Matches 5,201 to 5,400 of 11,213
| # |
Notes |
Linked to |
| 5201 |
Had his name legally changed to George W. Brown. | SPILLER George W. (I9167)
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| 5202 |
Had his own print shop named "The Printer" Which was enterred into a
Partnership June 1, 1955 with Hazel Smith and Sprague Smith as
partners. The business was sold November 1968 by Hazel after
Sprague's death. The purchasers of the company were Frank M Rarig Jr.
of St. Paul, MN. The location of The Printer was 500 Prior Ave. N.
St. Paul, MN.
SSN: 471-16-3813
Last address was:
761 East 7th St.
St. Paul, MN | SMITH Sprague W. (I9068)
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| 5203 |
Had one daughter and resided at Boston, Mass. | KENDALL Charles Eugene (I4491)
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| 5204 |
Hadamut was born about 1012[1]. Hadamut deFriaul was mentioned in 1040[2]... She passed away in 1064.
Sources
↑ Child born about 1030
↑ Isenburg, W. K. Prinz von
Europäische Stammtafeln, Band I, Frank Baron Freytag von Loringhoven, 1975, Isenburg, W. K. Prinz von. 184 https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00079980&tree=LEO
Charles Cawles: Medieval Lands: Hadamut (Azica) of Istria ( - after 1040) | ISTRIA Hadamut (I58093)
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| 5205 |
Haldane Cromwell was born about 1128 in Killpeck, Herefordshire, England. | CROMWELL Haldane (I60195)
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| 5206 |
Half Chippewa | SPRY Henry (I9224)
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| 5207 |
Halfdan (Old Norse: Halfdan, Old English: Healfdene, Medieval Latin: Haldānus, Proto-Norse: Halbadaniz, "half Dane") was a late 5th and early 6th century legendary Danish king of the Scylding (Skjöldung) lineage, the son of king named Fróði in many accounts, noted mainly as the father to the two kings who succeeded him in the rule of Denmark, kings named Hroðgar and Halga in the Old English poem Beowulf and named Hróar and Helgi in Old Norse accounts.
The tradition in Beowulf of a feud between the Danes and Heathobards in which Fróda king of the Heathobards was slain appears in Norse texts as a family feud in which Halfdan's brother Fróði kills Halfdan and Halfdan's sons kill Fróði. [1]
Hversum Noregr Byggðist
Both of these pedigrees are in the same text source.
As part of the pedigree of Harald Fairhair from Odin:
Óðin Ásakonung, father of
Skjöldr, faðir
Friðleifs, föður
Frið-Fróða, föður
Friðleifs, föður
Hávarðs ins handramma, föður
Fróða, föður
Vermundar ins vitra, föður
Óláfs ins lítilláta, föður
Dans ins mikilláta, föður
Fróða ins friðsama, föður
Friðleifs, föður
Fróða ins frækna, föður
Ingjalds Starkaðarfóstra, föður
Hræreks hnöggvanbauga, föður
Hálfdanar, föður
Hræreks slöngvanbauga, föður
Haralds hilditannar. Bróðir Haralds var Randvér, faðir Sigurðar hrings. Er þá slík ættartala til Haralds konungs hárfagra, sem fyrr segir.
As part of the lineage of Harald Fairhair from Adam:
Odin:
His son Skjöldr,
his son Friðleifr,
his son Frið-Fróði,
his son Herleifr,
his son Hávarr inn handrammi,
his son Fróði,
his son Vémundr inn vitri,
his daughter Ólof. She was the mother of
Fróði inn friðsama.
His son Friðleifr,
his son Fróði inn frækni,
his son Hálfdan,
his son Hróarr,
his son Valdarr inn mildi,
his son Haraldr the old,
his son Hálfdan the clever,
his son Ívarr víðfaðmi,
his daughter Auðr in djúpauðga,
her son Randvér,
his son Sigurðr hringr,
his son Ragnar loðbrók,
his son Sigurðr ormr í auga,
his daughter Áslaug,
her son Sigurðr hjörtr,
his daughter Ragnhildr,
her son King Haraldr inn hárfagri
Sources
↑ Wikipedia: Halfdan Scylding
Fornaldarsögur Norðurlanda I-IV: Hversu Noregr byggðist: Ættartala
The Viking Age, Gen. Hist. 19, v. 1, p. 68
Keiser und Koenig Hist., Gen. Hist. 25, pt 1, p. 126-7
Hist. of the Anglo-Saxons, Eng. 36, v. 1, p. 241 | FRODASSON Halfdan (I58788)
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| 5208 |
Halfdan Ragnarsson was a Viking leader who took part in the invasions of the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms of England. He is one of six sons of Ragnar Lodbrok named in Norse sagas. His brothers include Björn Ironside, Ivar the Boneless, Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye, Ubba and Hvitserk. Some sources say that Halfdan and Hvitserk may be the same person; he is named Albann in the records of Ulster; and does not seem to be named in Norse sources. [1] [2] [3]
The brothers Ubba, Halfdan and Ivar the Boneless, were among the leaders of "the Great Heathen Army" that invaded England in 865. [4] [5]
About 875, with the return of the the Great Army to Northumbria after a long series of battles in East Anglia, Mercia and Wessex, Halfdan was nominally ruler of Northumbria, though only in fact exercised power in the trading town of Jorvik/York for a time. [6] He left soon after to become involved in a struggle for power in the more important trading centre of Dublin.
Halfdan campaigned in Ireland, the Annals of Ulster record that Oistín, son of Amlaíb, king of the Norsemen was deceitfully killed by Albann. [7]
He died near Strangford Lough in County Down, killed in the Battle of Strangford Lough, fought in 877 between two groups of Vikings, loosely identified in the Irish Annals as the "fair heathens" (Danes) and the "dark heathens" (Norse). The Annals of Ulster record this battle as 'a skirmish at Loch Cuan between the fair heathens and the dark heathens, in which Albann, king of the dark heathens, fell.' [8] [9]
Research Note
Relationships between historical figures could have been simplified or even fabricated in the text to give the impression that succession remained within the same family. Precise chronology is also difficult to assess from the Sagas. The conclusion must be that the tight family network described in the Sagas is unlikely to be correct and that the relationships shown below should be treated with considerable caution.
Sources
↑ Wikipedia - Ragnar Lodbrok provides an overview of the sources naming Ragnar and his family
↑ The six sons of Ragnar Lodbrok named as Eiríkr, Agnarr, Ívarr beinlausi, Björn járnsíða, Hvítserkr, Sigurðr - Þáttr af Ragnars Sonum / The Tale of Ragnar’s Sons in The Complete Fornaldarsögur Norðurlanda; Legendary Sagas of the Northland in English Translation - trans: Peter Tunstall 2005
↑ The sons of Ragnar named as Fridleif, Radbard, Dunvat, Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye, Björn Ironside, Agnar and Ivar the Boneless, Ubbe, Ragnvald, Eric Weatherhat and Hvitserk in the Gesta Danorum by Saxo Grammaticus; Internet Archive : The first nine books of the Danish history of Saxo Grammaticus pub: D. Nutt, London 1894.
↑ "Ragnar Lodbroks söner Ivar, Ubbe och Halvdan erövrade i spetsen för en stor dansk vikingahär York år 866" Heimskringla - Anmärkningar: note: 9
↑ 'This year came the army to Reading in Wessex ..... they had two heathen kings, Bagsac and Healfden' The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle : AD 871 trans: J.H. Ingram
↑ 'The same year Healfden divided the land of the Northumbrians; so that they became afterwards their harrowers and plowers.' The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle : AD 876 trans: J.H. Ingram
↑ Celt: Annals of Ulster : U875.4 'Oistin m. Amlaiph regis Norddmannorum ab Alband per dolum occisus est.'
↑ " 'A battle at Loch Cuan between the fair heathens and the dark heathens, in which Albann, chief of the dark heathens, fell.' " Celt: Chronicon Scotorum : Annal CS877
↑ 'Belliolum occ Loch Cuan eitir Finngenti & Dubgennti in quo Albann, dux na n-Dubgenti, cecidit.' Celt: Annals of Ulster : U877.5 'A skirmish at Loch Cuan between the fair heathens and the dark heathens, in which Albann, king of the dark heathens, fell.' Celt: Annuls of Ulster U877.5
Viking Archaeology : Halfdan King of York
See also;
Anglo Saxon Chronicle in The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle (English) trans: J. A. Giles & J. Ingram; Release: Sept.1, 1996 [eBook #657] updated: January 1, 2021
Wikipedia : Halfdan Ragnarsson | RAGNARSSON Halfdan (I58755)
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| 5209 |
Halfdan Whiteshanks (Old Norse: Hálfdan hvítbeinn) was a mythical petty king in Norway, described in Ynglinga saga. The following description is based on the account in Ynglinga saga, written in the 1220s by Snorri Sturluson. The historicity of the kings described in that saga is generally not accepted by modern historians.
He was the son of Olof Trätälja (Treefeller) of the House of Yngling. His father was sacrificed to Odin by the Swedish settlers in Värmland because of a famine. Some Swedes, however, realised that the famine was brought by overpopulation and not by the fact that the king had been neglecting his religious duties.
Consequently, they resolved to cross the Ed Forest and settle in Norway and happened to end up in Soleyar where they killed king Sölve and took Halfdan prisoner. The Swedish expatriates elected Halfdan king as he was the son of their old king, Olof. Halfdan subjugated all of Soleyar and took his army into Romerike and subjugated that province as well. Halfdan was to become a great king, who married Åsa, the daughter of king Eystein, the ruler of Oppland and Hedmark. They had two sons, Öystein Halfdansson and Gudröd.
Halfdan conquered a large part of Hedemark, Toten, Hadeland and a part of Vestfold. When his brother Ingjald Olofsson died, he inherited Värmland. Halfdan died of old age in Toten and was transported to Vestfold where he was buried under a mound in Skiringssal. [1]
Sources
↑ Snorri Sturluson: Sagas of the Norse Kings. Ynglinga Saga:Translated by Samuel Laing, revised by Peter Foote MA. Everyman's Library Dutton New York SBN 460 00847 1 Page 39
Snorri Sturluson: Sagas of the Norse Kings. Translated by Samuel Laing, revised by Peter Foote MA. Everyman's Library Dutton New York SBN 460 00847 1 Page 38/39 " Olaf and Solva had two sons Ingjald and Halfdan Hvitbein.........Halfdan was married to Aasa a daughter of Eystein the Severe. Halfdan and Aasa had two sons, Eystein and Gudrodhe lived be an old man and died in his bed at Toten, and was buried under a mound at Skiringsale." | OLAFSSON Halfdan (I58719)
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| 5210 |
Halfdan, envoy to Charlemagne
According to Annales regni Francorum, Halfdan was sent by king Sigfred to the court of Charlemagne in 782. He was later praised by Poeta Saxo for his commendation to the emperor in 807. His son Hemming was mentioned as having converted to christianity, and probably was the ruler of Frisia in 837.
Medlands:
Halfdan (d. 810 Walcheren)[1]
Father: Harald, King of Haithabu)[1]
Mother: Imhild UNKNOWN[1]
Spouse: UNKNOWN. Issue: 6[1]
Hemming (d. 17 Jun 837 Walcheren "Walchram"
Anulo "Ali" (d. 812 Haithabu)
Harald (Heriold) "Klak" (d. 844 Walcheren).
m. UNKNOWN.
Rorik "Horik; Heric" (d. 854)
Ragnfrid (d. 814)
____ (unknown)
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Medlands: Halfdan
Cawley, C. (2006). "Kings of the Danes: 9th century." Medieval Lands v.3. fmg.ac: citing:
Annales Fuldenses
Europäische Stammtafeln
Einhard's Annales
See also:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halfdan_(fl._782%E2%80%93807) | HARALDSSON Halfdan (I58734)
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| 5211 |
Halvdan snälle eller Hálfdan snjalli var en skånsk sagokung som tillhör 600-talet.
Hans far skall ha varit Harald den gamle (Haraldr gamli), sonson till Hroar Halvdansson (Hróarr Hálfdanarson).
Enligt Hervarar saga skall hans mor varit Hild men i Hversu kallas hon Hervör. Det är möjligt att det är variationer av samma namn för enligt båda sagorna var hon dotter till Heidrek ulvhamn (Heiðrekr úlfhamr), kung över Reidgotaland, som var son till kung Angantyr.
Enligt Ynglingasagan var Halvdan snälle bror till Gudröd Skånekung, som var gift med Åsa illråda – Ingjald illrådes dotter. Sagan nämner också att han skall varit far till Ivar Vidfamne.
Enligt Wikipedia kan ordet snjallr ha flera betydelser; den snälle, modige, raske, kloke, duktige, vältalige.
Biography
Halfdan Snjalle is a mythological king from the Norse sagas who supposedly lived in the 7th century.
Name(s)
Parents and family
His father is said to been Harald den gamle (Haraldr gamli) meaning Harald the old.
According to Hervarar saga, his mother's name was Hild but in Hversu she is named Hervör. Both sagas agree upon her being a daughter of Heidrek Ulvhamn (Heiðrekr úlfhamr), son of king Angantyr.
According to Snorre Sturlasons Ynglinga saga, he is one of two sons of Harald the old Valdarsson. His brother is Gudrød, who married Åsa, daughter of Ingjald Illråde.
According to Hvordan Norge ble bygd (Hversu Noregr byggdist): Halvdan was son of Harald den gamle, his grandfather was Valdar den gavmilde and he was in turn son of Hróarr.
Spouse(s) and children
Possibly married to Moeld hin Digre (den tykke).
According to Ynglinga saga, he is father of Ivar Vidfamne.
Death and burial
Research Notes
An estimated birth year has been added in order to give the profile pre-1500 protection. It is, however, more of a guess than an estimate since the saga(s) mentioning him/her have been written many hundred years later.
Relationships between historical figures could have been simplified or even fabricated in the text to give the impression that succession remained within the same family….Precise chronology is also difficult to assess from the Sagas….The conclusion must be that the tight family network described in the Sagas is unlikely to be correct and that the relationships shown below should be treated with considerable caution.
Using the patronymic system, someone with the LNAB Haraldsson is the son of Harald, he could never have been son of Frode. Therefore parents Frode VII (Frodasson) Danmark and Hildis (Heidriksdatter) Vandals has been removed.
Disconnecting Hrolfsson-20 as father, he is most likely to be his grandfather.Andersson-4409 09:33, 24 May 2021 (UTC)
Disconnecting spouse Unknown-536673 and son Halfdansson-161 (both linked to in bio). Children Halfdansdatter-32, Halfdansson-317 and Halfdansson-309, not mentioned in any sagas has also been disconnected.
Sources
Fornaldarsögur Norðurlanda I-IV: Hversu Noregr byggðist
Fornaldarsögur Norðurlanda: Hervarar saga ok Heiðreks
See also;
https://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halvdan_sn%C3%A4lle
https://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halvdan_den_snille
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Halfdan_the_Valiant
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This profile was created through the import of master 11_12.ged on 21 October 2010 | HARALDSSON Hálfdan Snjalli (I58769)
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| 5212 |
Halvdan Svarte Gudrödsson skall ha varit kung i Vestfold i Norge på 800-talet. Sägs vara son till Gudröd och far till Harald Hårfager, samt gift med Ragnhild (dotter till antingen Sigurd Hjort eller Sigurd Ormiöga). Halvdan ska ha dött genom drunkning i Randsfjorden.
Biography
[King Gudröd & his second wife had one child:] ii) [HALFDAN "Swarti/the Black" ([830]-Rykinsvik [870], bur Ringerike, Ringarik, Hedmark and Vestfold). The Ynglinga Saga names Halfdan as son of Gudröd "the Hunter" and his second wife[35]. The Historia Norwegie names "Halfdanus…Niger" as son and successor of "Guthrodum Regem Venatorem", recording that he died after falling through the ice while travelling across a frozen lake "Rond"[36]. Snorre recounts that, after his father's death, his mother took Halfdan to Agder where he became king when aged eighteen, at which time he went to Vestfold and divided that kingdom with his half-brother Olaf[37]. He extended his domain to other parts of eastern Norway, probably also to the Sognefjord area on the west coast. He died, aged 40, after falling through the ice while riding over Rykinsvik bight. According to the Saga of Halfdan the Black, different districts claimed the honour of being Halfdan's burial place, and to satisfy all of them his body was divided into four parts and buried in Raumarik, Ringarik, Hedmark and Vestfold[38]. m firstly RAGNHILD [Thora], daughter of HARALD "Gullskiegg/Goldbeard" King at Sogn & his wife Selware ---. Snorre records the marriage of Halfdan "the Black" and Ragnhild, daughter of Harald "Gulskeg" king at Sogn, as well as her death in the winter before her son died[39]. Are´s Landnama-book names "Thora" as the daughter of "Harold Gold-beard…a king in Sogn [and his] wife Sel-ware, the daughter of earl Hound-wolf", adding that she married "Half-dan the Black the king of the Uplanders"[40]. m secondly RAGNHILD, daughter of SIGURD "Hjort/the Stag" Helgasson King at Ringerike & his wife Thorny. Snorre records the second marriage of Halfdan "the Black" and Ragnhild, daughter of Sigurd "Hjort" king at Ringerike. He records that Ragnild's father was the son of Helge "Hvasse/the Sharp" and his wife Aslaug, daughter of Sigurd "the Worm-eyed" (son of Ragnar "Lodbrok"), and that her mother was the daughter of "Klakharald king in Jutland" and a sister of Thyre "Dannebod" who married the Danish king Gorm "the Old"[41]. King Halfdan & his first wife had one child:]
Halvdan Svarte Gudrödsson is said to have been king of Vestfold in Norway in the ninth century. Supposedly son of Gudröd and the father of Harald Hårfager, and married to Ragnhild (daughter of either Sigurd Hjort or Sigurd Ormiöga). He is said to have died by drowning in the Randsfjord.
Husband: Halfdan 'the Black' Gudrodsson
Wife: Ragnhild Sigurdsdatter
Child: Harald I Halfdansson
Flóamanna saga
According to Flóamanna saga, king Harald gullskegg was the ruler of Sogn. He was married to Sölvör, the daughter of Hundólf jarl and sister of Atli jarl mjóvi. Their daughters were:
Þóra who married king Hálfdan svarti of the Opplands; their son was king Harald the Young, who was named after Harald gullskegg
Þuríðr who married Ketill helluflagi.
King Harald gullskegg died first, then his daughter Þóra, then his grandson king Harald the Young. Hálfdan svarti became king of Sogn and set Atli jarl to rule there.
Skáldskaparmál
Hildibrand (Hildibrandr), father of Vígbrand (Vígbrandr), father of Hildir and Herbrand (Herbrandr). Herbrand was father of Harald Red-beard, father of Ása who was the mother of Halfdan the Black, the father of Harald Fairhair. [1]
Research Notes
The sagas name him a king of Opplandene as well as a ruler of Sogn, and name him the father of Harald Fairhair. They also name him the father of king Harald the Young of Sogn, the grandson of Harald gullskegg; the mother of Harald the Young is occassionally called Ragnhild, the same as Harald Fairhair's mother.
All of this may have been done to create a connection to the eastern parts of the country for Harald Fairhair, as well as having him born in Sogn or Opplandene, when it is far more likely that Harald Fairhair came from Rogaland and Hordaland, where his kingdom started (all his royal seats were located on the coastline along the sheltered sailing route north). Østenstad-1 13:09, 6 October 2024 (UTC)
HIS CURRENT MOTHER IS BORN 80 YEARS EARLIER! She has been removed as his mother: Asa Haraldsdottir Restored his mother. The dates are awry but the relationship is sourced C 16 September 2018
Sources
↑ Wikipedia: Halfdan the Old
Guðni Jónsson bjó til prentunar: Íslendinga sögur: Flóamanna saga, 1. kap.
See also;
family history
[S38] John Morby, Dynasties of the World: a chronological and genealogical handbook (Oxford, Oxfordshire, U.K.: Oxford University Press, 1989), page 147. Hereinafter cited as Dynasties of the World.
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| 5213 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I56235)
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| 5214 |
Handicapped | ROLFE Virginia (I56240)
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| 5215 |
Handicapped since birth | SMITH Thomas Deacon (I36901)
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| 5216 |
Hannah could have been born before Thomas. She died very young.
Hannah could have been born before Thomas. She died very young. | Brown Hannah (I51176)
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| 5217 |
Hannah died when she was 2 days old. In naming her Hannah, is part of the
evidence that her grandmother was Hannah Blandford and not Deborah Haines as
some people thought.
Hannah's mother, Martha died in childbirth with Hannah. | Brown Hannah (I50750)
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| 5218 |
Hannah Jenks was also known as Hannah Jenkes. She was also known as Hannah Jeanks.2 She was also known as Hannah Jencks. | JENKS Hannah (I39791)
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| 5219 |
Hannah lived to be 92 years and seven months. She is buried in the Adam Castner plot. According to the "Home Book of the Darius Myer's Family" by Violet M. Beck; Adam Castner, husband of Hannah's was a wealthy cousin.
In the 1870, a widow, Hannah lived with her eldest child, Catherine L. Townssend husband, Charles J. Townsend. | Annable Hannah Frances (I53636)
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| 5220 |
Hannah was livingin in Norton, Brisol County, MA on 10 July, 1730 (Bristol County Deeds, 37:357-358) | Caswell Hannah (I52193)
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| 5221 |
Hannah was the widow of William Clarke. After the death of Thomas, she married Joseph Clarke of Westerly, R. I. | Clarke Hannah (Weeden) (I53885)
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| 5222 |
Hannah's birth recorded in Rutland, Worcester county, MA but was actually in "at the Township called ye Lower Ashuelot." (Swanzey, Cheshire County, NH) | Brown Hannah (I51076)
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| 5223 |
Hannah's last name was spelled Blanford in the Middlesex County records. | Blandford Hannah (I51882)
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| 5224 |
Hannah's signature was on a land agreement to sell land she and Wright, Sr.owned in Swanzey, Cheshire County, NH to Wright's half brother, William Wright of Swanzey. It did not appear on the final deed when it was finalized in 1787.
In the book, "Compendium of Early Mohawk Valley Families" by Maryly B. Penrose, C.G., A.S.I, Vol. 1 p. 81, it mentions under Births/Baptisms the following:
Births/Baptisms: Brown, Wright and Hannah (Nollin), Stillwater, Isaac, bapt. 1/18/1784.(JDR:16). Her birth, marriage, parents and siblings have not been found as yet.
Hannah's last name is still to be documented. It could be Newland, Kneeland, Knowland, Knowlton or Nolton. In a land document signed in 1791 in Swanzey, Wright sold land to Joshua Prime and an Ariel Newland witnessed the sale. This probably was a relative, if not a brother.
The original Newlin immigrants came from Ulster in 1683 according to sources at LDS. | NEWLAND Hannah (I50270)
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| 5225 |
Hannaretta Sicklar Swan was born in Marion, OH on May 20, 1840. On May 16, 1856 she married James Swan.
James enlisted in the Union Army, mustered in August 22, 1862 in Kankakee County, Illinois and died in Natchez, Mississippi, November 18, 1863, leaving a widow with three small children.
She was the daughter of William Sicklar and Elizabeth Colgate. | Sicklar Hannahretta (I52933)
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| 5226 |
HARALD ([750]-killed in battle in the Irish Sea 804). Second "King of Haithabu". m IMHILD, daughter of WARNECHIN Graf von Engern & his wife Kunhilde von Rügen. Three children:
a) HALFDAN (-killed in battle Walcheren 810). Third "King of Haithabu".
see below.
b) HARALD ([775/80]-murdered Haithabu 804). Fourth "King of Haithabu".
c) HOLGER ([780]-807). Danish.
note
one of the first Kings of Haithabu: http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/DENMARK.htm
ALTERNATE DATES: 736 - Abt 780
För mer info om Haithabu; https://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hedeby
Sources
Medlands: KINGS of the DANES, 9th CENTURY, accessed 3 Nov 2024, citing Europäische Stammtafeln II 104. | EYSTEINSSON Harald (I58736)
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| 5227 |
Harald Hårfagre/Haraldr hárfagri is regarded as the first king of a unified Norway.
Son of HALFDAN "Swarti/the Black" King of Vestfold & his second wife [Ragnhild Sigurdsdatter] ([853/54] or 860-Hogaland 933, 934 or 940. Succeeded his father at age 10. --- The business of conquest lasted Harald about (A.D. 860-872?), in which he subdued Orkneys, Shetlands, Hebrides, and Man. Sixty more years were given him to consolidate and regulate what he had conquered. His reign altogether is counted to have been of over seventy years. --- HE IS BELIEVED TO HAVE BETWEEN 20 AND 24 CHILDREN, CREATING A DYNASTY THAT LASTED 3 Centuries. (Twelve of his sons are named as kings, two of them over the whole country.) BASED ON DATES IN THESE PROFILES, IT IS VERY DOUBTFUL HE COULD BE THE FATHER OF ALL THE CHILDREN LISTED AS HIS. There is a pair two Olafs and two Haralds being his children.
Old King Fairhair, at the age of seventy, had another son, to whom was given the name of Hakon. His mother was a slave in Fairhair's house; slave by ill-luck of war, though nobly enough born.
Birth
He is thought to have been born about 850, and was the son of Halvdan Svarte in all sources.
Based on Snorre's work, Halvdan Svarte might have been from Ringerike or Hadeland, and descended from the swedish Ynglingeætten. Egils Saga says that Harald inherited the lands øst i Viken, which would have been Østfold. Nóregs konungatal states that Harald's ancestors ruled Sogn on the West coast.
His mother is most frequently found in sources as Ragnhild Sigurdsdatter, daughter of Sigurd Hjort Helgesson, or Ragnhild Haraldsdatter, daughter of Harald Gullskjegg in Sogn.
Marriage
According to the sagas, he had after Gyda, in succession, or perhaps even simultaneously in some cases, at least six other wives; and by Gyda herself one daughter and four sons.
Children with Gyda:
Ålov Årbot (Haraldsdotter)
Rørek Haraldsson
Sigtrygg Haraldsson
Frode Haraldsson
(Torgils Haraldsson)(considered questionable)
Children with Åsa, daughter of Håkon Grjotgardsson, Earl of Lade:
Guttorm Haraldsson, king of Ranrike
Halvdan Kvite (Haraldsson), king of Trondheim
Halvdan Svarte (Haraldsson), king of Trondheim.
Sigrød Haraldsson, king of Trondheim
Children with Ragnhild Eiriksdotter of Jutland:
Eirik Bloodaxe, king of Norway.
Children with Svanhild, daughter of Eystein Earl:
Bjørn Farmann, king of Vestfold.
Olaf Haraldsson Geirstadalf, king of Vingulmark, later also Vestfold.
Ragnar Rykkel
Children with Åshild, daughter of Ring Dagsson:
Ring Haraldsson
Dag Haraldsson
Gudrød Skirja
Ingegjerd Haraldsdotter
Children with Snøfrid, daughter of Svåse the Finn:
Halvdan Hålegg
Gudrød Ljome
Ragnvald Rettilbeine
Sigurd Rise
Children with Tora Mosterstong, his maid:
Haakon the Good, king of Norway.
Other children:
Ingebjørg Haraldsdotter
Harald was the grandfather of Harald II.
Death and Burial
Ágrip af Nóregs konunga sögum states that he died of illness in Rogaland and was buried at Haugar up from Hasseløysund (which corresponds with the location of the national monumen. Haraldsstøtta, which was raised in 1872).
Heimskringla states that he died of illness in Rogaland and is buried at Haugar by Karmsund (the sound between Haugesund and Karmøy)
There was a king's seat at Augvaldsnes/Avaldsnes, which also is named as one of Harald's homes in Heimskringla and in Egils Saga; he is probably likelier to have died there than at Hauge, which is named after there being a burial mound there.
Avaldsnes once had a great number of burial mounds, and it is suggested that he may have been buried on the Karmøy side of Karmsund instead of at Hauge.
Research Notes
The problem points (points of broken genealogy) in the medieval royal lineage in the so-called Fairhair dynasty are:
whether either Olav I of Norway or Olav II of Norway descended from Harald I of Norway (Harald Fairhair)
whether Harald III of Norway descended from Harald I
whether Harald IV of Norway was son of King Magnus III of Norway
whether King Sverre was son of King Sigurd II of Norway,
whether Haakon IV of Norway was son of King Haakon III
Each of them came from "nowhere" and won the kingdom, the three latter claiming to be hitherto unknown natural sons of an earlier king.
Sources
Snorra Sturlusonar. Heimskringla, Haralds saga hins hárfagra. N. Linder og H. A. Haggson, 1869-1872
Ágrip af Nóregs konunga sǫgum
Wikidata: Item Q206123 help.gif
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/NORWEGIAN%20NOBILITY.htm
Acknowledgments
Thank you to Katherine Wall for creating Halfdansson-314 on 24 Oct 13.
WikiTree profile Halfdansson-259 created through the import of jefflorrie(1).ged on Sep 10, 2011 by Jeff Johnson.
Thanks to Sheri Sturm for starting this profile.
Gordon Lokken, firsthand knowledge.
WikiTree profile Halfdansson-227 created through the import of wikitree.ged on Aug 1, 2011 by Abby Brown.
This person was created through the import of Sheppard_Duncan_Bickham_Stroud.ged on 01 February 2011.
WikiTree profile UNKNOWN-130411 created through the import of Spencer Family Tree 4 2002.GED on Nov 28, 2011 by Chet Spencer.
WikiTree profile Hårfagre-2 created through the import of WILLY.GED on Aug 17, 2011 by Robin Pedersen.
WikiTree profile UNKNOWN-125509 created through the import of Helene.ged on Oct 31, 2011 by Helene Ring Teppan.
This person was created through the import of David Rentschler Family Tree_2010-09-30.ged on 01 October 2010.
WikiTree profile Halfdansson-178 created through the import of FAMILY 6162011.GED on Jun 20, 2011 by Michael Stephenson.
WikiTree profile Halfdansson-227 created through the import of wikitree.ged on Aug 1, 2011 by Abby Brown.
WikiTree profile Halvdansson-6 created through the import of Forsstrom och Eriksson Wikitree.GED on Jul 16, 2011 by Torbjörn Forsström.
This person was created through the import of McQuery Family Tree.ged on 20 May 2011.
This person was created through the import of Acrossthepond.ged on 21 February 2011.
This person was created through the import of Williams_AndersForWikiTree.ged on 07 May 2011. | HALFDANSSON Harald Hárfagri (I58702)
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| 5228 |
harlotte Maugis (1607 - 1676), variante du nom: Mauger.
Père et mère
Inconnus, voir transcription de commentaire de René Jetté dans messages sur ce profil.[1]
Naissance
En 1607, elle naît à Saint-Germain, Saintes, Saintonge, France.
Mariage
Vers 1631, à Brouage en Saintonge, (ar. Rochefort, Charente-Maritime), France, Charlotte Mauger âgée d'environ 24 ans épouse Pierre Miville dit LeSuisse âgé d'environ 29 ans.[2]
Enfants connus / Known children: Pierre Miville & Charlotte Maugis:
Gabriel Miville (1630 - 1635)
Marie Miville dite LeSuisse (1632 - 1702); mariée à Mathieu Amiot dit Villeneuve 22 Nov 1650 Québec (ND)
François Miville dit LeSuisse (1634 - 1711); marié à Marie Langlois 10 août 1660 Québec (ND); remarié à Jeanne Savonet 7 nov 1692 Rivière-Ouelle
Marie Aimée Miville (1635 - 1713); Aimée mariée à Robert Giguère 2 juillet 1652 Québec (ND)
Madeleine Miville (1636 - 1708); mariée à Jean Cochon 20 nov 1652 Québec (ND)
Jacques Miville dit Deschênes (1639 - 1688); marié à Catherine Baillon 12 nov 1669 Québec (ND)
Suzanne Miville (1640 - 1675); mariée à Antoine Poulet 12 avril 1655 Québec (ND)[3]
Migration en Nouvelle-France
En 1649, le couple a eu 7 enfants tous nés en France. Six de leurs enfants émigrent au Canada avec eux. Le septième, Gabriel est inhumé à Brouage le 11 novembre 1635 à l'âge de 5 ans.
Recensement 1667
:Pierre Miville, 65 ; Charlotte Mauger, 60 ; Jacques Miville, 27 ; le Lorrain, domestique, 40 ; 8 bestiaux, 30 arpents en valeur. Ils vivent à la côte de Lauzon, Canada.[4]
Le 10 juin 1670, Charlotte Maugis et ses endants font une donation à la Confrérie de Sainte-Anne par devant Pierre Duquet. (voir actes ci-bas)
Décès
Le 11 octobre 1676, Charlotte Mongis âgée d'environ 69 ans (95 ans ou environ sur l'acte de décès) décède dans sa maison de la coste de Lauzon et est inhumée le même jour dans le cimetière de l'église qui se fait en la coste de Lauzon. Signé H. DeBernière. [5]
L'onzième jour du mois d'octobre de l'an mil six cent soixante seize Charlotte Mongis veuve de Pierre Miville dit le Suisse âgée de quatre vingt quinze ans ou environ est décédée après avoir reçu les sacrements de l'extrême onction par Mr Thomas Morel prêtre missionnaire du séminaire de Québec le jour d'hyer dans sa maison de la coste de Lauzon et a été inhumée dans le cimetière de l'Église qui se fait en la dite coste de Lauzon. H. De Bernières.[6][7]
Note
Elle reçoit les sacrements de l'extrême onction la veille de sa mort, c'est-à-dire le 10. Elle ne meurt pas le 10 mais le 11, inhumée le même jour dans le cimetière de la future église Pointe-de-Lévy, qui est en construction évidemment, et n'ouvre officiellement qu'en 1679. L'acte est enregistré dans les registres de Notre-Dame de Québec, où Henri De Bernières officiait normalement.
Actes légaux variés
Donation par Charlotte Maugis, veuve du feu Pierre Miville, de son vivant habitant de la seigneurie de Lauzon, et les sieurs François Miville et Jacques Miville, sieur des Chesnes (Deschênes - Chênes), ses enfants, à la Confrérie Sainte-Anne de Québec, ladite donation concernant une somme de 80 livres et 10 sols . - 18 juillet 1670 [Document insinué le 20 octobre 1670][8]
Appel mis au néant de la sentence rendue par le lieutenant général, en date du 2 septembre 1672, entre les héritiers du défunt Pierre Miville et Moïse Petit, marchand et procureur d'Alexandre Petit et correction de la dite sentence . - 2 mai 1673
Portée et contenu: Transcription du texte avec orthographe modernisée : «Entre Moïse PETIT, marchand au nom et comme procureur de Alexandre Petit marchand de la ville de La Rochelle demandeur en anticipation d'appel interjeté par François Miville de sentence du lieutenant général de cette ville du deuxième septembre dernier, comparant par Jean-Baptiste Gosset huissier son procureur et porteur de pièces d'une part, et ledit François Miville tant en son nom que comme fondé de procuration de Mathieu Amiot, Robert Giguier et Jean Cochon à cause de leurs femmes, et Suzanne Miville ses cohéritiers en la succession de défunt Pierre Miville leur père passée par-devant Rageot notaire à Québec en date du dix-neuf septembre dernier défendeur et au principal appelant d'autre. Parties ouïes en leurs demandes et défenses, griefs d'appel et contredits à iceux; vu ladite sentence par laquelle l'appelant était débouté de son opposition afin de distraire, sauf à se pourvoir sur les deniers provenant de la vente des biens immeubles dudit feu Miville et de Charlotte Maugis sa veuve, après l'adjudication qui en serait faite par décret, en cas qu'il lui fut dû par la succession de sondit père, et ordonné qu'il serait passé outre aux crises a jours de dimanche issue de grande messe en l'église paroissiale Notre-Dame de cette ville, attendu qu'il n'y a de paroisse en la seigneurie de Lauson; les pièces sur lesquelles serait intervenue ladite sentence; contrat de constitution de quatre-vingt-douze livres quinze sols six deniers de rente passé par-devant Becquet notaire le quatorze septembre 1670, par lesdits veuve Miville et Jacques Miville son fils, au profit de Daniel Biaille comme procureur dudit demandeur, ouï le substitut du procureur général, tout considéré, le Conseil a reçu et reçoit ledit Miville en qualités qu'il procède, appelant de ladite sentence, et faisant droit sur icelui, a mis et met icelle sentence au néant en ce qui le concerne et sesdites soeurs en émendant et corrigeant et faisant ce que devait faire ledit lieutenant général, ordonne que distraction sera faite de ladite saisie réelle des cinq parts qui appartiennent aux appelant en la moitié des maisons des terres qui leur sont échues par le décès dudit défunt Pierre Miville leur père, et condamné ledit François Miville aux dépens de la requête et procédures en désertion d'appel, et à l'égard des autres dépens compensés. FF.»[9]
Procès de Jacques Bigeon, prisonnier au château Saint-Louis, environ 45 ans, en Nouvelle-France depuis neuf ans, habitant de la côte de Lauzon depuis environ deux ans, accusé d'avoir juré et blasphémé le Saint Nom de Dieu . - 16 décembre 1665
Portée et contenu: Ce dossier en matières criminelles comprend l'interrogatoire de l'accusé; les informations des témoins; ainsi que le jugement de l'intendant Jean Talon. Ce dossier contient les interrogatoires ou les dépositions des personnes suivantes : Charlotte Maugis, native de Saint-Germain en Saintonge; François Miville, natif de la paroisse de Notre-Dame de Brouage; Jacques Miville, natif de la paroisse de Notre-Dame ; Jean Bourassa (Bourasseau), natif de Saint-Fulgent en Poitou; Toussaint Ledran, natif de la paroisse de Berzy en Picardie; Noël Penaut, natif de la paroisse de Pierrefonds en Picardie; Georges (Jean) Cadoret, natif de la paroisse de Saint-Pater (sic) à Vannes; Pierre Pouillard, natif de la paroisse de Valence en Angoumois; Henri Brou; Jean Huard, natif de la paroisse d'Autheuil en Perche; Antoine Dupré, natif de la paroisse de Saint-Honoré de Lyon.[10]
Procès de Jacques Bigeon, environ 50 ans, cordier (celui qui fabrique ou qui vend des cordes), natif de La Flotte à l'île de Ré, paroisse de Sainte-Catherine, accusé du meurtre de Nicolas Bernard . - 28 janvier 1668 - 26 avril 1668
Portée et contenu: Ce dossier en matières criminelles comprend la dénonciation de Jacques Miville et d'Antoine Dupré, habitants de la seigneurie de Lauzon; le procès-verbal concernant la découverte du corps de la victime par le chirurgien Isaac Joncas dit Bergerac; le certificat médical du chirurgien; les interrogatoires de l'accusé; la déposition, récolement et confrontation avec l'accusé des témoins; la requête de l'accusé au Conseil souverain pour surseoir à l'exécution de la question ordinaire et extraordinaire; le réquisitoire du procureur fiscal; les opinions de messieurs les juges; la sentence du lieutenant général; l'inventaire de ce qui a été trouvé dans la cabane de l'accusé; le procès-verbaux concernant le transport de diverses choses dont des outils et des aliments; les premiers au domicile de Noël Penaut (Penon) et les seconds chez ledit Miville, qui en ont la garde et l'administration; ainsi que le mémoire des dépenses du premier transport. Les pièces proviennent de la Prévôté de Québec et du Conseil souverain de Québec. Ce dossier contient les interrogatoires ou les dépositions des personnes suivantes : Noël Penaut (Penon), vulgairement appelé «le bonhomme Picard», 66 ans, natif de Hautefontaine en Picardie, habitant de la côte et seigneurie de Lauzon; François Marchand, 24 ans, natif de l'île de Ré; Charlotte Maugis, femme de Pierre Miville, capitaine du quartier de la côte de Lauzon; Antoine Dupré; Charles Amiot, environ 32 ans, habitant, bourgeois de Québec; Denis Duquet, 56 ans, bourgeois de Québec, habitant de la côte de Lauzon; Jean Bouteleu, 40 ans, natif de Fressenville, proche d'Abbeville, habitant de la Pointe de Lévy, seigneurie de Lauzon; Étienne Boulanger, 21 ans, natif de Blois, demeurant chez la veuve du sieur Bourdon; Pierre Miville, environ 66 ans, capitaine de la côte et seigneurie de Lauzon ; Marie Châtaigne, environ 40 ans, femme de Pierre Lefebvre (Lefèvre), native de Bournezeau, diocèse de Luçon, habitante de ce pays; Pierre Pluchon, environ 55 ans, natif de la paroisse de Chaudolart en Saintonge, habitant de la côte de Saint-Ignace; Jean Maranda (Marandeau), 40 ans, natif de La Flotte à l'île de Ré; Jacques Loyer, sieur de LaTour, bourgeois de Québec; Martin Lafilé, environ 20 ans, domestique du sieur Bissot, natif de Sainneville, près de Fécamps, pays de Caux.[11]
Nomination de François Miville comme curateur à la personne et aux biens de Charlotte Mongis, sa mère, veuve de feu Pierre Miville, vu qu'elle est démente, sur la requête de Charles Bazire, agent de la Compagnie des Indes occidentales et Moïse Petit, procureur d'Alexandre Petit, marchand . - 17 décembre 1674
Portée et contenu: Transcription du texte avec orthographe modernisée : «Vu la requête présentée au Conseil par Charles Bazire agent de la compagnie des Indes Occidentales, et Moïse Petit procureur de Alexandre Petit son père marchand, ledit sieur Petit présent, tendante à ce qu'il soit pourvu d'un curateur à Charlotte Mongis veuve de feu Pierre Miville, attendu qu'elle est en démence, au bas de laquelle est l'ordonnance du Conseil du dixième du présent mois portant qu'il serait donné communication de ladite requête à François Miville son fils aîné; ouï ledit François Miville; conclusions verbales du procureur général, tout considéré. Le Conseil a ordonné que ledit François Miville soit curateur à la personne et biens de ladite Charlotte Mongis sa mère, pour poursuivre ou défendre les droits de sa dite mère contre qui il appartiendra. FRONTENAC.»[12]
Défaut accordé à François Miville, curateur de la personne et des biens de Charlotte Mongis, sa mère à l'encontre de Mathieu Amiot, procureur de Jacques Miville, Antoine Poulet, Robert Giguère et Jean Cochon . - 29 octobre 1675
Portée et contenu: Transcription du texte avec orthographe modernisée : «Défaut à François Miville curateur à la personne et biens de Charlotte Mongis sa mère, demandeur aux fins de sa requête répondue en cette Cour le sixième mai dernier contre Mathieu Amiot tant en son nom que comme procureur de Jacques Miville, Antoine Poulet, Robert Giguer et Jean Cochon ses beaux-frères, pour le profit duquel ordonné qu'il sera réassigné à comparaître au premier jour plaidable d'après la Saint-Martin, et depuis est acte de la comparution de la femme dudit Amiot avec intimation à elle de se trouver ledit jour fondée de pouvoir. DUCHESNEAU.»[13]
Sources
↑ Commentaires de René Jetté les 29 novembre 1997 et 16 janvier 1998.
↑ Tanguay vol. 1 p. 435 Miville dit le Suisse Pierre
↑ Quebec, Vital and Church Records (Drouin Collection), 1621-1997 - Drouin IGD pour les mariages
↑ Recensement 1667
↑ Sépulture / Burial - Charlotte Mongis - FamilySearch
↑ funeral IGD
↑ transcription par/by Danielle Liard
↑ BANQ donation 1670
↑ BANQ appel rejeté 1673
↑ BANQ témoin procès criminel pour blasphème 1665
↑ BANQ témoin procès pour meurtre 1668
↑ BANQ curatelle 1674
↑ BANQ défaut 1675
Tanguay, Cyprien. Dictionnaire Genealogique des Familles Canadiennes. 1871. Pg. 435. Tanguay, archive.org
https://ia800300.us.archive.org/9/items/dictionnaireg01tang/dictionnaireg01tang.pdf
La quête religieuse et spirituelle de Pierre Miville dit le Suisse - Gervais Deschênes 2017, UQAC, PDF.
Religious and spiritual quest of Pierre Miville dit le Suisse - PDF - uqac
242942 Fichier origine Jacques Miville
Une excellente biographie de la famille Miville est disponible sur le site Histoires d'ancêtres (disparu) au lien suivant: https://web.archive.org/web/20130803142139/http://histoiresdancetres.com/vaillancourt/pierre-miville-dit-le-suisse/ (via archive.org)
Histoire du Notariat au Canada - p. 78
Histoire de Lauzon - p. 338
Les Députés des Trois-Rivières - p. 18
Généalogie Québec site de F. Marchi
Tree: Nos origines
Tree https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/123168515/charlotte-mauger|sameas=no | MAUGIS Charlotte (I5470)
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| 5229 |
Harold died at a young age. | AMES Harold (I40193)
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| 5230 |
Harold was the first child born of Delia L. O'Connell and John W. Wilson, but it was not known to his brothers and sister until long after the death of his parents that his existance came to light through an elderly aunt, Freida Wilson, half sister of John.
Delia was five months pregnant when she and John married and in those days, unlike today, it was considered highly improper for a young girl to get in that condition before marriage. Why they waited so long is unknown.
Harold's life was very short. His death was, according to the death record, attributed to Perebes spiral meningitis due to hydrocephalis. It was complicated by acute enterils. He suffered with this illness for 2 months and 21 days. He died at 9:05 P.M. Tuesday, May 5, 1903 with Dr. J. V. Lewis of Momence in attendance.
Little Harold is buried next to his uncle, Charles O'Connell and his maternal grandparents, Rosella and Thomas O'Connell in Momence Protestant Cemetery, Momence, IL. As yet, he has an unmarked grave, only denoted by a flat iron marker.
While cleaning out the house where Delia had lived, a white satin burial piece was found that belonged to the casket of little Harold. It must have been removed shortly before his burial.
The death of this little guy surely pained Delia for the rest of her life, for she told none of her children who were born after Harold. The fact that she had to marry, being four months pregnant and the shame she felt must have driven her to keep this family secret. | Wilson Harold (I52863)
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| 5231 |
Harriet crossed the plains in an ox cart with her folks in 1847, settling in Oregon City, OR. | HALL Harriet (I56286)
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| 5232 |
Harriet was a member of the Second Baptist Church of Stillwater, Saratoga County, NY built in 1836.
Union Cemetery, Town of Stillwater, Saratoga County, New York.As transcribed by Cornelius Emerson Durkee and listed under Stillwater in volume 2, pages 527-529Newland lot:Newland, Lydia M., d. July 29, 1862, 31ys.Newland, Dea. David, d. Feb. 10, 1860, a.71ys.Newland, Mary, wife of David, d. Dec. 15, 1840, 47ys.Bird, Almira Newland, wife of Wm. J., d. May 9, 1843, 25ys.Newland, Dorcas Adelia, dau of David & Mary, d. May 23, 1844, 7th yr.Newland, Elizabeth, dau. of David & Mary, d. Dec. 31, 1847, a.26 yrs.Newland, Helen, dau. of David & Mary, d. May 19, 1848, a.15 yrs.Newland, Sanford Billings, son of David & Mary, d. Oct. 5, 1848, 22d yr.Newland, Ephraim, b. June 22, 1793; d. Sep. 17, 1859.Newland, Sarah Brill, wife of Ephraim, d. Dec. 22, 1867, 72y.9m.26d.and four additonal inscriptions:Newland, Marilla, wife of David, d. Oct. 13, 1877 ae 75 yrs.Newland, Harriet, d. Oct. 31, 1871, ae 73 yrs.Newland, James B., 1815 - 1885Newland, Maltilda A., 1828 - 19051850 September, Stillwater, Saratoga County, New York. microfilm 432 roll 592 page 108.Ephraim Newland, 54, lumber merchant, New YorkSarah, 52, NYHarriet, 40, NYLydia, 19, NYElisabeth Cantwell, 21, IrelandHenry Hamwag, 19, laborer, NY | Newland Harriet (I52231)
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| 5233 |
Has represented district in New Hampshire legislature, resides at Manchester. | FREEMAN George (I37819)
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| 5234 |
Hattie never married. | Olofsson (Wilson) Hattie Lorena (I54313)
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| 5235 |
Hatto (d. after 744) and buried at Limoges.
Sources
MEDIEVAL LANDS: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families by Charles Cawley © Foundation for Medieval Genealogy & Charles Cawley 2000-2018. | AQUITAINE Hatto (I59566)
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| 5236 |
Hattwigate (Hatwigate, Hatiwigate) appears in older volumes of Royal genealogy (see Sources list for examples) as King or Prince of the Saxons from 480 to his death in 524.
He is the
son of Hartwake, Prince of the Saxons to 480, and the
father of Hulderic, King of the Saxons from 540 - 586.
Although there may be versions of this genealogy from earlier sources than the mid-1700s, there are no sources contemporary to the period he is supposed to have lived, confirm his existence, and he must be considered as totally legendary.
Hatwigate is not named in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. [1]
Research Notes
Legendary Saxon Line of Descent from Witigail to Witikind
George Fisher [2]in 1832 published his Genealogical Companion in which he presented a line of descent of princes and kings in Saxony from Hengist's father Witigail to Witikind the Great, conquered by Charlemagne. While many of these princes exist only in legend, they appear in many popular genealogies and therefore their line of descent is presented here for reference. Birth years are estimated and not part of Fisher's table.
Wihtgils or Witigail, born 380, King of the Saxons, died 434
Hengist, born 425. First king of Kent, died 488.
Audoacer or Hartwaker, born 455, succeeded his father as 15th Prince of the Saxons, died 480.
Hatwigate, born 475,Prince of the Saxons, died 524
Hulderic. born 500, King of the Saxons, died 540
Bodicus, born 525, Prince of the Saxons, died 586
Berthold, born 550, King of the Saxons, died 633.
Sighard, born 630, King of the Saxons, died 691
Dieteric, born 670,, King of the Saxons, died 740, married Dobogesa, daughter of Billung, King of the Vandals
Wernich, born 705, son of Dieteric, King of the Saxons, died 768. Wernich had a brother Ethelbard, also son of Dieteric, also King of the Saxons. Ethelbard had two sons; Albion, was baptized by his cousin Witikund the Great, son of Ethelbard, 785, and Herman was slain by Charlemagne 798,
Witikind the Great, born 755, the last King of the Saxons, conquered by Charlemagne, 785. Consentng to be baptized, the conqueror made him the first Duke of the old Upper Saxony, or on the Weser. He died 807 and was the patriarch of many great families in Europe, amongst whom may be reckoned the present Royal Family of England.
Name
A "Find-a-Grave" Memorial, not otherwise sourced, [3] presents a Hartwaker von Sachsen born in England in 455 and died in Saxony (Sachsen), Germany, in 480. It lists him as 3rd King of the Saxons, the son of Hengest, King of Kent, brother of Oeric, King of Kent, and father of Hathwigate von Sachsen, born 470 and died 574.
Hatwigate /deSaxony/ King[4]
Hatwigate[5]
Birth and Parents
Hathwigate Von Saxony (son of Henyest Von Saxony) was born 475 in Sachsen, Preussen, and died 524. [citation needed]
He was born in 450 in Saxony, Germany[5]
Hattwigate was born in 0487 [citation needed]
Jansen estimates the date of birth to be around 455. [6]
Jansen links Hattwigate to Hartwaker von Sachsen as father, his grandfather is then Hengest [6]
Marriage
He married about 499 in Sachsen, Preussen. [citation needed]
Title
Title: King of Saxony[citation needed]
Death
He died in 524 Saxony, Germany[5]
Issue
Children: Hulderick Von Saxony, b. 510, Sachsen, Preussen, d. 540.
Sources
↑ J. A. Giles, Editor, Anglo Saxon Chronicles [1] London: G. Bell & Sons, 1914. Accessed August 3, 2018 jhd
↑ George Fisher. A Genealogical Companion and Key to the history of England: Consisting of copious genealogical details of the British Sovereigns, Page 25 London: Simkin and Marshall, 1832. Accessed August 3, 2018 jhd
↑ Find-a-Grave Memorial# 144370782 Hartwaker von Sachsen Created by Memerizion. Record Added Mar 30, 2015. Accessed September 3, 2017 jhd
↑ Ancestry Family Trees Data: Text: https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/tree/27492901/familyAncestry Family Trees Publication: Name: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.;
↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 Record for Hulderick De Saxony; Record for King Hatwigate De Saxony; Record for Hatwigate De Saxony. One World Tree. Ancestry.com.
↑ 6.0 6.1 Jansen, Bernd Joseph: Genealogy of Bernd Joseph Janssen at GenealogieOnline
See also:
Anderson, J. (1732). Royal Genealogies: or the genealogical tables of Emperors, Kings and Princes from Adam to these times, London: James Bettenham. pp. 184 & 447. Retrieved from https://books.google.hu/books?id=yrqeY839bMwC | von SACHSEN Hattwigate (I58006)
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| 5237 |
Have two sons at White Earth. | BRANCHAUD Ellen (I1377)
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| 5238 |
Hawys (Hadeguisa) was the wife of Robert Marmion.[1]
Hawys and Robert had children:[1]
Roger;
Helto;
Manasses;
Hawys became a nun in the abbey of Holy Trinity, Caen, Normandy, In the year when Henry, king of the England subdued Normandy [1106], gifting to the abbey and the sisters lands in Normandy as Robert Marmion had held them at his death with the consent of her sons, Roger, Helto, and Manasses, who placed the gift on the alter with her, which was witnessed by Willelmus Marmion, Herluinus de Fonteneio, Rogerius de Moeio, Godefridus filius Robert, Willelmus de Ulfieres, Robertus Aculeus, Hamo filius Roberti de Mainsil Ursin, Robertus filius Roberti filii Ernesii et Gersenda mater ejus.[1]
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 John Horace Round, ed, Calendar of Documents Preserved in France, Illustrative of the History of Great Britain and Ireland, (London: Printed for Her Majesty's Stationery Office by Eyre and Spottiswoode, 1899), I:142, Digital Image Internet Archive (https://archive.org/stream/calendardocumen00roungoog#page/n204/mode/2up accessed 9 October 2017). No 425. | UNKNOWN Hawise (I60190)
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| 5239 |
Hazel and Sprague were married over 50 years. | Family: SMITH Sprague W. / SMITH Hazel (F9068)
|
| 5240 |
Hazel Lillian Brown Davis is the only surviving descendant still living on part of the original homestead of Wright S. Brown and Hannah Newland Brown who settled there sometime in 1783. She was one of only two children of William Wallace Brown, Jr. She married Arthur Thompson Davis but is childless as was her brother, William Wallace Brown, 3rd.
Part of the original homestead where she lives is located on Brown road, just north of 9P road, at the intersection of Pultney and Brown roads, east of Saratoga Lake. The land north of her home is the rest of the homestead which is now owned by others.
Her family once had an inn further up the road, which included a swimming pool, made of white tile bricks, indirect lighting, beautiful gardens surrounding the place and a pond. The swimming pool is in disrepair and falling apart but it had to be beautiful in it's day.
Elsie Eno
5641 County Road, Rte # 50
Granville, NY but send to Hazel's address.
Hazel Lillian Brown DavisSTILLWATER — Hazel Lillian Brown Davis passed away peacefully Saturday, Sept. 11, 2010, at her home on Brown Road, surrounded by her loved ones.She was 91.She was born June 1, 1919, in Stillwater to the late W. Wallace and Jennie Strang Brown.She was the wife of the late Arthur (Tom) Davis, who passed away in 2000.Hazel started school in a one-room school house in Wayville, then went on to graduate from Saratoga Springs High School and receive her business degree from SUNY Delhi.As soon as she was strong enough to carry a platter, Hazel started working at the Old Homestead Summer Tourist Resort, which was owned by her parents. During World War II she worked at General Electric as a machine operator, and she later worked at Saratoga Hospital as the print shop operator.Hazel was an active member in the Order of the Amaranth and the Order of the Eastern Star, where she held many offices on local and state levels.In addition to her parents and husband, Hazel was predeceased by her brother, W. Wallace Brown Jr.; and her cousin, Benjamin Marshall Pierce.Survivors include Elsie Eno, who was her caregiver and her true and devoted friend for many years and whom she called her “Kid”; as well as her sister-in-law, Gloria Driscoll.Calling hours will be held from 1 to 3 p.m. and from 5 to 7 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 15, 2010, at the Dunn Funeral Home, 729 N. Hudson Ave., Stillwater.A funeral service will be held at 10:30 a.m. Thursday, Sept. 16, 2010, at the funeral home.Burial will be in Stillwater Union Cemetery.Memorial contributions in Hazel’s name may be made to The Community Hospice of Saratoga County, 179 Lawrence St., Saratoga Springs, NY 12866; or to a charity of one’s choice.For directions, condolences and obituary information, go to www.Dunnfuneralhomes.com . | Brown Hazel Lillian (I52659)
|
| 5241 |
Hazel Lillian Brown still lives on part of the original homestead of Wright S. Brown, at the intersection of Pultney and Brown Roads in Stillwater, Saratoga County, NY. | Source (S1334)
|
| 5242 |
Hélie de Semur-en-Brionnais married about 1033 to Robert I, Duke of Burgundy.[1]
Sources
↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2025, Seigneurs de Semur. | SEMUR Hélie (I59819)
|
| 5243 |
Hélisende m. bef. c. 1008 Lord Geraldus II de la Ville Tancrède*
Children:
Baron Raoul I FitzGerald le Chamberlain de la Ville Tancrède*
Aumary (Almericus) d'Abitot
Gerold (Tancarville*) de Roumare
*The name of Tancarville does not appear until the early twelfth century, first shown in a charter for Henry I in 1103 for Hélisende's grandson, Earl William de Tancarville.
The COUNTS of TANCARVILLE: by J.R. Planché
No identification of this noble Norman has yet been made by any of the commentators on the "Roman de Rou," in which alone we find such a personage included in the list of the followers of the Duke of Normandy. Mr. Taylor says, "M. le Prévost rather inconclusively observes that Ralph, William's guardian, was too old and his children too young to be engaged," and adds, "Ralph's age is hardly itself a competent contradiction to Wace's statement; for his charter giving the Church of Mireville to Jumièges shows that he was living in 1079. William, his son and successor as Chamberlain, so appears in 1082." I certainly do not share the opinion of Le Prévost, and am at a loss to know where he found that Ralph, the Chamberlain of Tancarville, was guardian to Duke William. I have just mentioned this Ralph as the supposed brother of Gerold de Roumare and uncle of the William de Roumare I believe to have been at Hastings. Ralph was hereditary chamberlain of Normandy; but which of his family had first exercised that office is at present unknown.
The small Church of St. George, in the village of that name in the forest of Roumare, first endowed by Duke William, was subsequently rebuilt by Ralph, who is styled by the Duke in his charter of confirmation, “Meus magister Aulaque et Camera mea princeps.” (“My major-domo or master of the household and first chamberlain.”) Ralph also had the church re-decorated, and confirmed the grant which his father, Geraldus, and his brothers had given to St. George. A brother of Ralph, named Giraldus, was also an officer of William's household; and it was "Coram Giraldo Dapifer meo" that William, while yet Duke of the Normans, ratified a convention between Hugh de Pavilly and the Canons of St. George, the witnesses being the same Giraldus and Robert his son.
Now we have here two Gerolds, one who simply styles himself "a soldier of Christ," and the other the Dapifer (steward or seneschal) of William, King of the English. We also find one of these Gerolds rejoicing in two wives, named Albreda and Emicia, and who has a son, Robert, by the first. The other Gerold had a wife named Helisendis. Whether they were both Gerolds of Roumare; how they were connected; which was the father of Roger de Roumare, and which of Ralph the Chamberlain, has yet to be distinctly proved. The names of Gerald, Robert, Ralph, and William were much too common at that period to be of themselves sufficient identification; but that the chamberlain of Tancarville or Tankerville mentioned by Wace was Ralph, the son of Gerold and father of William the Chamberlain, I think cannot reasonably be doubted.
Sources
↑ Colonial England, 1066-1215, by J. C. Holt, p. 228
Histoire du château et des sires de Tancarville" by Achille Deville, N. Périaux, 1834
The Counts of TANCARVILLE: by J.R. Planché
WASHBURN FAMILY FOUNDATIONS in Normandy, England and America, by Mabel Thacher Rosemary Washburn ... WASHBURN FAMILY FOUNDATIONS
The Battle Abbey Roll with Some Accounts of the Norman Lineages, by Duchess of Cleveland, publ. 1889 by John Murray, London, England. Battle Abbey Roll
Urso d’Abitot – Sheriff of Worcestershire, by Eric Smith Redmarley D’Abitot
Chester Southworth Washburn & Family - Rev. Daniel Washburn Jones | UNKNOWN Hélisende (I60180)
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| 5244 |
He always took great interest in studies and became probably one of the best Mathematicians in the Country. Advanced as far as possible at the old Cobb's school house and at Grafton Centre, then attended New York Normal School at Albany, NY. commenced teaching when eighteen and followed it for a great many years. When he married, he bought out the heirs to the old homestead and resided there a number of years. He then sold out to Simeon Corbin and came west. Bought land west of Minonk, IL of the Illinois Central Railroad Co., and made a nice home. Followed farming, surveying and teaching. He has been County Surveyor nearly forty years. March 25, 1902, he and his wife celebrated their fiftieth anniversary of their marriage. Takes great delight in figuring out difficult problems and does surveying in other parts of the State. (Almond Alexander Davison, brother of Daniel Harrison Davison)
(The following was copied from the Minonk, IL newspaper at the time of his death, by Elsie Arvilla Davison-Simpson.)
DATE: September 17, 1914
DEATH PICKS OUT A SHINNING TARGET
Earthly pilgrimage of Daniel Harrison Davison closes on last Sunday night.
Long an Illustrious Citizen.
Funeral Services held at Late Home at 3:30 p.m. yesterday and Burial in Minonk Cemetery.
Daniel Harrison Davison, for many years one of Minonk’s most illustrious citizens, died at his home in this city on Sunday night at 9:45 o’clock. He had lived longer than his allotted three score years and ten, the active part of his life covering that period of time. Two years ago he began to show the feebleness of age, and death was surreptitously hastened when a stroke of paralysis overcame him one day last week, which caused the aged man to sink gradually into eternal sleep of death. His age was 88 years, 3 months and 19 days.
The life history of Daniel H. Davison, is full of intense interest. As we turn over the pages which record from birth to death this man’s career, we feel that there is written something deeper, something greater than we are accustomed to read. Born at Grafton, Rensselaer County, NY, on May 25, 1826, he came of ancestry that can be traced back as far as 1611, when Nicholas Davison, was born and who, as early as 1639, came to America and landed at Charleston, Mass., as the agent of Matthew Cradock, a merchant of London, and the first nominal governor of Mass. The Davisons were closely connected with all the events of those momentious times, various members of the family taking part in the Revolutionary War and the French and Indian Wars. They lived through the Puritan days and saw witchcraft come, and saw witchcraft go.
All of the hardships of those pioneer days were met with that perseverance and that determination which implanted in the decendants the strength of character, the virility, the ambition, which resulted in success for so many of them.
Daniel H. Davison, grew to manhood in the Empire State, and while still a resident of that State, he was united in marriage to Miss Louisa Ann Bly. Mr. Davison, became the owner of the old homestead, which was owned and improved by his great grandfather, and which had been in possession of the family from that time until 1855, when it was finally sold to other parties. In the meanwhile Daniel H. Davison, turned his attention to School teaching and to topographical surveying. The latter occupation took him at different times to Maine, Massachusetts, and to Pennsylvania, and these journeys afforded him much experience and general information.
In 1857, Mr. Davison, came to Illinois and invested in 80 acres of praire land lying three miles west of Minonk, IL, for which he paid $16.00 per acre to the Illinois Central Railroad Co. The prairies at that time swarmed with wolves and at the very site where he later built his home, he waged a fierce battle with a den of the animals. From time to time Mr. Davison added to his possessions and for the evening of his life he had acquired a rich competence.
During all these years, Mr. Davison, gained an enviable reputation as a Surveyor. He was a stanch Democrat and for more than fifty years he was elected and served as County Surveyor for Woodford County. His surveying expeditions took him to many localities and to many counties in the State. He was on the commission appointed to survey Hudson Township, McLean County, and he also surveyed Milan Township, Macon County. So accurate and well-known was his knowledge on the subject that he was frequently called as a witness in contested cases of boundry lines. He also did the surveying for all of the mines in this part of the State. His various surveys, when subjected to the decision of the Court were invariably approved.
But this man of brains needed more to occupy him than this. He was also a great Mathemetician and as such he gained a nation-wide reputation, many of his problems having been published throughout the United States and Canada. He composed many problems and theorems, and wrote many articles on that subject, most of them being published in the School Visitor of Ohio, which receives contributions from many of the ablest mathematicians in the United States.
What a marvelous life to contemplate and what a rich heritage to those who come after him! A life which touched the life of every President of the United States, except that of George Washington. (Also, though he did not know it, that of President Kennedy, who was born after his Death.) John Adams and Thomas Jefferson, living at the time of his birth, both passed away on the same day, July 4, 1826. Mr. Davison saw the wonderful development of the nineteenth century, and its application to the arts of life in this great twentieth century. He has seen history made in four Wars. Has seen Presidents and Generals come and go. Railroads and telephones and telegraphs and the wireless mode of communication developed. Automobiles and flying machines perfected, and to the very last his keen intellect followed with deep interest and progress that the world was making.
Some years ago, Mr. Davison retired from the farm and with his wife, moved to this city. Mrs. Louisa Ann Bly-Davison, departed from this life about five years ago.
Common in dress, common in speach, common in every day life, almost eccentric in his commoness, Mr. Davison was a familiar figure in the city. Unostentatious at all times, his worth, like that of all men of finer clay, was but realized after it grew beyond our reach. Mr. Davison lived to be the oldest of all the generations in the history of the Davison family.
The following children survive: Mrs. Ada C. Taylor, of Minonk, IL; Joseph a. Davison of Ft. Myers, FL; Daniel Melvin Davison of Bloomington, IL; Cyrus Elmar Davison of El Campo, TX; Mrs. Minnie A. (F.W.) Wilcox of Minonk, IL; Dr. Dexter H. Davison of Bombay, India; and Orris Merton Davison of Woodrow, FL. Mary H. Davison died in childhood, and William Archer Davison, passed away in 1891. There are also twenty-two grandchildren who survive, and seven great-grandchildren, and one aged brother, Almond Alexander Davison of Manito, IL.
Short funeral services were held at the residence yesterday afternoon at 3:30, being conducted by Rev. J. Clark Oranger of the First Baptist Church. The music was furnished by a quartette composed of Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Parks, (son of Louisa Malinda Davison-Parks, daughter of Daniel P.M. Davison, and nephew and niece and their two children.), Miss Louisa and Harvey Parks.
The Rob Norris Lodge, A.F.& A.M., of which the deceased had been an honor member for many years, led the funeral procession to the Mononk Cemetery, where they conducted the impressive Masonic burial services, Louis Zinger of Pekin, officiating.
Those from out of town who came to attend the funeral were, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hedrick, (daughter of his son Joseph,) and Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Davison, (son of Joseph,) of Polo, IL. Mrs. Hattie Webber-Davison, (wife of William Archer Davison,) and Miss Nellie Webber, (her sister,) of Rutland; Edward Wilson, Mrs. Dr. Mammen and Daniel Melvin Davison and family, (Daniel M., is son of D.H., Edward Wilson, D.M.'s brother-in-law; Mrs. Mammen, is Sarah Malinda Parks-Mammen, fifth child of Louisa Malinda Davison-Parks, a neice of Daniel H. Davison;) all came from Bloomington, IL. Cyrus Elmer of El Campo, Texas; and Orris M. Davison of Woodrow, FL, (a son). Because of the European War, all efforts to reach Dr. Dexter H. Davison, (a son) of Bombay, India were unavailing.
The family wishes to express their sincere thanks for the many kindnesses shown by their friends. | DAVISON Daniel Harrison (I35437)
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| 5245 |
He and Ann Marie Carey had two children, all unknown. | Annable Edwin Everett (I53142)
|
| 5246 |
He and his sister spent their adult lives working in their family hardware store. He died in 1974. Social Security informaton. SS# 343-10-7828. | Raue Benno (I52955)
|
| 5247 |
He and his wife, Hannah Stewart Annable were baptized into the church in Millington, CT, May 12, 1791.
According to the Connecticut Revolutionary Records, John Annable served during the Revolutionary War as a private in the regiment of Captain Holmes of East Haddam, Middlesex County, CT. | Annable John (I53608)
|
| 5248 |
He and Mary Steel had three children. They are unknown. | Annable William Henry (I53418)
|
| 5249 |
He appears in a pedigree of Pughe, of Mathavarn, in Cyveilog, reaching back to biblical Adam, presented by Lewys Dwnn. The pedigree illustrates the fondness of the Welsh for pedigrees as well as the difficulty of determining at what point the pedigree moves from history to legend. [1]
The pedigree also appears in a work by the Powys-land Club.[2]
The complete pedigree is presented and discussed at Space: John Pughe's Descent from Adam
Birth
fl c. 0305 Paternus Pasrut (of the Red Robe) ap Tacitus
Place: Scotland, of the tribe Venicones (map)
Father Tacitus ap Cein Tegid (fl c.270) [3]
Wikipedia entry
Padarn Beisrudd ap Tegid literally translates as Paternus of the Scarlet Robe, son of Tegid. His father may have borne the Roman name of Tacitus. Padarn is believed to have been born in the early 4th century in the Old North (or Hen Ogledd) of Roman Britain. According to Old Welsh tradition, his grandson, Cunedda certainly came from Manaw Gododdin, the modern Clackmannanshire region of Scotland.
One traditional interpretation identifies Padarn as a Roman (or Romano-British) official of reasonably high rank who had been placed in command of Votadini troops stationed in Clackmannanshire in the 380s or earlier by the Emperor Magnus Maximus. Alternatively, he may have been a frontier chieftain in the same region who was granted Roman military rank, a practice attested elsewhere along the empire's borders at the time.
His command in modern Scotland likely lasted till his death and was then assumed by his son Edern. Edern was the father of Cunedda, founder of the Kingdom of Gwynedd.
The coat of Padarn Redcoat is one of the Thirteen Treasures of the Island of Britain.[4]
Name
Padarn Beisrudd
Patern Pesrut ap Tegig/Tecit
Paternus Pasrut (of the Red Robe) ap Tacitus[5]
Family
(O)uen map (H)iguel map Catell map Rotri map Mermin map Etthil merch Cinnan map Rotri map Iutguaul map Catgualart map Catgollaun map Catman map Iacob map Beli map Run map Mailcun map Catgolaun Iauhir map Eniaun girt map Cuneda map Ætern map Patern Pesrut map Tacit map Cein map Guorcein map Doli map Guordoli map Dumn map Gurdumn map Amguoloyt map Anguerit map Oumun map Dubun map Brithguein map Eugein map Aballac map Amalach, qui fuit Beli magni filius et Anna mater eius quam dicunt esse consobrina Mariæ uirginis matris d’ni n’ri ih’u xp’i.[6]
Sources
↑ Lewys Dwnn. "Montgomeryshire Pedigrees: Heraldic Visitations of Wales and part of the Marches Pughe, of Mathavarn, in Cyveilog, to Adam page 205. Accessed 25 March 2020 jhd
↑ John Rhydderch. Pedigreees of Montgomeryshire Families selected about the yeare 1711-12 from Lewis Dwnn's Original Visitation. London: Powysland Club, 1888. [https://archive.org/details/pedigreesofmontg00rode/page/70/mode/2up/search/Clydno The Pedigree of Phghe of Mathavarn, in Cyveilog, to Adam. Pages 68-74. Archive.org. Accessed 27 March 2020 jhd
↑ Celtic Kingdoms of the British Isles: Celts of Britain: Venicones, added 2014-07-01, amb
↑ Padarn Beisrudd article on Wikipedia
↑ Celtic Kingdoms of the British Isles: Celts of Britain: Venicones
↑ Harleian genealogies 1: Gwynedd part 1, amb
Ford, David Nash, Details of the Ancestry of Cunedda Wledig, The Origins of Gwynedd | ap TEGID Padarn Beisrudd (I59298)
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| 5250 |
He appears on both 1860 and 1870 census with
his parents, but is not mentioned on the
mortgage forclosure against Edytha. Perhaps he
died between 1870 and 1876. | PULSIFER Almonde (I6796)
|
| 5251 |
He bought of Phillip Freeman, of Boston, a farm lying partly in Dudley, Massachusetts, and partly in Thompson, Connecticut. He settle there about 1769. | FREEMAN Joseph (I3130)
|
| 5252 |
He came from Cornwood, Devon. William had 5 wives (1)
Grace Ives, Mary Rogers, Grace Butterice, Phebe Green, and Sarah
(Cutting) Brown | HEALY Paul (I39506)
|
| 5253 |
He came from New York to Ann Arbor, Mi. in 1824. | PULSIFER Zerah S. (I8073)
|
| 5254 |
He came to Minnesota in 1855.
http://genealogytrails.com/minn/wabasha/bios_c.html | COOKE Lytle Osman (I57035)
|
| 5255 |
He carried on a large fishing business in Ipswich. Pulsifer Wharf or
landing is noted in old documents. He owned considerable property,
large dwelling, fish stages, etc. 37 ponds of pewter, silver spoons,
mentioned in inventory. Many purchases of real estate recorded. | PULSIFER Francis (I7238)
|
| 5256 |
He commanded a ship for 20 years, sailing from Salem. He was
afterwards a clerk of Middlesex Co. Year of death uncertain, as
pages were torn. | PULSIFER Bickford (I6904)
|
| 5257 |
He could also have been born in Taunton, Plymouth County, MA. In 1717 he was living in Dighton. By 1719 he was in Easton. He owned land north and west of his brother, Seth. By 1721 he was in Norton, Bristol County,MA. He worked as a joiner. It is thought he had a wife previous to his marriage to Elizabeth Vinton. He died at the age of 65 years.
In the years 1701/02, he was named in a lawsuit along with another merchant, George Hollard brought by merchant, East Apthorp, also of Boston, Suffolk County common pleas. | Babbitt Erasmas (I52471)
|
| 5258 |
He could have been born in New Towne or Concord. | Davis Simon (I51704)
|
| 5259 |
He could have died in Niles, Cayuga, NY. | Annable IV Samuel (I53466)
|
| 5260 |
He died at eight months, 17 days. | Loghry Elwin O. (I52948)
|
| 5261 |
He died at one years old. | Annable Prince (I52262)
|
| 5262 |
He died at the age of 82 in Barnstable.
He was 82 years old when he died.
He was 82 years old when he died. | Allyn Samuel (I53378)
|
| 5263 |
He died at the age of 86 years. | Snow Anthony (I53738)
|
| 5264 |
He died at the age of five years.
He died at the age of five years. | Snow David (I53696)
|
| 5265 |
He died in a mining accident in the Chateauguay Ore and Iron Mine in Lyon Mountain, NY. | LANCTO Arthur P (I5234)
|
| 5266 |
He died in his daughter's home in Alameda, California. | COOKE Lytle Osman (I57035)
|
| 5267 |
He died in Stow at the age of 74 years. | Brown Joshua (I50529)
|
| 5268 |
He died the day after his wife did. He had a
son Nathaniel who narrowly escaped
massacre at the surrender of Fort William
Henry in the French Indian Wars. | PULSIFER Thomas (I7977)
|
| 5269 |
He died unmarried. He was in Capt. Wade's Company, Col. Little's
Regt., 17th Mass.; was present at bunker Hill and at the battle of
Long Island. Ipswich vital records says he died of consumption. | PULSIFER Archelaus (I6835)
|
| 5270 |
he disappeared and his whereabouts has never been learned. | LARSON Herman (I4902)
|
| 5271 |
He drove his car into the Kankakee Rive, driving to fast and perhaps had been drinking and died by drowning. | Brown Fred (I52761)
|
| 5272 |
He graduated from Lyon Mountain High School and served in the U.S. Navy on the USS New Jersey in World War II. He was later employed at Republic Steel in Lyon Mountain and later in Mineville and later worked for Luck Vending in Plattsburgh until his retirement. He helped form the Lyon Mountain Boy Scout and Cub Scout troops and was a founding member of the Lyon Mountain Fire Department and served as chief. He enjoyed gardening and birdwatching. He was a past member of the Sorrell-Woodward American Legion in Lyon Mountain and the Hunter's Home hunting club. | THOMPSON Alvin Levi (I12494)
|
| 5273 |
He graduated from Union College, Schenectady, NY in 1846, was admitted to the bar in Philadelphia, PA in 1850, was graduated from Hamilton Theological Seminary, NY 1854, and received the degree of Doctor of Divinity, from Union College in 1867. | Anable Courtland Wilcox (I53230)
|
| 5274 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I274)
|
| 5275 |
He held in England at Norton and other places. He is said to have been born in 1110, but this seems too late, since his father would appear to have died by 1112, and there were younger sons. In addition, Aubri appears as a member of the French royal household 1122-9, suggesting a birth at least 20 years earlier. He is traditionally said to have married Amice de Gloucester (this cannot be documented in contemporary sources, but is chronologically possible). If so it was late in life, and of no genealogical consequence). He would seem to have been Count in 1166, and is said to have died ca. 1182. His son and heir was Aubri II, Count of Dammartin, who died 1200.[1]
He married Mathilde abt 1133. Mathilde was born about 1118, d aft 1147.
Sources
↑ Post on soc.genealogy.medieval
See also:
http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/GEN-MEDIEVAL/1997-02/0855106136
http://www.geneajourney.com/dammrtn.html#alberic2
Genealogics shows the following sources for this individual:
[S00301] Schwennicke, Detlev (Ed.), ~Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag, Marburg. 3:649
[S01302] Bur, Michel, De quelques champenois dans l'entourage francais des Rois d'Angleterre aux XIe et XII siecles. | DAMMARTIN Alberic (I60042)
|
| 5276 |
He immigrated to US in 1873 from Sweden. | Olofsson Nels (Nils) Peter (I54336)
|
| 5277 |
He is also known as Esek.
He is also known as Esek. | Annable Esekel (I53176)
|
| 5278 |
He is buried in Bedford town green, Westchester County, New York. | HOLMES Elkanah (I48872)
|
| 5279 |
He is buried in Southville Cemetery in Stockholm (TC, AG, 1850, 1860, 1865, 1890, cemetery, newspaper) | OBER James (I55638)
|
| 5280 |
He is buried in the Caldwell cemetery which is located on Cedar Bluff road just off of Wright road in Saratoga. (Stillwater on the map) Located 1/2 mile east of Hiway 9 P-East of Saratoga Lake.
Saratoga County Surrogate's Court. Will book 23, pages 237 - 240, and file 82-33.Seth B. Caldwell died 1 Dec 1872 at Malta.Will dated 12 February 1872, Petition for proof of will filed 23 Dec 1872.Witnesses: James M. Andrews Jr. & Joseph W. Hill, both of Saratoga Springs.son: Charles H. Caldwell, Malta, executordau: Mary Caldwell, Town of SaratogaMark T. Caldwell, Town of Saratogagrandson: Ernest Caldwellgrandson: Joseph H. Caldwell, child of Mark T. Caldwellgranddau: Elizabeth Caldwell, child of Mark T. Caldwellgrandchild: Judson C. Brown, Hillsdale, Michigan, child of William Browngrandchild: Morgan Brown, Milton, child of William Browngrandchild: Ophelia Baker, Mechanicville, child of my daughter, Selinda Bakergrandchild: Sarah E. Baker, Malta, child of my daughter, Selinda Bakergrandchild: Odie Baker, Mechanicville, child of my daughter, Selinda Bakergrandchild: Edward Baker, Jame's Switch, Indiana, child of my daughter, Selinda Bakergrandchild: Attie Baker, Indianapolis, Indiana, child of my daughter, Selinda BakerCaldwell Cemetery inscriptions:Seth B. Caldwell died Dec. 1, 1872, 74y 4m 9dMary Caldwell, wife of Seth B., died Apr. 10, 1827, 28 yrs.Cynthia, wife of Seth B. Caldwell, d. Aug. 9, 1862, 56y.9m.4d.1850 October, Saratoga, Saratoga, New York. microfilm 432 roll 592 page 239Seth C. Caldwell, 51, farmer, NYCyntha, 44, NYMark, 24, farmer, NYMary, 21, NYHannah E., 17, NYCharles H., 7, NY1860 August, Saratoga Town, Saratoga County, New York. 1412/1536.Seth B. Caldwell, 62, farmer, NYCynthia, 54, NYCharles, 18, farm labor, NYLouiza B. Legget, 17, NYOrrin Hill, 21, farm labor, NY | Caldwell Seth Burgess (I53298)
|
| 5281 |
He is buried in the Dudley V. Gelder plot in Lakeview Cemetery, Purchase 1, Penn Yan, Yates County, NY. | Gelder Henry Wright (I52731)
|
| 5282 |
He is buried in the Dudley V. Gelder plot that is shared with Henry H. Gelder plot.
In the 1900 Census, Cornelius W. Elting, 21, a cousin, was living with them. He was the son of Louis B. Elting and his wife, Justina Brown, sister to Margaret Rebecca Brown Gelder. | Gelder Dudley V. (I52716)
|
| 5283 |
He is called "cordwainer" in a deed dated 1721 and a "Yeoman" in deed
that is conveying to Caleb Pool, for 300 pounds, 20 acres of land
near Lane Cove, and a house and barn which I built", dated Ipswich
Apr. 13, 1736.
The General Court had ordered a township 6 miles square to be laid
out and distributed to officers and soldiers engaged in the
expedition to capture Quebec in 1690 which was commanded by Lieut.
William Phips. The expedition was a failure. Ebenezer Pulsifer was
allowed one share in the right of his uncle Benedictus (Jr.), who
was a member of Lieut. Abraham Tilton's co. of Ipwich. Ebenezer was
allotted Share # 33, located "next to the ministers' lot # 32". The
township, afterwards Winchendon, Mass. was granted on condition of
actual settlement. Ebenezer probably. moved to the new land in 1736,
selling as noted above,, his house and farm at Gloucester., but later
returned there where his 9th child. Joseph, was born in 1740, and
others in subsequent years. | PULSIFER Ebenezer (I7074)
|
| 5284 |
he is not mentioned in Prudence's will | SILLOWAY Henry (I8723)
|
| 5285 |
He is supposed to be the son of Ragnar Lothbrok Sigurdsson and his first wife, shieldmaiden Lathgertha. The sons of Ragnar named as Fridleif, Radbard, Dunvat, Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye, Björn Ironside, Agnar and Ivar the Boneless, Ubbe, Ragnvald, Eric Weatherhat and Hvitserk in the Gesta Danorum by Saxo Grammaticus; Internet Archive : The first nine books of the Danish history of Saxo Grammaticus page 370: pub: D. Nutt, London 1894.
His DOB can be estimated (crudely) by the assumption that Ragnar Lodbroks sons were part of the Great Heathen Army who came together under a unified command to invade the four Anglo-Saxon kingdoms that constituted England in AD 865.
Sources
https://heimskringla.no/wiki/Ragnar_Lodbrog
See also;
English Wikipedia-Lagertha. | RAGNARSSON Fridleif (I58753)
|
| 5286 |
He learned the trade of saddler of James Miller. He pursed a
course of preparatory study and in 1842 became a
missionary to the indians and was in Missouri from
the summer of 1842 to 1848 and was much
loved by the indians there. He returned to
New England in 1848 and received a
commision from the American Board to return
as a "regular" missionary to the Ojibiwas near
Lake Superior in Wisconsin. His weakened
eye sight (he had lost an eye by accident in
his youth and the sight of the other eye was
weakened.) caused him to apply for release
granted 1855. Retired to a farm in Rosamond, Ill. | PULSIFER Charles (I6932)
|
| 5287 |
He lived in Plymouth, N. H. about 3 yrs; moved
to Canandaigua, N.Y. in 1816. After his death,
his widow returned to Plymouth, N. H. and
raised her family. | PULSIFER Charles (I6931)
|
| 5288 |
He lost his lands in 1102, which went to the crown. Arundel (both barony and Earldom) went to Adeliza the widow of King Henry I, and thus to the d'Aubigny family, and later to the FitzAlans. Shrewsbury or Shropshire ("Salop") did not have an Earl for centuries.
"Robert was baptized at Sées by Thierry de Mathonville, abbot of St Evroult, before the abbot's departure for the Holy Land about 1057. He can be found attesting charters before the Norman conquest of England in company with his father and elder brother, Roger. In 1073 he was knighted by William I at Fresnay, during a campaign by which the king sought to enforce the overlordship of Maine which he had won in 1063; and in 10778, like many of the younger generation of Norman nobles, Bellême joined the first rebellion by the king's eldest son, Robert Curthose. His mother, Mabel, was killed in December 1077 and Robert, together with other members of the family, witnessed a confirmation to Troarn made in her memory. It appears that shortly thereafter there was a division of family interests, with Robert taking responsibility for the family's holdings in northern France and his father, Roger, taking up residence in England with his new wife and other sons. Robert probably did not inherit his mother's lands outright, for his father retained an interest in his first wife's property; but he certainly seems to have been in day-to-day control during the 1080s. He received a memorandum from his father about routine matters of tenure, for example, and in 1086 he can be found judging two lawsuits involving tenants of the family's French lands. His relations with the king were good, for William the Conqueror arranged Bellême's marriage to Agnes, the heir of the small, but strategically important, county of Ponthieu, to the north-east of Normandy; and in 1087, when news reached him of William's death, Robert was on his way to visit the king in Rouen to discuss important business. Bellême, anxious about the uncertainty which attended a changeover of power, immediately returned home and, like other Norman nobles, expelled the garrisons which the king had placed in his castles.
"Bellême's marriage to Agnes, the elder daughter of Gui, count of Ponthieu, was arranged before 1087, but may not have taken place until about 1092, perhaps because of the age of Agnes. Their union was neither long-lasting nor successful and Agnes left Robert, probably shortly after the birth of their only child, Guillaume Talvas, and returned to Ponthieu; but despite the lurid story of marital collapse given in Orderic Vitalis's ecclesiastical history (Ordericus Vitalis, Eccl. hist., 4.300), there are no signs of discord between Robert and his father-in-law, Count Gui, with whom he judged a plea in the ducal court at Rouen in 1093. Robert witnessed a charter given by Gui, apparently on his deathbed, and it may be that Agnes returned to Ponthieu in the later 1090s to act on her father's behalf because of his advanced age. She probably took her son with her since he does not attest Robert's acts until 1106."[1]
Sources
↑ Thompson, Kathleen. "Bellême, Robert de, earl of Shrewsbury and count of Ponthieu (bap. c. 1057, d. in or after 1130), magnate." Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. 23 Sep. 2004; Accessed 27 March 2024. https://doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/2042.
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/NORTHERN%20FRANCE.htm#GuyIPonthieudied1100B
Yeatman, John Pym. The Early Genealogical History of the House of Arundel (Mitchell and Hughes, London, 1882) Page 8:" Count of Beleseme, Alencon, etc.; Earl of Arundel and Shrewsbury, etc., 1098; forfeited his English Earldom 1102; imprisoned at Wareham by Henry I. 1113" | MONTGOMERY Robert (I60000)
|
| 5289 |
He married (2) BETSEY LEGG November 13, 1794 in Winchester, Cheshire
Co., NH, daughter of CALEB LEGG and SUSANNAH. | Family: FREEMAN Ralph / LEGG Betsey (F3187)
|
| 5290 |
He married Deborah Peckham, sister of Mary after Mary's death.
He married Deborah Peckham, sister of Mary after Mary's death. | Myrick Benjamin (I53842)
|
| 5291 |
He married Maud de Ganelon & had children:
Robert
Guillaume II
Yves Bishop of Seez
Guerin Seigneur de Domfront; his daughter Adèle married Rotrou II, Vicomte de Chateaudun, Seigneur de Nogent & Mortagne. From him descend the Comtes du Perche.
Guillaume spent a good part of his time fighting against the Count of Maine in order to protect the Saosnois (country of Mamers). At the beginning, he took the side of Richard II, Duke of Normandy (who gave him Alencon) against his younger brother Robert. In 1028 Richard II died, and Robert (the Devil) became the Duke of Normandy in his turn. Guillaume I refused to pay homage & Robert besieged him and took Alencon. Guillaume was forced to capitulate.
Later, with his two sons, Foulques and Robert, he fought against Normandy again but was overcome by the troops of Robert 'the Devil' in the battle of Blavon. Foulques was killed, and his brother Robert was taken prisoner.
Guillaume I had the castle of Domfront built. His sons Robert, Guillaume, & then Yves succeeded to the Seigniory of Belleme.
Guillaume I Talvas was a friend of Robert 'the Pius' King of France & accompanied him to Arles for his marriage to Constance of Arles. When Hugues, the son of King Robert, revolted against his father, he took refuge in le Perche. Guillaume de Belleme arrested him and delivered him to the King. Research note: Mamers.
Note: ES III:636 identifies her as Dame de Conde-sur-Noireau, perhaps a Norman (a.d.H. Normandie) [Ref: ES III:636] Note: an der Herr Normandy is fairly obtuse, meaning her father was a minor functionary, unlikely associated with the 'county of Noireau' which I've not elsewhere seen.
Note
Attestâe en 997. Il fit construire le chãateau de Domfront.
Sources
Cawley, Charles: Medieval Lands, Normandy: Guillaume I de Bellême
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=jweber&id=I02045
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/6676093/person/-1236856786/facts
Roderick W. Stuart, "Royalty for Commoners." | BELLÊME Guillaume (I60009)
|
| 5292 |
He married Onega.
Diego Fernández, Conde de Limia MP
Spanish: Dn. Diego Fernández, Conde de Limia
Gender: Male
Birth: circa 870
Galicia, Spain
Death: circa 926 (47-65)
Guimarães, Braga, Portugal
Immediate Family:
Husband of Oneca
Father of Ximeno Dias; Muniadomna Díaz and Leodegundia Díaz
Sources
https://www.geni.com/people/Diego-Fern%C3%A1ndez-Conde-de-Limia/6000000013262800864?through=6000000013262861661
https://www.genealogieonline.nl/en/stamboom-homs/I6000000013262800864.php | FERNÁNDEZ Diego (I59896)
|
| 5293 |
He matriculated Pembroke College, Cambridge, 1616, with a B. A. 1619/20, and an M. A. 1623. He later became the rector of Rayleigh, Essex County, England. He died in 1643. | Vassall Stephen (I50300)
|
| 5294 |
He matriculated Pembroke College, Cambridge, 1616, with a B. A. 1619/20, and an M. A. 1623. He later became the rector of Rayleigh, Essex County, England. He died in 1643. | Vassall Stephen (I50369)
|
| 5295 |
He move along with five of his brothers to Whitingham, VT sometime around 1800. | Brown Jonas (I50988)
|
| 5296 |
He moved his family to Oregon; went to
work in a sawmill, fell and was killed.
He enlisted at Plattsburgh, NY Feb 1, 1906 in 5th Infantry NY
and was discharged on July 17, 1906. He was registered for Draft at time of
WWI but I find no record he ever had to serve in war time. In 1906 when Fred W.
was 23 years and 8 months when he enlisted his occupation was laborer, eyes blue,
hair brown, complexion ruddy, height 5'5 1/4". He lived at Crown Point, NY. So
must have either come back to Crown Point, New York from living with his Proctor grandparents at
North Hudson, NY or simply when enlisting at Plattsburgh, NY put home address as
Crown Point, NY where his father William lived. | PULSIFER Frederick William (I7261)
|
| 5297 |
He moved to Kansas City, MO. | O'Connel Edward Thomas (I52809)
|
| 5298 |
He moved to LaFayette,Tippacanoe County, Indiana. Was married to Julia E. Loghry, daughter of William Henry Harrison Loghry and Hannaretta Sicklar Swan. Where they not half-brother and sister before they married? | Swan Daniel (I52928)
|
| 5299 |
He never married. | Risdon Orange (I52411)
|
| 5300 |
He never married. His sister, Violet never wanted him to marry although he did have a girl friend. | O'Connel Charles Robert (I52882)
|
| 5301 |
He purchased land in Crown Point 1866. On 27
Nov. 1872, he mortgaged that property
most likely to pay his 1872 taxes. The
mortgage was recorded on 27 Aug. 1873 by
Amos at the clerk's office. According to
Spaulding's History of Crown Point, by 20
Nov. 1873, Amos was no longer living. Amos,
John Ober and a Mr. Ephriam Towner were
the only 3 men to be named on all the tax
lists for Crown Point (1818, 1835 and 1872).
John Ober was the only one surviving by
the time Mr. Spaulding wrote his short
history. | PULSIFER Amos (I6802)
|
| 5302 |
He received a legacy from the estate of Charity White on 5 Feb. 1660. | Tarne Deliverance (I52458)
|
| 5303 |
He remained unmarried. He had a will and and inventory of his estate in Newport, R. I .
He remained unmarried. He had a will and and inventory of his estate in Newport, R. I . | Peckham James (I53893)
|
| 5304 |
He removed to Hamilton, Madison Co., N.Y. | CONKEY Benjamin (I2075)
|
| 5305 |
He resided at Gloucester until about 1736 when he moved his family to
Kensington, Rockingham Co., N.H. His name appears on a petition dated
Nov. 21. 1746 regarding the building of a bridge (N.H. Prov. Papers,
Vol. 9;9; page. 583).
He was allowed 2.14 pounds in Dec. 1758 for expenses of his son,
Jonathan, a soldier, who was sick and died at Sheffield, Mass., on
his return from the Fort George Campaign.
It is supposed that they moved to Brentwood in the same county around
the year 1762, but there is no record of him in Brentwood, nor one at
Kensington after 1750.
A Jonathan Pulsifer was admitted as a settler at Penacook, N.H. Feb.
1725 on payment of 20 shillings. This is from the proprietors Book of
Rumford (now Concord, N.H.). It is probably the same man, but we are
not absolutely certain.
His will, dated Jan. 12, 1766 and proved Aug. 27, 1766, mentions his
wife Susanna, children Samuel, Benjamin, Hannah, Elizabeth Crane,
Mary, and grandson Jonathan Batchelder (Rockingham Probate). | PULSIFER Jonathan (I7493)
|
| 5306 |
He resided in Gloucester until after 1772 | PULSIFER Joseph (I7504)
|
| 5307 |
He resided in Holland, Mi. | SMITH George H. (I8942)
|
| 5308 |
He resided in Keene, Cheahire County, NH after his marriage. He wasin the service during the Civil War; was promoted to first lieutenant of Co. A., 14th NH. Vos., and promoted again to Adjutant, Jan. 4, 1865. (The History of Richmon, Cheshire County, NH, by William Baswett, p. 538) | Wright Luther Warren (I51640)
|
| 5309 |
He resided in Raymond, N.H. and when the war broke out, he left a
young wife and an infant son of 6 months old and hastened to bunker
Hill, where he was killed. | PRESCOTT John (I6707)
|
| 5310 |
He seems to have been a man of property, loaning money to his wife's
relatives in Gloucester. He owned a dwelling on Middle (now Salem?)
Street in Boston.
His wife, Sarah made a will dated Nov. 1, 1779 Boston Records in
which she says she is "of advanced age" | PULSIFER Joseph (I7513)
|
| 5311 |
He served in the civil War Co; 8th Me. Regt. He enlisted 22 Aug.
1861; wounded 18 Jun. 1864, fractured left shoulder at spotsyvania,
Va. Also wounded at Petersburg, Va. He is discribed as a farmer, age
21 years, light complexion, grey eyes brown hair, 5 feet 4 inches
Cert. # 106.873. Also on file, widows pension # 944.767. | PULSIFER Nathan (I7751)
|
| 5312 |
He served in the military Enlisted,
Private on 13 May 1861 at Co.D, 3rd Infantry Regiment in Grand Rapids, Michigan, United States. Enlisted: May 31, 1861
Co.D 3rd Infantry Regiment, Grand Rapids Michigan
Wounded: Battle of Malvern Hills, VA In the actions of June 30 and July 1,1862.
Company Cook August 1862.
Promoted to Corporal Sept 1862
Transferred: to Regular Battery Jan 18, 1863.
He lived in Iona, Michigan in Jun 1861. James served in the military Transferred, Artillery Regiment, Regular Army on 18 Jan
1863. When Hooker made his march around the left flank of Lee's army, before the battle of Chancellorsville, C, under Lieut.
Meinell, was left with the force which was intended to cross below Fredericksburg and hold the enemy in his works. It thus
missed the battle. (F-K), under Turnbull, was more fortunate. On the 2d of May it rendered the Union cause most
opportune service. It was still attached to the 1st division 3d Army Corps. When the 11th Corps was routed, a battery of 22
guns was hastily thrown together at Hazel Grove, on ground dominating the enemy's advance. (F-K) was of this battery, the
fire from which, at short range, hurled back the victorious enemy discomfited. Of this struggle General H. J. Hunt, chief of
artillery of the army, remarked in his official report: "When the enemy, flushed with success, appeared before this battery,
they were met with a storm of canister first checking and then driving them back from whence they had emerged at three
hundred yards distance. It was a desperate combat between artillery and infantry, in which the former repulsed the latter,
flushed as they were with a great success, which they were following up when checked by this battery."
At Gettysburg, July 1-3, 1863, (F-K) again acted a distinguished part, losing Lt. Manning Livingston and 8 enlisted men killed,
14 wounded, 1 missing and 45 horses killed. It was on the Emmittsburg road supporting Humphreys' division when Sickles'
corps was attacked at Peach Orchard. This was about 3.30 P. M. July 2d. Here Captain D. R. Ransom while placing (F-K) in
position was wounded. When Sickles' corps fell back, (F-K) was rescued with only the greatest difficulty. It was in the
thickest of the fight when A. P. Hill took Birney's division in flank. Humphreys speaks in highest terms of the performance of
the battery that day.
early in the field in 1864. It accompanied Kilpatrick in his raid to Richmond, being engaged at Mechanicsville, Va., March 1st,
and stopped long enough in passing to throw 150 shells into the works guarding the enemy's capital. Soon after this (C-F-K),
consolidated, became one battery, serving with the cavalry. Under Sheridan it was actively employed. It accompanied him in
his raid on Richmond, May 9-24, 1864, passing the right of the enemy's army, defeating his cavalry, rejoining General Grant
June 24, near Chesterfield, Va. During the flank march to the James River, the battery was engaged at Hanover Court House,
May 31; Ashland, June 1, Bethesda Church, June 3, and in the works at the White House, June 20, 1864.
The next service of (C-F-K) was with Sheridan in the Shenandoah Valley. It was attached to the horse artillery brigade,
commanded by Captain L. L. Livingston. Engaged near Winchester, August 11, on road to Front Royal, August 16, at
Woolperth's cross-road and Sheperdstown, August 25, and Smithfield, August 29, 1864. The character of these affairs
presaged the nature of the fighting that was to follow. Each commander, but particularly Early, seemed anxious to test the
capacity and mettle of his opponent.
In the battle of Cedar Creek, October 19, 1864, (C-K-F) was present. After this it was engaged with others of Sheridan's
troops in sweeping the Shenandoah Valley of the enemy, the engagement at Mount Jackson, Va., being the severest in
which the battery took part. This practically closed the fighting of the battery during the war. That winter it went into
quarters at Pleasant Valley, Maryland, and the next spring moved to the vicinity of Washington City.
Battery"K" 3rd Artillery
(Attached to Battery "F".) Artillery, 1st Division, 3rd Army Corps, Army of the Potomac, to May, 1863. 1st Regular
Brigade,Artillery Reserve, Army of the Potomac, to November, 1863. Artillery Brigade, 5th Army Corps, Army of the
Potomac, to February, 1864. (Consolidated with Battery "C"February, 1864.) 2nd Brigade, Horse Artillery, Army of the
Potomac, to August, 1864. Horse Artillery, Army of the Shenandoah, Middle Military Division, to December, 1864. Horse
Artillery Reserve, Army of the Shenandoah, to April, 1865. Horse Artillery Brigade, 22nd Army Corps, to August, 1865.
SERVICE.--Battle of Chancellorsville May 1-5.Battle of Gettysburg, Pa., July 1-3. Bristoe Campaign October 9-22. Advance to
line of the Rappahannock November 7-8. Rappahannock Station November 7. Mine Run Campaign November 26-December
2. Rapidan Campaign May 4-June 12. Wilderness May 5-7. Spotsylvania Court House May 8-21. Cold Harbor June 1-12. Siege
of Petersburg June 16 to August 5. Sheridan'sShenandoah Valley Campaign August 7-November 28. Near Winchester August
11. Near Kearneysville August 25. Battle of Cedar Creek October 19. Duty in the Shenandoah Valley until April, 1865, and in
the Defenses of Washington, D.C., until August, 1865.
He served in the military Discharged on 8 Feb 1867 at Fort Warren in Boston, Massachusetts, United States.
http://www.nps.gov/civilwar/search-soldiers-detail.htm?soldierId=F5D886BE-DC7A-DF11-BF36-B8AC6F5D926A
Battle Unit Name: 3rd Regiment, US Artillery (Regular Army)
Side:Union
Company: K
Soldier's Rank In:
Soldier's Rank Out: First Sergeant
He Old Railroaders on 13 Aug 1882 at The Brooklyn Daily Eagle in Brooklyn, Kings, New York, United States. Excerpt: The
Brooklyn Daily Eagle, Vol.43, No.223
Sunday August 13, 1882
The Fort Hamilton Street Car Line:
James F. Newland has put in nine years of active service.
James Railroad Men on a Picnic on 18 Aug 1885 at The Brooklyn Daily Eagle in Brooklyn, Kings, New York, United States.
Brooklyn City Employes Going: to Bay View Park .
One of the large cars which are used on the Fort Hamilton branch of the Brooklyn City RailroadCompany drew up at the
main office of the company on Fulton street this afternoon, and was speedily filled by about 150 railroad men bent on a
jolly time.
The men were members of the Greenwood Mutual Benefit Association, an organization composed of employes of the
Brooklyn City Railroad. Their destination was Bay View Park, and six gaily harnessed horses wore attached to the car. The
men will enjoy the pleasures of an afternoon and evening picnic.
The officers of tho association are Patrick J. Farrell, president; Michael Gleason, first vice president; John Moore, second
vice president; Patrick M. Rogan, John Hoffner and James F. Newland, secretaries; Charles E. Pitts, treasurer, and William
O'Brien, sergeant at arms.
He Fort Hamilton Fireman on 1 Feb 1888 at The Brooklyn Daily Eagle in Brooklyn, Kings, New York, United States. FORT
HAMILTON FIREMEN.
The Third Company In New Utrecht With in a Year.
A fire company has been organized at Fort Hamilton. The meeting for organization was held last night at the residence of
James Keegan in Fort Hamilton village. The requisite number of charter members, consisting of Messrs. Peter Gates, Henry
Martin, John H. McBride, Henry B. Johnson, Michael J. Gates, John Martin, James Furoy, William Keogan, James F.
Newland, Henry Holland, James Keegan, William J. Tumulty, Edward J. Parker, Thomas J. Parker, John H. Willis, Thomas J.
Tumulty, Edward P. Shields, William H. Blankley and Henry F. Parker. Five then signed the roll. The trustees elected were
Peter Gates, William H. Blankley, John H. McBride, Edward J. Parker and William Keegan., The officers chosen for the year
were Henry Martin, foreman; Michael J. Gates, assistant foreman; William J. Keegan, secretary; William H. Blankley,
treasurer. The name adopted for the company is Hamilton Hook and Ladder Company, No. 3. Messrs. Peter Gates, Henry
Martin, William Keegan, Edward J. Parker and Henry B. Johnson were appointed a committee to sew Justice Charles W.
Church about the legal steps necessary for an appropriation to purchase the apparatus. The committee will report at a
meeting to be called by the Chair. The meeting passed a resolution of thanks to Foreman Rupert Werner, of Bay Ridge
Engine Company, No. 2, and to William G. Brammen of the same company, for their assistance in the meeting.
3rd Regiment, Michigan Infantry (1st organization)
He stood 6-0 with blue eyes, dark brown hair and a light complexion and was 21 years old and probably still living in Ionia
county when he enlisted in Company D on May 13, 1861. (Company D was composed in large part of men who came from
western Ionia county and Eaton county.) He was wounded at New Market Crossroads and at Malvern Hill, Virginia, on June
30 and July 1, 1862, respectively. He soon rejoined the Regiment, however, and was reported as a company cook in August
of 1862. James was a Corporal in January of 1863 when he was transferred to the regular Army.
3rd Regiment, US Artillery (Regular Army)
Assigned possibly as a Private, to Battery K, Third United States artillery at Camp Pitcher, Virginia, on January 18, 1863, to
serve out the balance of his term of enlistment. He reenlisted on February 8, 1864, at Rappahannock Station, Virginia in the
same battery, was presumably absent on veterans furlough for 30 days and probably returned to the Regiment on or about
the first week of March. He was appointed Corporal on October 27, promoted to Sergeant on April 1, 1865, and was
mustered out as First Sergeant on February 8, 1866, at Fort Warren in Boston harbor, Massachusetts.
After his discharge from the army James remained in Boston where he married Mary Monaghan on March 31, 1866, and
they had nine children: John J. (b. 1867), Mary A. (b. 1871), Charles J. (b. 1872), Margaret E. (b. 1874), Daniel M. (b. 1876),
Martha (b. 1877), Elias J. (b. 1879) and Susan (b. 1886), and James F. (b. 1888).
James eventually moved to Brooklyn, New York, where he lived the remainder of his life. In the spring of 1873 James was
residing at 715 Flushing avenue, suffering from deafness in both ears (possibly as a consequence of his service in the
artillery), and in July of 1892 he was living at 52 Delmonico street in Brooklyn. By 1902 and 1903 he was living at 985 Myrtle
avenue. He was residing at 884 Myrtle avenue in April of 1904, April of 1907, August of 1909 and in 1912, and he worked as
a conductor on the street railway system in Brooklyn in 1902 and 1904. He received pension no. 1,056,334 (increased from
$12.00 to $15.00 per month in 1909).
James died at his home in Brooklyn at 6:00 a.m. on December 17, 1912, and was presumably buried in Brooklyn.
3rd MI History:
At 8:30 on the morning of Thursday, June 13, 1861, ten companies of the Third Michigan infantry, led by its regimental band
and the field and staff officers, left their quarters at Cantonment Anderson on the site of the Kent county agricultural
fairgrounds, about two and a half miles south of the city of Grand Rapids, Michigan.
The Third Michigan marched north up the Kalamazoo Plank road (present-day Division street) into the city, turned down
Monroe street to Canal street and headed north to the Detroit & Milwaukee railroad depot, near what is today the corner
of Plainfield and Leonard streets.
Upon reaching the train station, the men boarded two special trains heading east, passing through Ada, St. Johns, Owosso,
Pontiac and terminated in Detroit, where the Third Michigan was feted by the citizens. The Regiment then boarded two
boats for a night cruise to Cleveland, Ohio. From Cleveland they went by rail to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and then on to
Harrisburg, Baltimore, Maryland, and finally arrived in Washington, DC, on Sunday June 16.
They were tired, hungry and weary when they marched to Chain Bridge just above Georgetown on the Potomac river,
where they set up their first wartime encampment on the bluffs overlooking the river. The camp was first called Camp
McConnell (after the colonel of the regiment) but then quickly changed to Camp Blair (after Austin Blair, then governor of
the state of Michigan).
The bands, the crowds, the patriotic fervor of late April soon give way to war's harshest reality: death. The first man to die
was William Choates of C company, who passed away on July 1, 1861, not amidst the glories of battle but in the throes of
fever. He was buried near Camp Blair, and is presumably buried there still.
The regiment's baptism into war came less than three weeks later in the action at Blackburn's Ford on July 18, 1861, a
prelude to the first battle of Bull Run on July 21. The Third suffered its first wartime casualty early on Saturday morning, July
20, 1861, when Homer Morgan of B company allegedly took his own life.
The Third Michigan infantry covered the retreat of the federal troops from Bull Run on July 21, and subsequently went into
a succession of camps around Washington throughout the fall and winter of 1861-62. The regiment participated in
McClellan's Peninsular campaign of 1862 and suffered its worst casualties to date at Fair Oaks, Virginia on May 31, 1862 and
at Groveton (or Second Bull Run) on August 29, 1862.
The Third Michigan infantry played a peripheral part in the battle of Fredericksburg on December 13, 1862.
He was wounded at the Battle of New Market Crossroads and Malvern Hills, VA. June 30th and July 1, 1862, and received a
Disabled Veterans pension until his death. He belonged to Thatford Post No.3 G.A.R.
3rd Michigan Infantry SERVICE:
Blackburn's Ford on July 18, 1861
Bull Run on July 21
Fair Oaks, Virginia on May 31, 1862
Groveton (or Second Bull Run) on August 29, 1862
Battle of Fredericksburg on December 13, 1862
Battle of New Market Crossroads and Malvern Hills, VA. June 30th and July 1, 1862
---------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------
James F. Newland was transferred to Battery K, 3rd U.S. Artillery Regiment, Regular Army, on January 18, 1863
Battery "K" 3rd U.S. Artillery Regiment
(Attached to Battery "F".)
Artillery, 1st Division, 3rd Army Corps, Army of the Potomac, to May, 1863.
1st Regular Brigade, Artillery Reserve, Army of the Potomac, to November, 1863. Artillery Brigade, 5th Army Corps, Army
of the Potomac, to February, 1864.
(Consolidated with Battery "C" February, 1864.)
2nd Brigade, Horse Artillery, Army of the Potomac, to August, 1864.
Horse Artillery, Army of the Shenandoah, Middle Military Division, to December, 1864.
Horse Artillery Reserve, Army of the Shenandoah, to April, 1865.
Horse Artillery Brigade, 22nd Army Corps, to August, 1865.
SERVICE.--
At Falmouth until April, 1863.
Chancellorsville Campaign April 27-May 6.
Battle of Chancellorsville May 1-5.
Battle of Gettysburg, Pa., July 1-3.
Bristoe Campaign October 9-22.
Advance to line of the Rappahannock November 7-8.
Rappahannock Station November 7.
Mine Run Campaign November 26-December 2.
Rapidan Campaign May 4-June 12.
Wilderness May 5-7.
Spotsylvania Court House May 8-21.
Cold Harbor June 1-12.
Siege of Petersburg June 16 to August 5.
Sheridan's Shenandoah Valley Campaign August 7-November 28.
Near Winchester August 11.
Near Kearneysville August 25.
Battle of Cedar Creek October 19.
Duty in the Shenandoah Valley until April, 1865,
and in the Defenses of Washington, D.C., until August, 1865.
He met Mary Monaghan while stationed at Fort Warren in Boston harbor. Mary was the cook at the residence of the
commander at Fort Warren.
They were married in Boston, MA on May 31, 1866. He was discharged from the Army on February 08, 1867, at Fort
Warren, Boston Harbor, MA
1. Family data, Newland Family Bible, The Holy Bible: Approbations of the Archbishops and Bishops of the United States and
Other Countries to Thomas Kelly's New and Most Elegant Edition of the Holy Bible, 1873 Edition of the Douay Bible and
Rheims Testement, (New York: Thomas Kelly, 1874); original owned in 2017 by Paul F. Klebaur, [ADDRESS FOR PRIVATE USE],
South Berwick, Maine.
---------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------
Pension Records:
Co.D, 3rd Michigan Infantry, (1st Organization)
Muster In: Grand Rapids, Mich, June 10, 1861, for a period of 3 Years, as a Private.
Muster Roll for Aug 1862: Company Cook
Muster Roll for Sept/Oct 1862: Promoted to Corporal.
Muster Roll for Jan/Feb 1863: Transferred to Regular Battery, Jan 18, 1863
---------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------
James F. Newland (First_Last)
Regiment Name 3 U.S. Arty.
Side Union
Company K
Soldier's Rank_In
Soldier's Rank_Out 1st Sgt.
Alternate Name
Notes
Film Number M233 roll 30
Questioniare from Dept. of Interior, Bureau of Pensions #1123533 dated May 1, 1902
James F. Newland
922 Myrtle St.
Brooklyn, NY
1. When were you born? 20th day of August 1839.
2. Where were you born? Saratoga Springs, NY
3. When did you enlist? May 13, 1861
4. Where did you enlist? Grand Rapids, Michigan
5. Where did you live before you enlisted? Ionia, Michigan
6. What was your post office address at enlistment? Ionia
7. What was your occupation at enlistment? Laborer
8. When were you discharged? Feburary 8, 1867
9. Where were you discharged? Fort Warren, Boston Harbor, MA
10. Where have you lived since discharge? Brooklyn, NY
11. What is your present occupation? Conductor, NYC Manhattan Transit
12. What is your height? 5ft 11.5in.
Your weight? 170lbs.
The color of your eyes? Blue
The color of your hair? Gray
Complexion? Light
Are there any permanent marks or scars on your person?
If so describe them. Ulcer sore on right leg caused by marching during war.
13. What is your full name? James Finchout Newland
---------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------
He was the conductor on the NYC Manhattan Transit "dummy" that ran on 3rd Ave. from Fort Hamilton to 25th Street.
Later he was the starter at Fort Hamilton. He is the conductor standing next to the dummy in the old family photograph.
James Finchout Newland and Mary Monahan were married on 31 May 1866 in Boston, MA.2 Mary Monahan, daughter of
Patrick Monahan and Bridget Sheridan, was born on 4 Aug 1846 in Northern Ireland, United Kingdom. She immigrated in
1852 to New York City, New York, United States. 3 She died on 23 Feb 1910 at the age of 63 in Brooklyn, New York, United
States.4,5 Mary was buried on 24 Feb 1910 at Holy Cross Cemetery 3620 Tilden Ave in Brooklyn, Kings, New York, United
States. She has reference number 30. Per Uncle Ed: Mary was the cook for the residence of the commander at Fort Warren,
Boston, MA. Boston marriage license lists her residence as Fort Warren.
Mary may have had sisters Anne, Susan, ??? (re: picture of the 4 Monahan sisters)
Burial:
3620 Tilden Ave
Brooklyn
Kings County
New York USA
Postal Code: 11203
Phone: 718-284-4520
Created by: Anonymous
Record added: Jul 08, 2012
Find A Grave Memorial# 93252849
2. Ibid.
3. , 1865, Kings County, NY, population, New Utrecht, ; , , .
4. Mary Newland, death certificate (Certificate and Record of Death) 4154 (23 February 1910), State of New York, New York
City Department of Health, .
5. Newland Family Bible. | NEWLAND James Finchout (I56404)
|
| 5313 |
He succeeded his father as count of Boulogne from 971 to 990. On his death his lands were divided between his 3 sons:
Baldwin got Boulogne
Arnulf got Ternois
a third son got Thérouanne.
Sources
Wikipedia - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnulf_III,_Count_of_Boulogne | BOULOGNE Arnulf (I58951)
|
| 5314 |
He succeeded his father before 1066 . He had many troubles with the religious, especially with the bishop of Liege Henry. In 1084 , he tried to capture Richilde of Hainault, but failed. In 1070 he founded the Abbey of Orval with Conrad I of Luxembourg. He also founded other religious establishments.
Orval Abbey (Abbaye Notre-Dame d'Orval) is a Cistercian monastery founded in 1132 in the Gaume region of Belgium and is located in Villers-devant-Orval, part of Florenville in the province of Luxembourg. In 1070, a group of Benedictine monks from Calabria settled here, at the invitation of Arnould, Count of Chiny, and began construction of a church and a monastery, but after some forty years, possibly because of the death of Count Arnould, they moved away again. They were replaced by a community of Canons Regular, who completed the construction work: the abbey church was consecrated on 30 September 1124.
Sources
Arnold I van Chiny, Wikipedia (NL). | CHINY Arnoul (I58995)
|
| 5315 |
He too was a clergyman. | Santee James M. (I54007)
|
| 5316 |
He was "Strategos of the Peloponnese." [1]
In 811, Leon Skleros was expelled from the palace by Emperor Mikhael I and was installed as Peloponnesiaci tractus ducem. [2]
Sources
↑ Wikipedia:DE:Skleros_(Adelsgeschlecht).
↑ Historia Leone Bardæ Armenii filio ("Scriptor Incertus") p. 336.
Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2023, Anti-Emperor (Skleros).
Settipani, Christian. Continuité des élites à Byzance (2006) p. 245. | SKLEROS Leon (I57950)
|
| 5317 |
He was a brother to Major Joseph Prescott, who married his wife's
sister; namely Susanna Prescott. They resided in Sanbornton, N.H. | PRESCOTT Stephen (I6721)
|
| 5318 |
He was a clergyman. | Santee Joseph (I54171)
|
| 5319 |
He was a companion of William the Conqueror in the Norman invasion of England on 27 September 1066. He was noted as the "captor of Harald" (Harold Godwyn). He was a crusader on the first crusade between 1096 and 1097.
"A charter dated 1100 included in the cartulary of Saint-Josse records a grant of fishing rights by "Guido comes Monsteroli et Pontivensium" which names "Hugo noster avus" and "patre meo Ingerrano."[1] This is inconsistent with the Chronique de Saint Riquier which records that "comte Gui fils du comte Hugues" succeeded after "Angelran son frère" was killed by the Normans and possessed the county of Ponthieu and the avouerie of Saint-Riquier. It is assumed that the charter provides the more reliable record of Guy's parentage."[2]
Marriages and Children
According to Medlands, he was twice married. By his first wife, he had one child:
Anne de Ponthieu
By his second wife, he had four children:
Enguerrand
Agnes
Ida
Mathilde
Sources
↑ Chronique de l'abbaye de Saint-Riquier, "Remarques", p. lxvii, which does not cite the reference of the cartulary of Saint-Josse
↑ https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/nfraamp.htm#GuyIPonthieudied1100B
See also:
Phillips, Weber, Kirk and Staggs Families of the Pacific Northwest, by Jim Weber on rootsweb.com (now defunct)
http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=7122234&pid=2708 | PONTHIEU Guy (I59995)
|
| 5320 |
He was a cordwainer in Walpole and Oxford, Massachusetts. He bought land in the southeast part of Dudley in 1747. He and thirteen sons served in the revolution, aggregating over sixty years of service. The father had been in the colonial service in the French wars. His will was proved May 5, 1795. | FOSTER Timothy (I37832)
|
| 5321 |
He was a doctor at Wilmington, Vermont and died there at age 25
years. | PULSIFER Billings (I6905)
|
| 5322 |
He was a Farmer, residing at 635 Lowell Street, Methuen, MA.
World War I Draft Registration, 1917, Merrill describes himself as tall, stout, with brown hair and blue eyes. He was married with one child.
1930 Methuen, MA Census:
Merrill was a Motorman for the Railroad.
Living with wife Maud and daughters Margaret and Barbara.
World War II Draft Registration, 1942. Merrill was living in Haverhill, MA with Olga and he worked for the Eastern Mass. Railway in Lawrence, MA. | BRAGDON Merrill Everett (I56409)
|
| 5323 |
He was a farmer. He served in the French War and was present at Fort
William Henry at it's surrender and narrowly escaped capture. He was
in Capt. Jos. Whipple's Co. Jul. 1775 and Capt. Lt. in Capt. Jos.
Lanes' Company in Sept. and Oct. in the same year. Later a member if
Sea Coast Company at Gloucester. His sons, Nathaniel and Epes
Proctor, claimed a pension as the only children then living. | PULSIFER Nathaniel (I7754)
|
| 5324 |
He was a farmer. In 1776 he was a signer to a "Declaration" of the
patriots of Gloucester insisting upon the justice of the War of
Revolution. | (Jr.) Thomas Pulsifer (I250)
|
| 5325 |
He was a General in the Judge Advocate General | PACK Philip Clarkson (I6137)
|
| 5326 |
He was a lawyer by profession, but after he came to New England followed husbandry. He settled in Kent street, Scituate, in 1633, and was taxed there June 2, 1633. He was one of the founders of the church January 8, 1635, was deputy to the general court 1639 and 1640. His will was dated November 24, 1643. | FOSTER Edward (I37875)
|
| 5327 |
He was a leather dresser in Boston as early as 1638. An inventory of his estate was filed by his widow, Elizabeth on 27 Jul 1676.
On 23 Oct. 1652, Myles and his second wife sold land as a bond the support her small children by a former marriage. | Tarne Myles (I52453)
|
| 5328 |
He was a mariner and died unmarried. His inventory of his estate
included a pair of silver sleeve buttons, amount. 218.11.9 pounds,
less 54.12.11 and a quarter pounds. | PULSIFER William (I8037)
|
| 5329 |
He was a Medical Doctor | PULSIFER Walter H. (I8018)
|
| 5330 |
He was a merchant by trade. | Santee Jesse (I54176)
|
| 5331 |
He was a minister | PULSIFER Daniel (I6993)
|
| 5332 |
He was a Physician for over 55 years in Rochester, New York. In 1971,
he received the Albert David Kaiser Medal; the Rochester Academy of
Medicine's highest award. | (MD.) Libby Pulsifer (I260)
|
| 5333 |
He was a proprietor of the Saratoga Hosiery Mills with his brother, Rial. This operation was located in Stillwater, NY.
Henry was in the Civil War. He was also a proprietor of the Saratoga Hosiery Mills in Stillwater. | Newland Henry (I52162)
|
| 5334 |
He was a school teacher and had two daughters, Margaret and Mary Ann. | Annable Silas (I52167)
|
| 5335 |
He was a shoemaker by trade. He died of paralysis. at age 76 years. | EMERY Moody (I2675)
|
| 5336 |
He was a twin of Sarah Alma Anable. | Anable Samuel Joseph (I53515)
|
| 5337 |
He was a weaver by trade as mentioned in a deed of 1747 in which he
sold half dwelling and 16 rods of land on meetinghouse hill to
Jonathan Wells of Ipswich.
He removed in 1747 to Mendon, Mass. | PULSIFER William (I8043)
|
| 5338 |
He was an Anglo-Norman tenant-in-chief holding land under William the conqueror in 1086. For a map and listing of his lands then, see his Open Domesday profile: https://opendomesday.org/name/osbern-giffard/
Keats-Rohan calls him Osbern Giffard in his entry in Domesday People p. 317 and summarizes what is known:[1]
Norman, member of the family of Giffard of Longueville, Seine-Maritime.
The abbot of Saint-Etienne de Caen had a plea against Osbern Giffard and his wife Adeguisa (Hadvise) in September 1077 (Deville, Analyse, 20-1).
He died before 1096 and left Elias, probably his son, to succeed him at Elston in Orcheston St George, Wiltshire (Sanders, 115-16).
There is a genealogy of this family in BM [British Museum] Add. 37124.
Research notes
As mentioned above, it is believed that Osbern was a relative of the Giffard family of Longueville, which was said to have descended, at least in its main line, from another Osbern de Bolebec. There appear to be two main speculative attempts to define the exact relationship, both of which give chronological concerns, and both of which seem to be based upon no specific medieval evidence:
Some older works say that he was simply the son of Osbern de Bolebec, without citing any medieval evidence.[2][3] NOTE: A descent from Osbern de Bolebec seems quite likely, but being his son would mean Osbern Giffard was very old when he helped invade England, to say the least.
Other works, say he was a son (and not a younger brother) of his contemporary, of the Longueville family, Walter Giffard.[4] Note that there was a sequence of several Walters, and probably at least one of them really was significantly older than Osbern.
On the other hand, it seems just as likely that Osbern was a more distant cousin to Walter, as no records have survived to define the exact connection.
Tree
Osberne Gyffarde
Helias m. Ala
Elias m. Berta
Helias
Gilbert
Walter Gyffarde[5]
Known children
Elias (Helias) Giffard, (married Ala) dead in 1130 when his son, Elias, paid relief.[3]
Death
He was alive in 1086 for Domesday Book, and he died before 1096.[6]
Sources
↑ Keats-Rohan, Domesday People, p.317.
↑ Burke, p. 206, added 2014-08-01, amb
↑ 3.0 3.1 G.A. Moriarty (1921) "Gifford-Sargent", in: The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, Vol 75 pp.60-61.
↑ , Alfred Ellis (1879-1880) "Domesday Tenants of Gloucestershire", in Transactions of the Bristol and Gloucestershire Archaeological Society, Vol.4, pp.158-159
↑ Burke, p. 206-207
↑ Sanders, English Baronies, p.115.
John Burke, A genealogical and heraldic history of the commoners of Great Britain and Ireland. Published 1833. Original from Oxford University. Digitized Sep 17, 2008
G.A. Moriarty (1921) "Gifford-Sargent", in: The New England Historical and Genealogical Register, Vol 75 pp.60-61.
Edward Foss, Biographia juridica. A biographical dictionary of the judges of England from the Conquest. Published 1870. Original from Oxford University. Digitized Jun 20, 2006
The Reliquary, Volume 18. Publisher John Russell Smith, 1878. Original from Oxford University. Digitized Oct 16, 2006
PASE page (Domesday): http://domesday.pase.ac.uk/Domesday?op=5&personkey=40687 | BOLEBEC Osbern (I60223)
|
| 5339 |
He was an antiquarian, clerk, and at times Deputy Secretary of State;
editor of Plymouth records, etc. etc. He married late in life and had
no children. | PULSIFER David (I7022)
|
| 5340 |
He was Bishop of Wyoming | SM Elmer Nicolas (I56304)
|
| 5341 |
He was born about the year 500 in Dublin, Ireland, the son of Colmán Már Mac Coirpri (Coirpre Mac Cormac) of the Uí Dúnlainge who was previously king 535–546
Coirpre Mac Cormac was King of Leinster 535–546
He died about 0546 in Dublin, Leinster, Ireland.
Annals of the Four Masters[1]
AFM546.4 Cairbre, son of Cormac, King of Leinster, died.
Sources
↑ Annals of the Four Masters - CELT
Wikiwand : Kings of Leinster
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/6835128/person/-1140786721/facts PRIVATE Ancestry Family Tree
Jaski, Bart Genealogical tables of medieval Irish royal dynasties Table-38 Early Irish Kingship Succession by Jaski Bart, Published by Four Courts Press, 2013, ISBN 1846824265 ISBN 9781846824265
CGH - Corpus Genealogies iHiberniae Vol 1 ed. M.A. O'Brien (Dublin 1962) pg, 42-5, 50-7, 348, 356.
MS - Rawlinson B502 - CELT | LEINSTER Cairbre (I58536)
|
| 5342 |
He was buried
on 26 Jun 1854 at Miller Cemetary in Greenfield, New York, United States. Elias has reference number 645. Burial: Miller
Cemetary, Greenfield, NY
GPS: LAT:43.10607 Lon: -73.78981 | Newland Elias (I52368)
|
| 5343 |
He was buried in Gate of Heaven Cemetary, Section 16, Lot H, Grave 8, East Hanover, NJ. Francis has reference number 4. | KLEBAUR Francis John (I57157)
|
| 5344 |
he was buried in Gate of Heaven Cemetary, Section 16, Lot H, Grave 9, East
Hanover, NJ. Susan has reference number 5. | NEWLAND Susan Caroline (I57156)
|
| 5345 |
He was buried in Moores Corner Cemetery, Leverett, Franklin, MA | RICE Frederic P. (I56699)
|
| 5346 |
He was buried in Moores Corner Cemetery, Leverett, Franklin, MA | RICE Frederic Porter (I56703)
|
| 5347 |
He was buried in Mount Ceaser Cemetery, Swanzey, Cheshire, New Hampshire.4 | CAPRON Oliver (I1803)
|
| 5348 |
He was buried in North Fairfield Cemetery (New), North Fairfield, Huron Co, OH | WRIGHT Lester L. (I56683)
|
| 5349 |
He was buried in North River Cemetery, Colrain, Franklin Co., MA. | SHEDD Charles William (I56707)
|
| 5350 |
He was buried in Old Kirk Burial Ground, Attleboro, Bristol, Massachusetts; | CAPRON Capt. Joseph (I39819)
|
| 5351 |
He was buried in Sand Hill Cemetery, Unadilla, Otsego, NY | HAWKS Herman R. (I56722)
|
| 5352 |
He was buried on 18 August 1758 in Capron Cemetery, Woonsocket, Providence, Rhode Island. His estate was probated on 29 August 1758 at Cumberland, Providence, Rhode Island.6 | Jr. Banfield Capron (I39790)
|
| 5353 |
He was buried on after 29 March 1788 in Elder Ballou Meeting House Cemetery, Cumberland, Providence, Rhode Island.1 | BROWN Joseph (I39796)
|
| 5354 |
He was Christened 1 Nov. 1739 in Athens, N.Y. | KNICKERBOCKER Lawrence (I4677)
|
| 5355 |
He was Count of Chiny from 987 to 1025 and at Verdun in 1024 to 1025. In 1024, Raimbert, bishop of Verdun, gave him the county of Verdun, which he had taken when the Count Hermann had retired to a monastery. Herman's brother, Godfrey the Bearded, who coveted the city, invaded and killed Louis. [1]
Sources
↑ Wikipedia:Louis,_Count_of_Verdun.
Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2023, Comtes de Chiny. | CHINY Louis (I59017)
|
| 5356 |
He was educated in the common schools of Dudley and Webster, and learned the trade of fuller or finisher of cloth. He carried on a farm and also worked in the woolen mills of the vicinity at wool sorting. He had part of his father's homestead, on which he built his house. He was a quiet, respectable citizen, standing well in the community. He was a strong antislavery man and voted with the Free Soil and Republican parties. | FREEMAN George (I37776)
|
| 5357 |
He was educated in the public schools of his native town and graduated from the Webster high school in 1858. He learned the trade of wool sorter in his youth, and for a period of thirty years made wool sorting his principal vocation. He worked in woolen mills in Putnam, Connecticut; Manchester, New Hampshire; Webster, Dudley and Southbridge, Massachusetts; and other places, but principally at the Slater mill in Webster and the Perry mill in Dudley. He began when a young man to buy wood lots, cutting the timber and marketing it. This business grew until in 1893 he gave his whole attention to it. He has done an extensive business in lumber since then, having a number of portable saw mills at work all the time. His place of business is at his residence, School Street, Webster. Mr. Freeman has always been a Republican and takes a lively interest in town affairs. He served the town of Webster two terms as assessor, and in 1890 was a member of the board of selectmen. | FREEMAN Sanford Myron (I37818)
|
| 5358 |
He was from Manou, ar. Nogentle-Rotrou, ev. Chartres, Preche (now
Eure-et-Loir), in France. He answered that he was 49 at the 1666
recording, and 51 in 1667 and 57 years in 1681, living at l'Isle d
Orleans. He was cited as being in Sillery 27 Aug 1653, as a mason. He
was married at the Notre-Dame-de Quebec, in Quebec City, PQ.
Louis Houde, son of Noël Houde and Anne Lefebvre was born in 1617 in
Manou, diocese of Chartres in the county of Perche, now the
department of Eure et Loir. He arrived in New France in 1647 and
worked for at least three years in the household of the Seigneur Noël
Juchereau de Chastellées. He quickly acquired land in Saint-Augustin,
in Quebec City (where the Grand-Allée is now) and in the seignory of
Sillery.
He married Madeleine Boucher on January 12, 1655 in her father's home
at Château-Richer. Madeleine--daughter of Marin Boucher and Perrine
Mallet--was fourteen years old. Within the next two years Louis
acquired new farms in Beaupré and on the Ile d'Orléans. In 1658, the
family was established on land with a frontage of four arpents (about
767 feet) along the river and extending into the island. They
remained there over the twenty four years that saw the birth of
thirteen of their fourteen children. (For most of the history of
French Canada, land was held by "Seigneurs" or land-lords who
received rents from those who held leases which were bought, sold and
passed to heirs much like deeds.)
As the children began to establish their own homesteads, the farm was
obviously too small. Consequently, the family moved to Sainte-Croix
de Lotbinière (above Quebec on the south bank of the Saint Lawrence)
on a huge holding acquired from the Ursulines of Québec. The sons
each had their own holding and some of them took surnames reflecting
the characteristics of their land: Desrochers (stony), Desruisseaux
(with brooks), Bellefeuille (with trees).
Louis Houde was obviously successful in his business dealings and by
way of philanthropy donated the land for the first church of Sainte-
Croix.
Although all records are lost, it is thought that Louis Houde died in
1712 at the age of 95. (His wife lived on to an equally venerable
age.) The descendants of Louis Houde and Madeleine Boucher are now
found throughout Canada and in many areas of the United States. | HOUDE Louis (I4138)
|
| 5359 |
He was from St-Denis de Cogne, eveche de La Rochelle, Aunis, France.
He answered that he was 20 at the 1667 recording, and at town of Ste-
Genevieve of Quebec, working as a domestic servant for Pasquir Nony.
He answered that he was 34 in 1681, at Charlesbourg, he was 68 years
old in 1716, at the age of 40 years, on 1 Jan 1692, 44 years, and 8
Jun 1697, at the age of 50 years all at the hospital in Quebec City.
He had a marriage to Antoinette Lenoir annulled 29 Sep 1669. She
later married Jacques Leboeuf. He filed marriage contract (for wife
Louise) with notary Becquet on 31 Aug 1670. | MEUSNIER Julien "Dit LaFramboise" (I5640)
|
| 5360 |
He was from Ste. Come de Vair, Maine, France
Bisson-Buisson-DE St Corne
[[Category:Sillery, Canada, Nouvelle-France]][[Category:Côte de Sainte-Geneviève, Saint-François et Saint-Michel en 1667]]
[[Category:Sillery, avec Cap-Rouge et St. François Xavier en 1666]]
[[Category:Migrants du Perche au Canada, Nouvelle-France]]
[[Category:Percheron Immigration]]
== Biographie ==
{{Migrating Ancestor
|lang=fr
|origin= de France
|destination= au Canada, Nouvelle-France
|origin-flag= Flags.png
|destination-flag= Flags-12.png
}}'''Gervais BISSON dit Saint-Côsme'''[[http://www.fichierorigine.com/detail.php?numero=400011 Fichier Origine 400011 Gervais '''Bisson''' / '''Buisson''' 2016 Fédération québécoise des sociétés de généalogie//Québec Federation of Genealogical Societies]][[https://www.wikitree.com/photo.php/1/1d/Bisson-10.pdf PREFEN Fiche 6790:] Gervais '''Bisson''' dit '''Saint-Côme''' (Voir PDF sur profil / see PDF on profile][ {{PRDH|Pionnier|11581}} Gervais '''Buisson de St-Cosme''' Bisson ; Date et lieu de naissance selon PRDH : Date - v 1602. Lieu - st-cosme-de-vair (auj. st-cosme-en-vairais), ev. le mans, maine (ar. mamers, sarthe)][[http://www.perche-quebec.com/files/perche/individus/bisson.htm perche-quebec.com:] Gervais '''Bisson'''][[http://bibnum2.banq.qc.ca/bna/dicoGenealogie/src/0002/0022/0024/0026/3957-1-095.pdf Tanguay, vol. 1, p. 54:] Gervais '''Bisson'''] [Carpin #174][ [http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk1/tape9/PQDD_0020/NQ47560.pdf Carpin 1999, Annexe D, p. 575]][Num la page [[:Category:Percheron_Immigration|Percheron Immigration Category]].]
'''Gervais Bisson''' est né en France vers 1603. Il est, comme son frère, vraisemblablement orginaire de [http://www.insee.fr/fr/methodes/nomenclatures/cog/fichecommunale.asp?codedep=72&codecom=276 Contres-en-Vairais] dans le [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dioc%C3%A8se_du_Mans diocèse du Mans], le [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pays_du_Perche_Sarthois Perche sarthois] et l'[https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maine_(province) ancienne province du Maine].[Géographie historique et moderne du lieu de baptême:*Contres-en-Vairais est aujourd'hui rattaché à la commune française de Saint-Cosme-en-Vairais ([http://www.insee.fr/fr/methodes/nomenclatures/cog/fichecommunale.asp?codedep=72&codecom=276 INSEE 72276]) situdépartement de la Sarthe en région Pays de la Loire]
'''Mariage''' Gervais Buisson épousa [[Lereau-5|'''Marie Lereau''']] avant 1642 en France[ {{PRDH|Individu|11582}} Marie Lereau ''L'Hérault'' (standardization from PRDH) ] (Premier baptname=Prefen />)
{{Canada_Nouvelle-France|lang=fr}}Il migre vers le Canada une première fois en 1650, retournant en France en 1651. Il migre de nouveau vers le Canada entre 1652 et 1654 avec son épouse et leurs enfants [[Bisson-10|'''Gervais''']] et [[Bisson-20|'''Antoine''']], son frère [[Buisson-45|'''Florent''']], sa belle-soeur [[Yvon-5|'''Jeanne Yvon''']], son neveu [[Bisson-256|'''Michel Bisson''']], et sa nièce [[Bisson-197|'''Mathurine Bisson''']].[[http://www.vt-fcgs.org/leperche.html Lesperance (2002) citant Jetté (1983), p. 107]: "Gervais Bisson, domestic, from Contres; with wife Marie Lereau & children Gervais & Antoine departed St-Cosme-de-Vair."] Il est mentionné pour la première fois au Canada le 19 septembre 1650 à Québec lorsqu'il est cité comme domestique.
Le 10 août 1659 à Québec, Monseigneur l'évêque [[Laval-89|de Petrée]] confirme [[Buisson-42|Gervais Bisson]], 52 ans, [[Bisson-10|Gervais Bisson]], 18 ans, [[Lereau-5|Marie Lereau]], 40 ans[[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/membership/voir.aspx?id=H%3a%2fRegistres%2fQu%c3%a9bec%2fFonds+Drouin%2fQC%2fDivers%2fDioc%c3%a8se+de+Qu%c3%a9bec%2fRegistre+des+confirmations%2f1649-1662/d1p_31400667.jpg Registre des confirmations, évêché de Québec, folios 3, 6, 7] (3 images) IGD (Membership)]
'''Décès''' Gervais Bisson décède le 31 juillet 1674 sur la côte Saint-Michel (Sillery[[https://www.erudit.org/fr/revues/haf/1996-v49-n4-haf2367/305464ar.pdf Érudit: Les routes à Sillery sous le régime français]]) et est inhumé le 1er août dans le cimetière de Québec (Notre-Dame), l'acte lui donne environ 72 ans.[[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/Membership/LAFRANCE/img/acte/69220 Sépulture-Funeral image Gervais Bisson] Collection Drouin, IGD (Membership)]
Il avait 233 descendants in 1729.[[https://www.lamemoireduquebec.com/wiki/index.php?title=Bisson%2C_Buisson_%28Gervais_%3B_dit_Saint-C%C3%B4me%29 La Mémoire du Québec, Gervais Bisson]]
==Biography ==
{{Migrating Ancestor
| origin = France
| destination = New France
| origin-flag = Flags.png
| destination-flag = Flags-12.png
}}'''Gervais BISSON dit Saint-Côsme''' [Carpin #174]
'''Gervais Bisson''' was born in France around 1603. He is, like his brother, probably from [http://www.insee.fr/fr/methodes/nomenclatures/cog/fichecommunale.asp?codedep=72&codecom=276 Contres-en-Vairais] in the [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dioc%C3%A8se_du_Mans diocese of Le Mans], in [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pays_du_Perche_Sarthois Perche sarthois] the [https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maine_(province) ancient province of Maine].
'''Marriage''' Gervais Buisson married [[Lereau-5|'''Marie Lereau''']] before 1642 in France (First known baptism of their children is on 22 February 1642)
{{Canada_Nouvelle-France}}He came to Canada for the first time around 1650, returning to France in 1651. He migrated again to Canada between 1652 and 1654 with his wife and their children [[Bisson-10|'''Gervais''']] and [[Bisson-20|'''Antoine''']], his brother [[Buisson-45|'''Florent''']], his sister-in-law [[Yvon-5|'''Jeanne Yvon''']], his nephew [[Bisson-256|'''Michel Bisson''']], and his niece [[Bisson-197|'''Mathurine Bisson''']]. He was mentionned for the first time in Canada on 19 September 1650 in Québec city where he is cited as servant.
On 10 August 1659 in Québec city, Monseigneur the bishop [[Laval-89|de Petrée]] confirmed [[Buisson-42|Gervais Bisson]], 52 years old, [[Bisson-10|Gervais Bisson]], 18, and [[Lereau-5|Marie Lereau]], 40.
'''Death''' Gervais Bisson died on 31 July 1674 on the côte Saint-Michel (Sillery) and was buried on the 1st of August in the cemetery of Québec (Notre-Dame), the record gives him around 72 years of age.
He had 233 descendants in 1729.
==Notes==
===Recensements / Censuses===
;'''Famille de / family of''' - Gervais Bisson & Marie Lereau
:'''1666''' Sillery Gervais Bisson, 65, habitant ; Marie Lereau, 43, sa femme ; Antoine, 20 ; Simonne Barbe, 11 ; Marie, 8 ; Jean-François, 5 ; Jacques Senson, 19, domestique engagé.[[https://fr.wikisource.org/wiki/Histoire_des_Canadiens-fran%C3%A7ais,_Tome_IV/Chapitre_4 Wikisource: Recensements 1666-1667 Censuses selon Benjamin Sulte ''Histoire des Canadiens-français, Tome 4, chap. 4'']]:'''1667''' Côtes de Sainte-Geneviève, Saint-François et Saint-Michel Gervais Buisson, 64 ; Marie Lebeau, sa femme, 45 ; Antoine, 20 ; Simonne, 13 ; Marie, 10 ; Jean-François, 7 ; 4 bestiaux, 12 arpents en valeur.
===Enfants / Children===
Avec / with [[Lereau-5|'''Marie Lereau''']] # [[Buisson-10|'''Gervais''']] '''b''' 22-02-1642 '''∞''' [[Boutet-11|'''Marie-Madeleine Boutet''']] 15-09-1664 '''+''' 7-03-1707# [[Buisson-20|'''Antoine''']] '''b''' 20-06-1645 '''ct''' [[Trud-2|'''Ursule Tru''']] 24-05-1671 '''+''' 26-01-1705
# '''Jean''' '''b''' 01-10-1651 # +[[Buisson-41|'''Simone''']] '''*''' 29-12-1654 '''∞''' [[Gauvreau-26|'''Nicolas Gauvreau''']] 30-07-1668 '''+''' 12-03-1722# +[[Buisson-4|'''Marie''']] '''*''' 24-10-1657 + 1732 [[Bonet-33|'''Mélin Bonet''']] 24-04-1671 '''+''' 03-06-1732# [[Buisson-230|'''Jean François''']] '''*''' 24-11-1660 '''+''' 15-03-1712
;|'''*''' naissance / birth
;|'''∞''' marié à / married to
;|'''+''' décès / death
;|'''b''' baptisé / baptism
;|'''ct''' contrat de mariage / marriage contract
;|'''v''' vers / about
== Sources ==
* '''IGD''': Actes d'état civil et registres d'église du Québec (Collection Drouin), 1621 à 1997 - Gabriel Drouin, comp. Drouin Collection: Institut Généalogique Drouin (''membership'') https://www.genealogiequebec.com* ABA - [http://www.genealogie.org/famille/bisson/Francais/Bienvenue.html L'Association des Bisson d'Amérique]* PRDH - [https://www.prdh-igd.com/fr/leprdh.htm Programme de recherche en démographie historique], Université de Montréal* PREFEN - [://www.unicaen.fr/mrsh/prefen/ Programme de Recherche sur l'Émigration des Français En Nouvelle-France], Université de Caen '''Note''': Le Préfen n'est plus accessible en ligne / Prefen is no longer accessible online* Carpin, Gervais (1999). [http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk1/tape9/PQDD_0020/NQ47560.pdf Le Réseau du Canada: Étude du mode migratoire de la France vers Ie Nouvelle-France (1628-1662)]* [https://www.mes-racines.ca/fichiers/Dict.%20g%E9n%E9alogiques/Dictionnaire%20g%E9n%E9alogique%20des%20familles%20du%20Qu%E9bec%20-%20Des%20origines%20%E0%201730/Dictionnaire%20g%E9n%E9alogique%20des%20familles%20du%20Qu%E9bec%20-%20Des%20origines%20%E0%201730%20-%20A%20-%20J.pdf ''Dictionnaire généalogique des familles du Québec des origines à 1730'', René Jetté, avec la collaboration du PRDH, 1983, Presses de l'Université de Montréal, A-J, PDF pg 107 (Bisson)]*Baptism of son, Gervais ( Baptême du fils, Gervais)[http://www.fichierorigine.com/detail.php?numero=400012 Fichier Origine 400012]*Our French-Canadian ancestors; Vol. 8 (Nos ancêtres canadiens-français; Vol. 8) :ISBN 0-914163-08-6. For brief biographical sketch of Gervais & Florent Bisson, see ch. 4, pp. 29-40., [https://dcms.lds.org/delivery/DeliveryManagerServlet?dps_pid=IE3443687 Laforest, Thomas J].* Lesperance, Jerry (December 2002). [http://www.vt-fcgs.org/leperche.html “Le Perche”], Vermont French-Canadian Genealogical Society*"Mémoire du Québec" https://www.lamemoireduquebec.com/wiki/index.php?title=Accueil *Les Bisson ou Buisson, une famille pionnière de Contres (The Bisson or Buisson, a pioneer family from Contres)[http://www.perche-quebec.com/files/perche/individus/bisson.htm Perche-Québec: Les Bisson]* [[Tanguay-103|Cyprien Tanguay]], [http://bibnum2.banq.qc.ca/bna/dicoGenealogie/ ''Dictionnaire généalogique des familles canadiennes''], 7 volumes*1601, "Canada, Quebec, Quebec Federation of Genealogical Societies, Family Origins, 1621-1865," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QKDB-H86X : 10 February 2018), Gervais Bisson, 1601; citing St-Cosme-en-Vairais, Sarthe, France, Birth, La Fédération québécoise des sociétés de généalogie (The Quebec Federation of Genealogical Societies), Canada.*1623, "Canada, Quebec, Quebec Federation of Genealogical Societies, Family Origins, 1621-1865," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QKDB-H2C1 : 10 February 2018), Gervais Bisson in entry for Marie Lereau, 1623; citing St-Cosme-en-Varais St-Cosme, Sarthe, France, Birth, La Fédération québécoise des sociétés de généalogie (The Quebec Federation of Genealogical Societies), Canada.*1642, "Canada, Quebec, Quebec Federation of Genealogical Societies, Family Origins, 1621-1865," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QKDB-4YXJ : 10 February 2018), Gervais Bisson in entry for Gervais Bisson, x; citing Pouvrai La Nativité-de-Notre-Dame, Orne, France, Birth, La Fédération québécoise des sociétés de généalogie (The Quebec Federation of Genealogical Societies), Canada.*1645, "Canada, Quebec, Quebec Federation of Genealogical Societies, Family Origins, 1621-1865," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QKDB-H6JP : 10 February 2018), Gervais Bisson in entry for Antoine Bisson, x; citing Pouvrai La Nativité-de-Notre-Dame, Orne, France, Birth, La Fédération québécoise des sociétés de généalogie (The Quebec Federation of Genealogical Societies), Canada.*1657, "Canada, Québec, registres paroissiaux catholiques, 1621-1979," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QS7-L993-F9S7-G?cc=1321742&wc=HCT2-829%3A17585101%2C19508101%2C19508102 : 16 July 2014), Québec > Notre-Dame-de-Québec > Baptêmes, mariages, sépultures 1621-1679 > image 67 of 512; Archives Nationales du Quebec (National Archives of Quebec), Montreal.*1664, "Canada, Québec, registres paroissiaux catholiques, 1621-1979," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G993-F9SW-X?cc=1321742&wc=HCT2-829%3A17585101%2C19508101%2C19508102 : 16 July 2014), Québec > Notre-Dame-de-Québec > Baptêmes, mariages, sépultures 1621-1679 > image 179 of 512; Archives Nationales du Quebec (National Archives of Quebec), Montreal.*TREE 1674, Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/214756162/gervais-buisson_dit_destcosme_dit_bisson : accessed 27 November 2021), memorial page for Gervais Buisson dit Destcosme dit Bisson (1602–31 Jul 1674), Find a Grave Memorial ID 214756162, citing Basilique-Cathédrale Notre-Dame de Québec, Quebec, Capitale-Nationale Region, Quebec, Canada ; Maintained by AW (contributor 47829810) .
*tree http://www.nosorigines.qc.ca/GenealogieQuebec.aspx?genealogy=Gervais_Bisson&pid=20215&lng=en&partID=20216 | BISSON Gervais (I1066)
|
| 5361 |
He was in Charleston, Massachusetts in 1639, as agent for Matthew Cradock, a merchant of London, the first nominal Governor of Massachusetts, but who never came to America. He went to Barbadoes and thence to England, in 1655, returning to America in 1656 aboard the Spedwell.
His will was proved on July 11, 1664, naming his wife, two children, and a brother, John. The estate inventoried at 1,869 pounds, 11s, 11d. It included lands in Boston, Charleston, Pennequid, and 21,000 acres near Windsor, on both sides of the Connecticut River. | DAVISON Nicholas (I34647)
|
| 5362 |
He was later "of Beverly". He was a sail maker. No known children. | PULSIFER John (I7459)
|
| 5363 |
He was later called Eugene. | PULSIFER Eugene Emerson (I7177)
|
| 5364 |
He was lord of Gistel. He passed away in 1289.[1]
His coat of arms is included in the attendees of the Tournament of Compiègne of 1278, when King Philippe III celebrated the visit of his cousin, Charles II d'Anjou, Prince of Salerno.[2][3]
Sources
↑ Flanders/Heren van Gistel, entry in the database Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families by Charles Cawley © Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, 2000-2025 (Accessed December 6, 2025)
↑ Armorial-Beyeren. Images on Wiki-Commons Wapenboek Beyeren, Tournament of Compiègne(Accessed December 6, 2025)
↑ Wappenwikki Tournoi de Compiegne (Accessed December 6, 2025) | GHISTELLES Jean (I59634)
|
| 5365 |
He was murdered | WATTON Craig (I9948)
|
| 5366 |
He was named after his uncle, Nil Gustav, brother to his father, John W. Wilson | Wilson Ned Guy (I54348)
|
| 5367 |
He was of the Huntington/Mason families of CT. | Huntington Gurdon (I51502)
|
| 5368 |
He was of Westerlo, Albany County, NY when he married Rhoda Jewett Annable. | Holmes James (I53454)
|
| 5369 |
He was on March 13, 1742 in Lotbiniere, Canada. | Baudet Jacques (I50016)
|
| 5370 |
He was probably born around 1700 or shortly thereafter. Vital records for Stow, Middlesex Co., MA show that he was living in 1765. | Browne Joseph (I50686)
|
| 5371 |
He was said to be generous in gold but to starve his men with food. He was a great warrior who often pillaged and gathered great booty.
According to the historian Halvdan Koht, Halfdan may have been the one to win independence for Vestfold during the turbulent years of 813–14. The Frankish annals state that the kings of Hedeby had to solve an uprising in Vestfold at this time. According to Ynglingatal, Halfdan's people "gained victory" in this uprising, and Halfdan might thus be the first independent ruler of Vestfold.
Name(s)
Old Norse: Hálfdan hinn mildi
Halfdan/Halvdan, "Den Gavmilde Og Matsåre" or "Milde och matnidske"
"Gavmilde" is more accurately translated as generous, not mild nor meek. He was apparently generous with golden coins but not with food.
Alternate spellings of last name: Eysteinsson, Östensson
Birth and Parents
Alternate birth year from merges; 768, 742, 750 Birth places; Holtum, Vestfold, Norway
Halfdan the Mild, son of Eystein Halfdansson, son of Halfdan Kvitbein. His mother was Hild, daughter of Eric Agnarsson, King in Westfold.[1]
Spouse and Children
Only one wife, Hlif (Liv) daughter of Dag of Westmare.
Father of Gudrod the Hunter.[2]
Death
Alternate death year from merges; 800, 803 Died at Borre/Borro, Vestfold, Norway. Burial: Borrestranda (hauglagt)
Biografi
Om Konung Halfdan den milde och matnidske. Halfdan het konung Östens son, som konungdom tog efter honom: han kallades Halfdan den milde och matnidske. Så är sagdt, att han gaf sine män i lön jämnmånge guldpenningar, som andre konungar silverpenningar, men han svälte dem i mat. Han var en stor härman, och var länge i viking och fick sig gods. Han egde Hlif, konung Dags dotter af Vestmarar. Holtar å Vestfold var hans hufvudby: der vardt han sotdöd, och är högad å Borro. Så säger Thjodolf:
Till Odens ting
thengil’n böds
ur verlden vida
af Hvedrungs mö
, när Halfdan, som
å Holtar bodde,
följa nöddes
nornors dom.
Och budlungen
å Borroe
de seger-säkre
sedan grofvo.
Halvdan den Milde og Mat-ille var ein konge av Ynglingeætta, far til Gudrød Veidekonge og farfar til Halvdan Svarte. Han var son av kong Øystein av ynglingeætta.
Han sat som konge i Holtar, no Holtan i Borre, og er gravlagd der. Han var gift med Liv, dotter til kong Dag på Vestmar, i dag eigna kring Langesund. Namnet og gravstaden hans tyder på ei lekk til Danmark (Borrestil).
Research Notes
The data collected below contains a lot of severely conflicting dates, and several of them probably are conflated with estimates for different people. The sources generally point to ancestry.com trees.(Østenstad-1 07:22, 10 November 2018 (UTC))
Sources
↑ Snorri Sturluson: Sagas of the Norse Kings. The Ynglinga Saga:Translated by Samuel Laing, revised by Peter Foote MA. Everyman's Library Dutton New York SBN 460 00847 1 Page 40 41
↑ Snorri Sturluson: Sagas of the Norse Kings. The Ynglinga Saga:Translated by Samuel Laing, revised by Peter Foote MA. Everyman's Library Dutton New York SBN 460 00847 1 Page 40 41
http://heimskringla.no/wiki/Ynglinga-Saga#373
Medieval Lands: Denmark: Haldan Mildi Parents unknown. Born about 750 died 803 buried Borro. King of Vestfold. Married Liv of Westmare daughter of Dag King of Westmare and unknown wife. Children Godefrid, Sigurd and possible someone else who had a child.
Snorri Sturluson: Sagas of the Norse Kings. Ynglinga Saga Translated by Samuel Laing, revised by Peter Foote MA. Everyman's Library Dutton New York SBN 460 00847 1 Page 40. Says son of Eystein Haraldsson and his wife, Hild daughter of Eric Agnarsson King in Westfold. Married Liv daughter of Dag of Westmare. Father of Gudrod the Hunter.
See also:
http://mauriceboddy.org.uk/Norway.htm
Rootsweb.
Medlands.
Sweden Royalty. | EYSTEINSSON Halvdan Milde (I58711)
|
| 5372 |
He was Senior Major of the Seventh New York Heavy Artillery Refiment in 8164 and participated in the Battle of the Wilderness under General Grant and was wounded in action at Petersburg, Virginia. In 1866 he and his family moved to Richmaond, Virginia where he represented the Federal Government in that occupied, formerly Confederate city. | Anable Samuel Low (I53139)
|
| 5373 |
He was suppose to have served in the navy of the Netherlands and was
severally wounded in the Battle of Sole bay 25 Jul. 1665. After he
recovered, he removed to Albany, New York. The first mention of his
name in America appears in Albany records when he was a witness in a
lawsuit 6 April 1680. He is called Van Bommel in the records of the
city of Albany, in the Court Minutes and in the Dutch Church
register. The surname is found written as Knickerbakker and
Knickerbocker. | KNICKERBOCKER Harmen Janse Van Bommel (I4663)
|
| 5374 |
He was the 2nd Grand Prince of the Hungarians.
King of Hungary, Ruled 886-907
Note: The land stretching between the Danube and the Tisza used to belong to my forefather, the mighty Attila.
(Gesta Hungarorum)
Sources
Geni at http://www.geni.com/people/%C3%81rp%C3%A1d-vez%C3%A9r-Grand-Prince-of-Magyars-a-magyar-%C3%81RP%C3%81D-h%C3%A1z-n%C3%A9vad%C3%B3ja-a-Honfoglal%C3%B3/6000000006906447277?
Wikipedia at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%81rp%C3%A1d
Fabpedigree at http://fabpedigree.com/s020/f123107.htm | ARPADHAZI Árpád (I58668)
|
| 5375 |
He was the captain of a vessel and was drowned off the Virginia Capes
in 1783. He was member of Captain Charles Smith's Company of Sea
Coast Guards at Ipswich, Apr. to Oct. 1775 | PULSIFER David (I7012)
|
| 5376 |
He was the oldest son. He succeeded his father in 1139. Shortly before he had married Lutgart von Sulzbach, the sister in law of king Conrad III. Relatively little is known of him, as he died in 1142, leaving behind only a son a less then a year old.
Occupation
Count of Louvain; Duke of Lower Lorraine; Margrave of Antwerp | LORRAINE Godefroi (I58955)
|
| 5377 |
He was the son of Bressal Bélach mac Fiacha.
He passed away about 0450.
Research Notes
This profile is based on Jaski's table 42
Clann Name: Dál Niad Cuirp
Annals
The Annals of Ulster[1]
AU - No entries found
Sources
↑ The Annals of Ulster - CELT
Jaski, Bart Genealogical tables of medieval Irish royal dynasties Table-38, 42 Early Irish Kingship Succession by Jaski Bart, Published by Four Courts Press, 2013, ISBN 1846824265 ISBN 9781846824265
CGH - Corpus Genealogies iHiberniae Vol 1 ed. M.A. O'Brien (Dublin 1962) pg, 42-5, 50-7, 348, 356.
MS - Rawlinson B502 - CELT | BÉLACH Labraid Laidech mac Bressal (I58480)
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| 5378 |
He was the son of Leon Skleros. [1]
In 838, he was General. [2]
Sources
↑ Settipani, Christian. Continuité des élites à Byzance (2006) p. 245.
↑ Wikipedia:DE:Skleros_(Adelsgeschlecht). | SKLEROS Pantherios (I57905)
|
| 5379 |
He was the son of Sir Baldwin Freville (whose father was also named Baldwin) and Maud Gifford of Boyton, Wilts., per this archive, citing "The Frevilles of Tamworth Castle, Staffordshire", Genealogists' Magazine, June 1984: 185 et seq. Patrick Montague-Smith.
Sir Alexander de Freville, or Friville, of Tamworth, co. Warwick, was summoned for military service against the Scots on 5 Apr 1327 by writ directed "Alexandro de Frevill".
Sanders reports that he died 1328.
Sources
15 July 2006 posting of Douglas Richardson on Gen-Medieval re: Early Frevilles of Tamworth and Cambridgeshire: http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/gen-medieval/2006-07/1152986237
Sanders, English Baronies, p.87. | FREVILLE Alexander (I60197)
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| 5380 |
He worked as a tool and die maker most of his adult life in Momence, IL. | Podach Pershing A. (I53011)
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| 5381 |
He worked hard during his lifetime for the causes of Temperence,
homeopathic medicine, public education, and anti-slavery. He attended
Dartmouth Medical College and Bowdoin Medical, receiving his diploma
from Bowdoin in 1822. | PULSIFER Moses Rust (I7743)
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| 5382 |
He worked in a blacksmith shop in 1870 in Marathon, Cortland county, NY. | Peebles Austin (I50822)
|
| 5383 |
He worked with his brother Lloyd Freeman in J.L.Freeman Company which
was a successful Wholesale Grocery Company. Frances married Agnes
Tangery. He died in 1973 in Montreal, and is buried in Cote Des
Neyes Cemetery, Montreal, 985 R. Frances and Agnes had 1 daughter: | FREEMAN Frances Sutherland (I3087)
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| 5384 |
He worked with M, O. Weaver Contruction company in Maynard and that is where he met his wife. He was living in Maynard, IA when he died.
Belles-Wright Funeral Home, Fayette, IA. officiated in his funeral service. | Wilson Clyde C. (I54347)
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| 5385 |
Heartwellville Cemetery | HASKINS Adelia A (I29925)
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| 5386 |
Heartwellville Cemetery, VT | PIKE Elizabeth (I29476)
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| 5387 |
Heartwellville Cemetery, VT | HASKINS Ida Z (I29497)
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| 5388 |
Heartwellville Cemetery, VT | HASKINS George (I29594)
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| 5389 |
Heartwellville Cemetery, VT | HASKINS Mary (I29686)
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| 5390 |
Heartwellville Cemetery, VT | BURDICK Maudem (I29715)
|
| 5391 |
Heartwellville Cemetery, VT | FULLER Fannie Jane (I29727)
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| 5392 |
Heartwellville Cemetery, VT | HASKINS Mary E (I29923)
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| 5393 |
Heartwellville Cemetery, VT | HASKINS Henry (I30112)
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| 5394 |
Heartwellville Cemetery, VT | HASKINS William (I30376)
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| 5395 |
Hedwig "Hathwiga" Hathui (850/5 - 24 Dec 903)[2]
Parents
Father: Heinrich Babenberger (d. ante Sep 886; p. unknown)
Mother: (disputed) Baba UNKNOWN (d. after 864),[3] or Engeltrudis UNKNOWN[4][1]
Marriage
m. Otto "der Erlauchte," Graf im Sudthüringau und Eichsfeld.[5] Issue: 7[6]
(dau) _____ (b. 865/70)
m. Ekkehard
Thankmar (d. ante 30 Nov 912)
Liudolf (d. ante 30 Nov 912)
Heinrich I, King of Germany (876 - 02 Jul 936 Memleben)
Oda
(unproven) Liutgard "Dodica" (d. 21 Jan 923)
(unproven) Irminburg (d. ante 936)
The Frankish Babenbergers or Popponen originated in the Grabfeldgau (border region between southern Thuringia and northern Bavaria).
The earliest known ancestor of the Frankish Babenbergers was Poppo, probably a son of Cancor of the Robertians. In this sense, the Popponen were an early secondary line of Robertians, from which the French royal family of the Capetians emerged. The Popponen were named from Poppo, who was an early 9th century Graf in Grabfeldgau that lies on the border between Bavaria and Thuringia. One of his sons was Heinrich, the first Princeps Militiae appointed by Louis the Younger (Ludwig dem Jüngeren). In the time of Charles the Fat (Karls des Dicken), Heinrich's family was preferred as Francorum marchio (Margrave of the Franks) and dux Austrasiorum (Duke of the Austrasians). He fought in 886 in a battle against the Normans. His brother, Poppo II, was at the same time Margrave of Thuringia (880-892), but under Charles' successor, Arnulf, his position was discontinued. The position was awarded to the Conradines of Lahngau as a result of Oda's marriage with Arnulf.
The rivalry between the two Frankish Counts of Franconia, the Babenbergers and the Conradines, was intensified by the effort of each to establish their authority in the central Main region. This conflict, known as the Babenberger Feud, reached its peak at the beginning of the 10th century during the troubled East Frankish reign of Louis IV the Child ( Ludwig IV des Kindes).
The leaders of the Frankish Babenbergers were the three sons of Duke Heinrich - Adalbert, Adalhard, and Heinrich - who from Babenburg (Babenberch Castrum) declared the region theirs.
When the Frankish Babenbergers in 902 incorporated parts of the territory of the Diocese of Würzburg as part of their own, King Louis IV, in return for a payment, gave the territory over to Bishop Rudolf of Würzburg, a Conradine. This led to years of feuding between the two Houses. Iniitially, Graf Adalbert drove the Bishop of Würzburg from the territory, which prompted the Conradine Counts Gebhard and Eberhard to come to his aid, sending men into Hesse. Finally in 906, in an attack on the Babenbergers by the Conradines at Fritlar, Conrad and Heinrich fought each other. Gebhard took blood revenge on Adalhard for the death of his brother Eberhard, who was earlier killed by him.
The only survivor among the Babenberger brothers was Adalbert, who was called to answer to the Royal Court for his actions by Chancellor and Regent for Hatto I, Archbishop of Mainz, a supporter of the Conradines. Adalbert refused to appear and held out for some time in his castle (now in Obertheres Haßfurt) against the royal army. Nonetheless, in 906, he was compelled to leave his refuge by Hatto, who despite a promise for safe conduct, captured, convicted, and beheaded him. The son of Conrad, Conrad the Younger, became the undisputed Duke of Franconia (and in 911, as Conrad I, King of the East Frankish Kingdom), while the Babenbergers lost most of their possessions and offices in Franconia.
Adalbert's son, Heinrich von Babenberg, survived the feud. It is believed that he was the father of the Count of Schweinfurt and the progenitor of the younger Babenberger line.
Sources
↑ Some argue for Ingeltrudis of Friuli, but dates are off.[1]
Stuart, R. (1998). Royalty for Commoners, (3rd ed).
Weis, F. (1992). Ancestral Roots, (7th ed). 141-17, for a discussion of Hedwig's possible ancestry. Stuart, who seems to understand Weis, offers Robert Stimmels professed ancestry for Hedwig.
Wikipedia: Hedwiga
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Popponen
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grafen_von_Lauffen
http://www.apfelweibla.de/10__jahrhundert_bamberg_902.htm
http://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hedwig_van_Babenberg
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Otto_I,_Duke_of_Saxony
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bamberg
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grabfeld
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hedwiga
MEDIEVAL LANDS: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families by Charles Cawley © Foundation for Medieval Genealogy & Charles Cawley 2000-2018.
Zu den fränkischen Babenbergern:
Detlev Schwennicke, Europäische Stammtafeln, III.1, T. 54, 1984 http://wiki-de.genealogy.net/Europ%C3%A4ische_Stammtafeln
darin benutzt:
Alfred Friese: Studien zur Herrschaftsgeschichte des fränkischen Adels. Der mainländisch-thüringische Raum vom 7.–11. Jahrhundert. Klett-Cotta, Stuttgart 1979, ISBN 3-12-913140-X (Geschichte und Gesellschaft - Bochumer historische Studien 18), (Zugleich: Bochum, Univ., Habil.-Schr.).
Ferdinand Geldner: Neue Beiträge zur Geschichte der „alten Babenberger“. Meisenbach, Bamberg 1971, ISBN 3-87525-023-0 (Bamberger Studien zur fränkischen und deutschen Geschichte 1).
Wolfgang Metz: Babenberger und Rupertiner in Ostfranken. In: Jahrbuch für fränkische Landesforschung. Band 18, 1958, ISSN 0446-3943, S. 295–304. --- Main text in English: | BAYERN Hedwig (I58007)
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| 5396 |
Hedwig Herzogin alias Hedwige of Formbach or Countess of Formbach or Hedwig von Formbach
Birth date is a guess, both 1050 and 1058 have been proposed in the literature, listed above is before 1059, the year her father was most likely killed; birth place unknown; CLN von Supplinburg is incorrect and was deleted, it was the name of her first husband and she was married again after his death - kept von Formbach as CLN; for a death date estimates of between 1090 and 1093 are most prevalent, after 1190 was entered in data field; death place is also not known.
Sources
See also:
Dr. Ted Vandevis http://www.genealogieonline.nl Stamboom Kok, Jagt, Bottinga, Maarhuis en Kuiper, door Martin Kok Vandevis-11 07:47, 30 July 2014 (EDT)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hedwig_of_Formbach | FORMBACH Hedwig (I59394)
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| 5397 |
Hedwig of France, Countess of Mons
Hedwig[1][2] (c. 970 – after 1013)[3]
Alias: Avoise,[4] Hadevide or Haltude[3]
Early Life
p. Hugh Capet and Adelaide of Aquitaine (Poitou)[3]
Family
m.1 996 Rainier IV of Hainaut (947–1013)[3][5] Issue:[3][6]
Reginar V, Count of Mons
Lambert
Beatrix m. Ebles I, Count of Rheims and Roucy
Ermentrude (d.Young)[7]
m.2 Hugh de Dagsbourg[3]
Sources
↑ Medieval Land fmg. ac >>HEDWIGE [Avoie] de France ([969][134]-after 1013). Her brother gave her the towns of Couvin, Fraisne, Nîme, Eve and Bens [all now in Belgium] as her dowry on her marriage.
↑ 14 Sep 2010 124-DeCoursey.ged; McQuery Family Tree.ged 20 May 2011. Ancestry Family Trees: S2295565934, S2295565934; Pamela Durrell. S3349418663; dyermaeettaaug2010.ged on 11 Sep 2010. Ancestry Family Trees #S36: a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h, i, j; LDS Baptism: 25 Mar 1933. Endowment: 6 Apr 1933. Sealing Child: 24 May 1943. Temple: SLAKE - Salt Lake. Jul 5, 2011 by Johanna Amnelin;
↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 Wikipedia
↑ Aug 30, 2011 by Sharryn Hopgood. S00008 Ancestry Family Trees https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/16581687/person/432278421/facts; Nov 14, 2011 by Frank Walter Sands. S-1961470941 Ancestry Family Trees https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/25971230/person/1867408577/facts
↑ Medieval Lands: m. ([996]) REGINAR IV Comte de Hainaut, son of REGINAR [III] Graf im Maasgau & his wife Adela [von Dachsburg] (after 947-1013). via Medieval Lands fmg.ac
↑ John Scheuerman
↑ Wikipedia: todder. Burial: Collegiate Church of Saint Gertrude in Nivelles, Belgium. | CAPET Hedwig (I58999)
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| 5398 |
Heilwige of Dabo was born around 980 to Count Louis de Dabo and Judith d'Oehningen.[1][2]
Heilwige is also known as Hedwige of Dachsburg (the name at the time, or Dagsburg in German).[2]
Heilwige married Hugues IV de Nordgau before 1000.[1][2][3][4]
Heilwige died around 1046.[2]
Castle of Haut-Eguisheim
The Castle of Haut-Eguisheim (Haut-Rhin) is the ancestral castle in County Dagsburg, Lorraine. It is also known as the Dagsburg Castle. The marriage of Heilwige and Hugues IV allowed the Etichoinids to acquire the castle and established Hugues IV's power in Alsace.[2][3]
Research Notes
GEDCOM: Birth: ABT 972; Heilwig Von Dagsburg
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 Donald C. Jackman, Ius hereditarium Encountered III: Ezzo's Chess Match; (State College, Pennsylvania, Editions Enlaplage, 2018) p. 48; digital images, Google Books (https://books.google.com : accessed 8 March 2018).]
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Wikipedia contributors, Heilwige de Dabo, Wikipédia, L'encyclopédie libre que chacun peut améliorer, revision 10 January 2018, 22:15 UTC (https://fr.wikipedia.org : accessed 8 March 2018).
↑ 3.0 3.1 Wikipedia contributors, County of Dagsburg, Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, revision 26 September 2017, 16:19 UTC (https://en.wikipedia.org : accessed 8 March 2018).
↑ Wikipedia contributors, Pope Leo IX, Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, revision 24 December 2017, 17:01 UTC (https://en.wikipedia.org : accessed 8 March 2018). | DAGSBURG Heilwig (I58905)
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| 5399 |
Heimskringla
According to Snorre, Svanhild was the daughter of Eystein Jarl, and was one of the wives of Harald Fairhair. Their sons were:
Bjørn Farmann
Olaf Geirstadalf
Ragnar Rykkel
Sources
Sturlason, Snorre. Haraldz saga ins hárfagra, ch. 21
MedLands: KINGS of NORWAY (872)-1028 – DOUBTFUL LINEAGE | EYSTEINSDOTTIR Svanhild (I58701)
|
| 5400 |
Heinrich I "the Fowler"
German king
Parents
Otto of Saxony and Hedwig de la Marche (Hadwiga of Babenberg)
Marriage
m.1 (906) Hatheburg. (Divorced 909). Issue: 1 son
m.2 (909) Mathilde von Ringelheim'
Titles
912: succeeded father as duke of Saxony in 912.
919: during the Reichstag of Fritzlar, he was elected King of the Germans. Legend says he was catching birds when the imperial insignia where given to him. His german nickname is "Vogelfänger" (bird-catcher). During his reign he was able to unite the German tribes to one Kingdom.
Encyclopedia Brittanica © 1994-2001 -- Henry the Fowler (c. 876 - 02 July 936, Memleben, Saxony)
"Heinrich der Vogler, German king and founder of the Saxon dynasty (918-1024) who strengthened the East Frankish, or German, army, encouraged the growth of towns, brought Lotharingia (Lorraine) back under German control (925), and secured German borders against pagan incursions.
The son of Otto the Illustrious, the Liudolfing duke of Saxony, Henry became duke at his father's death (912). His first marriage, to Hatheburg, daughter of Erwin, count of Merseburg, was declared invalid because she had become a nun after her first husband's death. He married Matilda, daughter of Dietrich, count of Westphalia, in 909; their eldest son would rule as the Holy Roman emperor Otto I the Great (936-973).
Although at war (912-915) with Conrad I of Franconia (German king, 903-918) over title to lands in Thuringia, Henry received Conrad's deathbed designation as heir to the throne. He was elected king of Germany (May 919) by nobles of Saxony and Franconia, two of the four most influential duchies; the other two important duchies, Swabia and Bavaria, did not recognize him as king.
Henry considered Germany a confederation of duchies rather than a nation. Having complete authority in Saxony and nominal sovereignty in Franconia, he sought to bring the duchies of Swabia and Bavaria into the confederation. After forcing the submission of Burchard, duke of Swabia (919), he allowed the duke to retain control over the civil administration of the duchy. On the basis of an election by Bavarian and East Frankish nobles (919), Arnulf, duke of Bavaria, also claimed the German throne. In 921, after two military campaigns, the king forced Arnulf to submit and relinquish his claim to the throne, though the duke retained complete internal control of Bavaria.
Henry defeated Giselbert, king of Lotharingia, in 925, and that region, which had become independent of Germany in 910, was brought back under German control. Giselbert, who was recognized as duke of Lotharingia, married the king's daughter Gerberga in 928.
When the Magyars, barbarian warriors from Hungary, invaded Germany in 924, Henry agreed to pay tribute to them and return a captured Magyar chief in exchange for a nine-year (924-933) cession of raids on German territory. During these years the king built fortified towns and trained the cavalry force he used to defeat various Slavic tribes; he conquered the Havelli at Brandenburg and the Daleminzi at Meissen in 928 and suppressed a rebellion in Bohemia in 929. The king refused to pay more tribute when the nine-year truce ended in 933. He used his seasoned cavalry to destroy the Magyars, who had resumed their raids, at Riade on March 15, 933, and ended their threat to the German countryside. The king's last campaign, an invasion of Denmark (934), added the territory of Schleswig to the German state.
The story that Henry received the surname Fowler because he was laying bird snares when informed of his election as king is probably a myth."
Sources
Flodoard of Reims Google Books
Weis, F.L. (1992). Ancestral Roots, (7th ed). N.p.
Wikipedia: Henry the Fowler
http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/261444/Henry-I | LIUDOLFING Heinrich (I57977)
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