Report: individuals with associated notes

         Description: personen met geassocieerde notities


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# Person ID Last Name First Name Birth Date Death Date Living note Tree
51 I1655  Adele        [dunbar_tree.FTW]

"Ancestral Roots..." (Balt., 1992) 48-18 gives Aelis as first wife of
Robert I, but other sources state that Beatrix of Vermandois is the first. 
bratt01 
52 I1147  Aelfgar  III    1059  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Earl of East Anglia in 1053, he was Earl of Mercia in 1057. By Aelfgifu he
had 3 known sons: Eadwine, Morkere and Burchard (whose issue is unknown).
Aelfgar III is an only child. 
bratt01 
53 I1213  Aethelred  II  968  23 Apr 1016  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Called "The Unready" (i.e. without rede or counsel); tried to buy off
Danish invaders led by Sweyn; finally assembled large navy but internal
dissent undermined effective deployment; Encycl. Britannica, 1956 Ed.
(1:275) states: "Weak, self-indulgent, improvident, he had pursued a policy
of opportunism to a fatal conclusion." He reigned 979-1016. 
bratt01 
54 I1674  Aethelwulf    Abt 800  13 Jan 858  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Aethelwulf reigned 839-858, "chiefly occupied with struggles against the
Danes" {-Encycl.Brit., 1956 Ed. 1:276}. In 855 went to Rome with Alfred; on
way home married Judith, daughter of Charles the Bold. Aethelwulf ruled
Wessex 839-856 (abdicated) and was Under-King of Kent 825-839 and 856-858.
His daughter Aethelswith m. (Easter, 853 at Chippenham) Burgred, King of the
Mercians (who succeeded Berhtwulf). His third son, Aethelbert, reigned
860-866 (buried at Sherborne). 
bratt01 
55 I1172  Agatha  of Hungary    Aft 1064  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Agatha's parents are not proven to my satisfaction.  I cannot tell why she was sometimes known as "of Hungary."
"The Plantagenet Ancestry," W.H.Turton (Balt.: Gen.Pub.Co., 1968) identifies Agatha "of Germany" as dau. of Bruno of Germany, Bishop of Augsburg and brother of Emperor Henry II. Ernest-Friedrich Kraentzler, "The Ancestry of Richard Plantagenet and
Cecily de Neville," p. 58, states that Agatha is daughter of Ludolph von Braunschweig, Count im Derlingo, Marquis von Westfriesland, b. 1008, d. 04-23-1038, m, 1020 Gertrude von Egisheim. See Szabolcs de Vajay, "Agatha, Mother of St. Margaret, Queen
of Scotland," in Duquesne Review, vol. 7, no. 2, Spring, 1962, pp. 71-80, with tables.
"Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists...," Frederick L. Weis, 7th Edition (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1992), p. 2, gives the current status of the discussion of Agatha's parentage: "For her ancestry, see The American
Genealogist 54:231. But see also Frank Barlow, "The Feudal Kingdom of England, 16-17; Ritchie, "The Normans in Scotland," 389-392, and Szaboles de Vajay, [referenced above - AEM ] The parentage suggested in the last [i.e. de Vajay] reference is the
most probable. See also Gabriel Ronay, "The Lost King of England" (1989), 117-121."
In "The Saints of the Catholic Church" it is written that she was a sister of Gisela of Bavaria who was married to king (St) Sthephen of Hungary (he died August 5th 1038).
Note: Europ 
bratt01 
56 I1188  Agnes        [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Agnes was kidnapped for Simon to marry by her half-brother, Ralph de Toeni
III de Conches, who received Simon's daughter Isabel in marriage in turn. 
bratt01 
57 I215  Ahern  Elizabeth T  10 Mar 1840  30 Dec 1921  From Journal of Education, Volume VIII, Montreal (Lower Canada), this date. No. 7
In Diplomas Granted by the normal schools session 1863-4, Elizabeth Ahern is granted a "Model School" diploma
https://books.google.com/books?id=Al09AQAAMAAJ 
bratt01 
58 I215  Ahern  Elizabeth T  10 Mar 1840  30 Dec 1921  Birth date listed on 1901 Canadian census  bratt01 
59 I215  Ahern  Elizabeth T  10 Mar 1840  30 Dec 1921  Find A Grave Memorial# 122911441  bratt01 
60 I215  Ahern  Elizabeth T  10 Mar 1840  30 Dec 1921  Immigrated as child to Canada  bratt01 
61 I1291  Aka Alberade de Bayeux?  Emma      [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Her brothers were churchmen - Hugh was Bishop of Bayeux and John was Bishop
of Avranches and then Archbishop of Rouen. 
bratt01 
62 I1452  Albert  920  988  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

{Alternately, Albert I may be son of Herbert I and therefore a brother to
Herbert II. W.H.Turton, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"
(Balt.:Gen.Pub.Co.,1968),p.112, shows Herbert II and wife Hildebrand as
parents of Albert I, and Herbert III as son of Albert I and Gerberga of
Lorraine.} 
bratt01 
63 I5623  Alden  Elizabeth  1625  31 May 1717  ... it is said she was the first white female born in the new world." You can read more about Elizbeth Pabodie from her Wikipedia page, here. Elizabeth descendants are documented in the book "Elizabeth (Alden) Pabodie and Descendants.  bratt01 
64 I5624  Alden  John  1599  22 Sep 1687  Much is written about John Alden as he was a cooper aboard the Mayflower. John famously elected to remain in Plymouth when the ship left for its return voyage after spending the winter of 1620/21. You can read more about John at his Mayflower Society page, and also at his Wikipedia page bratt01 
65 I1241  Aldred      1038  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Aldred's mother is one of the first two wives of Uchtred: (1) Ecgthryth,
dau. of Aldhun (Bishop of Durham), or (2) Sigen, dau. of Styr (Ulf's son). 
bratt01 
66 I1593  Alfred    849  26 Oct 900  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Alfred was one of the greatest military leaders in history; crowned at
Winchester Cathedral in 871; founded the British Navy; a scholar, etc. The
Mercian kingdom ended during his reign "and in 886 Alfred's authority was
accepted by all Englishmen who were not under the power of the Danes. From
this time onward the history of Wessex is the history of England."
{-Encyclopaedia Britannica, '56, 23:520; cf.8:483. Primary source is "Life
of King Alfred," Bishop Asser, trans. L. C. Jane (London: Chatto & Windus
Ltd., 1924).}
----- Compton's Encyclopedia (America Online, 1995) records:
ALFRED THE GREAT (848?-899). The course of English history would have been
very different had it not been for King Alfred. He won renown both as a
statesman and as a warrior and is justly called "the Great."
The England of Alfred's time was a country of four small Saxon kingdoms.
The strongest was Wessex, in the south. Born in about 848, Alfred was the
youngest son of Ethelwulf, king of Wessex. Each of Alfred's three older
brothers, in turn, ruled the kingdom. Alfred was by temperament a scholar,
and his health was never robust.
Nevertheless in his early youth he fought with his brother Ethelred
against Danish invaders. Alfred was 23 when Ethelred died, but he had already
won the confidence of the army and was at once acclaimed king in 871. By this
time the Danes, or Vikings, had penetrated to all parts of the island. Three
of the Saxon kingdoms--Northumbria, Mercia, and East Anglia--had one after
another fallen to the Danish invaders.
Under Alfred's leadership, the Saxons again found courage. The worst
crisis came in the winter of 877, when the Danish king, Guthrum, invaded
Wessex with his army. In 878 Alfred was defeated at Chippenham, where he was
celebrating Christmas, and was forced to go into hiding.
A few months later he forced Guthrum to surrender at Chippenham. The Danes
agreed to make the Thames River and the old Roman road called Watling Street
the boundary between Alfred's kingdom and the Danish lands to the north. The
treaty, however, did not assure permanent peace. The Danes assaulted London
and the coast towns repeatedly. In about 896 they finally admitted defeat and
ceased their struggle for a foothold in southern England.
Alfred was much more than the defender of his country. He took a keen
interest in law and order and was concerned with the improvement of the
cultural standards of his people. He encouraged industries of all kinds and
rebuilt London, which had been partly destroyed by the Danes. He collected
and revised the old laws of the kingdom. He invited learned men from other
countries to instruct the people because even the clergy of Wessex no longer
knew Latin, the international language of the church. He established a school
similar to the Palace School of Charlemagne.
The "books most necessary for all men to know" were translated from Latin
into English so that the people might read them. Alfred himself took a part
in preparing the translations. The `Anglo-Saxon Chronicle' was probably begun
under his direction.
Alfred died at the age of about 51 in 899. He was in no sense a true king
of England, for he ruled less than half of the island. After his death,
however, his capable son, Edward the Elder, and his grandsons extended their
rule over all of England.
- - - - -
From an Internet article at Ancestry.com:
"A British and U.S. archaeological team believes it has found the grave of
King Alfred, the great Saxon king, best remembered for fighting off the Danes
in the ninth century. As then befitted a king of great piety, Alfred was
buried in 899 at the New Minster church in Winchester, 65 miles southwest
of London. His remains are thought to have been moved 200 years later to
Winchester's Hyde Abbey, one of the great medieval monasteries. But the
abbey was destroyed in 1538, and the site believed to be Alfred's tomb now
lies next to a parking lot."
 
bratt01 
67 I1746  Alpin      837  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

The fiction that Alpin fell in a battle [in Galloway] with the Picts, when
asserting his right to the Pictish throne, has long been exploded.
King of Argylshire (831-834). 
bratt01 
68 I1258  Amauri  II      [dunbar_tree.FTW]

{Ancestors from "The Plantagenet Ancestry," W.H.Turton
(Balt.:Gen.Pub.Co.,1968), p.230.} 
bratt01 
69 I2071               
70 I2076               
71 I2070  Ames  John  10 Jan 1909  10 Aug 1948  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

John is son of Fred Ames and Annie Johnson. He was a salesman for Standard
Brands. 
bratt01 
72 I1796  Anchar      837  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

{Lillian Etters via Prodigy 4/91 states some Belgian records give him as
Ogier or Odacre von Laon, Conte Harlebec, who married the daughter of
Anselme de St. Paul and de St. Omer. He is son of Ingelram, Comte de
Harlebec, died 877/9, envoy to the Gauls of King Charles II; Ingelram is
son of Liedereck or Lyderic de Harlbec "the Forrester of Lotharn" who made
him a count for coming to his aid in a fight; he m. Fladrine, a German
woman. Liedereck's father is not known, but Liederick's grandfather is
Lideric a Forrester in Ardennen/Flanders, first Count, who died in 648 and
m. in 641 Rotilde, daughter of Dagobert I and Nautilde. AEM takes this
line with a grain of salt.} 
bratt01 
73 I1163  Ankaret  II      [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Anharet m. (2) Cynfyn of Powys and they had Bleddyn, who reigned as
sovereign prince of South Wales 1063-1075. 
bratt01 
74 I1683  Anscarius  Marquis ofIvrea    896  or d. 891  bratt01 
75 I1683  Anscarius  Marquis ofIvrea    896  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

{Data from W.H.Turton, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" (Balt.:
Gen.Pub.Co.,1968),p.42.} Ivrea is episcopal see of Piedmont and is 27 miles
NNE of Turin. It was a duchy and then a marquisate in the middle ages.
Cf. "Voorouders in de Middeleeuen," Leo Lindemans, pp. 74, 76. 
bratt01 
76 I1970               
77 I4151  Ariense  Maritje  1617  27 Dec 1692  Source, Find a grave memorial www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=72711613  bratt01 
78 I4151  Ariense  Maritje  1617  27 Dec 1692  www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=72711613  bratt01 
79 I5072  Armstrong  Vera  17 Oct 1898  6 May 1995  Find A Grave Memorial# 80301561  bratt01 
80 I1721  Arnulf      Dec 899  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Arnulf was illegitimate son of Carloman (?) and grandson of Carloman's
father Louis the German, King of the East Franks (d. 880; son of Emperor
Louis I - see AEM's Chart 310C:4). Arnulf's wife is Oda, daughter of
Theodore of Bavaria. 
bratt01 
81 I1565  Arnulf  890  27 Mar 966  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Arnulf was preoccupied with fighting off the Northmen. "In his old age he
placed the government in the hands of Baldwin, his son by Adela, daughter
of the count of Vermandois, and the young man in a short reign did much for
the commercial and industrial progress of the country, setting up the first
weavers and fullers at Ghent, and instituting yearly fairs at Ypres, Bruges
and other places. On Baldwin III's death in 961 the old count resumed
control and spent the few remaining years of his life in securing the
succession of his grandson Arnulf II...." {Encycl.Brit., 1956, 9:356} 
bratt01 
82 I1433  Arnulf  II    18 Sep 993  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Arnulf was killed while fighting the West Frisians and was succeeded by his
12-year-old son Dirk III. 
bratt01 
83 I1103  Arwystli  Trahaern of    1081  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

{This line from "Royal Ancestors of Sixty New England Colonists," Frederick
L. Weis, Lancaster, Mass., 1950, pp. 44 & 139. The 7th edition of this book
in 1992 casts doubt on this marriage and states "It is probable that Llywarch
was son of another woman." However, Trahaern is his father.} 
bratt01 
84 I4597  Ash  Elsie Etta  22 Apr 1907  26 Dec 1978  From Find a grave memorial:
West Clayston, who died Tuesday night at Pershing Memorial Hospital, will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday in Hill Funeral Home, conducted by the Rev. T. A. White with burial in the Meadville Cemetery.

Elsie Etta, daughter of George and Isabell (Brake) Ash, was born in Berry County, April 22, 1907.

Mrs. Dean is survived by her husband, Doc Dean, of Brookfield; one son, Loren C. Swihart, address unknown; four grandchildren; one sister, Mrs. Bertha Swihart, Chillicothe; two brothers, Vernon and Robert Ash, Brookfield; and several nieces, nephews and other relatives.

Mrs. Dean was preceded in death by her parents and four brothers. She was a member of the First Baptist Church of Brookfield.

Brookfield Daily News Bulletin, Dec 1978 
bratt01 
85 I4592  Ash  George Washington  22 Jan 1873  9 Feb 1962  From Find a Grave Memorial 17926342
George Washington Ash died Friday Morning at Pershing Hospital.

Services were held at 2 o'clock this afternoon at the Hill Funeral Hoe by the Rev. Kenneth Kelley, with burial in the Meadville Cemetery.

Born Jan. 22, 1873 in Carroll County Arkansas, he was the son of Jacob and Ellen Ash. In 1892 he married Isabella Brake. She died April 26, 1942.

They were the parents of eight children, three sons preceding him in death. Those surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Bertha Swihart, Marceline and Mrs. Elsie Swihart, Chicago; three sons, Wesley, of Coram, N. Y., Vernon of Chicago, and Robert of Waukegan, ILL.

On Feb. 10, 1961 he married Clara E. Griffeth, who survives at the home, 402 South Caldwell.

Also surviving are a sister, Mrs. Mildred Chasteen, Grapevine, Tex; eight stepchildren, Mrs. Florence Wells, Mooresville, Mrs. Daisy Hunter, Barry, Illl, Mrs. Alice Reed, St. Louis, Mrs. Flossie Bosert, St. Louis, Mrs. Doris Lowery, New York, Mrs. Opal Whisenend, Kansas City, Lee Griffeth, Linneus, and Clarence Griffith, Chillicothe, and 22 grandchildren, and 41 great -grandchildren, several great, great grandchildren and also a number of great, great, great-grandchildren. In addition to his 13 step grandchildren and 14 great-step grandchildren and several nieces and nephews.

No source listed, copy of newspaper page only, assuming Brookfield Daily News Bulletin, Date of death February 9, 1962 
bratt01 
86 I1983               
87 I1982               
88 I1984               
89 I1750  Athelbert  Count InSachsen      [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Athelbert is son of Wichmann, Count in Sachsen, and his wife
Imminhild_____. 
bratt01 
90 I2450  Atkins  Hannah      [dunbar_tree.FTW]

She and Jairus may be the parents of Juliet Dunbar who m. Eliakim Wardwell of
Penobscot, ME on 21 Feb 1826 - her dates have been reported as 19 Jan 1810 to
11 Nov 1827. 
bratt01 
91 I2439               
92 I2437               
93 I2438               
94 I646  Babb  Martin      Played Trombone  bratt01 
95 I2417  Babbiage  Madeline  9 Oct 1920  5 Jul 2008  Madeline Dow, 87, died July 5, 2008 at a Penobscot Health Care Facility. She was born October 9, 1920 in Brooksville. She was the daughter of James T and Eleanor (Clifford) Babbidge

She was a founding member of the "Jolly Helpers" of the West Brooksville Congregational Church.

She is survived by her son, Larry Dow and wife Lee; daughters, Carolyn Gray and husband Rick, Margaret Rackliffe and husband Dennis, Lois Austin and husband David; 8 grandchildren; and 10 great-grandchildren. She was predeceased by her husband of 57 years, Alton Dow and her sister, Marie Gross..

A graveside service will be held at a later date at Evergreen Cemetery, Cape Rosier. (Jordan-Fernald Funeral Home on-line) 
bratt01 
96 I2417  Babbiage  Madeline  9 Oct 1920  5 Jul 2008  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

still living - details excluded 
bratt01 
97 I2162  Bailey  Gertrude E.  3 May 1892  3 Apr 1941  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Gertrude is daughter of Alfred C. Bailey and Elizabeth Foster. She was a
teacher in the East Orland School at the time of her death and a graduate of
the Eastern State Normal School in Castine. She was previosly "employed by
the state as a "helping teacher" visiting rural schools and aiding teacher
in their professional advancement. She had taught school in Isleboro,
Penobscot, Castine, and more recently in East Orland." - obituary (which
calles her "Mrs. Gertrude Oakes Connor"). Buried from Unitarian Church. 
bratt01 
98 I1735  Baldwin    879  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Baldwin was created Margrave of Flanders by his father-in-law, Emperor
Charles the Bald; he was responsible for repulsing invasions of the
Northmen in this coastal borderland of the Frankish dominion. {"The
Plantagenet Ancestry," W.H.Turton (Balt.:Gen.Pub.Co.,1968), p. 19 states
that Baldwin I is son of Odoacre, Count of Harlebec (d. 862), who is son of
Engelram, Count of Harlebec (d. ca. 824, son of Lyderic, Count of Harlebec,
who d. ca, 802.} BaldwinI died in 877 or 879. 
bratt01 
99 I1661  Baldwin  II  865  2 Jan 919  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Baldwin II, "from his stronghold at Bruges, maintained, like his father, a
vigorous defence of his lands against the incursions of the Northmen. On
his mother's side a descendant of Charlemagne, he strengthened the dynastic
importance of his family by marrying Aelfthryth, daughter of Alfred the
Great. On his death in 918 [sic] his possessions were divided between his
two sons Arnulf the Elder and Adalulf, but the latter survived only a short
time and Arnulf succeeded to the whole inheritance." {-Encyclopaedia
Britannica, 1956 Edition, 9:356} 
bratt01 
100 I1306  Baldwin  IV  980  30 May 1036  [dunbar_tree.FTW]

Baldwin IV "fought successively both against the Capetian king of France
and the emperor Henry II" who was forced to grant him "in fief
Valenciennes, the burggraveship of Ghent, the land of Waes and Zeeland.
The count of Flanders thus became a feudatory of the empire as well as of
the French crown. The French fiefs are known in Flemish history as Crown
Flanders, the German fiefs as Imperial Flanders." {Encycl. Brit., 1956,
9:356} His nickname is "Handsome Beard". He m. (2) a daughter of Richard
II, Duke of Normandy. He reigned 988-1035. 
bratt01 


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