Notes


Matches 9,801 to 10,000 of 11,213

      «Prev «1 ... 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 ... 57» Next»

 #   Notes   Linked to 
9801 The following Ancestors of Thomas MORSE (1550 - 1597) were copied from Thomas MORSEA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Agnes (1521 - 1574)

The following 6 people were included in the copy from Thomas MORSEA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Agnes (1521 - 1574)
Lancelot MORSE
Margaret MORSE
Richard MORSE (1540 - 1603)
Robert MORSE (1551 - )
Wife of Richard MORSE 
Source (S959)
 
9802 The following Ancestors of Thomas O'Connel (1849 - 1928) were copied from BrianFreeman to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Catherine Cavanagh (1825 - 1896)
Michael Cavanaugh
Mary Ann

The following 7 people were included in the copy from BrianFreeman to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Catherine Cavanagh (1825 - 1896)
Edward Hughes (1860 - )
Eliza Cavanaugh (1834 - )
James Hughes (1857 - )
Mary Ann
Michael Cavanaugh
Timothy Hughes (1830 - 1864) 
Source (S1663)
 
9803 The following Ancestors of Thomas O'Connel (1849 - 1928) were copied from BrianFreeman to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Daniel O'Connel (1820 - 1899)
Thomas O'Connel (1770 - )
Michael O'Connel
Wife of Michael O'Connel
Delia Bridget

The following 62 people were included in the copy from BrianFreeman to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Acy O'Connel (1898 - )
Alice A. Hanen (1863 - 1945)
Birdie E. O'Connel (1897 - 1810)
Bridget O'Connel (1838 - )
Catherine S. O'Connel (1869 - )
Cora O'Connel
Daniel E. O'Connel (1868 - )
Daniel J. O'Connel (1852 - 1925)
Daniel O'Connel (1820 - 1899)
Delia Bridget
Dennis O'Connel
Earl O'Connel (1895 - )
Ellen (1844 - )
Ellen (Nellie) K. Hughes (1861 - )
Eunice (1815 - )
Frank H. Harris ( - 1910)
Frederick O'Connel (1864 - )
Gertrude V. O'Connel (1887 - )
Goldie M. (1852 - )
Hattie O'Connel (1884 - )
James O'Connel
James O'Connel (1835 - )
James O'Connel (1861 - )
Jane O'Connel
Janet Ruth Otterson (1939 - 1940)
Johanna O'Connel
Johanna O'Connel (1840 - )
John Henry Scharfenberg (1881 - )
John O'Connel
John O'Connel (1808 - )
John O'Connel (1856 - )
Laura Ethel O'Connel (1881 - 1933)
Mable O'Connel (1887 - )
Margaret O'Connel (1833 - )
Marilyn Laura Otterson (1930 - 2003)
Mary Ann (1811 - )
Mary Ann O'Connel (1837 - )
Mary Ann O'Connel (1854 - 1928)
Mary F. O'Connel (1845 - )
Michael O'Connel
Michael O'Connel (1810 - )
Michael O'Connel (1836 - )
Michael O'Connel (1850 - 1888)
Michael O'Connel (1889 - )
Mirtle O'Connel (1887 - )
Nellie O'Connel
O'Connel
Otto Dahl Otterson (1890 - 1978)
Pearl O'Connel (1895 - )
Ralph O'Connell
Ray O'Connel
Roy O'Connell
Ruth LaVaune Scharfenberg (1908 - 1992)
Samantha Burns (1864 - )
Shannon Kay Hiatt (1928 - 1994)
Son O'Connel (1813 - )
Stella O'Connel
Thomas D. O'Connel (1891 - )
Thomas F. O'Connel (1871 - )
Thomas O'Connel (1770 - )
Thomas O'Connel (1830 - )
Wife of Michael O'Connel 
Source (S1651)
 
9804 The following Ancestors of Thomas Pearson BROWN (1802 - 1834) were copied from ThomasIngersollD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Hannah DISBROW (1804 - 1885)
Husband of 266885
Wife of 266884

The following 15 people were included in the copy from ThomasIngersollD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Charles John BROWN (1869 - )
Charles Thomas BROWN (1829 - 1880)
Charlotte THOMPSON (1850 - 1922)
Chester Ingersoll BROWN (1882 - 1954)
George Frederick BROWN (1880 - 1936)
Hannah DISBROW (1804 - 1885)
Husband of 266885
Isabella D BROWN (1827 - 1910)
Isabella Louise MILLIDGE (1850 - 1897)
John Carrete BROWN (1834 - 1901)
Lavinia BROWN (1831 - 1906)
Lottie Josephine BROWN (1872 - 1902)
Mary Maud BROWN (1868 - )
Wife of 266884
Zoe Irene BROWN (1879 - 1891) 
Source (S385)
 
9805 The following Ancestors of Thomas ROOT (1655 - 1709) were copied from JaneRadcliffeD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Mary GRIDLEY (1652 - 1673)

The following 1 people were included in the copy from JaneRadcliffeD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Mary GRIDLEY (1652 - 1673) 
Source (S224)
 
9806 The following Ancestors of Thomas ROOT (1655 - 1709) were copied from JaneRadcliffeD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Mary SPENCER (1655 - 1690)

The following 1 people were included in the copy from JaneRadcliffeD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Mary SPENCER (1655 - 1690) 
Source (S225)
 
9807 The following Ancestors of Thomas ROOT (1655 - 1709) were copied from JaneRadcliffeD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Sarah (Dumbleton) LEONARD (1653 - 1693)

The following 1 people were included in the copy from JaneRadcliffeD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Sarah (Dumbleton) LEONARD (1653 - 1693) 
Source (S226)
 
9808 The following Ancestors of Thomas ROOT (1692 - 1782) were copied from ThomasRooteD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Hannah (Skinner) HINDSALL (1693 - 1776)

The following 144 people were included in the copy from ThomasRooteD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
? HARRISON
? PEASE
? WALCOTT
Abigail ROOT (1776 - 1841)
Abijah CURTIS (1767 - 1800)
Allen ROOT (1796 - 1807)
Amasa RANSOM (1769 - 1819)
Amelia ROOT (1779 - )
Anne CURTIS (1770 - 1771)
Asenath ROOT (1771 - 1855)
Barzillai AMES (1765 - 1849)
Bennett Fields (twin) ROOT
Bennett Fields ROOT Dr (1804 - 1879)
Betsey BURKE (1801 - )
Betsy CURTIS (1797 - 1880)
Betsy ROOT (1762 - )
Cassandana RANSOM (1799 - 1842)
Charles AMES (1802 - )
Charles ROOT (1770 - )
Chester HARRISON (1794 - )
Clarinda ROOT (1776 - )
Deborah HAWKINS (1743 - 1801)
Deborah ROOT (1762 - )
Derinda AMES (1793 - )
Derinda AMES (1796 - )
Eleazar ROOT Dr (1764 - 1837)
Eleazar ROOT Hon (1802 - 1887)
Eleazar WALCOTT
Electa AMES (1800 - )
Elijah BURKE (1775 - 1861)
Elijah BURKE (1807 - 1848)
Eliza (twin) ROOT
Eliza Field RANSOM (1807 - )
Eliza ROOT (1817 - )
Elizabeth FIELD (1740 - 1780)
Elizabeth ROOT (1730 - 1818)
Elizabeth ROOT (1818 - 1820)
Ephraim ANDREWS III (1801 - 1868)
Ephraim ANDREWS Jr (1759 - 1835)
Eunice FARNSWORTH
George ROOT (1815 - 1886)
Hannah (Skinner) HINDSALL (1693 - 1776)
Hannah BURKE (1802 - )
Hannah CURTIS (1761 - 1762)
Hannah CURTIS (1765 - )
Hannah ROOT (1771 - 1829)
Harriet A ROOT (1811 - 1820)
Harriet RANSOM (1796 - )
Harriet ROOT (1809 - 1810)
Henry CURTIS Jr (1728 - 1794)
Henry ROOT Rev (1813 - 1870)
Hiram BURKE (1810 - )
Horace HARRISON (1797 - )
Horatio ROOT (1794 - 1865)
Huldah FULLER
Husband of Betsey BURKE
Husband of Betsy CURTIS
Husband of Cassandana RANSOM
Husband of Eliza ROOT
Husband of Hannah BURKE
Husband of Laura HARRISON
Husband of Mary Jane ROOT
Husband of Polly HARRISON
Husband of Rhoda ROOT
Husband of Susannah AMES
Isaac ROOT (1739 - 1778)
Jesse CURTIS (1754 - 1777)
Joel ROOT (1804 - )
John ROOT (1732 - 1792)
John ROOT (1766 - 1775)
John ROOT (1775 - 1776)
Julia M ROOT (1822 - )
Julia RANSOM (1794 - )
Laura HARRISON (1802 - 1876)
Lois ROOT (1734 - 1743)
Lois ROOT (1761 - )
Lowes CURTIS (1756 - )
Lucinda BOSTWICK (1773 - 1849)
Lucy ROOT (1773 - )
Lydia AMES (1792 - )
Lydia ROOT (1783 - )
Margaret PEASE
Mark Whitney ROOT (1799 - )
Mary CURTIS (1759 - )
Mary Jane ROOT (1824 - 1904)
Mary ROOT (1781 - )
Mary WHITNEY (1773 - )
Molly ROOT
Nathaniel CURTIS (1752 - 1760)
Norman BURKE (1796 - 1851)
Olive RANSOM (1797 - )
Orlin ROOT (1801 - 1875)
Orrel HARRISON (1795 - )
Peter WALCOTT
Phebe AMES (1798 - )
Phebe ROOT (1764 - 1855)
Polly HARRISON (1804 - 1866)
Polly ROOT (1773 - 1861)
Rhoda ROOT (1806 - )
Sally INGERSOLL (1784 - 1859)
Sarah ROOT (1817 - 1817)
Simon WALCOTT
Solomon Sackett ROOT (1808 - )
Spafford ROOT (1800 - 1880)
Stephen AMES (1804 - 1841)
Stephen ROOT (1777 - )
Susannah AMES (1789 - 1859)
Susannah ROOT (1768 - )
Tabitha
Thomas A ROOT (1815 - 1817)
Thomas Hanson RANSOM ( - 1847)
Thomas ROOT (1735 - 1798)
Thomas ROOT (1766 - 1775)
Thomas ROOT (1779 - 1863)
Truman Bishop RANSOM Col (1802 - 1847)
Wife of Bennett Fields ROOT Dr
Wife of Bennett Fields ROOT Dr
Wife of Eleazar ROOT Hon
Wife of Eleazar ROOT Hon
Wife of Elijah BURKE
Wife of Ephraim ANDREWS III
Wife of George ROOT
Wife of Henry ROOT Rev
Wife of Hiram BURKE
Wife of Horace HARRISON
Wife of Horatio ROOT
Wife of Joel ROOT
Wife of Norman BURKE
Wife of Orlin ROOT
Wife of Spafford ROOT
Wife of Stephen AMES
Wife of Thomas ROOT
Wife of Truman Bishop RANSOM Col
Wife of William ROOT Dr
Wife of William ROOT Dr
Wife of William ROOT Dr
Wife of Zenas ROOT
Wife of Zenas ROOT
William HARRISON (1767 - 1825)
William HARRISON Jr
William ROOT Dr (1809 - 1872)
Zenas ROOT (1768 - )
Zenas ROOT (1799 - 1850)
Zenas ROOT (1808 - ) 
Source (S1004)
 
9809 The following Ancestors of Thomas ROOTE (1604 - 1694) were copied from JaneRadcliffeD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Elizabeth ? ( - 1691)

The following 1 people were included in the copy from JaneRadcliffeD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Elizabeth ? ( - 1691) 
Source (S191)
 
9810 The following Ancestors of Thomas S WADE were copied from ThomasIngersollD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Mary Esther POST

The following 4 people were included in the copy from ThomasIngersollD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Elbert Allen ALDEN
Ella Sophia WADE
Harriet ALDEN
Mary Esther POST 
Source (S372)
 
9811 The following Ancestors of Thomas WELLES Jr (1697 - 1774) were copied from ThomasRooteD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Mary CHESTER (1705 - 1775)
Husband of 291546
Wife of 291545

The following 23 people were included in the copy from ThomasRooteD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Amos WELLES (1768 - )
Billee WELLES (1747 - )
Chester WELLES (1738 - 1815)
Chester WELLES (1768 - )
Chloe BUTLER (1747 - 1776)
Daughter WELLES (1786 - 1786)
Elizabeth WELLES (1781 - )
Ezekiel WELLES (1771 - 1818)
Gurden WELLES (1799 - )
Hannah BELDEN (1745 - )
Hannah Belden WELLES (1804 - )
Hannah WELLES (1776 - )
Hezekiah WELLES (1770 - 1859)
Husband of 291546
Husband of Hannah Belden WELLES
Mabel MITCHELL
Mabel WELLES (1774 - 1856)
Mary CHESTER (1705 - 1775)
Mary WELLES (1779 - 1868)
Roger WELLES (1783 - )
Samuel WELLES (1744 - )
Thomas WELLES (1741 - )
Wife of 291545 
Source (S1001)
 
9812 The following Ancestors of Thrasamund of the VANDALS (465 - ) were copied from Thrasamund of the VANDALSA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Eurica of the GOTHS (448 - )

The following 1 people were included in the copy from Thrasamund of the VANDALSA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Eurica of the GOTHS (448 - ) 
Source (S657)
 
9813 The following Ancestors of Thrasamund of the VANDALS (465 - ) were copied from Thrasamund of the VANDALSA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Gelimir of the VANDALS (442 - )

The following 1 people were included in the copy from Thrasamund of the VANDALSA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Gelimir of the VANDALS (442 - ) 
Source (S658)
 
9814 The following Ancestors of Tonantius Praetorian Prefect of Gaul FERREOLUS (413 - 475) were copied from Tonantius PraetorianA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Syagrius CLARISSIMA FEMINA (390 - )
Flavius Afranius Syagrius GALLO (330 - 382)

The following 2 people were included in the copy from Tonantius PraetorianA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Flavius Afranius Syagrius GALLO (330 - 382)
Syagrius CLARISSIMA FEMINA (390 - ) 
Source (S554)
 
9815 The following Ancestors of Toustien Le GOZ (989 - ) were copied from Toustien Le GOZA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Ansfred II Onfror Or Unfroi GOZ (963 - )
Ansfred I ROLLOSSON (937 - )
Rollo Thurstan BRICO (885 - )
Gerlotte
Helloe Countess of BEULAC (942 - )
Godfrey "Ginbert" Count of BEULAC (921 - )

The following 10 people were included in the copy from Toustien Le GOZA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Ansfred I ROLLOSSON (937 - )
Ansfred II Onfror Or Unfroi GOZ (963 - )
Gerlotte
Godfrey "Ginbert" Count of BEULAC (921 - )
Helloe Countess of BEULAC (942 - )
Judith De MONTANOLIER (994 - )
Richard D' AVRANCHES (1025 - 1066)
Rollo Thurstan BRICO (885 - )
Toustien Le GOZ (989 - )
Wife of Richard D' AVRANCHES 
Source (S595)
 
9816 The following Ancestors of Ulf THORGILSSON (993 - 1027) were copied from Ulf THORGILSSONA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Sigrid (971 - )

The following 1 people were included in the copy from Ulf THORGILSSONA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Sigrid (971 - ) 
Source (S688)
 
9817 The following Ancestors of Ulf THORGILSSON (993 - 1027) were copied from Ulf THORGILSSONA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Thorgils "Sprakeleg" STYRJORNSSON (970 - )
Styrbjorn "The Strong" OLAFSSON Prince of SWEDEN (903 - 985)
Ingeberg THRANDSDOTTER (886 - )
Thyra HARALDSDATTER Queen of NORWAY (947 - 1000)
Harald "The Blue Tooth" GORMSSON King of DENMARK (910 - 987)
Geva HARDENKNUDSSON King of DENMARK (840 - 940)
Hardecanute "Knud" SIGURDSSON King of DENMARK (814 - )
Husband of 107082
Wife of 107081
Thyre "Danebod" Queen of DENMARK (844 - 935)
Gyrithe OLAFSDOTTER Queen of DENMARK (905 - )
Ingeberg THRANDSDOTTER (886 - )

The following 14 people were included in the copy from Ulf THORGILSSONA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Geva HARDENKNUDSSON King of DENMARK (840 - 940)
Gulhild Queen of DENMARK
Gyrithe OLAFSDOTTER Queen of DENMARK (905 - )
Harald "The Blue Tooth" GORMSSON King of DENMARK (910 - 987)
Hardecanute "Knud" SIGURDSSON King of DENMARK (814 - )
Husband of 107082
Ingeberg THRANDSDOTTER (886 - )
Styrbjorn "The Strong" OLAFSSON Prince of SWEDEN (903 - 985)
Svend I "Forked Beard" HARLDSSON King of DENMARK (960 - 1013)
Thorgils "Sprakeleg" STYRJORNSSON (970 - )
Thyra HARALDSDATTER Queen of NORWAY (947 - 1000)
Thyre "Danebod" Queen of DENMARK (844 - 935)
Wife of 107081
Wife of Svend I "Forked Beard" HARLDSSON King of DENMARK 
Source (S689)
 
9818 The following Ancestors of Under-King of KENT Ealhmund (758 - 788) were copied from Under-King of KENT EalhmundA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Eaba (732 - )
Eoppa (706 - )
Prince of WESSEX Ingild (680 - 718)
Cenred Prince of WESSEX (644 - )
Ceolwald Prince of WESSEX (622 - )
Husband of 105102
Wife of 105101

The following 7 people were included in the copy from Under-King of KENT EalhmundA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Cenred Prince of WESSEX (644 - )
Ceolwald Prince of WESSEX (622 - )
Eaba (732 - )
Eoppa (706 - )
Husband of 105102
Prince of WESSEX Ingild (680 - 718)
Wife of 105101 
Source (S713)
 
9819 The following Ancestors of Unroch (Hunroch) I Margrave of FRIULI (780 - 854) were copied from Margrave of FRIULIA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Berenger of FRIULI (755 - )

The following 1 people were included in the copy from Margrave of FRIULIA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Berenger of FRIULI (755 - ) 
Source (S526)
 
9820 The following Ancestors of Urracca Princess of ITALY (974 - ) were copied from Urracca Princess of ITALYA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Berenger II King of ITALY (919 - 996)
Adalbert Count Margrave of IVREA (880 - 923)
Gisele Princess of ITALY (885 - 910)
Berengar I King of Italy Holy Roman EMPEROR (850 - 924)
Eberhard I Duke of FRIULI (816 - 866)
Unroch (Hunroch) I Margrave of FRIULI (780 - 854)
Husband of 224862
Wife of 224861
Uroch I Conte Di FRIULI (770 - 811)
Engeltron de PARIS (786 - )
Husband of 224874
Wife of 224873
Gisele of AQUITAINE (820 - 874)
Louis I "The Pious" Emperor of The HOLY ROMAN EM (778 - 840)
Husband of 224870
Wife of 224869
Judith Princess of BAVARIA (800 - 843)
Husband of 224860
Wife of 224859

The following 33 people were included in the copy from Urracca Princess of ITALYA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Adalbert Count Margrave of IVREA (880 - 923)
Adalbert Marquis of IVREA (947 - 971)
Aelis (Adelaide) of Alsace & TOURS (802 - 886)
Alpaide Princess of FRANCE (825 - )
Amadeus Count of BURGUNDY (802 - )
Berengar I King of Italy Holy Roman EMPEROR (850 - 924)
Berenger II King of ITALY (919 - 996)
Charles II "The Bald" Holy Roman EMPEROR (823 - 877)
Eberhard I Duke of FRIULI (816 - 866)
Engeltron de PARIS (786 - )
Ermenfroi (Ermendfried) Count of AMIENS (844 - )
Ermengarde Of The HOLY ROMAN EMPIRE (778 - 818)
Gisele of AQUITAINE (820 - 874)
Gisele Princess of ITALY (885 - 910)
Hedwige of FRIULI (820 - )
Helwise (Heilwig) of FRIULI (855 - )
Husband of 224860
Husband of 224862
Husband of 224870
Husband of 224874
Judith (Ingeltrude) of FRIULI (837 - 853)
Judith Princess of BAVARIA (800 - 843)
Jutte (Judith) FRIULI (846 - 902)
Lothaire I Emperor of The HOLY ROMAN EMPIRE (795 - 855)
Louis I "The Pious" Emperor of The HOLY ROMAN EM (778 - 840)
Rosele "Susanna" Princess of ITALY (945 - 1002)
Unroch (Hunroch) I Margrave of FRIULI (780 - 854)
Unruoch III Conte Di FRIULI (842 - 987)
Uroch I Conte Di FRIULI (770 - 811)
Wife of 224859
Wife of 224861
Wife of 224869
Wife of 224873 
Source (S416)
 
9821 The following Ancestors of Valerius Constantinus Dardanus I Emperor (250 - 306) were copied from EuchariusA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Claudia Crispina ILLYRIA (230 - )
Marcus Aurelius Flavius Claudius ILLYRIA
Claudius of ILLYRIA
Wife of Claudius of ILLYRIA
Wife of Marcus Aurelius Flavius Claudius ILLYRIA

The following 5 people were included in the copy from EuchariusA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Claudia Crispina ILLYRIA (230 - )
Claudius of ILLYRIA
Marcus Aurelius Flavius Claudius ILLYRIA
Wife of Claudius of ILLYRIA
Wife of Marcus Aurelius Flavius Claudius ILLYRIA 
Source (S577)
 
9822 The following Ancestors of Valerius Constantinus Dardanus I Emperor (250 - 306) were copied from EuchariusA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

M Eutropius of The GORDIANI (230 - )
Gordiana Balba BALBUS (210 - )
Junius Licinius BALBUS (180 - )
Husband of 223995
Wife of 223994
Maecia Faustina Princess of ROMAN EMPIRE (190 - )
Husband of 224000
Wife of 223999
Wife of Gordiana Balba BALBUS

The following 9 people were included in the copy from EuchariusA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Gordiana Balba BALBUS (210 - )
Husband of 223995
Husband of 224000
Junius Licinius BALBUS (180 - )
M Eutropius of The GORDIANI (230 - )
Maecia Faustina Princess of ROMAN EMPIRE (190 - )
Wife of 223994
Wife of 223999
Wife of Gordiana Balba BALBUS 
Source (S578)
 
9823 The following Ancestors of Valtrude of ORLEANS (642 - 688) were copied from Valtrude of ORLEANSA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Valtrude (615 - )

The following 1 people were included in the copy from Valtrude of ORLEANSA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Valtrude (615 - ) 
Source (S536)
 
9824 The following Ancestors of Vitapoy De BENAUGES (1086 - ) were copied from Aymer De TAILLEFERA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Amanieu Seigneur De BENAUGES & ST MACAIRE (1060 - )

The following 1 people were included in the copy from Aymer De TAILLEFERA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Amanieu Seigneur De BENAUGES & ST MACAIRE (1060 - ) 
Source (S786)
 
9825 The following Ancestors of Waleran BEAUMONT (990 - 1069) were copied from Waleran BEAUMONTA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Alix De VEXIN (970 - )
Gauthier II "Le Blanc" Count of VEXIN (944 - 1027)
Gautier I Count of VEXIN (919 - 944)
Adele Countess of VEXIN (924 - )
Alix of SENLIS (944 - )
Bormard De SENLIS (919 - )

The following 6 people were included in the copy from Waleran BEAUMONTA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Adele Countess of VEXIN (924 - )
Alix De VEXIN (970 - )
Alix of SENLIS (944 - )
Bormard De SENLIS (919 - )
Gauthier II "Le Blanc" Count of VEXIN (944 - 1027)
Gautier I Count of VEXIN (919 - 944) 
Source (S654)
 
9826 The following Ancestors of Waleran BEAUMONT (990 - 1069) were copied from Waleran BEAUMONTA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Robert Count of MEULAN (965 - )
Robert I MEULENT (939 - 967)
Wife of Robert I MEULENT

The following 3 people were included in the copy from Waleran BEAUMONTA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Robert Count of MEULAN (965 - )
Robert I MEULENT (939 - 967)
Wife of Robert I MEULENT 
Source (S653)
 
9827 The following Ancestors of Walter De BEAUCHAMP (1194 - 1236) were copied from William De BEAUCHAMPA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Walter De BEAUCHAMP (1173 - 1235)
William De BEAUCHAMP (1130 - 1211)
William De BEAUCHAMP (1105 - )
Walter De BEAUCHAMP (1120 - )
Husband of 287331
Wife of 287330
Emmeline D' ABITOT (1076 - )
Husband of 287329
Wife of 287328
Maud De BRAOSE (1109 - )
William De BRAOSE (1049 - 1087)
Husband of 287323
Wife of 287322
Eve MARSHALL
Joane WALERIES (1154 - )
Thomas WALERIES (1109 - )

The following 19 people were included in the copy from William De BEAUCHAMPA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Agnes De ST CLAIRE
De BRAOSE
Emmeline D' ABITOT (1076 - )
Eve MARSHALL
Husband of 287323
Husband of 287329
Husband of 287331
James De BEAUCHAMP (1196 - )
Joane WALERIES (1154 - )
Maud De BRAOSE (1109 - )
Thomas WALERIES (1109 - )
Walter De BEAUCHAMP (1120 - )
Walter De BEAUCHAMP (1173 - 1235)
Wife of 287322
Wife of 287328
Wife of 287330
William De BEAUCHAMP (1105 - )
William De BEAUCHAMP (1130 - 1211)
William De BRAOSE (1049 - 1087) 
Source (S442)
 
9828 The following Ancestors of Wandregisi de NEUSTRIA (618 - ) were copied from Clovis II King of NEUSTRIAA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Walchisus de NEUSTRIA (580 - 619)

The following 1 people were included in the copy from Clovis II King of NEUSTRIAA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Walchisus de NEUSTRIA (580 - 619) 
Source (S803)
 
9829 The following Ancestors of Wandregisi de NEUSTRIA (618 - ) were copied from Clovis II King of NEUSTRIAA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Waldrada de NEUSTRIA (590 - )

The following 1 people were included in the copy from Clovis II King of NEUSTRIAA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Waldrada de NEUSTRIA (590 - ) 
Source (S804)
 
9830 The following Ancestors of Ward Edmund CLARK (1886 - 1957) were copied from Clark WardD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Mary Jane ALLEN (1893 - )

The following 24 people were included in the copy from Clark WardD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Alfred Guy BEMIS (1906 - )
Allen Ward CLARK (1917 - )
Carlton Elwin STACY (1905 - )
Cora Marie CLARK (1926 - )
Doris BACON
Dorothy Estella MANNING (1927 - )
Earl Harmon CLARK (1924 - )
Elmer George HARPER (1917 - )
Geneva Frances Adelma CLARK (1913 - )
Geneviere Alice CLARK (1915 - )
Howard Edmund CLARK (1918 - )
Ira William CLARK (1920 - )
Lillian Belle HARPER (1919 - )
Living CLARK
Living CLARKE
Living COWIN
Living HARPER
Living KENNY
Mabel Effie DOWNING (1919 - )
Mary Jane ALLEN (1893 - )
Maybelle Edna CLARK (1922 - )
Ruth HOLDEN
Theodore CLARK (1912 - 1912)
William HOGLE (1921 - ) 
Source (S1061)
 
9831 The following Ancestors of Warham PARKS (1751 - 1801) were copied from ConstanceHawesD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Rebecca (1755 - )

The following 1 people were included in the copy from ConstanceHawesD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Rebecca (1755 - ) 
Source (S83)
 
9832 The following Ancestors of Warham SHEPARD (1773 - 1853) were copied from ConstanceHawesD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Lucy MARSH (1777 - 1812)
Husband of 287618
Wife of 287617

The following 3 people were included in the copy from ConstanceHawesD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Husband of 287618
Lucy MARSH (1777 - 1812)
Wife of 287617 
Source (S92)
 
9833 The following Ancestors of Warinus Count of Franks BURGUNDY (610 - 677) were copied from Warinus Count of Franks BURGUNDYA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Bodilon Count of Franks BURGUNDY (585 - 643)
Garnier Count of Franks BURGUNDY (559 - )
Garnier Count of Franks BURGUNDY (535 - )

The following 3 people were included in the copy from Warinus Count of Franks BURGUNDYA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Bodilon Count of Franks BURGUNDY (585 - 643)
Garnier Count of Franks BURGUNDY (535 - )
Garnier Count of Franks BURGUNDY (559 - ) 
Source (S545)
 
9834 The following Ancestors of Warinus Count of Franks BURGUNDY (610 - 677) were copied from Warinus Count of Franks BURGUNDYA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Sigrada de ALSACE (592 - 678)
Ega Duke of ALSACE (570 - 646)
Gerberge of FRANCONIA (574 - 646)
Richemeres Duke of FRANCONIA (538 - )

The following 5 people were included in the copy from Warinus Count of Franks BURGUNDYA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Ega Duke of ALSACE (570 - 646)
Erchembaldus Duke de ALSACE (590 - 661)
Gerberge of FRANCONIA (574 - 646)
Richemeres Duke of FRANCONIA (538 - )
Sigrada de ALSACE (592 - 678) 
Source (S546)
 
9835 The following Ancestors of William "Walkelin" De FERRERS (1140 - 1189) were copied from Agatha De FerrersA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Margaret PEVEREL (1114 - )
William "The Younger" PEVEREL (1080 - 1155)
William "The Elder" PEVEREL (1062 - 1113)
Ranulph PEVEREL (1030 - )
Ingelrica Maud (1032 - )
Husband of 287307
Wife of 287306
Adeline "Adeliza" (1054 - 1119)
Avice De LANCASTER (1088 - 1149)
Roger "The Poitevin" MONTGOMERY (1058 - 1102)
Roger De MONTGOMERY (1022 - 1094)
Mabel TALVAS (1026 - 1079)
Almodis Countess of LA MARCHE (1062 - )

The following 15 people were included in the copy from Agatha De FerrersA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Adeline "Adeliza" (1054 - 1119)
Almodis Countess of LA MARCHE (1062 - )
Avice De LANCASTER (1088 - 1149)
Husband of 287307
Ingelrica Maud (1032 - )
Mabel TALVAS (1026 - 1079)
Margaret PEVEREL (1114 - )
Ranulph PEVEREL (1030 - )
Robert II De ALENCON (1039 - 1119)
Roger "The Poitevin" MONTGOMERY (1058 - 1102)
Roger De MONTGOMERY (1022 - 1094)
Sibyl De MONTGOMERY (1066 - )
Wife of 287306
William "The Elder" PEVEREL (1062 - 1113)
William "The Younger" PEVEREL (1080 - 1155) 
Source (S310)
 
9836 The following Ancestors of William "Walkelin" De FERRERS (1140 - 1189) were copied from Agatha De FerrersA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Robert De FERRERS (1090 - 1141)
Robert De FERRERS (1062 - )
Henry De FERRERS (1036 - 1088)
Walchelin De FERRERS (1010 - 1089)
Bertha ROBERTS
Hawise De VITRE (1069 - )
Andre Seigneur De VITRE
Agnes De MORTAIGNE (1054 - )
Robert De MORTAIGNE (1037 - 1091)
Maud De MONTGOMERY (1039 - )

The following 10 people were included in the copy from Agatha De FerrersA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Agnes De MORTAIGNE (1054 - )
Andre Seigneur De VITRE
Bertha ROBERTS
Hawise De VITRE (1069 - )
Henry De FERRERS (1036 - 1088)
Maud De MONTGOMERY (1039 - )
Robert De FERRERS (1062 - )
Robert De FERRERS (1090 - 1141)
Robert De MORTAIGNE (1037 - 1091)
Walchelin De FERRERS (1010 - 1089) 
Source (S309)
 
9837 The following Ancestors of William BRERETON Sir (1414 - ) were copied from William BRERETON , Sir.A to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Alice CORBET (1390 - )
Richard CORBET
Wife of Richard CORBET

The following 3 people were included in the copy from William BRERETON , Sir.A to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Alice CORBET (1390 - )
Richard CORBET
Wife of Richard CORBET 
Source (S971)
 
9838 The following Ancestors of William BRERETON Sir (1414 - ) were copied from William BRERETON , Sir.A to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

William BRERETON (1388 - 1426)
William BRERETON (1350 - 1426)
William BRERETON Sir (1314 - )
William De BRERETON (1286 - )
William BRERETON Sir (1266 - )
Husband of 287232
Wife of 287231
Roseia De VERNON
Margery De BOSLEY (1290 - )
Richard De BOSLEY
Wife of Richard De BOSLEY
Ellen EGERTON (1320 - )
Philip De EGERTON (1295 - )
Ellen De ST PIERRE (1297 - )
Anyll VENABLES (1350 - )
Hugh VENABLES (1310 - )
Agatha VERNON (1315 - )

The following 17 people were included in the copy from William BRERETON , Sir.A to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Agatha VERNON (1315 - )
Anyll VENABLES (1350 - )
Ellen De ST PIERRE (1297 - )
Ellen EGERTON (1320 - )
Hugh VENABLES (1310 - )
Husband of 287232
Margery De BOSLEY (1290 - )
Philip De EGERTON (1295 - )
Richard De BOSLEY
Roseia De VERNON
Wife of 287231
Wife of Richard De BOSLEY
William BRERETON (1350 - 1426)
William BRERETON (1388 - 1426)
William BRERETON Sir (1266 - )
William BRERETON Sir (1314 - )
William De BRERETON (1286 - ) 
Source (S972)
 
9839 The following Ancestors of William D' AUBIGNY "Earl of ARUNDEL" (1140 - 1193) were copied from William D' AUBIGNYA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Adelicia "Princess of BRABANT" (1104 - 1151)
Godfrey "A La Barbe" Duke of LORRAINE (1074 - 1139)
Henri II Count of LORRAINE (1021 - 1079)
Lambert III "Baudry" Count of LOUVAIN (995 - 1062)
Lambert II Count of LOUVAIN (952 - 1015)
Husband of 123976
Wife of 123975
Gerberge De LORRAINE (977 - 1015)
Husband of 123978
Wife of 123977
Oda Princess of LORRAINE (995 - 1044)
Gonzelon I Duke of LORRAINE (967 - 1044)
Husband of 123980
Wife of 123979
Urracca Princess of ITALY (974 - )
Husband of 123974
Wife of 123973
Adele "Alix" Countess of BETEAU (1023 - 1086)
Eberhard Count of BETEAU
Clementia Countess of NAMUR (1078 - 1117)
Albert III Count of NAMUR (1048 - )
Ida BILLUNG (1046 - )
Bernard II BILLUNG (1020 - )

The following 23 people were included in the copy from William D' AUBIGNYA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Adele "Alix" Countess of BETEAU (1023 - 1086)
Adelicia "Princess of BRABANT" (1104 - 1151)
Albert III Count of NAMUR (1048 - )
Bernard II BILLUNG (1020 - )
Clementia Countess of NAMUR (1078 - 1117)
Eberhard Count of BETEAU
Gerberge De LORRAINE (977 - 1015)
Godfrey "A La Barbe" Duke of LORRAINE (1074 - 1139)
Gonzelon I Duke of LORRAINE (967 - 1044)
Henri II Count of LORRAINE (1021 - 1079)
Husband of 123974
Husband of 123976
Husband of 123978
Husband of 123980
Ida BILLUNG (1046 - )
Lambert II Count of LOUVAIN (952 - 1015)
Lambert III "Baudry" Count of LOUVAIN (995 - 1062)
Oda Princess of LORRAINE (995 - 1044)
Urracca Princess of ITALY (974 - )
Wife of 123973
Wife of 123975
Wife of 123977
Wife of 123979 
Source (S399)
 
9840 The following Ancestors of William D' AUBIGNY "Earl of ARUNDEL" (1140 - 1193) were copied from William D' AUBIGNYA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

William "Strong Hand" D' AUBIGNY (1090 - 1176)
William D' AUBIGNY (1064 - 1139)
Roger D' AUBIGNY (1036 - 1084)
William De AUBIGNY (1010 - )
De PLESSIS (1014 - )
Maud BIGOD (1068 - )

The following 6 people were included in the copy from William D' AUBIGNYA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
De PLESSIS (1014 - )
Maud BIGOD (1068 - )
Roger D' AUBIGNY (1036 - 1084)
William "Strong Hand" D' AUBIGNY (1090 - 1176)
William D' AUBIGNY (1064 - 1139)
William De AUBIGNY (1010 - ) 
Source (S398)
 
9841 The following Ancestors of William DE HARCOURT (1100 - 1141) were copied from William DE HARCOURTA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

De BRAOSE (1070 - )
William De BRAOSE (1049 - 1087)
Robert De BRUS (1030 - )
Emma De BRITTANY (1034 - 1094)
Alan De BRITTANY (1046 - 1100)
Wife of Alan De BRITTANY
Agnes De ST CLAIRE
Waldron De ST CLAIRE (1015 - )
Helena Le BON (1020 - )

The following 14 people were included in the copy from William DE HARCOURTA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Agnes De ST CLAIRE
Alan De BRITTANY (1046 - 1100)
De BRAOSE (1070 - )
Emma De BRITTANY (1034 - 1094)
Helena Le BON (1020 - )
Husband of Maud De BRAOSE
Ivo DE HARCOURT (1130 - 1180)
Maud De BRAOSE (1109 - )
Robert De BRUS (1030 - )
Waldron De ST CLAIRE (1015 - )
Wife of Alan De BRITTANY
Wife of Ivo DE HARCOURT
William De BRAOSE (1049 - 1087)
William DE HARCOURT (1100 - 1141) 
Source (S662)
 
9842 The following Ancestors of William EASTMAN (1718 - 1793) were copied from William EASTMANA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Joseph EASTMAN (1683 - 1769)
Joseph EASTMAN (1650 - 1692)
Roger EASTMAN (1610 - 1694)
John EASTMAN (1579 - )
Wife of John EASTMAN
Sarah SMITH (1621 - 1639)
Mary TILTON (1647 - )
Peter TILTON
William TILTON (1585 - )
Robert TILTON (1558 - 1642)
Elizabeth FOCELL
Wife of William TILTON
Wife of Peter TILTON

The following 37 people were included in the copy from William EASTMANA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Abigail EASTMAN (1728 - 1792)
Benjamin EASTMAN (1724 - 1792)
Elizabeth FOCELL
Husband of Abigail EASTMAN
Husband of Keziah EASTMAN
Husband of Mary EASTMAN
Husband of Mary EASTMAN
Husband of Mary EASTMAN
Husband of Mercy EASTMAN
Husband of Rachel EASTMAN
John EASTMAN (1579 - )
John EASTMAN (1721 - 1790)
Joseph EASTMAN (1650 - 1692)
Joseph EASTMAN (1683 - 1769)
Joseph EASTMAN (1714 - 1793)
Keziah EASTMAN (1733 - 1812)
Mary EASTMAN (1684 - 1785)
Mary EASTMAN (1712 - 1799)
Mary TILTON (1647 - )
Mercy EASTMAN (1723 - )
Peter TILTON
Rachel EASTMAN (1724 - 1782)
Robert TILTON (1558 - 1642)
Roger EASTMAN (1610 - 1694)
Ruth EASTMAN (1731 - 1739)
Sarah SMITH (1621 - 1639)
Timothy EASTMAN (1739 - 1818)
Wife of Benjamin EASTMAN
Wife of Benjamin EASTMAN
Wife of John EASTMAN
Wife of John EASTMAN
Wife of Joseph EASTMAN
Wife of Peter TILTON
Wife of Timothy EASTMAN
Wife of Timothy EASTMAN
Wife of William TILTON
William TILTON (1585 - ) 
Source (S851)
 
9843 The following Ancestors of William EASTMAN (1718 - 1793) were copied from William EASTMANA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Mary WHITE (1727 - 1752)
Husband of 108942
Wife of 108941

The following 3 people were included in the copy from William EASTMANA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Husband of 108942
Mary WHITE (1727 - 1752)
Wife of 108941 
Source (S857)
 
9844 The following Ancestors of William FITZOSBORNE (1030 - 1070) were copied from William FITZOSBORNEA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Emma Of IVRY (1008 - )
Ralph Count of IVRY (978 - )
Wife of Ralph Count of IVRY

The following 3 people were included in the copy from William FITZOSBORNEA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Emma Of IVRY (1008 - )
Ralph Count of IVRY (978 - )
Wife of Ralph Count of IVRY 
Source (S825)
 
9845 The following Ancestors of William FITZOSBORNE (1030 - 1070) were copied from William FITZOSBORNEA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Osbern (1000 - )
Herfast De CREPON (975 - )
Wife of Herfast De CREPON

The following 3 people were included in the copy from William FITZOSBORNEA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Herfast De CREPON (975 - )
Osbern (1000 - )
Wife of Herfast De CREPON 
Source (S826)
 
9846 The following Ancestors of William FITZPATRICK (1154 - 1196) were copied from William FITZPATRICKA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Adela "Ela" TALVAISE (1124 - 1174)
William Talvase COMET (1084 - )

The following 2 people were included in the copy from William FITZPATRICKA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Adela "Ela" TALVAISE (1124 - 1174)
William Talvase COMET (1084 - ) 
Source (S508)
 
9847 The following Ancestors of William MAINWARING (1410 - 1499) were copied from William MAINWARINGA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Margery VENABLES (1369 - 1459)
Hugh De VENABLES (1330 - 1383)
Hugh De VENABLES (1296 - 1368)
Katherine De HOUGHTON (1310 - )
Margery COTTON (1335 - )
Hugh COTTON (1360 - )
Wife of Hugh COTTON

The following 7 people were included in the copy from William MAINWARINGA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Hugh COTTON (1360 - )
Hugh De VENABLES (1296 - 1368)
Hugh De VENABLES (1330 - 1383)
Katherine De HOUGHTON (1310 - )
Margery COTTON (1335 - )
Margery VENABLES (1369 - 1459)
Wife of Hugh COTTON 
Source (S976)
 
9848 The following Ancestors of William MAINWARING (1410 - 1499) were copied from William MAINWARINGA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Randle MAINWARING (1367 - 1456)
William MAINWARING (1316 - )
William De MAINWARING (1286 - )
Roger De MAINWARING (1263 - )
William De MAINWARING (1225 - )
Husband of 187326
Wife of 187325
Agnes De ADRERNE
Christian BRITLES (1265 - )
Mary DAVENPORT (1287 - )
Henry DAVENPORT (1256 - )
Roger De DAVENPORT (1226 - )
Mary SALMON (1228 - )
Wife of Henry DAVENPORT
Elizabeth LEYCESTER (1318 - )

The following 15 people were included in the copy from William MAINWARINGA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Agnes De ADRERNE
Christian BRITLES (1265 - )
Elizabeth LEYCESTER (1318 - )
Henry DAVENPORT (1256 - )
Husband of 187326
Mary DAVENPORT (1287 - )
Mary SALMON (1228 - )
Randle MAINWARING (1367 - 1456)
Roger De DAVENPORT (1226 - )
Roger De MAINWARING (1263 - )
Wife of 187325
Wife of Henry DAVENPORT
William De MAINWARING (1225 - )
William De MAINWARING (1286 - )
William MAINWARING (1316 - ) 
Source (S977)
 
9849 The following Ancestors of William MAUDUIT (1094 - 1195) were copied from William MAUDUITA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Maud HANSLAPE (1077 - )
Michael HANSLAPE (1052 - )

The following 2 people were included in the copy from William MAUDUITA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Maud HANSLAPE (1077 - )
Michael HANSLAPE (1052 - ) 
Source (S829)
 
9850 The following Ancestors of William MAUDUIT (1094 - 1195) were copied from William MAUDUITA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

William MAUDUIT (1070 - 1157)
William MAUDUIT (1038 - )
Hawyse (1046 - )

The following 3 people were included in the copy from William MAUDUITA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Hawyse (1046 - )
William MAUDUIT (1038 - )
William MAUDUIT (1070 - 1157) 
Source (S827)
 
9851 The following Ancestors of William MAUDUIT (1186 - 1257) were copied from Isabell MauduitA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Isabel BASSET (1176 - 1224)
Thurston BASSET

The following 2 people were included in the copy from Isabell MauduitA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Isabel BASSET (1176 - 1224)
Thurston BASSET 
Source (S306)
 
9852 The following Ancestors of William MAUDUIT (1186 - 1257) were copied from Isabell MauduitA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Robert MAUDUIT (1172 - 1221)
William MAUDUIT (1144 - 1195)
William MAUDUIT (1126 - 1170)
William MAUDUIT (1094 - 1195)
Husband of 287303
Wife of 287302
Adelicia "Alice" De SAINT LIZ (1100 - )
Isabel SAINT LIZ (1130 - )
Simon De SAINT LIZ (1098 - 1153)
Husband of 287293
Wife of 287292
Isabel "Elizabeth" BEAUMONT

The following 12 people were included in the copy from Isabell MauduitA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Adelicia "Alice" De SAINT LIZ (1100 - )
Husband of 287293
Husband of 287303
Isabel "Elizabeth" BEAUMONT
Isabel SAINT LIZ (1130 - )
Robert MAUDUIT (1172 - 1221)
Simon De SAINT LIZ (1098 - 1153)
Wife of 287292
Wife of 287302
William MAUDUIT (1094 - 1195)
William MAUDUIT (1126 - 1170)
William MAUDUIT (1144 - 1195) 
Source (S305)
 
9853 The following Ancestors of William TALVAS (1000 - ) were copied from William TALVASA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

William De BELLEME (966 - )
William BELLEME (979 - )
Matilda GANELON (980 - )

The following 3 people were included in the copy from William TALVASA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Matilda GANELON (980 - )
William BELLEME (979 - )
William De BELLEME (966 - ) 
Source (S602)
 
9854 The following Ancestors of Willigarde de AGILOFINGES (666 - ) were copied from Louis I "The Pious"A to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

De SALZBURG (635 - )
Husband of 224862
Wife of 224861

The following 3 people were included in the copy from Louis I "The Pious"A to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
De SALZBURG (635 - )
Husband of 224862
Wife of 224861 
Source (S483)
 
9855 The following Ancestors of Willigarde de AGILOFINGES (666 - ) were copied from Louis I "The Pious"A to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Theodon de Bayern AGILOFINGES (630 - 713)
Husband of 224860
Wife of 224859

The following 3 people were included in the copy from Louis I "The Pious"A to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Husband of 224860
Theodon de Bayern AGILOFINGES (630 - 713)
Wife of 224859 
Source (S482)
 
9856 The following Ancestors of Worthington Hooker INGERSOLL (1852 - ) were copied from ElizabethMartinD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Harriet BAKER (1857 - )

The following 1 people were included in the copy from ElizabethMartinD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Harriet BAKER (1857 - ) 
Source (S104)
 
9857 The following Ancestors of Wulgrim De ANGOULEME (835 - 886) were copied from Wulgrim De ANGOULEMEA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Roricon Count of MAINE (790 - )

The following 3 people were included in the copy from Wulgrim De ANGOULEMEA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Bilichilde D ANJOU (817 - )
Husband of Bilichilde D ANJOU
Roricon Count of MAINE (790 - ) 
Source (S680)
 
9858 The following Ancestors of Ximena Nunez De GUZMAN (1048 - 1128) were copied from Ximena Nunez De GUZMANA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Nuno Rodriquez De GUZMAN (1026 - )

The following 1 people were included in the copy from Ximena Nunez De GUZMANA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Nuno Rodriquez De GUZMAN (1026 - ) 
Source (S820)
 
9859 The following Ancestors of Ximena Nunez De GUZMAN (1048 - 1128) were copied from Ximena Nunez De GUZMANA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Ximena ORDONEZ (1030 - )

The following 1 people were included in the copy from Ximena Nunez De GUZMANA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Ximena ORDONEZ (1030 - ) 
Source (S821)
 
9860 The following Ancestors of Yrsa HELGADATTER (565 - ) were copied from Yrsa HELGADATTERA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Helgi HALFDANSSON (538 - )
Halfdan King of Denmark FRODASSON (512 - )
Frodi "The Valiant" King of Denmark FRIDLEIFSSON (479 - 548)
Fridleif FRODASSON (456 - )
Fordi DANSSON (433 - )
Husband of 224104
Wife of 224103
Wife of Fordi DANSSON
Wife of Fridleif FRODASSON
Hildis Princess of VANDALS (496 - )
Hilderich Kinf of The Africa VANDALS (470 - 530)
Huneric King of The Africa VANDALS (440 - 484)
Husband of 224100
Wife of 224099
Eudoxia of ROMAN EMPIRE (448 - )
Husband of 224096
Wife of 224095
Amfleda "The Younger" of VANDALS (482 - )
Thrasamund of the VANDALS (465 - )
Husband of 224107
Wife of 224106
Amfleda of OSTROGOTHS (468 - )
Husband of 224098
Wife of 224097
Sigris FRODASDOTTIR (512 - )

The following 27 people were included in the copy from Yrsa HELGADATTERA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Amfleda "The Younger" of VANDALS (482 - )
Amfleda of OSTROGOTHS (468 - )
Eudoxia of ROMAN EMPIRE (448 - )
Fordi DANSSON (433 - )
Fridleif FRODASSON (456 - )
Frodi "The Valiant" King of Denmark FRIDLEIFSSON (479 - 548)
Halfdan King of Denmark FRODASSON (512 - )
Helgi HALFDANSSON (538 - )
Hilderich Kinf of The Africa VANDALS (470 - 530)
Hildis Princess of VANDALS (496 - )
Hroar HALFDANSSON (529 - )
Huneric King of The Africa VANDALS (440 - 484)
Husband of 224096
Husband of 224098
Husband of 224100
Husband of 224104
Husband of 224107
Sigris FRODASDOTTIR (512 - )
Thrasamund of the VANDALS (465 - )
Wife of 224095
Wife of 224097
Wife of 224099
Wife of 224103
Wife of 224106
Wife of Fordi DANSSON
Wife of Fridleif FRODASSON
Wife of Hroar HALFDANSSON 
Source (S625)
 
9861 The following Ancestors of Yves II Beaumount Count of BEAUMONT (1005 - ) were copied from Yves II BeaumountA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Gisele CHEVREUSE (980 - )

The following 1 people were included in the copy from Yves II BeaumountA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Gisele CHEVREUSE (980 - ) 
Source (S822)
 
9862 The following Ancestors of Yves II Beaumount Count of BEAUMONT (1005 - ) were copied from Yves II BeaumountA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Yves I Beaumont Count of BEAUMONT (975 - )
Yves De BEAUMONT (945 - )

The following 2 people were included in the copy from Yves II BeaumountA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Yves De BEAUMONT (945 - )
Yves I Beaumont Count of BEAUMONT (975 - ) 
Source (S823)
 
9863 The following Descendants of Edward Burnham ROOT (1845 - 1918) were copied from AbigailRootD_1 to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Emma Edna ROOT (1870 - 1936) + Husband of Emma Edna ROOT + Husband of Emma Edna ROOT

The following 3 people were included in the copy from AbigailRootD_1 to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Emma Edna ROOT (1870 - 1936)
Husband of Emma Edna ROOT
Husband of Emma Edna ROOT 
Source (S846)
 
9864 The following Descendants of Edward Burnham ROOT (1845 - 1918) were copied from AbigailRootD_1 to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Minnie ROOT (1873 - 1873)

The following 1 people were included in the copy from AbigailRootD_1 to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Minnie ROOT (1873 - 1873) 
Source (S847)
 
9865 The following Descendants of Egdir SKULASSON (598 - ) were copied from Hialmther EGDIRSSOND to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Hialmther EGDIRSSON (638 - ) + ?
Eylimi "Elina" HJALMTHERSSON (688 - ) + ?
Hjordis EYLIMASDATTER (710 - ) + Sigmund VOLSUNGSSON (705 - )

The following 6 people were included in the copy from Hialmther EGDIRSSOND to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
?
?
Eylimi "Elina" HJALMTHERSSON (688 - )
Hialmther EGDIRSSON (638 - )
Hjordis EYLIMASDATTER (710 - )
Sigmund VOLSUNGSSON (705 - ) 
Source (S843)
 
9866 The following Descendants of Ermentrude Irmgard De ROUCY (953 - 1003) were copied from Beatrice De MACONA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Agnaes Countess of BURGUNDY (987 - 1068)

The following 1 people were included in the copy from Beatrice De MACONA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Agnaes Countess of BURGUNDY (987 - 1068) 
Source (S457)
 
9867 The following Descendants of Ermentrude Irmgard De ROUCY (953 - 1003) were copied from Beatrice De MACONA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Gerberge Countess of BURGUNDY (986 - )

The following 1 people were included in the copy from Beatrice De MACONA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Gerberge Countess of BURGUNDY (986 - ) 
Source (S455)
 
9868 The following Descendants of Ermentrude Irmgard De ROUCY (953 - 1003) were copied from Beatrice De MACONA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Renaud I Count Palatine of BURGUNDY (986 - 1057)

The following 1 people were included in the copy from Beatrice De MACONA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Renaud I Count Palatine of BURGUNDY (986 - 1057) 
Source (S456)
 
9869 The following Descendants of Eva MARSHAL (1206 - ) were copied from Adelle "Adelaide" VERMANDOISD_1 to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Eleanor DE BRAOSE (1230 - ) + Husband of Eleanor DE BRAOSE

The following 2 people were included in the copy from Adelle "Adelaide" VERMANDOISD_1 to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Eleanor DE BRAOSE (1230 - )
Husband of Eleanor DE BRAOSE 
Source (S701)
 
9870 The following Descendants of Eva MARSHAL (1206 - ) were copied from Adelle "Adelaide" VERMANDOISD_1 to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Eva DE BRAOSE (1220 - ) + Husband of Eva DE BRAOSE

The following 2 people were included in the copy from Adelle "Adelaide" VERMANDOISD_1 to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Eva DE BRAOSE (1220 - )
Husband of Eva DE BRAOSE 
Source (S700)
 
9871 The following Descendants of Hamelin PLANTAGENET (1130 - 1202) were copied from Isabella BigodA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Ida PLANTAGENET DE WARREN (1155 - ) + Roger de BIGOD (1150 - 1221)
Hugh de BIGOD

The following 3 people were included in the copy from Isabella BigodA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Hugh de BIGOD
Ida PLANTAGENET DE WARREN (1155 - )
Roger de BIGOD (1150 - 1221) 
Source (S314)
 
9872 The following Descendants of Hamelin PLANTAGENET (1130 - 1202) were copied from Isabella BigodA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Jeffrey WARREN (1160 - )

The following 1 people were included in the copy from Isabella BigodA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Jeffrey WARREN (1160 - ) 
Source (S315)
 
9873 The following Descendants of Hawise "De Beaumont" Of LEICESTER (1129 - 1197) were copied from Oda De CONTEVILLED to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Amice FITZROBERT (1160 - 1224) + Richard De CLARE (1162 - 1218)
Gilbert De CLARE Earl of GLOUCESTER (1182 - 1230) + Isabel MARSHALL (1206 - 1239)
Maud "Matilda De CLARE (1184 - 1213) + Husband of Maud "Matilda De CLARE

The following 6 people were included in the copy from Oda De CONTEVILLED to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Amice FITZROBERT (1160 - 1224)
Gilbert De CLARE Earl of GLOUCESTER (1182 - 1230)
Husband of Maud "Matilda De CLARE
Isabel MARSHALL (1206 - 1239)
Maud "Matilda De CLARE (1184 - 1213)
Richard De CLARE (1162 - 1218) 
Source (S643)
 
9874 The following Descendants of Henrietta GRISWOLD (1794 - 1874) were copied from ThomasIngersollD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Adaline ROCKWELL (1825 - 1890) + Homer Collins WATERS + William ALSEVER
Kelsey Theodore WATERS (1846 - )
Ella Collins WATERS (1849 - )
Josephine Arvilla WATERS (1852 - )
Emma Augusta WATERS (1855 - 1890)
Homer Merton WATERS (1857 - 1889)
Grace Monroe ALSEVER (1863 - 1864)
Adeline M ALSEVER (1866 - )

The following 10 people were included in the copy from ThomasIngersollD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Adaline ROCKWELL (1825 - 1890)
Adeline M ALSEVER (1866 - )
Ella Collins WATERS (1849 - )
Emma Augusta WATERS (1855 - 1890)
Grace Monroe ALSEVER (1863 - 1864)
Homer Collins WATERS
Homer Merton WATERS (1857 - 1889)
Josephine Arvilla WATERS (1852 - )
Kelsey Theodore WATERS (1846 - )
William ALSEVER 
Source (S356)
 
9875 The following Descendants of Henrietta GRISWOLD (1794 - 1874) were copied from ThomasIngersollD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Anson ROCKWELL (1828 - 1883)

The following 1 people were included in the copy from ThomasIngersollD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Anson ROCKWELL (1828 - 1883) 
Source (S357)
 
9876 The following Descendants of Henrietta GRISWOLD (1794 - 1874) were copied from ThomasIngersollD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Happylonia ROCKWELL (1818 - 1843) + Henry RAGAN (1801 - 1865)
Luara Ann RAGAN (1835 - )
Henrietta RAGAN (1838 - 1885)

The following 4 people were included in the copy from ThomasIngersollD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Happylonia ROCKWELL (1818 - 1843)
Henrietta RAGAN (1838 - 1885)
Henry RAGAN (1801 - 1865)
Luara Ann RAGAN (1835 - ) 
Source (S355)
 
9877 The following Descendants of Henrietta GRISWOLD (1794 - 1874) were copied from ThomasIngersollD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Jane ROCKWELL (1835 - 1843)

The following 1 people were included in the copy from ThomasIngersollD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Jane ROCKWELL (1835 - 1843) 
Source (S358)
 
9878 The following Descendants of Ingersoll GRISWOLD (1820 - ) were copied from ThomasIngersollD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Henry Dexter GRISWOLD (1843 - 1887)

The following 1 people were included in the copy from ThomasIngersollD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Henry Dexter GRISWOLD (1843 - 1887) 
Source (S366)
 
9879 The following Descendants of Isabel MARSHALL (1206 - 1239) were copied from Adelle "Adelaide" VERMANDOISD_1 to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Richard De CLARE (1222 - 1262) + Wife of Richard De CLARE

The following 2 people were included in the copy from Adelle "Adelaide" VERMANDOISD_1 to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Richard De CLARE (1222 - 1262)
Wife of Richard De CLARE 
Source (S698)
 
9880 The following Descendants of Jeffrey WARREN (1160 - ) were copied from Adelle "Adelaide" VERMANDOISD_1 to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

John WARREN (1200 - ) + Audelia D' ALBINI (1200 - )
Griffith WARREN (1240 - ) + Wife of Griffith WARREN

The following 4 people were included in the copy from Adelle "Adelaide" VERMANDOISD_1 to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Audelia D' ALBINI (1200 - )
Griffith WARREN (1240 - )
John WARREN (1200 - )
Wife of Griffith WARREN 
Source (S710)
 
9881 The following Descendants of John De Warren PLANTAGENET (1231 - ) were copied from Adelle "Adelaide" VERMANDOISD_1 to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Eleanor DE WARREN (1251 - )

The following 1 people were included in the copy from Adelle "Adelaide" VERMANDOISD_1 to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Eleanor DE WARREN (1251 - ) 
Source (S703)
 
9882 The following Descendants of John De Warren PLANTAGENET (1231 - ) were copied from Adelle "Adelaide" VERMANDOISD_1 to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Isabel DE WARREN (1253 - )

The following 1 people were included in the copy from Adelle "Adelaide" VERMANDOISD_1 to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Isabel DE WARREN (1253 - ) 
Source (S704)
 
9883 The following Descendants of John De Warren PLANTAGENET (1231 - ) were copied from Adelle "Adelaide" VERMANDOISD_1 to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

William PLANTAGENET DE WARREN (1256 - 1286) + Wife of William PLANTAGENET DE WARREN

The following 2 people were included in the copy from Adelle "Adelaide" VERMANDOISD_1 to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Wife of William PLANTAGENET DE WARREN
William PLANTAGENET DE WARREN (1256 - 1286) 
Source (S705)
 
9884 The following Descendants of Lienfni ATTIPSSON (625 - ) were copied from Lienfni ATTIPSSON D to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Budli LEINFNISSON (680 - ) + ?
Brynhild BUDLASDATTER (738 - ) + Sigurd "Fafnisbana" SIGMUNDSSON (735 - )

The following 4 people were included in the copy from Lienfni ATTIPSSON D to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
?
Brynhild BUDLASDATTER (738 - )
Budli LEINFNISSON (680 - )
Sigurd "Fafnisbana" SIGMUNDSSON (735 - ) 
Source (S842)
 
9885 The following Descendants of Lucy MATTOON (1737 - 1817) were copied from Elisha ROOTA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Elisha ROOT (1770 - 1770)

The following 1 people were included in the copy from Elisha ROOTA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Elisha ROOT (1770 - 1770) 
Source (S859)
 
9886 The following Descendants of Margery de BIGOD (1172 - 1297) were copied from Adelle "Adelaide" VERMANDOISD_1 to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Henry I de HASTINGS (1194 - 1250) + Wife of Henry I de HASTINGS

The following 2 people were included in the copy from Adelle "Adelaide" VERMANDOISD_1 to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Henry I de HASTINGS (1194 - 1250)
Wife of Henry I de HASTINGS 
Source (S709)
 
9887 The following Descendants of Mary Dickenson RIPLEY (1833 - ) were copied from ElizabethMartinD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Elizabeth Ripley HUMPHREY (1867 - )

The following 1 people were included in the copy from ElizabethMartinD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Elizabeth Ripley HUMPHREY (1867 - ) 
Source (S95)
 
9888 The following Descendants of Mary Dickenson RIPLEY (1833 - ) were copied from ElizabethMartinD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

James HUMPHREY (1871 - )

The following 1 people were included in the copy from ElizabethMartinD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
James HUMPHREY (1871 - ) 
Source (S96)
 
9889 The following Descendants of Mary Dickenson RIPLEY (1833 - ) were copied from ElizabethMartinD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Maria Antoinette HUMPHREY (1864 - )

The following 1 people were included in the copy from ElizabethMartinD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Maria Antoinette HUMPHREY (1864 - ) 
Source (S94)
 
9890 The following Descendants of Philippe CAPET I King of FRANCE (1052 - 1108) were copied from Robert CAPETD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Louis CAPET VI "The Fat" King of FRANCE (1081 - 1137) + Wife of Louis CAPET VI "The Fat" King of FRANCE

The following 2 people were included in the copy from Robert CAPETD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Louis CAPET VI "The Fat" King of FRANCE (1081 - 1137)
Wife of Louis CAPET VI "The Fat" King of FRANCE 
Source (S677)
 
9891 The following Descendants of Richard De CLARE (1084 - 1136) were copied from Elisende De FLANDERS D to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Roger De CLARE (1116 - 1173) + Wife of Roger De CLARE

The following 2 people were included in the copy from Elisende De FLANDERS D to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Roger De CLARE (1116 - 1173)
Wife of Roger De CLARE 
Source (S697)
 
9892 The following Descendants of Richard II "The Good" Duke of NORMANDY (963 - 1027) were copied from Duke of NORMANDYA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Adelais "Judith" De NORMANDIE (1007 - 1037) + Husband of Adelais "Judith" De NORMANDIE

The following 2 people were included in the copy from Duke of NORMANDYA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Adelais "Judith" De NORMANDIE (1007 - 1037)
Husband of Adelais "Judith" De NORMANDIE 
Source (S594)
 
9893 The following Descendants of Richard II "The Good" Duke of NORMANDY (963 - 1027) were copied from Duke of NORMANDYA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Richard III De NORMANDIE (1001 - 1028) + Wife of Richard III De NORMANDIE

The following 2 people were included in the copy from Duke of NORMANDYA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Richard III De NORMANDIE (1001 - 1028)
Wife of Richard III De NORMANDIE 
Source (S593)
 
9894 The following Descendants of Roger de BEAUCHAMP (1280 - ) were copied from Isabell MauduitD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Roger de BEAUCHAMP (1330 - )

The following 1 people were included in the copy from Isabell MauduitD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Roger de BEAUCHAMP (1330 - ) 
Source (S353)
 
9895 The following Descendants of Rohese Fitzrichard De CLARE (1058 - 1121) were copied from Elisende De FLANDERS D to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Alice De LUCY (1129 - 1197) + Odinel De UMFREVILLE II (1125 - )
Richard De UMFREVILLE (1163 - 1226) + Wife of Richard De UMFREVILLE

The following 4 people were included in the copy from Elisende De FLANDERS D to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Alice De LUCY (1129 - 1197)
Odinel De UMFREVILLE II (1125 - )
Richard De UMFREVILLE (1163 - 1226)
Wife of Richard De UMFREVILLE 
Source (S694)
 
9896 The following Descendants of Rohese Fitzrichard De CLARE (1058 - 1121) were copied from Elisende De FLANDERS D to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Margaret De RIE (1075 - ) + William De MANDEVILLE ( - 1130)
Geoffrey De MANDEVILLE (1082 - 1144) + Rohese De VERE (1103 - 1166)
Beatrix de MANDEVILLE (1090 - ) + Husband of Beatrix de MANDEVILLE

The following 6 people were included in the copy from Elisende De FLANDERS D to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Beatrix de MANDEVILLE (1090 - )
Geoffrey De MANDEVILLE (1082 - 1144)
Husband of Beatrix de MANDEVILLE
Margaret De RIE (1075 - )
Rohese De VERE (1103 - 1166)
William De MANDEVILLE ( - 1130) 
Source (S693)
 
9897 The following Descendants of Sally Ann INGERSOLL (1805 - 1890) were copied from ThomasIngersollD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Chandler Lambert WINANT (1831 - ) + Emily Cecilia VAN CUREN (1833 - 1928)
Chandler WINANT (1860 - 1867)
Edward WINANT (1860 - 1867)
Harry C WINANT (1862 - )
Frank Ingersoll WINANT (1865 - 1947)
Charles E WINANT (1868 - )

The following 7 people were included in the copy from ThomasIngersollD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Chandler Lambert WINANT (1831 - )
Chandler WINANT (1860 - 1867)
Charles E WINANT (1868 - )
Edward WINANT (1860 - 1867)
Emily Cecilia VAN CUREN (1833 - 1928)
Frank Ingersoll WINANT (1865 - 1947)
Harry C WINANT (1862 - ) 
Source (S362)
 
9898 The following Descendants of Sally Ann INGERSOLL (1805 - 1890) were copied from ThomasIngersollD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Sarah E WINANT (1829 - ) + John SPENCER

The following 2 people were included in the copy from ThomasIngersollD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
John SPENCER
Sarah E WINANT (1829 - ) 
Source (S361)
 
9899 The following Descendants of Sarah Boswell INGERSOLL (1848 - ) were copied from ElizabethMartinD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Catherine Morris LAWRENCE (1876 - )

The following 1 people were included in the copy from ElizabethMartinD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Catherine Morris LAWRENCE (1876 - ) 
Source (S100)
 
9900 The following Descendants of Sarah Boswell INGERSOLL (1848 - ) were copied from ElizabethMartinD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

George Ingersoll LAWRENCE (1874 - )

The following 1 people were included in the copy from ElizabethMartinD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
George Ingersoll LAWRENCE (1874 - ) 
Source (S99)
 
9901 The following Descendants of Sarah Boswell INGERSOLL (1848 - ) were copied from ElizabethMartinD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Hattie May LAWRENCE (1871 - )

The following 1 people were included in the copy from ElizabethMartinD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Hattie May LAWRENCE (1871 - ) 
Source (S98)
 
9902 The following Descendants of Sarah Boswell INGERSOLL (1848 - ) were copied from ElizabethMartinD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Hugh Taylor LAWRENCE Jr (1881 - )

The following 1 people were included in the copy from ElizabethMartinD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Hugh Taylor LAWRENCE Jr (1881 - ) 
Source (S102)
 
9903 The following Descendants of Sarah Boswell INGERSOLL (1848 - ) were copied from ElizabethMartinD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Thomas LAWRENCE (1879 - )

The following 1 people were included in the copy from ElizabethMartinD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Thomas LAWRENCE (1879 - ) 
Source (S101)
 
9904 The following Descendants of Thomas ROOTE (1604 - 1694) were copied from JaneRadcliffeD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Hezekiah ROOT (1650 - 1690) + Mehitable FRARY (1663 - 1698)
Mehitable ROOT (1683 - 1683)
Benjamin ROOT (1686 - ) + Ruth HUBBARD ( - 1761)
Benjamin ROOT Jr (1722 - 1760)
Abigail ROOT (1723 - 1733)
Mehitable ROOT (1688 - 1760) + Peter EASTMAN (1684 - 1764)
Mary EASTMAN (1708 - 1710)
Peter EASTMAN (1709 - 1709)
Peter EASTMAN (1712 - 1767)
Hezekiah EASTMAN (1714 - )
William EASTMAN (1714 - 1714)
Azariah EASTMAN (1718 - 1777)
Benjamin EASTMAN (1718 - 1814)
Joseph EASTMAN (1724 - 1802)
Mehitable EASTMAN (1738 - 1838)
Mercy ROOT (1689 - )

The following 19 people were included in the copy from JaneRadcliffeD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Abigail ROOT (1723 - 1733)
Azariah EASTMAN (1718 - 1777)
Benjamin EASTMAN (1718 - 1814)
Benjamin ROOT (1686 - )
Benjamin ROOT Jr (1722 - 1760)
Hezekiah EASTMAN (1714 - )
Hezekiah ROOT (1650 - 1690)
Joseph EASTMAN (1724 - 1802)
Mary EASTMAN (1708 - 1710)
Mehitable EASTMAN (1738 - 1838)
Mehitable FRARY (1663 - 1698)
Mehitable ROOT (1683 - 1683)
Mehitable ROOT (1688 - 1760)
Mercy ROOT (1689 - )
Peter EASTMAN (1684 - 1764)
Peter EASTMAN (1709 - 1709)
Peter EASTMAN (1712 - 1767)
Ruth HUBBARD ( - 1761)
William EASTMAN (1714 - 1714) 
Source (S188)
 
9905 The following Descendants of Thomas ROOTE (1604 - 1694) were copied from JaneRadcliffeD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Jacob ROOT (1660 - 1731) + Mary FRARY (1662 - 1743)
Joanna ROOT (1681 - 1712) + Samuel POMEROY (1669 - 1748)
Joanna POMEROY (1704 - 1801)
Hepzibah POMEROY (1706 - )
Caleb POMEROY (1707 - 1783)
Daniel ROOT (1684 - ) + Mehitable TAYLOR (1695 - )
Daniel ROOT (1714 - 1763)
Ebenezar ROOT (1717 - 1777)
Rachel ROOT (1721 - )
Jacob ROOT Jr (1687 - 1766) + Sarah GOODALE (1686 - )
Sarah ROOT (1710 - )
Jacob ROOT (1710 - 1795)
John ROOT (1712 - 1804)
Hannah ROOT (1714 - 1794)
Benjamin ROOT (1719 - 1800)
Margaret ROOT (1721 - )
Lydia ROOT (1722 - 1819)
David ROOT (1725 - )
Elinor ROOT (1729 - )
Mary Eliza ROOT (1689 - 1728) + Nathaniel MANN (1693 - 1758)
Joseph MANN (1714 - 1798)
Nathaniel MANN (1716 - )
Benjamin MANN (1717 - )
John MANN (1720 - 1806)
Mary MANN (1723 - )
Nathan MANN (1727 - )
Margaret ROOT (1691 - 1793) + ? TRUMBULL + John WARNER (1692 - )
Daniel WARNER
John WARNER
Sarah WARNER
Thomas WARNER
William ROOT (1694 - 1768) + Hannah (Pinnock) PENNOCK (1709 - 1785)
Mehitable ROOT (1728 - 1799)
William ROOT (1731 - 1790)
Simeon ROOT (1733 - 1773)
Hannah ROOT (1735 - 1770)
Samuel ROOT (1738 - 1742)
Levi ROOT (1740 - 1820)
Ann ROOT (1743 - )
Joanna ROOT (1745 - 1746)
Samuel ROOT (1748 - 1830)
Ephraim ROOT (1751 - 1832)
Abigail ROOT (1754 - 1814)
Hezekiah ROOT (1697 - 1728)
Ruth ROOT (1698 - 1787)
Nathaniel ROOT (1702 - 1783) + Mary TARBOX (1704 - 1754) + Jerusha BREWER
Jemima ROOT (1727 - )
Coziah ROOT (1729 - )
Mary ROOT (1730 - )
Nathaniel ROOT (1732 - 1754)
Esther ROOT (1735 - )
Ruth ROOT (1737 - 1754)
Partha ROOT (1739 - )
Martha ROOT (1741 - )
Jonah ROOT (1743 - 1832)
Eunice ROOT (1745 - )
Abitha ROOT (1747 - )
Abijah ROOT (1749 - 1750)
Abijah ROOT (1751 - 1760)
Jonathan ROOT (1705 - 1783) + Sarah TARBOX (1705 - 1754)
Elijah ROOT (1729 - )
Elizabeth ROOT (1733 - )
Jonathan ROOT (1735 - 1785)
Caleb ROOT (1738 - 1822)
Sarah ROOT (1748 - 1754)

The following 76 people were included in the copy from JaneRadcliffeD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
? TRUMBULL
Abigail ROOT (1754 - 1814)
Abijah ROOT (1749 - 1750)
Abijah ROOT (1751 - 1760)
Abitha ROOT (1747 - )
Ann ROOT (1743 - )
Benjamin MANN (1717 - )
Benjamin ROOT (1719 - 1800)
Caleb POMEROY (1707 - 1783)
Caleb ROOT (1738 - 1822)
Coziah ROOT (1729 - )
Daniel ROOT (1684 - )
Daniel ROOT (1714 - 1763)
Daniel WARNER
David ROOT (1725 - )
Ebenezar ROOT (1717 - 1777)
Elijah ROOT (1729 - )
Elinor ROOT (1729 - )
Elizabeth ROOT (1733 - )
Ephraim ROOT (1751 - 1832)
Esther ROOT (1735 - )
Eunice ROOT (1745 - )
Hannah (Pinnock) PENNOCK (1709 - 1785)
Hannah ROOT (1714 - 1794)
Hannah ROOT (1735 - 1770)
Hepzibah POMEROY (1706 - )
Hezekiah ROOT (1697 - 1728)
Jacob ROOT (1660 - 1731)
Jacob ROOT (1710 - 1795)
Jacob ROOT Jr (1687 - 1766)
Jemima ROOT (1727 - )
Jerusha BREWER
Joanna POMEROY (1704 - 1801)
Joanna ROOT (1681 - 1712)
Joanna ROOT (1745 - 1746)
John MANN (1720 - 1806)
John ROOT (1712 - 1804)
John WARNER
John WARNER (1692 - )
Jonah ROOT (1743 - 1832)
Jonathan ROOT (1705 - 1783)
Jonathan ROOT (1735 - 1785)
Joseph MANN (1714 - 1798)
Levi ROOT (1740 - 1820)
Lydia ROOT (1722 - 1819)
Margaret ROOT (1691 - 1793)
Margaret ROOT (1721 - )
Martha ROOT (1741 - )
Mary Eliza ROOT (1689 - 1728)
Mary FRARY (1662 - 1743)
Mary MANN (1723 - )
Mary ROOT (1730 - )
Mary TARBOX (1704 - 1754)
Mehitable ROOT (1728 - 1799)
Mehitable TAYLOR (1695 - )
Nathan MANN (1727 - )
Nathaniel MANN (1693 - 1758)
Nathaniel MANN (1716 - )
Nathaniel ROOT (1702 - 1783)
Nathaniel ROOT (1732 - 1754)
Partha ROOT (1739 - )
Rachel ROOT (1721 - )
Ruth ROOT (1698 - 1787)
Ruth ROOT (1737 - 1754)
Samuel POMEROY (1669 - 1748)
Samuel ROOT (1738 - 1742)
Samuel ROOT (1748 - 1830)
Sarah GOODALE (1686 - )
Sarah ROOT (1710 - )
Sarah ROOT (1748 - 1754)
Sarah TARBOX (1705 - 1754)
Sarah WARNER
Simeon ROOT (1733 - 1773)
Thomas WARNER
William ROOT (1694 - 1768)
William ROOT (1731 - 1790) 
Source (S190)
 
9906 The following Descendants of Thomas ROOTE (1604 - 1694) were copied from JaneRadcliffeD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

John ROOT (1645 - 1677) + Mehitable JOHNSON (1644 - 1689)
Thankful ROOT (1676 - 1704) + Thomas WELLES (1662 - 1711)
Thomas WELLES Jr (1697 - 1774)
Hezekiah WELLES (1701 - 1711)

The following 6 people were included in the copy from JaneRadcliffeD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Hezekiah WELLES (1701 - 1711)
John ROOT (1645 - 1677)
Mehitable JOHNSON (1644 - 1689)
Thankful ROOT (1676 - 1704)
Thomas WELLES (1662 - 1711)
Thomas WELLES Jr (1697 - 1774) 
Source (S185)
 
9907 The following Descendants of Thomas ROOTE (1604 - 1694) were copied from JaneRadcliffeD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Jonathan ROOT (1648 - 1741) + Ann L GULL (1659 - 1746)
Elizabeth ROOT (1681 - 1737)
Esther ROOT (1683 - 1707)
Hannah ROOT (1687 - 1705)
Ann ROOT (1690 - ) + Jas LYMAN
Abigail ROOT (1692 - 1695)
Abigail ROOT (1695 - ) + John KING

The following 10 people were included in the copy from JaneRadcliffeD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Abigail ROOT (1692 - 1695)
Abigail ROOT (1695 - )
Ann L GULL (1659 - 1746)
Ann ROOT (1690 - )
Elizabeth ROOT (1681 - 1737)
Esther ROOT (1683 - 1707)
Hannah ROOT (1687 - 1705)
Jas LYMAN
John KING
Jonathan ROOT (1648 - 1741) 
Source (S187)
 
9908 The following Descendants of Thomas ROOTE (1604 - 1694) were copied from JaneRadcliffeD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Joseph ROOT (1640 - 1711) + Hannah HAYNES (1635 - 1690) + Mary HOLTON (1636 - 1713)
Hannah ROOT (1662 - 1729) + John HUTCHINSON (1658 - 1719)
John HUTCHINSON (1683 - 1726)
Jonathan HUTCHINSON (1685 - 1717)
Hannah HUTCHINSON (1688 - 1728)
Joseph HUTCHINSON (1690 - 1731)
Thankful HUTCHINSON (1694 - 1754)
Hezakiah HUTCHINSON (1696 - 1777)
Moses HUTCHINSON (1700 - 1776)
Aaron HUTCHINSON (1702 - 1719)
Mary HUTCHINSON (1705 - 1760)
Joseph ROOT (1663 - 1690) + Hannah ?
Jonathan ROOT
Joseph ROOT (1686 - 1727)
Hannah ROOT (1688 - )
Thomas ROOT (1667 - 1727) + Sarah CLARK (1667 - 1711)
Sarah ROOT (1692 - 1715)
Martha ROOT (1693 - )
Margaret ROOT (1694 - )
Thomas ROOT (1696 - )
Hannah ROOT (1699 - 1748)
Mary ROOT (1700 - )
Thomas ROOT (1705 - 1734)
Eleazar ROOT (1706 - 1706)
Martha ROOT (1707 - )
Experience ROOT (1710 - )
John ROOT (1669 - 1710) + Mary WOODRUFF (1667 - 1709)
John ROOT (1690 - 1767)
Joseph ROOT (1692 - 1747)
Samuel ROOT (1696 - 1748)
Mary ROOT (1698 - )
Thankful ROOT (1702 - 1739)
Hezekiah ROOT (1705 - )
Sarah ROOT (1670 - 1671)
Sarah ROOT (1671 - 1740) + Samuel HUTCHINSON (1666 - 1757)
Samuel HUTCHINSON (1692 - 1762)
Sarah HUTCHINSON (1695 - 1776)
Experience HUTCHINSON (1698 - 1746)
Martha HUTCHINSON (1701 - 1763)
Eleazer HUTCHINSON (1702 - 1791)
Stephen HUTCHINSON (1704 - 1793)
Hannah HUTCHINSON (1709 - 1773)
Jemima HUTCHINSON (1712 - )
Hope ROOT (1675 - 1750) + Sarah WRIGHT (1678 - 1747)
Stephen ROOT (1699 - 1782)
Sarah ROOT (1702 - )
Elias ROOT (1705 - 1738)
Hannah ROOT (1706 - 1748)
Martha ROOT (1710 - 1740)
Esther ROOT (1712 - 1749)
Eleazar ROOT (1715 - 1803)
Timothy ROOT (1718 - 1782)
Aaron ROOT (1721 - 1749)
Hezekiah ROOT Sr (1676 - 1766) + Martha BRIDGMAN (1690 - 1759)
Hannah ROOT
Esther ROOT ( - 1747)
Hezekiah ROOT (1713 - 1792)
Dorothy ROOT (1715 - )
Simeon ROOT (1718 - 1751)
Martha ROOT (1720 - )
Jemima ROOT (1722 - 1816)
Joseph ROOT (1728 - 1802)
Orlando ROOT (1734 - 1805)
Miriam ROOT (1736 - 1735)

The following 73 people were included in the copy from JaneRadcliffeD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Aaron HUTCHINSON (1702 - 1719)
Aaron ROOT (1721 - 1749)
Dorothy ROOT (1715 - )
Eleazar ROOT (1706 - 1706)
Eleazar ROOT (1715 - 1803)
Eleazer HUTCHINSON (1702 - 1791)
Elias ROOT (1705 - 1738)
Esther ROOT ( - 1747)
Esther ROOT (1712 - 1749)
Experience HUTCHINSON (1698 - 1746)
Experience ROOT (1710 - )
Hannah ?
Hannah HAYNES (1635 - 1690)
Hannah HUTCHINSON (1688 - 1728)
Hannah HUTCHINSON (1709 - 1773)
Hannah ROOT
Hannah ROOT (1662 - 1729)
Hannah ROOT (1688 - )
Hannah ROOT (1699 - 1748)
Hannah ROOT (1706 - 1748)
Hezakiah HUTCHINSON (1696 - 1777)
Hezekiah ROOT (1705 - )
Hezekiah ROOT (1713 - 1792)
Hezekiah ROOT Sr (1676 - 1766)
Hope ROOT (1675 - 1750)
Jemima HUTCHINSON (1712 - )
Jemima ROOT (1722 - 1816)
John HUTCHINSON (1658 - 1719)
John HUTCHINSON (1683 - 1726)
John ROOT (1669 - 1710)
John ROOT (1690 - 1767)
Jonathan HUTCHINSON (1685 - 1717)
Jonathan ROOT
Joseph HUTCHINSON (1690 - 1731)
Joseph ROOT (1640 - 1711)
Joseph ROOT (1663 - 1690)
Joseph ROOT (1686 - 1727)
Joseph ROOT (1692 - 1747)
Joseph ROOT (1728 - 1802)
Margaret ROOT (1694 - )
Martha BRIDGMAN (1690 - 1759)
Martha HUTCHINSON (1701 - 1763)
Martha ROOT (1693 - )
Martha ROOT (1707 - )
Martha ROOT (1710 - 1740)
Martha ROOT (1720 - )
Mary HOLTON (1636 - 1713)
Mary HUTCHINSON (1705 - 1760)
Mary ROOT (1698 - )
Mary ROOT (1700 - )
Mary WOODRUFF (1667 - 1709)
Miriam ROOT (1736 - 1735)
Moses HUTCHINSON (1700 - 1776)
Orlando ROOT (1734 - 1805)
Samuel HUTCHINSON (1666 - 1757)
Samuel HUTCHINSON (1692 - 1762)
Samuel ROOT (1696 - 1748)
Sarah CLARK (1667 - 1711)
Sarah HUTCHINSON (1695 - 1776)
Sarah ROOT (1670 - 1671)
Sarah ROOT (1671 - 1740)
Sarah ROOT (1692 - 1715)
Sarah ROOT (1702 - )
Sarah WRIGHT (1678 - 1747)
Simeon ROOT (1718 - 1751)
Stephen HUTCHINSON (1704 - 1793)
Stephen ROOT (1699 - 1782)
Thankful HUTCHINSON (1694 - 1754)
Thankful ROOT (1702 - 1739)
Thomas ROOT (1667 - 1727)
Thomas ROOT (1696 - )
Thomas ROOT (1705 - 1734)
Timothy ROOT (1718 - 1782) 
Source (S184)
 
9909 The following Descendants of Thomas ROOTE (1604 - 1694) were copied from JaneRadcliffeD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Sarah ROOT (1652 - 1717) + Samuel KELLOGG (1633 - 1709)
John KELLOGG (1680 - 1755)
Thomas KELLOGG (1681 - 1758)
Sarah KELLOGG (1683 - 1755) + Abraham MORTON (1676 - 1765)
Abraham MORTON (1703 - )
Richard MORTON (1704 - 1772)
Sarah MORTON (1707 - 1767)
Samuel MORTON (1709 - 1793)
Abigail MORTON (1710 - 1714)
Noah MORTON (1718 - 1798)
Daniel MORTON (1720 - 1786)
Moses MORTON (1720 - 1798)
Abigail MORTON (1721 - 1726)

The following 15 people were included in the copy from JaneRadcliffeD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Abigail MORTON (1710 - 1714)
Abigail MORTON (1721 - 1726)
Abraham MORTON (1676 - 1765)
Abraham MORTON (1703 - )
Daniel MORTON (1720 - 1786)
John KELLOGG (1680 - 1755)
Moses MORTON (1720 - 1798)
Noah MORTON (1718 - 1798)
Richard MORTON (1704 - 1772)
Samuel KELLOGG (1633 - 1709)
Samuel MORTON (1709 - 1793)
Sarah KELLOGG (1683 - 1755)
Sarah MORTON (1707 - 1767)
Sarah ROOT (1652 - 1717)
Thomas KELLOGG (1681 - 1758) 
Source (S189)
 
9910 The following Descendants of Thomas ROOTE (1604 - 1694) were copied from JaneRadcliffeD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Thomas ROOT (1646 - 1730) + Abigail ALVORD (1647 - 1699) + Mary KIRTLAND (1640 - )
Abigail ROOT (1667 - 1691)
Thomas ROOT (1667 - 1758) + Thankful STRONG (1672 - 1742)
Thomas ROOT (1692 - 1782) + Elizabeth LEE (1694 - 1726)
Ebenezer ROOT (1693 - 1760)
Eliakim ROOT (1696 - 1759)
Abigail ROOT (1697 - 1775)
Thankful ROOT (1700 - 1750)
Mindwell ROOT (1701 - 1789)
Experience ROOT (1702 - )
Samuel ROOT (1705 - 1789)
Miriam ROOT (1707 - 1760)
Ephraim ROOT (1709 - 1713)
Mehitable ROOT (1712 - 1756)
Samuel ROOT (1673 - 1687)
Hezekiah ROOT (1686 - 1690)

The following 20 people were included in the copy from JaneRadcliffeD to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
Abigail ALVORD (1647 - 1699)
Abigail ROOT (1667 - 1691)
Abigail ROOT (1697 - 1775)
Ebenezer ROOT (1693 - 1760)
Eliakim ROOT (1696 - 1759)
Elizabeth LEE (1694 - 1726)
Ephraim ROOT (1709 - 1713)
Experience ROOT (1702 - )
Hezekiah ROOT (1686 - 1690)
Mary KIRTLAND (1640 - )
Mehitable ROOT (1712 - 1756)
Mindwell ROOT (1701 - 1789)
Miriam ROOT (1707 - 1760)
Samuel ROOT (1673 - 1687)
Samuel ROOT (1705 - 1789)
Thankful ROOT (1700 - 1750)
Thankful STRONG (1672 - 1742)
Thomas ROOT (1646 - 1730)
Thomas ROOT (1667 - 1758)
Thomas ROOT (1692 - 1782) 
Source (S186)
 
9911 The following Descendants of Thorri SNAERSSON King of KVENLAND (320 - ) were copied from Norr THORRASSONA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01

Norr THORRASSON King of ALFHEIM (345 - ) + ?
Raum "The Old" NORSSON (370 - ) + Hildur GUDRAUDSDATTER (371 - )
Hring RAUMSSON (406 - ) + VIFILSDATTER
Hafldan "The Old" HRINGSSON King of RINGERIK (450 - ) + Almveigu EYMUNDSDATTER (455 - )
Lofdi HALFDANSSON (498 - ) + ?
Skuli LOFDASSON (548 - ) + ?
Egdir SKULASSON (598 - ) + Wife of Egdir SKULASSON
Budli HALFDANSSON (502 - ) + ?
Attip BUDLASSON (565 - ) + ?
Lienfni ATTIPSSON (625 - ) + Wife of Lienfni ATTIPSSON

The following 20 people were included in the copy from Norr THORRASSONA to Freeman-Smith Tree all_Backup01
?
?
?
?
?
Almveigu EYMUNDSDATTER (455 - )
Attip BUDLASSON (565 - )
Budli HALFDANSSON (502 - )
Egdir SKULASSON (598 - )
Hafldan "The Old" HRINGSSON King of RINGERIK (450 - )
Hildur GUDRAUDSDATTER (371 - )
Hring RAUMSSON (406 - )
Lienfni ATTIPSSON (625 - )
Lofdi HALFDANSSON (498 - )
Norr THORRASSON King of ALFHEIM (345 - )
Raum "The Old" NORSSON (370 - )
Skuli LOFDASSON (548 - )
VIFILSDATTER
Wife of Egdir SKULASSON
Wife of Lienfni ATTIPSSON 
Source (S841)
 
9912 The following is from NORTHERN FRANCE, nobility Project MedLands:

RAOUL [III] “le Grand” (-Péronne 23 Feb or 8 Sep 1074, bur Montdidier, later transferred to Crépy-en-Valois, église collégiale Saint-Arnoul).


The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines names "Rodulfum" as son of "Rodulfum [filii Gauteri Albus de Albamarla]".

succeeded [1030/35] as Comte de Valois.
headed resistance to Henri I of France from the death of Eudes II Comte de Blois in 1038, and as such led the campaigns of Beauvaisis in 104.
succeeded cousin Gautier [III] as Comte d'Amiens et du Vexin.
"Comes Rodulfus et filius meus Walterus et Simon…" donated property to Montiérender by undated charter.
First conseiller in the royal council, he was one of the most powerful and influential nobles in the kingdom.
excommunicated because of scandal of his third marriage, he reappeared at court only in 1070.
"Rodulphus…Ambianensis comes" donated property “ad Conteiense castellum” to Sainte-Marie d'Amiens, with the consent of "Simon filius meus et Gualterus, Gualteri Tyrelli natus", by charter dated 1069, subscribed by "Radulphus comes, Anna uxor eius, Gualterus Tirelli filius, Symon comitis filius.".
The consent given by Gauthier Tirell suggests that he and Comte Raoul [III] held an interest in the property at Conty jointly, but if this is correct the family relationship between them has not been traced.

"Symon comes Barrensium" donated property to the abbey of Molesme for the souls of "parentum suorum Radulfi … comitis et Walterii fratris suis et matris sue Adele" by undated charter, the entry stating that "Radulfus comes" died "VIII Kal Mar".
m. firstly ([1041/45]) as her fourth husband, AELIS de Bar-sur-Aube, widow firstly of RENAUD de Semur-en-Brionnais, secondly of RENARD Comte de Joigny and thirdly of ROGER [I] avoué de Vignory, daughter and heiress of NOCHER [II] Comte de Bar-sur-Aube et de Vitry-en-Perthois & his wife --- (([1020/25]-11 Sep 1053).


The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines names "Adala" wife of "comitis Veromandie [error for Valois] Rodolfi" and mother of "Symonem et filiam…Adala", but does not give her origin[1858].

The Acta Sanctorum commentary on the life of St Simon de Valois, based on an undated manuscript of the abbey of Saint-Claude, records that "Rodulpho (Simonis genitori)" married three wives, firstly:

"Adela, Nocheri Barrensis ad Albam comitis filia, Notheri comitis Suessionum neptis, Archardi proneptis" who had previously married "Rainaldum de Sinemuro, Rainardum comitem de Jooniaco, Rotgerium de Wangionis ripa"[1859].
Her marital history is recorded in the Acta Sanctorum commentary on the life of St Simon de Valois: after the death of her first husband, "Rodulfus comes Calvimontis Vallis Cassini" [identified as her future fourth husband] visited "castellum Barri" who proposed marriage, the ceremony to take place after his return from a pilgrimage to Rome, but as the proposal displeased "primoribus terræ illius" they married her during Raoul´s absence to "Rainardo comiti de Jooniaco".

After Raoul returned, he besieged "Jooniacum castellum" and abducted Aelis to "castello Firmitatis", wanting to assure himself that she was not pregnant before marrying her. While there, the inhabitants of Bar-sur-Aube married her again to "Rotgerio de Wangionis ripa", after which Raoul ravaged the countryside until they returned Aelis to him[1860].

Her son "Symon comes Barrensium" donated property to the abbey of Molesme for the souls of "parentum suorum Radulfi … comitis et Walterii fratris suis et matris sue Adele" by undated charter. "Symon comes Barrensium" donated property to the abbey of Molesme for the souls of "parentum suorum Radulfi … comitis et Walterii fratris suis et matris sue Adele" by undated charter, the entry stating that "Adelina comitissa" died "III Id Sep"[1862].

m secondly (repudiated 1060) ALIENOR "Haquenez", dau. of ---. The primary source which confirms her marriage not identified.

Heiress of Montdidier et Péronne. Pope Alexander II wrote to Gervais Archbishop of Reims in 1062 recording that "comes Radulfus" had repudiated his (unnamed) wife on false charges of adultery and requiring him to take her back.

m thirdly ([1061]) as her second husband, ANNA Iaroslavna, widow of HENRI I King of France, daughter of IAROSLAV I Vladimirovich "Mudriy/the Wise" Grand Prince of Kiev & his second wife Ingigerd Olafsdottir of Sweden (1036-5 Sep ([1075/78], bur Abbaye Villiers near La-Ferté-Alais).

The Liber Modernorum Regum Francorum records the marriage of "filiam regis Russorum Annam" with King Henri. The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines names "Anna filia Georgii regis Sclavonum" as wife of King Henri.

Consecrated Queen Consort at Reims on her wedding day. Queen Anna caused a scandal in France by her second marriage and was forced to leave the court, although she returned after her second husband's death in 1074.


The Liber Modernorum Regum Francorum records the marriage of "Anna, Henrici relicta" and "Rodulfo comitis". "Rodulphus…Ambianensis comes" donated property to Sainte-Marie d'Amiens, with the consent of "Simon filius meus et Gualterus, Gualteri Tyrelli natus", by charter dated 1069, subscribed by "Anna uxor eius".

Comte Raoul III & his first wife had five children:

GAUTHIER (-in battle 6 Sep [1065/1067]).
SIMON (-Rome [30 Sep/1 Oct] 1080, bur 1082 Rome St Peter).
ADELAIS de Valois (-after 1077).
ADELA [Alix] de Valois (-12 May [1093/1100], bur Saint-Faron)
ELISABETH de Valois (-[12 May 1093/1101]).[1]
Nickname
Title: "The Great"
Sources
↑ Foundation for Medieval Genealogy© , 2000-2013 http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/NORTHERN%20FRANCE.htm#RaoulIIValois entered 2013 Nov 15 by Michelle
Foundation for Medieval Genealogy 
VEXIN Raoul (I59068)
 
9913 The following WikiTree Profiles require review and distinction:

Coel ap Meurig, b 080 Camulod
Coellus Britain ap Meurig, b. 100
Coel (Siluria) Cyllin born 0125
Coel I de Bretagne, b. 0130
Coilus (Kaercolvin) Cambria, b. 0218
Coel of Camulod born 218
Coel Hen ap Tegfan, born -0340
Biography
Profiles need birth years, whether actual or estimated. Birth years for this line of descent are estimated with each generation born 25 years after the preceding generation.


Coel (c. 100). (pic #1 Third column near the bottom), should not to be confused with Duke (King) Coel of Kaercolvin-1 Colchester (c. 200) married to Strada verch Cadvan The Fair of Cambria-5, (pic #2)
pic #1
Kaercolvin-1.jpg

pic #2

National CV of Britain: Huntingdon and Monmouth's Mythical Pedigree (by c. 1300)
National CV of Britain: Huntingdon and Monmouth's Mythical Pedigree (by c. 1300)

Excerpt from The National CV of Britain: (added to help clarify which Coel is which. amb)

The 3 Coels: Coel I - Coellus in Holinshed ([see pic #1 above Monarchs, table column 3, entry 5]);

Coel II Kaercolvin-1 of Colchester, spouse of Strada The Fair, reigned in the AD 200s and was the father of Helen, the mother of Constantine the GreatHelen ferch Coel was made up to make Constantius Chlorus a relative of Coel Hen. The mythical Helen, is not Flavia Julia Helena Augusta (Empress of Rome / St. Helen). (see Wikipedia: Coel Hen for more about the mythical pedigree).

Coel III reigned in the AD 400s; Coel I was of western British ancestry according to R W Morgan (Pic #2 above or see Royal family tree on the web page), the eastern branch of the royal family apparently lacking a male heir; but he was simply the son of Marius according to Tysilio, Holinshed & Enderbie - and also De Wavrin:

Legend
"In the meantime Coel, duke of Kaercolvin or Colchester, made an insurrection against king Asclepiodotus, and in a pitched battle, killed him, and took possession of his crown. The senate, hearing this, rejoiced at the king's death, who had given such disturbance to the Roman power and reflecting on the damage which they had sustained by the loss of this kingdom, they sent Constantius the senator, a man of prudence and courage, who had reduced Spain under their subjection, and who was above all the rest industrious to promote the good of the commonwealth. Coel, having information of his coming, was afraid to stand before him. Therefore, as soon as Constantius was arrived at the island, Coel sent ambassadors to him with offers of peace and submission, on condition that he should enjoy the kingdom of Britain, and pay no more than the usual tribute to the Roman state. Constantius consented to this proposal and so upon their giving hostages, peace was confirmed between them. The month after Coel was seized with a very great sickness, of which he died within eight days. After his decease, Constantius himself was crowned, and married the daughter of Coel, whose name was Helena. She surpassed all the ladies of the country in beauty, as she did all the others of the time in her skill in music and the liberal arts. Her father had no other issue to succeed him on the throne; for which reason he was very careful about her education, that she might be better qualified to govern the kingdom. Constantius, therefore, having made her partner of his bed, had a son by her called Constantine. After eleven years were expired, he died at York, and bestowed the kingdom upon his son, who, within a few years after he was raised to this dignity, began to give proofs of herooic virtue, undaunted courage, and strict observance of justice towards his people. He put a stop to the depradations of robbers, suppressed the insolence of tyrants, and endeavoured everywhere to restore peace."[1]
Wikipedia: Helena (empress)#Depictions in British folklore -- "In Great Britain, later legend, mentioned by Henry of Huntingdon but made popular by Geoffrey of Monmouth, claimed that Helena was a daughter of the King of Britain, Cole of Colchester, who allied with Constantius to avoid more war between the Britons and Rome. Geoffrey further states that she was brought up in the manner of a queen, as she had no brothers to inherit the throne of Britain. The source for this may have been Sozomen's Historia Ecclesiastica, which however does not claim Helena was British but only that her son Constantine picked up his Christianity there. Constantine was with his father when he died in York, but neither had spent much time in Britain.
The statement made by English chroniclers of the Middle Ages, according to which Helena was supposed to have been the daughter of a British prince, is entirely without historical foundation. It may arise from the similarly-named Welsh princess Saint Elen (alleged to have married Magnus Maximus and to have borne a son named Constantine) or from the misinterpretation of a term used in the fourth chapter of the panegyric on Constantine's marriage with Fausta. The description of Constantine honoring Britain oriendo (lit. "from the outset", "from the beginning") may have been taken as an allusion to his birth ("from his beginning") although it was actually discussing the beginning of his reign.
At least twenty-five holy wells currently exist in the United Kingdom dedicated to a Saint Helen. She is also the patron saint of Abingdon and Colchester. St Helen's Chapel in Colchester was believed to have been founded by Helena herself, and since the 15th century, the town's coat of arms has shown a representation of the True Cross and three crowned nails in her honour. Colchester Town Hall has a Victorian statue of the saint on top of its 50-metre (160 ft) high tower.[34] The arms of Nottingham are almost identical because of the city's connection with Cole, her supposed father.
Adrian Gilbert has argued that Helena traveled to Nevern in Wales and hid the True Cross near the local Norman church of St Brynach, where a cross is carved into a rock formation. Named the Pilgrim's Cross, religious pilgrims once came here to pray for visions. Names of local places are abundant with cross imagery, including River of the Empress, Mountain of the Cross, Pass of the Cross, and others.[36]"
Name
Name: /Coel/ II
Name: Coel II King of Old /Britian
Name: COEL King Of Britain
Alias
Alias: Coel of Camulod
Birth
Date: 218
Place: Drepanum, Helenopolis, Bithynia, Turkey
Title
Title: Duke (King) of Colchester
Coel reigned 232AD.
Marriage
Husband: Cadfan ap Cynan
Wife: Gladys verch Mawr
Child: UNKNOWN Coel
Marriage: BEF. 206
Place: Bretagne, France
Death
Place: Colchester, Essex, , England
Date: 262
Age: 29-30
Sources
↑ History of the Kings of Britain, Book 5, # 6.
History of the Kings of Britain, by Geoffrey of Monmouth. Translation based on Aaron Thompson & J. A. Giles (1842).
The National CV of Britain
Royal Line, The: Albert F Schmuhl: March, 1929 NYC, NY - Rev. March 1980. Genealogical lineages may not always be from father to son, especially Houses of Kings 
KAERCOLVIN Coilus (I59323)
 
9914 The following year, Jeanne-Angelique met Louis Prat, living in the
Lower-Town of Quebec. The wedding took place at the cathedral on 30
July 1691. Louis
Prat was a good fellow, an innkeeper, a merchant-baker, a ship owner
and the port captain of Quebec. In 1704, he built the ship le
Joybert. "A few months
after it was launched, the vessel returned triumphantly to Quebec,
bringing the Pembroke Gally, a frigate taken from the English. This
period is remembered
in a painting dated from 1706 given to the sanctuary of Sainte-Anne-
de-Beaupre. "

In 1716, Louis and Jeanne-Angelique were living in the Rue Sous-le-
Fort. The couple had three daughters, one of whom survived, Marie-
Josephe, and was
married to Charles-Paul Denis, Sieur de Saint-Simon, on 17 October
1713, at Quebec. Louis died in February 1726 and was buried in the
cathedral. 
GOBEIL Jeanne Angelique (I3434)
 
9915 The friends of Goeffrey were unaware that their playful nickname for
him "Plantagenet" would live through the years. The story is told
that while disguised in battle, and to make himself known to his
followers, he leaned down from his horse and grasped a sprig of
"plante de genet", the common broom corn which grew thickly on the
heath, and thrust it in his helmet. Thus he derived his popular
title.
A noble person was Geoffrey, one of the most powerful princes of
France, with elegant and courtly manners and a reputation for
gallantry in the field. His alliance with England came about in
consequence of the great tragedy of the sinking of the famous White
Ship. When it struck hidden rocks off he coast of France, young
William, Duke of Normandy, the heir to the English throne, and 300
hundred others, were drowned in the freezing November waters, the
Butcher of Rouen alone being saved.
King Henry I of England, in despair over the loss of his only son,
sought the aid of Geoffrey Plantagenet and personally invested him
with the order of knighthood. Approving the marriage of his daughter
Matilda with Geoffrey, King Henry expressed the hope that all
Englishmen would give them their full allegiance. The Barons took
oath to uphold the succession of Matilda and Geoffrey and their
children after them. When , therefore, the sons Henry, Geoffrey, and
William were born, their grandfather thought the succession to the
throne secure. However, King Henry had no sooner died that all the
plans he had labored at so long crumbled away. Yet eventually on 19
Dec. 1154, Geoffrey's eldest son was crowned King Henry II and thus
Geoffrey heads the line of English Kings which bear his Plantagenet
name.


Geoffrey "the Fair", meaning "the Handsome" was the first to use the Plantagenet name. One story relates that his father, Fulk the Younger atoned for some evil deed by being scourged with broom twigs or planta genista before the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem. Another story relates that Geoffrey wore a sprig of broom or planta genista in his hat. Regardless, it is generally agreed upon that the family name of "Plantagenet" has its origins with the planta genista or broom plant.

Born on August 24, 1113
Died on September 7, 1151 and interred at St. Julian's Church, Le Mans, Anjou.

Armorial Bearings of Plantagenet The arms of Plantagenet are described by Richard Thomson: "Ancient Arms of Anjou borne by the Plantagenets, who were Earls of that place, of which family King John was descended. Gules, a chief argent over all an escarbuncle, or." Note that:
(1) Shields were sometimes strengthened with iron bands radiating from the centre which eventually became a part of the coat of arms under the term escarbuncle, and;
(2) Geoffrey "the Fair" Plantagenet pictured above doesn't appear to be carrying these arms.

Geoffrey married on May 22, 1127 to Matilda of England who was born in 1104 and died on September 10, 1167. Matilda was the only surviving legitimate child of King Henry I of England. After the death of Henry I in 1135, Geoffrey laid claim to Normandy through his wife Matilda. Meanwhile, Matilda attempted the conquest of England from her cousin King Stephen who had gained the crown. Geoffrey did not accompany her, being still engaged in the conquest of Normandy, which he completed in 1144. In 1147 he undertook a crusade with King Louis VII of France. In 1150, Geoffrey and Matilda ceded Normandy to their son Henry (later King Henry II of England), who founded the English Angevin dynasty. Click on Matilda for her ancestry.

Geoffrey and Mathilda had the following sons:

* Henry II Curtmantle, King of England, born March 5, 1132/33. Click Here for this line.
* Geoffrey VI, Count of Nantes and Anjou, born June 1, 1134 and d.s.p July 26, 1158
* William Longespée (also William Fitz Empress), Vicomte of Dieppe, born July 21, 1136 and died January 30, 1163/64. (not to be confused with his nephew William Longespée, named in the Magna Charta)
(Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, Baltimore, 2004, p. 2 & 3)

Geoffrey was associated with an unknown girlfriend, said by Brian C. Tompsett to be named "Adelaide of Angers". Geoffrey and his girlfriend had a son:

* Hamelin Plantagenet

Geoffrey also had two daughters, but the mother is not known:

* Emma (or Emme) Plantagenet who married Dafydd Ab Owain, Prince of North Wales
* Mary, Abbess of Shaftesbury 
PLANTAGENET Geoffrey IV "Le Bon" (I6566)
 
9916 The gender of this child is unknown as is the date of birth and it's birth order in the family.

Taken from the "History of Swanzey, NH" by Reade p. 301. 
Brown (I52685)
 
9917 The Gesta Episcoporum Autissiodorensium records that Angela was the wife of Aubry I, Vicomte d'Orléans. [1]

Sources
↑ Gesta Episcoporum Autissiodorensium, p. 371.
Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2023, Vicomtes d'Orleans. 
UNKNOWN Angela (I58368)
 
9918 The Gestis Hungarorum Liber records the marriage of "Almus" and "filiam cuiusdam nobilissimi ducis" but does not name her or her father[1]

Research Notes
The Gesta Hungarorum was written some 400 years later and cannot be regarded as a primary source.

Sources
↑ Gestis Hungarorum Liber 4, p. 6. cited by Medieval Lands.
Anonymus. Gesta Hungarorum. c1200. Reprint: Anakreón Kiadó (1996)
Cawley, Charles: Medieval Lands. Hungary, Ch5. Magyar Princes of Hungary from 900, Kings of Hungary 1000-1301 (Árpád) 
Of HUNGARY Unknown (I58669)
 
9919 The GIFFARD surname is derived from a Saxon word signifyingliberal disposition, the giver. Is is also a place name from atown of the water of Gifford, Huddington County, Scotland; fromthe Celtic word Gaf, a hook, a bend, and ford. BOLEBEC Geoffrey (I59179)
 
9920 The Histoire Générale de Languedoc suggests that the wife of Odon Comte de Toulouse was the daughter of Ermengaud Comte d’Albi, basing this on Gersende naming her second son Ermengaud. Cawley states however, that it is presumably possible that she was a more remote relation of Ermengaud than his daughter. [1]

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.
Ancestry Profile: #256015453. 
ALBI Garsende (I59784)
 
9921 The History of Charlestown, NH" p. 620 by Henry Hamilton Saunderson

p.620
WILLARD:
"Simon, (son of Henry and Mary (Lakin) Willard) married Mary Whitcomb. His place of residence was Lancaster, where he died in 1706. On Dec. 12th, 1706, his widow married Samuel Farusworth, and became, by this marriage, the mother of Samuel, David and Stephen Farnsworth, the first settlers of No. 4. v The children of Simon Willard, by Mary Whitcomb, were Aaron, b. in Lancaster, in 1701, who m. Dec. 16th, 1724, Mary Wright, (dau. of Capt. Samuel and Mary (Stevens) Wright), first of Sudbury then of Rutland, Mass., and grand-daughter of Cyprian and Mary (Willard) Stevens; Moses, b. at Lancaster, about 1702 or 03 ; Eunice b. at Lancaster, who m. Joseph Doby, jr. of Stow ; Alice, who was b. at Lancaster and m. Capt. Jonathan Whitney of that place, Jan. 29th, 1718-19 ; Miriam, a posthumous child, b. at Sudbury and who m. Joseph Maynard of that place Jan. 29th, 1723." 
Wright Mary (I51724)
 
9922 The History of Charlestown,NH by Henry Hamilton Saunderson.

p.620
WILLARD:
"Simon, (son of Henry and Mary (Lakin) Willard) married Mary Whitcomb. His place of residence was Lancaster, where he died in 1706. On Dec. 12th, 1706, his widow married Samuel Farusworth, and became, by this marriage, the mother of Samuel, David and Stephen Farnsworth, the first settlers of No. 4. v The children of Simon Willard, by Mary Whitcomb, were Aaron, b. in Lancaster, in 1701, who m. Dec. 16th, 1724, Mary Wright, (dau. of Capt. Samuel and Mary (Stevens) Wright), first of Sudbury then of Rutland, Mass., and grand-daughter of Cyprian and Mary (Willard) Stevens; Moses, b. at Lancaster, about 1702 or 03 ; Eunice b. at Lancaster, who m. Joseph Doby, jr. of Stow ; Alice, who was b. at Lancaster and m. Capt. Jonathan Whitney of that place, Jan. 29th, 1718-19 ; Miriam, a posthumous child, b. at Sudbury and who m. Joseph Maynard of that place Jan. 29th, 1723."

Willard memoir: or, Life and times of Major Simon Willard; with notices of . . .
By Joseph Willard
See p.407 which mentions:
WILLARD:
"194. * Aaron, 4 born at Lancaster, January, 1701 ; owned the covenant, and was baptized, May 10,1719; m., Dec. 16,1724, Mary Wright, daughter of Captain Samuel and Mary (Stevens) Wright, first of Sudbury and then of Rutland, and grand-daughter of Cyprian and Mary (Willard) Stevens. Aaron Willard was an active citizen in his native town, and Colonel of one of the Worcester regiments. He died in May, 1784, in the eighty-fourth year of his age. Mrs. Willard died April 27, 1767, in her sixty-fourth year. They had nine children, one of whom was * Simon,5 born Sept. 29, 1727, died Jan. 9, 1825, set. ninety-seven year three months and eleven days." 
Willard Aaron (I51768)
 
9923 The history of Marie, born about 1655, is known to USA through that
of her fiance Robert Vaillancourt and through her twelve children,
all born and baptized at the
church of Ste-Famille on the island. 
GOBEIL Marie Francoise (I3437)
 
9924 The house he built in 1837 or 1839 at 2000 Leffingwell NE, Grand Rapids, MI is still standing (it's the oldest standing house in Grand Rapids township) BRADISH Joshua Luther (I32902)
 
9925 The Hulterstad Church, with it's mediavel tower, the only remaining part left of the original church, was built in the year 1200. This once Catholic Church had been one of the biggest churches in Oland. The nave is in the neo-classical style, which reminds one of a barn, was built in 1803. It was the first of its kind. At one time this was used as a parish fortress to protect the people of Oland from invading "heathens" south and east of the Baltic Sea. The great bell resting in the bell tower was installed in the 1630.

The church is surrounded by a cemetery. Most of our ancestors lay buried
in this tiny churchyard. However, like most cemeteries in the Scandinavian countries, if perpetual care is not paid by the family, the body is removed and the grave re-used. The gravestone is then placed against the surrounding wall of the churchyard. I believe this is what happened to the graves of Olof Andersson and his wife, M. Brita Nilsdotter Andersson but at the time of the visit to the church and cemetery, their names were not known to me. It is not known if any living descendants still live in the area. The family home is nearby on #10 Skarloff, Hulterstad, Oland, Sweden. 
Source (S1678)
 
9926 The idea that the wife of Pepin of Landen, whose real parentage is unknown, was descended from Arnulfing stock, e.g. Arnold of Saxony the fancied father of Arnulf of Metz, was seductive from an early date. Such links have been removed.

Itta (Ittaberga; Yduberga) UNKNOWN (592–652)[4]

Parents
Itta's parents are UNKNOWN.[5]

Marriage
m. Pepin I of Landen.
Issue: 3 children:

Begga, Abess of Andenne (d. 693, 698 or 709)[6]
m. Ansegisel (father: Arnulf of Metz)[7]
Grimoald, maiores domus (615 - 657 Paris)[8]
Gertrudis (d. 17 Mar 656/64)[9]
Relatives
(possible) Saint Modoald, Bishop of Triers[10][1]
(possible) Saint Severa[11][2]
Religion
650: founded Abbey of Nivells (Benedictine), built the double monastery under the leadership of her daughter, Saint Gertrude. She spent the rest of her life there. [12]
Feast Day: May 8
Occupation
Abbess of Nivelles[13]
Burial in Abbey of Nivelles (present St. Gertrudes Collegiate Church), Nivelles, Walloon Brabant, Belgium

Widowed in 640, Itte Idoberge retired in religion. Soon after 640 or 647, St. Amand visited her and encouraged her to found a monastery. This advice came true in 648 or 649 by the foundation of a monastery (Abbey Nivelles) in Hainaut.

Her daughter Gertrude was an interesting party because Grimoald's sister was highly sought by proposals of marriage.

To prevent her from being kidnapped and forcibly married, and as the young girl destined to a religious life, Itta herself cut the hair of her daughter and installed her as Abbess of Nivelles.

Mother and daughter had monks coming in from France and from overseas, probably England or Ireland. The monastery became twice it previous size, with a congregation of nuns along with a congregation of monks.

Itte died there twelve years after her husband had died.

Title
Saint
Name
Name: Itta /de Metz/
Name: Itta /DeNivelles/
Name: Itta //
Also Known As: Iduberga
Name: Itta /d' Aquitaine/
Name: Itte //
Given Name: Itte
Birth
Place: Metz, Moselle, Lorraine, France
Date: 592
Place: Landenne, Liege, Belgium
Date: 591
Place: Landenne, Liege, Belgium
Date: 592
Place: Metz, Moselle, Lorraine, France
Date: ABT 590
Date: 583
Marriage
Date: 582
Place: France
Date: 612
Place: Landenne, Liege, Belgium
Date: 582
Marriage:
Date: 581
Place: Herstal, Liege, Belgium
Date: 0652
Place: Abbey Nivelles, Brabant, Belgium
Age: 60-61
Date: 8 May, 652
Place: Abbey Nivelles, Brabant, Belgium
Death
Place: Abbey Nivelles, Brabant, Belgium
Date: 652
Place: Abbey Nivelles, Brabant, Belgium

Sources
↑ Some believe that the bishop was her brother.[1] Note that Wikipedia's stub (retrieved 20 Oct 2015),[2] lacks authority... their stub for Itta explicitly states Itta and Modoald were siblings, but this is not certain.
↑ Severa and Modoald are siblings.[3]
Cawley C. (2006). Medieval Lands v.3. fmg.acItta/Ittaberga (592-652)
Fox, Y. (2014). Power and Religion in Merovingian Gaul: Columbanian Monasticism and the Frankish Elites, (pp. 187). Cambridge University Press. eBook.[14]
“Saint Ida of Nivelles“ (592-652) CatholicSaints.Info, 4 May 2016, Web accessed 16 September 2017
Ancestral Roots; Fredrick Weis; Seventh Edition, 1992.
https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/17142559/person/765418802/facts
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Itta 
UNKNOWN Itte (I58181)
 
9927 The immigrant ancestor of the most numerous families of Davison in America of that period, was a Scotch Convenanter, a group in Scotland, which struggled for religious liberty. They were called thus because they found themselves in a series of covenants to maintain the Presbyterian doctrines. The Covenanter Army was defeated at the Battle of Dunbar Scotland by Oliver Cromwell in 1650. Daniel is supposed to have been a prisoner of war, who was exiled or deported to the Colonies in 1651 or 52. He built a house in Ipswich Hamlet, Essex, MA in the year 1667. He served in King Philips War 1675-1676. His will was dated December 5, 1693. The earliest record of Daniel Davison is the marriage record in the Essex court record. He was 27, Margaret was 22.

The placing of Daniel as one of the Scotch exiles was in the instance largely upon circumstantial evidence, and family traditions. When this solution was once accepted, it was found so well secured in circumstances that it seemed impossible to rove a flaw of genuineness of the same. The traditions, while indistinct as to the historical facts, were founded in lines of the family descent, and had been separated for two centuries, and could have only a common source at the beginning. Daniel Davison being an industrious, frugal thinking man under the conditions named in Rev. John Cotton’s letter, soon found himself able to reimburse the person who paid for his passage to America and in the short period of six years accumulated enough substance to become a farmer upon his own account, and married into a substantial English family, that has borne a worthy name through the centuries since. His children were able to make marriage alliances with the best families, the Dodges, the Whipples, the Morgans, the Tracys, the Williams and the Reddingtons who took and have maintained, during the eight to ten generations since, leaving good repute throughout the continent. He was an educated man to any degree. The record indicates he did not write. If by any chance, he was taken into the Scotch army on the levy of 1643, he could have had the opportunity for education. While it seems improbable at this time, that a boy of fourteen years would be called, yet in the Revolutionary War, Benjamin Davison, who enlisted at fourteen year of age, and fought in the lines for eight years, was only one of several of Daniel Davison's descendants of similar ages, who fought to make this nation possible.

At the date of dedication of the Hamlet church, 1714, the Davison’s and other residents of the Hamlet withdrew from Wenham church and became charter members of the Hamlet church, now Hamilton. This seems to be the only record that Daniel Davison was a member of the church. The fact that he was a member of the Convenanter Army stands as the strongest evidence that his people were of that faith, and that he was baptized as a child in Scotland.

The bloody and crushing experience of Dunbar and of Worcester, 1650 and 1651, it is said caused these unfortunate captives to curse the King, and clergy for “ensnaring them in misery”. Wheelock observed they could not look upon the perpetual meddling of the minister with the affairs of state, as the real source of all calamities, which had “recently befallen them”.

There is no recorded evidence that Daniel Davison held aloof form the church, except silence, which is not strong when his children were in church, and the record that he was buried by the good man as a member, is sufficient. At this date (1693) and for half a century thereafter, the “Hamlet of Ipswich” was more a part of Wenham than of Ipswich, five miles to the north. Here the Davison’s attended church, school and buried their dead. In the southwest corner of that ancient part of the Wenham cemetery today is a triangular tract that has no marking of burials. The fact that the area has been left, as further burials were made, confirm that belief that the ground is sacred to the memory of their ancestors.

About 1920, permission was asked and received, the consent of the present cemetery board to erect near the middle of the front of this area, a memorial to Daniel Davison and his wife Margaret. Daniel’s number in Rev. Gerrish’s list is 33; hence about the middle of the area may be his resting place. The inscriptions reads: “In Memory of Daniel Davison, Born in Scotland, 1630-1693 and his wife, Margaret Low. Ancestors of the Most Numerous Family of the Name in America. Buried 1693, by Rev. Joseph Gerrish”.
Daniel and Margaret had 13 children.

On September 13, 1666 he signed a loyalist petition. He served as a Major in the Essex Regiment and a member of the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Co. in 1672. He became a member of the Wenham Massachusetts Meeting House on January 5, 1674 and was a resident of Ipswich.

Will of Daniel Davison

In the name of God, Amen. I, Daniel Davison of Ipswich in the county of Essex in New England, being sick in body, but in sound and disposing memory praise be given to God for the same do make this my last will and testament in manner and form following:

First: and principal I resign my soul into the merciful hands of almighty God my creator Asuredly hopeing through the merits of my Blessed Saviour to obtain pardon and remission of all my sins & my body I comit to the earth whence it was taken to be decently buried by the discretion of my Executor hereinafter named & for the worldly goods and estate the Lord hath given me, I dispose thereof as follows: I give unto my son William my dwellinghouse and barne and all my outhouses & orchards together with twenty acres of upland and the rest of the upland adjoining to the house lott on the west & northwest to my son William’s at my beloved wifes decease or when she marries.

Item: I give unto my son John fifteen acres of upland adjoining to Edward Potter and Samuel Lumass their land & so to front upon the road way to Boston also I give to my son John five acres of meadow in Bay Path meadow.

Item: I give unto my son Thomas fifteen acres of upland joining to the land I have given my son Daniel & to joyne to Mr. Whipple’s land; also I give to my son Thomas five acres of meaddow in Bay Meaddow.

Item: I give to my son Peter fifteen acres of upland joyning to the land I have given my son Daniel on the one side & joyining to John Gilbert’s land also I give to my son Peter five acres of meaddow in Bay path meaddow and I do oblige my sons John, Thomas and Peter their proportions of upland and meaddow to my Beloved wife in the same termes as I have obliged my son William. And whereas there is thirty acres of upland lying Between William and Peter’s land not disposed which I value to be worth one hundred & twenty pounds, I doe lieue it in the hands of my Beloved wife whome I constitute & appoint to be my sole executrix of this my last will and testament, to be improved for Legacies to my Daughters Bridget & Dorcas distributing the overplus making them all equal and I doe appoint my son William to pay ten pounds for the use of his mother in order to my daughters portions Bridget & Dorcas; and my sons Daniel, & Thomas, & Peter shall have the priviledge of a high way to the Bay Road throught each others land & if by Gods providence any of my sons dy without issue then their part of land shall be equally divided among the survivers;

In Witness of this my firm act and deed I have hereunto sett my hand and seals_______

Signed Sealed in presence of
Richard Walker Senr; Isaac Swaine.
The Mark of Danll Davison (Seal)

Before ye Honoured Bartho Gedney Esq. Dec. 5, 1693____

Richard Walker Senr; & Isaac Swaine the witnesses within subscribe oath that they saw Daniel Davison sign & seal & heard him declare the written to be his last will & testament and that he was then of a disp

Attest Steph Sewall Regr.

Dated Dec. 5, 1693

Probate Records, Salem, Massachusetts, Vol. 303; "12/15/1692-Last will and Testament of Daniel Davison, Deceased"


Inventory of Daniel Davison
From: Probate records of Salem, Mass. Vol. 303. The inventory of the Estate of Daniel Davison deceased taken this 27th day of November, 1693, by us whose names are under subscribed_________________

A Dwelling House and Barne and outhouses 70L, Home Lott and orchard and meadow belonging 110L, 12 acres of tillage land 72 L, Pasture land and Meadow 76 acres 304L, Neet cattle and sheep 34L 1s, Swine and horse and maire 12L 7s, Feather bed and stock bed with furniture 20L, Sheets, table linen and pewter 7L, Iron potts, brass kettle and warming pan 3L, Chests and boxes and three musketts 4 L 10s, Tramel fire pan tongues and frying pan, All utensells of Husbandry 21L 10s, Sadle pollion and bridle and sword 2L 10s, Spinning wheels and other lumber tables and chairs 2L, Indian corn and barley, wheat and rye 34L 14s, Hay in Barne and oates threshed 17L 12s, Sider and flax 14L 10s, Total 720L 12s, Debts due from the estate fiz, General expense 8L 5s, Other debts 8L 1s.
Richard Walker John Gilbert Davison Exrx.

Before the Honored Bartho Gedney, Esq. 12/5/1693 made oath that the above is a true perfect inventory of ye estate of her late husband Daniel Davison deceased if more comes to her knowledge she will ad the same. Attest Steph Sewall

Sources of Information:
Author: Davisson, Russell Lee.
Title: A history and genealogy, the Davissons : twelve generations,
1630-1992, Davidson-Davison-Davisson families
Publication:
Date: c1993

Author:
Title: Colonial Families of the United States
Publication:
Date:
Text: Cited by Joseph Miller to Dennis Nicklaus in letter of May, 1996.


Title: Probate Records of Salem, Massachusetts
Publication:
Date:
Text: Cited by Joseph Miller to Dennis Nicklaus in letter of May, 1996. 
Sr. Daniel DAVISON (I34645)
 
9928 The inventory of the estate of Phillip of Brookfield, Worcester County, MA was made 17 Sept. 1742. Goss Phillip (I54382)
 
9929 The large grey granite tombstone denotes the Hanen plot in which is written the following: "Thy will be done." The family plot is located in the St. Anne Protestant Cemetery, St. Anne, Kankakee County, IL. Brown Melinda Ellen (I52993)
 
9930 The marriage announcement is noted as such;

Brown, William m. "in February" Rebecca Wood; Elder N. Noyes. All of Preston. (Published in newspaper of 7-7/20/1819)

The marriage announcement is noted as such;

Brown, William m. "in February" Rebecca Wood; Elder N. Noyes. All of Preston. (Published in newspaper of 7-7/20/1819) 
Family: Brown William / Weed Rebecca (F24052)
 
9931 The marriage ceremony was performed by A. C. Kline, a minister of the Gospel.

The marriage ceremony was performed by A. C. Kline, a minister of the Gospel. 
Family: O'Connel Thomas / Brown Rosella (F24077)
 
9932 The Methodist Church Moody Gary Edwin (I52830)
 
9933 The Methodist Church Moody Glenn Edwin (I52910)
 
9934 The Methodist Church Moody Donald Merle (I52913)
 
9935 The mother of Aelinde, wife of Ingelger I of Anjou, was a sister of Bishop Raino of Angers and Archbishop Adalard of Tours[1][2]. The family was related to Hugues, duke of Burgundy, but the precise relationship has not been identified[2].

According to Gesta Consulum Andegavorum (not to be accepted as historical), her husband, father of Aelinde, was Gaufredus (Geoffrey) consul of Gâtinais[1]. Other theories (no identified source) say he was Fulk, Count of Châteaudun[3][4].

Name
The name of Aelinde's mother is unknown. Numerous genealogies call her "Ava".

Birth
An estimated birth year of 0835 has been given, based on her grandson Fulk of Anjou being probably born about 0870.

Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 See discussion of Ingelger's ancestry and of his wife, S. Baldwin, The Henry Project, page for Foulques I d'Anjou, accessed Jan 2021
↑ 2.0 2.1 Archbishopric of Tours Chap 1. Archbishops of Tours, Charles Cawley, Medieval Lands, accessed Nov 2018
↑ Contributeurs de Wikipédia, "Ingelger," Wikipédia, l'encyclopédie libre, https://fr.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ingelger&oldid=154214083 (Page consultée le 24 novembre 2018)
↑ Châteaudun, Loches, Amboise, Châteaudun, "The Boddy Family" website, with no identification of the sources that were used to reach this conclusion. A summary of the sources used by the site can be seen here (accessed Nov 2018) 
AMBOISE Unknown (I58377)
 
9936 The name and parents of Ardabasto's wife (fl. 642-643), are unknown. Cawley's (2006), research states she's the *NIECE* (sobrina) of Chindasvinto, King of the Visigoths. She is *NOT* Flavia Juliana hija de Pedro Augusto, as Salazar y Castro's suggests.[1] VISIGOTHS Unknown (I59871)
 
9937 The name for the wife of Udo von Wetterau is not given in any source. Jackman suggests her name was Cunegundis, who is listed in the Reichenau memorial book which includes members of the Konradiner family. [1]

Parents
Flodoard refers to the wife of Udo von Wetterau as Amita (Aunt) to Hugo de Vermandois, Archbishop of Reims. [2]

Birth
Her birth is based on the approximate date of her marriage and the estimated birth dates of her children.

Marriage
Cawley estimates that Cunigundis married about 915 to Udo, Graf von Wetterau. [3]

Death
Her husband died 949[4] or 950[5], and Cawley states she died after 943. [3]

Sources
↑ Jackman (1997), p. 38.
↑ Flodoard 946, MGH SS III, p. 393.
↑ 3.0 3.1 Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2022, Comtes de Vermandois.
↑ Annales Necrologici Fuldenses, MGH SS XIII, p. 123.
↑ Continuator Reginonis Trevirensis 949, MGH SS I, p. 620. 
VERMANDOIS Cunigundis (I58219)
 
9938 The name of Joseph's parents as given by himself on his marriage
licence to Charlotte (Watchorn) Chedister were Jacob Vallee and
Delfie La Vallier. On Joseph's Social Security Records he lists his
parents as Jacob Vallie and Delphine Vallie. 
GIROUX Jacques\James (I3403)
 
9939 The name of this twin could possibly James William Loghry. He died in 1779. Loghry James (I54056)
 
9940 The Norman Montgomery family ancestry was closely interwoven either by blood or marriage with the Duchy of Normandy. However, the family history in Normandy was not without blemish. Hugh had five sons. Hugh, Robert, William and Gilbert were all murdered in revenge for the murder of Osberne de Crepon, guardian of Duke William. Roger was the survivor.

Name
Roger [I] de Montgommery [1]
Birth and Parents
Roger's parents are not known. [1]

His birth year is estimated as 984.

Marriage to Josceline
He married Josceline. Josceline's mother was named Sainsfrida [Senfrie] (Josceline, her husband and her mother are named in a letter of Ives Bishop of Chartres to Henry I King of England dated 1114 which explains the consanguinity between the king and Hugues de Châteauneuf, who wanted to marry one of the king's illegitimate daughters.)[1]

Lands
Roger was Seigneur de Montgommery and Vicomte de l'Hiémois. [1]

1028 Restored market to Abbey of Jumieges
In [1028/35] he restored to the Abbey of Jumièges the market at Vimoutiers which he had taken from the monks. [1]

1031 Witnessed Charter for Robert I, Duke of Normandy
He witnessed a charter of Robert I Duke of Normandy for the abbey of Saint Wandrille dated [1031/32]. [1]

Exiled to Paris
During the troubles of Duke William's minority, he was exiled to Paris on account of the murder of Osbern by his son William de Montgomery (who was later slain in revenge).

Guillaume of Jumièges records that “Rogeri[us] de Montegumeri“ had been exiled to Paris “pro perfidia sua” when [his son] “Willelmo Rogerii de Montegumeri filio” murdered “Osbernus...Herfasti Gunnoris comitissæ fratris filius”. [1]

Guillaume of Jumièges indicated that Roger's five sons remained in Normandy during their father’s exile. [1]

1048 Death
Roger died before 1048.[1]

Issue
Roger & his wife had six children: [1]

Hughes de Montgommery was killed in battle 7 Feb 1035/before 1048], and buried in Troarn. Guillaume of Jumièges names “Hugo et Robertus, Rogerius et Willelmus atque Gislebertus” as the five sons of “Rogeri[us] de Montegumeri“, adding that they had remained in Normandy during their father’s exile. He witnessed his father's charter for the abbey of Jumièges. He was killed during the troubles in Normandy during the minority of Duke Guillaume II. Vicomte d'Hiémois. He married Josceline de Bolbec, daughter of OSBERN de Bolbec & his [first/second wife Aveline ---/Hawise ---]. Josceline and her marriage are shown in Europäische Stammtafeln. This is presumably based on Robert de Torigny, continuation of William of Jumièges, the unreliability of this part of whose chronicle is discussed in the Complete Peerage. Guillaume of Jumièges records that “nepotes...plures...Gunnor...earum...quintam” married “Hugo de Monte-gummerici” by whom she had “Rogerius pater Roberti de Bellismo”[449]. There must be considerable doubt about whether this can be correct as Osbern de Bolbec’s wife and Hugues de Montgommery’s mother would have been first cousins.] [1]
Robert de Montgommery died before his father. Guillaume of Jumièges names “Hugo et Robertus, Rogerius et Willelmus atque Gislebertus” as the five sons of “Rogeri[us] de Montegumeri“, adding that they had remained in Normandy during their father’s exile. [1]
Roger [II] de Montgommery died in Shrewsbury 27 Jul 1094 and was buried in Shrewsbury Abbey). Guillaume of Jumièges names “Hugo et Robertus, Rogerius et Willelmus atque Gislebertus” as the five sons of “Rogeri[us] de Montegumeri“, adding that they had remained in Normandy during their father’s exile. He succeeded his father as Seigneur de Montgommery, Vicomte d'Hiémois. He was created Earl of Shrewsbury in 1074. Seigneur d'Alençon.
Guillaume de Montgommery was killed in battle in 1035, before 1048. Guillaume of Jumièges names “Hugo et Robertus, Rogerius et Willelmus atque Gislebertus” as the five sons of “Rogeri[us] de Montegumeri“, adding that they had remained in Normandy during their father’s exile[452]. Guillaume of Jumièges records that “Osbernus...procurator principalis domus, Herfasti Gunnoris comitissæ fratris filius“ was killed while sleeping “in cubiculo ducis cum ipso in valle Rodoili” by “Willelmo Rogerii de Montegumeri filio”, dated to early in the reign of Duke Guillaume II from the context, adding that the murderer was subsequently killed by “Barno...de Glotis præpositus Osberni” in revenge for the crime. [1]
Gilbert de Montgommery was murdered in 1064. Guillaume of Jumièges names “Hugo et Robertus, Rogerius et Willelmus atque Gislebertus” as the five sons of “Rogeri[us] de Montegumeri“, adding that they had remained in Normandy during their father’s exile[454]. Orderic Vitalis records the return from Apulia of “Ernaldus de Escalfoio Willermi Geroiani filius” who was pardoned by Duke Guillaume who promised the return of his property, that “Mabilia Talavacii filia” prepared poison for him which was drunk by “Gislebertus frater Rogerii de Monte-Gomerici” who died three days later “apud Raimalastum”, dated to [1064] from the context. Amieria is shown as the daughter of Gilbert in Europäische Stammtafeln[456], but this may be no more than speculation. The word "neptis" may indicate a more remote family relationship than niece. Orderic Vitalis reports that Roger de Montgommery married "Amieriam neptem suam" to "Warino autem Calvo", who was "a man small in body but great in spirit", to whom he granted “præsidatum Scrobesburiæ”[457]. Her second marriage is confirmed by a manuscript which recites the history of the foundation of Shrewsbury abbey and records donations including that of "Reginaldus frater Warini vicecomes…villam…Lega", adding in a later passage that "Reinaldus…post mortem Warini vicecomitis uxorem illius, cum honore, suscepit"[458]. Eyton interprets "frater" in this document as meaning "brother-in-law or rather husband of Warin’s widow"[459] but, assuming that the extract quoted above reflects the facts, such an interpretation is unnecessary as Rainald was both Warin’s brother and second husband of Warin’s widow. Orderic Vitalis records that “Rogerius ... Scrobesburiensis comes” donated properties to Ouche, including confirmation of the donation of “in ecclesia de Bailol altare sancti Leonardi et unam partem decimæ eiusdem villæ cum terra” donated by “Rainaldus de Bailol et Amieria uxor eius neptis mea”, undated but dated to after his second marriage[460]. The date of death of Amieria’s first husband and the date of her second marriage is indicated by Domesday Book which records "Raynaldus" as "vicecomes" of Shropshire[461]. m firstly WARIN [Guérin] "the Bald/le Chauve", son of --- (-[25 Feb 1083/1086]). A manuscript reciting the foundation of Shrewsbury abbey records donations including by "Warinus vicecomes…in villa…Tugfort" and “uxor…illius post eius obitum…domum…in civitate”, with the consent of "filiis suis"[462]. Orderic Vitalis records that “V Kal Mar” in 1083 “Rogerius comes” declared to “Guarinum vicecomitem et Picotem de Saia cæterosque proceres suos” his intention of founding the abbey of Saint-Pierre[463]. m secondly (before 1086) her first husband’s brother, RAINALD de Bailleul [Bailleul-en-Gouffern], son of ---. "Rainaldus" donated “Dodefort” to Shrewsbury abbey for the soul of "Warini antecessoris sui"[464]. Domesday Book records "Raynaldus" as "vicecomes" of Shropshire[465]. Orderic Vitalis records that “Rogerius...Scrobesburiensis comes” donated properties to Ouche, including confirmation of the donation of “in ecclesia de Bailol altare sancti Leonardi et unam partem decimæ eiusdem villæ cum terra” donated by “Rainaldus de Bailol et Amieria uxor eius neptis mea”, undated but dated to after his second marriage[466]. He must have ceased to be Sheriff in the early 1100s as a manuscript reciting the foundation of Shrewsbury abbey records that "Alanus filius Fladaldi" held “honorem vicecomitis Warini” after "filium eius"[467].] Amieria & her first husband had one child: [1]
Hugh died between 1102 and 1110. A manuscript reciting the history of the foundation of Shrewsbury abbey records donations including that of "Hugo filius eiusdem Warini"[468]. Sheriff of Shropshire. A manuscript reciting the foundation of Shrewsbury abbey records that "Alanus filius Fladaldi" held “honorem vicecomitis Warini” after "filium eius"[469]. As the death of Alan FitzFlaald is dated to before 1114, it is assumed that Hugh died early in the 1100s, probably without issue. See research note below.[1]
Research note
The above # 6 Hugh is not listed as a son by Cawley. Hugh appears to be the son of Amieria, who was the daughter of an unname sixth son of this Roger. [1]

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 Charles Cawley. Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Medieval Lands Database. Roger Montgomery Accessed December 16, 2017 jhd
http://www.geneajourney.com/talvas.html
Phillips, Weber, Kirk and Staggs Families of the Pacific Northwest, by Jim Weber, on Rootsweb.com
Roderick W. Stuart, "Royalty for Commoners."
Ancestry.com family trees
Yeatman, John Pym. The Early Genealogical History of the House of Arundel (Mitchell and Hughes, London, 1882) Page 8: "...son of Magnus; founder of Troarn (1022); exiled in Paris 1037" 
MONTGOMERY Roger (I60006)
 
9941 The Normans, or Norsemen, raided the shores of England and France from their homes in Scandinavia. The most prominent of these Norsemen was Hrólf, the Viking. whose name was Latinized to "Rollo" ... Rollo and his followers eventually seized Normandy in northern France, and their possession of the land was formalized by the Treaty of St Clair-sur-Epte between Charles III of France and Rollo, in the year 911.

One of the foremost of the Vikings under Rollo was Tancrède. He was with Rollo at St. Clair-sur-Epte, and receiving his reward of the land of and surrounding what was to becomes Tancarville, settled there and eventually was built a fortified Castle on his demesne, le Ville de Tancrède, on the first promontory guarding the mouth of the Seine River. Tancarville was an "allodium", signifying absolute ownership by Tancrède, as contrasted with a "fief". signifying lands held subject to the King or another Noble.

Tancrède is first recorded as holding his land in 912 and lacking much more information on same, we must speculate that only his Manor House (la Ancien Manoir) and probably, at least some, if not all of the structure(s) along the length of Rabels Fossé, existed in the first two generations, until Raoul FitzGerald fortified it substantially, with massive walls all around (6 to 18 feet thick), adding "le Tour Carrée" (the Square Tower), "le Chambre Aux Chevaliers" (the Knights Chamber), and much more, transforming it into one of the most respected Château Forts in the Pays de Caux and beyond.

"Tancarville castle was the seat of one of the most powerful lineages of the Pays de Caux ... This family, grand officers of the crown, were as mentioned, early landowners in the Lillebonne region. Infamous in Knightly accomplishments and during the ducal epoch, becoming that of the Hereditary Chamberlains of Normandy." The castle was located on the extremity of a triangular spur, detached from the hillsides of the Seine with a large deep ditch separating it from the plateau and a huge Fossé between the structure and le Boulevard Coquésant.
A first castle was founded for a lord named Tancredi who gave his name to the castle fort built on a spur overlooking the Seine to Raoul de Tancarville, Chamberlain of William the Conqueror in the 11th century.[3]



Sources
↑ Colonial England, 1066-1215, by J. C. Holt, p. 228
↑ Histoire du château et des sires de Tancarville by Achille Deville
↑ Des Forts, Philippe - Ministère de la Culture France
Des Forts, Philippe - Ministère de la Culture France - le Château Fort de Tancarville
Histoire du château et des sires de Tancarville" by Achille Deville, N. Périaux, 1834 - Histoire de Tancarville
Châteaux-forts et fortifications en France, Paris, J. Mesqui 1997, p. 370-372.
WASHBURN FAMILY FOUNDATIONS in Normandy, England and America, by Mabel Thacher Rosemary Washburn http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=wu.89062009634;view=1up;seq=7
The Battle Abbey Roll with Some Accounts of the Norman Lineages, by Duchess of Cleveland, publ. 1889 by John Murray, London, England. http://www.1066.co.nz/library/battle_abbey_roll3/subchap117.htm 
TANCARVILLE Tancrède (I60185)
 
9942 The old Ipswich court records make reference to Benedict's second
son, John. as a child of 12, we have a court record that John broke
open the barn door of James Chute Jr., breaking the lock taking his
oxen and working them "contrary to his knowledge and order",
witnessed by Thomas Harris Sr., his wife and son.
In the winter of 1678-79, John lived in the home of Mr. Francis
Wainwright. John apparently worked for Wainwright in some sort of
employee capacity. Wainwright was of a prominent family and a rather
wealthy member of the community. John was caught stealing food from
Wainwright, and providing it to his mother. In the hearing John tried
to put the blame on his parents, stating that his mother told him
that they wanted wheat, which "he might help them to" whereupon he
removed a bushel and a half of wheat and delivered it to Benedict,
his father. His mother, Susanna, made John a cake out of it. Later,
according to John, his stepmother asked that John take some pork from
Wainwright's warehouse. He took 2 large pieces five or six times.
This led to further thefts, including a small hog, half bushel of
salt, two bundles of candles, sugar carried in a handkerchief, all of
which he brought to his parents. Susanna's version of the story was
somewhat different. Yes, John had stolen the goods, but she
apparently did not put John up to it. She says she was suspicious and
wished them sent back to Mr. Wainwright, but did not for fear of
making trouble. John was to be severely whipped and the parents were
ordered to pay restitution to Mr. Wainwright.
Five years later, at the age of 17, John committed some unknown wrong
against his father. This dispute apparently could not be settled
within the family, so Benedict had to take his own son to court. On
Mar. 26, 1684, Benedict received execution of a judgment against his
son and the town Marshall "delivered said John Pulsepher to his
father for a term of six years." The records give no details
regarding the nature of the offense which would warrant what appears
to be a six year indenture to his father. two months later, John
"acknowledged judgment to his father in wheat, malt and pork.
Sometime in the next four years, John left Ipswich, and moved to
Gloucester, near a spot on the old road leading to Coffin's Beach.

In May 1684, at age 21 yrs.; Ipswich town
records note that John Pulsifer acknowledged
judgement to his father, Benedict with wheat, malt,
and pork. Whatever the dispute between
was, could not be settled privately and
required Benedict to exact a formal court
order against his son. He left Ispwich and
settled to the west town of Gloucester on
the road leading to Coffin's Beach. 
PULSIFER John (I7435)
 
9943 The oldest, Marie-Madeleine, after her birth at Riviere-Ouelle, was
brought to Quebec to be baptized on 30 June 1680. Jean Marchand, a
carpenter from Quebec, and Marie
Gachet, wife in a second marriage to Charles Roger, Sieur des
Colombiers, served as her godparents. At the end of her sixteenth
year, Marie-Madeleine became the wife of
Pierre Boucher, at Riviere-Ouelle, on 4 February 1697, and gave him
ten children. After the death of her first husband, Madeleine married
the twenty year old
Jean-Baptiste Maisonneuve, a Gascon from Bayonne, on 21 March 1716.
She had four more children by him. 
DANCOSSE Marie Madeleine (I2237)
 
9944 The origins of "Etienette, Comtesse de Bourgogne," wife of Guillaume Ier de Bourgogne[1] have been the subject of genealogical dispute since the 18th Century. No contemporary documents mention her parents or where she was born. Was she born in Longwy (at the time within the Duchy of Luxembourg) or possibly in Barcelona or was she from the Comté de Foix (Ariege), in Languedoc?

See: Etiennette de Bourgogne on Wikipedia. Cites: Christian Settipani, "La Noblesse du Midi Carolingien," Oxford, Linacre College, Unit for Prosopographical Research, coll. « Occasional Publications / 5 »,‎ 2004, 388 p. (ISBN 1-900934-04-3), p. 147 à 149 for a long discussion (in French) on this subject. The author believes the 3rd alternative (that she was the daughter of the Foix native, Comte Bernard II de Bigorre), is correct. He had two sisters named Etiennette, an unusual feminine given name, taken from Etienne, or Stephen, in French. This feminine given name was more common in Auvergne and Languedoc than in either Barcelona or Lorraine (Longwy). It is, therefore, extremely unlikely that she was born in Longwy and her maiden name should likely be "de Bigorre" and her birthplace the town of Foix (Ariege, France).

In about 1050, Etiennette married Count William I of Burgundy (Comte Guillaume 1er de Bourgogne) and they had 13 children, including a son who became Pope Callixtus II, another who became a Roman Catholic saint (Saint Octavian) and two future Counts of Burgundy .[2]

Octavien ( 1128), moine à Pavie, en Lombardie et évêque de Savone, saint catholique.
Eudes. Son père fait une donation à la cathédrale de Besançon en 1087 pour le repos de son âme.
Renaud II ( 1097 en croisade), comte de Bourgogne.
Guillaume
Ermentrude mariée en 1065 à Thierry Ier, comte de Montbéliard, d'Altkirch et de Ferrette.
Guy, administrateur de l'Archevêché de Besançon puis élu 160 ème pape en 1119 sous le nom de Calixte II.
Étienne Ier ( 1102 à Ascalon) comte de Bourgogne.
Sybille de Bourgogne (aussi appelée Mahaut), épouse en 1080 #Eudes Ier, duc de Bourgogne
Raymond de Bourgogne ( 1107 en Espagne) marié en 1090 à Urraque Ire, reine de Castille et de Léon.
Hugues ( 1103), archevêque de Besançon.
Gisèle de Bourgogne, mariée en 1090 à Humbert II, comte de Savoie, puis vers 1105 à Rénier de Montferrat.
Clémence (°1078 - 1129), mariée en 1092 à Robert II, comte de #Flandre, puis vers 1125 à Godefroid Ier, duc de Brabant.
Étiennette, épouse Lambert François, de Valence, seigneur de Royans.
Count William of Burgundy was a powerful medieval sovereign with lands that far exceeded the boundaries of the "Franche Comté de Bourgogne". Three of his sons, including his heir, Count Renaud II, died in the Holy Land on Crusades. This ultimately weakened the Comté in Europe. Comtesse Etiennette de Bourgogne died in 1088 in the Comté de Bourgogne (also known as the "Franche Comté" region) in eastern France.[3] About Étiennette (Estefania) de Longwy?, Comtesse de Bourgogne Étiennette de Bourgogne (vers 1035-1045 après 1088) comtesse de Bourgogne par mariage avec le comte Guillaume Ier de Bourgogne.

Une filiation incertaine. Aucun document contemporain ne mentionne ses parents ou lui attribue une origine familiale. (Parentage uncertain and evidence is lacking)

Married between 1049 -1057 to Guillaume I de Bourgogne (Burgundy)

Children:

•Eudes. Son père fait une donation à la cathédrale de Besançon en 1087 pour le repos de son âme. •Renaud II ( 1097 en croisade), comte de Bourgogne. Guillaume.

•Ermentrude mariée en 1065 à Thierry Ier, comte de Montbéliard, d'Altkirch et de Ferrette. •Guy administrateur de l'Archevêché de Besançon puis élu 160 ème pape en 1119 sous le nom de Calixte II. •Étienne Ier ( 1102 à Ascalon) comte de Bourgogne. •Sybille épouse en 1080 Eudes Ier, duc de Bourgogne •Raymond ( 1107 en Espagne) marié en 1090 à Urraque Ire, reine de Castille et de Léon. •Hugues ( 1103). •Gisèle mariée en 1090 à Humbert II, comte de Savoie •Clémence (1078 1129) mariée en 1092 à Robert II, comte de Flandre, puis vers 1125 à Godefroid Ier, duc de Brabant. •Etiennette, épouse le Lambert François, de Valence seigneur de Royans. •Berthe ( 1097) épouse en 1093 Alphonse VI (1040 1109), roi de Castille et de Léon. Regarding her parentage/origin:

[SUMMARY OF THE FRENCH (below): No strong evidence exists to support the parentage of Etiennette, although many theories have been proposed and then disproven. Much discussion has taken place about the possibility of her mother having been named Clemence, and after considering the various women of that period named Clemence, one proposition is that Etiennette, Countess of Burgundy (as well as Ermesinde, Duchess of Aquitaine) may have been the daughters of Bernard II de Bigorre and his wife Clemence. (According to FMG, this was proposed by Settipani but it only a theory.)]

http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/BURGUNDY%20Kingdom.htm#_Toc232731766

ETIENNETTE, daughter of --- ([1035]-after 19 Oct 1088). Szabolcs de Vajay[35] demonstrates that his early hypothesis concerning a Lotharingian origin of Etiennette[36] is incorrect. According to Père Anselme[37], she was the daughter of Berenguer Ramón I "el Curvo" Conde de Barcelona, but there appears to be no contemporary documentation on which this is based. Settipani suggests that Etiennette may have been the daughter of Bernard [II] Comte de Bigorre & his first wife Clémence, based solely on onomastics[38], but the possible reason for a marriage between these two families has not been identified. A possible indication of her origin is provided by William of Tyre who specifies that Pope Calixtus II (Etiennette's son) was "consanguineus" of Emperor Heinrich V[39]. The precise relationship has not yet been identified. It is possible that it is through Etiennette's family. Another clue may be provided by the Liber de Restauratione Sancti Martini Tornacensis which names "Hiolendem, filiam Gerardi Babinbergensis comitis" [Gerhard Graf von Wassenberg], when recording her marriage to Baudouin III Comte de Hainaut, and specifies that Yolande was "neptem Clementia Flandrensis comitissa"[40]. The relationship between Yolande and Ctss Clémence has not been established, but the obvious interpretation of the text is that Yolande's mother may have been the daughter of Guillaume II "le Grand" Comte de Bourgogne, and therefore the sister of Clémence (see below). This is far from certain. Another possibility is that "neptem" should be interpreted more broadly, and that Graf Gerhard's wife was a relative of Etiennette, who was Clémence's mother.

from wikipedia.fr:

L’inscription de comtesse des Allobroges qui figure sur son épitaphe a fait couler beaucoup d’encre et les Allobroges étant un peuple celte vivant autour de Vienne, certains historiens ont tenté de la rattacher à une (hypothétique) maison comtale de Vienne. En fait il semble que ce terme soit un archaïsme équivalent au titre de comtesse de Bourgogne, qu’il a obtenu par son mariage.

Le premier à lui proposer une filiation est le Père Anselme1 (historien et généalogiste français) qui la dit issue du comte Bérenger Raymond Ier de Barcelone, et de Sancie de Navarre, mais sans justifier cette affirmation.

L’origine lorraine a été proposé par Szabolcs de Vajay en 19602. [CURATOR NOTE: the FMG MedLands database states that "Szabolcs de Vajay[421] has confirmed the incorrectness of his earlier proposition that Duke Adalbert's wife was Clémence de Foix, and that the Duke was the father of Etiennette (wife of Guillaume Comte de Bourgogne) and Clémence (wife of Conrad Comte de Luxembourg)." The source cited is Szabolcs de Vajay 'Parlons encore d'Etiennette', Keats-Rohan, K. S. B. and Settipani, C. (eds.) (2000) Onomastique et Parenté dans l'Occident medieval (Oxford), pp. 2-6. ]

Un des papiers du généalogiste Pierre Chifflet, conservé à la Bibliothèque Nationale et parlant de Guy de Bourgogne (futur pape Calixte II et fils d’Etiennette) le disait d’une origine tant bourguignonne que lorraine. Il avait également fait un rapprochement entre Etiennette, dont une des filles se prénomme Clémence et Ermesinde, épouse d’un duc d’Aquitaine et mère de Clémence d'Aquitaine, comtesse de Luxembourg par mariage. Ces deux Clémence sont les deux premières princesses de ce prénom en dehors du domaine pyrénéen d’où elles sont issues. Clémence, comtesse de Luxembourg est également qualifiée de comtesse de Longwy. D’après Laurent de Liège, le possesseur de Longwy en 1047 était le duc Adalbert de Lorraine. Szabolcs de Vajay en avait déduit que Etiennette et Ermesinde étaient toutes deux filles d’Adalbert, duc de Lorraine. Pour expliquer l’apparition du prénom Clémence parmi leurs filles, il avait considéré qu’Adalbert avait épousé une Clémence, qu’il considérait issue de la maison de Foix.

Mais il a été par la suite établi que le document de Pierre Chifflet ne concernait pas le futur pape, mais un de ses neveux, fils de Thierry Ier de Montbéliard (issu des comtes de Bar et d’une sœur de Calixte II). D’autre part, Longwy à cette époque n’appartient pas aux ducs de Lorraine, mais aux comtes de Luxembourg, et il est probable que Laurent de Liège ait été victime de confusions. Ces critiquent réduisent donc à néant la thèse de l’origine lorraine.

A. Beau3, a repris le Père Anselme, en disant que ce dernier avait certainement des bonnes raisons de proposer la filiation barcelonaise. Il modifie toutefois la filiation, en faisant remarquer qu’une des filles se nommant Guisla (Gisèle), elle était plus probablement née du second mariage de Bérenger Raymond Ier avec Guisla de Lluça. Cette filiation pose cependant quelques problèmes, car Sibylle, la fille d’Etiennette, épouse le duc de Bourgogne Eudes Ier de Bourgogne dit Eudes Borel. Ce second prénom de Borel indique également une origine barcelonaise, et la mère d’Eudes Borel, par ailleurs inconnue, est probablement issue des comtes de Barcelone. Le problème est que Eudes Borel et son épouse sont alors trop proches parents pour se marier. Le second problème est l’absence du prénom Bérenger que l’on s’attendrait à trouver dans la maison comtale de Bourgogne et l’absence de justification onomastique du prénom Clémence.

En fait, la plus ancienne femme à porter ce prénom de Clémence est la femme du comte Bernard II de Bigorre, cousin d’une Etiennette4, frère et neveu de deux Ermesinde et petit-neveu de Guila de Melgueil et père d’un Raymond. Ces différentes rencontres onomastiques permettent de propose le comte Bernard II de Bigorre, et Clémence comme parent d’Etiennette, comtesse de Bourgogne, et d’Ermesinde, duchesse d’Aquitaine.

[SUMMARY OF THE FRENCH (above): No strong evidence exists to support the parentage of Etiennette, although many theories have been proposed and then disproven. Much discussion has taken place about the possibility of her mother having been named Clemence, and after considering the various women of that period named Clemence, one proposition is that Etiennette, Countess of Burgundy (as well as Ermesinde, Duchess of Aquitaine) may have been the daughters of Bernard II de Bigorre and his wife Clemence.]

Mariage et enfants

Mariée entre 1049 et 1057 à Guillaume Ier de Bourgogne, elle donne naissance à :

Eudes. Son père fait une donation à la cathédrale de Besançon en 1087 pour le repos de son âme.

Renaud II ( 1097 en croisade), comte de Bourgogne.

Guillaume.

Ermentrude mariée en 1065 à Thierry Ier, comte de Montbéliard ,d'Altkirch et de Ferrette.

Guy administrateur de l'Archevêché de Besançon puis élu 160 ème pape en 1119 sous le nom de Calixte II.

Étienne Ier ( 1102 à Ascalon) comte de Bourgogne.

Sybille épouse en 1080 Eudes Ier, duc de Bourgogne

Raymond ( 1107 en Espagne) marié en 1090 à Urraque Ire, reine de Castille et de Léon.

Hugues ( 1103).

Gisèle mariée en 1090 à Humbert II, comte de Savoie

Clémence (1078 1129) mariée en 1092 à Robert II, comte de Flandre, puis vers 1125 à Godefroid Ier, duc de Brabant.

Etiennette, épouse le Lambert François, de Valence seigneur de Royans.

Berthe ( 1097) épouse en 1093 Alphonse VI (1040 1109), roi de Castille et de Léon.

http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Étiennette_de_Bourgogne

The family of Guillaume Ier dit Tête Hardie de BOURGOGNE and Étiennette de LONGWY-METZ

[133896] BOURGOGNE (de), Guillaume Ier dit Tête Hardie (Renaud Ier & Adelaïs dite Judith de NORMANDIE [133897]), comte de Bourgogne

•married about 1040, from France ? (France) LONGWY-METZ (de), Étiennette (Adalbert II & Clémence de FOIX [134959])

1) Étienne, comte de Mâcon, married Béatrix d'ALSACE 2) Gisle ou Gisèle, married about 1090 Humbert II de SAVOIE Bibliographie : Histoire de la maison royale de France (Père Anselme); Le Sang de Charlemagne; Europaische Stammtafeln

http://www.francogene.com/quebec--genealogy/133/133896.php

William married a woman named Stephanie.[1] They had many children: * Renaud II, William's successor, died on First Crusade * Stephen I, successor to Renaud II, Stephen died on the Crusade of 1101 * Raymond, married (1090) Urraca, the reigning queen of Castile * Guy of Vienne, elected pope, in 1119 at the Abbey of Cluny. as Calixtus II * Sybilla (or Maud), married (1080) Eudes I of Burgundy * Gisela of Burgundy, married (1090) Humbert II of Savoy and then Renier I of Montferrat * Adelaide * Eudes * Hugh III, Archbishop of Besançon * Clementia married Robert II, Count of Flanders and was Regent, during his absence * Stephanie married Lambert, Prince de Royans (d.1119) * Ermentrude, married (1065) Theodoric I * (perhaps) Bertha wife of Alphonso VI of Castile

Stephanie de Longwy nació el año 1035 en Longwy, Meurthe-et-Moselle, France. Murió en 1092. Sus padres fueron Alberto III de Longwy, duque de la Alta Lorena (c.1005 a 3-II-1048/49) y Clemencia de Foix (ver Condes de Aragón). Abuelos paternos: Gerhard I de Bouzonvielle, duque de la Alta Lorena (c.980 a 10045, hijo de Adalberto II, conde de Metz y Judith de Suabia, hermana de Hermann I e Suabia: ver Reyes de Borgoña) y Gisela, condesa de Alsacia. Abuelos maternos: Bernard I Roger de Foix y Garsinda de Bigorra.
This person was created through the import of Acrossthepond.ged on 21 February 2011. The following data was included in the gedcom. You may wish to edit it for readability.

Note
Or of Lorraine. In Spanish, she is called Etiennette of Vienne, the heiress of Vienne, probably a descendant of Charles Constantine, Ct Vienne, son of Louis the Blind, d 927, son of Boson & Ermengarde, daughter of Louis II.


Sources
↑ William 1 of Burgundy on Wikipedia in French.
↑ See Wikipedia article in French, referenced in preceding note.
↑ Comté de Bourgogne article in Wikipedia in French.
See also:

Etiennette de Bourgogne on Wikipedia. Cites: Christian Settipani, "La Noblesse du Midi Carolingien," Oxford, Linacre College, Unit for Prosopographical Research, coll. « Occasional Publications / 5 »,‎ 2004, 388 p. (ISBN 1-900934-04-3), p. 147 à 149. 
LONGWY Etiennette (I58331)
 
9945 The parentage of Adalbert von Ortenburg is unclear, he was possibly the son of Hartwig II, Graf an der unteren Amper of House Hirschberg and Aviza, daughter of Graf Altmann von Kühbach. Another alternative following Karlmann Tangl is Adalbert III von Walde Sachsenkam and Itiperch, daughter of Friedrich II, Vogt von Regensburg.[1] Likewise, the identity of his wife Bertha von Dießen is based on the list of witnesses to the marriage contract and not on primary sources identifying her family.[2] He died in August of 1096.[3]

Sources
↑ Karlmann Tangl, Die Grafen von Ortenburg in Kärnten. Erste Abtheilung von 1058 bis 1256. in: Archiv für Kunde österreichischer Geschichts-Quellen 30/1, Wien 1863, pp. 203–352, here pp. 227-244
↑ Therese Meyer; Kurt Karpf, Herrschaftsausbau im Südostalpenraum am Beispiel einer bayerischen Adelsgruppe. Untersuchung zum Freisinger Vizedom Adalbert, zur Herkunft der Eurasberger in Bayern, der Grafen von Tirol und der Grafen von Ortenburg in Kärnten. in: Zeitschrift für bayerische Landesgeschichte 63, München 2000, pp. 491–539, here pp. 493-495 
ORTENBURG Adalbert (I59049)
 
9946 The parents of Thibaut "l'ancien" are UNKNOWN.[1]

Biography
Name
Thibaut (Tetbald) I "l'Ancein" (d. 944).[2]
Thibaut or Tetbald "l'Ancien"[1]
Tetbaldus [1]
Theobald the Elder of Blois [2]
Theobald le Vieux of Blois, was father of Theobald I, Count of Blois. [3][4] Theobald le vieux was from 908 on viscomte of Tours. [5]
883 Birth and Parentage
He was born 883. [6] But note he may have been the same Thibault le Vieux who was alive in 878. [3]

Thibault's parents are unknown. [1]

900 Obtains property from Hastings by Threat
[Comte de Chartres: Guillaume de Jumièges describes how "Tetboldus comes" threatened “Hastingus” into selling “Carnotenam urbem” to him, after which Hasting became a pilgrim and disappeared (“peregre profectus disparuit”)[27], maybe dated to [900], an earlier passage recording that Hasting held Chartres presumably from “Rainaldus totius Franciæ dux” who had sent him to negotiate unsuccessfully with Rollo. [1] Note, however, that if he was born as late as 883, he would only have been 17 in 900. This suggests an earlier birth year, perhaps as early as 858, 20 years prior to 878.

The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines records that "Hastingo" sold "civitate Carnoto" to "Turonensi comiti Theobaldo" in 904[28]. The accuracy of these two reports is uncertain as it is unclear whether Hasting was ever comte de Chartres.] Vicomte de Tours: "Domni Fulconis Andecavorum comitis, Tedbaldi Turonorum vicecomitis" subscribed the charter dated 30 Oct 909 under which the testamentary executors of "domni Gauzuini" donated property to Saint-Martin de Tours[29]. "…Tetbaldi vicecomitis…" subscribed the charter of "Hugo rector abbatiæ sancti Martini" relating to Tours Saint-Martin dated 931[30]. [1]

Marriage
Thibault was married one or more times and one or more wives were named Richildis. To facilitate further research and evaluation, several conflicting accounts are presented below in detail:

Cawley suggests a first marriage to an unknown woman, but states that the primary source that confirms such a first marriage has not been identified. Cawley believes that the only indication is provided by a charter, dated to [980], under which “Ledgardis comitissa necnon Hugo episcopus et filius meus et item filius meus Odo comes” donated property to Saint-Martin de Tours, for the souls of “Theobaldi comitis quondam senioris mei…Richildis quondam sanctimonialis, eiusque filii Richardi episcopi” (referring to “dicti comitis et fratris sui Theobaldi”, in relation to Bishop Richard)[32]. [1]

Elsewhere, however, he suggests that the unknown first wife was the mother of Thibaut II (910 -16 Jan 975/77), who later became Thibaut I "le tricheur," Comte de Blois, Victome de Tours. [7] The younger Thibaut married (943/4) Luitgardis de Vermandois

The authors of the Wikipedia article stated that the mother of Theobald I was named Richildis [2] and that she was a great -granddaughter of Rorgon I, Count of Maine. [4]

Cawley also notes that the identity of the husband of Richilde, and father of Thibaut [II] and Richard, is confirmed by the charter dated to 944 under which "le comte Thibault père de Thibault" relinquished rights relating to "les terres de Vancé, de Joué, de Martigny et de Berthenay" to Tours Saint-Martin and paid for his future burial in the abbey[31]. [1]

Cawley continues that this charter confirms that Richildis was the mother of Richard and that Richard was the brother of Thibaut [II]. However, the absence of a phrase in the text such as “matris sui” linking “Richildis” to “Theobaldi comitis” suggests that she was not his mother and that therefore the brothers were born from different marriages of the same father. [1]

Richildis is named as second wife of Thibaut in Europäische Stammtafeln[33] but the primary source on which this is based has not yet been identified. The charter, dated to 980, under which “Ledgardis comitissa necnon Hugo episcopus et filius meus et item filius meus Odo comes” donated property to Saint-Martin de Tours, for the souls of “Theobaldi comitis quondam senioris mei…Richildis quondam sanctimonialis, eiusque filii Richardi episcopi” (referring to “dicti comitis et fratris sui Theobaldi”, in relation to Bishop Richard) confirms that Richildis was the mother of Richard and that Richard was the brother of Thibaut. However, it provides no indication of the name of their father and therefore of Richildis’s husband. [1]

Additional references to Richildis in Cawley include:

[3]
[4]
Another site has Thibaut married to Richilde von Metz, born 850 and died 910, was the daughter of Odo von Schwaben and Judith von Altdorf. [8] She married Thibault de Bois-Ferrand, born 845, and they were parents of Odile de Bois-Ferrand, born 875. [8]

"Theobald, Viscount of Troyes, married Richelde, the daughter of Hugh Aquitaine, Count of Bourges and his wife, Rothaut (the daughter of Charles II 'l'Chauve' ['The Bald'] King of France and Ricardis Buwinis Amiens, although some list her mother as Ermentrude Orleans, but that is topic for another day...) circa 886. As a result of this marriage, Theobald (Thiabald, Thiabault, etc) became guardian of Richelda's younger brother, Hugh, and was given the territories of Blois and Chartres in appreciation of this service. [9]

Norman attack on Chartres leads to creation of Normandy
Shortly thereafter, a marauding band of Norman pirates, who had recently taken up residence on the banks of the Seine, attacked Chartres. [9]

"These brigands, led by a certain 'Rollon', were more than Theobald could handle on his own. Theobald sent messangers to his wife's cousin, King Charles III 'The Simple', Conrad, Duke of Bourgogne and Ebles, Count of Poiters, appealing for assistance. The castle had been under seige for some time, when Joscelin, Bishop of Chartres, observing from the castle ramparts, saw that assistance was on its way! [9]

"The counter-attack was led by King Charles; the Norsemen were forced to lift the seige. King Charles and the renegade Rollon, or Rolf, drew up the Treaty of Saint Clair-sur-Epte which included an agreement by Rollon to convert to Christianity. In return, Rollon was awarded an area to govern that would later be called Normandy, and as wife, Giselle, daughter of King Charles."[9]

944 Death
Thibaqud l'ancien died in 944 and was buried in Tours Saint-Martin). [1]

Issue
Because there is controversy about the name and number of Thibaud's wives, there is similarly controversy about the mother(s) of his children.

Thibaut, born 910[1], probably the child of the first wife. Cawley notes that "Le comte Thibault père de Thibault" relinquished rights relating to "les terres de Vancé, de Joué, de Martigny et de Berthenay" to Tours Saint-Martin and paid for his future burial in the abbey by charter dated to [944][35]. He succeeded [his father] in [944] as THIBAUT I "le Tricheur" Comte de Blois, Vicomte de Tours. [1] Theobald I, Count of Blois[2]
Richard, birth year unknown but probably child of the second wife. [1] Cawley notes that “Ledgardis comitissa necnon Hugo episcopus et filius meus et item filius meus Odo comes” donated property to Saint-Martin de Tours, for the souls of “Theobaldi comitis quondam senioris mei…Richildis quondam sanctimonialis, eiusque filii Richardi episcopi” (referring to “dicti comitis et fratris sui Theobaldi”, in relation to Bishop Richard), by charter dated to [980][36]. This confirms that Richildis was the mother of Richard and that Richard was the brother of Thibaut. However, the absence of a phrase in the text such as “matris sui” linking “Richildis” to “Theobaldi comitis” suggests that she was not his mother and that therefore the brothers were born from different marriages of the same father. Richard, who died 969, was Archbishop of Bourges 956/57. [1]
Unknown, birth year unknown[6] daughter. The sister of Theobald I, she married Alan II of Nantes, the Duke of Brittany. [10] After Alan's death she married (after 952) Foulque II, Comte d'Anjou (920 - 11 Nov 958; p. Foulque I "le roux," Comte d'Anjou and Roscille de Loches).FoulquesII died 958 Cawley notes that the Chronicle of Nantes records the marriage of "Alanus dux" and "Theobaldum comitem Blesensem…sorore sua"[37]. Given the date of her marriage, and assuming that the estimated birth date of her brother Thibaut [II] is correct as shown above, it is probable that this daughter was born from her father's supposed second marriage. The Chronicle of Nantes records the marriage of "Theobaldus comes Blesensis…sororem suam relictam Alani Barbætortæ ducis" and "Fulconi comiti Andegavensi"[38]. This daughter married firstly (before [949/51]) as his second wife, ALAIN II Duke of Brittany, son of MATHEDOI [Matuedo] Comte de Poher & his wife --- de Bretagne (in Brittany [before 919]-952). She married secondly (after 952) as his second wife, FOULQUES II Comte d'Anjou, son of FOULQUES I "le Roux" Comte d'Anjou & his wife Roscille de "Loches" ([920]-11 Nov 958). [1] [5]
m.1 (ante 949/51) Alain II de Bretagne, Duke of Brittany (father: Mathedoi, Comte de Poher)
Linked on WikiTree but not named in sources
Gerlotte, born 895[6]
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 Charles Cawley and Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Medieval Lands: http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CAROLINGIANS.htm#_ftnref235. Accessed January 10, 2017
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Wikipedia. Theobald I, Count of Blois. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theobald_I,_Count_of_Blois.
↑ 3.0 3.1 Theobald was also called Theobald 'the Elder' who in 878 replaced Warnegald as viscount in Maine, quite probably on the basis of his marriage to a Rorgonid cousin Richildis. See: Pierre Riché, The Carolingians (1993), p. 237. Cited in Wikipedia.
↑ 4.0 4.1 K.S.B. Keats-Rohan, 'Two Studies in North French Prosopography', Journal of Medieval History, Vol. 20 (1994), p. 10, cited in Wikipedia.
↑ The Gesta Normannorum Ducum of William of Jumièges, Orderic Vitalis, and Robert of Torigni, Ed. & Trans. Elisabeth M.V. Van Houts (Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1992), pp. 56-7 n. 1. Cited in Wikipedia
↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 WikiTree Data Field Entry, unsourced
↑ Charles Cawley and Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Medieval Lands Database: http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CENTRAL%20FRANCE.htm#ThibautIdied975 Accessed January 10, 2017
↑ 8.0 8.1 Genealogie Online. https://www.genealogieonline.nl/fr/kwartierstaat-top-vanhoutte/I505764.php
↑ 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 From J de Petigny and Professor Launay's Historie Archeologique Du Vendome, I, pages 121-122, Academie des Inscriptions et Belle Lettres Chartes et Diplomas: Receuil Des Actes De Charles III, page xx, and Pere Anselme's (Pierre Guibors) Histoire Genealogicue et Chronilogique des Rois de France, II, pages 33-34.
↑ Bernard S. Bachrach, Fulk Nerra the Neo-Roman Consul, 987-1040 (University of California Press, 1993), p. 7. Cited by Wikipedia.
Europäische Stammtafeln citing charter (980AD).
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. 
BLOIS Thibaut (I59604)
 
9947 The person buried in the Wright Brown family plot could very well be a Brown who married an Annable. It is actually unknown if the person buried in the marked grave is a female or male since the headstone is broken and the only remains of the first name is " as" on the end of the name. Earlier notes from the Historical Society in Penn Yan say it was a Dorcas who is buried there but can not be confirmed. Because the marker is in the shape of a heart, it is believed to be a female. Brown Dorcas (I52752)
 
9948 The records were hard to read..the marriage could have been on the 1st instead of the 11th of April, 1748 according to Bowman. Family: Annable Thomas / Dimock Abigail (F24398)
 
9949 The Saratogian newspaper, Saturday, June 8, 1912. Maple Shade. June 8. - The marriage of Wallace Brown to Miss Jennie Strang on Tuesday, June 4, met with hearty congratulations by their many friends. They are now on their honeymoon trip, which includes a visit to New York, Philadelphia and Washington. Brown William Wallace (I52675)
 
9950 The Saratogian newspaper, Saturday, June 8, 1912. Maple Shade. June 8. - The marriage of Wallace Brown to Miss Jennie Strang on Tuesday, June 4, met with hearty congratulations by their many friends. They are now on their honeymoon trip, which includes a visit to New York, Philadelphia and Washington. Family: Brown William Wallace / Strang Jennie Isabelle (F24047)
 
9951 The second Frankish emperor, Louis the Pious as he is known in English, was the son and heir of the first Frankish emperor, Charlemagne.[1][2]

His name Louis was still pronounced in an older way in his time. In later Latin it is typically written as Ludovicus, but in his own lifetime it was spelled for example as Hludowicus. (It is in fact the same name as the first Frankish king of France, Clovis I.)[3] Other modern variants of his name include:

French: Louis le pieux.
Dutch: Lodewijk de Vrome
German: Ludwig der Fromme
He also had the title "King of the Aquitainians" and as of 02 Feb 814: Emperor Louis I "der le fromme / le pieux".

Chronology
778. He was born between April and September in 778, the youngest legitimate son of Charlemagne by his wife Hildegarde.[2],
781. King of the Aquitainians in Rome 15 Apr 781 by Pope Hadrian I.[1][2]
Approximately 794. He married his first wife in 794, Ermengarde, the daughter of Ingram, who was a brother of Chrodegang, bishop of Metz.[4][2]
813. His father named him as his successor at Aachen (Aix-la-Chapelle), crowning him as joint emperor 11 Sep 813, while his nephew Bernard, the son of his late older brother Pépin, was declared king of Italy.
814. Upon his father's death he became sole emperor.
816. Crowned by Pope Stephen IV at Reims.
817. He made his oldest son Lothaire joint emperor.
818. Having defeated and killed his nephew Bernard, he became king of Italy as well.[2]
819. He married secondly in February 819 at Aix-la-Chapelle, Judith the daughter of count Welf. [4][2]
833. He was temporarily replaced as emperor by his son Lothaire when he and his brothers Pépin, and Louis revolted.[2]
840. He is thought to have died on the Königsklinger Aue, an island in the Rhine (near Ingelheim) on 20 June 840. However, there is also reason to believe that this event took place on the Mariannenaue, due to its former affiliation to the Ingelheim district. Louis was buried at the église abbatiale de Saint-Arnoul, Metz [1]
Issue
1. Louis I & Ermengarde had at least 5 or possibly more children:[5]

Lothair, born 795[5] [6]
Pepin I of Aquitaine, born 797[5][6]
Rotrude, born 799[7] Cawley shows a birth year for Hrotrud (Rotrude) of 800. [5] [8]
Uncertain. Berta. Cawley notes that Settipani cites charters which name Berta as the daughter of Emperor Louis. [5] However, see Baldwin, who rejects this daughter.[2]
Hildegarde d'Aquitaine, born April 802[5] [8] Cawley notes that Hildegard is named as sister of Charles by Nithard. [5]
Louis, born 806[5] [6]
2. He had at least two children with his second wife. [5]

Gisela/Giselle, born 819[5][9]
Charles the Bald, was 13 June 823 in Frankfurt am Main [5][10]
Uncertain. An unnamed daughter is also recorded for this family. [11] However, see Baldwin.[2]

3. Louis also had at least one mistress, with whom he had at least two illegitimate childre.

Alpais, born 793/794. [5][12]
Arnoul, born 794 [7][13]
Theodolinde de Sens is currently shown on WikiTree as a mistress. Louis also had two illegitimate children by his mistress.

Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Cawley and Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, Medlands Database, Ref 181.
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 2.8 The Henry Project: The Ancestors of King Henry II of England https://fasg.org/projects/henryproject/data/louis000.htm
↑ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clovis_I#Name
↑ 4.0 4.1 Cawley and Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, Medlands Database, Ref 193.
↑ 5.00 5.01 5.02 5.03 5.04 5.05 5.06 5.07 5.08 5.09 5.10 5.11 Charles Cawley and Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Medieval Lands: Germany, Kings and Emperors. http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CAROLINGIANS.htm#LudwigIIleGermaniqueA Accessed January 10, 2017
↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 Thegan's Vita Hludowici Imperatoris, cited in the Medlands Data Base, names (in order) "Hlutharius, Pippinus, Hludowicus" as sons of Emperor Ludwig I & his wife Ermengard. Cited by Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Medieval Lands: Germany, Kings and Emperors. http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CAROLINGIANS.htm#LudwigIIleGermanique Accessed January 10, 2017
↑ 7.0 7.1 Current name and date linked on WikiTree
↑ 8.0 8.1 Cawley notes that the Genealogica Arnulfi Comitis names (in order) "Hlotharium Pipinum et Hludovicum Rotrudim et Hildegardim" as children of "Hludovicus ymperator…ex Yrmingardi regina" Cited by Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Medieval Lands: Germany, Kings and Emperors. http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CAROLINGIANS.htm#LudwigIIleGermanique Accessed January 10, 2017
↑ The Genealogica Arnulfi Comitis names (in order) "Karolum et Gislam" children of "Hludovicus ymperator…ex Iudith ymperatrice" Cited by Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Medieval Lands: Germany, Kings and Emperors. http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CAROLINGIANS.htm#LudwigIIleGermanique Accessed January 10, 2017
↑ The Annales S. Benigni Divisionensis record the birth of "Karolus filius Ludowici" in Frankfurt "Idus Iun 824"]. Cited by Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Medieval Lands: Germany, Kings and Emperors. http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CAROLINGIANS.htm#LudwigIIleGermanique Accessed January 10, 2017
↑ The Casus Monasterii Petrishusensis records that "rex Francorum qui et imperator Romanorum" (which appears to indicate Charles II "le Chauve") gave his sister in marriage to "vir nobilissimo genere decoratus", that the couple had two sons to whom their uncle gave "in Alemannia loca…Potamum et Brigantium, Ubirlingin et Buochorn, Ahihusin et Turingen atque Heistirgou, Wintirture…et in Retia Curiensi Mesouch", and that one of the sons returned to France while the other "Oudalricus" retained all the property in Alamannia. Research of Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Medieval Lands: Germany, Kings and Emperors. http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CAROLINGIANS.htm#LudwigIIleGermanique Accessed January 10, 2017
↑ Cawley notes that "Flodoard refers to "Ludowicus Alpheidi filie sue uxori Begonis comitis." Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Medieval Lands: Germany, Kings and Emperors. http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CAROLINGIANS.htm#LudwigIIleGermanique Accessed January 10, 2017
↑ Cawley notes that the Chronicon Moissacense names "quartum…filium [Ludovici]…ex concubina…Arnulfum" recording that his father gave him the county of Sens[234]. Comte de Sens 817. Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Medieval Lands: Germany, Kings and Emperors. http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CAROLINGIANS.htm#LudwigIIleGermanique Accessed January 10, 2017 
CAROLINGIAN Hludowic (I58144)
 
9952 The six sons of Ragnar Lodbrok named as Eiríkr, Agnarr, Ívarr beinlausi, Björn járnsíða, Hvítserkr, Sigurðr - Þáttr af Ragnars Sonum / The Tale of Ragnar’s Sons in The Complete Fornaldarsögur Norðurlanda; Legendary Sagas of the Northland in English Translation - trans: Peter Tunstall 2005

The sons of Ragnar named as Fridleif, Radbard, Dunvat, Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye, Björn Ironside, Agnar and Ivar the Boneless, Ubbe, Ragnvald, Eric Weatherhat and Hvitserk in the Gesta Danorum by Saxo Grammaticus; Internet Archive : The first nine books of the Danish history of Saxo Grammaticus pub: D. Nutt, London 1894.

click here for early Danish kings summary: [1] 
RAGNARSSON Agnar (I58752)
 
9953 The sons of Ragnar named as Fridleif, Radbard, Dunvat, Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye, Björn Ironside, Agnar and Ivar the Boneless, Ubbe, Ragnvald, Eric Weatherhat and Hvitserk in the Gesta Danorum by Saxo Grammaticus; Internet Archive : The first nine books of the Danish history of Saxo Grammaticus page 370: pub: D. Nutt, London 1894.

Relationships between historical figures could have been simplified or even fabricated in the text to give the impression that succession remained within the same family….Precise chronology is also difficult to assess from the Sagas….The conclusion must be that the tight family network described in the Sagas is unlikely to be correct and that the relationships shown below should be treated with considerable caution.


Sources
WikiTree profile Ragnarsson-60 created through the import of FAMILY 6162011.GED on Jun 20, 2011 by Michael Stephenson.
Source: S2 Title: Pedigree Resource File CD 49 Abbreviation: Pedigree Resource File CD 49 Publication: (Salt Lake City, UT: Intellectual Reserve, Inc., 2002)
Source: S3 Title: Ancestral File (TM) Abbreviation: Ancestral File (TM) Author: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day SAINTS Publication: June 1998 (c), data as of 5 JAN 1998 Repository: #R1
Repository: R1 Name: Unknown
Source: S3730 Title: Type: Ancestral File Number Abbreviation: Type: Ancestral File Number
Source: S4 Title: hofundssonAnces.ged Abbreviation: hofundssonAnces.ged Repository: #R1
This person was created through the import of Campbell-Charsha Family Tree.ged on 28 February 2011.
WikiTree profile Ragnarsson-71 created through the import of wikitree.ged on Aug 1, 2011 by Abby Brown.
This person was created through the import of Howland Mayflower-dude.ged on 12 September 2010. 
RAGNARSSON Rognvald (I58756)
 
9954 The St. Antoine church is located in Monroe Mi. on the River Raison.
This Parrish has changed names and is now going by the name of St.
Mary's.

We find Joseph listed as a son of James Louis and Julia in the French
family of the Detroit River area. We find no record of him in
Mackinaw Co. during the 1850 or 1860 census. We did locate a land
record that might be him on file at the Archives located in the Mich.
State Library, Lansing, Mi. The land record is a grant of land given
in Baraga Co., L'anse to Indians and is dated 1854. In checking the
1860 census for that county, we find a Joseph Perio residing in a
home occupied by several persons, most of whom are in the mining
profession. He lists himself as age 28 yrs. Since our Joseph was born
Dec. 1830, he would have been 29 yrs at the time this census was
taken, and therefore is a possibility of being the same person. We
have no proof of this , however. 
PEARO Joseph (I6290)
 
9955 The story of Steadman Wyman is a real tragedy. In a letter written in March 1825 from Joseph Brown of Cavendish, VT to his brother, Aaron Brown of New Ipswich, he tells of the tragic death of young Steadman.

Dear Brother and Sister:

I am glad that any occasion can induce you to write. I received your letter thankfully, and could not but hope the sentiments of esteem you express were sincere. But I was unable to answer it at the time, and now am hardly able. For about four weeks I have been much out of health but am now upon the recovery. In our family we enjoy considerable health, we have a compentency of the work, and ought to be content. We have the means of grace and ought to improve them. Time is short and Death fast approaching. The thought, to me, is awakening! In some measure I am quickened, I am up, and find it my constant care to have all things, and especially myself, in readiness. I have tried the cords which bind me to the work and think that whenever I am called, I can break them with ease, and go joyfully the way whence I cannot return. Lord have mercy, and let me not be deceived.

Dear Brother, Dear Sister, Dear Children: Let this be your care, your business. Our confessions of faith are scarcely to be mentioned. It is a life mortified to the world a life of prayer, of watchfulness and sincere devotion to God, which encourages our hope, which brightens our prospect, and meets approaching Death with calmness and triumph! And in this way let us all be encouraged; let us surmount every difficulty and hold out--"Be faithful unto Death, and I will give thee the crown of Life." We all send our love to you, also our respectful regards to your aged Father and to all our friends. May the Lord command a blessing upon them.

You wished to hear the certainty and the circumstances of the unhappy suicide in our family. It happened on the 10th of January last. Steadman Wyman, the second son, two and twenty years of age, had for a long time been out of health, but then appeared upon the recovery. He appeared generally in good spirits, but sometimes melancholy. For a short time before his unhappy end, he became acquainted with a young woman in the neighborhood, and nothing appeared but that they were mutually satisfied with each other. However, the day preceding his last, she went in company with another young man to visit her parents. She returned, and in the evening, Steadman paid her a visit. After the visit, at about ten or eleven, he returned home and went to bed. His sister was up, and observing her Brother rather inattentive to himself, felt a little concerned. However, he rose in the morning as usual but appeared rather melancholy. He sat down and wrote, perhaps half a sheet.
But when his mother came near enough to read, he would turn his sheet over. His mother thought nothing but that he was writing to a particular friend, and so passed along. After the family was dispersed, his father at work and the children at school, he finished writing, went into a back room, took a part of a Cod-line, doubled it, and, as they supposed, prepared the knot, put it into his pocket, took his leave of the maid in the house, and set out to visit once more the girl we mentioned before. He was in her company, perhaps about an hour and a half. At the close of the visit he asked her plainly if she thought best to discontinue their acquaintance. She said she thought it best. He replied, you have a right to do as you think proper; and took his leave. Upon his return, about half a mile from his Father's house, he found a place which nature had formed convenient for his purpose--a tree bent over from the root, with the top lying upon the ground at the hightest place in the bow, about nine feet to the snow underneath, with conveniences for getting up. When he came to the place, he took off his hat, his greatcoat, and his collar and put them into his sleeve. He mounted the tree, he fastenend the rope, slipped himself off, and came to his unhappy end. Next day his Father found him and called a Jury to attend to his case. The Jury pronounced it premeditated suicide.

Mrs. Brown and I attended the Funeral as mourners. The corpse was carried to the meeting house. There was such a crowd of people, and the sermon--for a universalist minister--considerably appropriate. Text: "I saw in the cutting off of my Days, I shall go to the gates of the grave." The family seemed to bear the affliction as well as could be expected; except Mrs. Wyman. She was exceedingly borne down, and is still. Mary, my daughter, returned from there yesterday, which was Saturday, the 12th of March, and says Mrs. Wyman wishes I would write a letter for her to you, for she could not compose her mind to write herself. But I am unable. I have been several days about writing this. As to the young woman, whether she treated Steadman honorably or not is, in general, yet unknown. With regard to this there are different reports. The girl is in trouble, and told Mrs. Wyman the other day she could see no way to end it but by putting an end to herself. Steadman, as his grandmother told me, was established in the opinion that all would be well after Death. He was a young man of correct morals, dutiful to his parents, loving to his brothers and sisters, and esteemed by all his acquaintance. But concealed his troubles and his intentions to end it from all his friends. Not any of his friends nor his neighbors, so far as I have understood, had the least suspicion till it was too late.

From your very affectionate Brother. Joseph Brown. 
Wyman Steadman (I51233)
 
9956 The Tale of Ragnar’s Sons speaks of Helgi Hvassi as being the brother of Gudrod, son of Olaf, son of Hring, son of Ingjald, son of Ingi, son of Hring who named Ringerike in Norway.[1]

It also says that he stayed in Denmark with Aslaug, the mother of Sigurd Snake-In-Eye, after a battle where both Sigurd and Gudrod, Helgi's brother, died. Aslaug and Helgi were later married and had a son, Sigurd Hjort.[1]

According to English Wikipedia;

In Ragnarssona þáttr, Helgi the Sharp, prince of Ringerike (Old Norse: Helgi Hvassi) was a grandson of king Ring II of Ringerike and the brother of Guðrøðr, the king of Ringerike and they lived in the 9th century.
and

Helgi married Harthacanute's twin sister, also named Aslaug, and they had the son Sigurd Hart. (Sigurd Hiort)
The original text of Þáttr af Ragnars sonum from heimskringla.no[2] reads;

Sigurðr ormr í auga ok Björn járnsíða ok Hvítserkr höfðu herjat víða um Frakkland. Þá sneri Björn heim til ríkis síns. Eptir þat barðist Örnúlfr keisari við þá bræðr, ok fell þá af Dönum ok Norðmönnum hundrað þúshundraða. Þar fell þá Sigurðr ormr í auga, ok Guðröðr hét annarr konungr, er þar fell. Hann var sonr Óláfs Hringssonar, Ingjaldssonar, Ingasonar, Hringssonar, er Hringaríki er við kennt. Hann var sonr Dags ok Þóru drengjamóður. Þau áttu níu syni, ok er af þeim komin Döglinga ætt. Helgi hvassi hét bróðir Guðröðar. Hann hafði brott ór orrostunni merki Sigurðar orms í auga ok sverð hans ok skjöld. Hann fór heim til Danmarkar með sínu liði ok fann þar Áslaugu, móður Sigurðar, ok sagði henni tíðendin.

Research Notes
Possible this profile is a bad merge between Name: Helgi 'The Bold' /FRIDLEIFSSON/ and Name: Helgi the Sharp /of RINGERIKE/
According to "Þáttr af Ragnars sonum" he was son of Olof. Therefore Frodasson-30 has been removed as father of this profile and his wife Haraldsdottir-65 has been removed as mother. Andersson-4409 09:45, 9 July 2021 (UTC)
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 The Tale of Ragnar’s Sons, chapter 5, accessed 7 Aug 2018
↑ Þáttr af Ragnars sonum
See also:

Helgi the Sharp at Wikipedia, accessed 7 Aug 2018 
OLAFSSON Helgi Hvassi (I58742)
 
9957 The town of Nichols. Source (S1592)
 
9958 The Vita Basilli records that Maiktes (Hmayeak) left Asia Minor for Macedonia during the reign of Emperor Konstantinos VI (780/97). [1]

Research Notes
"The ancestry of Hmayeak is dubious if the origins of his grandson Basil I were humble,"[2] as stated by Liudprand[3] and Zonaras[4].

Sources
↑ Theophanes Continuatus, V, "Historia de Vita et rebus gestis Basilii inclyti imperatoris," 3, p. 213.
↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2023, Emperors (Macedonian Dynasty).
↑ Liudprandi Antapodosis I.8, p. 276.
↑ Migne, J. P. (1887) Ioannes Zonaræ Annales, Patrologiæ cursus completus, Series Græca Tomus CXXXV (Paris) ("Zonaras II"), Liber XVI, VI, col. 30. 
MAMIKONID Hmayeak (I57914)
 
9959 The vital records say that this John died one month after his brother, John was born. I think this is an error in transcription. He probably died one month before his brother was born. Annable John (I53265)
 
9960 The wife of Gerulf was Unknown ...[1]

Name
Name: /flanders/
Sources
↑ Annalen van Egmond: de Annales Egmundenses tezamen met de Annales Xantenses en het Egmondse leven van Thomas Becket Uitgeverij Verloren, 2007 (see pg. 385) 
FLANDERS Unknown (I58647)
 
9961 The wife of Heinrich I is not known

Their children were :

Gerhard II d. - after 1098, m. Richarda ___ who founded Kloster Oelenberg in 1057.
Hugo X von Egisheim - murdered Niedersasbach 5 Sep 1089
Bruno, d. 1102
Heilwig , married ALBERT II of Moha
Burial
Hesse abbey

Sources
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ALSACE.htm#HeinrichIdied1065A 
DAGSBURG Heinrich I (I60032)
 
9962 The younger son of Eberhard, Graaf van Drethe en Salland and his wife Amalrada, potentially named Eberhard, was the brother of Dietrich the Bishop of Metz and the father of five children including the future Graven van Teisterban(d/t) [1]

His existence and parentage is confirmed by the Vita Deoderici Episcopi which names "Everardi fratruelis sui [=Dietrich Bishop of Metz]…infans…ex cuius fratre fuit genitus", when recording his son's death in Sep 978. [1]
His wife was possibly a relative of Ansfrid III, Comte de Huy who later became the Bishop of Utrecht. [1]

The couple reportedely had five children as reflected in Europäische Stammtafeln although primary sources confirming parentage remain to be identified: [1]

Eberhard, who died young in Sep 978
Fretherhard, who became Graaf van Teisterband
Adelbold, who became the Bishop Utrecht
Unruoch, who succeeded his elder brother as Graaf van Teisterband
Godizo, who became the Graaf van Betuwe (Batavia)
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Graven van Teisterband (Family of Eberhard) 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) 
DRENTHE Eberhard (I59027)
 
9963 The youngest, Laurent Gobeil, became the godson of Nicolas Huot dit
St-Laurent on 5 November 1672, at Ste-Famille, and disappeared into
the darkness of
history, after 1697. 
GOBEIL Laurent (I3435)
 
9964 The youngest, Marie-Elisabeth, died at the age of five. She was
buried in her native parish on 27 March 1698. 
(Dancause) Marie-Elisabeth Dancosse (I227)
 
9965 Their divorce decree was finalized on Jun 26, 1919 in St. Paul, MN Family: LEEDOM Calbert Harry / MILLER Regina Agnes (F25700)
 
9966 Their mother died when they were four and two years old. They lived with S. Rowland Davison, whose wife Amanda, was their half-sister, and other places until their father married again, to Amy Wells. Then they went home. But in a few years, their father, Rev. Amos west, was taken with Consumption and went to Illinois, to reside with his son-in-law, S. Rowland Davison, who had previously moved there. It was thought then, that the climate of Illinois would cure the consumption. He died at Goveland, Illinois. The two little girls were then left alone, orphans indeed. they then moved to Hoosick Falls, NY, where friends were residing, and working in the cotton factory, and went from there to Benninton, VT, and from there to North Adams, MA, where they both married. then the girls seem to have separated. We will first follow Adeline.

She married george R. Bly. He only lived a year and a half, and died of consumption in 1850. She then went to Adams, Jefferson County, New York, to where her two half-sisters, Emeline Lewis-Maxon, and Louisa Lewis-Reed, lifed. In 1853 she married Lorenzo Maxon. They moved in February 1854 to Walworth, WI. In 1865, they moved to Farina, IL, and lived there over thirty-nine years. She enjoyed peace, quiet and plenty, at the beautiful home of her son, who was a proprietor of a drug store, and an officer in the bank at Farina, IL. received her photograph recently. Had not seen her since 1847, at North Adams, MA.

(Quoted by Almond Alexander Davison, 1905). 
WEST Adeline S. (I35231)
 
9967 Theitmar von Merseburg ... [1] von MERSEBURG Thietmar (I59411)
 
9968 Theoderata UNKNOWN (d. ante 19 Feb 834)[1]

Parents
Theoderata's parents are unknown.[2]

Marriage
m. Robert II, Graf im Wormsgau und Oberrheingau. Issue:[3]

(unproven) Robert III, Graf im Wormsgau (d. ante 19 Feb 834).[4]
m. (808) Wiltrud Udalrichinger[5]
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. 
SAXONY Theoderata (I58276)
 
9969 Theoderic III, King of the Franks: Neustria[2]

Parents
Father: Clovis II, King of the Franks: Neustria[3]

Mother: Bathildis UNKNOWN[4][1]

Marriage
Theoderic, had three (3) children with a woman of unknown origins named, Chrothechildis "Rothilde" (d. 692 or after):[5]

Choldovech "Clovis" III, King of the Franks (678 - 695)[6]
Childebert III, King of the Franks (d. 14 Apr 711)[7]
m. Ermenechildis (p. unknown)
Bertrada "Berta", Abbess of Prüm[8]
m. _____ (unknown)
Theuderic III (or Theuderich, Theoderic, or Theodoric; in French, Thierry) (654–691) was the king of Neustria (including Burgundy) on two occasions (673 and 675–691) and king of Austrasia from 679 to his death in 691. Thus, he was the king of all the Franks from 679. The son of Clovis II and Balthild, he has been described as a puppet — a roi fainéant — of Mayor of the Palace Ebroin, who may have even appointed him without the support of the nobles. He succeeded his brother Clotaire III in Neustria in 673, but Childeric II of Austrasia displaced him soon thereafter until he died in 675 and Theuderic retook his throne. When Dagobert II died in 679, he received Austrasia as well and became king of the whole Frankish realm.

He and the Neustrian mayor of the palace, Waratton, made peace with Pepin of Heristal, mayor of the palace of Austrasia, in 681. However, on Waratton's death in 686, the new mayor, Berthar, made war with Austrasia and Pepin vanquished the Burgundo-Neustrian army under Berthar and Theuderic (a Neustrian) at the Battle of Tertry in 687, thus paving the way for Austrasian dominance of the Frankish state. [2]

This profile is managed by the European Aristocrats project. WikiTree users are welcome to participate.

Sources
↑ Parents chosen by principles of the European Aristocracts project, using primary sources, especially collected by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy’s, Medieval Lands project.[1]
↑ Fouracre, Paul; Gerberding, Richard A. (1996). Late Merovingian France: History and Hagiography, 640-720. Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-0-7190-4791-6.
[Wikipedia Theuderic III] 
MEROVINGIAN Theodoric (I58158)
 
9970 Theodore V (Dirk) [Theoderici V filii Florentii comitis[1]], Count of West-Frisia 1061-1091 and Count of Holland 1081-1091 was born about 1052 at Dordrecht.[2]

Dirk V, was the son and heir of Floris I, and Count of Holland from 1049 until 1061. He wife was, Gertrud Princess of Saxony.[2]

Dirk V was the brother of:[2]

Adelheid Countess of Holland, married with Arnulf IV (I) Count of Looz born about 1044 died about 1141;
Albrecht Count of Holland born about 1051 Dordrecht;
Dirk V Count of Holland born about 1052, Dordrecht, died 17 June 1091;
Pieter Count of Holland born about 1053, Dordrecht;
Bertha Countess of Holland born about 1054, Dordrecht, died 1093/94, Montreuil-sur-Loire France;
Floris Count of Holland born about 1055, Dordrecht, died young;
Machteld Countess of Holland born about 1057, Dordrecht;
Floris Count of Holland born about 1059, Dordrecht, died young;
Adela (Christina) Countess of Holland born about 1061, Dordrecht, died 1085;
His father, Floris I, was murdered near Nederhemert, Gelderland, Netherlands, on 28 June 1061, and he succeeded his father as Dirk V Count of Holland under the guardianship of his mother, Gertrude of Saxony. Dirk's lands were limited to those west of the Vlie and around the mouths of the Rhine because William I, Bishop of Utrecht, claimed and occupied territory in Holland that was confirmed to William by two charters of the emperor Henry IV. (April 30, 1064 and May 2, 1064).[2]

In 1063, Dirk's mother, Gertrude, married Robert, the second son of Baldwin V of Flanders, and Robert became ruler of all Frisia (Zeeland), partly in his own right and partly that of his stepson, and was known by his Flemish Countrymen as Robert the Frisian. The death of Robert's brother, Baldwin VI. in 1070 led to civil war in Flanders which Robert won in a decisive victory at Cassel in February 1071.[2]

During the civil war in Flanders, the people in the lands held by William of Utrecht rose in revolt. By order of the emperor Henry IV, an army under the command of Godfrey IV (the Hunchback), duke of Lower Lorraine, suppressed the rebellion. On 26 February 1076, Duke Godfrey IV died (a few days after being stabbed in his behind while on the toilet by a person in the employ of Matilda, his wife, or Dirk V or Dirk's stepfather[3]). William of Utrecht died two months later, on 17 April 1076. William's successor, Bishop Conrad of Utrecht, when besieged in the castle of Ysselmonde by Dirk V and the army raised with the assistance of his stepfather Robert, purchased his liberty by surrendering all claim to Dirk's disputed lands.[2]

Dirk married before 26 July 1083 with Othelhildis (Othelhilda[4]) Countess of Holland, born about 1054 at Vlaardingen, died 18 November ?, and they had children:[2]

Floris II "the Fat" Count of Holland born about 1085, Dordrecht, died 2 March 1121;
Mathilde[1], Countess of Holland born about 1087, Dordrecht;
Dirk V died 17 June 1091 and was succeeded by his son, Floris II "the Fat" Count of Holland born about 1085, Dordrecht, died 2 March 1121.[2]

Dirk V was buried at Egmond.[1] The Benedictine St. Adelbert Abbey, also known as the Abbey of Egmond, was in Egmond-Binnen,[5] a village now in the Dutch province of North Holland.

Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Charles Cawley, "HOLLAND & FRISIA: Chapter 2. COUNTS OF HOLLAND [900]-1299", Medieval Lands, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, March 2015, http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/HOLLAND.htm#FlorisIdied1061, accessed 22 August 2015.
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 L C Geerts, "The history of Holland and the story of its ancient Capital and Residence Dordrecht Part 1 From the year 993 to 1222", Holland history pages, http://geerts.com/index.php/dordrecht/history-of-dordrecht-1, accessed 22 August 2015.
↑ Dr. Kees C. Nieuwenhuijsen, "The Assassination of Godfrey the Hunchback", kees.nieuwenhuijsen, http://www.keesn.nl/murder/text_en.htm, accessed 22 August 2015.
↑ Dr. Kees C. Nieuwenhuijsen, "Dutch Medieval Sources: Egmonds charter, AD 1083: Personal names", kees.nieuwenhuijsen, http://www.keesn.nl/sources/en_start.htm, accessed 22 August 2015.
↑ Abbey of Egmond, http://www.abdijvanegmond.nl/abdij-van-egmond/, accessed 22 August 2015.
[1] - gives date of birth as 1052.
See also:

Wikipedia:Dirk V, Count of Holland accessed 22 August 2015. This Wikipedia article cites no sources and has a broken external link to The history of the Lowlands. See the archived webpage of The history of the Lowlands Part 2, accessed 22 August 2015. The new version of this webpage is the source used for the inline citations in this profile. The sources used by this website are listed at http://geerts.com/index.php/home/sources.
http://www.genealogieonline.nl/Stamboom Kok, Jagt, Bottinga, Maarhuisen, Kuipe, [dead link on 22 August 2015]. 
HOLLAND Theodorus (I59397)
 
9971 Theodore was a U.S. Marshall, at the Rosebud reservation in S.
Dakota, also at Morris, MN., and wound up at White Earth. Both
Theodore and Ella died and are buried there. They left considerable
money, which Mart Branchaud, "(The blacksmith of the Luck Lake
reservation)" disposed of in one year after inheritance. 
BRANCHAUD Theodore (I1385)
 
9972 Theotbald "Thidbaut," Comte d’Arles (d. Jun 887/95)[1] died when his son Boson (or Boso) was a baby, the boy was raised by his wife's second husband, Adalbert the Marquis of Tuscany."[citation needed]

Parents
Father: Hubert (d. 866 Orbe; son of Bosco, Comte d'Arles: Italy)

Mother: UNKNOWN

Marriage
m. (879/80) Berta of Lotharingia (863 - 08 Mar 925)[1] Issue: 4[2][3]

Hughes "Ugo" (880 - 10 Apr 947), Comte de Vienne and King of Italy
Boso (885 - after 936), Marchese of Tuscany i[4] m. (separated 936) Willa (p. unknown)
Teutberga (880/90 - ante Sep 948) m. Warner "Garnier," Vicomte de Sens (d. 06 Dec 924; p. uknown)[5]
dau. ____ (d. after 924)
Sources
↑ Medlands 
BOSONID Theobald (I58419)
 
9973 There also is a Barnabus, b. 31 May 1767 in Ashfield, Franklin Co. MA.
Could this be the same? 
Annable Barnabas (I53124)
 
9974 There are currently two Cutha Cathwulf's

Cutha Cathwulf, born 592, shown as son of Cuthwine Wessex, and grandson of Cynric.
Cutha Cathwulf, born 592, shown as son of Caewim, who may not have existed, and grandson of Cynric.
Cuthwulf (or Cutha) are sometimes shown as the son of Cynric of Wessex, and sometimes (as here) as the son of Cuthwine of Wessex. An actual expert should make a decision. For now I'm listing him as is.Stubbs-204 00:45, 25 November 2011 (EST)

Name
Cutha was a prince of Wessex. [1]

Cutha Cuthwulf was a prince of Wessex. [2]

Birth
Cutha was born in 593 in Wessex. [2]

Cutha Cathwulf son of Cuthwine son of Cealwine of Wessex, son of Cynric, son of Cerdic, was born between 575 and 583.

Cutha died between 634 and 694. [1]

Parents
Cutha Cathwulf was the third son of Cuthwine and consequently a member of the House of Wessex. Although a member of the direct male line from Cynric to Egbert, (see House of Wessex family tree), Cathwulf was never king. He is said to have been born in c. 592 and his death date is unknown. [3]

Ancestry
Alfred the Great (31ggf)
Æthelwulf King of Wessex (32ggf)
his father → Egbert King of Wessex (33ggf)
his father → Ealhmund King of Kent (34ggf)
his father → Eafa (35ggf)
his father → Eoppa Atheling of Wessex (36ggf)
his father → Inglid Prince of Wessex (37ggf)
his father → Cenred of Wessex (38ggf)
his father → Ceolwald of Wessex (39ggf)
his father → Cutha Cathwulf of Wessex (40ggf)
Siblings
His brothers were Cynebald and Cedda; his son was Ceolwald of Wessex; nothing more of his life is known. [3]

Due to the similarity of his name to his father's name, and the shadowy nature of early Anglo-Saxon genealogies, it appears that he was often confused with his father Cuthwine. For example, Caedwalla was said to be the son of Cedda and the grandson of Cutha, where Cutha here presumably refers to Cuthwine, since Cedda is also said to be the brother of Cathwulf, the name by which Cutha Cathwulf was more commonly known.[3]

Cathwulf had two brothers; Cynebald, born 585, and Cedda, born 590. The name of their mother is not recorded, but it is possible that she died in the tumult surrounding Cuthwine's flight into exile given that Cuthwine had no more children after that time. [3]

Early life
Cathwulf was born in tumultuous times. He was the third son of Cuthwine, son of Ceawlin, son of Cynric, the son of Cerdic, the first of the Saxons to come across the sea from Germany; and he and his people were still relatively out of place in a world dominated by the Britons. He was born in the final year of his father's time as prince of the Saxons. [3]

592 Cuthwine flees as Ceawlin loses Wessex throne
Ceawlin lost the throne of Wessex in June 592. The annal for that year in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle reads, at least in part: “Here there was great slaughter at Woden’s Barrow, and Ceawlin was driven out.” Woden’s Barrow is a tumulus, now called Adam’s Grave, at Alton Priors, Wiltshire. His opponent was Ceol, the next king of Wessex, who ruled for six years. The origins of the battle are unclear; it is probable that nothing more than greed and a lust for power motivated Ceol. Cuthwine, then twenty-seven, was a commander in the fateful battle; but upon defeat, as the rightful heir to the throne, he fled the place along with his young sons. [3]

592 Cuthwine in exile
The following year (593) saw the deaths of Ceawlin and all his brothers in unclear circumstances, although most likely in another battle. Cuthwine escaped from this defeat also, and went into exile to the east with his young family. If Ceol and Ceolwulf made efforts to eradicate the members of the original branch of the ruling family, they were unsuccessful. At any rate the Cuthwines remained at large during this period, far from fugitives after the first few years of their supposed exile. [3]

Ceol, described as a ruthless leader, was a son of another prince called Cutha (the brother of Ceawlin and a son of Cynric) and hence a cousin of Cuthwine; and Ceolwulf, his brother, reigned for seventeen years after him. Great fragmentation of control among the West Saxons occurred at this time: Ceol and Ceolwulf were in control of Wiltshire, as opposed to the upper Thames valley where Cuthwine and his household were almost certainly based. [3]

Details about the activities of Cathwulf during most of his life in exile are very hard to come by. He and his brothers remained in a powerful position throughout the reign of Cynegils, son of Ceol; and then Cenwalh, son of Cynegils, became king.

645 Penda overruns Wessex
In the year 645 Penda of Mercia overran the kingdom (in return for Cenwalh's repudiation of Penda's sister) and was for three years king, sending Cenwalh into exile in East Anglia.

648 Cathwulf aids Cenwalh
Cathwulf is recorded as having been present at the negotiations along with his brothers (although some sources say it was Cuthwine, which could of course mean his father), but little more is known of his activities. Nevertheless, much can be deduced. If this experienced prince was not the sole ruler of Wessex during the years of Cenwalh's exile (naturally in a subservient position to Penda) then it is likely that he was a member of the ruling body; but, given the tangled diplomacy of the times and his eastern power base, it is equally likely that he aided Cenwalh in his successful attempt to regain the throne in 648. [3]

672 Past Eighty
After this, he appears infrequently as a shadowy figure, apparently already passing into legend among the common people as a result of his long-held position against the (at times) brutal role of Ceol and his family. He probably died sometime during the second period of Cenwalh's reign, as he would have been past eighty by the year 672 when Cenwalh died, and there are no records of him doing anything in the turbulent times succeeding Cenwalh's death. It seems inconceivable that he would have lived to see the reinstatement of his line to the throne of Wessex. [3]

Descendants
This enigmatic prince and his long roster of descendants were not forgotten by the West Saxons, however. When the line of Ceol finally became extinct, first Caedwalla of Wessex and then Ine of Wessex became king; the first a great-nephew, and the second a grandson of Cathwulf. Nowadays he occurs in many places simply as one of a long list of names in the descent from Egbert back to the dawn of time, but it is thanks to him that this continuous descent can be traced at all. [3]

620 Move to Devon and Cornwall
In about the year 620 it appears that the upper Thames valley where the household of Cathwulf was based became too small to comfortably hold the three brothers. As the youngest, Cathwulf was the one who was forced to move - at any rate this is a sensible deduction given that he later turns up in what is now east Devon, on the western marches of Wessex and in constant conflict with Dumnonia. This was a Celtic tribe that inhabited Cornwall, although in Cathwulf's time their sphere of influence was much greater, extending over most of what is now Devon as well. The chronology of English dominance over Cornwall is unclear, but inevitably at about this time Cornwall came into conflict with the westerly-expanding kingdom of Wessex. There are no recorded charters or legal agreements showing Cornwall as part of Wessex. Furthermore, there is little economic, military, social, cultural or archaeological evidence that Wessex established control over Cornwall, certainly not in those early days. [3]

The Britons in Dumnonia were cut off from their allies in Wales by Ceawlin of Wessex's victory at Dyrham in 577, but since sea travel was easier than land, the blow may not have been severe. Clemen ap Bledric is thought to have been king when the Britons fought the Battle of Beandun (possibly Bindon near Axmouth in east Devon) in 614. The battle site suggests that the Dumnonian army was invading Wessex using the Roman road eastward from Exeter to Dorchester and was intercepted by a West Saxon garrison marching south. The Flores Historiarum, attributed incorrectly to Matthew of Westminster, states that the Britons were still in possession of Exeter in 632, when it was bravely defended against Penda of Mercia until relieved by Cadwallon, who engaged and defeated the Mercians with "great slaughter to their troops". Geoffrey of Monmouth also details an account of the siege in his pseudo-historic Historia Brittonum, stating that Cadwallon made an alliance with the British nobility. [3]

From this circumstantial evidence comes further consolidation that the boundary between Wessex and Dumnonia ran through east Devon, more or less where Cathwulf was based. A theory can thus be deduced; that Cathwulf, unwelcome in the lands of his brothers or in the land closely controlled by the king Cynegils, was forced to move to the very edges of the kingdom. He and his people may even have been sent there in the hope that they would be killed by the Dumnonians. [3]

The date of the move is unclear, although if it was before 614 then Cathwulf would have been the West Saxon commander at the Battle of Beandun mentioned above. This seems likely. [3]

Marriage to Gwynhafar
It is known that Cathwulf married a Dumnonian princess Gwynhafar, almost certainly a daughter of Clemen ap Bledric, as part of a (temporary, at least) alliance - probably the one mentioned above by Geoffrey of Monmouth, or maybe an earlier one. The marriage was perhaps unsuccessful, as he is believed to only have had one son, Ceolwald of Wessex. [3]

571 Captured towns from Britons
"The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle" (1961 translation), p. 13: "571. In this year Cuthwulf [Cutha] fought against the Britons at Biedcanford, and captured four towns, Limbury, Aylesbury, Bengsington, and Eynsham; and in the same year he died." But another MS of the Chronicle has him living in 584. [4]

Issue
Ceolwald, died after 688 [1]
Cynegils, king, baptized 635 in Dorchester, Dorset, England by Bishop Birinus at Dorchester. [1]

Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Original gedcom data, not otherwise sourced. Replace this reference when better sourcing is found.
↑ 2.0 2.1 Record for Ceowald of Wessex; record for Cutha Cuthwulf prince of Wessex. Record for Cuthwine Wessex. Database online
↑ 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 Wikipedia: Cutha_Cathwulf
↑ From http://www.rpi.edu/~holmes/Hobbies/Genealogy2/ps05/ps05_052.htm
See also:

* Kirby, D.P. (1992). The Earliest English Kings. London: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-09086-5. * Yorke, Barbara (1990). Kings and Kingdoms of Early Anglo-Saxon England. London: Seaby. ISBN 1-85264-027-8.

Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999 
WESSEX Cutha (I58623)
 
9975 There are two birth dates for Simeon or Simon, Jan. 22, 1649 and Nov. 22, 1648.
Just a mistake in dates?


There are two birth dates for Simeon or Simon, Jan. 22, 1649 and Nov. 22, 1648.
Just a mistake in dates? 
Hayward Simeon (I50681)
 
9976 There is also a birth date for Daniel as being 11 Feb. 1825. Castner Daniel Remer (I53150)
 
9977 There is also a date of 23 Feb 1804. White Luther (I54058)
 
9978 There is also a record of Marriage dated 5 Nov. 1640 in Scituate (PRC8:19) Family: WHITE Resolved / VASSALL Judith (F10043)
 
9979 There is much legendary material associated with this person.

Research Notes
In some respects, Caradoc ap Bran would appear to be a legendary version of the historical Caractacus. However, there are so many differences that there are advantages to keeping a separate profile for Caradoc ap Bran.

The following two profiles overlap in their identity:

Caratacus or Caractacus is the historical version. Caractacus was the son of Cunobelinus
Caradoc is the legendary version and is the son of Bran the Blessed.
Birth
Baptized: 0056[1]
Birth: 0007—0035, Siluria. Trevan, Llanilid, Glamorganshire, England
Children
Eigen[2]
Claudia (Gladys)
Cyllinus
Linus[3]



Links removed
The following were previously linked on WikiTree to Anna Arimathea

Father: Joseph of Arimathea. This is a BCE (before the Common Era) profile and will be removed from WikiTree in due course.
Husband: Caradog ap Bran, said to be born in the year 35, Glamorganshire, England.
Child: Cyllinus ap Caradoc, said to be born in the year 65, Travan, Llanilid, Glamorganshire.
Bran the Blessed and his Children
Bran the Blessed or Bran Fendigaid has been shown with the following children. Since Bran is a legendary rather than historical figure, these children have been de-linked. There is no expectation that the relationships of legendary persons will fit logical dating patterns! [4]

Avallach ap Bran. No birth year, possibly born unknown BCE.
Caradog ap Bran, born 0035, Glamorganshire, England
Beli ap Bran born 0060,
Protage ap Bran, or Protage Benardin Bran, born 0110, Glamorgan, Wales.
Bran the Blessed, legendary father
Conversion to Christianity
Bran the Blessed, the son of Llyr Llediaith was the first of the race of the Cymry who was converted to the faith in Christ.[5]

His family is the most ancient of the Holy Families of the Island of Britain, and his church is in Llandaff. [5]

Arwystli Hen, a man from Italy; he came with Bran, the son of Llyr, to the Island of Britain to teach the Christian faith. [5]

70: Bran and Ilid from Rome to Wales to Teach Christianity
Saint Ilid[6], a man of Israel, who came with Bran, the son of Llyr, from Rome to teach the Christian faith to the race of the Cymry.
[5]

Ilid. A saint who is said to have accompanied Bran ab Liyr to Britain, about A. D. 70, with Arwystli Hen, cyndav, and Mawan, and to have been one of the first preachers of the Gospel in this country. Ilid and Cyndav are called men of Israel, which would imply that they were converted Jews. Ilid is said to have converted many of the Cymry to the Christian faith. A saying of his is preserved in "Chwedlau y Doethion," "Hst thou heard the saying of St. ilid, one come of the rase of Israel? There is no madness like extreme anger." (Iolo Morganwg's Welsh MSS.) [6]

Eigen, the daughter of Caradoc, the son of Bran, the son of Llyr Llediaith, wife of Sallwg, lord of Garth Mathrin.
Saint Lleurwg, called Lleuver Mawr [the great luminary], the son of Coel, the son of Cyllin, the son of Caradoc, the son of Bran, the son of Llyr Llediaith, sent to Pope Eleutherius to request bishops to confer baptism on those of the race of the Cymry who should believe in Christ.
[5]

Saint Gwerydd, the son of Cadwn, the son of Cenau, the son of Eudav, of the family of Bran the Blessed, the son of Llyr Llediaith. His church is Llanwerydd, the same as Saint Dunawd. Saint Gwynno, of the family of Bran the Blessed.[5]

Death
Date: 0067 — Executed, Rome, Italy, Age: 46-47. [7]
Sources
↑ Smart, p. 3
↑ Iolo Manuscripts, p. 538
↑ Smart, pp. 3-6, added 2014-08-02, amb
↑ jhd Jan 27, 2018
↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 Iolo Manuscripts, p. 538. accessed 2014-04-26, amb
↑ 6.0 6.1 A Biographical Dictionary of Eminent Welshmen: From the Earliest Times to the Present, and Including Every Name Connected with the Ancient History of Wales ... (Google eBook). Robert Williams. William Rees, 1852. Accessed August 24, 2017. jhd
↑ Smart, p. 3
See also

Histroical Traditions and Facts relating to Newport and Caerleon, by a member of the Caerleon and Monmouthshire antiquarian society by Charles Octavius S. Morgan 1880, p. 7
Iolo Manuscripts: A Selection of Ancient Welsh Manuscripts, in Prose and Verse, from the Collection Made by the Late Edward Williams, Iolo Morganwg, for the Purpose of Forming a Continuation of the Myfyrian Archaiology; and Subsequently Proposed as Materials for a New History of Wales, p. 538. (Google eBook). Iolo Morganwg. W. Rees; sold by Longman and Company, London, 1848.
Thomas Gregory Smart, Genealogy of the descendants of the Prichards, formerly lords of Llanover, Monmouthshire, with an appendix of the pedigrees of the houses, with which that family intermarried, Published 1868. Original from Oxford University. Digitized Jun 23, 2006
Wikipedia entry for Caratacus 
Ap BRAN Caradog (I59283)
 
9980 There seems to be no trustworthy records for Jonathan. One of that
name did marry a Widow Susannah Holland in 1756. Jonathan Pulsifer
made a deed of land Jan. 20, 1755 to Bickford Pulsifer, probably his
brother. No record of children. 
PULSIFER Jonathan (I7496)
 
9981 There was an Isaac Santee living in Bucks county, PA in the 1700. Santee Isaac (I54200)
 
9982 There was Henry Smith, of Springfield, MA. English home: Dorchester,
Dorset on the Mary & John in 1630; He was also listed on the sister ship of the
"Speedwell" in 1637, with wife, four children, four men servants and four
woman servants. This was apparently his second crossing. He was in Dorchester
MA in 1630 and Springfield, MA in 1636. His mother was Frances Sandford, widow
also came between 1630 & 1637; whe m. (1) Smith; (2) Sandford, and (3) William
Pynchon in New England after 1630. She returned to England with Pynchon
and d. 1657. Henry m. (1)? before 1637; and (2) his step-sister Ann Pynchon. He
went to Springfield with Pynchon. 
SMITH Henry (I39514)
 
9983 There were no children by this marriage. Spencer Deborah (I53170)
 
9984 Thetbaldi de Charte
Title: Comte
Birth: 840 Eure Et Loire
Death: 871 
De CHARTRES Thetbaldi (I59614)
 
9985 Theudemer (living late 4th century / early 5th century),[1][2] is cited as a son of Ricimer (d. abt. 393), and Ascylla, from sources which precede, Gregory of Tours. But while Gregory, stressed discontinuity of Frankish rule, it's the 7th century Chronicle of Fredegar, that took liberties to write in Chlodio (Chlogio), as a son of Theodemer.[3]

Gregory of Tours:
"We read in the Fasti Consulares that Theodomer, king of the Franks, son of Richimer, and Ascyla his mother, were once on a time slain by the sword. They say also that Chlogio, a man of ability and high rank among his people, was king of the Franks then, and he dwelt at the stronghold of Dispargum which is within the borders of the Thuringians."[4]
Sources
Reimitz, H. (2015). History, Frankish Identity and the Framing of Western Ethnicity, 550-850, (pp.169). Cambridge University Press. eBook.[5]

Space: Gregory of Tours 
FRANKS Theodemer (I59141)
 
9986 They had eight children. Names unknown.

Annable Sarah (I53421)
 
9987 They had no children born to this marriage. Burns Ethel Viola (I53067)
 
9988 They had six children, all unknown. Annable Charlotte Ann (I53408)
 
9989 They moved to Illinois about 1838. Went all the way with a pair of horses and a wagon. Settled at Groveland, IL, where he took up land and made brick on his farm, and built a good brick house. He was a Brick Mason by trade. He also built several brick buildings in Pekin, IL. He with a partner, built the Court House, that is still in use. His land was what was then called, “the barrens”. Timber and undergrowth had to be cleared and grubbed before it could be farmed. For his orchards, seeds were brought from the OLD ORCHARD on the OLD HOMESTEAD, in Grafton, NY. I, (A. A. Davison) was quite a small boy, but well remember saving apple seeds for Uncle Rowland Davison to take to Illinois. When I came in 1851, it was quite an old orchard. Found only one tree with apples anything like any apples in the old orchard. He lived in Groveland, IL, until about the time Uncle John P. Davison (Davidson) came. He then took up several tracts of land eight miles west of Minonk, IL. A large farm for himself, and eighty acres for each of his nine children. He took great interest in Church and Sunday School, was a Deacon in the Baptist Church. I am not competent to write a brief sketch. He was a good man, and a true Christian. He was killed in an accident; was harrowing with a pair of young horses. They go frightened and ran. The harrow turned over and a tooth went through his neck, which caused his death. (A. A. Davison, 1905) DAVISON Rowland (Squire) (I35801)
 
9990 They moved to Sepronius, NY where she died when she was well over 90 years of age. Annable Polly (I53282)
 
9991 They reside in Miles city, Montana SHERMAN Catherine (I8577)
 
9992 They resided in his native town of Grafton, NY, until in 1855 when with his father, he came to Illinois, and located in Clayton Township, Woodford County, where he resided on the farm until 1887 when he moved to Eureka, IL to give his children the benefit of Eureka College. He was elected County Treasurer in 1885. He resided in Eureka, until 1889 when he removed to Metamora, IL, the County Seat. After his term of office expired, he returned to the farm and lived there until the Fall of 1902 when he moved to Minonk, IL. During that winter, he had a severe attack of LaGrippe, from which he never recovered. He went to Excelsior Springs, Missouri, without receiving any benefit, and gradually grew weaker, until September 13, 1903 when he peacefully passed away. He was a prosperous farmer. Owned 720 acres of land, besides town and other property. Was nearly a life-long member of the Baptist Church, and was a leader in society, socially, religiously, and politically. He was a Democrat and cast his first ballot for James Buchanan. He was Treasurer of Clayton Township for twenty years, and also Supervisor. January 1, 1900, he assisted in organizing the State Bank of Benson, IL, and served as Vice President. Was a member of the Minonk Lodge, No. 927, I.O.O.F. Harvey was always gentle and kind, and had a pleasant word for everyone. The funeral services were held September 15, 1903, conducted by Rev. Robert Wallace of Minonk, IL, and Rev. F. M. Johnson of Benson, IL. Buried at Yankee Town Cemetery, eight miles west of Minonk, IL.
(The preceding sketch was furnished by Prosper Harvey’s sons, to Almon A. Davison in 1905) 
DAVISON Prosper Harvey (I35663)
 
9993 They resided in Saco, Maine. PRESCOTT Sarah (I6720)
 
9994 They soon div. Family: NICHOLS Melvin E. / PULSIFER Bertha May (F5938)
 
9995 They were divorced sometime between 1850 and 1860 according to the census reports. Family: Annable William / Esmond Sarah M. (F24321)
 
9996 They were living in Notre Dame de Chemille, Province of Anjou, France
in 1676 
Family: BEAULIEU Jean Hudon Dit / DURAND Francoise (F736)
 
9997 They were married sometime before the May 22, 1627 Division of cattle. Family: Snow Nicholas / Hopkins Constance (F24217)
 
9998 They were married by her brother, William Allen who was a lawyer and judge in Kittery, Maine. Since court was in session at the time, he brought all the court officials to the wedding. Allen Frances (I50501)
 
9999 They were married by J. C. Stevens in Stillwater, Saratoga county,NY. Family: Sherman William / Newland Harriet A. (F23967)
 
10000 They were married by Rev. Addison Brown. Was this her father? Family: Schuster Christian Frederic / Brown Ann Elizabeth (F23438)
 

      «Prev «1 ... 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 ... 57» Next»

Home Page |  What's New |  Most Wanted |  Surnames |  Photos |  Histories |  Documents |  Cemeteries |  Places |  Dates |  Reports |  Sources