Matches 5,401 to 5,600 of 11,213
| # |
Notes |
Linked to |
| 5401 |
Heinrich I von Stade, according to Thietmar, who reports two of his great-grandfathers named Lothar died in the battle of Lenzen[1] was the son of Lothar II von Stade. He married Judith from the Konradiner family about 946. After her death he married Hildegard von Rheinhausen. He died either in 975 or 976[2] on either May 9 or 10.[3] Charles Cawley gives 11 May 976 as date of death.[4]
Sources
↑ Chronici Ditmari Episcopi Mersepurgii, Die Dresdner Handschrift der Chronik des Bischofs Thietmar von Merseburg, Sächsische Landesbibliothek – Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek (original manuscript in Latin); and Die Chronik des Thietmar von Merseburg. Übersetzt von Johann Christian Moritz Laurent. 1849. 2. Auflage hrsg. v. Johannes Strebitzki 1878. (German translation)
↑ Richard Georg Hucke: Die Grafen von Stade 900–1144. Genealogie, politische Stellung, Comitat und Allodialbesitz der sächsischen Udonen (= Einzelschriften des Stader Geschichts- und Heimatvereins / Stader Geschichts- und Heimatverein. Bd. 8). Selbstverlag des Stader Geschichts- und Heimatvereins, Stade 1956, p. 12
↑ Gerd Althoff: Adels- und Königsfamilien im Spiegel ihrer Memorialüberlieferung. Studien zum Totengedenken der Billunger und Ottonen. (= Münstersche Mittelalter-Schriften. Band 47). Fink, München 1984, p. 397
↑ Charles Cawley, Medieval Lands, GRAFEN von STADE (family of LOTHAR) | STADE Heinrich (I58581)
|
| 5402 |
Heinrich II, Graf an der Pegnitz is thought to have been the son of Heinrich von Schweinfurt, Markgraf auf dem Nordgau, and his wife Gerberga. This seems to be based on that fact that Heinrich von Schweinfurt was also mentioned as Graf an der Pegnitz in 1009 and 1011, and that succession to these titles may have been inherited.
Heinrich appears in the records as Graf an der Pegnitz from 1021-1043.
He perhaps married an unnamed daughter of Kuno I [von Altdorf] , Graf im Sualafeld, though this appears to be solely based on Heinrich possibly having a son named Kuno), and was the father of;
Heinrich II or III, Graf an der Pegnitz
Kuno, Graf von Lechsgemünd.
There is also a theory that Heinrich, Graf an der Pegnitz was the father of Otto I, Graf von Scheyern and ancestor of the Wittelsbach dynasty.
However, much of this is based on the research and suppositions of one man, Wilhelm Wegener, and there are almost no primary documents to support any of these relationships.
Sources
Cawley, Charles, "Bavaria, Nobility: Chapter 4G Grafen von Lechsgemünd, Horburg und Graisbach", v3.2 30 March 2015. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/BAVARIAN%20NOBILITY.htm#HeinrichPegnitzdiedafter1043B : accessed 08 May 2016.
Schwennicke, Detlev, Europäische Stammtafeln, Neue folge, Band I.1. Vittorio Klostermann: Frankfurt am Main. 1998. Tafel 88.
See Also:
https://www.geni.com/people/Rudolf-I-count-of-Altdorf/6000000003827270991 | PEGNITZ Heinrich (I58313)
|
| 5403 |
Heinrich was born about 0793. Heinrich of Wettergau ... He passed away before 0812. | WETTERGAU Heinrich (I58014)
|
| 5404 |
Heiress of the countship of Valois.
Sources
Roderick W. Stuart, "Royalty for Commoners."
http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ad%C3%A9la%C3%AFde_de_Valois | VEXIN Adela (I59066)
|
| 5405 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family: KOTKE Gotlieb (Gub) John / Living (F4710)
|
| 5406 |
Helen and her daughters did seamstress work for the community.
Name may have been Sandow | SAUVROW Helen (I9113)
|
| 5407 |
HELEN BROWN BRIDE OF JOHN VONDRUSKA
Newspaper unknown
A quiet wedding was held in the Baptist church parsonage at 4:00 p. m. August, 24, when Miss Helen F. Brown and John Vondruska were united in marriage by Rev. Charles R. Dru-----(unreadable). The ring ceremony was used. The young couple are occupying an apartment in the Commercial building. | Family: von Druska John Joseph / Brown Hellen Francis (F24174)
|
| 5408 |
Helen's death notice was published in the Ballston Journal in Saratoga County, NY on May 23, 1848.
In the Stillwater Vital Records, 1847-1850. District 2, Henry T. Shearman, Clerk; Helen is listed as being 14 years of age, a native of Stillwater, single and a houseworker. | Newland Helen (I52309)
|
| 5409 |
Helen, born Nov. 1, 1911, was a housewife and mother of two children. She later owned and operated a resort. After her first husband died, she remarried to a Bowman. She was living in Fountain Hill, Arizona when she died on August 11, 2005. Her funeral was held in IL. Obit was publishe in the Arizona Republican, 8/14/2005. | Brown Hellen Francis (I52983)
|
| 5410 |
Helgaud Ponthieu III, was born about 0860, Ponthieu, Alencon, Normandy, France. He died about 0926, Ponthieu, Somme, Picardie, France. No parents mentioned by Cawley.[1]
Sources
↑ https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/nfraamp.htm#_Toc494871036
Flodoard of Reims. Flodoardi Chronicon (Reims : Regnier, 1855) Records his death in 926, during a battle with the Northmen in which King Raoul was injured. About 1,100 Northmen were killed. | PONTHIEU Helgaud (I59090)
|
| 5411 |
Helie, also called Ela, Ala, and Alix, was the daughter of Eudes or Odo de Bourgogne, duke of Burgundy. Her birth date is estimated by a first marriage in 1095.[1]
She married in June 1095 Bertrand de Toulouse, count of Toulouse, by whom she had a son Pons de Toulouse. Bertrand died 21 April 1112[2]
Her second husband was Guillaume de Ponthieu, count of Ponthieu, also called William Talvas. They had children: Clemence, Mabile, Philippa, Guy, John/Jean, two Roberts, two Guillaumes/Williams, two Enguerrands, and Ela. Medieval Lands suggests that Clemence, Mabile, and Philippa may have been by a first wife but offers no evidence. [3][4][5]
Helie is said in Medieval Lands to have died 28 February 1141, although no source is provided for that date.
Research Notes
The profiles for Helie de Bourgogne and Alix de Burgundy were merged since both were shown as daughters of Eudes or Odo de Bourgogne/Burgunday. The profile for Alix showed a son Richard Despencer, but no source was provided for him.
Sources
↑ Medieval Lands http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/BURGUNDY.htm#HelieBourgognedied1141
↑ Medieval Lands http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/TRIPOLI.htm#BertrandToulousedied1112
↑ Medieval Lands http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/nfraamp.htm#GuillaumeIPonthieudied1171B
↑ Yeatman, John Pym. The Early Genealogical History of the House of Arundel (London: Mitchell and Hughes, 1882) Pedigree on Page 8.
↑ White, Geoffrey H, and Cokayne, G E. The Complete Peerage. Volume 11: Rickerton to Sisonby. (London: St Catherine Press, 1949.) Page 697. | BOURGOGNE Hélie (I59936)
|
| 5412 |
Helisinde (de Ramerupt) Ramerupt...
Can you add any information on Helisinde (de Ramerupt) Ramerupt? Please help grow this WikiTree profile. Everything you see here is a collaborative work-in-progress.
Name
Name: Helisinde /de Ramerupt/]
Ancestry Family Trees | de RAMERUPT Helisinde (I59091)
|
| 5413 |
Helvise was a possible wife of Hugues de Blois,[1] and then (around 971) of Hilduin de Montdidier (or I of Ramerupt).[2]
Sources
↑ Raphaël Bijard, Hugues de Beauvais - Le Comte Palatin de l’An Mil, sur Academia, 2018.
↑ Mathieu, Cahiers Haut-Marnais, 1999, p. 51. | LAON Helvide (I59005)
|
| 5414 |
Hendrik, Count of Guelders and of Zutphen, was born about 1117.
He died in 1182 and was buried at Kloster Kamp. [1]
Hendrik had a rider seal (Ruiter Zegel) from 1179. This was descrived by Spaen as een geschulpte schildrand met daarbinnen een patriarchaal of dubbel kruis Ter Gouw in 1865 describes it as als 3 fasen (dwarsbalken) met een kruis daarover.
The coat of arms based on Seal of Hendrik van Gelre from 1179
Coat of arms
The coat of arms of Gelre has changed through the years. Below are the coat of arms from the beginning to the Dukes of Gulik.[2]
'
Sources
↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2021. [1]
↑ Wikipedia NL Wapen van Gelre
See also:
Wikipedia:nl:Hendrik_I_van_Gelre
Graven en Hertogen van Gelre, Arnhem, 1967 , Schilfgaarde, Mr. A. P. van. 83 cited by http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00120760&tree=LEO
Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag, Marburg, Schwennicke, Detlev (Ed.). VI 25 cited by http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00120760&tree=LEO | GELRE Hendrik (I59514)
|
| 5415 |
Henri 'le Damoiseau' de Bourgogne, duc de Bourgogne
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Henry of Burgundy (1035 – c. 1071) was the son and heir of Robert I, duke of Burgundy. He died shortly before his father and failed to succeed in Burgundy. The name of his wife is unknown (that it was Sibil has been discredited) as is her origin, although a connection to the Counts of Barcelona has been hypothesized. Their children were: Hugh I, Duke of Burgundy (1057-1093) Eudes I, Duke of Burgundy (1058-1103) Robert, bishop of Langres (1059-1111) Helie, a nun (b. 1061) Beatrice (b. 1063), married Guy I, count of Vignory Reginald, abbot of St Pierre (1065-1092) Henry, Count of Portugal (1066-1112), who became a vassal of León and ruler of the county of Portugal in 1093; his son would be Afonso Henriques, first king of Portugal -------------------- Henry of Burgundy (1035 – c. 1071) was the son and heir of Robert I, duke of Burgundy . He died shortly before his father and failed to succeed in Burgundy. The name of his wife is unknown (that it was Sibil has been discredited) as is her origin, although a connection to the Counts of Barcelona has been hypothesized. Their children were: Hugh I, Duke of Burgundy (1057-1093) Eudes I, Duke of Burgundy (1058-1103) Robert , bishop of Langres (1059-1111) Helie, a nun (b. 1061) Beatrice (b. 1063), married Guy I, count of Vignory Reginald, abbot of St Pierre (1065-1092) Henry, Count of Portugal (1066-1112), who became a vassal of León and ruler of the county of Portugal in 1093; his son would be Afonso Henriques , first king of Portugal.
Henrique de Borgonha (1035 - ca. 1074) foi o filho herdeiro de Roberto I, Duque de Borgonha. Faleceu pouco antes do seu pai não o tendo por isso sucedido na Borgonha. Henrique casou com Sibila de Barcelona, filha de Berengário Raimundo "O Curvo" (1005 — 26 de Maio de 1035), Conde de Barcelona e teve os seguintes filhos:
1.Hugo I (1057-1093), sucessor do pai no ducado da Borgonha 2.Odo I (1058-1103), sucessor do irmão no ducado da Borgonha 3.Roberto (1059-1111), bispo de Langres 4.Hélia (n.1061), freira 5.Beatriz (n.1063), casou com Guy I de Vignory, conde de Vignory 6.Reinaldo (1065-1092), abade de Saint-Pierre à Flavigny 7.Henrique de Borgonha, Conde de Portugal (1066-1112), que se tornou vassalo de Castela e o senhor do Condado Portucalense em 1093; o seu filho foi D. Afonso Henriques, primeiro rei de Portugal In: Wikipédia, a enciclopédia livre.
Henri de Bourgogne (1035-1066)
Henri de Bourgogne1, dit Donzel ou le Damoiseau, (né vers 1035 - mort entre 1070 et 1074) était un prince de sang royal français, fils du duc de Bourgogne, Robert Ier le Vieux ( 1076), et d'Hélie de Semur, et donc petit-fils du roi de France Robert II le Pieux.
Selon certains historiens, il aurait épousé en 1056 Sibylle de Barcelone, fille de Bérenger Raymond Ier dit le Courbé ou le Corbeau, comte de Barcelone, et de Gisèle de Lluca. Jean Richard dans Les ducs de Bourgogne et la formation du duché du xie au xive siècles2, sur la base d'une phrase d'Orderic Vital, parlant des exploits de Robert Ier en plusieurs contrées, pense qu'il faut tenir compte, ainsi que l'a supposé M. Chaume3, dit-il, d'une expédition menée en 1058 pour défendre le comte de Barcelone contre les Musulmans. « C'est au cours de cette expédition qu'il aurait épousé une parente du comte Raymond Borel de Barcelone dont le surnom passa à ses descendants ».
Il eut les enfants suivants :
Hugues Ier (1057 1093) duc de Bourgogne
Eudes Ier (1058 1102), duc de Bourgogne
Robert (1059 1111), évêque de Langres
Hélie (1061 après 1081/84)
Béatrix (1063 v. 1110), mariée à Guy III de Vignory
Renaud (1065 1092), abbé de Saint-Pierre à Flavigny
Henri (1066 1112), comte de Portugal de qui descendra la maison royale du Portugal.
Mort avant son père, ce fut son fils aîné Hugues qui prit la succession du duché de Bourgogne.
Notes et références
↑ Henri de Bourgogne , le Damoiseau sur le site Foundation for Medieval Genealogy [archive]
↑ Société Les Belles Lettres, Paris, 1954, p. 12-13, r. 1 p. 13.
↑ Maurice Chaume, Les premières croisades bourguignonnes au-delà des Pyrénées in Annales de Bourgogne, XVIII, 1946, p. 161-165) et En marges des croisades bourguignonnes, d'Espagne, in Annales de Bourgogne, IX, 1937, p. 68-73).
Henri de Bourgogne (1035-1066) (http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henri_de_Bourgogne_(1035-1066) : accessed 27 Mar 2013)
Henrique de Borgonha (1035 — 1074) foi infante do Ducado da Borgonha[1] e avô D. Afonso Henriques, primeiro rei de Portugal.
Relações familiares
Foi filho e herdeiro de Roberto I, Duque de Borgonha (1011 — 21 de Março de 1076) e de Hélia de Semur (1015 - 1055), filha de Damásio de Semur e de Aremburga de Borgonha.
Henrique de Borgonha, no entanto faleceu um pouco antes do seu pai, não o tendo por isso sucedido na Borgonha. Henrique casou com Sibila de Barcelona, filha de Berengário Raimundo "O Curvo" (1005 — 26 de Maio de 1035), Conde de Barcelona e teve os seguintes filhos:
Hugo I (1057-1093), sucessor do pai no ducado da Borgonha
Odo I (1058-1103), sucessor do irmão no ducado da Borgonha
Roberto (1059-1111), bispo de Langres
Hélia (n.1061), freira
Beatriz (n.1063), casou com Guy I de Vignory, conde de Vignory
Reinaldo (1065-1092), abade de Saint-Pierre à Flavigny
Henrique de Borgonha, Conde de Portugal (1066-1112), que se tornou vassalo de Castela e o senhor do Condado Portucalense em 1093; o seu filho foi D. Afonso Henriques, primeiro rei de Portugal
Referências
↑ Henri de Bourgogne , le Damoiseau sur le site Foundation for Medieval Genealogy
Research Notes
Speculation regarding the wife of Henri "le Damoiseau" de Bourgogne
According to research performed by Charles Cawley of Medieval Lands, in Patrick van Kerrebrouck's Les Capétiens 987-1328, the following speculations regarding Henri "le Damoiseau" de Bourgogne's wife are documented:[1]
Abbé Maurice Chaume in his works En marge des croisades bourgignonnes d'Espagne and Les premières croisades bourgignonnes au-delà des Pyrénées states that she was related to Ramón Borell I, Conde de Barcelona, noting the usage of the name "Borel" by her son and grandson Eudes I and Hugues II.[1][2][3]
Szabolcs de Vajay in his work Etiennette, dite de Vienne, comtesse de Bourgogne. Bourgogne, Lorraine et Espagne au XI siècle names her mother as --- de Barcelona, daughter of Berenguer Ramón I "el Curvo" Conde de Barcelona and his third wife Guisle de Ampurias. He speculates that she married while her husband and his father were on crusade in Spain. He offers no proof that her first name was Sybilla.[1][4]
Jean Richard in his work Sur les alliances familiales des ducs de Bourgogne aux XII et XIII siècles speculates that the wife of Henri de Bourgogne was named Clémence as the name was used in later generations, and she could have been from Poitiers.[1][5]
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Charles Cawley. Beatrix de Bourgogne, entry in "Medieval Lands" database (accessed 2-Apr-23).
↑ Maurice Chaume. En marge des croisades bourgignonnes d'Espagne, Annales de Bourgogne, t. IX (1937), p. 72.
↑ Maurice Chaume. Les premières croisades bourgignonnes au-delà des Pyrénées, Annales de Bourgogne, t. XVIII (1946), pp. 161-5.
↑ Szabolcs de Vajay. Etiennette, dite de Vienne, comtesse de Bourgogne. Bourgogne, Lorraine et Espagne au XI siècle, Annales de Bourgogne, t. XXXII (1960), p. 259 note 3.
↑ Jean Richard. Sur les alliances familiales des ducs de Bourgogne aux XII et XIII siècles, Annales de Bourgogne, t. XXX (1958), pp. 39-42.
Wikipédia: Henrique de Borgonha (1035 — 1074)(http://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henrique_de_Borgonha : accessed 03 Mar 2013)
Histoire généalogique et chronologique de la maison royale de France, des pairs, grands officiers de la Couronne, de la Maison du Roy et des anciens barons du royaume, Tome Premier, par le Père Anselme de Sainte-Marie, continuée par Honoré du Fourny, ed. la compagnie des libraires (Paris) 1726-1733. Page 538. | BOURGOGNE Henri (I59987)
|
| 5416 |
Henri / Heinrich de Namur (later Henri IV "l'Aveugle" Comte de Luxembourg et Comte de Namur) was born in about 1111 and was the son of Ermesinde de Luxembourg and her second husband Godefroi Comte de Namur, who married in 1109. [1] [2] [3]
Siblings
Henri's father Godefroi de Namur, who succeeded as Comte de Namur in 1102, had two daughters with his first wife Sibylle de Porcien: [1]
Elisabeth de Namur
Flandrine de Namur
Henri's mother Ermesinde de Luxembourg was first married to Albert II Graf von Dagsburg, as his second wife. Her husband died on 24 Aug 1098, and they had no known children together. [4]
His father Godefroi's first wife Sibylle was reportedly seduced by Enguerrand de Boves Comte d'Amiens, Seigneur de Coucy, and fled Godefroi before giving birth to an illegitimate child. Guibert de Nogent records that Ingelrannus abducted filia…Rogeri comitis Porcensis, wife of Namurensi…comiti Godefrido. Godefroi and Sibylle were divorced in about 1104. In about 1109, Godefroi married Henri's mother, Ermesinde de Luxembourg, who was then a widow. [1]
Ermesinde de Luxembourg and Godefroi de Namur, each in their second marriage, had five children together: [1] [2]
Albert de Namur - who died before 1131
Henri de Namur - who succeeded his cousin and mother to become Henri IV Comte de Luxembourg and later succeeded his father as Comte de Namur
Clementia (Clemence) de Namur - who married Konrad Herzog von Zähringen (fr: Conrad, duc de Zähringen)
Beatrix de Namur - who married Ithier / Gonthier, Comte de Rethel
Adelaide (Adelis / Aledis / Alix) de Namur - who married Baudoin IV Comte de Hainaut
Accessions to Luxembourg and to Namur
Henri's older brother Albert de Namur died sometime between 1125-1131, leaving Henri as the eldest son. [1] [2]
In 1136, his first cousin Conrad II Comte de Luxembourg (Ermesinde's nephew), died without heirs and his mother inherited the county of Luxembourg, but effectively abdicated in favor of Henri, who then succeeded his cousin as Henri IV Comte de Luxembourg. [1] [2] [4] [5]
On 19 Aug 1139, his father Godefroi Comte de Namur died, and Henri succeeded him as Henri Comte de Namur. [1] [2]
First Marriage and Divorce
In about 1155 (1152-59), Henri married Lauretta de Flandre who was three times widowed. Lauretta and Henri had no known children together and she left him in about 1163 and refused to return, despite excommunication. They were divorced and she retired to the nunnery at Voorst. [1] [2]
Second Marriage, Separation and Family
In about 1168, Henri married Agnes van Gelre (fr: Agnès de Gueldre), the daughter of Hendrik Graf van Gelre in Holland. [1] [2] [5] [6]
Henri lost his sight in connection with an illness during the winter of 1182/83 and was later called Henri l'Aveugle. [5]
His second wife Agnes later left him to enter a convent and refused to return to him despite his appeal to Pope Alexander III. A reconciliation was negotiated in 1185 by the Archbishop of Köln, Philippe Count of Flanders and Godefroi Duke of Brabant, anxious to ensure that Namur and Luxembourg were not inherited by Baudouin V Comte de Hainaut (the nominated successor of Comte Henri). [1] [2] [5] [6]
After Agnes returned to Henri, they had a daughter named Ermesinde de Namur who was born in July 1186. [1] [2] [5]
Successions of Namur and Luxembourg
After the return of his wife and the birth of their daughter Ermesinde in 1186, Henri revoked his assurance to Baudouin V Comte de Hainaut concerning the succession and betrothed his infant daughter to Henri II Comte de Champagne. In 1188, Henri was obliged to reinstate Baudouin as his heir after a verdict in the latter's favour from Heinrich VI King of Germany. Comte Baudouin later attacked Namur, captured Henri and obtained a confirmation of his position from Emperor Friedrich I who also secretly created him Marquis de Namur. Under a compromise reached in 1190, Baudouin received Namur immediately, with the expectation of La Roche and Durbuy after the death of Henri who received the revenues of these two counties for life; the fate of Luxembourg was not mentioned. The creation of the Marquisate of Namur was announced at Worms in 1190, at which time Comte Henri retired to Luxembourg where he continued to rule as count. He made a last attempt to recover Namur in 1194 but was defeated at Noville-sur-Mehaigne. [2] [5]
Henri died on 14 Aug 1196. In Namur, he had already been succeeded by his nephew Baudouin V de Hainaut. In Luxembourg, he was succeeded by his daughter Ermesinde, who became the Comtesse de Luxembourg. [2] [5]
Sources
↑ 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 Comtes de Namur 907-1190 - Godefroi de Namur by Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Published by Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG) 2006-2021, including source citations and relevant texts; hosted online by FMG, accessed 2024; see also WikiTree's source page for MedLands)
↑ 2.00 2.01 2.02 2.03 2.04 2.05 2.06 2.07 2.08 2.09 2.10 Rouseau, Félix (Conservateur aux Archives du Royaume). Actes des Comtes de Namur de la Première Race (946-1196) (1936, Marcel, Hayez, Imprimeur de l'Académie Royale de Belgique); disponible via Commission Royale d'Histoire de la Belgique Actes des Comtes de Namur (946-1196) - Henri l'Aveugle, CXII - CXXV
↑ Wikipedia - Henry IV, Count of Luxembourg
↑ 4.0 4.1 Comtes de Luxembourg 963-1136 by Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Published by Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG) 2006-2021, including source citations and relevant texts; hosted online by FMG, accessed 2024; see also WikiTree's source page for MedLands)
↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 Comtes de Luxembourg 1136-1247 (Namur) by Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Published by Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG) 2006-2021, including source citations and relevant texts; hosted online by FMG, accessed 2024; see also WikiTree's source page for MedLands)
↑ 6.0 6.1 Graven van Gelre by Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Published by Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG) 2006-2021, including source citations and relevant texts; hosted online by FMG, accessed 2024; see also WikiTree's source page for MedLands)
See also:
- Rousseau, Félix. Henri l’Aveugle, Comte de Namur et de Luxembourg (1136-1196). (1921, Presses universitaires de Liège) | NAMUR Henri (I59501)
|
| 5417 |
Henri I was born circa 1165, probably in Leuven, in the Landgraviate of Brabant.
Henri I was Duke of Brabant from 1183 to his death, and Duke of Lower Lotharingia from 1190 to his death.
He was installed in 1180 as Duke of Lower Lotharingy, which he held until 1222. He was Duke of Louvain 1183-1198. He returned property to Aachen St Maria, in the presence of "filiis meis Heinrico milite, Alberto clerico", by charter dated September 1185. He was installed as Duke of Brabant in 1191. He agreed to divide "terram de Mussal" if "comes de Dasborc" died without heirs by charter dated 1197. He was one of the leaders of a crusade planned by Emperor Heinrich VI King of Germany, arriving in Palestine in mid-1197. He was marching to relieve Jaffa, captured by the Muslims in September 1198, when he heard news of the death of Henri de Champagne, King of Jerusalem. He returned to Acre and took interim charge of the government until the arrival of Amaury de Lusignan, King of Cyprus in January 1198. He recaptured Beirut from the Muslims in October 1197. After the murder of Philipp von Hohenstaufen, King of Germany in 1208, Philippe II "Auguste", King of France promoted the candidacy of Duke Henri for the German throne. Duke Henri joined his son-in-law Emperor Otto IV against France, and was defeated at the battle of Bouvines in 1214. Markgraaf van Antwerpen 1211. [1]
He died on 5 September 1235 in Köln (English: Cologne) in the Kingdom of Germany.[2] He was buried in St. Peter's church in Leuven. | BRABANT Henri (I57864)
|
| 5418 |
Henry and Anna were married in Howard County, IA, but after their marriage they moved to Nashyua, Floyd County, Iowa. They made their home there for five years, and then returned to Howard County living at Saratoge Iowa until 1912, at which time they move to Comfort Township, Kanabec county, Minnesota. | Family: KRAFT Henry / SCHRIBER Anna Catherine (F24969)
|
| 5419 |
Henry Babenburger (Babenburg)[1]
Disputed Origins
Heinrich's parents are UNKNOWN.[2][3]
Disputed Marriage
There was an argument that Engeltrude di Friuli married, "Heinrich dux [alte Babenberger] (d. 886)." Cawley (2006), shot it down ... because the timing's off. [4]
Sources
↑ http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FRANCONIA.htm#_ftnref85
↑ http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FRANCONIA.htm#_ftnref85
↑ Wikipedia claims that, Poppo of Grapfield, may have been his father or grandfather.Poppo of Grapfeld
↑ http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/NORTHERN%20ITALY%20900-1100.htm#_ftnref263
Wikipedia: Henry of Franconia; Wikipedia: of Franconia; Wikipedia: House of Babenberg
MEDIEVAL LANDS: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families by Charles Cawley © Foundation for Medieval Genealogy & Charles Cawley 2000-2018. | of FRANCONIA Heinrich (Babenberg) (I58010)
|
| 5420 |
Henry Ewell immigrated to Scituate, Plymouth County, MA in 1634. | Ewell Henry (I53335)
|
| 5421 |
Henry I (of France) (circa 1008-60), king of France (1031-60), son of King Robert II and grandson of Hugh Capet, founder of the Capetian dynasty. From the beginning of his reign he was occupied with putting down rebellions led by members of his family and other French nobles. Between 1035 and 1047 he assisted his nephew William, duke of Normandy, later William the Conqueror, king of England, in establishing William's authority over rebellious Norman nobles. Henry later grew jealous of William's power and waged unsuccessful war against him in 1054 and 1058. Henry was succeeded by his son Philip I.[1]
married 1051-05-19 Reims (Marne : 510454), France
Marriages and children
Henry was betrothed to Mathilde of Germany, the daughter of Emperor Konrad II, when she was about 6, but she died the following year, still unmarried at 7.
Henry then promptly married another German girl, also called Mathilde, but slightly older, about 8 or 9. She died 10 years later, soon after the death of their only child. She was a member of the complex Imperial family, but a description of exactly where she fitted in seems to have defeated the explanatory powers of the chroniclers.
This time Henry didn't rush to remarry; 7 years passed before he married a 15-year-old Russian princess. Their fourth and last child was born 6 years later.
Research Notes
Philippe Ier, roi de France, born 1053, died 1108-07-29 Melun (Seine-et-Marne : 770288), France, buried Saint-Benoît-sur-Loire (Loiret : 450270), France, married .. (France) 1071 or 1073 Berthe de HOLLANDE[2]
Sources
↑ Encarta® 98 Desk Encyclopedia © & 1996-97 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
↑ Histoire de la maison royale de France (Père Anselme); Mémoires (Société généalogique canadienne-française)
See also:
"Royal Ancestry" 2013 by Douglas Richardson, Vol. III. page 17 - 18
Foundation for Medieval Genealogy
Francogene:
Wikipedia (FR)
Ataviµ regiµ consisting of sixty copies only. Florence: Printed by J. Marenigh, 1820.Original data: Note: Includes text in French and Italian. bibliographical references and index.
Vajay, S. Mathilde, reine de France inconnue (Journal des savants), 1971
Settipani, Christian (2000). "Les vicomtes de Châteaudun et leurs alliés [Viscounts of Chateaudun and their relatives]" (in French). Onomastique et Parenté dans l'Occident médiéval (Oxford: Prosopographica et genealogica): pp. 247-261. ISBN 1-900934-01-9.
Christian Settipani, "Les comtes d'Anjou et leur alliances aux Xe et XIe siècles", in K. S. B. Keats-Rohan, ed., Family Trees and the Roots of Politics (Woodbridge, Suffolk, 1997): 211-267.
(En Francais) French Wikipedia page on Henri I de France: http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henri_Ier_de_France
Geneall: http://www.geneall.net/F/per_page.php?id=15
FRANCE (de), Henri Ier (Robert II le Pieux & Constance de PROVENCE [10405]), roi de France, born about 1005, died 1060-08-04 Vitry-aux-Loges (Loiret : 450346), France, buried Saint-Denis (Seine-Saint-Denis : 930066), France
Roderick W. Stuart, "Royalty for Commoners."
Histoire généalogique et chronologique de la maison royale de France, des pairs, grands officiers de la Couronne, de la Maison du Roy et des anciens barons du royaume, Tome Premier, par le Père Anselme de Sainte-Marie, continuée par Honoré du Fourny, ed. la compagnie des libraires (Paris) 1726-1733. Pages 72-73. | CAPET Hehri (I58654)
|
| 5422 |
Henry I took control of Normandy in 1106, and at that time Robert was recently dead. See below.
Very little is known about Robert. Stapleton wrote (p.xcvi):
In Domesday Book the surname "Marmion" does not occur, and we first meet with it in England in a List of Tenants of lands in the county of Lincoln of the time of Henry I. compiled between the years 1106 and 1120.
In that list appear both a Robert and a Roger, but these are apparently the son and grandson of the subject of this profile.
Perhaps the most important modern interpretation of the evidence is still derived from J. H. Round, who showed, based on prior work by Stapleton, how Robert Marmion preceded the better attested Roger Marmion, and that their lands seemed to represent one major part of the inheritance of Urse d'Abitot, including the lands held by his brother Robert the Dispensator (or Bursar).
At the time of the Domesday Survey, Robert the Dispensator held from the Bishop 17 and 1/2 hides and later, Robert (not Roger) Marmion held 7 in the Worcester Survey, with Walter de Beauchamp held the rest of Urse's holdings. p.175
Round speculates that Urse d'Abetot may have had two daughters, one the wife of Walter de Beauchamp and the other married to Robert Marmion, and when his son Roger forfeited, his sister pressed her claim. In Domesday, both a Robert and a Walter hold of Urse in Worcestershire. (Round, p.176)
Concerning the origins of Robert, Stapleton wrote (p.xcvi):
The caput of the Honour of Robert Marmion in Normandy was the castle of Fontenay in the Bailiwick of the Oximin or Hyémois near the river Laize, and he had likewise large possessions in the pays de Cinglais, together with a fief in the Bessin held of the see of Bayeux. Before the conquest of England [1066], in the time of Hugh Bishop of Bayeux, Ralph Tesson gave twelve acres in pago Baiocensi, adjoining the river Orne, and opposite the west front of the abbey, to the monks of Fontenay, which land he had exchanged with William Marmion ; and in the same pays in the year in which Henry, King of the English, reduced Normandy under his subjection [1106], Hadeguisa, the wife of Robert Marmion, upon being made a nun in the church of the Holy Trinity of Caen, gave to that church, and to the sisterhood, the land which she had in St. Georges and in Jurques, and the mill of La Hoiste and the Parket in its entirety, as Robert Marmion had held it on the day that he was alive and dead, by the concession of her sons, namely, Roger Marmion and Helto and Manasses, who, at the same time, together with their mother, placed the gift upon the altar.
Among the witnesses for Hadewis of this gift was a William Marmion and also Robert son of Robert Fitz-Erneis, and Gersenda his mother. According to Stapleton, "Gersenda named above was the daughter of Robert Marmjon, and with her husband affixed her signature to a charter in favour of the abbey of Fontenay in the time of William the Conqueror".
Research Notes
From Round. A survey of Worcestershire, conducted during the reign of Henry I, after 1108, to resolve a dispute between the Sheriff and the Church, compared hides held with those recorded in the Domesday Book. (Round, p.173) In the Domesday Survey for Cropetorn cum Neothetune:
the Abbot of Evesham holding 19,
the Monks holding 15,
Robert Despencer holding 11, and
Urso holding 6.
Compared to the Worcester Survey in the manor of Croppethorne
the Abbot of Evesham held 19 hides,
the Church of Worcester held 14,
Walter de Beauchamp held 9, and
Robert Marmion held 7 (24 hides).
This shows a Robert where a Roger Marmion is later found, "if", as Round writes several times, "we can trust the text".
The Northamptonshire Survey, conducted somewhere in the reigns of Henry I - Henry II, says in Pokebroc Rogerus Marmium i hid. et i. virg. de eodem feudo. and In Therninge Rogerus Marmioun iii parvas virg. de feodo Burgi. (Round, p.217) Polebrook, a township of five hides, was held at Domesday by Eustace "the Sheriff", 1 and 1/4 hides in capite, and 3 and 3/4 hides as a tenant of Peterborough Abbey; at the time of the Northamptonshire Survey Walter "de Clopton" holds 2/3 of Eustace's Peterborough Abbey property and Roger Marmion holds the rest. (Round, pp.222-3.)
At the time of the Lindsey Survey, dated by Round to between 1115-1118, Robert Marmion held 11 carucates at Winteringham of Walter, Gilbert's son, and Roger Marmion held 1 carucate in capite. These 12 carucates had been held at Domesday by "Robertus homo Gilberti" of Walter de Gant. (Round, p.190)
Circa 1146, Ranulph earl of Chester granted Coventreia to Robert Marmion in fee; the deed is endorsed Magna Charta maneri domini Marmyon de Conventre and included Lodelowe venilla among others.[1] This would suggest that Robert reached his majority around 1146, so born around 1125. Richard de Canvilla, was a witness to the grant.[1] Richard de Canvilla was Millicent Rethel's second husband. Another witness was a William Redzai',[1] perhaps a representative of his mother's family, the Rethels?
Henry VI inspected and confirmed to Philip Marmion:
the charter of Henry I granting Robert Marmion freewarren in Warwickshire (specially at Tamworth) as his father had;
the charter of Henry II, dated by Round to 1155; and
the charter of Henry III. (Round, p.192)
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 The National Archives Website: Discovery: DR10/256, 188 - Shakespeare Birthplace Trust: DR10 - GREGORY OF STIVICHALL: Warwickshire: Coventry: DR10/256 - DEEDS AND PAPERS, http://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/rd/c67ee918-1ec2-4e3d-876f-c8d202bba150. 20 March 2015.
Keats-Rohan, K.S.B. Domesday Descendants: A proopography of Persons Occurring in English Documents 1066-1166 (Boydell Press : Woodbridge, Suffolk, 2002). p. 1032.
Stapleton, Thomas. Magni Rotuli Scaccarii Normanniæ Sub Regibus Angliæ. Opera Thomæ Stapleton: Tomus Ii. Londini: Soc. Antiq. Londinensis, 1844. https://archive.org/details/MagniRotuliScaccariiNormanniaeSubRegibusAngliae.Volume2.1844
Feudal England Historical Studies on the XIth and XIIth Centuries|first=John Horace|last=Round, MA|publication-place=London|publisher=Swan Sonnenschein & Co Ltd.|year=1895 Reprint 1909|accessdate=22 March 2015|url=https://archive.org/stream/cu31924014477271|repository=The Internet Archive
Major-General The Hon G Wrottesley, comp., Pedigrees from the Plea Rolls collected from the Pleadings in the Various Courts of Law AD 1200 to 1500 from the Original Rolls, ( 1905), accessed 29 August 2014, https://archive.org/stream/pedigreesfromple00wrotrich#page/n5/mode/2up .
See also:
Charles Cawley (October 2020): MedLands, Marmion, 3 Robert Marmion [I].
Self-published family trees, https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/6835128/person/-472574855/facts
Memoirs of Chesters of Chicheley pedigree of Boteler and Marmion. | MARMION Robert (I60191)
|
| 5423 |
Henry of Scotland
Henry of Scotland was the second but oldest surviving son of David I, King of Scots, and his queen consort Maud Huntingdon. [1][2][3] His older brother, Malcolm, was strangled at the age of two.[2][4] His two older sisters, Claricia and Hodierna, both died unmarried.[5]
Henry succeeded his father as earl of Huntingdon in 1136.[1][6] His mother had a hereditary claim to the earldom of Northumberland which King David demanded also be invested in Henry, but King Stephen refused to do so.[6] Accordingly, in 1138 David sent his army into Yorkshire where he suffered an ignominious defeat at the Battle of the Standard with Henry, who had led the men of Cumberland and Teviotdale, barely escaping with his life.[6] However, the heroic calvary charge which Henry led at the last minute on a flank of the English army (accompanied only by what was left of his father's bodyguard) was so much admired that when peace was restored in the spring of the following year, Stephen relented and did present him with Northumberland .[1][7] [8]
Notable Events
Henry subsequently spent time at King Stephen's court, becoming a favorite there, and later accompanied Stephen to the seige of Ludlow. There Henry was nearly unhorsed by a grappling iron and would have been taken captive, but King Stephen fought off Henry's attackers and rescued him.[6][8] It was during his sojourn at Stephen's court that Henry met his future bride, Ada de Warenne.[8]
Henry was trained from the age of about fourteen to inherit the throne of Scotland, his name constantly linked with his father's in charters, and in a document dated 1144 he was styled "rex designatus" (king-designate).[6] Coins were issued in his name at Bamburgh, Carlisle, and Corbridge.[6] On 22 May 1149 he stood sponsor to Henry Plantagenet for his knighting.[6] In 1150 he joined with his father to found a Cisterian house at Holmcultram, Cumberland for monks from Melrose Abbey.[1][6]
Marriage and Children
Earl Henry married in 1139 Ada de Warenne, a daughter of William de Warenne, 2nd earl of Surrey and earl of Warenne, and Isabel de Vermandois.[1][2] There were at least six children from this marriage: [see research notes]
Malcolm IV, King of Scots; b. 20 Mar 1141;[9][10] d. 9 Dec 1214[11][12]
Ada Dunkeld; b. bef. 1143[13] m. 28 Aug 1162 Floris III, count of Holland[14][15]
William I, King of Scots; b. c.1143;[3][16] m. 5 Sep 1189 Ermengarde Beaumont;[16][17] d. 4 Dec 1214[18][19]
David Dunkeld, earl of Huntingdon; b. c.1144[2][3] m. 26 Aug 1190 Maud Chester;[3][2] d. 17 Jun 1219[2][3]
Margaret (or Margery) Dunkeld; b. c.1145[20][21] m(1) 1160 Conan IV, duke of Brittany and earl of Richmond;[3][14][22] m(2) Humphrey de Bohun, earl of Hereford[3][14]
Maud (or Matilda) Dunkeld; b. aft. 1146;[21] died unmarried in 1152[23][24][14][25]
Death
Henry, earl of Northumberland, died 12 June 1152, aged (about) 37 years, and was buried at Kelso Abbey in Roxburghshire.[26][1][27] Contemporary historians in both England and Scotland lamented the earl's early death and praised him as "all that is excellent in a knight, a prince, and a man."[8] Henry's death turned out to be a heavy blow to Scotland, as the following year his father, King David, also died and Henry's eldest son Malcolm, not an experienced heir but a boy only eleven years of age, succeeded his grandfather as King of Scots.[6][8] His widow, the Countess Ada, granted a toft in Haddington to Dunfermline Abbey, Fife, for the soul of her husband, Earl Henry.[1]
Research Notes
Posssible fourth daughter of Henry and Ada
Douglas Richardson discusses briefly the possiblity of a fourth daughter whose name is unknown, who in 1168 was offered in marriage to an unnamed son of Guglielmo V, marquis of Monferrato, and whose history is unknown.[28] As evidence of this daughter's existence, Richardson cites Giles, Joannis Saresberiensis postea episcopi Carnotensis Opera Omnia, vol. 2 (1848), p. 131; and Millor, Letters of John of Salisbury, vol. 2 (1979), p. 555. Unfortunately neither of these sources appear to be available online. Because virtually nothing is known about this possible daughter (even the suggested marriage cannot be confirmed) and no other historians include any mention of her, she has not been included in the list of children on this profile. Stevens-17832 16:00, 30 September 2021 (UTC)
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 Richardson, Douglas. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 5 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham (Salt Lake City: the author, 2013), vol. 4, pp. 580-583 SCOTLAND 3. Henry of Scotland.
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 Dunbar, Sir Archibald H. Scottish Kings: A Revised Chronology of Scottish History 1005-1625. Edinburgh: D. Douglas (1899), pp. 64-65.
↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 Paul, Sir James Balfour. The Scotts Peerage. Edinburgh: D. Douglas (1904), vol. 1, pp. 4-5.
↑ Paul, Sir James Balfour. The Scotts Peerage. Edinburgh: D. Douglas (1904), vol. 1, p. 3.
↑ Orderic Vitalis, iii. 402-403, bk. viii. c.22, also 403, note 1, cited in Dunbar, Sir Archibald H. Scottish Kings: A Revised Chronology of Scottish History 1005-1625. Edinburgh: D. Douglas (1899), p. 64.
↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 6.6 6.7 6.8 Stringer, Keith. Henry, earl of Northumberland. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Online edition (23 Sep 2004), rv. 25 May 2006, available here by subscription.
↑ Cawley, Charles. Foundation for Medieval Genealogy: Medieval Lands database. Chapter 3,Henry of Scotland.
↑ 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 Norgate, Kate. Dictionary of National Biography Online, vol. 26, Henry of Scotland.
↑ Richardson, Douglas. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 5 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham (Salt Lake City: the author, 2013), vol. 4, p. 582 SCOTLAND 3.i. Malcolm IV.
↑ Stevenson, J. (ed). Chronica de Mailros. Edinburgh: the Societatis Edinburgensis (1835), [Anno m.c.xlj.Eclipfis facta eft xxij. kalendas Aprilis [Mar 20] et atus eft rex Melcolmus.], p. 72.
↑ Dunbar, Sir Archibald H. Scottish Kings: A Revised Chronology of Scottish History 1005-1625. Edinburgh: D. Douglas (1899), p. 73.
↑ Stevenson, J. (ed). Chronica de Mailros. Edinburgh: the Societatis Edinburgensis (1835),[A.D. 1165: ...Obit pie memorie Malcolmus rex Scotorum apud Gedewurt, v. idus Decembris [Dec 9] quod evenit v.o feria, anno etatis fuae xxovo, regnique ejus anno xij.k. cujus corpus honorifice ab omnibus perfonis ufque ad Dunfermelin delatum fepelitur; cui fucceffit Willelmus frater ejus, in virgilia natalis Domini [Dec 24] , more regio elevatus in regnum.], p. 80.
↑ Ritchie, R.L.G. The Normans in Scotland. Edinburgh (1954), cited in Chandler, Victoria. “Ada de Warenne, Queen Mother of Scotland (c. 1123-1178).” The Scottish Historical Review 60, no. 170 (1981), p. 123, available at jstor.
↑ 14.0 14.1 14.2 14.3 Dunbar, Sir Archibald H. Scottish Kings: A Revised Chronology of Scottish History 1005-1625. Edinburgh: D. Douglas (1899), p. 68.
↑ Richardson, Douglas. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 5 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham (Salt Lake City: the author, 2013), vol. 3, p. 299 HOLLAND 4. Ada of Scotland.
↑ 16.0 16.1 Richardson, Douglas. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 5 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham (Salt Lake City: the author, 2013), vol. 4, p. 583 SCOTLAND 4. William the Lion.
↑ Scott, W.W. Ermengarde (Ermengarde de Beaumont). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Online, 23 Sep 2004, available here by subscription.
↑ Skene, William F. John of Fordun's Chronicle of the Scottish Nation. Edinburgh: Edmonston and Douglas (1862), Annals, XXVIII, pp 274-275.
↑ Skene, William F. Chronicles of the Picts and Scots. Edinburgh: H.M. General Register House (1867), p. 175.
↑ Reported to be (approximately) forty years old in 1185 in Rotuli de Dominabus et Pueris et Puellis de Donatione Regis in XII Comitatibus'[1185], Stacey Grimaldi (ed). London (1830). pp. 4, 62.
↑ 21.0 21.1 Chandler, Victoria. “Ada de Warenne, Queen Mother of Scotland (c. 1123-1178).” The Scottish Historical Review 60, no. 170 (1981), p. 123, available at jstor.
↑ Richardson, Douglas. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 5 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham (Salt Lake City: the author, 2013), vol. 4, p. 583 SCOTLAND 3.v. Margaret of Scotland.
↑ Riley, Henry T. (ed). The Annals of Roger de Hoveden. London: H.G. Bohn (1853), "In the same year [1152], Henry, earl of Northumberia, son of David, king of the Scots, and Matilda, his daughter, departed this life", vol. 1, p. 252.
↑ Stevenson, J. (ed). Chronica de Mailros. Edinburgh: the Societatis Edinburgensis (1835), sub A.D. 1152: "Obiit Henricus comes Norhimbrorum, filius regis David Scottorum, et Matildis filia ejus." p. 74.
↑ Richardson, Douglas. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 5 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham (Salt Lake City: the author, 2013), vol. 4, p. 582 SCOTLAND 3.iv. Maud of Scotland.
↑ Wharton, Henry. Anglia Sacra. London: Richard Chiswel (1691), Chronicon Sanctae Crucis Edinburgensis, sub A.D. 1152: "Obiit Henricus Comes Northanhumborum filius David Regis Scotiae secundo Idus Junii [12 June]." p. 161.
↑ Chron. S. Crucis Edinb., p.31, Bannatyne Club, cited in Norgate, Kate. Dictionary of National Biography Online, vol. 26, Henry of Scotland.
↑ Richardson, Douglas. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 5 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham (Salt Lake City: the author, 2013), vol. 4, p. 583 SCOTLAND 3.vii. __________ of Scotland.
See also:
Richardson, Douglas. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 5 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham (Salt Lake City: the author, 2013), vol. 5, p. 274 VERMANDOIS 5.iv.iii. Ada de Warenne.
Richardson, Douglas. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 5 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham (Salt Lake City: the author, 2013), vol. 1, pp. 542-544 BRITTANY 5. Conan IV.
Richardson, Douglas. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 5 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham (Salt Lake City: the author, 2013), vol. 1, pp. 404-406 BOHUN 4. Humphrey de Bohun.
Richardson, Douglas. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, 5 vols, ed. Kimball G. Everingham (Salt Lake City: the author, 2013), vol.3, p. 299 HOLLAND 4. Ada of Scotland.
Wikipedia: Henry of Scotland | DUNKELD Henry (I59061)
|
| 5424 |
Her ancestry can be traced back to Stephen Hopkins who arrived in Plymouth Plantation in 1620 on the "Mayflower". This is the beginning of the Mayflower connection to the Annable line.
Elizabeth was baptized in the Rochester Church, bp. 18 July,1747 | Snow Elizabeth (I53232)
|
| 5425 |
Her baptismal at Penetanguishene, Ont. gives a date of 16th of July
1865 and states that she was born 3 weeks before the baptisum. | BOUCHER Julia (I1277)
|
| 5426 |
Her birth and death dates are not known. Her death date has been changed from 731 to 736 to prevent data error messages (since her daughter is shown as being born in 736).
Parents
Father: UNKNOWN[2]
Mother: Williswint[3]
Marriage
m. Nebe (Hnabi), Duke of Alemannia.[4] Issue: 2
Ruodpoert "Robert" (d. 785)
Imma
m. Gerold, Graf im Kraichgau "Udalrichinger"
Sources
Cawley, Charles. "Medieval Lands": A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families © by Charles Cawley, hosted by Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG). See also WikiTree's source page for MedLands. | UNKNOWN Herswinde (I58149)
|
| 5427 |
Her birth date is estimated on the assumption that she was 15 years old or younger at the time of her marriage, but old enough to have given birth to her first child before the date of this charter dated 6 JUN 964 :
“Borrellus comes et marchio” donated property to the monastery of San Saturnino de Urgell, for the souls of "…uxoris meæ Letgarda vel prolis meæ, que de me et illa procreata est, et…fratris mei Mironis comitis atque marchionis". [1]
Marriage
She married (as his first wife) Borrell II Comte de Barcelona, son of Sunyer I Comte de Barcelona & his wife Richilde. [2]
Research Notes
Elsewhere the mother of Borrell's children is given as Garsinda, possibly a variant of Lutgarde. [3]
Bofarull records a suggestion by Marca that Ledgarde was the daughter of "Ramon Pons y Garsinda condes de Auvernia".[4]
Sources
↑ Marca. Marca Hispanica, 1688, Appendix, CIII, col. 884.
↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2021. [1]
↑ Richard Erdoes, AD 1000: Living on the Brink of Apocalypse, 1988, p. 33.
↑ Bofarull y Mascaró. Tomo I, 1836, p. 145, citing Marca Hisp. col. 101 y 102.
See Also:
Sant Cugat del Vallés Vol. I, 126, p. 101.
Vic, 465, p. 388. | TOULOUSE Luitgarde (I59809)
|
| 5428 |
Her death (after 904) appears in Wikipedia. [1] The date field has been changed to "after". Note that her first name appears as "Ermesenda" in the article (not changed in Wikitree).
Saunders-3874 09:34, 2 October 2017 (EDT)
Sources
↑ https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guterre_Mendes
Ancestry Family Trees: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=27418815&pid=4188
Ancestry Family Trees: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=27418815&pid=4191 | GUTIÉRREZ Hermensinda (I59887)
|
| 5429 |
Her death is recorded in Wayne Co. deaths ledger 207, page 629 | LEDUC Julia (I5004)
|
| 5430 |
Her father, Guillaume, succeeded his father as Comte d'Auvergne in 886. Guillaume was not know as Duke of Aquitaine until 909.
Research Notes
The wife of Rotbald is not known. It has been speculated, for onomastic reasons only, that she was a daughter of Guillaume "le Pieux" Duke of Aquitaine & his wife Engelberga de Provence, but there appears to be no other basis for this suggestion [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 2023, Dukes of Aquitaine. | AUVERGNE Ermengarde (I58823)
|
| 5431 |
Her given name is unknown, but may have been Beatrix.
Sources
Ancestry family trees
Royal and Noble Genealogical Data, Brian Tompsett, Copyright 1994-2001, Version March 25, 2001
http://www.dcs.hull.ac.uk/public/genealogy/GEDCOM.html, Department of Computer Science, University of Hull, Hull, UK, HU6 7RX, B.C.Tompsett@dcs.hull.ac.uk | BOLEBEC Beatrix (I59175)
|
| 5432 |
Her husband is considered legendary; how much more so should the wife of a legendary person be, when even her name is in dispute!Day-1904 22:44, 1 April 2019 (UTC)
Name
Her name is unknown. [1]
Sources
↑ Ancestry Family Trees Data: Text: https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/tree/27492901/family. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.; This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files.
Source: S-2087525741 Repository: #R-2142232775 Title: Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. Note: This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created. Page: Ancestry Family Trees Note: Data: Text: https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/tree/27418815/family
Repository: R-2142232775 Name: Ancestry.com Address: http://www.Ancestry.com Note:
Acknowledgements
WikiTree profile Unknown-104562 created through the import of Steve Sanders family tree_2011-08-28.ged on Aug 30, 2011 by Steve Sanders.
WikiTree profile Saxony-149 created through the import of jefflorrie(1).ged on Sep 10, 2011 by Jeff Johnson. | UNKNOWN Eiliswintha (I58002)
|
| 5433 |
Her last name was sometimes listed as Hayward. | HOWARD Lois (I4161)
|
| 5434 |
Her maiden name was Glidden. | WELCH Theresa A. (I9980)
|
| 5435 |
Her maiden name was Merritt. | GLIDDEN Flora A (I3423)
|
| 5436 |
Her mar. records states she mar. to G. W.
Hastings; but the announcement in the
Clayton County Journal Elkader, Iowa issued
26 Apr. 1871 says " At Elkader 17 Apr. 1871
by Justice Vaupel; Georege W. Harding and
Emma Pulsifer both of McGregor. | PULSIFER Emergene (I7176)
|
| 5437 |
Her marriage certificate says she was wed at her home with brother, Richard King Brown and cousin, Wells King as witnesses. Rev. Allen Traver, paster of the Presbyterian Church of Dresden officiated. | Family: Elting Louis B. / Brown Justina Sophiah (F24067)
|
| 5438 |
Her marriage to Berthold Schwarzenburg is uncertain.
Sources
J.A. Stargardt Verlag, Marburg, Schwennicke, Detlev (Ed.). Europäische Stammtafeln, V 118. [1]
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CARINTHIA.htm#RichgardSponheimdied1130 | SPONHEIM Richgard (I58056)
|
| 5439 |
Her name gets variously spelled Gorion, Gouron, Goron
Anne Françoise Goron, b c 1672 (9 on 1681 census) daughter of Michel Goron and Marguerite Robineau.[1]
married Robert Houy 18 Apr 1689 Cap-Santé (Houy dit St-Laurent);
Recensement 1681 Census: SAINT-CHARLES DES ROCHES
Michel Goron 45 ; Marguerite Robineau, sa femme, 40 ; enfants : Thimothée 11, Anne 9, Gilles 8 ; 3 bêtes à cornes ; 6 arpents en valeur.[2]
Marriage
Contrat de mariage entre Robert Houry dit Saint-Laurent, soldat de M. de Bergères, fils de Jacques Houry et de Jeanne DesRoziers, de l’évêché d’Orléans; et Anne-Françoise Goron, fille de Michel Goron et de Marguerite Robineau, de Deschaillons (12 avril 1689) Notaire François Trotain Vol XXVII pg 153[3]
April 18, 1689
Cap-Santé,
Marriage with Robert Houy
Family Ouis / Goron complete (4 children) checked with PRDH
Listed as Marie Madeleine Goron, wife of Robert St-Laurent when she died 29 Feb 1748 buried 1 Mar Deschaillons.[4] (her parents are named on the record)
Notes
Note NI2847Anne-Françoise Gauron aka Houy
Born about 1672 in Québec, Canada
Daughter of Michel Gauron Petitbois and Marguerite Robineau
Sister of Angelique (Gauron) Leboeuf, Françoise-Marguerite Gauron and Marie C. Gauron
Wife of Robert Houy St-Laurent married April 18, 1689 in Cap Santé, Quebec, Canada
Mother of Angélique Houy St-Laurent, Robert Houy St-Laurent, Madeleine Houy St-Laurent and Marie Houy
Died February 29, 1748 in Deschaillons, Canada
Sources
↑ Source: #S29649
↑ Wikisource Recensement 1681 Census selon Benjamin Sulte
↑ BAnQ Notarial acts index Inventaire des greffes des notaires du régime français, par Pierre Georges Roy et Antoine Roy; 27 Vol + index 1-8
↑ Sépulture-Funeral Marie Madeleine Goron image IGD
Actes d'état civil et registres d'église du Québec (Collection Drouin), 1621 à 1997 - Gabriel Drouin, comp. Drouin Collection: Institut Généalogique Drouin IGD (membership) https://www.genealogiequebec.com
http://www.nosorigines.qc.ca/GenealogieQuebec.aspx?genealogy=Anne-Francoise_Gauron&pid=199067&lng=en
Source: S29649 Title: 0Wickitree Repository: Note: #NS296493 | GAURON Anne Françoise (I60297)
|
| 5440 |
Her name was spelled Moumford on the marriage records in All Saint's Church in Cambridgeshire Parish, England.
She and Anthony Annable married on 26 April, 1619. No more can be found on her in England. | Momford Jane (I53675)
|
| 5441 |
Her obituary says she was married on January 10, 1902. | Family: Wilson John Wilhelm / O'Connel Delia Louella (F24075)
|
| 5442 |
Her remains are interred in Laurel Hill Cemetery, Philadelphia, PA. | Sheldon Alma (I53148)
|
| 5443 |
Her remains were interred by the side of her father in the Albany Rural Cemetery in 1868. | Anable Cynthia Jane (I53403)
|
| 5444 |
Her will, dated 24 Jan. 1755 at Hampton Falls, N.H.; witnessed by
Jonathan Green, Samuel Prescott Jr. and Thoedore Smith. Proved 30 May
1755.
See: Genealogical and Family History of the State of New
Hamphire page 1654 | Pulsifer. Elizabeth (I8074)
|
| 5445 |
Herbert was killed a train wreck.
http://www.gendisasters.com/data1/ma/trains/shelburnefalls-trainwreck1886.htm | LITTLEJOHN Herbert Pliney (I40275)
|
| 5446 |
Herbert I (died 1036), called Wakedog or Evigilans Canis (Eveille-Chien), was the count of Maine from 1015, the son and successor of Hugh III.
Under the last Carolingian and first Capetian kings of France, royal power declined sharply and many royal rights were amassed by the greater and lesser nobility. Herbert of Maine even struck coins with his own monogram. He purchased the loyalty of his vassals by dolling out his land to them and granting them the right to build castles, which proliferated, as at Sablé, Château-du-Loir, Mayenne, Laval, La Ferté Bernard, Saint Calais, Sillé (after 1050), La Suze, Malicorne, La Milesse, Montfort, and Sourches.
From the beginning of his reign, he was constrained to aid his suzerain, Fulk III of Anjou, in a war against Odo II of Blois, both of whom had designs on the Touraine. In 1016, following an attack on the fortress of Montrichard, Odo met the forces of Fulk at the Battle of Pontlevoy on 6 July. Despite Odo's numerical advantage, by the intervention of Herbert, the battle went to Fulk. One of the consequences of the battle was to create a balance of power in the region, which was followed by peace for several years.
By marrying his son to a daughter of the count of Blois, Herbert was able to maintain himself independent of his legal suzerain. He also allied with the count of Rennes, who threatened Fulk from the west. He made enemies with the king, Robert II, and even expelled the bishop of Le Mans, Avesgaud of Bellème, from his diocese. Finally, on 7 March 1025, he was arrested in Saintes by Fulk, who kept him imprisoned for two years until a coalition forced his release. Herbert then did homage to Fulk.
The name of Héribert's wife is not known.
Children
Hugh IV, succeeded his father, married Bertha, daughter of Odo II of Blois
Biota, married Walter III of the Vexin
Gersenda, married firstly Theobald III of Blois; divorced in 1048 and married secondly Albert Azzo II, Margrave of Milan
Research Notes
Paula has been disconnected as a daughter. Please see her profile for more details.
Sources
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/MAINE.htm#HerbertIMainedied1032A
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herbert_I,_Count_of_Maine
Geni. Heribert I, Comte du Maine, born c 984. Husband of Bertha and Paule de Preuilly. Son of Hugues III and Ermengard de Vermandois. Note no mention of the wife listed here, Eremburge. Extensive commentary and references listed.
Stewart Baldwin. The Henry Project -Herbert I "Wake Dog" | MAINE Herbert (I59954)
|
| 5447 |
Herbert IV of Vermandois (1028 - 1080), Count of Vermandois, was the son of Otto of Vermandois and Pavia (or Patia). He married Adele of Valois, daughter of Raoul III of Valois and Adele de Bar-sur-Aube, and had:
? Adelaide, Countess of Vermandois, married to Hugh of Vermandois.
? Odo, Count of Vermandois (died after 1085), married to Hedwig.
Later became Lord of Saint-Simon by marriage. The last Carolingian.
Sources
Royal Ancestry by Douglas Richardson Vol. V. page 268
ENGLISH ORIGINS OF NEW ENGLAND FAMILIES. From NEHGS Register Three Volumes. By Gary Boyd Roberts. Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc. 1984.
Some Descendants of Charlemagne
Wikipedia (http://www.wikipedia.org) (12 May 10)
Roderick W. Stuart, "Royalty for Commoners."
Ancestry Family Trees Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.
This person was created through the import of Jamie 2010_2010-04-10.ged on 14 Apr 2010. | VERMANDOIS Herbert (I59160)
|
| 5448 |
Herbert, Count of Gleiberg, Kinzigau, & Schweinfurt, was born about 930. [1]
He was Graf im Kinziggau in 976. [2]
In 981 he followed Emperor Otto II to Italy, and in 982, he took part in the disastrous Battle of Stilo against the Saracens. [3]
Heribert died in 992. [4]
Sources
↑ Our Royal, Titled, Noble, and Commoner Ancestors & Cousins.
↑ * Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2021. [1]
↑ Wikipedia:Herbert_of_Wetterau.
↑ Annales Necrologici Fuldenses. MGH SS XIII, p. 123. | WETTERAU Heribert (I58128)
|
| 5449 |
Heribert was a Carolingian aristocrat who played a significant role in Francia.[1]
Name and Titles
Héribert I was Count of Vermandois and Soissons. [2]
He was Count of Soissons and lay-abbot of Saint-Crépin.[3] [1]
Herbert I, Count of Vermandois[1]
Count of Meaux, [1]
850 Birth and Parentage
Charles Cawley (Medlands) estimates the birth in the time period 848-840. [4] Other writers often use an estimated birth year of 850.[5] Stewart Baldwin (Henry Project) reminds us that Heribert's actual date and place of birth are unknown.[3]
He was a younger son of Pepin of Vermandois. Cawley notes that if Regino's account gave the proper order for Pepin's the three children, Heribert would have been the youngest of them: "Bernardum, Pippinum et Heribertum" [6]
Baldwin states that Heribert's mother is unknown. [3] "The idea that she was a member of the "Nibelungen" family (descendants of Childebrand, son of Charles Martel) is a conjecture based on the fact that Heribert I's predecessors in some of his possessions belonged to that family, and on the presence of the name Heribert in that family [see Werner (1960), 101-6]." [3]
A contemporary of Baldwin II, Count of Flanders he had the advantage of being a Carolingian, a great-grandson of Pepin of Italy, a son of Charlemagne. [7]
Marriage to Lietgardis
There having been no issues regarding the legitimacy of his children, we know that Heribert was married. However, Baldwin, the source most unwilling to surmise, states that Heribert's wife or wives are unknown. [3]
Cawley notes that he married Lietgardis who died 27 May, year uncertain. [8]
Fictional Marriage to Bertha
Frederick Weis names "Bertha de Morvois" as Heribert's wife. [9] and Wikipedia follows suit. [1]
Baldwin states very strongly, however, that Berthe, daughter of Guerri (Wedricus), count of Morvois, and his wife Eva is a falsely-attributed wife of Heribert, whose relationship is only fictional.[3] Baldwin notes that the source of this fiction is the Historia Walciodorensis Monasterii, which includes a fabricated genealogy. The result of the fabrication is that the Historia's subject, Ybert, is falsely made a relative of Count Heribert, and Ybert's mother Berthe becomes Heribert's wife. [3]
In recognition of this fiction, Bertha has been delinked as a wife of Heribert, and his children are not shown as her children.
877 Heribert With Brother Pépin arranges meeting Pope and Emperor
Heribert "first appears in records in 877, when he and his brother Pépin were among those sent by emperor Charles the Bald to prepare for a meeting between the pope and emperor." [3]
889 Count of Soissons
Herbert became count of Soissons before 889 and was probably charged with defending the Oise against Viking intrusions. [1]
889 Reign
Heribert succeeded Pepin, his predecessor, as Count of Vermandois, in 889. [1]
893 Heribert With Brother Pépin and Charles the Simple
In 1893 Heribert and Pepin supported the accession of Charles III, the Simple, as King of the West Franks in opposition to King Eudes. Regino, who recorded this, does not specify Heribert and Pepin's relationship. [6] Regino does record that both Heribert and Pepin are present with Charles upon his elevation as king. [3]
896 Meaux and murder of brother Raoul
He succeeded Theodebert as Count of Meaux in 896.[1]
Baldwin reports that in 896, "Heribert killed Raoul, brother of count Baldwin II..., who had been expelled earlier that year from the countship of Vermandois, and it is probably in this year that Heribert became count of Vermandois and lay-abbot of Saint-Quentin." [3] As reported in Latin, Heribert killed "Rodulfum comitem filium Balduini comitis". [6]
907 Death
"Heribert last appears in 900 (the year that Annales Vedastini end). Baldwin adds that "Regino of Prüm, writing ca. 906, in comments added to the obituary of king Bernard of Italy under the year 818, mentions that Bernard's grandson Heribert had killed count Rodulf, son of Baldwin, in Regino's own time, and that Heribert was killed not long after by a supporter (also named Baldwin) of Rodulf's brother Baldwin [II] of Flanders." [3]
Thus Heribert's death would have occurred between 900 and 906, place unknown. [3]
He died in 907. Herbert II, his successor, began his own reign in 907.[1]
Issue
There is some uncertainty regarding Heribert's children. Cawley states he had two proven children and two speculative. [8] Baldwin considers all the children unproved, two of whom are highly probable (Heribert and an unnamed daughter), one conjectured (Adela), and one falsely attributed (Beatrix). [3]
Currently linked on Wikitree and Very Probable
Heribert II, born 880. [8] Stewart Baldwin [3] believes Heribert II as son of Heribert I is "very probable" though not proven. He notes a number of scholars have simply assumed the relationship without documenting it. The earliest source he found appearing to document the relationship, an eleventh century Angevin genealogical table, contains an error thwarting its usefulness. Baldwin notes that "the strongest piece of indirect evidence for Heribert II's parentage is that he is found in possession of the lands which were also held by his namesake Heribert I, e.g. Soissons, Vermandois. [3] Heribert II, b. say 880, d. 23 February 943, count of Meaux, Soissons, and Vermandois, and abbot of Saint-Crépin and Saint-Médard (Soissons), 900×7-943; m. before 907, Adèle, daughter of Robert of Neustria (later Robert I, king of France).[3] Herbert II, Count of Vermandois, succeeded his father. [5]
Unknown, born 890-900 [8], very probably a daughter of Heribert, who married Udo, count of Wetterau. An entry in Flodoard's annals for the year 946 shows that Udo had married an aunt of bishop Hugues, also mentioning Arnulf, who had married the bishop's sister. "Since Hugues was a son of Heribert II and Arnolf (I of Flanders) was married to a duaghter of Heribert II, Udo's wife would be a sister of Heribert" (II). [3] Cawley gives the daughter's wife as Cunigundis [8] following Settipani and Jackman [10] Cunegonda of Vermandois ( aft. 943) who married Eudo, Count in the Wetterau. [5] Baldwin rejects the theory that this un-named daughter was Beatrix, wife of Robert I of France. [3]
Conjectured daughter
Adela or Adèle is a conjectured daughter whose existence is based on a chain of arguments related to the parentage of Heribert, count of Kinziggau (d. 992) and involving the identification of an Adele, who appears on a Reichenau memorial list with Heribert of Vermandois in order to explain the appearance of the name Heribert in a branch of the Konradiner dynasty. [3] Adela is said to have married Gebhard, Graf im Ufgau[8] Since it is possible that Heribert had a daughter named Adela, the link to her as a child has been retained.
Falsely attributed child: The Legend of Beatrix de Vermandois
In legend, Heribert had a daughter Beatrix, who married Robert I, King of France. Cawley cites such a person -- Beatrix de Vermandois born 880/3 and died after 26 Mar 931, and married in 897. [8]
There are several strong reasons why Baldwin regards Beatrix, as a daughter of Heribert, to be false, and her existence legendary. These are discussed on the page for Beatrix de Vermandois.
King Robert I did marry a Beatrix, however, but she was not a daughter of Heribert. The claim that Robert married a sister of Heribert II appears first in the twelfth century. Since Heribert II married a daughter of Robert, this may have originated the legend that Heribert Ii had a sister named Beatrix. [3]
As a legendary person who never existed, Beatrix is not linked to any parents, spouse or children, but her profile is cross-referenced here.
Line of Descent from Charlemagne to William the Conqueror
Douglas Richardson [2] provides one line of descent from Charlemagne to William the Conqueror and four lines of descent from Charlemagne to William's wife Maud.
Parent: Pepin, 815-850
This profile: Heribert, 850-906
Child: Heribert, 880-943
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 Wikipedia. Herbert I, Count of Vermandois. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herbert_I%2C_Count_of_Vermandois. Accessed May 6, 2017. jhd
↑ 2.0 2.1 Douglas Richardson. Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families. Kimball G. Everengham, ed. Salt Lake City, Utah: 2013. Volume V, page 484
↑ 3.00 3.01 3.02 3.03 3.04 3.05 3.06 3.07 3.08 3.09 3.10 3.11 3.12 3.13 3.14 3.15 3.16 3.17 3.18 3.19 Stewart Baldwin. "Heribert I" The Henry Project. First uploaded 23 May 2007. http://sbaldw.home.mindspring.com/hproject/prov/herib001.htm. Accessed May 6, 2017. jhd
↑ Charles Cawley, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Medieval Lands Database, Northern France. [1]
↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 Jean Dunbabin, France in the making, 843-1180 (Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press, 2000), p. 95. Cited in Wikipedia.
↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 Cawley, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Frankish Nobility. Medieval Lands Database - Pepin Accessed Feb 20, 2017 jhd
↑ Jean Dunbabin, France in the making, 843-1180 (Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press, 2000), p. 95. Wikipedia. Herbert I, Count of Vermandois. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herbert_I%2C_Count_of_Vermandois. Accessed May 6, 2017. jhd
↑ 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 8.5 8.6 Cawley, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Medieval Lands Database.[2].
↑ Weis, F.L. (2004). Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists who Came to America Before 1700: Lineages from Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Other Historical Individuals, (pp. 57). Geneological Publishing co. eBook.[3]
↑ Settipani (1993), 222-3, Jackman (1997) 36,38, cited by Stewart Baldwin, Henry Project. | VERMANDOIS Héribert (I58222)
|
| 5450 |
Herleve[1] : Herlava; Arlette (c.1003- c.1050)[2][3]
Arlette [1]
Parents
Herleve's father was Fulbert de Falaise. [4][5]
Herleve's mother was named Doda or Duwa. [5] [6]
The earliest accounts of Herleva come from Orderic Vitalis (1075 – c. 1142).[7] They were not written down until 80 years after she met Robert the Magnificent. It was only through Wace and Benoit in the 12th century, and later 17th century writings, that she became known as a the daughter of tanner.[8]
Scholarship discounts this based on examination of the original source, the context of the public heckling of Duke William, and the Latin and French words later chroniclers had trouble translating.[8]
According to van Houts (1986), Fulbert was probably a mortician. He is described as, "a person who laid out corpses," and "might have embalmed bodies." As Chamberlain of the ducal court, this was one of Fulbert's duties.[8]
The Legend of Robert and Herleve
According to one legend, still recounted by tour guides at Falaise, it all started when Robert, the young Duke of Normandy saw Herleva from the roof of his castle tower. The walkway on the roof still looks down on the dyeing trenches cut into stone in the courtyard below, which can be seen to this day from the tower ramparts above. The traditional way of dyeing leather or garments was for individuals to trample barefoot on the garments which were awash in the dyeing liquid in these trenches. Herleva, legend goes, seeing the Duke on his ramparts above, raised her skirts perhaps a bit more than necessary in order to attract the Duke's eye. The latter was immediately smitten and ordered her brought in (as was customary for any woman that caught the Duke's eye) through the back door. Herleva refused, saying she would only enter the Duke's castle on horseback through the front gate, and not as an ordinary commoner. The Duke, filled with lust, could only agree. In a few days, Herleva, dressed in the finest her father could provide, and sitting on a white horse, rode proudly through the front gate, her head held high. This gave Herleva a semi-official status as the Duke's mistress. [9]
1027 Robert I and William the Bastard
There is some controversy as to whether Herleve married Robert. Freeman reports their relationship as a marriage: "Herleve married first Robert, Duke of Normandy. Issue: William the Conqueror [10]
There is also the possibility that they were married according to "More danico", the "Danish Way". [11] She was referred to in the Grestain abbey as "a legitimate wife according to old Norman traditions." [12]
At the same time, up-and-coming reformists like pope Gregory VII (Hildebrand of Sovana) hoped to ban these customs and establish authoritarian rule. As a "concubine" through this lens, a "frilla" like Herleve is a glance at the long process of the Christianization of Europe, and the outing of indigenous culture.[13][14]
Still struggling for power and legitimacy, the seat of Rome had barely cleaned up its own house, before it got caught between the Roman aristocracy, and the slaughter of the Saracens and unstoppable Norman "barbarians." Unable to maintain its own security, the papacy cut a deal with the devil, and asked for the backing of the Norman military. It worked, but Rome paid a fateful price before it was able to achieve absolute rule.[14]
So at this juncture, the lack of a wedding sanctioned by the Roman church was no threat to the rank or inheritance of England's future Norman king.[15] And by the time the Conqueror was on the throne, the papacy was lucky to have any influence on him at all.[16] Incidentally, William was born around c.1028 in Falaise, Normandy.[17]
Nevertheless, contemporary genealogists such as Douglas Richardson state that "she became the mistress of Robert I, Duke of Normandy, and by him had one illegitimate son, William the Conqueror, King of England, Duke of Normandy."[1]
It should also be noted that while William was never known as "the Conqueror" during his life time, he was often referred to as "William the Bastard." [18]
1030 Marriage of Herleve and Herluin
About 1030 Herleve married Herluin de Conteville, Vicomte, seigneur of Conteville. [1] Some writers assume that the marriage to Herluin occurred only after Robert's death.
Herleve and Herluin had two sons, and one daughter:[1]
Eudes or Odo, Bishop of Bayeux, Earl of Kent, died Jan 1097 [1]
Robert de Mortain, Count of Mortain, [1] born after 1040 - d. 8 Dec 1090.
Muriel. [1]
1050 Grestain Abbey: ✝ Abbey Notre Dame de Grestain ✝
Herluin founded Grestain Abbey i Normandy about 1050. He and his wife renounced their claim to the tithe of Toutainville and to the vill called Mesnil-Dastin to Preaux Abbey. [1][19]
At some point, Herlave's second husband supposedly had leprosy.[20] This is said to have inspired the couple to found the Abbey Notre-Dame de Grestain in 1050,[20] but other sources state Herleva had no part in it.[21] It's assumed Herlave is buried there or Mortain, Haute-Normandie.[22]
1050 Death
Herluin's wife, Herleve, is thought to have been living in 1050-51, but died soon afterwards. [1]
Herluin and his first wife, Arlette, were buried in Grestain Abbey. [1]
Remarriage of Husband
Herluin married, 2nd, Fredesende. They had two sons, Jean, who appears to have died young, and Raoul Fitz Herluin (or de Conteville), seigneur of Corneville-sur-Risle and Martainville-en-Lieuvin, presumably Domesday tenant of Chapel Allerton, Huish (in Burnham), Adber (in Trent) and Brent, Somerset. Herluin de Conteville died about 1066. [1]
His widow, Fredesende, granted part of dower lands at Le Neubourg, Cantelou, and Honnaville, to Grestain Abbey. [1]
Issue
Documented Children
Herleve had children by both Robert and Herluin. Herleve and Herluin had two sons, and one daughter:[1]
Guillaume de Normandie or William of Normandy, son of Herleve and Robert of Normandy, born at Falaise Castle in Normandy in 1027.
Eudes or Odo, Bishop of Bayeux, Earl of Kent. [1], born 1030, died 1097.
Robert de Mortain, Count of Mortain, [1] born after 1040 - d. 8 Dec 1090.
Muriel. [1]
Other Children Attributed to Herleve
An uncertain daughter married Guillaume de la Ferté-Macé. She might have been the dau. of Frendesendis [23]
Adelais de Lens, born 1035 in Falaise Castle. [24]
Emma d'Avranches born April 30, 1039 in Conteville, Calvados
Research Notes
Some say family was from Chaumont in diocese of Liège but moved to Falaise, Calvados, Basse Normandie. Other state they were from Huy.[citation needed]
living 1049.[6]
Additional notes from Unknown-290714
From http://www.englishmonarchs.co.uk/normans.htm
Falaise CastleEngland's first Norman king, the formidable William I, was born in 1028 at Falaise Castle. Wiliam was the illegitimate son of Robert 'the Devil' or the Magnificent, Duke of Normandy and his mistress Herleve, (sometimes called Arlette) the daughter of Fullbert, a tanner of Falaise. Before history renamed him the Conqueror he was more commonly known to his contemporaries as William the Bastard. Herleve was reported to have attracted Duke Robert with her dancing, in some accounts, he is said to have first caught sight of her while she was washing her linen in the castle moat.
The Norman dynasty had been founded by Robert's ancestor Rollo or Hrolf the Ganger, a Viking raider chief, who was granted the duchy by Charles the Simple, King of France, in 911, at the Treaty of Saint-Clair-sur-Epte, in exchange for feudal allegiance and conversion to Christianity at which he took the baptismal name of Robert.
William's mother, Herleve, also had a daughter, Adelaide, to Duke Robert. Although they had a long relationship, the gap in their social standing rendered marriage out of the question and Herleve was married off to one of Robert's vassals, Herluin, a knight. From this marriage, Herleve produced two further sons, Robert, who later became Count of Mortain and Odo, destined to become Bishop of Bayeux and Earl of Kent and also to play a part in England's history.
Sources
↑ 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 1.14 1.15 1.16 Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families. Kimball G. Everingham, ed. Salt Lake City, Utah: 2013. Volume 5, page 487
↑ Cawley, C. (2006). Medieval Lands. [1]
↑ Wikipedia: Herleva;
↑ Stewart Baldwin, Henry Project. [2]
↑ 5.0 5.1 Charles Cawley, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, Medieval Lands Database. [3]
↑ Royals and Nobles: A Genealogist's Tool. pp.45. iUniverse, 2002).[4]
↑ Wikipedia: Orderic Vitalis
↑ 8.0 8.1 8.2 Van Houts, (1986). The Origins of Herleva, Mother of William the Conqueror. The English Historical Review, 101(399), pp. 399-404. Oxford University Press. JSTOR. Retrieved 26 Mar 2014.
↑ Posted by Roger Wehr, 2011
↑ "When the said William had been born, in that same year Duke Robert took as his wife the boy's mother, whom he had deflowered." (Freeman, 1870, pp.615)
↑ Danish Way."
↑ Arlette. Abbey Notre-Dame de Grestain
↑ Abbey Notre-Dame de Grestain: The family of Arlette.
↑ 14.0 14.1 Norwich, J. J. (2011). A History of the Papacy: Absolute Monarchs. NY: Random House. eBook.
↑ Danish Way
↑ Wikipedia:Pope Gregory VII
↑ "William the Conqueror," (n.d.). bio.com. Web. Accessed 08 Mar 2014.
↑ Wikipedia. William the Conqueror. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_the_Conqueror. Accessed May 12, 2017. jhd
↑ Wikipedia: Grestain Abbey; Abbey Notre-Dame de Grestain;
↑ 20.0 20.1 Wikipedia: Grestain Abbey
↑ Wikipedia: Herleva
↑ Ogle, B. (2014, March 26). Herlave Falaise Mortain: Biography. WikiTree. Web.
↑ Cawley, 2006.[5]
↑ 1 GEDCOM asserts she had another daughter with Robert named Adelaide of Normandy (1029-1090).[citation needed]
Find A Grave: Memorial #90987094
See also:
Abbott, J. (1903). William the Conqueror (pp. 41). N.p.
Chronicle of St-Maxentius.
Crouch, D. (2002). The Normans- The History of a Dynasty, (pp 52–53, 58). Hambledon.
Douglas, D.C. (1964). William the Conqueror, (pp. 15, 381-382). Berkeley and LA: University of California Press.
Freeman, E. A. (1867). The History of the Norman Conquest, (pp. 530, 615). N.p.
McLynn, F. (1999). 1066: The Year of the Three Battles, (pp. 21–23). N.p.
Palgrave, F. (1864). The History of Normandy and of England, (pp.145). N.p | FALAISE Herlève (I59186)
|
| 5451 |
Herluin (d. 1066).[4] His parents are unknown. He has been detached from Jean Conteville and Harlette Meulan [1][2]
He established Grestain monastery (c. 1050),[5] according to an account now lost, as a result of a vision that promised to cure his leprosy in return for the foundation.[3]
Prayers for him (and for his son Robert and Robert's first wife, Matilda) were requested by the abbey on its entries in the mortuary rolls for Matilda, daughter of the Conqueror, and for Vital de Savigny.[citation needed]
Titles
Vicomte (shortly after marriage, circa 1030)[4]
Marriage
He married sometime after 1035 to Herleve (living 1049; d. abt. 1050/3), the mistress of Robert II, Duke of Normandy, and daughter of Fulbert. She presumably died before her husband founded the abbey of Grestain as she is not referred to in the abbey's confirmation charter.[5] They had three children:
Robert de Mortain
Eudes (Odo), Bishop of Bayeux
Unknown daughter who married William de la Ferté-Macé.[6] (She may have been a child by his second wife.)
He married secondly, after 1050, to Frendesendis. She is named as the wife of Herluin in the confirmation charter of the abbey of Grestain.[7] They had three children:
Raoul de Conteville (b. after 1050 - d. after 1089).
Jean de Conteville (unproven)
Richard FitzHerluin (d. after 1082)
Death and Burial
Robert of Torigny's De Immutatione Ordinis Monachorum records that "Herluinus de Contevilla…et Herleve uxor eius" were buried in "mon. Sanctæ Mariæ Gresteni."[8]
Sources
↑ http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/normabc.htm#_ftnref15
↑ Hollister, C. Warren (1987). The Greater Domesday Tenants-in-Chief.[1]
↑ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herluin_de_Conteville
↑ [2]
↑ http://sbaldw.home.mindspring.com/hproject/prov/willi001.htm
↑ According to Cawley (2006) Herluin had an unknown daughter, Guillaume II de la Ferté-Macé, by one of his two wives. Cawley (2006), seems to think it's more likely that her mother was Herleve.
↑ parents unknown (Cawley, 2006).[3]
↑ Robert de Torigny, Vol. II, p. 201
See also:
Cawley, C. (2006). "Herluin." Medieval Lands v.4. Fmg.ac.[6]
Project Medlands - Normandy Nobility - Comtes de Mortain, Vicomtes de Conteville
Glover, R. (1885). "The genealogy of the earls of Chester (Harl. 1424, fo. 3. Harl. 1505, fo. 2)," in the Visitation of Cheshire in the Year 1580, 18, pp. 4. Harleian Society. Google Books.[7]
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
Richardson, D. (n.d.). Royal Ancestry, V, pp .487. N.p.
Stuart, R.W. (n.d.). Royalty for Commoners. N.p.
https://genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00076242&tree=LEO | CONTEVILLE Herluin (I60102)
|
| 5452 |
Herman died of complications of bladder and kidney desease. | Brown Herman (I51164)
|
| 5453 |
Herman/Hermann II, Duke of Swabia, was the son of Konrad I, Duke of Swabia.[1] He was duke of Swabia from 997 to his death. Between January and October 1002 Herman II attempted, unsuccessfully, to become king of Germany.[2]
Hermann married Gerberga of Burgundy, widow of Herman I, Count of Werl, and daughter of Conrad of Burgundy and Matilda of France.[1][2][3]
They had issue:[2][1]
Gisela, wife of Emperor Conrad II
Matilda of Swabia, wife of Frederick II, Duke of Upper Lorraine
Herman III, Duke of Swabia
Beatrice (?), died after 25 February 1025, married Adalbert of Eppenstein
Hermann II died in May 1003,[1] perhaps in Strasbourg.[2]
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed Mar 2021 FMG.
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Wikipedia: Herman II, Duke of Swabia
↑ Wikipedia: Gerberga of Burgundy | SCHWABEN Hermann (I58898)
|
| 5454 |
Hermann "Pusillus" later Pfalzgraf (Count Palatine) of Lotharingia was reported in the Europäische Stammtafeln as being the son of Erenfriend de Keldachgau, Graf von Zülpich and Graf von Bonn and his wife Richwara. [1]
Count and later Pfalzgraf (Count Palatine)
Hermann became associated with a number of lands in Lower Lotharingia, including Bonn (Bonngau), Eifelgau, Zülpich and Auelgau. [1]
Hermann was installed as Pfalzgraf (Count Palatine) of Lower Lothargina in about 985. [2]
Marriage and Family
Hermann married a woman named Heilwig, whose parents are unknown but was reportedly related to Ulrich, the Bishop of Augsburg. [2]
Pfalzgraf Hermann and Heilwig had three children: [2]
Ezzo, who succeeded his father as Count Palatine (Pfalzgraf) of Lower Lotharingia
Hezzelin
Richenza
Research Note
Ancestor of Philippa of Hainault, wife of King Edward III of England.
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 Grafen von Bonn by Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Published by Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG) 2006-2021, including source citations and relevant texts; hosted online by FMG, accessed 2025; see also WikiTree's source page for MedLands)
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Pfalzgrafen von Lothringen 985-1085 (Ezzonen) by Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Published by Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG) 2006-2021, including source citations and relevant texts; hosted online by FMG, accessed 2025; see also WikiTree's source page for MedLands) | von LOTHRINGEN Herman (Keldachgau) (I58021)
|
| 5455 |
Hermann, Graaf van Nifterlake, died after 1036. [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 2021, Gaven van Zutphen. | NIFTERLAKE Hermann (I59511)
|
| 5456 |
Hermenegildo Gutiérrez (Hermenegildo Guterres in Portuguese) (c. 850 – after May 912), was a distinguished Galician noble who lived during the 9th and 10th centuries. As the Mayordomo mayor of King Alfonso III, he was an active member of the curia regia. His daughter Elvira, as the first wife of King Ordoño II, was queen consort of León.
Rico-homem, mordomo do Palácio (antes de 883), em 876 reconquistou Coimbra aos árabes
Conde dos Cristãos de Coimbra Príncipe soberano del Reino de Tude Conde de Galicia Conde de Portugal
Hermenegildo Guttierez was the son of Guttiere and his wife Elvira[1]. He married Ermesinda Gatonez, daughter of Gaton Ramirez and his wife Egilona[1]. They had six known children:
Guttiere Menéndez
Arias Menéndez
Aldonza Menéndez
Elvira Menéndez, married Ordoño II, King of Leon
Enderquina
Gudilona (unconfirmed).
Hermenegildo was still living as of 912[1].
Research Notes
Birth
Other online sources indicate a birth about circa 842 or even circa 830, which seems much too early (he would be in his 80s when he died)
It's doubtful he was ever created Count of Portugal (conde de Portugal) but this needs more investigation.
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Hermenegildo Guttierez: Charles Cawley, Medieval Lands, Galicia Nobility 9th-11th century Chap 3. Menendez Family. accessed Oct 2018
http://roglo.eu/roglo?lang=pt;i=3391197
Actas do 17º Congresso Internacional de Ciências Genealógica e Heráldica - pg. 317 ((Tab. I))
Costados do Duque de Bragança
Wikipedia. | GUTIÉRREZ Hermenegildo (I59851)
|
| 5457 |
Hermengildo, was born circa 850[1], which would place Elvira's birth at about 825.
Elvira married Gutiérre de Coimbra. [2]
Count Gutierre and his wife Elvira are the parents of Hermengildo Gutierrez, a Galician noble of the 9th and 10th centuries.[1] They are probably named in a donation by Hermengildo, but there seems to be nothing more known about them other than their names.[3]
Elvira and Gutierre had three sons:
Aloito
Osorio
Hermenegildo.
Research Notes
She is given the patronymic Ansúrez in some versions of this person, but that is most likely based on older, less reliable sources.
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 Wikipedia contributors, "Hermenegildo Gutiérrez," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Hermenegildo_Guti%C3%A9rrez&oldid=813275029 (accessed December 8, 2017).
↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2023, Menendez Family.
↑ Menendez family: Charles Cawley, Medieval Lands, Galicia Nobility Chap. 3 Menendez Family. Accessed Sept 2018 | UNKNOWN Elvira (I59857)
|
| 5458 |
Hersende[1] was born on an unknown date in Abbeville, Oise, Picardie, France.
Hersende married Herlouin (Ponthieu) de Ponthieu in about 894 in Abbeville, Oise, Picardie, France. The couple had one child: Rotgaire (Ponthieu) de Ponthieu.
Sources
↑ Name: Title: Ancestry Family Trees. Publication: Name: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. NOTEThis information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created. Citing: Page: Ancestry Family Trees
Data:
Text: https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/6835128/person/-1098732426/facts (accessed before 21 March 2011)
Notes
The marriage date is estimated from the birth of the only child listed here and should not be added to the marriage field without a reliable source. | de NORMANDIE Hersende (I59088)
|
| 5459 |
Heylwig married Herman (Lotharingia) Lorraine in about 955 at an unknown location. The couple had one child: Ezzo Lotharingia.
Research Notes
Notes
The marriage date is estimated from the birth of the only child listed here and should not be added to the marriage field without a reliable source.
The Peerage has her birth year as "circa 935." and an incomplete death date of "12.11.????"
Wikidata has two fathers listed, Theotbald Graf von Dillingen and Hucbald II von Dillingen. They may be the same person.
Sources
Wikidata: Item Q61314159 help.gif
https://www.thepeerage.com/p67236.htm#i672355 | DILLINGEN Heylwig (I58020)
|
| 5460 |
Hi, Jean baptiste Croteau was born in lac Saint Come in Deux Montagnes. He married Maru louise Piwabonkwe Denys La Ronde she was born Sept 25 1800 in Penetaguishene ontario. Or Chibechkon Huron Ontario. She was not baptised until she was 18 yrs old her parents married. Her father was Charles Francois Denys De la Ronde born 1763 in Windsor Ontario her mother was Magdeline Pemadjjinanokse. Mary louise and jean Baptise children were: Alice celeste married Ryndress, Marie Louise married George Bovaire. Boisvert Sept 2 1844, Marie anne born 1824 married Jooseph St. germain on Jan 11 1849, Jean Baptiste married Delphine Carrier in 1873. For more of this family email me. Hope this helps cindy-Lou
(from Rootsweb message board) | DENYS DE LARONDE Mary Louise (I55263)
|
| 5461 |
Higgins Cemetery | BEEBE William Edward (I17124)
|
| 5462 |
Highland Cemetery | ANDERSON Effie Mae (I26596)
|
| 5463 |
Hilda married Thored Gunnarsson.[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 2024, Unconnected Nobility, Danish Origin. | UNKNOWN Hilda (I59210)
|
| 5464 |
Hilde or Afhild
Research Notes
click here for early Danish kings summary: [1]
Genealogical lineages may not always be from father to son, especially Houses of Kings
She was probably the step-mother and not the mother of King Frode IV
Possible ID http://www.geni.com/people/Hilde-Aalesdottir/6000000012976026829
Dotter, Datter, Dottir are all the same ending, meaning "daughter" in Scandinavia, and attached behind the father's first name. A woman kept her birth name all her life and did not take on her husband's last name as her own until about 100-200 years ago.
Descendant ASA currently shows as grandmother on both sides of the grandchildren's profiles, CREATING A DUPLICATE LINE HERE.
Sources
See Also: Schmuhl, Albert F., The Royal Line (New York: NY: Schmule, 1929) | UNKNOWN Hilde (I58790)
|
| 5465 |
Hildegaire (d. 943/7)[1]
Parents
Father: Hildebert, Victome de Limoges
Mother: Adaltrude d'Aurillac
Titles
Victome de Limoges
Marriage
m. Thiberge UNKNOWN (d. after 943)
Sources
↑ http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/LIMOUSIN.htm#_ftnref404 | LIMOGES Hildegaire (I59727)
|
| 5466 |
Hildegard van Vlaanderen, 936/7-975/80, ca. 949 married graaf Dirk n.:
Dese Diederic goet ende waert Hadde een wijf, hiet Hildegaert, 600 Hovesch van seden ende van leven Ende vol doghentachticheden... [1]
Hildegard van Vlaanderen (born 936/937 – died. 975/980), by marriage she became countess (gravin) van Holland. Daughter of Arnulf I, graaf van Vlaanderen (885/890-965) and Adela van Vermandois (910/915-960). Hildegard van Vlaanderen married in 948 or 949 Dirk II, graaf van Holland en West-Friesland (936/941-988). From this marriage at least two sons and one daughter were born [2]
Aarnout (Gent 951-993), ook wel Arnulf Gandensis genoemd, die zijn opvolger werd [3]
Egbert van Trier (952-994), aartsbisschop van Trier [3]
Erlindis (953-1012) [3]
possibly an Unknown daughter who married graaf Everhard van Doornik.[3]
Diederik II died in 988. He was buried in the new abbey church of Egmond, in the grave in which Hildegard was buried eight years earlier. Their gospel book remained in the abbey for six centuries, then swirled around, and resurrected in Utrecht in 1805. Thanks to King Willem I, it has been in the Royal Library since 1830 [4]
Marriage
Husband: Wichmann Dirk II of Holland
Wife: Hildegarde Luitgard of Flanders
Child: Arnulf I Count Holland
Marriage: Date: MAY Place: Belgium
Burial
Burial: Place: Abdijkerk, Egmond Aan Den Hoef, Noord Holland, Netherlands
Sources
↑ Huygens KNAW Rijmkroniek van Holland (366-1305) pg 22
↑ Source: Huygens KNAW: Carine van Rhijn, Hildegard van Vlaanderen, in: Digitaal Vrouwenlexicon van Nederland. URL: Hildegard van Vlaanderen (936/937-975/980) 13/06/2017
↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Wikipedia Dirk II Graaf van Holland en West Friesland
↑ Koninklijke Bibliotheek Nationale bibliotheek van Nederland Evangeliarium van Egmond blog, 9 mei 2012 Collectiespecialist Ed van der Vlist
Evangeliarium van Egmond The Evangelium of Egmond is a parchment handwriting that has become famous because Count Dirk and Countess Hildegard of 'Holland' had their image added to it in 975. More than a thousand years later, Dirk and Hildegard are the oldest Dutch of whom an image exists.
Annalen van Egmond: de Annales Egmundenses tezamen met de Annales Xantenses en het Egmondse leven van Thomas Becket Uitgeverij Verloren, 2007
Projects MedLands Chapter 2. Counts of Holland 900-1299 | FLANDRE Hildegaert (I58600)
|
| 5467 |
Hildegarde von Stade married Bernhard von Sachsen. [1]
Research Notes
She is sometimes conflated with Hildesuith, the second wife of his father Hermann Billung. [2]
Sources
↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2023, Grafen von Stade.
↑ Baldwin, Stewart. (2011) The Henry Project: The Ancestors of King Henry II of England. | STADE Hildegarde (I58579)
|
| 5468 |
Hildier Bergstorm is second marriage.` | TEODOR Sven Arvid (I9465)
|
| 5469 |
Hildouin (Gilduin) was Comte de Breteuil and Vicomte de Chartres.[1]
Hilduin married Emmeline[2] about 0990, in Breteuil, Normandy, France. They were the parents of at least 7 sons and 4 daughters.[3]
Harduin, married Elisabeth.
Erard.
Hugues, Bishop of Langres.
Galeran.
Hilduin.
Daughter, married Raoul, Comte de Valois.
Hildouin died on 1 July 1060 in Verdun, Meuse, France.[3]
Research Notes
WikiTree suggested the FamilySearch PID GNTS-LC8, which redirects to a different PID, for Hilduin II de Breteuil ,Vicomte de Chartres.[3] It appears to be the source for a lot of this profile's information. FamilySearch is not a reliable source, although it may it may cite reliable sources.
Prior to 10 April 2025, this profile had the "Uncertain Family" template: "This person may not belong in the family group. See the text for details." No details were included, so - lacking an explanation for the warning - the template was removed.
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, Vicomtes de Chartres (Breteuil).
↑ Schwennicke, Detlev. "Europäische Stammtafeln: Stammtafeln zur Geschichte der Europäischen Staaten, Neue Folge", Marburg, Germany: J. A. Stargardt, 1978, Vol III, p. 649.
↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 FamilySearch PID for Hilduin II de Breteui (11 October 0970-18 May 1060)
FamilySearch Person: LCJD-VJG
FamilySearch Person Sources: LCJD-VJG 11 sources as of 10 April 2025
FamilySearch Person Discovery: LCJD-VJG
See also:
Lewis, Marlyn. Entry for Hildouin, Count Breteuil, Vicomte de Chartres. | PONTHIEU Gilduin (I59084)
|
| 5470 |
Hildouin IV de Montdidier, Comte de Montdidier et Seigneur de Ramerupt Hildouin IV de Montdidier (d 1063), fils du comte Hildouin III de Montdidier, seigneur de Ramerupt. Par mariage il devient comte de Roucy de 1033 à 1063.
Il épousa Alix de Roucy (v.1015-1020 1062), fille d'Ebles Ier de Roucy, comte de Roucy et archevêque de Reims, et de Béatrice de Hainaut.
Ils eurent :
Ebles II, ( 1103), comte de Roucy
André, seigneur de Ramerupt
Marguerite de Montdidier-Roucy (v. 1045 1103), mariée à Hugues Ier (circa 1030 1102), comte de Clermont-en-Beauvaisis.
Béatrix de Montdidier-Roucy ( 1129), mariée à Geoffroy II, comte du Perche ( 1100).
Ermentrude de Montdidier-Roucy, mariée à Thibaud, comte de Reynel.
Ada de Montdidier-Roucy, mariée en premères noces à Geoffroy, seigneur de Guise (1070 1141), en secondes noces à Gaultier d'Ath, puis à Thierry, seigneur d'Avesnes
Adélaïde de Montdidier-Roucy (v.1035 v.1068), mariée à Arnoul Ier, ( 1106), comte de Chiny.
Aélis de Montdidier-Roucy, mariée à Conon Falcon de La Sarraz, sire de Grandson.
Félicie de Montdidier-Roucy ( 1123), mariée en 1076 à Sancho Ier Ramírez, roi d'Aragon et de Navarre.
From FMG Medieval Lands database:
HILDUIN [IV] de Ramerupt, son of HILDUIN [III] Seigneur de Ramerupt & his wife --- (-1063). The primary source which confirms his parentage has not yet been identified. Comte de Montdidier. Seigneur de Ramerupt. "Vir nobilis Hugo Bardul" donated property to Montiérender by charter dated [1061/62 or before], subscribed by "Teobaldi comitis, Hilduini comitis, Burdini de Belfort, Manasse filii eius"[1062].
m ADELAIDE de Roucy, daughter of EBLES Comte de Roucy & his wife Beatrix de Hainaut ([1015/20]-1062). The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines names "Aelidam et Hadewidem" as the two daughters of "Ebalus de Roceio " & his wife, specifying that "omnes comites de Roceio et de Arceis sive de Ramerupt vel de Brena super Albam" descended from Adelaide[1063]. The Genealogiæ Scriptoris Fusniacensis names "Adelidem et Hadevidem" as the two daughters of "Ebalus de Roceio " and his wife Beatrix, specifying that "secunda filia…soror…Hadevidis nupsit Helduino comiti de Ramerut[1064]. Her birth date is estimated from her mother's estimated birth date and the fact that Adelaide herself gave birth to her youngest child in [1060].
Hilduin [IV] & his wife had nine children:
1. EBLES [II] de Ramerupt (-May 1103). The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines names "Ebalus…de Roceio et Andreas de Ramerut et Arceis comites" as the two sons of "Hilduinus de Ramerut" & his wife Adelaide[1065]. Comte de Roucy. - COMTES de ROUCY. m. (before 1082) SIBYLLE de Apulia, daughter of ROBERT “Guiscard” Duke of Apulia & his second wife Sichelgaita di Salerno. [1092]/1117. The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines names "Sybilla" as wife of "comitis Ebali de Roceio" but does not give her origin[1201]. The Alexeiad records that Robert "Guiscard" married "the other [daughter] to Eubulus who was himself a count of great distinction" but does not name her[1202].
2. ANDRE de Ramerupt (-after 1118). The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines names "Ebalus…de Roceio et Andreas de Ramerut et Arceis comites" as the two sons of "Hilduinus de Ramerut" & his wife Adelaide[1066]. The Genealogiæ Scriptoris Fusniacensis names "Ebalum comitem…et Andream comitem de Ramerut et filias" as children of "comes Helduinus [et] Adelaide"[1067]. Seigneur de Ramerupt et d'Arcis-sur-Aube. m firstly ADELA, daughter of ---. The primary source which confirms her marriage has not yet been identified. m secondly as her second husband, GUISEMODE, widow of HUGUES Seigneur de Pleurs, sister of BAUDOUIN Monk at Molesme, daughter of ---. The primary source which confirms her origin and two marriages has not yet been identified.
3. BEATRIX de Ramerupt (-2 Sep after 1129). The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines names "Beatrix" as second daughter of Ebles Comte de Roucy and incorrectly names her husband "Rotroldo comiti de Pertico"[1076]. The Genealogiæ Scriptoris Fusniacensis names "comitis Hilduini de Rameruth maior natu filia dicta Beatrix" as wife, also incorrectly, of "Rotaldo comiti de Pertica"[1077]. She is named as wife of Geoffroy Comte du Perche by Orderic Vitalis, incorrectly saying that she was daughter of "the count of Rochefort"[1078] and specifying in another passage that her son Rotrou was consanguineus of Alfonso I King of Aragon[1079]. m GEOFFROY de Châteaudun, son of ROTROU Vicomte de Châteaudun, Comte de Mortagne & his wife Adelise de Bellême (-mid-Oct 1100, bur Nogent-le-Rotrou[1080]). He succeeded his father in [1080] as Comte de Mortagne. He adopted the title Comte du Perche after 1090.
4. MARGUERITE de Ramerupt . The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines names "Margareta" as third daughter of Ebles Comte de Roucy and names her husband "comiti Hugonis de Claromonte Baluacensi"[1081]. The Genealogiæ Scriptoris Fusniacensis names "secundam filiam comitis Helduini de Rameruth dictam Margaretam" as wife of "Hugo comes de Claro-monte"[1082]. m HUGUES de Clermont [en-Beauvaisis] dit de Mouchy, son of ---. 1067.
5. ERMENTRUDE de Ramerupt (-1102 or after). The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines names "Ermentrudis" as fourth daughter of Ebles Comte de Roucy and names her husband "Theobaldo comiti de Rimnello"[1083]. The Genealogiæ Scriptoris Fusniacensis names "tertiam…Hilduini comitis filiam Ermentrudem" as wife of "Theobaldus comes de Rinnel"[1084]. m THIBAUT [I] Comte de Reynel, son of OLRI Comte de Reynel & his wife --- (-before 11 Apr 1101).
6. ADA de Ramerupt (-bur Abbaye de Liessies). The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines names "Ada…de Guisia" as sixth daughter of Ebles Comte de Roucy[1085]. The Genealogiæ Scriptoris Fusniacensis names "quartam…Hilduini comitis filiam Adam" as wife firstly of "Godefridus de Guisia" and secondly of "Galterum de Aat" and thirdly of "Theoderico de Avesnis"[1086]. She built the convent of Lessies with her third husband, where she retired after his death and was buried[1087]. m firstly GEOFFROY Seigneur de Guise, son of ---. m secondly GAUTHIER Seigneur de Ath, son of ---. m thirdly THIERRY Seigneur d'Avesnes, son of WEDRICUS "Ad-barbam" d'Avesnes & his wife --- (-[1106]).
7. ADELA de Ramerupt (-[1068/69], bur Saint-Hubert, Ardennes). The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines names "Adele" as seventh daughter of Ebles Comte de Roucy and names her husband "Arnulfo comiti de Chisneio"[1088], although the chronology favours Adela being the sister rather than daughter of Ebles. The Genealogiæ Scriptoris Fusniacensis clarifies the question when it refers to, but does not name, "quintam…Hilduini comitis filiam" as wife of "Arnulfus comes de Cinni"[1089]. “Arnulphus comes cum coniuge mea Adelais, filius Ludovici comitis” founded a monastery “in villa Pyrorum…in honore S. Sulpitii”, subject to “ecclesiæ S. Petri et S. Hugberti in Ardenna”, by undated charter signed by “Arnulphi comitis et Manasse fratris eius”[1090]. "Arnulfus comes cum coniuge mea Adelais filius Ludoguici comitis" donated revenue from the church of Prix to Ardenne Saint-Hubert by charter dated to 1066, signed by "Arnulfi comitis et Manasse fratris eius…"[1091]. "Arnulfus comes cum coniuge mea Adelail, filius Ludoguici comitis" founded the priory of Priez by charter dated 1068, signed by "Arnulphi comitis et Manasse fratris eius…"[1092]. The Chronicle of Saint-Hubert records the burial of "Adeladis uxor Arnulphi, soror…Ebali Roceiensis" at Saint-Hubert, dated to [1068/69] from the context[1093]. m as his first wife, ARNOUL II Comte de Chiny, son of LOUIS [II] Comte de Chiny & his wife Sophie --- (-16 Apr 1106).
8. AELIS de Ramerupt . The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines names "Aeliz de Sarrata in Burgundia" as fifth daughter of Ebles Comte de Roucy[1094]. The Genealogiæ Scriptoris Fusniacensis names "sexta filia Hilduini comitis Adelidis" as mother of "filium columbine simplicitatis nomine Bartholomeum…[et] Ebalum"[1095]. m CONON "Falcon" de La Sarraz [Grandson], son of ADALBERT & his wife --- (-before 1114).
9. FELICIE de Ramerupt ([1060]-3 May 1123[1096], bur Monastery of San Juan de la Peña). The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines refers to the first of the seven daughters of Count Ebles as, inaccurately, wife of "regi Galicie Sanctio" but does not name her[1097]. The Genealogiæ Scriptoris Fusniacensis is somewhat more accurate in referring to, but still not naming, "septima filia…Hilduini" as wife of "Sanctio regi Hispanie" by whom she had "Hildefonsum regem et fratrem eius, qui ei successit in regnum. Cuius filiam cum regni gubernaculis comes inclitus Barcinonensis, qui paganos impugnare non desinit, duxit uxorem"[1098]. The Crónica de San Juan de la Peña records that King Sancho married "muller Doña Felicia"[1099]. The Monumenta Historiæ Tornacensis names "Feliciæ materteræ vestræ filium" as wife of "in Hispaniam regem Hildefonsum"[1100]. "Sancius rex Aragonensium…cum filio meo Petro et uxore mea regina…Felicia" granted the monastery of Sauve-Majeure, Gironde to the church of Pamplona by charter dated to [1086/94][1101]. m (1076[1102] or before) as his second wife, SANCHO I King of Aragon [SANCHO V King of Navarre], son of don RAMIRO I King of Aragon & his first wife Gilberga [Hermesenda] de Cousserans ([1042/43]-Huesca 4 Jun 1094, bur Monastery of San Juan de la Peña) .
Sources
Americans of Royal Descent, Los Angeles Library
G.E.C. Complete Peerage III, 243
J.H. Round: Feudal England, p. 522-23
Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700, Edition: 7th ed. Abbreviation: Ancestral Roots, 7th ed. Author: Weis, Frederick Lewis, Editor: Sheppard Jr., Walter Lee Publication: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., Baltimore, MD, 1992 | MONTDIDIER Hildouin (I58997)
|
| 5471 |
HIlduin was the founder of the House of Montdidier, which produced the Counts of Montdidier, Dammartin and Roucy.
Marriage
Historians disagree as to the exact disposition of the descendants, but all agree that they descended from Hersende, Dame of Ramerupt, who was married to Hilduin I, or his son of the same name, or his brother, or, in some interpretations, his daughter. We cannot resolve these competing claims and will assume that Hilduin was married to Hersende (Heldwide).
Research Notes
It is unknown who the parents of Hilduin were. [1] There is considerable confusion as to the immediate family of Hilduin among historians and genealogists because of the lack of documented evidence, the preponderance of the names of Hilduin and Manasses in the family and the existence of other contemporary Hilduins (particularly, the Counts of Montreuil and Ponthieu).
The only creditable reference to Hilduin I was when Philip I, King of France, donated the village of Bagneux to the Abbey of Saint-Germain-des-Prés in exchange for Combs la Ville by charter dated 1061, which recounts that Hugh the Great had granted Combs to Hilduino
comiti de Monte qui vocatur Desiderius, who died before his benefactor (before 956), and that Henry I, King of France, had regranted Combs to Manasses nepos supradicti Hilduini comitis [Manasses, grandson of Hilduin] just as suus avunculus Hilduinus [his uncle Hilduin] had held it. [2]
Hilduin has been detached as the son of Rotgaire and Hersende.
Sources
↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2021, Seigneurs de Ramerupt, Comtes de Montdidier.
↑ Tardif, J. Monuments historiques (Paris, 1866) 284, p. 175. | MONTDIDIER Hilduin (I59008)
|
| 5472 |
Hill was dedicated to community service
Kristine Goodrich
Staff Writer
Stan Hill was a board member for more than 20 nonprofit organizations
and volunteered for dozens more. The longtime White Bear Lake and
Mahtomedi resident was a successful businessman and committed family
man, but he always found time to serve the community he loved.
"He was such a giving and caring person," said Carol McFarlane, who
worked with him on several committees. "He was instrumental in
supporting a lot of people in need. It was such a privilege to know
him."
The long list of community organizations Hill served on includes the
White Bear Lake Area Historical Society, Century College Foundation,
Metropolitan Interfaith Council on Affordable Housing, White Bear
Lake Area Educational Foundation, Mahtomedi Educational Foundation
and East Metro Women's Council.
"He was concerned with making the community he lived in a better
place for everyone," said Jan Becker, executive director of the
Mahtomedi Educational Foundation. "He was genuinely the nicest,
kindest person I ever met."
Hill died Dec. 25 at age 91 from heart failure. He had been sick for
a while, but held on until he was able to see everyone in his family
one last time, said Doris Hill, his wife of more than 65 years.
"Everyone came home for Christmas," Doris said. "After everyone got
there, he knew it was OK to let go."
Along with a successful career and his many volunteer efforts, his
family was always his priority.
"No matter how busy he was, he was always there for all of the
children and in later years, all the grandchildren," said his son,
George Hill.
"He was a kind, respectful husband and always showed his love," Doris
said.
Hill graduated from White Bear High School in 1929. At age 14, he was
the youngest in his class and was salutatorian. He was involved in
dozens of school activities, including glee club, orchestra, debate
and yearbook.
"Even back then it was already obvious he was going places,"
McFarlane said. "He was always active." Hill was inducted in 1992
into the White Bear Lake Schools' Wall of Fame.
He married Doris in 1938. They met at First Presbyterian Church,
Doris said. He offered to drive her home after a young-people's
meeting.
Hill worked as an actuary at Minnesota Mutual before being drafted
into the Army in 1941. Even after his time was up, he remained in the
Reserve. He went back to work at Minnesota Mutual and was vice
president when he retired in 1970. He then started up his own
computer consulting business before officially retiring.
"He became very successful but he never forgot where he came from,"
Becker said. "He always gave back to his community."
"He was a self-made man who was very generous with his time, talents
and treasures," said Philip Bruner, president of the Mahtomedi
Educational Foundation.
Hill had always volunteered, but after retiring, it became his life's
work, his family said.
"He always very active," George said, "but after he retired, he had
another eight hours to devote to helping people."
He helped dozens of organizations install their first computers and
served as treasurer on numerous boards.
"I will miss his sparkle, his good judgment and his fine example,"
Brunner said. "He truly set a standard of civic participation to
which all citizens should aspire."
Education was one of his most valued efforts, his family said. Stan
and Doris sponsored several college scholarships, and along with the
local school foundations, Stan was treasurer of the Minnesota
Mathematics League for more than 50 years.
He was treasurer of the Mahtomedi Area Educational Foundation up
until this spring.
"He was on the top of his game, right up to end," Becker said.
"Anything he touched, he did a phenomenal job. It has been my
privilege to have known Stan and I consider him a dear friend. He
will be greatly missed."
He also was one of the historical society's earliest members and was
treasurer for many years, said Executive Director Sara Markoe Hanson.
Even after he stepped down as treasurer, he was still very active,
Hanson said.
"He still helped out on some special projects and came to all of our
events," she said. "Stan was a person that when he set his mind to
something, it was as good as done. He was so supportive. He really
understood what we were doing and where we were trying to go."
Hill's most recent effort was founding the North East Round Table.
Now part of the Metropolitan Interfaith Council on Affordable
Housing, the group works to create more affordable housing
opportunities in the community.
"He was constantly out there advocating for people in need,"
McFarlane said. "He didn't just talk it, he walked it."
Retirement also afforded Hill time to pursue other hobbies. He wrote
two books -- an autobiography titled "Confessions of an 80 Year Old
Boy" and a novel titled "Almost Immortal." Hill also didn't let aging
stop him from enjoying outdoor recreation.
Stan and George competed together for more than 30 years in sailing
races at the White Bear Yacht Club, taking home several trophies. At
age 80, he could still be spotted windsurfing on White Bear Lake. At
age 91, he was still biking more than 1,000 miles around town each
summer.
"He had this energy," Hanson said. "I only hope I have half of that
when I get to be his age."
Hill is survived by children, George (Diana) Hill, Janis (Loren)
Knott, Mary (David) West, Beverly Dwyer, Richard (Satoko) Hill;
grandchildren, Erin and Casey Dwyer, Enoch and John Hill, Karen West;
brother, Jack (Catherine) Hill.
Services are Jan. 13 at St. Andrew's Lutheran Church, 900 Stillwater
Rd. in Mahtomedi. Visitation starts at 1 p.m. and memorial service is
at 3 p.m. Memorials preferred to Century College Foundation, White
Bear Lake Area Educational Foundation, Mahtomedi Educational
Foundation, or any other charity of the donor's choosing.
Kristine Goodrich can be reached at 651-407-1233 or
vadnaisheightspress@sherbtel.net. | HILL Stan (I4024)
|
| 5473 |
Hillside Cemetery | SEARLE Timothius (I14570)
|
| 5474 |
Hillside Cemetery | PIER Amy Nama (I17372)
|
| 5475 |
Hillside Cemetery | O'ROURKE Catherine (I25684)
|
| 5476 |
Hillside Cemetery | SMITH Sarah (I26964)
|
| 5477 |
Hillside Cemetery | HUTCHINSON Ezra (I27221)
|
| 5478 |
Hillside Cemetery, Minneapolis, Lot 97, Section C. This is the Dawon family plot. Look for Dawson upright monument. | HOLMES Sarah Ann (I4095)
|
| 5479 |
Hillside Cemetery, Minneapolis, Lot 97, Section C. This is the Dawon family plot. Look for Dawson upright monument. | SMITH Thomas (I9078)
|
| 5480 |
His address given in the family Bible was Room 51 Evening Post, New York City, NY. | Brown Addison Prescott (I50787)
|
| 5481 |
His baptismal records are from church records. (Vital Records, p. 104 Rutland, Worcester County, MA
John died young.
His baptismal records are from church records. (Vital Records, p. 104 Rutland, Worcester County, MA
John died young. | Wright John (I51594)
|
| 5482 |
His birth date may have been Jan.21, 1836. | PULSIFER William (I8033)
|
| 5483 |
His birth recorded in Rutland, Worcester county, MA but was actually in "at the Township called ye Lower Ashuelot." (Swanzey, Cheshire County, NH) | Brown Oliver (I51138)
|
| 5484 |
His daughter Jeanne Marguerite Chevalier was a fille du roi, her first marriage names her father as Jacques Alexandre, her later marriages name him as Jean
Jacques Chevalier:
Birth: 1624 in Normandie France Rouen
Spouse: Marguerite Scorinan-Romian 1624 - ?
Daughter: Jeanne-Marguerite Chevalier: Birth 1645 in Normandie France Death 24 nov 1716 in Rivière-Ouelle Qc[1] | CHEVALIER Jacques Alexandre Jean (I57780)
|
| 5485 |
His death is substantiated by his will. | Willard Richard (I51628)
|
| 5486 |
His death record in Muskegon say he was born November 9, 1900 | VALLEE Walter (I9800)
|
| 5487 |
His estate dated 18 Aug. 1724 was adm. by
wife Jane and son Zacharias. | SMITH Jonathan (I8973)
|
| 5488 |
His estate was probated on 13 October 1752. | CAPRON Banfield (I1770)
|
| 5489 |
His family came to America from France in 1764, being royalists in
the old country, and for meritorious services rendered to their
sovereign, "De Beaulieu" was added to their family name of "Hudon".
Nicolas Hudon was baptized on 16 Dec 1723 in Notre-Dame-de-Liesse, Rivière-Ouelle, Canada, Nouvelle-France. He was the son of Nicolas Hudon dit Beaulieu and Madeleine Bouchard.[1]
On Sunday, July 14, 1776 the gentlemen François Baby, Gabriel Taschereau and Jenkins Williams were making there way through the parishes and towns in Quebec by orders of the British Colonial Government. Their tasks was to locate and punish those who partook in the “unrest” in 1775 brought on by the American invasion. They arrived at Rivière Ouelle and assembled the militia at noon where they read their charges.
All officers commissioned by Genl Carleton last summer, whom they discharged for the reasons given below.
Frans Gagnon, Capt.
Joseph Beaulieu, Lieut.
Nicolas Beaulieu, Ensign
Pierre Boucher, Assistant-Major
They discharged the subordinate officers for executing the Captain’s orders in their respective rank. They had on several occasions followed orders by from the rebels. [2]
Sources
↑ Baptism IGD
↑ Gabriel, Michael P. Ed. Quebec During The American Invasion, 1775-1776: The Journal of François Baby, Gabriel Taschereau, and Jenkins Williams. Michigan State University Press. 2005:109-110
Quebec, Vital and Church Records (Drouin Collection), 1621-1997
PRDH/ Repertoire des Actes de Bapteme, Mariage, et Sepulture, et des Recensements de Quebec Ancien XVIIe Siecle, Jacques Legare & Hubert Charbonneau, Les Presses de Université de Montréal, Montreal, Québec, (PRDH-IGD Family, Couples, Baptism, Individual, Burial and Marriage Records)
Index to French Canadian Revolutionary War Patriots
Canadian participants in the American Revolution, an index, by Virginia Easley DeMarce, page 58 (image 65)
Tree: Nos Origines
Mariage avec Madeleine Miville: https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G99M-YZ74?i=13&wc=HCWB-2NL%3A17758701%2C17758702%2C17758703&cc=1321742&lang=fr | BEAULIEU Nicolas Hudon Dit (II) (I781)
|
| 5490 |
His first name may have ben Daniel. | STAIRES Mr. (I9240)
|
| 5491 |
His house lot in Rutland was # 54 and by May 20, 1731 had 30 acres laid out for him by Ware River. His brother, Capt. Samuel Brown lived to the right of Lot # 54. More on page 144 of History of Rutland, Worcester Co. MA. | Brown, 3rd. Eleazer (I50831)
|
| 5492 |
his is a legendary or fictional person.
The profile is being retained on WikiTree because he/she appears in many popular online genealogies.
An estimated birth year has been added in order to give the profile pre-1500 protection.
Forskningsanteckning
Äldre namn för danska Lejre är bland annat Ledre, Ledreborg, Lethreborg, också stavat Lethre, Ledre, Ledhre, Lædre osv..
Lethra är det latinska namnet för det som numera kallas Lejre, på fornnordiska Hleiðr.
Enligt danska Wikipedia;
Ifølge Saxo Grammaticus blev Lejre anlagt af Roars efterfølger, Rolf Krake. Sagn beretter, at Roar var den 23. konge i Lejre, og at det blev anlagt få år før Kristus af Skjold, Odins søn. Danske konger skulle have haft deres hovedsæde i Lejre til det 9. eller 10. århundrede.
För vidare forskning och biografi:
https://da.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lejre
http://www.gedevasen.dk/danerkongerne.html
Sources
The Viking Age 1 v. 1, p. 65, 68, Gen. Hist. 19
Keiser und Koenig Hist., Gen. Hist. 25, pt 1, p. 126-27
Heritage Consulting. The Millennium File. Salt Lake City, UT, USA
---
WikiTree profile Fridleifsson-24 created through the import of FAMILY 6162011.GED on Jun 20, 2011 by Michael Stephenson.
This person was created on 19 April 2011 through the import of Stout - Trask - Cowan .ged.
WikiTree profile Fridleifsson-29 created through the import of heinakuu2011-6.ged on Jul 5, 2011 by Johanna Amnelin.
This person was created through the import of Redmond_Chambers(3).ged on 28 January 2011.
WikiTree profile Fridleifsson-44 created through the import of wikitree.ged on Aug 1, 2011 by Abby Brown.
WikiTree profile UNKNOWN-83311 created through the import of heinakuu2011-6.ged on Jul 5, 2011 by Johanna Amnelin.
WikiTree profile Fridleifsson-39 created through the import of Sara Betty Northrup_2011-07-29.ged on Jul 29, 2011 by Alexis Connolly.
WikiTree profile Fridleifsson-36 created through the import of Elbert Clayton Smith_s tree_2011-07-29.ged on Jul 29, 2011 by Alexis Connolly.
This person was created through the import of Redmond_Chambers(3).ged on 28 January 2011.
WikiTree profile Of Lethra-12 created through the import of heinakuu2011-6.ged on Jul 5, 2011 | FRIDLEIFSSON Frodi (I58800)
|
| 5493 |
His is listed as 89 years old in 1840 as a pensioner which would leave his birth date about 1751. | Source (S1269)
|
| 5494 |
His last name was Arshakuni. sometimes called "Apostle Killer" according to the website According to the website Our Royal Titled Noble etc Ancestors [1]
Faith and Family
renounced Christianity, under pressure from his lords and pagan clergy, and put his daughter to death
Reign
SANATRUCES (Sinatruces, Pers. Sanatruk), Parthian king. In the troublous times after the death of Mithradates II. (c. 88 B.c.) he was made king by the Sacaraucae, a Mongolian tribe who had invaded Iran. in. 76 B.C. He was eighty years old and reigned seven years; his successor was his son Phraates III. [2]
Another Sanatruces (Sanatrucius) is mentioned as an ephemeral Parthian king in A.D. 115 [3]
Children
Vologaesus 1 Birth 0095 King of Armenia Death 0137 (age 41-42)
Ghadana Birth 0100 Queen of Iberia Spouse Paramenes II + KRETI (90- )
Sources
↑ According to the website Our Royal Titled Noble etc Ancestors
↑ (Lucian, Macrob. 15; Phlegon, fr. 12 ap. Phot. cod. 97; Appian, Mithr. 104; Dio Cass. xxxvi. 45).
↑ (Malalas, Chron. p. 270, 273). (Eo. M.)
Citations Stuart, Roderick W. Royalty for Commoners, The Complete Known Lineage of John of Gaunt, Son of Edward III, King of England, and Queen Philippa. Fourth Edition. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Company, 2002.
See also:
http://www.geni.com/people/Sanatroukes/6000000002187597381?through=6000000006924788090
http://fabpedigree.com/s080/f005224.htm
http://homepages.rpi.edu/~holmes/Hobbies/Genealogy2/ps31/ps31_287.htm
http://www.muldermedia.com/roots/INDIs/II3896.html
http://www.genealogieonline.nl/en/kwartierstaat-vermaat/I3223.php
http://our-royal-titled-noble-and-commoner-ancestors.com/p3437.htm | ARSHAKUNI Sanatroukes Unknown (I57941)
|
| 5495 |
His marriage record lists his age as 26 and his wife's age as 20 and
says she is dau. of Joseph and Sophia (Dault) Belhumer. St. Anne's
Parrish, Penetang. | CADIEUX Isadore (Jr.) (I1741)
|
| 5496 |
His name is not known. He died in infancy. | Loghry Unknown (I52826)
|
| 5497 |
His obituary in Muskegan, Mi. says he was
born at Hornshire, N.Y. After consulting
several gazateers and checking with local
historians in the area, no town by that name
can be located. | PULSIFER Abel N. (I6750)
|
| 5498 |
his second wife | Castile) Constance (of (I1866)
|
| 5499 |
His son's baptism indicates that he is a master surgeon.[1] and married to Marguerite Leguey. They would have been married at least before 1676 based on the baptism of the earlier son.
His son Charles fichier origine indicates that he had a brother named Gatien baptized in St. Calais on 3/12/1677.[2]
Their known children were:
Gatien Chandonné (about Mar 12 1677 – unknown) .
Charles Chandonnet (Oct 18 1678 – Jun 27 1756)
Sources
↑ Son's Bapt. image Fichier Original source was not provided.
↑ https://www.fichierorigine.com/recherche?numero=240790
Il est mentionné au mariage de son fils Charles: https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3QSQ-G993-XFJ?i=17&wc=9RL6-N3K%3A17585101%2C19508101%2C26193301&cc=1321742 | Chandonne' Gatien (I1904)
|
| 5500 |
His widow was the administrator of his estate Dec. 25, 1827. Value of
estate : $5,827.69 | PULSIFER Ebenezer (I7087)
|
| 5501 |
His wife is believed to have been a niece of Duchess Gunnora, wife of Richard I, Duke of Normandy, perhaps daughter of Senfria.
Sources
Geneajourney.com - http://www.geneajourney.com/talvas.html
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/6676093/person/-1236859166/facts
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/tree/27492901/familyf
Roderick W. Stuart, "Royalty for Commoners."
Geni (http://www.geni.com/people/Hugues-de-Montgomery/6000000000074487690) accessed by Varnell-40 17:49, 24 February 2015 (EST) | MONTGOMERY Hugues (I60011)
|
| 5502 |
His wife was Catholic but he never followed
her beliefs. It wasn't until he was on his
death bed that he called for a priest and
converted to the Catholic faith. His sudden
change of heart is said because it was the only way
he could be buried in the Catholic Cem. and
he said " I don't want to be buried up there-
(meaning White Church Cem.) with the rest
of THOSE PULSIFERS !!! His decendants say
he would get mad or moody and go off in the
woods for several days before returning
like nothing had happened.
Cyrus change his name from Pulsifer to Pulcipher. | PULCIPHER Cyrus H. (I6990)
|
| 5503 |
His will was dated 27 Jan 1617/18, proved 17 Feb. 1617/18.
His will was dated 27 Jan 1617/18, proved 17 Feb. 1617/18. | Freeborne John (I50390)
|
| 5504 |
Historians disagree as to the exact disposition of the descendants, but all agree that they descended from Hersende, Dame of Ramerupt, who was married to Hilduin I, or his son of the same name, or his brother, or, in some interpretations, his daughter.
We cannot resolve these competing claims and will assume that Hersende married Hilduin de Montdidier.
Sources
Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2021, Seigneurs de Ramerupt, Comtes de Montdidier. | MONTREUIL Hersende (I59007)
|
| 5505 |
HISTORY OF MORROW COUNTY OHIO A Narrative Account of its Historical Progress Its People and its Principal Interests ay ji ba &Uh&Vn ASSISTED BY ROBERT F BART LETT ILLUSTRATED VOL I THE LEWIS PUBLISHING COMPANY CHICAGO NEW YORK 1911
In the township are the villages of South Woodbury and West Liberty. South Woodbury contains one church, three stores, two wagon and blacksmiths shops, two physicians, one school and a resident minister; also an Odd Fellows' hall. The town was laid out in 1830, by Daniel Wood. The first building, a log cabin, was erected by Joseph Horr. The first frame building was erected by Andrew Schofield, as a storeroom. The first hotel was erected by Shadrach Hubbell and Eli Johnson, during the year 1832-33. The first mail carried from Delaware to Woodbury on contract, was by Shadrach Hubbell, and in this the Hon. J. Randolph Hubbell acted in the capacity of post-boy. The first hotel was erected by Shadrach Hubbell and Eli Johnson, in 1832 and 1833. They were succeeded by Solomon Westbrook.
The organization of the township of Lincoln in 1828, was mainly due to the efforts of Collins Buck, Steiner and Shadrack Hubbell, who had come to maturity, married, and settled down in a cabin on the site of Pearson's brick house. The first election was held on the first Monday in April, 1828, at Hubbell's cabin, and resulted in the election of Edmund Buck as Justice of the Peace, and each one of the voters to one or more offices, as there were but seventeen men to fill twenty-four positions.
From The Delaware Gazette - May 27, 1886: In memoriam. Mrs. Rebecca Randolph Hubbell died at the home of her son-in-law Jackson Hipple, Esq., in the 87th year of her age. She was an early pioneer of Delaware Co., having immigrated to this county with her parents Mr. James and his wife Catharine FitzRandolph in the year 1818. The family settled on a farm in Peru Twp now in Morrow Co. The farm is still in the family, and is now owned and occupied by her grandson, Mr. Orville Westbrook. In the 23d year of her age she was married to Shadrack Hubbell, who died of small pox in the winter of 1851, at his home in Morrow Co. He had contracted the disease on a business trip to Chicago. By this marriage she had eight children, Bowen C., James R., Asa C., Hiram, Harriet, Catharine, Susan and Minerva, all of whom preceded her to the grave except James and Hiram, now a resident of Ross Co., and Mrs. Susan Hipple of this city with whom she had lived since the death of her daughter, Mrs. Westbrook in 1868. Her parents were of Quaker descent, but early in life and previous to her marriage she joined the Baptist Church.
A Hubbell family history says he died of smallpox in 1847.
( From section on early settlers of Gilead township) Part No 4 Eli Johnston from Jefferson county(Ohio) and Rufus Dodd from Knox county settled on section 35 about 1824 In 1826 Mrs Campbell from Jefferson county settled on section 35 In 1830 Andrew Dalrymplc and Ezckicl Clark settled on sections 26 and 35
1880 census
Name: Eli Johnson Residence: Emporia, Lyon, Kansas Birthdate: 1800 Birthplace: Ohio, United States Relationship to Head: Father-in-law Spouse's Name: Spouse's Birthplace: Father's Name: Father's Birthplace: United States Mother's Name: Mother's Birthplace: United States Race or Color (Expanded): White Ethnicity (Standardized): American Gender: Male Martial Status: Widowed Age (Expanded): 80 years Occupation: Farmer NARA Film Number: T9-0387 Page: 307 Page Character: C Entry Number: 7310 Film number: 1254387 HouseholdGenderAge Martin Lambert M 55 Child Adaline Lambert F 40 Marshell Lambert M 22 Finley Lambert M 19 John Lambert M 13 George Lambert M 11 Eli Johnson M 80 Jennie Mccastle F 22
1870 census
Name: Eli Johnson Estimated Birth Year: 1802 Gender: Male Age in 1870: 68y Color (white, black, mulatto, chinese, Indian): White Birthplace: Pennsylvania Home in 1870: Missouri, United States HouseholdGenderAge Eli Johnson M 68y Ada Johnson F 61y George Ruble M 28y Ada E Ruble F 22y William E Ruble M 3y Maria Ruble F 4m
1860 census taken June 13th. Eli is 58 and born in Penn. Wife is listed as Hubbell is 51 and was born in New York. Eli is in Knox county ill. Children listed are Hubbell age 16 and adah age 12.
1850 census
Name: Eli Johnston Residence: Knox county, part of, Knox, Illinois Age: 50 years Calculated Birth Year: 1800 Birthplace: Ohio Gender: Male Race (original): Race (expanded): Death Month: Death Year: Film Number: 7686 Digital GS Number: 4193362 Image Number: 00450 Line Number: 9 Dwelling House Number: 1713 Family Number: 1775 Marital Status: Free or Slave: HouseholdGenderAge Eli Johnston M 50y Ady Johnston F 40y Shadrie Johnston M 20y Meriah Johnston F 16y Joseph Johnston M 11y James Johnston M 8y Hubble Johnston M 6y Ady Johnston F 2y Hannah Overlander F 3y
1840 Census Knox County Ill. Eli is listed as head of house hold age 30-40. Children are 2 males under 5, one male 5-10, one female under 5, 2 age 5-10, one 10-15, and one female age 30-40.
Some discrepancy exists on where Eli was born. Several censuses list his birth place as Ohio, where others list his birth place as Penn. Hubbell Johnson lists Eli’s birth place as Penn on Joseph Johnson’s death certificate. The census taker would have asked Eli where he was born. Ohio became a state on March 1, 1803. In 1801 Ohio was known as the Northwest Territory. The Ohio River defined the boundary between Pennsylvania and Ohio. Jefferson county Ohio is right on the northern border of Pennsylvania and Ohio and about 70-80 miles from New York. The Johnson family bible place Eli’s birth place as Pennsylvania.
Early references place Eli in Morrow county Ohio in 1824. Delaware Ohio is about a day’s travel to the west of south Woodbury whereas Pennsylvania is to the east implying that Eli probably lived in south Woodbury and went to the closest church to get married. The logic here is that Ada was young and had other family in the area namely her brother Shadrach. She was probably living here when Eli showed up. Ada was probably born on the trip to Ohio as her father came from Connecticut and her birth place is listed as New York which is between Connecticut and Ohio. Ada’s brother Shadrach was also married in Delaware, Ohio in 1821, Ada probably had to wait to get married as in 1822 she would have been 16 or possibly Eli was not in Ohio yet? In 1832 and 1833 Eli was in south Woodbury Township. 1850 Eli is in Illinois. The 1800 and 1810 Ohio census was destroyed in the war of 1812. Only records for Washington country exist. A systematic search of all existing census records for Ohio and Pennsylvania produce several possibilities for Eli’s father and builds at least an argument that Eli was not born in Ohio.
Time line for Eli Johnson:
1801, Born November 29 probably along the Ohio/Pennsylvania border
1822, Married Ada Hubbell in June, Delaware Ohio
1825-1837, Various children born
1830 Shadrack is born in Ohio (1850 CENSUS)
1832-3, Built the first Hotel in South Woodbury, Ohio
1835, Myra was born in Ohio (1850 CENSUS)
1839, Joseph Johnson born on August 27 in Victoria, Knox county ill.
1840, Census places Eli and Ada in Knox county Ill.
1844, Hubbell Johnson born on April 7 in Versailles, Ill.
1850, Census Places Eli and Ada in Knox county Ill.
1860, Census place Eli and Ada in Knox county Ill
1870, Census places Eli and Ada in Missouri
1880, Census places Eli in Emporia, Lyon, Kansas
Several sources list Eli as dying in pilot grove, Ill Is this possible if he is in Kansas in 1880. Travel back to Ill would have been difficult especially for someone 80+ years old. Trains were invented but the more likely mode of travel would have been horse and wagon. Perhaps Eli is buried in Kansas? Eli’s body could have been shipped back to Ill, but that would have been expensive. The CK&N rail road went from Kansas to Chicago and was active during the decade of 1880-1890. Eli did spend 25 years in Knox County, Ill so perhaps he did have a burial plot there. Pilot grove is along the rail road line from Kansas to Chicago and is about 70miles south west of Knox County. The 1870 census and the 1880 census place Eli with his children in Missouri and Kansas respectively. Did Eli have family in Pilot grove? Joseph James and Hubbell are in Nebraska. Adaline and Shadrach “did their turn” so that leaves the two oldest daughters Myra or Eli jr. or William. Eli and William are the two easiest as we know there last names, however I come up empty. The remaining daughter probably married and took other surnames which are not known? The case for Pilot grove is not impossible but also not supported. Where is Ada buried? Pioneer cemeteries are replete with single family member who died en route to their destinations.
Criteria for possible fathers of Eli are:
1 must have same last name
2 must be of reasonable age born before 1780
3 must have a son born in 1801
4 must be in the right location Ohio or Pa with emphasis on those closest to the border
5 secondary searches do not rule them out | JOHNSON Eli (I41540)
|
| 5506 |
History of Ontario County, NY, Pub. 1878, Pg. 163
Joseph Brown GATES the chief subject of this sketch, was born in Hopewell, Ontario County, New York, April 28, 1802. At the present writing he is in his seventy-fifty year and resides on the farm where he was born, and where he has always resided, three and one-half miles east of Canandaigua, on the old turnpike road. His father, Daniel GATES, was one of the first settlers in Ontario County, having emigrated hither from Rutland county, Vermont, in the year 1789. Soon after his settlement in Gorham (now Hopewell), his wife died, leaving him a family of nine children. About the year 1793, he married Milcah BROWN, widow of Joseph BROWN, of Vermont. As the result of his second marriage, there were five children born to them, Esther, Cyrus, Moses S., Joseph B. and Fordys.
All of this second family settled in the neighborhood of their birthplace, Joseph B., succeeding to the old homestead. On the 22nd of October, 1829, Joseph B., was married to Pamelia B. COOK. He lead a quiet, industrious farmer life through all the subsequent years of activity. Careful and prudent in all his business concerns, he gathered about his home the comforts and privileges well earned by toil, and gave his five children the benefits of a good academical education. He has ever borne both a character and reputation of unquestionable integrity. Preferring to suffer wrong rather than to do wrong, he never had a contested lawsuit, either as plaintiff or defendant. Being one of the most highly respected citizens of Ontario county, he has been many times urged to allow his name to be used in reference to places of public trust; but he studiously declined such proffered honors, and hence never was a candidate for any official position, and never held any office above school trustee. Always leading an exemplary, moral life, he for many years was a regular attendant and supporter of the Presbyterian church in Hopewell, and afterwards of the Wesleyan Methodist church at Hopewell Centre, to which his wife was joined. In September, 1869, after forty years of contented marriage, his companion in life was separated from him by death. His five children are living to respect and honor him in his advanced years.
(see Pamelia Bishop COOK for sketch on Joseph's wife)
(Under Settlement, pg 159)
A worthy pioneer form the "Green Mountain State", was Daniel GATES, who with a family of four children, emigrated from Vermont in 1798, and located on lot 22. A venerable son, Mr. Joseph B. GATES, resides on the old homestead, where he was born April 28, 1802. He has five children living, viz: Elisha L. and Mary M., residing in the town; Daniel N., in Minnesota; J. Spencer, in Illinois, and John C., in Iowa. Daniel WARREN, Shubeal CLARK, and Daniel GATES Jr., were early settlers on this lot. | Ludden Milcah (I50738)
|
| 5507 |
History of the town of Sunderland, Massachusetts, by John Montague Smith.. prepared by
Henry Taft & Abbie Montague, Press of E A Hall & Co, Greenfiel. #163 p 461. 235 #169.
History of the town of Sunderland, Massachusetts, by John Montague Smith.. prepared by
Henry Taft & Abbie Montague, Press of E A Hall & Co, Greenfiel. p 335.
Massachusetts.4241,4242 History of The Town of Sunderland, Massachusetts, by John
Montague Smith, prepared by Henry W. Taft & Abbie T. Montague. Press of E. A. Hall &
Co., Greenfield, Mass., 1899. p. 282. | MONTAGUE Eunice (I28937)
|
| 5508 |
History of the town of Sunderland, Massachusetts, by John Montague Smith.. prepared by
Henry Taft & Abbie Montague, Press of E A Hall & Co, Greenfiel. p 282. | AMES Ebenezer (I29062)
|
| 5509 |
Hitta was born in 0882. Hitta von Merseburg ... She passed away in 0970. [1] | von MERSEBURG Hidda (I59409)
|
| 5510 |
Hobbs Cemetery | MARTIN Katurah Basheba Hester (I31110)
|
| 5511 |
Hobbs Cemetery | BRYAN Sidney Rufus (I31239)
|
| 5512 |
Hobbs Cemetery | BRYAN Ruth (I31430)
|
| 5513 |
Holy Cross Cemetery | DWIGHT Anne Maria (I16272)
|
| 5514 |
Holy Cross Cemetery 3620 Tilden Ave, Brooklyn, NY. She has reference number 247. | KEHOE Mary E (I57159)
|
| 5515 |
Holy Cross Cemetery in 3620 Tilden Ave, Brooklyn, NY
Find A Grave Memorial# 93252849 | NEWLAND Mary Veronica (I57160)
|
| 5516 |
Holy Cross Hospital
Burial: Feb 15, 1936 Salt Lake City (Mount Olivet Cemetery), Salt Lake Co., UT | GIESY William Sommers (I13822)
|
| 5517 |
Home - 1334 S. 10 East
Burial: Jan 25, 1919 in Salt Lake City (Mount Olivet Cemetery), Salt Lake Co., UT | HECKERMAN Anna Catherine "Kate" (I13889)
|
| 5518 |
Horace died at the age of 20 years, seven months. | Annable Horace (I53559)
|
| 5519 |
Houghton Cemetery | HASKINS Eliza (I29621)
|
| 5520 |
Houghton Cemetery | HASKINS Jason (I30021)
|
| 5521 |
Houghton Cemetery | PIKE Zilpha (I30023)
|
| 5522 |
Houghton Cemetery | GUNN Electa (I30223)
|
| 5523 |
Houghton Cemetery | HASKINS Jason Wellington (I30412)
|
| 5524 |
House of Creil
"Gérard Louise considered "Yves de Creil" to be a legendary personage, but whatever the reality he was represented by Orderic as coming from Creil, which is near Beauvais, and holding a position of trust close to the Frankish king - i.e. obviously a Frank himself and not a Norman. Creil was one of the places of safety under Frankish control where saintly relics were taken to protect them from Viking despoilers."
Name at Birth: Yves de Creil
Spouse: Geile de Crei
Children: Hugh de Creil
Sources
http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/gen-medieval/2010-06/1277937520
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/13078823/person/607801882/facts | CREIL Yves (I60019)
|
| 5525 |
House of Creil
Name: Fulk de Corbonais
Married Rolais
Sources
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/13078823/person/355863097/facts
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/13078823/person/607479083/facts | CREIL Fulk (I60017)
|
| 5526 |
House of Creil See Creil family genealogy Renaud de Creil, de Clermont-en-Beauvasis, Chamberlain of Clermont
Son of Hugues Seigneur de Creil et Mouchy, Butler Of France (990 - 1060)
Renaud I, comte de Clermont, was recorded as living in 1087 per Orderic Vital.
Sources
Royal Ancestry by Douglas Richardson Vol. V. page 268
http://www.geneajourney.com/clermnt.html (accessed 30 Nov 2014)
http://www.coltechpub.com/hartgen/htm/de-creil.htm | CLERMONT Renaud (I60022)
|
| 5527 |
House of Creil See de Creil family genealogy Hugh de Creil, Count of Clermont, Rouse & Montdidier
Hugh de Claremont, Count of Claremont
Birth 1 JUL 1030 England (Northampton)
Occupation: Count of ClermontCount of Clermont, of Roucy and of Montdidier
Death 1 JUL 1101
Hugues, Count de Clermont Lord of Creil & Mouchy was born circa 1030 in Clermont, Oise, France. Marriage* He married Margaret (Marguerite) De Montdidier, daughter of Hildouin IV de Montdidier Seigneur De Rameru and Alice (Adela) de Roucy, circa 1065 in Picardy, France. Death* Hugues, Count de Clermont Lord of Creil & Mouchy died in 1101.
Family Margaret (Marguerite) De Montdidier b. circa 1045, d. circa 1110 Child * Adeliza De Clermont+ b. c 1058 Hugh de_Creil Count of Clermont in Beauvaisis Count de Clermont (1030-1101) [Pedigree]
Son of Renaud I de CLERMONT Count Clermont (-1087) and Ermengardis de CLERMONT
Count of Mouchy and Creil. d. 1101 b. 1030, of Clermont, Beauvais, France d. 1101, of Northamptonshire, Eng. Married Marguerite de ROUCI (1035-)
Children:
1. Renaud II Comte de Clermont (-1162) m(2) Clemence of Bar-le-duc (-1183) 2. Adelaide de_Clermont (1074-) m. Gilbert FitzRichard de CLARE 2nd Earl of Clare (1066-1114) 3. Richilde de CLERMONT m. Dreux II de Mello Seigneur de Mouchy
References: 1. "Ancestral roots of certain American colonists who came to America before 1700", Frederick Lewis Weis, 1992, seventh edition. The earlier editions were called: "Ancestral roots of sixty colonists who came to New England 1623-1650"
Note: Hugues, COUNT OF CLERMONT in Beauvaisis, by Margaret, daughter of Hilduin, COUNT OF Rouci and MONTDIDIER. [Complete Peerage]
Note:
Note: Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999
Note: Page: 144-25
Note: Title: Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000
Note: Page: III:165-166
Sources
See also:
Wikipedia: Hugh I, Count of Clermont-en-Beauvaisis
Wikidata: Item Q28407393, en:Wikipedia help.gif
Roderick W. Stuart, "Royalty for Commoners."
The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Volume: vols. I-XII Abbreviation: Complete Peerage Author: Cokayne, George Edward Publication: St. Catherine Press Ltd., London, 1910-1959
Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists Who Came to New England between 1623 and 1650 Abbreviation: Ancestral Roots, 6th ed. Author: Weis, Frederick Lewis Publication: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., Baltimore, MD, 1988 Note: RIN#10004
Source: de Creil family genealogy, http://www.coltechpub.com/hartgen/htm/de-creil.htm accessed by Varnell-40 13:44, 13 April 2015 (EDT). | CLERMONT Hugues (I60026)
|
| 5528 |
Howe GenealogiesJohn Howe of Sudbury & Marlboroughhttp://content.ancestry.com/Browse/BookView.aspx?dbid=11748&iid=dvm_GenMono001261-00017-1&sid=&gskw=&cr=1Nehemiah Howe (1693-1747) (Samuel, John)...In the spring and early summer of 1739, he bought three full township rights in the new town called Great Meadows, N.H. the records of those deeds are found at Springfield, Mass. In 1739 or 1740 he became one of the early settlers of that town. The year 1744 broght an Indian war, with all its attending horrors, the settlers were obliged to seek safety and shelter in the forts. On the 11th of Oct 1745, as he was cutting wood a few rods from the fort, he was surprised by a band of Indians and taken captive before help could reach him. He was taken to Canada, where he was kept a prisoner in Quebec for a year and a half, when he died of prison fever 25 May 1747, just as he was about to be redeemed. His death was a severe blow to his family, and to the community where he was known, as one of his contemporaries wrote of him, "he was greatly beloved by all who knew him." ... (Recorded in ‘Howe Genealogies,’ by Daniel Wait Howe, p21)14. NEHEMIAH3 HOWE (Samuel,2 John1), born in Sudbury, Mass., about 1693. After his father’s death, he took the estate, and paid off the other heirs. In 1717 when he was 24 years old, he sold the estate in Sudbury, and moved to Framingham. In 1727 he was a petitioner for the town of Graf ton, to which place he moved, and the second town meeting was held in his house 19 April 1728. He was one of the original members of the church 28 Dec. 1731, and was one of the Selectmen 1735, school committee 1736, and was that year paid £4, is, 8d. for keeping the school. He was Town Clerk 1736-7-8, assessor 1737, and school committee 1738-9. In the spring and early summer of 1739, he bought three full township rights in the new town called Great Meadows, N. H., the records of those deeds are found at Springfield, Mass. In 1739 or 1740 he became one of the early settlers of that town. The year 1744 brought an Indian war, with all its attending horrors, the settlers were obliged to seek safety and shelter in the forts. On the i ith of Oct. 1745, as he was cutting wood a few rods from the fort, he was surprised by a band of Indians and taken captive before help could reach him. He was taken jo Canada, where he was kept a prisoner in Quebec for a year and a half, when he died of prison fever 25 May 1747, just as he was about to be redeemed. His death was a severe blow to his family, and to the community where he was known, as one of his contemporaries wrote of him, “he was greatly beloved by all who knew him.” He was possessed of cultivation and refinement far beyond the ordinary. He kept a journal during his prison life which was of inestimable value, for the many items therein recorded of other captives whose fate otherwise would never have been known. It is also a pricless legacy to his descendants, showing as it does, the beautiful Christian character of one who could endure the severest hardships with a grace and dignity rarely to be found.He married MARGARET WILLARD, daughter of Capt. Benjamin and Sarah (Larkin) Willard, and granddaughter of Major Simon Willard, of Colonial fame. Capt. Benjamin Willard commanded a company in an expedition against the Indians. After his death, his widow married for her second husband, 26 Jan. Ensign James Miller of Hopkinton and Graf ton, and died 25 Jan. 1758. The following was taken from the diary of Rev. Ebenezer Parkman of Westboro, bearing date of 25 Jan. 1758. “We had ye sorrowing tidings of ye wife of Ensign James Miller. She was heretofore ye wife of Mr. Nehemiah How of Graf ton, who was carried away captive frem ye grt Meadows. Her maiden name was Willard, daughter of Captain Benjamin Willard, a woman of many virtues; her death is not only a great loss to me and mine, but to all 22 JOHN HOWE OF SUDBURY AND MARLBOROUGHye place. May ye God of all Grace sanctifie it to me and mine to ye bereaved Ensign (who is under great sufferings by ye palsey) and to all ye Relatives and neighborhood.” | Howe Nehemiah (I52014)
|
| 5529 |
Howland Cemetery | ROOT Jonathan (I25403)
|
| 5530 |
Howland Cemetery | CLARY Sarah (I29246)
|
| 5531 |
Howland Cemetery | ROOT Oliver (I29308)
|
| 5532 |
Howland Cemetery | FRARY Polina (I33845)
|
| 5533 |
http://www.ancientwalesstudies.org/id145.html estimates Gradd ap Rifedel as born about 185.
Grad was born about 0250. Grad Rhyfedel ... He passed away about 0288. [1]
Name
Name: Gratian /ap Rhifedel/
Name: Gradd ap /Rhyfedel/[2][3]
Name: Gradd ap Rhyfedel of /Britain/[4]
Birth
Birth: 260 Powys, Wales[4]
Birth: 250 Powys, Wales[2][3]
Death
Death: 288 Wales[3]
Gradd was born about 0210. Gradd Ap Rhyfeddel ... [5]
This profile is a collaborative work-in-progress. Can you contribute information or sources?
This biography is a rough draft. It was auto-generated by a GEDCOM import and needs to be edited.
Name
Name: Grat /(Gradd)/
ArrayCouldn't find any valid last name at birth.
Sources
↑ Entered by Tony De Martino, Tuesday, September 17, 2013.
↑ 2.0 2.1 Ancestry.com Public Member Trees Database online. Record for Urban ap Grad ap Britain
↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 Ancestry.com Public Member Trees Database online. Record for Gradd ap Rhyfedel
↑ 4.0 4.1 Ancestry.com Public Member Trees Database online. Record for Rhyfedel ap Rhydeyrn of Britain
↑ First-hand information as remembered by Jessica Dunn, Friday, January 2, 2015. Replace this citation if there is another source.
Ancestry Family Trees
http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=6835128&pid=-894044826
http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=16723752&pid=1492018160 | RHYFEDEL Grad (I59290)
|
| 5534 |
http://www.ancientwalesstudies.org/id145.html estimates Urban ap Gradd as born about 215.
Urban was born about 0250. Urban Ap Gradd ... [1]
Urban was born about 0270. He was the son of Grad Rhyfedel and Wentlian Verch Ieuaf. He passed away about 0314. [2]
No documentation have been found for this person.
Urban of Brynffenigl, Lord[3]
Browning presents a line of descent for rulers of Brynffenigl in Denbighshire, but the line does not start until the 9th century. [4]
Sources
↑ First-hand information as remembered by Jessica Dunn, Friday, January 2, 2015. Replace this citation if there is another source.
↑ Entered by Tony De Martino, Tuesday, September 17, 2013.
↑ Ken Stelmaszek. Lineage of the Royal Princes of England. Nov 2000 was at http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/4793/index.html
↑ Charles Henry Browning. Americans of Royal Descent: A Collection of Genealogies of American Families Pedigree CV Rulers of Brynffenigl Accessed July 14, 2018 jhd | Ap GRADD Urban (I59289)
|
| 5535 |
http://www.ancientwalesstudies.org/id145.html has him as Deheuwaint, father of Tecfan and son of Telpwll, and estimates that he was born about 280 AD.[1]
Tegfan Gloff ap /Deheuwaint Birth: ABT 320 Powys - this is his son.
Family line (Male)
Grat —Gratian
Urban — Urban
Telpuil — Telpwyll
Teuhant — Deheuwaint/Tegfan or Tasciovanus
Tecmant — Tegvan
Coyl Hen Guotepauc — Coel Hen (the Old)
It is similarly recorded in the pedigree of the Kings of South Rheged in the Achau Brenhinoedd a Thywysogion Cymru.
https://www.geni.com/people/Deheuvraint-ap-Tudbwyll/6000000008177322888 lists spouse as Wladysus verch Edenowen her genealogy is given here. She seems to exist in WikiTree but she is listed as wife of her son as listed here. https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Verch_Edenowen-1 Not sure this is same person but with a birth of 0320 it would be more in line with being wife of the son not this man's wife. Needs more research.
Sources
↑ Beli Mawr and Llyr Llediath in Welsh Pedigrees, accessed 4 Apr 2021
An essay on the Welsh Saints
Early British Kingdoms
https://www.geni.com/people/Deheuvraint-apTudbwyll/6000000008177322888 This source also references Darrell Wolcott, "Beli Mawr and Llyr Llediath in Welsh Pedigrees," http://www.ancientwalesstudies.org/id145.html -- for help in untangling these lines. (May 18, 2016, Anne Brannen, curator)
See "My Lines"
( http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p112.htm#i13450 )
from Compiler: R. B. Stewart, Evans, GA
Several listings for this individual here. But they all need verification https://www.myheritage.com/names/deheuwaint_ap%20tudbwyll | ap TELPWYLL Deheuwaint (I59286)
|
| 5536 |
http://www.ancientwalesstudies.org/id145.html has him as Rhifidel, son of Ryderyn, son of Eudigant, and estimates that he was born about 155 AD.[1]
Name
Name: Rhyfedel ap /Rhydeyrn/[2][3]
Name: Rhifidel "Iumetel" /ap Rhydeyrn/[4]
Alias
Alias: Rhyfedel of Britain
Birth
Birth:
Place: Powys, Wales[2][3]
This biography is a rough draft. It was auto-generated by a GEDCOM import and needs to be edited.
Name
Name: Remetel /(Rhuddvedel)/
ArrayCouldn't find any valid last name at birth.
This person was created through the import of Farmer Meanderings.ged on 31 January 2011. The following data was included in the gedcom. You may wish to edit it for readability.
Source
Source: #S-2127383364
Page: Ancestry Family Trees
Note:
Data:
Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=16723752&pid=1492020377
Source: #S-2127383364
Page: Ancestry Family Trees
Note:
Data:
Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=16723752&pid=1492020377
Sources
↑ Beli Mawr and Llyr Llediath in Welsh Pedigrees, accessed 4 Apr 2021
↑ 2.0 2.1 Ancestry.com Public Member Trees Database online. Record for Gradd ap Rhyfedel
↑ 3.0 3.1 Ancestry.com Public Member Trees Database online. Record for Rhyfedel ap Rhydeyrn of Britain
↑ Ancestry Family Trees: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=6835128&pid=-894038209
WikiTree profile Rhydeyrn-1 created through the import of SRW 7th July 2011.ged on Jul 7, 2011 by Stephen Wilkinson.
This person was created through the import of LJ Pellman Consolidated Family_2011-03-21.ged on 21 March 2011.
See also:
WikiTree profile UNKNOWN-130301 created through the import of Spencer Family Tree 4 2002.GED on Nov 28, 2011 by Chet Spencer. See the Changes page for the details of edits by Chet and others. | ap RHYDEYRN Rhifidel (I59292)
|
| 5537 |
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GScid=1982461&GRid=11059040& | BEAULIEU Bazile Hudon Dit (I690)
|
| 5538 |
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=Beaulieu&GSfn=Bazil&GSbyrel=all&GSdyrel=all&GSob=n&GRid=19664478&df=all& | BEAULIEU Bazil Hudon Dit (I688)
|
| 5539 |
http://www.geni.com/people/Dzoyk-Bagratina/6000000002187821606?through=6000000004287155553
Fabpedigree http://fabpedigree.com/s097/f563578.htm
Ancient Genealogies (pre-1000 CE) http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=ancient2222&id=I263
Notes
Changed sex from male to female as per listed sources. Dzoyk Mamikoneans is female. This was done to correct db_ error. | MAMIKONEANS Dzoyk (I59449)
|
| 5540 |
http://www.geni.com/people/Hripsime-Bagratina-of-Armenia/6000000004287155553?through=6000000002187821537
Fabpedigree http://fabpedigree.com/s049/f281789.htm | ARMENIA Hripsime Bagratina (of (I59447)
|
| 5541 |
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/157578946/clara-colby | SMITH Clara Clemens (I28209)
|
| 5542 |
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/16220034/hester-cooke | MAHIEU Esther (I57091)
|
| 5543 |
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/176123691/chandler | COLBY Nellie Eva (I28135)
|
| 5544 |
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/26608005/elizabeth-o-grafe | COOKE Mary Elizabeth (I57038)
|
| 5545 |
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/52416018/damaris-cooke | HOPKINS Damaris (I57079)
|
| 5546 |
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/69536675/hattie-a.-paulson
BURIAL
Persilla Watts Cemetery
Rugby, Pierce County, North Dakota, USA
MEMORIAL ID 69536675 · View Source | COOK Hattie Annette (I2094)
|
| 5547 |
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/80533802/annetta-carver | COOKE Annetta Rosalie (I57039)
|
| 5548 |
Hugh - supported King Edward I in the war against his rival, the Earl of Lancaster. He served in the Welsh war but was fined 2,000 marks because he married, without the king's license, Isabel, daughter of William Beauchamp, earl of Warwick, the widow of Patrick of Chaworth.
He accompanied Edward to Scotland and fought in the Battle of Dunbar (I) and the expediition against Flanders in 1297. The King used him to negotiate for peace between Edward I and the King of the Romans and the King of France.
He served again in Scotland and then was sent to negociate with France which led to the peace of 1303. In 1305 he was sent to see Pope Clement V at Lyons and obtained a Papal bull which absolved King Edward from the oaths he had been forced to take to his people. When Edward II was coronated as King, Hugh carried part of the royal insignia. He defended the king's favorite, Gaveston, in 1308 against the league of barons, which alienated him from the barons who regarded him as a deserter from their cause.
Then Isabel married William Blount about 1261 while living in Belton, Rutland, England. William was born about 1223, lived in Belton, Rutland, England. He was the son of Robert Blount and Isabel Odingsells. He died in 1316 while living in Timberlake, Worcestershire, England . | of WINCHESTER Hugh DESPENCER Earl (I20913)
|
| 5549 |
Hugh de Cromwell was born about 1154 in Kilpeck, Herefordshire, England.
Research Notes
No reliable source has been found to justify these dates and the date of death quoted (1174) has been removed from his vital dates as it is clearly conflicted with the stated birth of his son circa 1180. | CROMWELL Hugh (I60194)
|
| 5550 |
Hugh de Kilpecke aka de Kylpek,[1] de Kilpek[2]
Hugh was the father of:
Isabella, who was married to William Walraund; William was seised in the time of Henry III, king of England 1216-1272;[2] Isabella and William had children:
Robert Walrand, who died without having children:[2]
John Walrand, an idiot;[2]
Joan, who was married to Philip Marmion;[2] Joan and Philip had children:
Joan Marmion, who was married to — de Morteyn; Joan was living in April 1294;[2]
Matilda Marmion, who was married to Ralph le Botiller; Matilda and Ralph were living in April 1294;[2]
Mazera Marmion,[2] who was the mother of:
Joan;[2]
On 12 March, 1223, at Worcester, Hugh of Kilpeck made fine with the king by £20, to be rendered in 15 days from Easter forthcoming in the seventh year of Henry III's reign, for having the king’s windfallen wood from Hugh’s bailiwick in the county of Herefordshire, and the sellers of the windfallen wood in Herefordshire were ordered not to intermeddle with the windfallen wood of the aforesaid bailiwick.[3]
An Extent was made in 28 Henry III (28 October 1243-27 October 1244) of Hugh de Kylpek's land in co Gloucester, and the panel, which included Richard Marmihun and Ralph Walens', said that Hugh held property in Parva ....., and he had daughters, the younger of whom was aged 17 years, and he held that land by serjeanty of ..... of Kilpek.[1]
At the Easter term in 22 Edward I [April 1294], in a Staffordshire de Banco case, Joan de Morteyn sued Ralph le Botiller and his wife, Matilda, for the next presentation to the church of Northburi (Norbury); Joan, the plaintiff, and Matilda, the defendant, were sisters: granddaughters of Hugh de Kilpek, daughters of Hugh's daughter, Joan, wife of Philip Marmion.[2]
Research Notes
The following was provided by Carol (O'Brien) McDonald: The Kilpeck family, a distaff line of the Whitney family of Herefordshire, was one of those families that has gone largely unnoticed by the historians. Joan Kilpeck [c1227-<1282] was the younger daughter and coheir of Hugh Kilpeck [>1192-1244], married Philip Marmion [died 1291] as his first wife. Could find no information on Hugh’s origins other than he held lands in chief by serjeanty being the forester of Kilpeck in co. Hereford. Hugh was a minor in 1212 when William Cantilupe was the custodian of his lands, but had attained his majority by 1219. [Book of Fees, page 101, Calendar Patent Rolls HIII] However, whilst searching for a record for the parentage of Walter I Cantilupe in the Pipe Rolls, came across the name of Kilpeck immediately under the name of Cantilupe. We have now have four earlier generations prior to Hugh Kilpeck, the father of Joan, from the introduction written by Round, in which is written: In Herefordshire Henry de 'Kilpeed' (i.e. Kilpeck), who was fined 100 marcs 'pro foresta,' was himself the keeper of the forest, being identical with the Henry 'filius Hugonis forestarii ' of the previous page (p. 53), whose father, as Hugh ' filius Willelmi forestarii,' had made his return in 1166. The roll of the previous year (p. 42) records his succession to his father. [Pipe Roll 23HII, page xxvi ] As Hugh was a minor in 1212, the time frame is consistent with Henry being the grandfather of Hugh. The father of Hugh is likely to have been John Kilpec , as an entry that I had previously missed reads, Willelmus de Cantilupo tenet de garela hered' Johannis de Kylpec feudum j. militis et dimidii. [Book of Fees, pages 100, 101] John Kilpeck was living 1200 but deceased 1204 when his widow Juliana was assigned her dower. [Rotuli de Oblatis et Finibus, pages 78, 233 ]
“Great Roll of the Pipe for the 23rd year of the reign of King Henry the Second: A.D. 1176/7:” Published by the Pipe Roll Society. Introduction by J. H. Round. [Book of Fees pages 100, 101] 1212. Hereford - Willelmus de Cantilupo tenet de garela hered' Johannis de Kylpec feudum j. militis et dimidii. De seriantis - Willelmus de Cantilupo tenet medietatem de Bradeford' de garda heredis [f.n. 4 - 326 reads Johannis] de Kilpec per seriantiam forinsecam et aliam medietatem tenent monachi de Radinges de dono Rogeri comitis Herefordie in puram elemosynam. [Rotuli de Oblatis et Finibus 2J, page 78, 6J, page 233] 1200. Hereford’ – Jon’s de Kilpeal ---------------- de forester. 1204. Hereford’ – Julia’ que fuit uxor Johis de Kilpac -------------- et assignet’ Rokesleia et LFerna -----------------. Et mandatii est Willo de Cantilupo.
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 Sidney J Madge, ed, Abstracts of Inquisitiones Post Mortem for Gloucestershire, Returned Into the Court of Chancery During the Plantagenet Period. Part IV. 20 Henry III. to 29 Edward I. 1236-1300, (Germany: Kraus reprint, 1968, of The Index Library, XXX,1903), 4, Digital Image Internet Archive (https://archive.org/stream/abstractsofglouc00grea#page/4/mode/2up). The original document is damaged.
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 2.8 2.9 Major-General The Hon G Wrottesley, ed, Pedigrees from the Plea Rolls Collected from the Pleadings in the Various Courts of Law AD 1200 to 1500 from the Original Rolls, (1905), 507, Digital Image Internet Archive (https://archive.org/stream/pedigreesfromple00wrotrich#page/506/mode/2up : accessed 31 October, 2018).
↑ Calendar of the Fine Rolls of the Reign of Henry III [CFR] 1222–3, Calendar of the Fine Rolls of the Reign of Henry III 1216–1224, ed. P. Dryburgh and B. Hartland, technical ed. A. Ciula and J.M. Vieira (Woodbridge, 2007), Henry III Fine Rolls Project's website, no 100, (https://finerollshenry3.org.uk/content/calendar/roll_018.html#it100_007 : accessed 4 November, 2018).
Sanders, English Baronies, p.73
See also:
Abstracts of Inquisitiones Post Mortem for Gloucestershire;
[1] or [2]; | KILPEC Hugh (I60155)
|
| 5551 |
Hugh I "Magnus", Count of Vermandois
His titles and honors included: Duke of France and Burgundy; Marquis of Orleans; Count of Amiens, Clermont, Paris, Valois, and Vermandois; a leader of the 1st Crusade. He was also known as Magnus the Great.
Hugh I was born in 1057. He was the son of Henry I of France and Anne of Kiev. Hugh I was wounded and later died i Turkey while on the Crusade of 1101. .
Family
Hugh I married Adelaide of Vermandois, daughter of Herbert IV, Count of Vermandois and Alice, Countess of Valois. They had 9 children:
Mathilde m. Raoul I of Beaugency
Elizabeth of Vermandois, Countess of Leicester (d. 1131)
Beatrice (living 1144) m. Hugh III of Gournay
Ralph I (d. 1152)
Constance m. Godfrey de la Ferté-Gaucher
Agnes (living 1125), married Boniface del Vasto
Henry (d. 1130), seigneur of Chaumont en Vexin
Simon (d. 1148)
William (d. c.1096)
The First Crusade
The History of the Crusades, by, Joseph Fr. Michaud, William Robson, and Hamilton W Mabie
"The men of the Vermandois marched with the subjects of Philip under the colours of their count Hugh, a young prince whose brilliant qualities had been much admired by the court. Proud of being a brother of the king of France and the first of the French knights, he distinguished himself by his bravery and the ostentation of his manners. He displayed invincible courage in the field of battle, but allowed himself to be too easily overcome by flattery, and was wanting in perseverance in reverses. Although fortune was not too kind to him, not one of the heroes of the crusade exhibited more honourable and disinterested intentions. If he had not merited by his exploits the surname of Great which history has given him, he would have obtained it for having only listened to his zeal, and for having sought nothing but glory in a war which offered kingdoms to the ambition of princes and simple knights."
"Robert, surnamed Courte-heuse, duke of Normandy, who led his vassals to the holy war, was the eldest son of William the Conqueror."
"Another Robert, count of Flanders, placed himself at the head of the Frisons and the Flemings."
"Stephen, count of Blois and Chartres, had also taken up the cross."
"These four chiefs were accompanied by a crowd of knights and nobles, among whom history names Robert of Paris, Evrard of Prusaiè, Achard de Montmerle, Isouard de Muson, Stephen, count d'Albermarle, Walter de St. Valery, Roger de Barneville, Fergant and Conan, two illustrious Bretons, Guis de Trusselle, Miles de Braiës, Raoul de Baugency, Rotrou, son of the count de Perche; Odo, bishop of Bayeux, uncle of the duke of Normandy; Raoul de Gader, Yve and Albéric, sons of Hugh de Grandménil. The greater part of the counts and barons took with them their wives and children, and all their war equipages. They crossed the Alps, and directed their march towards the cities of Italy, with the intention of embarking for Greece. They found in the neighbourhood of Lucca Pope Urban, who gave them his benediction, praised their zeal, and offered up prayers for the success of their enterprize. The count de Vermandois, after having received the standard of the Church from the hands of the sovereign pontiff, repaired to Rome, with the other princes, to visit the tombs of St. Peter and St. Paul."
"The passage of the French Crusaders, however, had awakened the zeal of the Italians. Bohemond, prince of Tarentum, was the first who resolved to associate himself with their fortunes, and to partake of the glory of the holy expedition."
The First Crusade; The Accounts of Eyewitnesses and Participants, by August Charles Krey
"When this message was heard, the Christians, cleansed by confession, and stoutly armed by partaking of the body and blood of Christ, went out from the gate ready for battle. The first to go forth was Hugh the Great, with his Franks; next the Count of the Normans and the Count of Flanders; after them, the venerable Bishop of Puy and the battle line of the Count of St. Gilles; after him, Tancred; and last of all, unconquered Bohemund. When, accordingly, the lines had been formed, with the Lance of the Lord and the Cross before them, they began battle with the greatest confidence. God helping, they turned in flight the Turkish princes, who were confused and utterly beaten, and killed countless numbers of them. Returning, therefore, with victory, we gave thanks to the Lord and celebrated the festival of the apostles with the greatest rejoicing. On that day the citadel was surrendered to us, the son of the King of Antioch having fled with Corbara. The King himself had been killed by peasants while fleeing in the mountains on the day that the city was surrendered.*"
"King of Antioch" and "son", seem to be Yaghi-Siyan and his son Shams ad-Dawla. [1]
Sources
Royal Ancestry by Douglas Richardson Vol. V. page 268
↑ Wikipedia contributors, "Yaghi-Siyan," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, [1] (accessed March 23, 2016).
The first crusade; the accounts of eyewitnesses and participants, by August Charles Krey [2]
The History of the Crusades, by, Joseph Fr. Michaud, William Robson, and Hamilton W Mabie, pg 81 [3]
Wikipedia: Hugh I, Count of Vermandois
Tompsett: Capet, Henry I. (Assigns son Hugh to first wife Maud.)
Roderick W. Stuart, "Royalty for Commoners." | CAPET Hughes (I59065)
|
| 5552 |
Hugh I ([born c.1035], 2nd son of Manasses), Count of Dammartin (1071), married:
1. [c.1075] Dame Rohais de Bulles (born 1046, of conflicting origin) and thereby became Seigneur de Bulles by right of his wife (1075).
Afterwards Hugh married:
2. (c.1090) Rohais de Clare (born c.1068, previously married to Eudo FitzHubert de Rye.
Sources
http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/GEN-MEDIEVAL/1997-02/0855106136
http://mauriceboddy.org.uk/Dammart.htm
http://www.geneajourney.com/dammrtn.html#alberic2
Ancestry.com family trees | DAMMARTIN Hugues (I60050)
|
| 5553 |
Hugh I du Maine (890 - 26 Mar 931/Sep 960)[2]
Titles
Comte du Maine[3]
Parents
Father: Rotger (Roger), Comte du Maine (855/65 -ante 01 Nov 900).[4]
Mother: Rothildis Carolingian (871 - 928/9).
Marriage
m. UNKNOWN. Issue: 1 possible
Hugues (d. after 936/7).[1]
Sources
↑ possibly same person as David / Hugh de Maine (parents unknown).[1] | MAINE Hughes (I59960)
|
| 5554 |
Hugh II (920-before 992), Count of Maine, son of Hugh I, Count of Maine, and an unknown mother, probably a daughter of Gauzlin II, Count of Maine. He was, like his father, a vassal of his uncle Hugh the Great.
After the death of Hugh the Great, Hugh II allied himself Fulk II the Good, Count of Anjou, and Theobald the Trickster, Count of Blois. Hugh later joined Theobald’s son Odo against Seinfroy, Bishop of Le Mans. Hugh and Odo had to flee and seek refuge with Bouchard I, Count of Vendôme, in the areas that form the Bas-Vendômois.
In 939 he fought alongside Alan II, Duke of Brittany and Judicael Berengar against the Vikings at the Battle of Trans-la-Forêt.[1] Hugh had by his unknown wife: Hugh III, Count of Maine[2], Fulk of Maine, (d. after 992) and Herbert “Baco” of Maine (d. after 1046), regent of Hugh IV, Count of Maine. Hugh was succeeded as Count of Maine by his son Hugh III.
Sources
Wikipedia:Hugh_I,_Count_of_Maine. | MAINE Hugues (I59959)
|
| 5555 |
Hugh III Hohenburg, Count in the Alsacian Nordgau and of Hohenburg in Alsace (d. 940). [1]
Hugo V died in 940. [2]
Titles
910: Graf im Nordgau. [2]
Parents
Hugo was the son of Eberhard III, Graf im Nordgau, and Adelinda. [2]
Marriage
He married Hildegarde. [2]
Eberhard IV (d. 18 Dec 972/3)
Hugo VI
Guntram (d. after 952).
Adela (d. 961)
Sources
↑ Wikipedia:Eberhard_IV_of_Nordgau.
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2022, Grafen im Nordgau. | ALSACE Hugo (I58596)
|
| 5556 |
Hugh von Nordgau
Hugues III
Hugh IV
Count of Alsace
Birth: ABT 958; 948 Nordgau
Death: 984 Eguisheim, Haut-Rhin, Alsace | NORDGAU Hugh (I58910)
|
| 5557 |
Hugo Count Nordgau
Birth: ABT 960
Hugh IV Count of Alsace
Birth: ABT 980 L-Alsc, France
Sources
Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag, Marburg, Schwennicke, Detlev (Ed.). 1.2 200B cited by http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00426919&tree=LEO
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ALSACE.htm#HugoVIEgisheimMHeilwigDagsburgA | NORDGAU Hugo (I58907)
|
| 5558 |
Hugues de Roucy was the son of Ebles (II) de Roucy and Sybille Guiscard de Apulia.[1]
His second marriage dates to circa 1120 with Richentia (of unknown origin) by whom his son and successor Guiscard was born, one of at least six children.
In 1147 he founded the Cistercian abbey of Valroy.[2]
Having run afoul of the Catholic church and apparently being excommunicated, an atonement was effected later in his life. His death about 1164 saw the succession of his son Guiscard as count of Roucy.
Sources
↑ Charles Cawley. Hugues de Roucy, entry in "Medieval Lands" database (accessed 2-Apr-23).
↑ Desilve, I., curé de Basuel. "Analyse d'un cartulaire de l'abbaye de la Valroy" Bulletin de la Société Académique de Laon, Volume 22, 1878; pages 111-252.
Histoire généalogique et chronologique de la Maison royale de France, Tome VIII, Anselme de Sainte-Marie, Les Libraires Associés, 1726-1733. Page 864.
Hugues Ier de Roucy, French Wikipedia entry | ROUCY Hugues (I60078)
|
| 5559 |
Hugues le Grand (Robertien)
Autres langues (Link to Wikipedia article in other languages)
[Deutsch]
[English]
[Español]
[Português]
One of the founders of the power of the Capetian house in France. Hugh's first wife was Eadhild, a sister of the English king, Athelstan. At the death of Rudolph, duke of Burgundy, in 936, Hugh was in possession of nearly all the region between the Loire and the Seine, corresponding to the ancient Neustria, with the exception of the territory ceded to the Normans in 911. He took a very active part in bringing Louis IV (d'Outremer) from England in 936, but in the same year Hugh married Hedwige, sister of the emperor Otto the Great, and soon quarrelled with Louis.
Hugh even paid homage to Otto, and supported him in his struggle against Louis. When Louis fell into the hands of the Normans in 945, he was handed over to Hugh, who released him in 946 only on condition that he should surrender the fortress of Laon. At the council of Ingelheim (948) Hugh was condemned, under pain of excommunication, to make reparation to Louis. It was not, however, until 950 that the powerful vassal became reconciled with his suzerain and restored Laon. But new difficulties arose, and peace was not finally concluded until 953.
On the death of Louis IV, Hugh was one of the first to recognize Lothair as his successor, and, at the intervention of Queen Gerberga, was instrumental in having him crowned. In recognition of this service Hugh was invested by the new king with the duchies of Burgundy (his suzerainty over which had already been nominally recognized by Louis IV) and Aquitaine. But his expedition in 955 to take possession of Aquitaine was unsuccessful. In the same year, however, Giselbert, duke of Burgundy, acknowledged himself his vassal and betrothed his daughter to Hugh's son Otto. At Giselbert's death (April 8, 956) Hugh became effective master of the duchy, but died soon afterwards, on the 16th or 17th of June 956.]
Hugues le Grand1 (né vers 898, mort le 16 juin 956 à Dourdan), comte de Paris, marquis de Neustrie de 923 à 956, puis duc des Francs à partir de 936, comte d'Auxerre de 954 à sa mort, il est le père d'Hugues Capet.
Biographie
Fils de Robert Ier, roi de Francie occidentale, et de Béatrice de Vermandois, descendant au 6e degré par sa mère de Charlemagne, Hugues le Grand, appelé parfois « Hugues le Blanc » à cause de son teint pâle, était un personnage puissant du royaume de Francie occidentale à l'origine de l'établissement de la dynastie capétienne.
Après la mort sans descendance, en janvier 936, de son beau-frère le roi Raoul, Hugues le Grand choisit de ne pas briguer la couronne de Francie occidentale qui était pourtant à sa portée, dans la mesure où il disposait, en Neustrie et même en Francie d'« une puissance qui l'emportait sur tout autre grand »2. Mais Hugues préféra rappeler sur le trône le jeune fils de Charles III le Simple, Louis IV d'Outremer qui avait suivi sa mère lors de son exil en Angleterre. Il espérait ainsi gouverner à la place de son neveu par alliance (il avait épousé en 926 la sœur d'Ogive, la mère de Louis IV), désormais son obligé, et disposer d'un pouvoir bien plus grand, en tant que régent, que s'il avait obtenu une promotion qui n'aurait pas été sans inquiéter les autres grands du royaume. Par ailleurs, cela lui permettait de contrer les ambitions de son autre beau-frère, Herbert II de Vermandois dans la lutte pour l'hégémonie en Francie occidentale. Le dimanche 19 juin 936, Louis IV fut ainsi couronné et sacré roi par Artaud, l’archevêque de Reims. La cérémonie du sacre eut lieu dans l’église abbatiale de Saint-Vincent de Laon, sa ville natale et fief de sa famille carolingienne.
Un mois plus tard, le 25 juillet 936, Louis IV donna à Hugues les moyens de manifester dans le royaume sa prééminence sur les autres princes, en lui accordant le titre de dux Francorum, duc des Francs. La signification de ce titre fut explicité le 26 décembre de la même année par un document dans lequel Louis IV soulignait que cela faisait de Hugues « en tous nos regna, le second après nous »2, assimilé à un « vice-roi » de position équivalente au maire du Palais sous les derniers Mérovingiens3. Les diplômes de juillet, en affirmant qu'il était abbé laïc de Saint-Germain d'Auxerre et maître d'Autun, deux éléments fondamentaux de la principauté bourguignonne, avaient déjà accentué son pouvoir en contestant la légitimité d'Hugues le Noir à se proclamer prince d'une Bourgogne qu'il pensait avoir hérité de son frère le roi Raoul2.
Cependant la prépondérance d'Hugues le Grand finit par exaspérer le jeune roi qui, cherchant à s'émanciper, prit les armes pour le combattre. Hugues s'allia alors avec Herbert de Vermandois et Guillaume Longue-Épée, duc de Normandie3. En 940, Louis IV fut battu près de Reims puis, en 945, capturé par les Normands et remis à Hugues qui le confia à Thibaud de Blois. Hugues le libéra sous la pression de l'empereur, mais obtint la ville de Laon en échange.
En 946, il régla la succession d'Herbert II de Vermandois entre les enfants de celui-ci, ses neveux, et affaiblit ainsi la puissance de la dynastie. Lors du synode d'Ingelheim en 948, troisième de la série après ceux de Verdun et de Mouzon, visant essentiellement à régler la question du siège archiépiscopal rémois, Louis IV parvint à faire excommunier Hugues le Grand4.[réf. souhaitée]
Disposant déjà la suzeraineté sur la Bourgogne que Louis IV lui avait accordée en 9435, il obtint la confirmation de son titre de « duc des Francs »3 ainsi que l'Aquitaine (dont il assura la tutelle de 954 à sa mort en 956) en échange de son accord, après la mort de Louis IV en 954, à la montée de Lothaire sur le trône de Francie occidentale.
De Raingarde de Dijon sa concubine, fille de Raoul comte de Dijon6, il eut Herbert ou Héribert ( 996) qui fut évêque d'Auxerre. Il se maria à une fille de Roger du Maine vers 914, puis vers 926 à Eadhilda de Wessex (ou Édith), fille d'Édouard l'Ancien, et enfin à Hedwige de Saxe (922-965, fille d'Henri Ier l'Oiseleur) vers 937, dont il eut :
Béatrice, mariée à Frédéric Ier, comte de Bar et duc de Haute-Lotharingie
Hugues Capet, roi des Francs en 987, et postérité ;
Emma, mariée à Richard Ier, duc de Normandie, et postérité ;
Otton, duc de Bourgogne ;
Eudes-Henri, duc de Bourgogne. Il laisserait une postérité.
Hugues le Grand meurt le « XVI des calendes de juillet 956 », c'est-à-dire le 16 juin 956, au château de Dourdan7. Sa sépulture se trouve dans la Basilique Saint-Denis, nécropole des rois de France.
Sources
↑ (en) Généalogie de Hugues le Grand [archive]
↑ a, b et c Olivier Guillot, Albert Rigaudière, Yves Sassier, Pouvoirs et institutions dans la France médiévale, tome I : Des origines à l'époque féodale, Armand Colin, 2003, p. 170
↑ a, b et c Christian Bonnet, Christine Descatoire, Les Carolingiens, 741-987, Armand Colin, 2001, p. 214
↑ L. Theis, L'héritage des Charles, Paris, Seuil, 1990. p. 176.
↑ Page 628 dans Histoire générale du Moyen Âge d'Ovide Chrysanthe Desmichels (1831) [archive]
↑ Raingarde de Dijon [archive] sur racineshistoire.net.
↑ Joseph Guyot, Chronique d'une ancienne ville royale, Dourdan capitale du Hurepoix, Paris, Auguste Aubry, 1869, p. 13
Karl Ferdinand Werner, Les Origines avant l'an mil, Histoire de France sous la direction de Jean Favier, vol. 1, Paris, 1984.
Karl Ferdinand Werner, « Les premiers Robertiens et les premiers Anjou (IXe-début Xe siècle) », in Olivier Guillot et Robert Favreau (éd.), Pays de Loire et Aquitaine de Robert le Fort aux premiers Capétiens. Actes du colloque scientifique international tenu à Angers en septembre 1987, Poitiers, 1997, « Mémoires de la Société des antiquaires de l'Ouest et des musées de Poitiers », 5e série, IV.
Christian Settipani, La Préhistoire des Capétiens (481-987). Première partie : Mérovingiens, Carolingiens et Robertiens, Nouvelle histoire généalogique de l'auguste maison de France, vol. 1, Patrick van Kerrebrouck (éd.), Villeneuve d'Ascq, 1993. (ISBN 2-9501509-3-4)
Flodoard of Reims. Flodoardi Chronicon (Reims : Regnier, 1855) Records marriages in 926 & 938. Also records his death in 956
Wikipédia, L'encyclopédie libre (http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugues_le_Grand_(Robertien) : accessed 04 Mar 2013 | ROBERTIAN Hugues (I58270)
|
| 5560 |
Hulderic (Hulderik or Hulderick) appears in older volumes of Royal genealogy (see Sources list for examples) as King of the Saxons from 524 to his death in 540. He is the son of Hattwigate, Prince of the Saxons from 480 - 524, and the father of Bodicus, Prince of the Saxons from 540 - 568.
However none of these books cite any sources and no earlier works, contemporary to the period he is supposed to have lived, confirm his existence. He must be considered as totally legendary.
Legendary Saxon Line of Descent from Witigail to Witikind
George Fisher [1]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.
Sources
↑ 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
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
Fisher, G. (1832). A companion and key to the history of England: Consisting of copious genealogical details of the British Sovereigns, London: Simkin and Marshall. Table V. Retrieved from https://books.google.com.au/books?id=H78IAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA24&lpg=PA24&dq=Svarticke&source=bl&ots=LIS029ajep&sig=PEJVi0tbyDiAR9xzifZwE0eDhXI&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwi5tYvPlIjKAhVDrKYKHf9PDtoQ6AEIoAEwHQ#v=onepage&q=Hulderic&f=false | von SACHSEN Hulderic (I58005)
|
| 5561 |
Hunda-Steinar was an earl in England; he married Álafa, daughter of Ragnar loðbrókar. [1] Their children were:
Björn, the father of Auðun skákul,
Eiríkur, the father of Sigurður bjóðaskalli,
Ísgerður, who married earl Þórir in Vermaland.
Sources
↑ LANDNÁMABÓK (Sturlubók) ÞRIÐJI HLUTI : 55. kafli 'Hunda-Steinar hét jarl á Englandi; hann átti Álöfu, dóttur Ragnars loðbrókar. Þeirra börn voru þau Björn, faðir Auðunar skökuls, og Eiríkur, faðir Sigurðar bjóðaskalla, og Ísgerður, er átti Þórir jarl á Vermalandi.'
Íslendinga sögur: Landnámabók, Þriðji hluti, 1. kapituli. Accessed 5 Oct 2024
The viking age: the early history, manners, and customs of the ancestors of the English speaking nations. Chapter XXVIII Page 450 | UNKNOWNN Hunda-Steinar (I59470)
|
| 5562 |
Hung as a witch | GILBERT Lydia (I55581)
|
| 5563 |
Huoching Etichonen was a member of aristocracy in ancient Europe.
Join: Medieval Project
Discuss: MEDIEVAL
Parents
Father: Gottfried (d. 709), Duke of Alemannia[2][1]
Mother: UNKNOWN[3]
Marriage
m. UNKNOWN. Issue: 1[4]
Nebe "Hnabi"[5]
Sources
Wikipedia: Huoching
Geni. Extensive discussion and references.
Cawley, Charles. "Medieval Lands": A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families © by Charles Cawley, hosted by Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG). See also WikiTree's source page for MedLands. | ETICHONEN Huoching (I58151)
|
| 5564 |
Husband of Mary (Dunkeld) Scotland — married 1102 in Boulogne, Pas de Calais, France
Wikipedia Entry
Eustace III de Boulogne, Comte de Boulogne http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eustace_III_of_Boulogne -------------------- Eustace III of Boulogne From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Eustace III, was a count of Boulogne, successor to his father Count Eustace II of Boulogne. His mother was Ida of Lorraine. Eustace appeared at the Battle of Hastings in 1066 as an ally of William the Conqueror, and is listed as a possible killer of Harold II; he is also believed to have given William his own horse after the duke's was killed under him by Gyrth, brother of Harold. He succeeded to Count of Boulogne in 1087.[1] He went on the First Crusade in 1096 with his brothers Godfrey of Bouillon (duke of Lower Lotharingia) and Baldwin of Boulogne. He soon returned to Europe to administer his domains. He married Mary of Scotland, daughter of King Malcolm III of Scotland, and Saint Margaret of Scotland. Eustace and Mary had one daughter, Matilda of Boulogne. When his youngest brother king Baldwin I of Jerusalem died in 1118, the elderly Eustace was offered the throne. Eustace was at first uninterested, but was convinced to accept it; he travelled all the way to Apulia before learning that a distant relative, Baldwin of Bourcq, had been crowned in the meantime. Eustace returned to Boulogne and died about 1125. On his death the county of Boulogne was inherited by his daughter, Matilda, and her husband Stephen de Blois, count of Mortain, afterwards king of England, and at the death of Matilda in 1151 it was inherited by their son, Eustace IV of Boulogne, later their second son William and ultimately by their daughter Marie of Boulogne, since both sons died without children. [edit]References
^ NORTHERN FRANCE, NOBILITY. Retrieved on 2007-11-04. -------------------- Eustace III, was a count of Boulogne, successor to his father Count Eustace II of Boulogne. His mother was Ida of Lorraine.
Eustace appeared at the Battle of Hastings in 1066 as an ally of William the Conqueror, and is listed as a possible killer of Harold II; he is also believed to have given William his own horse after the duke's was killed under him by Gyrth, brother of Harold.
He succeeded to Count of Boulogne in 1087.[1]
He went on the First Crusade in 1096 with his brothers Godfrey of Bouillon (duke of Lower Lotharingia) and Baldwin of Boulogne. He soon returned to Europe to administer his domains. He married Mary of Scotland, daughter of King Malcolm III of Scotland, and Saint Margaret of Scotland. Eustace and Mary had one daughter, Matilda of Boulogne.
When his youngest brother king Baldwin I of Jerusalem died in 1118, the elderly Eustace was offered the throne. Eustace was at first uninterested, but was convinced to accept it; he travelled all the way to Apulia before learning that a distant relative, Baldwin of Bourcq, had been crowned in the meantime. Eustace returned to Boulogne and died about 1125.
On his death the county of Boulogne was inherited by his daughter, Matilda, and her husband Stephen de Blois, count of Mortain, afterwards king of England, and at the death of Matilda in 1151 it was inherited by their son, Eustace IV of Boulogne, later their second son William and ultimately by their daughter Marie of Boulogne, since both sons died without children.
Sources
1. Scottish Kings, Scot. 28, p. 32
2. Scots Peerage, Scot 2b, v. 1, p. 2
3. Burke's Peerage, Eng. P, 1949, pref. p. 252, 286
4. Anderson's Royal Gen., Eng. 132, p. 388, 757
Note: Norman Crusaders
http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=009c7bea-4894-4f88-b606-13ea9f80916c&tid=16692088&pid=1146649744
Note: House of Boulogne Coat of Arms
http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=f236dfe1-0d67-4272-9001-6187b6d4a647&tid=16692088&pid=1146649744
Note: Eustace (shown with white hair) with his brothers
http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=cbd946f1-5b10-4b63-a96d-6f15153a60a0&tid=16692088&pid=1146649744
Note: Eustace III, Count of Boulogne
http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=document&guid=930afcaa-fa8f-4273-ae50-890fcf49cefb&tid=16692088&pid=1146649744 | BOULOGNE Eustace (I59940)
|
| 5565 |
Hutchinson Cemetery | CUSHMAN Benjamin Holmes (I25755)
|
| 5566 |
Hutchinson Cemetery | HUTCHINSON Phoebe (I25851)
|
| 5567 |
I am a direct descendent of him, We don't know where he was born my first great says the family was from Old Saybrook, Ct but I can't prove that. The first I picked up Daniel was in 1795 in a church letter. In Roxbury, Ct He was married there in 1797 From there the family moved to Pitcher, NY He was killed building a church when a log fell on him. In 1820, Later the family sold the farm and moved to Fayetteville, NY. Daniel's body was moved to Fayetteville, Buried there on the evans lot.
Paul Shipman | SHIPMAN Daniel (I42738)
|
| 5568 |
I am not sure this Mary belongs to this family since the birthdate conflicts with Joseph. | Newland Mary (I52356)
|
| 5569 |
I changed the date of birth from 912 to prevent a data error. His approximate date of birth needs to be determined. There are no sources shown for this profile . . .
Count of Gueldres | AVALGAU Wichard (I58214)
|
| 5570 |
I have found two different birth dates; the other is Apr. 20, 1647.
I have found two different birth dates; the other is Apr. 20, 1647. | Hayward Hannah (I50509)
|
| 5571 |
I have not totally proved that the Levi Brown b. in Lunenberg, was thesame Levi as the on in Charlestown, NH. However, it is highly probablysince the Levi in Lunenberg was the son of Aaron and Abigail and theymoved to Charlestown from Lunenberg.
There were two Aaron Browns in Leominster/Lunenberg both having childrenaround the same time which causes a lot of confusion, especially sincethe Leominster first church records only give the father's name onbirths. Following are listing from the Leominster First Church:
Sept. 28, 1747 Aaron Brown and Rachel his wife joined church
Oct. 3, 1747 Aaron Brown on Leominster married Rachel Reed of Harvard
baptisms:
Oct. 1747 Sarah, dau. of Aaron Brown
Jan 14, 1750 Prudence, dau. of Aaron Brown, Junr.
Mar 25, 1750 Ephriam, son of Aaron Brown
Mar 29, 1752 Aaron, son of Aaron Brown
Sept 24, 1752 Levi, son of Aaron Brown, Junr.
Oct 27, 1754 Silas and Elizabeth (twins), children of Aaron Brown
June 11, 1758 Molly, dau of Aaron and Rachel Brown
Following are from Leominster, MA VR
Aug. 13, 1747 Sarah, dau of Aaron and Rachel Brown
Jan 11, 1749-50 Prudence, dau of Aaron and Abigail Brown
Jan 14, 1749-50 Ephriam, son of Aaron and Rachel Brown
One of the Aaron's was referred to as Aaron, Jr. both in church and townrecords, even though neither appears to be the son of an Aaron. Ibelieve the Jr. was simply a way of keeping them seperate and indicateswhich was younger. Notice that in the church records, Aaron has a sonAaron in 1752, so he wasn't the father of Aaron, Jr.. Aaron Brown, Jr.must have been the Aaron who married Abigail since both the church andtown records list a birth for Prudence. Likewise, the entries for Sarahshow that Aaron (Sr.) was Rachel Reed's husband. Aaron Jr. also hasbirths show in Lunenberg and Charlestown, NH.
Lunenberg, MA VR
Jan 31, 1744-45 Aaron, son of Aaron and Abigail Brown
Feb 17, 1746-47 David, son of Aaron and Abigail Brown
Dec 13, 1754 Jonathan, son of Aaron and Abigail Brown (he d. July 17,1759)
Feb. 2, 1757 Hepsibah, dau of Aaron and Abigail Brown
Oct. 1, 1759 Jonathan, son of Aaron and Abigail Brown
Charlestown, NH VR
May 16, 1762 Elijah, son of Aaron and Abigail Brown
The probate records for the Estate of Aaron Brown of Charlestown (Feb 18,1770?) mention s. Aaron Jr., and include David Brown as a creditor.According to Charlestown town records, they were warned out ofCharlestown on Mar 27, 1760 after having arrived in Feb. 4, 1760. Howeverthey apparently stayed for a while. Later probate shows Jonas Cutler ofGroton, MA trying to get money fron Aaron and Aaron Jr. of Charlestown(May 16, 1769 docket #15226). In docket #28508, Simon Sartwell ofCharlestown got a judgement against Capt. Aaron Brown of Westmoreland, NHon June 11, 1771 after he left town owing money. That was probably AaronBrown Jr. who left after Aaron Sr. passed away.
From NEHGR V13 pp 7-8 Petition for the Protection of Township No. 4Dec 31, 1746 Includes from Lunenberg Thomas Brown, Joseph Fuller, AaronBrown
I have not totally proved that the Levi Brown b. in Lunenberg, was the same Levi as the on in Charlestown, NH. However, it is highly probably since the Levi in Lunenberg was the son of Aaron and Abigail and they moved to Charlestown from Lunenberg.
There were two Aaron Browns in Leominster/Lunenberg both having children around the same time which causes a lot of confusion, especially since the Leominster first church records only give the father's name on
births. Following are listing from the Leominster First Church: Sept. 28, 1747 Aaron Brown and Rachel his wife joined church.
Oct. 3, 1747 Aaron Brown on Leominster married Rachel Reed of Harvard
Baptisms:
Oct. 1747 Sarah, dau. of Aaron Brown
Jan 14, 1750 Prudence, dau. of Aaron Brown, Junr.
Mar 25, 1750 Ephriam, son of Aaron Brown
Mar 29, 1752 Aaron, son of Aaron Brown
Sept 24, 1752 Levi, son of Aaron Brown, Junr.
Oct 27, 1754 Silas and Elizabeth (twins), children of Aaron Brown
June 11, 1758 Molly, dau of Aaron and Rachel Brown
Following are from Leominster, MA VR:
Aug. 13, 1747 Sarah, dau of Aaron and Rachel Brown
Jan 11, 1749-50 Prudence, dau of Aaron and Abigail Brown
Jan 14, 1749-50 Ephriam, son of Aaron and Rachel Brown
One of the Aaron's was referred to as Aaron, Jr. both in church and town records, even though neither appears to be the son of an Aaron. I believe the Jr. was simply a way of keeping them seperate and indicates which was younger. Notice that in the church records, Aaron has a son Aaron in 1752, so he wasn't the father of Aaron, Jr.. Aaron Brown, Jr. must have been the Aaron who married Abigail since both the church and town records list a birth for Prudence. Likewise, the entries for Sarah show that Aaron (Sr.) was Rachel Reed's husband. Aaron Jr. also has
births show in Lunenberg and Charlestown, NH.
Lunenberg, MA VR:
Jan 31, 1744-45 Aaron, son of Aaron and Abigail Brown
Feb 17, 1746-47 David, son of Aaron and Abigail Brown
Dec 13, 1754 Jonathan, son of Aaron and Abigail Brown (he d. July 17,
1759)
Feb. 2, 1757 Hepsibah, dau of Aaron and Abigail Brown
Oct. 1, 1759 Jonathan, son of Aaron and Abigail Brown
Charlestown, NH VR:
May 16, 1762 Elijah, son of Aaron and Abigail Brown
The probate records for the Estate of Aaron Brown of Charlestown (Feb 18, 1770?) mention s. Aaron Jr., and include David Brown as a creditor. According to Charlestown town records, they were warned out of Charlestown on Mar 27, 1760 after having arrived in Feb. 4, 1760. However they apparently stayed for a while. Later probate shows Jonas Cutler of Groton, MA trying to get money fron Aaron and Aaron Jr. of Charlestown
(May 16, 1769 docket #15226). In docket #28508, Simon Sartwell of Charlestown got a judgement against Capt. Aaron Brown of Westmoreland, NH on June 11, 1771 after he left town owing money. That was probably Aaron
Brown Jr. who left after Aaron Sr. passed away.
From NEHGR V13 pp 7-8:
Petition for the Protection of Township No. 4 Dec 31, 1746. Includes from Lunenberg Thomas Brown, Joseph Fuller, Aaron Brown
I have not totally proved that the Levi Brown b. in Lunenberg, was thesame Levi as the on in Charlestown, NH. However, it is highly probablysince the Levi in Lunenberg was the son of Aaron and Abigail and theymoved to Charlestown from Lunenberg.
There were two Aaron Browns in Leominster/Lunenberg both having childrenaround the same time which causes a lot of confusion, especially sincethe Leominster first church records only give the father's name onbirths. Following are listing from the Leominster First Church:
Sept. 28, 1747 Aaron Brown and Rachel his wife joined church
Oct. 3, 1747 Aaron Brown on Leominster married Rachel Reed of Harvard
baptisms:
Oct. 1747 Sarah, dau. of Aaron Brown
Jan 14, 1750 Prudence, dau. of Aaron Brown, Junr.
Mar 25, 1750 Ephriam, son of Aaron Brown
Mar 29, 1752 Aaron, son of Aaron Brown
Sept 24, 1752 Levi, son of Aaron Brown, Junr.
Oct 27, 1754 Silas and Elizabeth (twins), children of Aaron Brown
June 11, 1758 Molly, dau of Aaron and Rachel Brown
Following are from Leominster, MA VR
Aug. 13, 1747 Sarah, dau of Aaron and Rachel Brown
Jan 11, 1749-50 Prudence, dau of Aaron and Abigail Brown
Jan 14, 1749-50 Ephriam, son of Aaron and Rachel Brown
One of the Aaron's was referred to as Aaron, Jr. both in church and townrecords, even though neither appears to be the son of an Aaron. Ibelieve the Jr. was simply a way of keeping them seperate and indicateswhich was younger. Notice that in the church records, Aaron has a sonAaron in 1752, so he wasn't the father of Aaron, Jr.. Aaron Brown, Jr.must have been the Aaron who married Abigail since both the church andtown records list a birth for Prudence. Likewise, the entries for Sarahshow that Aaron (Sr.) was Rachel Reed's husband. Aaron Jr. also hasbirths show in Lunenberg and Charlestown, NH.
Lunenberg, MA VR
Jan 31, 1744-45 Aaron, son of Aaron and Abigail Brown
Feb 17, 1746-47 David, son of Aaron and Abigail Brown
Dec 13, 1754 Jonathan, son of Aaron and Abigail Brown (he d. July 17,1759)
Feb. 2, 1757 Hepsibah, dau of Aaron and Abigail Brown
Oct. 1, 1759 Jonathan, son of Aaron and Abigail Brown
Charlestown, NH VR
May 16, 1762 Elijah, son of Aaron and Abigail Brown
The probate records for the Estate of Aaron Brown of Charlestown (Feb 18,1770?) mention s. Aaron Jr., and include David Brown as a creditor.According to Charlestown town records, they were warned out ofCharlestown on Mar 27, 1760 after having arrived in Feb. 4, 1760. Howeverthey apparently stayed for a while. Later probate shows Jonas Cutler ofGroton, MA trying to get money fron Aaron and Aaron Jr. of Charlestown(May 16, 1769 docket #15226). In docket #28508, Simon Sartwell ofCharlestown got a judgement against Capt. Aaron Brown of Westmoreland, NHon June 11, 1771 after he left town owing money. That was probably AaronBrown Jr. who left after Aaron Sr. passed away.
From NEHGR V13 pp 7-8 Petition for the Protection of Township No. 4Dec 31, 1746 Includes from Lunenberg Thomas Brown, Joseph Fuller, AaronBrown
I have not totally proved that the Levi Brown b. in Lunenberg, was the same Levi as the on in Charlestown, NH. However, it is highly probably since the Levi in Lunenberg was the son of Aaron and Abigail and they moved to Charlestown from Lunenberg.
There were two Aaron Browns in Leominster/Lunenberg both having children around the same time which causes a lot of confusion, especially since the Leominster first church records only give the father's name on
births. Following are listing from the Leominster First Church: Sept. 28, 1747 Aaron Brown and Rachel his wife joined church.
Oct. 3, 1747 Aaron Brown on Leominster married Rachel Reed of Harvard
Baptisms:
Oct. 1747 Sarah, dau. of Aaron Brown
Jan 14, 1750 Prudence, dau. of Aaron Brown, Junr.
Mar 25, 1750 Ephriam, son of Aaron Brown
Mar 29, 1752 Aaron, son of Aaron Brown
Sept 24, 1752 Levi, son of Aaron Brown, Junr.
Oct 27, 1754 Silas and Elizabeth (twins), children of Aaron Brown
June 11, 1758 Molly, dau of Aaron and Rachel Brown
Following are from Leominster, MA VR:
Aug. 13, 1747 Sarah, dau of Aaron and Rachel Brown
Jan 11, 1749-50 Prudence, dau of Aaron and Abigail Brown
Jan 14, 1749-50 Ephriam, son of Aaron and Rachel Brown
One of the Aaron's was referred to as Aaron, Jr. both in church and town records, even though neither appears to be the son of an Aaron. I believe the Jr. was simply a way of keeping them seperate and indicates which was younger. Notice that in the church records, Aaron has a son Aaron in 1752, so he wasn't the father of Aaron, Jr.. Aaron Brown, Jr. must have been the Aaron who married Abigail since both the church and town records list a birth for Prudence. Likewise, the entries for Sarah show that Aaron (Sr.) was Rachel Reed's husband. Aaron Jr. also has
births show in Lunenberg and Charlestown, NH.
Lunenberg, MA VR:
Jan 31, 1744-45 Aaron, son of Aaron and Abigail Brown
Feb 17, 1746-47 David, son of Aaron and Abigail Brown
Dec 13, 1754 Jonathan, son of Aaron and Abigail Brown (he d. July 17,
1759)
Feb. 2, 1757 Hepsibah, dau of Aaron and Abigail Brown
Oct. 1, 1759 Jonathan, son of Aaron and Abigail Brown
Charlestown, NH VR:
May 16, 1762 Elijah, son of Aaron and Abigail Brown
The probate records for the Estate of Aaron Brown of Charlestown (Feb 18, 1770?) mention s. Aaron Jr., and include David Brown as a creditor. According to Charlestown town records, they were warned out of Charlestown on Mar 27, 1760 after having arrived in Feb. 4, 1760. However they apparently stayed for a while. Later probate shows Jonas Cutler of Groton, MA trying to get money fron Aaron and Aaron Jr. of Charlestown
(May 16, 1769 docket #15226). In docket #28508, Simon Sartwell of Charlestown got a judgement against Capt. Aaron Brown of Westmoreland, NH on June 11, 1771 after he left town owing money. That was probably Aaron
Brown Jr. who left after Aaron Sr. passed away.
From NEHGR V13 pp 7-8:
Petition for the Protection of Township No. 4 Dec 31, 1746. Includes from Lunenberg Thomas Brown, Joseph Fuller, Aaron Brown | Brown Aaron (I51334)
|
| 5572 |
I have the legal description 31 40N 13E, the original names of the Street, now I have the original owner's (Sayer and 5 other guys)
purchased in 1838 for $1.25 per acre (www.glorecords.blm.gov), and I have facts about the area and who lived here. The problem is all the titls/deeds to properties were in the Chicago fire 1871 (prior to this date were burned). If I put in my pin number, this info only goes back to 1989. I did find that Sayre built a house on Grand and 70th. My house is located about 2 blocks form that location. Since Sayre was a farmer, I was thinking that he built my house for the farm help???? I have a victorian workmans cottage built in 1852. My search continues.
Here is some info on your family:
An Historical Perspective
1830 Prairie adjacent to Lake Michigan is platted for settlement by the United States government. The Township of Jefferson is established, consisting of thirty six square miles, within the boundaries of future streets North to Devon Avenue, and Western to Harlem Avenue.
1833 Town of Chicago established with a population of three hundred.
1837 Abram Gale (1796-1889) arrives in Chicago from New York state. He bought prairie, built a farm and residence near present day Mulligan and Bloomingdale, miles from the City limits. William Sayre also arrives from New York state, claiming land west of Gale’s, and marries Harriet Lovett in 1839. Theirs is the first settler’s marriage recorded in Jefferson Township. City of Chicago is incorporated.
1848 The railroads arrive, including the Chicago and Pacific running through Gale’s and Sayre’s land, at their request.
1870s Area has farms that grow hay, corn and oats. Grand Avenue, formerly Whiskey Point Road, and prior to that a Native American trail is the farmer’s connection with Chicago.
1873 Sayre Station is established, will be renamed Montclare in 1875. Montclare Post Office established with Thomas Rutherford as Postmaster, it is the only post office serving southwest Jefferson Township. A train stop is also
established for the later Galewood subdivision.
1883 Western Brick and Tile plant (present day Brickyard Shopping Center) is built on land sitting seventy feet above Lake Michigan. One of the first industries in area, serving Galewood’s population of about one hundred twenty people.
1890 Jefferson Township annexed to City of Chicago, in anticipation of the 1893 World’s Fair.
1899 Westward Ho Golf Course, with eighteen holes, established on Gale’s land west of Narragansett Avenue. It became the Galewood Golf Club in 1922.
1912 Grand Avenue streetcar extension to Harlem Avenue encourages middle class residential development along with a booming commercial strip. Rutherford-Sayre Park established, field house constructed in 1916.
1920s The automobile leads to the growth of the bungalow belt in Chicago, our neighborhoods are on the western edge of this development. Wood framed houses are no longer allowed, replaced by the brick Chicago Bungalow, Tudor, Norman, Georgian and other blends of romantic styles.
1925 Amundsen Park, named for the Norwegian polar explorer, established by the Northwest Park District after petitioning by the North Austin Improvement Association. Field house not constructed until 1954
1926 Lovett and Locke Schools built in Gothic Revival/Collegiate style.
Park Avenue. It has paved streets in place, ready for development. Bell Park, named for a Spanish American War Major General, established by the Northwest Park District after petitioning by the Montclare Boosters. Field house not constructed until 1954.
1928 Frank Mars moves his candy business to Galewood from Minneapolis after an invitation from the Gale family.
Sayre school built in Neo-Gothic/Art Deco style.
1930s Vacant land west of Oak Park Avenue along North Avenue and south of Montclare is developed during the Great Depression.
2073 WILLIAM EDWIN,' b. in Blooming Grove, N. Y., Aug. 21, 1813; m.
Harriet Lovett. He removed to Chicago, and was among the earliest settlers.
He died Jan. 24, 1873.
The Chicago " Tribune," of July 4, 1897, makes this reference to his widow :
Mrs. Sayre of Mont Clare has lived at the site of her present home for sixtythree years. The ancient structure in which she took shelter and was guarded by friendly Indians during an Indian raid stands opposite her present handsome residence. Mrs. Sayre tells a story of the early '405, when surveyors first came to the neighborhood with compass and line prospecting a right of way for a railroad. She cooked dinner for the tired, mud-bespattered men, and wagered a goodly venture that no one present on that day would live to see a railroad laid in or about Chicago.
Mrs. Sayre is hale and hearty notwithstanding her pioneer experiences and the fact that she has passed the threescore and ten years' limit of age. She administers her large estate.
CHILDREN.
1 Mary Ellen,' b. April 21, 1841; m. Oct. 27, 1868, Charles E. Allen, a
farmer, who was born in Vermont, June 5, 1841. They live in Chicago.
Child.
William Sayre Allen,9 b. Dec. 31, 1869.
2 Lydia Clio.s b. Oct. 7, 1845; d. April 14, 1851.
3 John JOSEPH,8 b. Jan. 9, 1847; m. Oct. 18, 1875, Amy Sarah Hand. He
died April 21, 1885. Had two daughters.
4 Emma Jane,s b. Jan. 13, 1850; d. Feb. 5, 1851.
5 Ida Theresa.s b. April 22, 1856; d. Oct. 18, 1860.
Sayre family: lineage of Thomas Sayre, a founder of Southampton website
Chicago Public Library
Special Collections and Preservation Division
Neighborhood Research History Collection
Suburbia Collection
1871-1969
.5 linear ft., 13 photographs, 2 oversize folders
Call number: Archives_SUB
22. Biographical sketches—Sayre, Harriet Lovett
Info from face book……….Len The first settlers in the area were the Lovetts. They built a cabin on what now is the SE corner of Fullerton & Long. Following them was William Sayre who built a home what now is the SW corner of Grand/Sayre (Hoyne Bank). Then he married Harriet (Lovett) Sayre. Thomas Rutherford built a home (which is still there) on the SE corner of Medill/Oak Park.
Top of Form 1
&&January 9, 2009 at 6:23pm
Bottom of Form 1
Len Rutherford-Sayre Park was constructed by Thomas & Jospeh Rutherford and Harriet Sayre to prevent the railroads from building a yard.
Top of Form 2
&&January 9, 2009 at 6:25pm
Bottom of Form 2
Montclare
Community Area 18, 9 miles NW of the Loop. First attracted by a rolling landscape, William Sayre in 1836 laid claim “by right of possession” to 90 acres in what is now the Montclare Community Area. Unable to gain title to the land because of an inaccurate government survey, he bought the acreage at the
Jefferson Township land sales in 1838. A year later he married Harriet Lovett, daughter of another area settler, in the first marriage of the township. They set up housekeeping in a newly built frame house in 1840.
Sayre and his neighbors cleared fields of hay and tended main crops of oats and corn. Farmers used Grand Avenue as their main thoroughfare to the downtown markets in Chicago, where many hawked their produce from wagons at the Randolph Street Market. The return home was sometimes dangerous: along the dark, lonely road, farmers faced the threat of robbery or by the 1880s risked having their wagons hit by a train.
In 1872 Sayre allowed the Chicago & Pacific
Railroad Company right-of-way over his property, and Sayre Station was built on the farm. A year later another family farm in the area was platted by developers, who sold lots for $250 to $500. The town and the depot were named Montclare after Montclair, New Jersey.
In 1873 the rail line failed and was taken over by the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railroad (CM&SP). As a result, the only form of
commuter transportation was a single daily train, reducing the desirability of the area. Lots remained vacant. Undaunted by a lack of new settlers, the some 120 residents went about their farming. Two schools were in evidence in 1884. Social activities focused on family, church, and Sunday School. Most residents were native-born, English, or German.
Although Montclare was
annexed by the city of Chicago in 1889, the first spurt of growth occurred in 1912, when the Grand Avenue streetcar line extended service to the area. The Sayre family contributed acreage for community use in 1916, which, along with another piece of donated property, later formed Rutherford-Sayre Park. The park was divided down the middle by the railroad tracks that marked the town's southern boundary.
Settlement concentrated in the southeastern section near the depot, but was hampered until utilities and paved streets were added in the 1920s. Single-family structures, mainly standard
bungalows, predominated in the area. Some residents found employment at light industrial plants along the CM&SP railroad lines that bounded Montclare on its eastern and southern edges; most workers crossed into neighboring communities where factories were more plentiful.
Housing extended north of Diversey Avenue in the 1930s, a combination of bungalows, ranches, and Tudor houses. Hugging Chicago's western edge, Montclare retained an identity more suburban than urban. Pre–
World War II commercial development was minimal; the only shopping was a retail strip at Grand and Harlem. In the 1960s the strip experienced decline and deterioration as stores left and newer shopping centers were built in nearby areas. But residential areas remained intact owing to good construction and property upkeep by conscientious residents.
Population figures for 1970 showed 11,675, of which
Poles, Italians, and Germans were the majority. These numbers decreased to 10,573 in the 1990 census, with Greeks, Ukrainians, Lithuanians, Lebanese, and a growing number of Hispanics (11 percent) adding to the mix. In the late 1980s a few African Americans moved into the neighborhood, prompting racially motivated incidents that induced groups such as the Galewood-Montclare Community Organization to devote their efforts to reducing tensions. At the close of the twentieth century Montclare still had only 297 African American residents, but the Hispanic proportion stood at 38 percent.
Bibliography
Edwards, Brian. “Frontier Bargains: Tiny Montclare Offers Quiet Family Living Way Out West.” Chicago Tribune, August 24, 1990.
Karlen, Harvey M. Chicago's Crabgrass Communities: The History of the Independent Suburbs and Their Post Offices That Became Part of Chicago. 1992, 163–166.
Melaniphy & Associates, Inc. Chicago Comprehensive Neighborhood Needs Analysis, vol. 2. 1982, 16–23.
Encyclopedia ofChicago
WILLIAM E. SAYRE.
The marvelous growth of Chicago deserves to be ranked with the seven wonders of the world. When that section which is today covered for mile after mile with attr
attractive residences or substantial business blocks until the city is today the second in America was an uncultivated prairie of low, wet land, William E. Sayre made his way to Cook county and took up a claim of government land at what is now the southwest corner of Grand and Seventieth avenues. This was in November, 1836. It was not until the following year that the little section of business enterprises and homes that clustered around the mouth of the river was incorporated as a city. For more than a third of a century William E. Sayre lived to watch the marvelous growth of the town as its boundaries were extended to the north, to the south and to the west until today within its borders is found the longest street in any municipality of the world.Mr. Sayre was a native of Blooming Grove, Orange county, New York, born August £1, 1813. His father, John A. Sayre, a native of the same place, was a fanner by occupation and resided there until his death, which occurred in 1859. His wife bore the maiden name of Cleo Brewster and she, too, was born, lived and died at Blooming Grove. On the old homestead farm there the son William E. was reared. His birth occurred while the second war with England was in progress and he lived through the period of two more great wars of the country, the one with Mexico and that between the north and the south. His early experiences were such as usually come to farm boys, his time being divided between the sehoolroom and the fields. He continued to assist his father until twenty-three years of age and then sought the opportunities of the unsettled west. He made his way to Illinois in November, 1836, and with his partner, Amos Moore, took up a government claim of one hundred and sixty acres. There he built one of the first homes on that section which is now the southwest corner of Grand and Seventieth avenues. With characteristic energy he began to break the sod and till the soil and later he purchased his partner's interest and continued in business on this tract until it was subdivided in 1873. Much of this, including the old homestead, is still in possession of the family. With the growth of the city it has risen continuously in value until it now commands a high market price. Year after year Mr. Sayre with the return of spring took his place in the fields and cultivated the crops best adapted to soil and climate, and year after year he gathered his harvests which enabled him to provide a comfortable living for his family. His life was indeed a busy and useful one and at the old homestead he remained until death called him on the 24th of January, 1873.
Mr. Sayre was always active in public affairs of his township—Jefferson—and from its organization held office. He was the first justice of the peace of the district, was supervisor for some time and was road commissioner twenty-seven years. His public duties were ever discharged in a most capable and faithful manner and he was ever loyal to the best interests of citizenship. During the Civil war he took a keen interest in the conflict, being an enthusiastic supporter of the Union, but age and ill health prevented his enlistment. He was always confident that Chicago would some day be a great city which would include his property and time proved the wisdom of his foresight for today the old home farm is within the limits of the western metropolis.
On the 3d of January, 1839, occurred the marriage of William E. Sayre and Miss Harriet Lovett, who had become a resident of Cook county four years before. In 1835 her father, Joseph Lovett, brought his family to Chicago, reaching the little village, for such it was then, on the 4th of March. He made the journey from Bath, Steuben county, New York, traveling overland and bringing with him his wife, Mrs. Lydia (Crouch) Lovett, their five children and a son-in-law. He first took up a claim at Cragin, but about two years later arrived in the district that is now Chicago and took up a claim of one hundred and sixty acres a mile east of the farm of William E. Sayre. There he spent his remaining days in agricultural pursuits until age and ill health forced him to put aside the arduous duties of life and on the 6th of September, 1851, at the age of sixty-two years, he passed away. He had for about five years survived his wife, who died in 1846. In their family were ten children but only one, Harriet, the fourth in
order of birth, is now living. She was born December 13, 1819, in Tyrone, New Y'ork, and was a maiden of fifteen summers when she accompanied her parents on the removal to what was then the far west. Here she formed the acquaintance of William E. Sayre who sought her hand in marriage, and on the 3d of January, 1839, went as a bride to his home. They lived upon the western prairie when there was not a house between their home and the west bank of the Chicago river. There is doubtless no one in Chicago who has resided here for a longer period than Mrs. Sayre. She is now in her ninety-third year, but her intellect is remarkably keen and her physical powers but slightly diminished. She does all ^rork without the use of glasses except sewing and reading and busies herself with some of the lighter household tasks or plain sewing. What she has been to the section of the city in which she lives can scarcely be overestimated. In the early days before this section became thickly settled there was no call for assistance in case of illness or distress to which she did not respond. She was the ministering angel at many bedsides and she always had a word of hope and encouragement for any who were distressed because of the heavy burdens or sorrows of life. She still lives upon the property to which she went as a bride, occupying the old homestead of her husband at the southwest corner of Grand and Seventieth avenues until after his death. Since then she has built her present residence which in the renumbering of the district is known as 6935 Grand avenue. Mrs. Sayre always shared with her husband in the belief that their home would one day be connected with the city of Chicago by street car lines and she lived to witness the fulfillment of the hope which she had long cherished. After waiting for seventysix years the car line was completed and she took her first ride on the extension of the Grand avenue line on the 1st of February, 1911. She had witnessed the building of the different railway lines not far from her home and it is said that on various occasions she would prepare a meal for the workmen. It is told how, when on one occasion she had to build a sidewalk at her home, the railroad transported the material free of charge and the labor was performed by neighbors. When the street car line was completed past her home a representative of one of the daily papers, knowing of the hope she had long cherished that this might be realized, invited her for a ride on the new line. The occasion brought back many reminiscences of the past and she exclaimed: "Who ever thought when I came rolling through this stretch of prairie more than seventy-five years ago in an old cloth covered 'schooner' that some day I would pass along this same road in a brightly painted street car? It's wonderful! Why, you will hardly believe me when I tell you that there was not a tree all along here in those days. Nothing but the big prairie and grass higher than a horse. I watched all these trees grow. At that time our house was the only one in this region west of Chicago. Oak Park was a wilderness and Chicago itself a mere dot compared to what it is now. And now I'm here in a street car! Shall I believe it? I have lived to see a wonderful age but I like it. Oh, yes, I do! I believe in all the new things. I love to ride in the automobile and I would take a chance in an airship if I had the opportunity. Really, I wouldn't be afraid; I'd like it." It is indeed a matter of marvel to think that it is within the memory of a living person when all the vast section of Chicago west of La Salle street was an unsettled, undeveloped prairie, yet when she came here with a party of sixteen people, traveling in three emigrant wagons, reaching their destination after a trip of twenty-one days, land could be purchased at twelve shillings per acre. Her father's first home for his family of nine was a little log building without a floor.
Mrs. Sayre has ever kept apace in thought and spirit with the progress that the years have brought and is today as interested in what is being accomplished as she was when she watched the changes that occurred during the period of her girlhood and womanhood. When she first took up her abode out on the prairie it sometimes required five or six hours to drive in a wagon for the roads were usually muddy and it was mainly a swamp district between her home and the river. Speaking of this she said: "In the winter the big swamp would freeze over and our sleds would slip and skid like automobiles do now. There were no bridges over the river except narrow, shaky ones for the people to walk on. Wagons and horses were all ferried across. The stage went by once a week in either direction. It took a week to get to Rockford when the roads were bad and they wouldn't carry many passengers, either. They used to bring our mail out from Chicago and always stop in front of the house. Not a tree was in sight out there and the grass of the prairie, my, how long it was! It seemed to wave like a big sea under the wind which never was still. We could see it waving; as the lumber box wagons of the emigrants going still farther west drove through it we could see the white canvas tops of the wagons but we couldn't see the horses or the wagon boxes. Then in the fall it would catch fire from some camp or somebody smoking and the sky would be lit up as if the whole world was burning. The night of the big fire it was as light as day out here. I could see to pick up a pin on our lawn. I put the children all to bed and stayed up all night myself." Speaking of her arrival in Illinois Mrs. Sayre continued: "We were the only white persons west of the river. The Fort Dearborn massacre took place two years before we came. The government was moving away the Indians but there were still five' hundred Sioux with red blankets, five hundred Sacs with blue blankets and five hundred Pottawatomies with white ones living near us. They 'slept out around big fires at night. We used to go to their camps in daytime. They would give us presents and then come the next day and want them back. But they never shot a deer or any game without coming to the house and asking 'White squaw want some?' We were married young in those days. My nineteenth birthday was in December and on the 3d of the next month I was married. Every person who attended that wedding except me is gone."
Five children came to bless the home of Mr. and Mrs. Sayre: Mary E., who married Charles E. Allen and makes her home with her mother; Lydia C., who died at the age of six and a half years; Emma J., who died in infancy; Ida T., who has also passed away; and John J. The grandchildren are Harriet Sayre, now the wife of Albert F. Keeney, president of the board of local improvement of Chicago; Mary Sayre, the wife of R. Y. Bradshaw; and William S. Allen, of Los Angeles, California. There are also six great-grandchildren: Edwin Sayre and Josephine Esther Allen, children of William S. Allen; Harriet E. and Virginia Keeney; and Harriet Amy and Robert Sayre Bradshaw.
In his last illness Mr. Sayre said to his wife that he hoped she would take life easier during the rest of her days and not work as they had done in the early period of their married life, adding that it would not be long before she joined him. But thirty-nine years have passed and Mrs. Sayre is still an active, well preserved woman for one of her age. She spends the winter months in California in the milder climate of the Pacific coast, but eagerly looks forward to her return to her old home in Chicago in the opening of the spring. Hers has indeed been a useful life. She cared nothing for the social prominence which means leadership in fashions, but with a heart responsive to every appeal she has always been ready to extend a helping hand to all and her kind deeds have left an indelible impress upon the hearts of many who have known her. Everyone in her section of the city knows Mrs. Sayre or where she lives and such a life deserves all the respect and honor which can be accorded it.
Chicago: Its History and Its Builders, a Century of Marvelous Growth, Volume 4
By Josiah Seymour Currey
1913-11-17
Chicago Tribune (IL)
OLDEST CITY SETTLER DEAD
Mrs. Harriett Lovett Sayre, 94 Years Old, Here in 1835.
RODE WEST BEHIND OXEN.
Bought 160 Acres for $240 on Easy Terms.
Edition: Chicago Tribune
Mrs. Harriett Lovett Sayre, 94 years old, credited with being the oldest settler of Chicago, died yesterday at her home on Grand and Sayre avenues.
Mrs. Sayre, in 1835, when 15 years old, came to Chicago in a prairie schooner drawn by oxen. Her father, with a party of sixteen from Bath, Steuben county, N. Y., took up land on the prairie four miles north of the Chicago river, two years after the Fort Dearborn massacre. There was a camp of 500 Sioux near her home.
At 19 she was married to William E. Sayre, and went to live in the log house with a dirt floor, the only building between the Sayre homestead at Seventieth street and the south branch of the Chicago river. Their farm here of 160 acres was purchased from the government at 12 shillings or $1.50 an acre, on easy terms. Here she has lived for seventy-two years.
At that time they were the only white people in the vicinity. The stage passed their house on Grand avenue once a week. Seventy years later Mrs. Sayre was one of the party that rode on the first street car down Grand avenue.
She is survived by her daughter, Mrs. Mary E. Allen, who lives at the old homestead; her grandchildren, Williams S. Allen of Los Angeles, Mrs. Harriett S. Keeney of 2046 North Tripp avenue, and Mrs. Mary S. Bradshaw of 2358 North Sayre avenue, and six greatgrand-children. Services will be held at Mont Clair Congregational church tomorrow. She will be buried at Rosehill.
Copyright 1913, Chicago Tribune. For permission to reprint, contact Chicago Tribune.
Record Number: 19131117ob006
The old Jefferson township was settled at a very early date. It occupied a central position, and as the soil was unusually good settlers were attracted to that vicinity. However, the territory was somewhat low and in early times was covered with water. To add to this unpleasant state of affairs, the citizens were negligent in regard to the question of drainage. They even took action against becoming a part of the Chicago drainage system early in the '50s. Later this injury to the town was repaired by the construction of numerous ditches and sewers. The site was originally prairie, crossed with Sand ridge and Union ridge, the latter extending from Elijah Wentworth's hotel to Whiskey Point. As a whole the township was elevated about twenty to twenty-five feet above Lake Michigan. The ridges were approximately from thirty to forty feet above the lake. The drainage was effected from the North branch of the Chicago river.
Among the first settlers was John Kinzie Clark, who located there as early as 1830. He is conceded to have been the first resident in this township. He was a squatter, of course, and hence had no rights except those granted by the preemption laws. His log cabin was located in the timber on the North branch of the river, about eight miles from its junction with the South branch, the Clybourns and several residents of Chicago assisting him to erect his small residence. Here Mr. Clark resided until 1836, when he sold to Mr. Brownell and removed to Northfield.
Mr. Clark seems to have been the only resident of the township prior to about 1831-32. At this date or a little later the Bickerdikes settled not far from the Clark residence. The Nobles owned land in this township very early and may have lived within the township limits during the early '30s. Joseph Lovett settled near Mr. Clark in 1833 and his residence stood about one mile northwest of Whiskey Point. It was not until 1838 that the land of this township was thrown into the market, so that all settlers prior to that date were squatters. Another early settler was David Everett. Elijah Wentworth located on Sand ridge as early as 1836. He opened a tavern and received much patronage from emigrants westward bound.
Mr. Wentworth's tavern became such a landmark that the ridge was often called "Wentworth's Ridge." Among others who settled in the township about 1836 were Winthrop Merrill, Wm. E. Sayre, Gustavius V. Smith, Israel G. Smith, Major Noble, Martin Kimbell, James Townsend, Philip Townsend, Richard Townsend, John Anderson, S. S. Abbott, Thomas Burkel, Laomi Butterfield, John Sweeney, Abner Ellison, and a little later came John Robinson, Hiram Sanford, Reese Eaton, Edward Simons and others.
Milwaukee avenue at a very early date was a wagon track extending from Kinzie street, Chicago, northward through Jefferson township and then on to Niles and Northfield in the direction of Deerfield. This was the most important highway leading northward from Chicago in early years. Accordingly the citizens of Chicago as well as the settlers along the road were interested in its early improvement. The County Board early made appropriations for keeping it in repair, and the towns through which it passed levied taxes for the same purpose. It was duly surveyed upon petition of Silas W. Sherman, and Asa F. Bradley was the surveyor to mark its final course. Abram Gale located in the township as early as 1835. Upon his arrival Charles Chapman had just located within the limits. Mr. Gale selected a tract on the ridge that afterward became known as Galewood. The house, however, was not built until 1838. Richard Y. Spikings, Leighton Turner, Able Kay, D. L. Roberts, Chester Dickinson and William P. Gray located in the township late in the '30s or early in the '40s. Taverns were opened by George N. Powers, S. S. Abbott and D. L. Roberts. The latter purchased the tavern owned by Elijah Wentworth in the village of Jefferson. This building was a strong block-house, two stories high. In 1845 a postoffice was established at Jefferson with E. B. Sutherland as postmaster. He was succeeded the following year by Chester Dickinson. The school section was offered for sale in 1840. At that date its valuation was from $4 to $12 per acre.
In 1850 the township was organized as a township under the new law. Prior to that date the citizens had voted either at Chicago or in Monroe township. One of the voting places was at Higgins' tavern on the west side of the Des Plaines river. The new Jefferson town was made to coincide with the Congressional township of the same name. At the first meeting there were present the following men: Martin Kimbell, William P. Gray, Edward Simons, Chester Dickinson, David L. Roberts, Zina Byington, S. S. Abbott and Major Noble. The first election was held in April, 1850, at the residence of Chester Dickinson. George Merrill served as moderator; D. L,. Roberts, clerk. The first officers elected were as follows: Martin W. Kimbell, supervisor; Robert J. Edbrook, clerk; Russell Morton, assessor; Alexander Clark, collector; George Merrill, overseer of the poor; Daniel Booth and Major Noble, commissioner of highways; John H. Butterfield, constable. The officers immediately proceeded to divide the township into road and school districts, levy a tax on property, fix a legal height for fences and provide for digging ditches and constructing sewers. Early in the '50s the commissioners of highways performed the duties of a drainage board, and seem to have been negligent because there was much complaint. In 1859 a separate drainage board was organized. The village of Jefferson was organized in 1870, the first officers being William P. Gray, supervisor; S. S. Abbott, assessor; Frank D. Wulff, collector, and D. N. Kelsey, clerk. In 1856 the town hall was erected at a cost of about $2,500. From the start Jefferson spent immense sums for drainage purposes, and the result was shown a little later in the splendid farms and gardens in this portion of the county.
In 1872 the village organization was made effective. Thirty citizens petitioned for the change and a total of eighty-two votes were polled, seventy-two being in favor of village organization and ten opposed. William P. Gray was the first president of the Board of Trustees. As early as 1869 the first artesian well was sunk on the farm of M. W. Kimbell, and a depth of 653 feet was reached at a cost of about $4,000. Later several Bothers were dug in the same vicinity; the water usually came a few feet above the surface but not with great force. About ten or a dozen wells were sunk and several are in existence at the present time.
As early as 1836 the township was divided into school districts. Reese Eaton was one of the first teachers. He was succeeded by L. H. Smith. Mr. Kimbell taught several terms in his own residence. Children came to his house from as far as four miles. By 1837 there were four schoolhouses within the township limits. The first regularly organized school district was established in 1842 and Edward Simons, Gustavius V. Smith, Philip Townsend, Nyram Sanford and W. E. Sayre were the first trustees. Two years later, School district No. 2 was duly organized by the citizens assembled in the tavern of Mr. Kimbell. By 1849 Jefferson probably had, as a whole, the best schools in the county outside of Chicago proper. The school buildings by that time were numerous, well constructed and well attended. Among the early settlements in the township were: Maplewood, Cragin, Humboldt, Avondale, Mont Clare, Montrose, Whiskey Point, Grayland, Forest Glen, Bandow, Kelvyn Grove, Jefferson, Bowmanville, Summerdale and Irving Park. In 1869 the citizens concluded to build their first high school building. At first it was proposed to conduct high school in the town house. The first attempts failed, and it was not until 1870 that a high school was finished and opened under the principalship of J.,,B. Farnsworth. The high school building was not erected until 1883. It cost about $30,000 and was a credit to the township. Soon afterward it was found necessary to erect another.
As early as 1833 religious services were held in Jefferson township. The first settlers prior to that date attended meetings at the residence of Daniel Everett in Leyden township and in 1833 Rev. Mr. Payne, a Congregational minister, conducted services in the first schoolhouse built in the township. A little later Methodist quarterly meeting was held at Whiskey Point. This meeting was the foundation for the rapid growth of Methodism in this section of Cook county. Mark Noble, Sr., a strong church man, preached to Jefferson township congregations at an early date. Several other organizations sprang up and by 1860 the township was well represented with religious services. The Jefferson Congregational church was organized with seven members in 1861. St. Johannes German Evangelical Lutheran church was established in 1876 by Rev. Augustus Reinke. The Union Congregational church at Bowmanville was founded as early as 1878 and was known as the Union Protestant church. Mrs. Mary A. Petersen was a leading member at the start. This society had an early Sunday school with large membership. The Congregational church at Cragin was established in 1873 by Rev. J. M. Williams. In 1874 the Reform Church of Irving Park was commenced with a membership of sixteen. In 1860 the Baptist church of this township was organized. Its services were held in the railroad station and in the schoolhouse. The Church Extension sosiety of this denomination do important work to this day. Jefferson village was laid out by D. L. Roberts in 1855. Numerous additions were platted and within a few years the village contained several thousand population, excellent schools, churches, business houses and shops.
Maplewood lies in the southeast corner of Jefferson township. The first house there was built in 1870 by Mr. Hoffman. The second was built the following year by Mr. Daniel Reynolds. Other buildings were erected by Crony & Farlin. Mr. Rhoades, L. Welch, C. M. De Libbey, David A. Cashman, T. W. Taylor, James Lee and Mr. Whitman. The station was built in 1870 and the postoffice established two years later with Mr. Reynolds as postmaster. The site of Maplewood originally embraced the southeast quarter of Section 25.
Galewood is 8.7 miles from Chicago proper. The land was originally owned by Abram Gale, from whom the village took its title. It was located on Sections 31 and 32. The station house was built in 1872, but was only a flag station until 1883. Charles G. Whitcomb was the first station agent. An important business enterprise here was the Western Brick and Tile company, which began operations in 1883. Excellent brick clay was found in the vicinity of Galewood. When burned it gave brick of a fine red color that attracted the attention of builders and contractors.
History of Cook County, Illinois--: being a general survey of Cook ..., Volume 2
By Weston Arthur Goodspeed, Daniel David
GALE ABRAM E2SE 31 40N 13E 3 10/23/1838 COOK
GALE ABRAM W2SE 31 40N 13E 3 11/27/1838 COOK
LOVETT JOSEPH E2NE 31 40N 13E 3 11/27/1838 COOK
MOORE AMOS M SW 31 40N 13E 3 11/27/1838 COOK
MOORE AMOS M E2NW 31 40N 13E 3 11/27/1838 COOK
MOORE AMOS M W2NW 31 40N 13E 3 11/27/1883 COOK
MOORE AMOS M W2NE 31 40N 13E 3 11/27/1838 COOK
SAYRE WILLIAM E SW 31 40N 13E 3 11/27/1838 COOK
SAYRE WILLIAM E E2NW 31 40N 13E 3 11/27/1838 COOK
SAYRE WILLIAM E W2NE 31 40N 13E 3 11/27/1838 COOK
SAYRE WILLIAM E W2NW 31 40N 13E 3 11/27/1838 COOK
BAILEY FREDERICK NE 30 40N 13E 3 11/27/1838 COOK
BOWEN SYLVESTER E2SW 30 40N 13E 3 11/27/1838 COOK
BRAND ALEX W2SE 30 40N 13E 3 05/18/1847 COOK
COLE PARKER M W2SW 30 40N 13E 3 11/27/1838 COOK
ROBINS GEORGE NW 30 40N 13E 3 11/28/1846 COOK
STRACHAN PATRICK E2SE 30 40N 13E 3 11/27/1838 COOK | SAYRE William Edwin (I26462)
|
| 5573 |
I Om Oplandskongerne nämns kong Sigtryg af Vendel:
Halfdan Hvidbens søn Eystein var konge i Romerike. Han var gift med en datter af Erik Agnarson, der var konge i Vestfold. Erik havde ingen sønner. Agnar — Eriks far — var søn af kong Sigtryg af Vendel.
Biography
In Om Oplandskongerne there is a mention of King Sigtryg of Vendel:
Translated - Halfdan Hvidben's son Eystein was king of Romerike. He was married to a daughter of Erik Agnarson, who was king of Vestfold. Erik had no sons. Agnar - Erik's father - was the son of King Sigtryg of Vendel.
The parents of Sigtrygg is not known. Any wife of Sigtrygg is not known, the sagas just mention he had a son named Agnar.[1]
Research Note
This person is not found among the list of Norwegian Nobility at MedLands
Not sure what the Vendal domain refers to? Vendel is by some said to be the same as Vendsyssel Denmark? See Wikipedia. In the old Norse version of Heimskringla the location is called Vindil which some say refers to locations in Norway, either Vennesla or Vetland/Vetteland which in old Norse was named Vendilslá.
The profiles connected to this profile as parents, Gauteelva-1 and Vestfold-Ynglingætta-1, as well as spouse De_Vendil-1 have been disconnected, they are not mentioned in any saga. The son Sigtrygsson-1 has been linked to in the biography text. Andersson-4409 13:56, 17 October 2021 (UTC) Update: 15:50, 18 October 2021 (CET)
Source
↑ Om Oplandskongerne
http://www.heimskringla.no/wiki/Om_Uppl%C3%A4ndernas_Konungar
http://www.heimskringla.no/wiki/Om_Opl%C3%A6ndingernes_Konger
See also;
https://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Om_Opplendingenes_konger
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Af_Upplendinga_konungum | UNKNOWN Sigtrygg (I58716)
|
| 5574 |
I remember my cousin Steve very well. We played quite a bit when I was young. He was one year loder than me and one year younger than my brother Pat. When Pat was alive him and Steve were buddies and me and Steve's younger brother Mike were buddies.
Steve got involved with Bent Christopher one of his friends from school they took an awful lot of drugs. Steve Had came to visit me once after shock treatment. He was a zombie for several weeks. He never seemed to fully regain all of his faculties.
Steve committed suicide after killing his wife Cindy Bauer after they had came home from a night out. The story goes they had a fight, over a comment that one of guys that Steve was working with at the Elk Mound feed mill had made, about having slept with Cindy. | Brindle Steven (I49915)
|
| 5575 |
Iago was born about 0250. Iago ap Genedog ... [1]
Research Notes
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. [2]
The pedigree also appears in a work by the Powys-land Club.[3]
The complete pedigree is presented and discussed at Space: John Pughe's Descent from Adam
Sources
↑ A source for this information is needed.
↑ 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 | ap GENEDOG Iago (I59300)
|
| 5576 |
Iñigo Jiménez is definitely named as the brother of García Jiménez in the Codice de Roda, and their patyrnomic indicates their father's name was Jimeno.[1]
Research Notes
The Arab historian Ibn Hayyân indicates that King Íñigo´s father was also named Íñigo. However, the source is rather confused and is contradicted by numerous other primary sources.[2] He probably meant to say that Íñigo was of the family of Íñigo, which would make him the same as Iñigo de Pamplona.
Sources
↑ Salazar y Acha, Jaime de, Las Dinastías Reales de España en la Edad Media (Madrid: Real Academia de la Historia, 2021). p. 89. Electronic edition, Agencia Estatal Boletín Oficial del Estado, https://www.boe.es/biblioteca_juridica/abrir_pdf.php?id=PUB-DH-2021-233 : accessed 1 May 2022.
↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2022, Origins of Kings opf Pamplona. | JIMÉNEZ Iñigo (I59751)
|
| 5577 |
Ida de Louvain married Arnold I von Kleve. Ida is a daughter of Godefroy I "le Barbu" Duke of Lower Lotharingia & his first wife Ida de Chiny (-27 Jul before 1162).
The Genealogia Ducum Brabantiæ Heredum Franciæ names (in order) Alaida…Anglorum regina…comitissa de Cleves Ida…[et] Clarissia virgo as the three daughters of Godefridus Cum-barba.[1]
Theodericus comes in Cleue et Aleidis uxor mea donated property to Kloster Bedburg, for the anniversaries X Kal Mar…patris mei Arnoldi comitis et VI Kal Aug matris mee Ide comitisse, by charter dated 1162.[2]
Sources
↑ Genealogia Ducum Brabantiæ Heredum Franciæ 6, MGH SS XXV, p. 390.
↑ Niederrheins Urkundenbuch, Band I, 404, p. 278.
John fitz Geoffrey, entry in the database Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families by Charles Cawley © Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, 2000-2017. | de LORRAINE Ida (I59494)
|
| 5578 |
Ida of Saxony was buried at Namur. [1]
On her marriage to Albert, she brought her husband extensive lands northeast of the castle of Bouillon which later formed the county of Laroche.
Sources
↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2022, Dukes of Saxony. | BILLUNG Ida (I58983)
|
| 5579 |
Ida was born in 1040. Ida Verdun passed away in 1113.
Eustace II, the Count of Boulogne from 1049-1087, first married Goda of England, who was the daughter of King Ethelred the Unready and his second wife Emma of Normandy, and sister of King Edward the Confessor. There were no children.
Goda died circa 1047, and he quickly married again (about 1049). From his second marriage with Ida of Lorraine (daughter of Godfrey III, Duke of Lower Lorraine), Eustace had three sons, Eustace III, the next count of Boulogne, and Godfrey of Bouillon and Baldwin, both later monarchs of Jerusalem.
Marriage
Husband: Eustache De Boulogne
Wife: Ida De Bouillon
Child: Mahaud De Louvain
Marriage:
Date: 1057-12
Place: ,Boulogne-Sur-Mer,Pas-De-Calais,France
Imported only 1057 from Marriage Date and marked as uncertain.
Birth:
Date: ABT 1040
Place: Bouillon, Ardenne, South Belgium
Removed ABT from Birth Date and marked as uncertain.
Sources
See also:
Wikipedia: Ida of Lorraine
NL: Ida van Verdun
FR: Ide de Boulogne
Wikidata: Item Q2072769, en:Wikipedia help.gif
Farrer-William., (1920)., An outline itinerary of King Henry the First. Printed by F. Hall. Retrieved from the Internet Archive (here;) Accessed 7 Feb 2022. | LORRAINE Ida (I59941)
|
| 5580 |
Identity
Bierbrier and other historians believe this is the same Ealhmund found in two pedigrees in the Winchester (Parker) Chronicle, compiled during the reign of Alfred the Great. [1]
784 Charter
The existence of Ealhmund is confirmed by a charter in which, in 784, Ealhmund granted land to the Abbot of Reculver. [2][3][4] This is the only contemporary evidence of Ealhmund's existence.
785 End of Reign
Reigned in 784, subject to Mercian overlordship
By the following year, 785, Offa of Mercia seems to have been ruling directly, as he issued a charter without any mention of a local king. [5]
Issue
Ealhmund & his unknown wife were probably the parents of:
Ecgberht, born 769-80, died in 839 . The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that "Egbert succeeded to the kingdom of Wessex" after the death of Beorhtric in 802. See Ecgberht's profile for some discussion of his parentage.
Research Notes
Uncertain Parents
Experts disagree on whether Ealhmund was of Wessex or Kentish origins. There is a lack of hard evidence to determine which is right.
Historian Heather Edwards acknowledges that scholars disagree on Ecgberht's parents, but suggests that Ealhmund was probably a Kentish royal scion, whose pedigree was forged to give his son Egbert the descent from Cerdic requisite to reigning in Wessex.[6] This part of the ODNB entry for Ecgberht contains some surmise and speculation.
The referenced pedigree is provided in the genealogical preface to the Winchester (Parker) Chronicle and also in the annual entry (covering years 855–859) describing the death of Æthelwulf as follows: [7]
Ingild, brother of King Ine of Wessex and descendant of founder, Cerdic
Eoppa
Eafa
Ealhmund
King Egbert of Wessex.
Charles Cawley has expressed doubts about Ealhmund's ancestry, noting that: "The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle names Ealhmund as son of Eafa, in a late passage which sets out the ancestry of Æthelwulf King of Wessex. However, Ealhmund's predecessor as king of Kent, and Ealhmund's own son, were both named Ecgberht, a name which was not particularly common in any of the Anglo-Saxon royal families. In view of the general practice of name inheritance within the ruling families, and the absence of the name "Ecgberht" from the house of Wessex as recorded in the traditional genealogies, it is not impossible that Ealhmund's origins lay in Kent and not in Wessex. This would of course mean that the usually represented ancestry of Ecgberht King of Wessex would require reconsideration. Mercian involvement in Kentish affairs appears to have increased again in 785-89. Presumably King Ealhmund was deposed as king of Kent by Offa King of Mercia as the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle states that "the Kentishmen … formerly … had been wrongly forced away from their allegiance to [Ecgberht King of Wessex's] kinsmen". This event may have taken place in 789, the date when King Ealhmund's son Ecgberht is later described as having been expelled from England by Beorhtric King of Wessex and Offa King of Mercia." [8]
The Henry Project has a fairly detailed discussion of the issues. It acknowledges scholarly disagreements, recognises that Ecgberht of Wessex had Kentish connections according to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicles, but comments that "the most obvious parentage for Ealhmund would be to accept the orthodox genealogy as it stands", that is, the traditional view that his father was Eafa and that he was descended from the royal line of Wessex. It rightly mentions the possibility that Ealhmund may have either married a member of the Kentish royal family, or that his descent from the Kentish royal family was matrilineal rather than patrilineal - either theory would reconcile the traditional genealogy with the evidence that Ealhmund was linked to a Kentish ruling dynasty.[9]
The possibility of a matrilineal connection to the royal house of Kent is supported by David Kelley[10] but has been disputed by M L Bierbrier, with little more than assertion, in a talk in 2007.[1] Medlands mentions that Ealhmund may have had a Kentish wife.[8]
In the absence of firmer information, it is not possible to draw definitive conclusions.
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 M L Bierbrier. Genealogical Flights of Fancy. Old Assumptions, New Sources, in 'Foundations: Journal of the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy', Vol. 2(5), p. 382, PDF
↑ "S 38". Anglo-Saxons.net. Retrieved 2012-02-10. Cited by Wikipedia: Ealhmund_of_Kent Accessed 10/3/2019 jhd
↑ Barbara Yorke. Kings and Kingdoms of Early Anglo-Saxon England, Seaby, 1990, p. 31
↑ P H Sawyer. Anglo-Saxon Charters, Royal Historical Society, 1968, p. 81, charter 38. "Ealhmund, king of Kent, to Hwitred, abbot, and his familia at Reculver; grant of land at Sheldwich, Kent"
↑ "S 123". Anglo-Saxons.net. Retrieved 2012-02-10. Cited by Wikipedia: Ealhmund_of_Kent Accessed 10/3/2019 jhd
↑ Edwards, Heather (2004). "Ecgberht [Egbert] (d. 839), king of the West Saxons". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/8581. Retrieved 14 May 2014. (subscription or UK public library membership required) Cited by Wikipedia: Ealhmund_of_Kent Accessed 10/3/2019 jhd
↑ Garmonsway, G.N. ed., The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, London: J. M. Dent & Sons, Ltd. pp. xxxii, 2, 4. Cited by Wikipedia: Ealhmund_of_Kent Accessed 10/3/2019 jhd
↑ 8.0 8.1 Charles Cawley, Medieval Lands: A Prosopography of Medieval European Noble and Royal Families, Online at Foundation for Medieval Genealogy Website. Anglo Saxon Danish Kings
↑ The Henry Project, entry for Ealhmund
↑ Kelley, David H. "The House of Aethelred", in Brooks, Lindsay L., ed., Studies in Genealogy and Family History in Tribute to Charles Evans, Salt Lake City: The Association for the Promotion of Scholarship in Genealogy, Occasional Publication, No. 2, pp. 63–93. Cited by Wikipedia: Ealhmund_of_Kent Accessed 10/3/2019 jhd
The Henry Project, entry for Ealhmund
See also:
Note NI2469!SOURCES: 1. Anglo-Saxon Bishops, Kings & Nobles, Eng. 104, p. 339, 342-43
2. Royal Line of Succession, A16A225, p. 5
3. Keiser und Koenig Hist., Gen. Hist. 25, pt 1, p. 95
4. Hist. of the Anglo-Saxons, Eng. 36, v. 1, p. 362 | WESSEX Ealmund (I58608)
|
| 5581 |
If 1847, the birthdate is too close the the child recorded at New Salem 5 April 1848. If this is a child in this family, he must have died before the 1850 census. | FREEMAN Frank Henry (I40045)
|
| 5582 |
If this is the same Thomas, some records show he didn't die at 11 yrs. 3 days,
but lived to marry Judith Gilbert (daughter of Judith Hayward Goss Gilbert) and
granddaughter of Deacon Henery Gilbert in 1765. | Brown Thomas (I50754)
|
| 5583 |
Igneach married Eochaidh Buide (mac Aedain) mac Áedáin in about 600 at an unknown location. The couple had one child: Domnall Brecc (mac Echdach Buide) mac Eochu Buide.[1]
Sources
↑ Family: Title: Ancestry Family Trees. Publication: Name: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. NOTEThis information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created,
Page: Ancestry Family Trees
Data:
Text:.
Ancestry Profile: #-978329871 (accessed before 21 March 2011). | UNKNOWN Igneach (I59253)
|
| 5584 |
Igor was born about 0877., He was possibly the son of Rurik, mother unknown. His father being Rurik is questioned on chronolgical grounds.
Igor died about A.D. 945 he was supposed to have been killed whilst collecting tribute from the Drevlians. [1]:
He married about 930/35 to OLGA [2]
He was Grand Prince of Russia.
Source
↑ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Igor_of_Kiev
↑ The Primary Chronicle records that a wife Olga was brought to Igor from Pskov in 903. However that date is clearly inconsistent with the suggested birth date of their son Sviatoslav which was in 935/40
RUSSIA, RURIKID at FMG | РЮРИКОВИЧ Игорь (I58814)
|
| 5585 |
Imbert Lullier était le fils de Jean Luillier, seigneur de la Mothe d'Esgry[1] et de sa femme Jeanne de Victry[2]. Il fut reçu auditeur des comptes le 18 juillet 1467[3].
Il épousa Marguerite Braque, fille de Germain Braque et Catherine Deslandes. Marguerite Braque mourut en ou avant 1485[3]. Il a eu de ce premier mariage quatre enfants en vie en 1496, Jean, Charles, Catherine et Marie Luillier[4].
Il épousa en secondes noces, avant le 28 juillet 1485, Françoise de Marigné[5] dont il eut deux filles, Jeanne et Françoise[4].
Il est mort avant le 4 février 1496, date du partage de sa succession[4]
Sources
↑ Rappel d'un acte de partage des deux maisons sises entre les rue du Roi-de-Sicile, des Ecouffes et des Juifs, entre Imbert Luillier et Jean de Harlay, Louis Luillier et sa femme, héritiers de Jean Luillier, sieur de La Mothe d'Esgry, acte passé le 2 août 1475, Jean Duconseil, notaire. Cotes : MC/ET/XIX/151 14 janvier 1539, Minutes et répertoires du notaire Jean TROUVÉ, 1533 - 1er février 1554 (étude XIX), Archives Nationales
↑ Élites Parisiennes entre XVe et XVIIe siècle : du bon usage du Cabinet des titres, Robert Descimon, Bibliothèque de l'École des chartes Année 1997 155-2 pp. 607-644, page 623, Persee.doc, Dec 2018
↑ 3.0 3.1 Armorial général de la France, de Louis-Pierre d'Hozier, Registre 3, 1ère partie, Firmin-Didot, 1752. Page: 70 (Braque), Google Books, Dec 2018
↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 Partage des biens de la succession d'Imbert Luillier entre noble Denis de Landes, élu sur le fait des aides, tuteur de Jean, Charles, Catherine et Marie Luillier, enfants d'un premier lit du défunt, d'une part, et Françoise de Marigné, deuxième femme d'Imbert Luillier, pour Jeanne et Françoise Luillier, ses filles, d'autre part. Cotes : MC/ET/XIX/10 4 février 1496 Minutes et répertoires du notaire Jean TROUVÉ, 1533 - 1er février 1554 (étude XIX), Archives Nationales
↑ Titre nouvel par Noël Delaporte, laboureur à Gentilly, pour trois quartiers de terre en ce lieu, chargés de 3 s.p. de rente envers noble Françoise de Marigné, femme en secondes noces de noble Imbert Luillier, seigneur de Corbeilles et de la Motte-d'Égry, clerc des comptes, et envers noble Guyon de Saint-Benoît, fils de son premier mariage avec Jacques de Saint-Benoît. Cotes : MC/ET/XIX/1 28 juillet 1485, Minutes et répertoires du notaire Pierre I PICHON, 14 janvier 1465 - 14 avril 1493 (étude XIX), Archives Nationales
Bretigny-sur-Orge, etc. M. Bertrandy-Lacabane; Cerf et fils, 59 rue Duplessis, Versailles, 1886. Several transcribed acts mentioning Imbert as spouse of Françoise de Marigné as well as their children. See pages 157-162. | LUILLIER Imbert (I57821)
|
| 5586 |
Imiza (also Irmentrude and Ermentrude) of Luxembourg, daughter of Frederick of Luxembourg and Ermentrude of Gleiberg, was born 990/1000 and died after c. 1055/6. She married Welf II of Swabia and had children Cuniza (or Cunigunde) and Welf III.[1]
Note
Ancestor of Matilda of Flanders, Queen Consort of William the Conqueror. Wikipedia article about Welf III calls her Imiza.
Sources
↑ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imiza_of_Luxembourg | LUXEMBOURG Imizia (I59487)
|
| 5587 |
Imma[1], also seen as Emma
Parents
Father: Nebe "Hnabi"[2]
Mother: Hereswint UKNOWN[3]
Marriage
m. Gerold, Graf im Kraichgau "Udalrichinger" (d. aftr 01 Jul 784; p. unknown).[4] Issue: 6[5]
Gerold II (d. 01 Sep 799)[6]
Udalrich I (d. 824)[7][1]
Udo (d. ante 798)[8]
Hildegard (758 - 30 Apr 783 Thionville, Moselle)[9]
m. (ante 30 Apr 771) Charles I, King of the Franks (p. Pepin "le Bref" and Bertrada (Berta) "au Grand Pied")[10]
Adrian[11]
Erbio (d. ante 11 Jul 793)[12]
Burial in Lorsch Abbey Lorsch, Kreis Bergstraße, Hessen, Germany is recorded in Find A Grave. Looking for something to substantiate this since no graves remain and burials from that time period are thought to lie beneath an attached open grassy field.
Sources
↑ Through Udalrich, Gerold is reckoned as the founder of the family of the Udalrichians.
Royal Ancestry by Douglas Richardson Vol. V page 483
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ ↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A Prosopography of Medieval European Noble and Royal Families, Online at Foundation for Medieval Genealogy Website
https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/SWABIA.htm#_Toc359919994 records her death in 798
https://pure.uva.nl/ws/files/1900807/128167_05.pdf footnote indicates donation to Lorsch Abby by
http://www.toveogflemming.dk/tove/per05924.htm and http://www.toveogflemming.dk/tove/per05925.htm#0 well sourced genealogical works covering both Imma and her husband.
See also:
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/146206718/emma-von_alemannen
https://www.stripes.com/travel/lorsch-abbey-and-museum-tell-a-tale-of-medieval-germany-1.61478 indicates what is left.
https://www.sophiesworld.net/lorsch-abbey-unesco-germany/ Many photos of the Lorsch Abbey grounds. One shows the field where it is believed the graves of Merovingian and early Carolingian nobles can be found. So this begs the question, how does the person who created the Find A Grave for Emma know she was buried here? So far no corroborating information has been found. | ALEMANNIA Imma (I58147)
|
| 5588 |
Immediate neighbor: James Gleason and Mary | Williams Thomas (I55892)
|
| 5589 |
Immigrant ancestor of Sanford Myron Freeman, of Webster, Massachusetts, was probably born in Devonshire, England. | FOSTER Timothy (I37892)
|
| 5590 |
Immigrated from Baden, Germany on the ship "Mercury". Departed from
Havre and arrived in New York 28 Sept. 1865. With him were apparently
two sisters; Emma Leutz age 24 and Catherine Leutz age 18; all three
were given the occupation of farmers. | LEUTZ Emil (I5096)
|
| 5591 |
Immigration 1670, New France as "King's Daughter" Age 16.
Occupation: Homemaker
Religion: Catholic
Three years later Mathurin declared himself ready to take a wife. The
time was propitious since the King had just sent to this new country
one of the largest contingents of his "daughters," under the
direction of Anne Gasnier and Elisabeth Estienne. Mathurin needed a
strong wife and he found her in Marie Campion, a young girl of 16
years. She had all of the qualities required to raise a family in the
difficult conditions of that time, when one needed much courage to
set up a home and to succeed in living with only the raw materials
which are found in nature.
"The King's Daughters, like their predecessors, wrote Silvio Dumas,
were courageous. It is true that they came to Canada to try to build
a better future than the one they had in France, but that takes
nothing away from their courageous actions. Emigration to faraway
colonies was unsympathetically viewed in the mother country at that
time. They knew from the Jesuit reports that Canada had a severe
climate, was closed to all communications for six months of the year,
and was subject to damage from the Iroquois. To emigrate to this new
country, which was described at times as "a place of horror," was
perhaps an adventure to tempt the men but not the women. Those who
came during this time of emigration left a country where it was good
to live and which was, in addition, the best organized country in
Europe; they left it to go to a far off colony without hope of seeing
their native land again. So, we cannot deny that these women
possessed a strong measure of courage." (3)
PIONEER OF THE ILE D'ORLEANS
Therefore, on 28 August 1670, Mathurin Dube, having discovered this
rare pearl, needed the services of an expert in marriage contracts,
the notary Romain Becquet. The contract revealed that our pioneer
lived on the Ile d'Orleans and that he was the son of the late Jean
Dube and Renee Suzanne, his father and mother, from "la Chapelle de
May, near the town of Fontenay, diocese of Lucon." For her part,
Marie Campion was the daughter of Pierre and of the late Marguerite
Esnau (Henaut), her father and mother, from the town of Saint-Malo in
Brittany (Ille-et-Vilaine). (4) The future spouses agreed to live in
joinder as to property following the Couturne de Paris.
Marie was endowed with the sum of 200 livres, and Mathurin
acknowledged that she brought to the future household a sum equal to
his and that half would belong to the estate, plus a sum of 50 livres
that His Majesty gave her in consideration of her marriage. As usual
several witnesses took part in concluding this type of agreement.
There was Anne Gasnier, widow of Jean Bourdon, former seigneur of
Saint-Jean and of Saint Francois and former procurer-general of the
Sovereign Council; Louis Rouer de Villeray, first councillor of the
same tribunal; Elisabeth Estienne, Jean-Baptiste Gosset, and Claude
Morin. All signed with the notary, with the exception of the future
spouses, who made their mark.
The nuptial ceremony took place six days later in the parish of
Mathurin Dube, Sainte-Famille on the Ile d'Orleans. (5) A copy of the
parish registry indicates, however, that the parents of the bride
were from Saint-Nicaise de Rouen. Why this different origin than the
one indicated on her marriage contract? Was Marie born in Saint-Malo?
Did her parents later move to Rouen? This could be a plausible
explanation. | CAMPION Marie (I1755)
|
| 5592 |
Immigration Jan. 1, 1923 to Cedar Rapids, Linn Co., IA
Occupation: Farmer
SSN: 481-44-9101 | SEBETKA Lester John (I49765)
|
| 5593 |
Immigration: 13 May 1665, Quebec, New France Age: 18
Occupation: Soldier In Grandfontain's Company, Carignan Regiment Of
New France; Farmer
Religion: Catholic
Jean Soucy dit Lavigne
Picardy was the province of origin of the ancestor of all the Soucy
families in America. Normandy, Artois, Flanders, Champagne and the
Ile-de-France surround this territory, which is subdivided into three
departments: the Aisne, the Oise and the Somme.
At Quebec on 9 October 1669, before notary Romain Becquet, Jean
Lavigne stated that he was originally from Saint-Vulfran in
Abbeville, diocese of Amiens. In the department of the Somme,
Abbeville, known to the Romans as abbatis villa, or "city of the
abbey", is one of the oldest inhabited sites in France.
Archaeological research has revealed that at this place primitive man
used sharpened flint as a tool.
The history of Abbeville is steeped in religion. Before the French
Revolution this city was host to 16 parishes, 7 monasteries and 8
convents. Of the 4 remaining parishes, the most venerable and the
largest is Saint-Vulfran. The mortal remains of this saint were
brought to Abbeville in 1058. In 1121 a collegiate church was
founded. Vulfran, archbishop of Sens in the seventh century, then
apostle of the Frisons (the Dutch), for centuries after his death was
invoked against the dangers of the sea. The present church which is
dedicated to him was begun in 1488 and was therefore the one attended
by Jean Soucy, son of Claude and of Francoise de Vaime of Cevainne.
No researcher has yet located the baptismal record of this father of
numerous descendants, Jean Soucy dit Lavigne.
LA VIGNE FROM THE REGIMENT
Jean Soucy arrived in New France as a soldier of his Majesty in the
famous Carignan Regiment; composed of 20 companies of 50 soldiers or
1,000 men. Four other companies from the Navarre regiment increased
the royal military strength-to 1,200 effectives. Up until that time,
never had a colony in the New World seen so many troops debark in a
single year.
Nearly all of these regular army soldiers had a double last name.
Here are a few examples selected at random: 12 Laverdure, 7 Lafleur,
6 Laviolette, 2 Laforest one each of Laramee, Laplante, Latulippe,
Latreille, Larose, Bellerose, and 2 dit Lavigne: Jean Soucy and Andre
Poutre.
Soucy dit Lavigne was part of Grandfontaine's company, as was Jean
Bergevin, Louis Bolduc, Rene Dumas, Pierre Hudon and Pierre Lacroix.
Before coming to Canada, had Soucy fought under the French flag
against Austria? Quite possibly but unprovable.
Let's summarize the verified facts. The last preparations before the
dispatch of the regiment to Canada were carried out in the winter of
1665. On 11 April, Colbert de Terron went to La Rochelle where 4
companies were quartered. The 16 others, including Jean Soucy's, were
billeted not far away, on the Ile de Oleron. On 4 May, Jean Talon
ascertained that there were only 200 mattresses for all the soldiers
so he quickly ordered 500 additional straw pallets. The seas were
high and the barometer was low. The weather was cold, rainy and raw,
hence the departure was delayed. On 13 May, the ship named L'Aigle
d'Or with a 400 ton capacity, a veritable old worm-eaten hulk of the
seas left the port of La Rochelle with 200 soldiers in 4 companies:
Salieries, La Frediere, La Motte and Grandfontaine. The crossing took
more than 3 months, with progress at the mercy of the wind and seas.
Captain Villepars successfully reached the Gaspe with his ship, which
had sprung a leak on the high seas. The anchor was dropped a few
leagues downstream from the Saguenay River. Lieutenant Sertine went
ashore to find an experienced pilot. Finally, on the evening of 17
August, Jean Soucy glimpsed Quebec in the semi-darkness. The next
morning, on Tuesday, 18 August 1665, our happy ancestor stepped on
the soil of his new homeland.
L'Aigle d'Or sailed from Quebec on 13 September. On 6 November she
berthed at La Rochelle. Colbert said upon seeing the ship that it was
no longer seaworthy. Mission accomplished! As a last gasp the old
ship served in a naval action as a giant fireship.
MILITARY ACTIVITIES
After the debarkation at Quebec, it is difficult to say where the
soldiers (and jean Soucy) were billeted at that time. Perhaps the
L'Aigle d'Or served as temporary sleeping quarters. There were only
70 houses it "pierrotees " on top of the old rock, reported the
Ursulines.
On 19 August, the soldiers passed in parade. Solemnly, the Marquis
de Tracy reviewed his 8 companies, all of whom appeared to be in good
condition. The population rejoiced. The religious authorities took
advantage of this to organize a type of retreat preliminary to
receiving the sacrament of confirmation on 21 and 22 August. The
retreat master was Father Claude Dablon, S.J. Jean Soucy was not on
the list of those confirmed. What a shame, because then we would know
his age.
"During the course of the last week of August, numerous soldiers
received the scapular of Mont-Carmel." The list of candidates
included jean Soucy dit Lavigne and Pierre Feuvrier, both from the
Grandfontaine company. "There were indeed five hundred soldiers who
took the scapular of the Virgin saint," wrote Marie de l'Incarnation.
The recitation of the rosary in common was an almost daily practice.
It wasn't war they wanted, but a crusade in favor of peace.
Already summer was slipping away; September was bringing shorter and
cooler days. There still remained a campaign for which to prepare. It
was necessary to busy the non-commissioned officers and the enlisted
men with a useful and necessary project before the onset of winter.
The scope of the strategy went like this: to put obstacles in the way
of Mohawk movement on the Richelieu River, from Lake Champlain to the
Saint-Lawrence. On 2 September, Jean Soucy's company and several
others made their way towards the river of the Iroquois. On 22
October, after they had built Fort Sainte-Therese , they received the
mission from Governor de Courcelle to build a passable road linking
Fort Sainte-Therese to Fort Saint-Louis (Chambly).
Jean Soucy then returned to Quebec where he wintered over. In 1666,
under his company commander, Hector d'Andigne de Grandfontaine, he
took part in the expedition against the Mohawks, beyond Lake
Champlain. On 17 October 1666, the army took possession of the
invaded territory. And history tells USA that the soldiers gave a
rousing three cheers "Vive le Roy!" Certainly Jean Soucy was among
them. The agenda for the years 1667 and 1668 is notable for its
absence. There was general demobilization with voluntary return of
the soldiers to France. Jean Soucy was among those who decided to
adopt this new country.
FAILED MARRIAGE PLANS
Jean Soucy traded his gun for the axe and the plow. In the autumn of
1669, his heart was full of love. On 6 October in the home office of
notary Romain Becquet at Quebec, he committed himself to take as his
legitimate wife, one Madeleine Marechal, daughter of Jean and of the
late Catherine Frenost. He signed his own name "Jean Lavigne." This
daughter of the King was a native of Amiens, a renowned city in
Picardy, also the homeland of her future husband.
This orphan girl brought property valued at 200 livres in addition
to the "sum of fifty livres which His Majesty gave her in
Consideration of her marriage." However, it seems that Madeleine had
previously married Pierre Poupardeau, origin unknown, also known by
the last name of Le Vagabond. Therefore it was necessary for Jean to
annul the marriage contract which was done on 13 October, just seven
days later. Madeleine and her vagabond eventually had 3 children:
Jean, Isabelle and Louis, however, on 3 July 1684, Madeleine was run
out of Montreal for bad conduct.
JEAN SOUCY FINDS A RARE PEARL
Jean Soucy patiently waited to find a kindred spirit and eventually
he did. However, nothing- has been discovered, not even a notary
contract, to help in fixing the approximate date of his marriage. As
his first child was born on 5 September 1671, it is reasonable to
assume that Jean took a wife in the autumn of 1670. Rene Jette even
believes that the religious ceremony took place on the Ile d'Orleans.
Who, therefore, was this incomparable wife? Her name was Jeanne
Sauvenier or Savonet, the 23 year old daughter of Jacques and of
Antoinette Babillotte from the city of Paris. She was a courageous
woman of good sense, which is just what Jean Soucy wanted.
ON THE ISLANDS OF THE SNOW GEESE
The non- commissioned officers of the famous regiment, those who
decided to settle in Canada, obtained fiefs and seigneuries in return
for their service to the crown. They also were able to marry girls of
good families. Thus, Paul Dupuy de Lisloye, husband of Jeanne
Couillard, became the owner of half of the Ile-aux-Oies and the Ile-
aux-Grues, in the Saint-Lawrence River, not far from the Ile
d'Orleans. Pierre Becart de Grandville, an officer in Grandfontaine's
company, husband of Anne Macard, daughter of Nicolas and Marguerite
Couillard, obtained from seigneur Louis Couillard de Lespinay on 16
October 1668, the other halves of the islands. On 17 October 1671,
the two seigneurs, Dupuy and Becart, agreed to redivide their
properties. Paul owned the large Ile-aux-Oies, and Pierre the small
Ile-aux-Oies and the Ile-aux-Grues. Here are the historical facts to
help USA understand the hidden history of Jean Soucy.
Pierre Becart had earned decorations and done deeds which,
nevertheless, left him unfulfilled. Rather early in life he retired
to his islands and requested the help of Jean Soucy, an old military
acquaintance. From 1669, Jean Soucy worked hard to build the simple
manor house of his seigneur. In 1670, he married and continued his
activities as protege of Pierre Becart. The latter ceded to him,
perhaps verbally, a piece of land on the Ile-aux-Grues. There, Jean
built his house which he occupied about 1674. In fact, on 17 July
1674, Pierre Michaud, who obtained a concession on the Ile-aux-Grues,
was a neighbor to Jean Soucy.
Such are the approximate facts concerning the settlement by Jean
Soucy on the small islands of the great white geese.
FOUR CHILDREN
The registries list 4 Soucy children: Anne, Pierre, Marie-Anne and
Guillaume, all born on the islands, all baptized by Abbot Thomas
Morel, missionary on the South Coast and the first priest of Saint-
Anne-de-Beaupre.
Anne, born on the Ile-aux-Oies on 5 September 1671, was baptized at
Cap-Saint-Ignace on the 15th of the same month. The act was recorded
at Sainte-Famille. The seigneuresse Anne Macard, accompanied by
seigneur Paul Dupuy, stood up for her at the font. Anne Soucy married
Jean Lebel, son of our ancestor Nicolas, on 16 August 1689 at Riviere-
Ouelle. They had 5 children. Jean Lebel was buried in the same place
on 6 October 1699. Anne was also the mother of a child born out of
wedlock. Marie-Therese, baptized on 6 October 1703 at Riviere-Ouelle.
The latter married Louis Morais, of unknown origin, at La Pocatiere
about 1729. On 24 November 1704, widow Anne Soucy was married to
Jacques Bois, who had arrived in the country about 1698. The. new
couple saw the birth of 8 Bois children. As a result, the descendants
of Anne Soucy have been most numerous.
On 13 April 1673, Pierre, the eldest of the Soucy boys was born. On
the 16th of the same month, Seigneur Pierre Becart served as his
godparent along with Jeanne Couillard, wife of Paul Dupuy. The
baptism was recorded in the registry of Notre-Dame de Quebec. Msgr de
Laval conferred the sacrament of confirmation on this child at
Montmagny on 31 July 1681. Elisabeth-Ursule Fouquerau, daughter of
Urbain and of Jeanne Rossignol, captured Pierre's heart and married
him at Riviere-Ouelle on 13 January 1699. Twelve children were the
jewels in the crown of this beautiful union. Pierre was a farmer and
also fished for porpoise. He died at an advanced age.
Marie-Anne, the first child born on the Ile-aux-Grues on 15 February
1675, was baptized on 26 April before her godfather Pierre Michaud.
At the age of 21, on 24 November 1701 at Riviere-Ouelle, Marie-Anne
became the bride of Charles Pelletier, son of Noel. Charles died on 7
October 1713. They had only one son, Joseph, who was a seminarian
when he died at the Hotel Dieu in Quebec on 21 April 1723. Marie-Anne
then became the wife of Robert Gaulin, widower of Elisabeth
Latourneau, father of 14 children, at Sainte-Famille, on 15 April
1716. Marie-Anne has no descendants.
There remains the youngest to present. Guillaume, the godson of
Guillaume Lemieux and Marie-Anne Langlois, was born on 5 April 1677
and baptized on the first of May. This Guillaume does not seem to
have married. However, he had a natural son by Marguerite Bouchard,
wife of Fran is Dutartre. This unheralded child was named Jean
Baptiste dit Guillaume. He went to the Montreal region as a young
man, where he married the widow of Jean Laroche, one Catherine
Demers, on 18 June 1726 at Laprairie. To her 6 Laroche children,
Catherine Demers added 3 Soucy children: Jean-Baptiste, Marie-
Angelique and Louis.
Such is the brief account of the first harvest of Soucy offspring in
America.
SAUVENIER-BERUBE-MIVILLE
One inevitable day ancestor jean Soucy died; we know neither how nor
why. During her mourning Jeanne Sauvenier met ancestor Damien Berube
and married him on 22 August 1679. Proof appears in the registry of
l'Islet. To the Berube history, previously featured in this series,
let USA add that in the census of 1681, the 4 Soucy children remained
well protected in the home of Damien Berube at Riviere-Ouelle. There,
they knew 6 Berube half-brothers and sisters and, later, a half-
sister, Marie-Francoise Miville, the daughter of Francois and of
Jeanne Sauvenier, their mother.
The Soucy family has spread out and is most numerous in both Canada
and in the United States. We find them in all trades and professions.
Let it suffice to recall the memory of a family of Soucy sculptors:
Elzear, Cleophas and Donat. For three generations they lived at Saint-
Onesime in Kamouraska. In 1924, Elzear Soucy sculpted a Pierre
Lemoyne d'Iberville "which truly has style." This work may be admired
in an exterior niche of the parliament of Quebec.
FAMILY NAME VARIATIONS
Soucy: Coussi, Enouille, Lavigne, Sansouci, Soucey, Souci, Soucis,
Soucisse, Souisix, Sousis, Sousix, and Suprenant.
Lavigne: Bernard, Bidault, Bideau, Boursier, Bourtier, Brisetout,
Brodeur, Colin, Dextra, Doutre, Fily, Fydy, Gour, Graps, Lachaise,
Lacheze, Lamy, Langire, Lavaigne, Lavene, Lavigny, Lavine, Lavyne,
Levasseur, Levine, Nadeau, Poudre, Poutre, Rivard, Saviot, Sigu,
Soucy, Tessier and Texier.
END NOTES
Record of Becquet, 6 October 1669.
Record of Lecomte, 16 October 1668.
Du Broc de Segauge, Les Saints Patrons des Corporations et
Protecteurs (1887), Vol. I, pp. 200-201.
Dumas, Silvio., LFRNF (1972), pp. 292-293, 332-333.
Jette, Rene'., DGFQ (1983), p. 942.
Lafontaine, Andre'., RANF 1681 (1981), p. 198.
Roy, Regis & Malchelosse, Gerard., Le Regiment de Carignan (1925),
p. 92.
Talbot, Eloi-Gerard., Genealogie des Familles originaires des comtes
de Montmagny, l'Islet, Bellechasse, Vol. 15, p. 108.
Annuaire Catholique de France (1981-1982), p. 75.
BRH, Vol. 13, pp. 350-351; Vol. 52, pp. 143-145.
DBC, Vol. 1, pp. 62-64; Vol. 2, pp. 220-222.
JDCS (1888), Vol. 4, pp. 135-136.
La Grande Encyclopedie, (Tours - Imprimerie de E. Arrault et Cie.
sans date), Vol. 1, pp. 44-46.
Nos racines, 22nd issue, pp. 436-437.
PRDH, Vol. 7, Index words Soucy, Soussy; Vol. 18, pp. 436-437.
Revue de l'Universite-d'Ottawa, Vol. 35, pp. 11-34.
SGQ, I'Ancetre, Vol. 3, p. 14; Vol. 6, p. 176.
Jean Soucy dit Lavigne #2838
!OCCUPATION: Soldier with the Regiment de Carignan, Company of Mr.
Grandfontaine. Arrived in Canada on Aug. 17, 1665.
!MARRIAGE: First marriage annuled. Was married with Madeleine
Marechal, with a contract in front of Notary Becquet on Oct. 6, 1669.
She later married Pierre Pompardeau.
!RESIDENCE: Noted as living in Notre-Dame de Liesse, Quebec, Canada,
on daughter Marie-Madeleine's mariage contract with Charles Peltier.
Birth record of his son Pierre mentions Cap Saint-Ignace as
residence. Birth record of daughter Marie Anne (2/15/1675) mentions
Ile-aux-Grues, Quebec, as residence. Birth record of daughter Anne
(9/5/1671) mentions Cap Saint-Ignace as residence.32 | SOUCY Jean (Lavigne) "Dit Lavique" (I9121)
|
| 5594 |
Immigration: 1635 Quebec, New France
Madeleine (1634-1691), was probably born during the Atlantic
crossing. In 1647 she married Urbain Baudry dit Lamarche, an edge-
tool maker and master blacksmith. They lived for a time in Quebec but
then lived in Trois-Rivieres for more than thirty years, where she
died. | BOUCHER Madeleine (I1289)
|
| 5595 |
Immigration: 1635 Quebec, New France
Marguerite (1631-1669), was born at Mortagne, married Toussaint
Toupin, a master boatman, and died in the Quebec region. | BOUCHER Marguerite (I1294)
|
| 5596 |
Immigration: 1635 Quebec, New France | BOUCHER Marie (I1298)
|
| 5597 |
Immigration: 1635 Quebec, New France | BOUCHER Nicholas (I1319)
|
| 5598 |
Immigration: 1635, Quebec, New France
Religion: Catholic | LEMAIRE Nicole (I5056)
|
| 5599 |
Immigration: 1635, Quebec, New France
Occupation: Master Carpenter
Religion: Catholic
Gaspard Boucher may count among his descendants a great number of the
most remarkable families in Canada. Such is, in substance, the
finding of Msgr. Cyprien Tanguay contained in a short three-line
notation, which must be read with a magnifying glass because it
appears as a footnote to a page in his monumental work "Dictionnaire
genealogique des familles canadiennes." (1)
THE HEAD OF A CANADIAN DYNASTY
Indeed, this remarkable descendancy includes a Governor, a Prime
Minister, Ministers, Legislators, Bishops, illustrious warriors as
well as renowned male and female educators. We have here an entire
dynasty about which one could write a saga more captivating even than
the "Chronique des Pasquier, Jean-Christophe, or the Comedie
humaine." (2) There are also various intrigues from which an expert
writer could create a compellingly passionate tale.
In the meantime, while waiting for the legend of the Bouchers, to
flow from the pen of an historian who, with a little poetic flavor,
would reveal the exploits and feats-of-arms of these three centuries
and until all of the scattered documents have been assembled, let USA
portray the ancestor Gaspard as a humble settler who came from Perche
with his entire family in 1635. He had no intention of accomplishing
feats of arms and entering his name in the history books. He would
leave this task to his son Pierre and to the latter's offspring.
Moreover, if Gaspard Boucher and Pierre had not taken the initiative
of' settling in Trois-Rivieres, the destiny of this family would have
been different. Providence, in its unfathomable wisdom, often knows
how to place good people in the right place at the right time.
From 1629 to 1632, while New France suffered under the yoke of the
Kirke brothers, very few Frenchmen lived in that area of the world.
For his part, Robert Giffard, Seigneur of Beauport, had returned to
France. In 1634 he decided to come back to Canada, but this time with
his wife, his children and as many colonists as he could recruit.
Jean Guyon, Zacharie Cloutier, Noel Langlois and Jean Juchereau came
with this first group. Meanwhile, Gaspard Boucher was making his
final decision to leave the land of his fathers.
FATHER, MOTHER AND FIVE CHILDREN, CROSS THE SEA
Born at the end of the XVI century, Gaspard, probably the son of
Jacques Boucher and of Francoise Paigne, was married to Nicole
Lemaire when he was about twenty years old. At least eight children
were born of this union, five of whom crossed the seas with their
parents. However, on 25 May 1633, it is not at all certain that our
ancestor had any intention of leaving his homeland. On that date our
master carpenter acquired from his mother-in-law, Marie Gastrie, a
plot of land and an orchard at Perruchet, in the parish of Saint-
Hilaire. But he sold this property on 1 February 1634. Had he already
made the decision to go to New France? It is quite possible. However,
he was not on the first voyage, the one in 1634, as several
historians have stated.
Besides, on the following 20 April, (3) we learn that Marie Gastrie,
"abandoned wife of Pierre Delorme, her second husband," ensured her
son-in-law and daughter a legacy superior to that of her other heirs
because Gaspard and Nicole had provided for the forsaken lady without
recompense for eighteen months. Pierre Boucher himself stated in his
Memoires that he was one of the earliest inhabitants of New France,
"having been brought over to this country by my late father in 1635.
" (4) In addition, an act by notary Decourtemanche discovered by
Madame Pierre Montagne in the archives of Alencon confirms this. (5)
On 19 March 1635, the Boucher's were still in France; but on that day
they sold, left, ceded and transferred forever to Jeanne Desjouis,
two parcels of plowed but unsown land at Charbonniers, adjoining the
monastery of Val-Dieu. (6)
This was probably Gaspard's last transaction in his native Perche. A
few days later, the family bade adieu to their relatives and friends,
received the blessing of the Cure Alexandre Chevalier, traveled the
forty leagues (160 km) by wagon, (from Mortagne to Dieppe) and
embarked on one of the ships commanded by Duplessis-Bouchart.(7)
Coming out of the English Channel, the convoy evaded a fleet of
Turkish ships and made the transit, beset by the usual Atlantic
storms. This voyage was longer than the one the previous year, but
they finally reached the promised land on 4 July. A long-boat sent
from Tadoussac announced their imminent arrival at Quebec. The good
ship Saint-Jacques, commanded by Roche-Jacquelin, arrived there eight
days later.
CHAMPLAIN WELCOMES THE NEW ARRIVALS
"Samuel de Champlain, who was still living, (he died on Christmas
Day 1635), writes Montarville de la Bruere, welcomed the new arrivals
at Fort Saint-Louis. Without doubt he could not have suspected that
one among them, a young boy of thirteen, would later be one of the
principal instruments of the salvation of his dear colony. However,
it was a great consolation during his last days, to see added to his
nation such an industrious and honest family. " (8)
Gaspard himself asked Champlain for protection on his arrival at
Quebec. He then took advantage of this to inform the Governor of an
incident in which he was a victim. Thomas Giroust, a traveling
companion to whom he had entrusted some personal effects, refused to
return them. Champlain ordered Giroust to return the property that he
had kept illegally. Giroust pretended to obey, but later swore that
he would not. This affair dragged on for three years, and finally
justice was done. On 12 September 1638, Gaspard recounted that he had
asked Giroust to take him from Mortagne to Dieppe, with baggage which
contained, among other things, "two large salt cellars, two large
flower vases, two large plates, six porridge bowls, all in a tin
case, eight to ten plates, three small bowls, two of pewter and one
of tin, a ceramic bottle containing rosewater, two bushels of cooked
pears and one bushel of cooked prunes." (9) All of these items were
put aboard the ship and brought to Quebec. This theft of utensils did
not benefit Giroust, because it appears that he was obligated to sell
his property and return to France.
THE INFLUENCE OF THE BOUCHER FAMILY IN TROIS-RIVIERES
During the first ten years of his stay in New France, it seems that
Gaspard Boucher was a farmer for the Jesuits at Beauport. In 1644 he
received a section of land at Trois-Rivieres, probably granted by the
Governor, Charles Hualt de Montmagny. The Boucher family was well
established by 1646, because in that year two of the ancestor's
daughters, 12 year old Madeleine and 15 year old Marguerite, were
listed in the civil records of the town as godmothers, paired with
Michel Leneuf and Jean Godefroy.
"At the post of Trois-Rivieres, writes Sister Estelle Mitchell, (10)
the Boucher family had great influence, being made up of eighteen
people while the total population did not exceed one hundred. (11)
Gaspard, the father, as well as his sons-in-law Baudry and Lafond,
signed the official report of the election, as trustee, of Michel
Leneuf du Herisson in September 1648. (12) ... On Sunday, 17 January
1649, at the home of Gaspard Boucher, a marriage contract was signed
between his son Pierre and Marie Chrestien(sic), a Huron woman living
in Trois-Rivieres and who was related to the Pachirini family. (13)
Marie-Madeleine Chretienne, as historians call her, was a boarder for
a few years at the Ursuline convent." Mother Marie de l'Incarnation
said about her: "There are some among the Hurons who persevered in
their studies and whom we raised as French girls. We provide for them
and they do very well in reading, writing and speaking French. We
have introduced one of these girls to Monsieur Boucher who has been
for some time the Governor of Trois-Rivieres." (14)
The whole Boucher family fully approved of this marriage.
On 16 June 1649, Gaspard sold his property to Jean Sauvaget, (15)
but Governor d'Ailleboust granted him another on 1 June 1650, as "a
place to build a house at the bottom of the hillside where the fort
is situated." ( 16) This property had an area of 300 toises; 10 in
frontage by 30 in depth, located near the road which ran from the
town to the common. Gaspard's immediate neighbor was his son Pierre,
who also received a grant on the same day. He was located to the
north-west, on the land called the "Marquisat du Sable;" a boundary
which corresponds today with the rue Badeaux. (17)
From 1650 until his unexpected death, few documents detail Gaspard
Boucher's life in Trois-Rivieres. Undoubtedly he cultivated his land,
worked at his trade of carpenter, and above all, he influenced his
son Pierre, who often needed his wise counsel. On 22 November 1655,
the archives of the Provost of Trois-Rivieres mention a lawsuit
brought by, Gaspard against two competitors, the master carpenter
Elie Bourbaut and his associate Michel Lemay: Then we hear no more.
DID GASPARD DIE IN A FIRE IN HIS HOUSE?
On 27 June 1668, Madeleine Boucher, Gaspard's daughter and wife of
Urbain Baudry dit Lamarche, declared that the title to the 24 arpents
of land that her father had received from Governor Hualt de
Montmagny, on 21 March 1646, situated on the Saint-Maurice River "was
burned with the house of the said Gaspard Boucher, in which it was
kept." (18) Can we infer from this evidence that our ancestor himself
perished in his house? Most historians think so: It is certain that
Gaspard passed away between 1662 and 1668. As for his wife Nicole
Lemaire, was she also a victim of this fire? We just don't know. It
was said that she was still alive on 19 June 1652 when the records
mention her as a godmother. After that date there was nothing more.
The burial records of Gaspard and Nicole have fallen into one of the
numerous voids in the registry of Trois-Rivieres.
THE CHILDREN OF GASPARD BOUCHER AND NICOLE LEMAIRE
1. Charles (1620), was born at Mortagne and died an infant.
2. Antoinette (1621-?), was born at Mortagne and died, in France.
3. Pierre (1622-1717).
4. Nicolas (1625-1649), was born at Mortagne and died at Trois-
Rivieres.
5. Charles (1628-?), was born at Mortagne and died in France.
6. Marie (1629-1706), was born at Mortagne, married Etienne Pepin de
Lafond in 1645 and died at Batiscan.
7. Marguerite (1631-1669), was born at Mortagne, married Toussaint
Toupin, a master boatman, and died in the Quebec region.
8. Madeleine (1634-1691), was probably born during the Atlantic
crossing. In 1647 she married Urbain Baudry dit Lamarche, an edge-
tool maker and master blacksmith. They lived for a time in Quebec but
then lived in Trois-Rivieres for more than thirty years, where she
died.
THE CHILDREN OF PIERRE BOUCHER AND JEANNE CREVIER
1. Pierre (1653-1724?), Sieur de Boucherville, married Charlotte
Denis in 1683 at Quebec. They had 12 children.
2. Marie, also known as Marie-Ursule (1655-after 1688), married
Rene' Gauthier, Sieur de Varennes, in 1667. They had 11
children.
3. Lambert (1656-1699), Sieur de Grandpre, married Marie-Marguerite
rite Vauvril in 1693 at Quebec. They had 3 children.
4. Ignace (1659-1699), Sieur de Grosbois, married Marie-Anne Margane
in 1694 at Montreal. They had 5 children.
5. Madeleine (1661-after 160), married Pierre-NoeI LeGardeur, Sieur
de Tilly, in 1680 at Boucherville. They had 12 children.
6. Marguerite also known as Marie (1663-1698), married Nicolas
Danieu, Sieur de Muy, in 1687 at Boucherville. They had 7 children.
7. Philipp (1665-1721) was ordained a priest in 1689. He died at
Lauzon.
8. Jean (1667-after 1715) Sieur de Monbrun, married Francoise-Claire
Charet in 1692 at Lauzon. They had 12 children.
9. Rene (1668-after 1726) Sieur de LaPerriere, married Marie-
Francoise Maillot at Montreal in 1705. She died a few days after the
birth of their second child.
10. Jeanne (1670-1703) married Jacques-Charles Sabrevios, Sieur de
Bleury, in 1695 at Boucherville. They had 6 children.
11. Louise (1670-?) was the twin of Jeanne. Born at Boucherville but
no further information.
12. Nicolas (1672-?) was ordained a priest in 1696.
13. Jean-Baptiste (1673-after 1628), Sieur de Niverville , married
Marguerite-Therese Hertel in 1710 at Chambly. They had 12 children.
14. Jacques was the twin of Jean-Baptiste. He died at Boucherville
in 1688.
15. Genevieve was born in 1676 at Boucherville. She became an
Ursuline nun at Quebec in 1696. (21)
END NOTES
1) Volume 1, page 71.
2) Work of Georges Duhamel, Romain Rollard and Honore de Balzac.
3) Act of Roussel, notary of Mortagne.
4) BRH, 1926. Page 398.
5) Author of Tourouvre et les Juchereau. This great friend of Canada
has gathered all the notarial information about the origins of our
ancestors who came from Perche in the XVII century.
6) Quote from Messire Pierre Boucher, the splendid work of Sister
Estelle Mitchell, published on the occasion of the 250th anniversary
of the death of the founder of Boucherville.
7) Charles Duplessis-Bouchart, Admiral of the Fleet of the One
Hundred-Associates. The previous year he had participated in the
founding of Trois-Rivieres, by Laviolette on 4 July 1634. The town
took its name from the three channels through which the Saint-Maurice
River enters the Saint-Lawrence.
8) Cahiers des Dix, No 2, Montreal, 1937, pages 239-240.
9) Guillaume Tronquet, the Secretary to Governor Montmagny, drew up
the official report of testimony.
10) Op Cit (6), pages 63-64.
11) BRH, 1924, page 171.
12) Ibid,1923, page 252.
13) Benjamin Sulte, HCF, Volume 1, page 101. Charles Pachirini was
an Algonquin Chief.
14) Richardeau, Volume 2, page 364. This was an excerpt from a
letter to her son, Dom Claude Martin.
15) Record of the notary Laurent Berman.
16) Record of the notary Guillaume Audouart.
17) Marcel Trudel. Le terrier du Saint-Laurent, 1663. Page 392.
18) Pierre-Georges Roy. Papier terrier de la compagnie des Indes
occidentales. Page 319.
19) J. Richard Lebel. "Je Me Souviens" , Journal of the American
French Genealogical Society, Spring 1982, pages 3-7.
20) Taguay, Jette, et al.
21) Rene Jette. Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec.
Page 136. | BOUCHER Gaspard (I1243)
|
| 5600 |
Immigration: 1660, Quebec, New France Age: 29
Occupation: Farmer
Religion: Catholic
Mathurin Dube
It has been 3 and 1/4 centuries since the Poitevin, Mathurin Dube,
left his native village of Chapelle-Themer to try his luck in New
France. Since this time long ago, there have always been Dubes in
Canada and there still remain some who perpetuate, from generation to
generation, the ancestral line in this humble village in the Vendee.
THE LAST OF THE DUBES IN CHAPELLE-THEMER
In 1928 J.A. Dube, bookkeeper for the J.A. Larochelle firm of
Quebec, began to search for the place of origin of his ancestors. (1)
Thanks to the information provided by two highly esteemed
genealogists of his time, Msgr Amedee Gosselin and Father Archange
Godbout, the researcher succeeded in locating the small village which
for a long time, he had dreamed of visiting. There, he was privileged
to meet the last surviving relative from the French family of his
Canadian ancestor: Jules Dube, son of Louis.
Nine years later, J.A. Dube returned to Chapelle-Themer in order to
renew his ties of friendship with his cousins from France. Alas!
Jules had left for another world in 1934 at the age of 72, but his
mother, the wife of Louis, still lived and the local population was
getting ready to celebrate her 100th birth day. In reality the
venerable ancestress had turned 100 on 28 September 1937, but the
village celebration was on 3 October. On the road which leads to
Sainte-Hermine a la Caillere, near Beau-Raisin, at the crest of the
road going down to the village of Magnils (2), an arch of triumph
carried these words: "Honor to our centenarian."
"The small road, reports the author of the article, was changed into
a lane of greenery and flowers. The village party held in her honor,
that evening, took place in the large yard of Madame Dube and was a
big success. It was there that Monsieur the Mayor, surrounded by all
the council members and speaking for all his administrators, offered
the centenarian the warmest congratulations. The musicians from la
Chapelle and from Thire played selections in her honor. It appeared
that Madame Dube herself was a part of the melody,"
Born in the village of Magnils on 28 September 1837, Madame Dube was
baptized two days later, made her first communion in 1847, was
married on 14 July 1856, her husband died in 1924 and her son in
1934. We do not know exactly when Madame Dube died, but there were
still some Dubes who lived in the community of Chapelle-Themer,
somewhere between Sainte-Hermine and Frontenay-le-Comte. Some
Canadians who recently finished a pilgrimage to the land of their
ancestors have confirmed this.
SERVANT FOR MSGR DE LAVAL
Mathurin Dube, the pioneer of the Canadian families bearing this
name, arrived in New France around 1660, maybe even 1659, at the same
time as Msgr de Laval, for whom he worked for several years. Even if
the ancestor was not listed in the census of 1666 and 1667, it is
certain that he lived in the Quebec region. On 22 June 1667 an act by
notary Paul Vachon reveals that the bishop of Petree conceded his
servant a piece of land, 3 arpents in frontage by half that in width,
on the Ile d'Orleans, within the boundaries of the parish of Saint-
Jean, facing the south bank of the Saint-Lawrence River. His
neighbors were Pierre Michaud and Jacques Jahan.
The first six children of Mathurin and Marie were born on the Ile
d'Orleans: four of whom were baptized at Sainte Famille and the other
two at Saint-Jean. It was in this last parish that the family was
listed in the census of 1681. (6) The master of the house was said to
be 50 years old, and his wife 27; five children were counted:
Mathurin, Madeleine, Louis, Pierre and Charles. The ancestor still
worked only 3 arpents of land and kept but 1 cow; his immediate
neighbors were Jean Moirier (Amaury) and Rene Asseline (Ancelin).
A little later, Mathurin signed 2 farming leases whose contracts
were initialed at the home of notary Gilles Rageot. One, on 26
September, 1684, on behalf of Francois Magdelaine Ruette d'Auteuil et
de Monceaux, councillor and procurer general to the Sovereign
Council; the other on 20 October, from Eleanore de Grandmaison, widow
of Jacques Cailhaut de la Tesserie, former councillor to the same
Council; all of this is to say that Mathurin was the farmer for these
two important people, after having been the farmer for Msgr de Laval;
this would also explain why he hardly had the time to enlarge the
cleared portion of his own land.
FARMER OF THE SEIGNEUR OF AUTEUIL
The contract of 26 September marked the departure of Mathurin and
his family. On 10 October he sold his land at Saint-Jean to Julien
Dumont dit Lafleur. (7) By this time he had already crossed the river
to work the land of the seigneur of Auteuil at Grand-Anse, in the
seigneurie of la Pocatiere. Proud of his seven year lease, Dube
housed his family near to the seigneurial manor where he could use
the bakehouse, the barn, the stable, as well as work the land and the
fields. He had as neighbors Guillaume Lizot to the northeast, and
Monsieur de Saint-Denis to the southeast. The lease specified that
the tenant was to cultivate the land, to seed half of it and to raise
as many cows as he could.
Mathurin Dube was the farmer of the seigneur of Auteuil when LeRouge
surveyed this seigneurie in 1692. In his official report the latter
wrote: "I have measured all the lands of the aforementioned
seigneurie, both those of the domain and the conceded dwellings and
those not conceded, namely first, the domain which begins at a
boundary marker which I planted that separates the aforementioned
seigneurie from that of Monsieur de Saint-Denis, and from the above-
mentioned marker I measured 14 arpents to the river where the mill is
built, and from the aforementioned river to the dwelling of Guillaume
Lizot there are 9 arpents 9 perches, and at the end of this I drew a
line from the northeast to the southeast to a small hill, the above-
mentioned line making a separation from the previously mentioned
seigneurie of Monsieur Auteil from the dwelling of Guillaume Lizot,
and on the aforementioned line I planted 2 stone markers under which
are buried some pieces of brick."
Mathurin Dube had his last 2 children baptized at Sainte Anne-de-la-
Pocatiere, but they seem to have died in infancy. However, 5 of his 6
offspring had families of their own. "Mathurin Dube, wrote Leon Roy
(9), had barely finished his lease with the seigneurs of Pocatiere
when he died at about 64 years of age. He was buried at Riviere-
Ouelle on 30 December 1695. Marie Campion, his spouse, died before 30
December 1703. (10) Their sons Mathurin, Laurent, and Pierre
established themselves in the first row of the seigneurie of
Aulnaies, but the last apparently gave up his land to his brother
Laurent before 1714 (no. 13 des Aulnaies). In 1723, son Pierre Dube
had some property in the seigneurie of Lauzon and in 1728 he lived in
the Montreal region, while his brother Louis lived in the parish of
Notre-Dame-de-Liesse (of Riviere-Quelle). Their only sister,
Madeleine, lived at Pocatiere until the death of her husband, Jean
Miville (1672-1711)."
NUMEROUS FAMILIES
Even though ancestor Mathurin Dube had an average size family-at
that time eight children was not considered large- the four sons who
took wives did better in this respect than their father. Louis, the
second son, was the champion with about 20 offspring. In 1719 at the
age of 42, he married Marguerite Lebel in a second marriage, who was
the same age as his eldest son, 19 years old. He began, so to speak,
to raise a second family. Here are some details concerning the 8
children of Mathurin Dube and Marie Campion:
THE DUBES DIT DELORME
Towards the end of the French regime a soldier, by the name of Jean
Dube dit Delorme came from France, without doubt to participate in
the defense of the colony threatened by the English army. After the
conquest, Jean Dube settled down in the region of Richelieu. His act
of marriage, inscribed in the registry of Saint-Denis on 13 January
1766, indicates that he was the son of Pierre Dube's (sic) and of
Marie Bourgette (Bourgatte or Bourgotte) and on that day married
Marie-Anne Martin, born about 1741, daughter of Jean-Baptiste and of
Marie-Anne Renaud dit Deslauriers. Jean Dube dit Delorme had been a
merchant, and then a surgeon beginning in 1774. He died during the
night of 28 or 29 March 1789 at Saint Denis and was buried in the
same place on 30
March. Six sons and seven daughters were the issue from this union.
Three sons: Jean-Baptiste born in 1766, Joseph born in 1774 and
Charles born in 1785, had descendants. Most of these families live
today in the region of Saint-Hyacinthe. (11)
ENDNOTES
(1) This fact is reported in the journal Le Soleil of 16 February
1938, by Madame Louis Dube.
(2) These four small hamlets formed the commune de la Chapelle
Themer: Fougeroux, La Jousse-Liniere, Les Magnils and l'Orbire.
(3) Silvio Dumas, Les Filles du roi en Nouvelle-France, p 72.
(4) Romain Becquet act of 28 August 1670. Becquet wrote Dubay
instead of Dube and la chapelle de May instead of la Chapelle-Themer.
Tanguay read la Chapelle Detrer from the marriage act of 3 September
in the parish register of Sainte-Famille.
(5) Sainte-Famille was the only parish on the lle d'Orleans at that
time. The parish of Saint-Jean was not founded until 1679.
(6) Benjamin Sulte, HCF, Volume 5, p 87.
(7) Gilles Rageot, act of 10 October 1686.
(8) Leon Roy, Les Terres de la Grande-Anse, des Aulnaies et du Port-
Joly, p 147. The orthography of this "proces-verbal" in the old text
has been modernized in order better understand it in todays
publications.
(11) (9) Ibid, p 147.
(10) Etienne Janneau, act of 30 December 1703. On this same date
notary Janneau wrote a privately recorded contract of marriage
between Pierre Dube and Marie-Therese Boucher, in which he deposed
Pierre as stating that he had no mother and father (orphelin).
(11) Tanguay lists no variations on the name Dube, however Delorme
is listed also as Sanscrainte (fearless). Most likely this name
derived from the military background of Jean Dube dit Delorme. | DUBE Mathurin (I2511)
|
|