Notes
Matches 2,001 to 2,050 of 3,154
# | Notes | Linked to |
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2001 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] "Ancestral Roots..." (Balt., 1992) 250-18 gives him as "Walter I, Count of Aiens, Valois and the Vexin, d. 992/998; m. Adele, dau., perh. of Fulk I, Count of Anjou....Walter I was son of Ralph, Count of Valois", either the one shown here as his father or a son of this Ralph. | Vexintamiens, Gauthier I of (I1560)
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2002 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] "Ancestral Roots..." (Balt., 1992) 252-28 says she was living in 1264. | Clare, Isabel (I1001)
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2003 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] "Ancestral Roots..." (Balt., 1992) 48-13: "Count in the Upper Rhine and Wormgau, seen 722-757; m. Williswint, dau. of Count Adelhelm, wid. 764." Rutpert I is son of Lantbertus (Lambert) II, an adult in ca. 690, dead in 741. | Rutpert, I (I1882)
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2004 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] "Ancestral Roots..." (Balt., 1992) 48-16: "seen 770-807; m. (1) Theoderata, dead 789; m. (2) Isingard, seen 789." | Rutpert, II (I1783)
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2005 | [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. | Adele (I1655)
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2006 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] "Ancestral Roots..." (Balt., 1992) 50-14: "Apparently by a dau. of Duke Bernard, yr. bro. of Pepin the Short, [Pepin] had Bernard a natural son." He reigned as King from 813 to December, 817. | of Lombardy, King Of Italy Bernard (I1713)
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2007 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] "Ancestral Roots..." (Balt., 1992) 53-20: she "b. ca. 945, d. ca. 1004." | Poitou, Adelaide of (I1341)
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2008 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] "Ancestral Roots..." (Balt.,1992) 41-23: " Gospatric II, slain at the battle of the Standard, 23 Aug. 1138, Earl of Dunbar, Baron of Beanly; m. Sybil, dau. of Arkil Morel, d. 1095." Arkil Morel was lieutenant of Robert de Mowbray, Norman Earl of Northumberland in his rebellion against King William Rufus, 1095 - - see NEHGR 97:239-251. | Morel, Sybil (I1066)
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2009 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] "Ancestral Roots..." (Baltimore, 1992) 243a-15: "Gudrod, 'the Magnificent,' also called 'the Hunting-King', s. Halfdan 'White-Leg' and Asa ..., King of Vermaland, Vestfold, and Vingulmark, murdered 810-827 at instigation of (2) wife Asa in revenge for forcibly abducting her and killing ca. 800 her father and brother; m. (1) Alfhilde, dau. Afrim, ruler of Vingulmark; m. (2) Asa, dau. Harald, 'Red-Beard', King of Agdir. Asa believed bur. in Oseberg ship, richest Scandinavian archaeological find." | Vestfold, Gudrod of (I1837)
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2010 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Crocker, C. (I2073)
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2011 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] "Debrett's Kings and Queens of Britain" by David Williamson (Salem House Pub., 1986) says, "....he [Charles the Bald] gave her [Judith] in marriage to Ethelwulf, the wedding being solemnized at Verberie-sur-Oise on 1 October 856. Ethelwulf returned home in 'good health' and died over a year later on 13 January 858. He was buried first at Steyning in Sussex, but was later removed to Winchester." | Judith Princess of Aquitaine (I1736)
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2012 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] "Ed" is son of Dr. Edwin R. Henry and Olga Matilda Gerwig. He was a geotechnical engineer for the State of New Jersey, 1963-1998. He holds a BA in geology from the University of Maine (1960) and was a Lt. in the U.S.Corps of Engineers, 1961-63. He and Beverly r. Oradell, NJ before moving to Florida in his retirement. | Henry, Edwin Ruthvan IV (I1953)
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2013 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] "Falaise Roll" (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1994), p. 30, opines that he is second son if Wickman, created Count of Gand in 940 by Emperor Otho, his nephew. This Wickman is second son of Bruno, Duke of Saxony. Bruno descends from Witiking, duke of Angria, who opposed Charlemange ca. 780. | Adalbert Count of Gand (I1576)
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2014 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] "History of the Town of Hingham" II:243: "She survived [John], and m. secondly, 18 June 1669, Nathaniel Chubbuck." Mary and John had ten children, listed on II:243. | Mary (I2397)
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2015 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] "In the 9th century a national hero, Nomenoe, revolted against the tutelage of Charles the Bald and conquered Nantes and Rennes, thus giving to Brittany its definitive extension and its complex constitution of both Celtic and Frankish country. The successors of Nomenoe, nominally vassals of the king but in fact independent, rallied their people against the Norse raiders..." - Encyclopedia Britannica, 1956, 4:205. | Nomenoe, (a Breton Chief) (I1850)
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2016 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] "In the second quarter of the 10th century Fulk the Red had already usurped the title of count, which his descendants kept for three centuries. He was succeeded first by his son Fulk II the Good (941 or 942 - c. 960), and then by Fulk's son, Geoffrey I Grisegonelle, who inaugurated a policy of expansion...." - Encyclopedia Britannica, 1956, 1:976. See discussion of "The Houses of Anjou and Gatinais" in "England Under the Angevin Kings," Kate Norgate (N.Y.: Haskel House, 1969), Vol. 1, pp. 249-51, for a differing ancestry for Fulk. | Fulk Count of Anjou (I1553)
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2017 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] "One of King William's most favored companions; had numerous manors at Domesday; md Agnes (1040)(2nd mar. for both...), d. of Waldren de St.Clare." {-"Some Early English Pedigrees," Vernon M. Norr (Arlington, VA, 1968, typescript, p. 34, used at Library of Congress, 7/89)} Conflicting accounts of his parentage exist among genealogists; I have used the reasoning given in "The Bruce Journal," Vol. 1, No. 4 (Fall, 1990), p. 46. William built the great Bramber Castle at Stynning, Sussex; he held the "rape of Bramber." Also see the discussion of his identity in "Falaise Roll" (Baltimore: Gen. Pub. Co, 1994), pp. 35-36. | Braose, William de (I1111)
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2018 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] "Pete" is son of Carl James Poole and Maggie Lee Martin of Ohatchee, Alabama. Served with the Navy in both the Pacific and European theaters during World War II, having been a survivor of Pearl Harbor and serving on a minesweeper off Normandy Beach in D-Day. He retired as Chief Boatswain in 1946 and served Northeast and Delta airlines for 22 years as a mechanic. | Poole, Leo Lawrence (I2383)
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2019 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] "Smyth (Alfred the Great) says she married Conrad of Burgandy. There is confusion in that she married "a Prince near the Alps"; but Boleslaw seems the most likely." - Brian Thompsett ( 1999) at his Web site: http://www.dcs.hull.ac.uk/public/genealogy/royal This disputes the descendancy from her in AEM's database. | Elfgifu (I1738)
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2020 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] "Ted" also married (2) Violet Smallwood (who by a previous marriage had a daughter, Joan Yonkers). Elma is his third wife. | Conner, Edwin Kenniston (I2235)
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2021 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] "The beauty of this young woman, her grace and intelligence, are mentioned by all writers of the time." - Fr. Funck-Brentano, "A History of Gaul," p. 386. | Bavaria, Judith of (I1770)
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2022 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] "The Bruce Journal", 1:4, p. 47, states that she is daughter of Allen, Earl of Brittany. | Brittany, Emma of (I1167)
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2023 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] "The continuous history of Sweden begins in the early 10th century, when a king named Eric son of Edmund was reigning at Uppsala."{- Encyclopedia Britannica, 1956, 21:638 - could be ID1648?} | Eric King of Sweden (I1428)
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2024 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] "The extent of Otto the Great's dominions compelled him to delegate much of his authority in Saxony, and in 960 he gave to a trusted relative, Hermann Billung, certain duties and privileges on the eastern frontier and from time to time appointed him as his representative in Saxony. Hermann gradually extended his authority, and when he died in 973 was followed by his son Bernhard I, who was undoubtedly duke of Saxony in 986." {-Encycl.Brit.,`56,20:33} Hermann's wife is Hildegarde of Westerbourg. | Billung, Duke of Saxony Hermann (I1599)
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2025 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] "The Folks of Majorbigwaduce," Limeburner, Grace (N. Brooksville, ME - typescript, at Bangor Public Library), p. 89, states that Eliza m. 2 Nov 1820 Ichabod Doble. | Devereaux, Eliza (I2550)
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2026 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] "The Lineage and Ancestry of HRH Prince Charles, Prince of Wales," I:11-12, lists 20 `natural' children of King Henry I; among the youngest is Isabel (a form of Elizabeth), born of Isabel, daughter of Robert de Beaumont, Earl of Leicester, and wife of Gilbert de Clare, Earl of Pembroke. | Elizabeth (I1055)
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2027 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] "The Old Lords of Raby," by John L. Low (booklet, 1879, used at Bodleian Library, Oxford, England, 5/87) states that Waltheof was (Saxon) Earl of Northumberland at the time the City of Durham was founded and resided at Bamburgh Castle where his son Uchtred stopped a major Scottish invasion of England. His name is given as Siward, Earl of Northumberland, Northumbria, Northampton and Huntingdon by Carr P. Collins, "Royal Ancestors of Magna Charta Barons" (Dallas, 1959, pp. 199-200). "The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle" edition of 1961 indicates on a chart, p.218, that this person is "Waltheof, Earl of Northumbria beyond the Tees [river], probably descendant of the high-reeves of Bamburgh." Brian Thompsett of the University of Hull (http://www.dcs.hull.ac.uk/cgi-bin/gedlkup/n=royal?royal01771) gives his death as 1006 and his accession as ca. 965. | Waltheof, Earl I Northumberland (I1324)
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2028 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] "The Scots Peerage," ed. by Sir James Balfour Paul, 4:135: "The first Lord or Prince of Galloway on record is Fergus, styled `of Galloway', who appears as a witness to a charter by King David I, granting land to the Church of Glasgow on 7 July 1136 when that church was dedicated.... Little is known of his personal history, but like King David I...he gave liberally to the church, and was the founder of several abbeys in his own district. ...Towards the close of his life, and after King David's death, Fergus appears to have been drawn by the claims of relationship to take part in the insurrection of Donald MacBeth, or at least to afford him shelter in his territories. There Donald was pursued by King Malcolm IV, who succeeded in 1160 in reducing the rebellious district to submission, and Fergus, perhaps because of advancing age, took the cowl, and became a monk in the then new Abbey of Holyrood, where he died in 1161. He is said to have married Elizabeth, the youngest natural daughter of Henry I of England, but the authorities quoted by Chalmers, who makes the statement, do not bear out his assertion. However, Hovendon (who knew the Galloway chiefs personally) and Benedict Abbas both refer to Uchtred, eldest son of Fergus, as cousin of Henry II. This epithet is NOT applied to Gilbert, and he may be a son by a second wife." | Fergus Lord of Galloway (I1054)
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2029 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] (Clermont, his County, is in Beauvais, France.) | Creil, Hugh de (I1194)
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2030 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] (Clermont, in northern France about 40 miles north of Paris, appears to have been founded during the invasions of the Norsemen. It was a fortified town in the middle ages.) | Baudouin, Count of Clermont I (I1477)
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2031 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] (Emma's brother, Hugh, was Bishop of Bayeux.) | Ivry, Emma of (I1204)
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2032 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] (gravestone states was 34 at death; d. in childbirth) | Wardwell, Ellen M. (I2462)
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2033 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] | Morgrage, Elsie Mona (I1779)
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2034 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] |