Notes
Matches 3,001 to 3,050 of 3,136
# | Notes | Linked to |
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3001 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Sylvia Conner Wardwell gives her year of death as 1944 in 9/96. | Conner, Nora May (I2376)
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3002 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Syward was Earl of Northumberland, Northampton, Huntingdon and Northumbria. W.H.Turton, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" (Balt.: Gen. Pub. Co., 1968), p. 141, states that Syward is son of Biorn (of the Danish royal house)(son of Ulfius, son of Shratlingus, son of Ursus). | Syward The Saxon Earl (I1174)
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3003 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Tammie is daughter of Dale Johnson and wife Lucille of Sharon Center, Ohio. Tammie was an R.N. and Assistant Director of Nursing at Magnolia Care Center, Wadsworth, Ohio. | Johnson, Tamara Lou (I2250)
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3004 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle calls him "the deed-doer"; Florence of Worcester calls him "Edmundus magnificus"; "buried at Glastonbury, an abbey which he had entrusted in 943 to the famous Dunstan" {-Encycl.Brit., 1956 Ed., 7:962}. He reigned 940-946. He regained northern England and Strathclyde from the Vikings and gave Strathclyde to his ally Malcolm I MacDonald, King of Scots. Edmund I is known as a legal reformer, especially for his restrictions on the "blood feud." An outlaw, Leolf, stabbed him at a banquet to St. Augustine. | Edmund, King of England "The Magnificent" I (I1398)
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3005 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] The daughter of Baldwin V, Maud, married William the Conqueror (William I of England); she is also known as Matilda of Flanders. Baldwin V was Count 1036-67 and "greatly extended his power", obtaining from the Emperor the area between the Scheldt and Dender as an imperial fief along with the marggravate of Antwerp. He was so powerful that he became regent on the death of Henry I of France in 1060. | Baldwin, Count of Flanders V (I1218)
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3006 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] The drum John played at the two public hangings at Fort George, Castine, 1811 & 1819, is in the Wilson Museum (Castine). | Conner, John (I2079)
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3007 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] The family of Warren derived its name from the fief of Varenne in St-Aubin-le-Cauf, arrondissement of Dieppe, and descends from Gautier de St-Martin. {-per "Falaise Roll," M.J.Crispin (1938), p. 52}{W.H.Turton, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" (Balt.:Gen.Pub.Co.,1968),p.112, gives Hugh, Bishop of Coutances (d.1020) as father of Ralph de Warren.} | St-Martin, Gautier de (I1244)
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3008 | [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). | Alpin King of Scots (I1746)
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3009 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] The Forester of Argues. {For line see "Interpolation of Jumieges," Robert de Torigny, and "The Genealogist," New Series, 37:57.} | Herfastus, Sire de Crepon (I1339)
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3010 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] The Innes clan is found in Moray as early as the 12th century. Branches of the family spread all over northern Scotland. Isabel is daughter of Sir Walter Innes. | Innes, Isabel (I2655)
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3011 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] The LDS Church's Ancestral File (not verified) gives her dates: b. 24 Dec 1853, d. 24 Sept 1879. David Wardwell states (not verified) that Helen was born 24 Dec 1853 at Penobscot, ME and m. ca. 1875 at Penobscot. Her grave is in the Stephen Perkins Cemetery off route 199. | Wardwell, Helen W. (I2006)
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3012 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] The name Dalrieda for the Scottish kingdom based in Argyllshire (and for its parent kingdom in northern Ireland) fell into disuse from the time of Kenneth MacAlpin. {Encycl. Brit., 1956 Ed., 6:994; 20:146:} "Dalraida [sic] threw off Pictish control and in 843, when the Norsemen were attacking Pictland, Kenneth MacAlpin, king of the Scots, established a claim by the Celtic law of tanistry to the Pictish throne." Kenneth reigned 844-859. Cf. H. Pirie-Gordon, "Succession of the Kingdom of Strathclyde," `The Armorial', Vols. 1-2. Kenneth is regarded as the first king of Scotland. He united the Pictist kingdom with his own base in Galloway, and in later years expanded into Lothian (southern Scotland, then part of Saxon Northumbria). He also had a daughter who married Run of Strathclyde, a king of Scots (they had Eocha, king of Scots). http://www.magoo.com/hugh/scotskings.html (in 2002): "'On the Stone of Scone (http://members.aol.com/Skyelander/mediev20.html), Kenneth MacAlpin, already king of Scots, was made King of Picts (http://members.tripod.com/%7EHalfmoon/pict4). . . . about mid 9th century, the Scots themselves only represented 1/10 (10%) of Scotland's people. They became dominant through battle and marriage. The Celtic . . . Scots passed Kingship down through the male line. The Celtic Picts, by way of the female.' 'His Pictish mother was descended from the royal house of Fortrenn, and his great-grand uncle, Alpin Mac Eachaidh had actually reigned as King of Picts until deposed by Oengus I.' MacAlpin's Treason (http://members.tripod.com/%7EHalfmoon/macalpin.html). He married his daughter to Rhun (http://www.royal.gov.uk/output/page78.asp>, King of Strathclyde, and Rhun and she were the parents of Eochaidh. (Professor Donnchadh O Corrain says that the wife of King Rhun, the mother of Eochaidh, was the daughter of Constantine. The Vikings in Scotland and Ireland in the Ninth Century (http://www.ucc.ie/chronicon/ocorr2.htm).) The Annals of the Four Masters (http://www.ucc.ie/celt/online/T100005A/) record: 'M835.15 Gofraidh, son of Fearghus, chief of Oirghialla, went to Alba, to strengthen the Dal Riada, at the request of Cinaeth, son of Ailpin.' (841?859) [843]. Grandfather of Niall Glundubh. His daughter Muire was the mother of Conghalach. He died of a tumor in the palace at Forteviot, Perthshire, and was interred on the Isle of Iona. Father of Constantine and Aodd." | MacAlpin, King of Scots Kenneth (I1673)
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3013 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] The Northmen pirates were held at bay by Rhodri Mawr, "founder of the princely houses of Gwynedd and Deheubarth (south Wales) and ruler of all Wales save Dyfed (the land of the Demetae), Brecon, Gwent and Glamorgan." {-Encycl.Brit.,`56,23:291} Sir Anthony Wagner, Garter King of Arms ("English Ancestry," Oxford U. Press, 1961, pp.14-15) states: "Rhodri's male ancestry is traced...to Coel Hen Godebog, who lived, perhaps, early in the fifth century, while the line of Rhodri's grandmother, that of the older dynasty of North Wales, is taken back to its founder Cunedda, about A.D.450, and to Cunedda's father, grandfather and great-grandfather, the Roman forms of whose names (Eternus, Paternus and Tacitus) suggest that they were historical." "A History of Wales," John Davies (New York: Penguin Books, 1993) p. 81: "A chain of marriages begins around 800 when Gwriad, of the lineage of the Men of the North, married Esyllt of the line of Maelgwn Fawr; their son, Merfyn, became king of Gwynedd in 825 on the death of Esyllt's uncle, Hywel ap Rhodri, Marfyn married Nest of the house of Powys, and their son, Rhodri, married Angharad of the house of Seisyllwg (Ceredigion and Ystrad Tywi). Rhodri became ruler of Gwynedd in 844 on the death of his father, of Powys in 855 on the death of his uncle, Cyngen, and of Seisyllwg in 871 on the death of his brother-in-law Gwgon; he died in 877, king of a realm extending from Anglesey to Gower. ...Rhodri's fame sprang from his success as a warrior." | Mawr, King Roderick the Great Rhodri of All Wales (I1607)
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3014 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] The Penobscot Town Register, 1906, lists William as a farmer. He married Emma Conner before Samuel Dunbar, J.P. Some sources give the year of his birth as 1849, but the Conner-Morgrage family Bible gives the date above. | Conner, William G. (I2004)
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3015 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] The surname is from the town, Beaumont-le-Roger in Normandy. Roger was "a kinsman of the dukes of Normandy" {Encycl.Brit., 1956 Ed., 3:274}. | Bello-Mont, Roger de (I1201)
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3016 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Theidlindis descends from the Merovingian Kings of France (Clovis I the Great and his wife St. Clothilda), etc. - her ancestry reaches back to Clodion, King of the Salic Franks (ca. 380-448). | Blois, Theidlindis of (I1822)
|
3017 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] There is a fantastic legendary line for Darbforgaill from Noah's son Japhet via Pharaoh Nectanebus of Egypt; this account states that her paternal grandfather is Brien Borom the Great (King of Munster, 1009-39, and Monarch of Ireland, 1027-39) who routed and expelled the Danes from Ireland. {Carr P. Collins, Jr. "Royal Ancestors of Magna Charta Barons," Dallas, 1959.} | Darbforgaill (I1295)
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3018 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] They r. in 1977 at 41 High St., Abington, MA. | Pinkham, Darwin (I2072)
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3019 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] This ancestry is from Carr P. Collins, Jr., "Royal Ancestors of Magna Carta Barons" (Dallas: 1959), p. 225, but is disputed by another source which gives his father as James Stewart and wife Egidia de Burgh. "Ancestral Roots..." (Balt., 1992) 75A-31 contradicts this ancestry for Walter, giving his father as James Steward (5th High Steward of Scotland, b. ca. 1243, d. 1309, son of Alexander of Dundoland, High Steward of Scotland, d. ca. 1282, by wife Jean, said to be dau. of James, Earl of Bute; Walter's mother is then James' wife, Egidia de Burgh, dau. of Walter de Burgh (ID3267) and his second wife, Avelina Fitz John. 252-31 states Walter m. (2) or (3) Isabel, sister of Sir John Graham, with whom he had issue. See Edigia, ID14411. | Walter, Steward of Scotland (I2668)
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3020 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] This Cospatric is styled in the Register of Kelso as "Cospatricius Comes, filius Cospatricii Comitis." He witnessed a charter of King David I dated 1140. | Cospatric, Earl of Dunbar III (I1037)
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3021 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] This Cospatric was a great benefactor of the abbey of Kelso, described in its charters from him as "Cospatricius, Comes." {-line from Burke's "Dormant...Peerages."} He was a signer of the Charter of Scone by Alexander I in 1115. Cf. "The Scots Peerage," James Balfour Paul (Edinburg: David Douglas, 1906), pp. 246-7. Cospatric was also Baron of Beanly in Northumbria. | Cospatric, Earl of Dunbar (2nd) II (I1065)
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3022 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] This family is from Mark E. Honey, 8/2001, who reports their children are Laura E., F. Hayden and Teresa L. | Dunbar, Frank Wardwell (I2502)
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3023 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] This line from W.H. Turton, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" (Balt.:Gen.Pub.Co.,1968),p.8.} With Lothaire, the independent history of Lorraine begins. He recieved Austrasien in the division with his brothers, and it included Alsace and Friesland (the land from the Rhine to beyond the Maas and NW to the Schelde). "Ancestral Roots..." (Balt., 1992) 145-16 states he "m. (2) 862, Waldrada, d. 868." One source gives his wife as Waldrade d'Alsace (b. by 842, d. after 868). | Lothair, King of Lorraine II (I1725)
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3024 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] This line from W.H.Turton, "The Plantagenet Ancestry"(Balt.:Gen.Pub.Co.,1968),p.141. | Oswulf, Earl Northumberland (I1235)
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3025 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] This line is from "Ancestral Roots..." (Balt., 1992) 144A-15. | Gerard Count of Auvergne (I1791)
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3026 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] This line is uncertain! | Eberhard, Vicount of Nordgau II (I1833)
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3027 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] This link appears doubtful to me - AEM | Calvacamp, Hugh de (I1590)
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3028 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Thomas was Chief of Clan Allan and served as Great Chamberlain of Scotland, 1273-96. {-see "Earls of Moray from 1313 to 1455" in "Family Records of the Bruce and Cumyns...," M.E.Cummings Bruce (London: William Blackwood & Sons, 1870), used at Bodleian Library, Oxford, England, 1987.} | Ranulph, Sir Thomas (I2675)
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3029 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Thomas was created Earl of Moray 1313-14. He was also Lord of Annandale and of the Isle of Man, etc. Either his year of birth is wrong, or the dates for his parents are wrong, or both. | Randolph, Earl of Moray Sir Thomas (I2666)
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3030 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Thored is son of Gunnor. | Thored Ealdorman (I1302)
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3031 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Tillie is daughter of Henry Marks and Minnie Page. | Marks, Tillie (I2468)
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3032 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Torf gave his name to the town of Tourville and added Torcy, Torny and Pontatou to his paternal inheritance. His wife was heiress of Pont Audemar. {See "Falaise Roll" (Baltimore: Gen. Pub. Co., 1994), p. 14.} | Torfus (I1487)
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3033 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Toulouse, in SW France, had a large population by the middle of the 4th century. In 419 is became capital of the Visigoth kingdom, and remained a great city under the Merovingians. Charlemagne appointed his little son Louis king of Aquitaine with Toulouse the chief city. It was besieged by Charles the Bald in 844, and taken in 848 by the Norsemen. "About 852 Raymond I, count of Quercy, succeeded his brother Fridolo as count of Rouergue and Toulouse; it is from this noble that all the later counts of Toulouse trace their descent." - Encycl.Brit.,'56,22:326. | Raymond, Count of Toulouse I (I1728)
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3034 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Tressa m. 19 Nov 1909 at Otis, ME to Arthur E. Moore (b. 10 Oct 1879 in Mariaville, ME, d. 1945 in Otis, ME). | Young, Tressa M. (I2612)
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3035 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Turof, son of Torf, inherited from his mother the Pont Audemar estate on the banks of the Risele ten miles from the Seine. There is some doubt as to the identity of his wife {-see "Falaise Roll," p. 14}. | Turof, of Pontaudemar (I1385)
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3036 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Turstain was Viscomte 1035-41. | Goz, Turstain de ViscomteD'exmes (I1376)
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3037 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Two bonnets which belonged to Lucinda are owned by the Wilson Museum, Castine, ME. | Conner, Lucinda H. (I2629)
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3038 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Uchtred was granted the Earldom of Northumberland while his father, also Earl, was still alive - due to his bravery against the Scots. He married: (1) Egfrida, dau. of Bp. Aldwin of Durham; (2) Sigen, dau. of Styr; (3) ____; and (4) Elgiva, dau. of King Ethelred II of England. There is some doubt as to whether Cospatrick (ID2148) is his son or his grandson. | Uchtred Earl of Northumberland (I1330)
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3039 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Vivian entered Eastern State Normal School (now Maine Maritime Academy) at Castine, Maine in 1898, teaching in small schools to pay for her tuition and graduating in June, 1901. In the fall of 1900 she met Ed Conner, a fellow student whom she married in her family's living room. After the birth of their first child she returned to the normal school and finished the Advanced Normal Course in 1905. She was organizer and president of the Goodyear Women's Club, Central High School PTA, the Women's Democratic Club and League of Women Voters, all in Akron, Ohio. She also belonged to the Sixth Ward Democratic Club, Public Affairs Study Club, Cleveland Shakespeare Society (charter member), and the Cleveland South Side Women's Club. She was active in the Society of Mayflower Descendants, Daughters of the American Revolution (Regent of the Akron Chapter), National Huguenot Society, Daughters of American Colonists, National Society of Women Descendants of the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company (National Number 626), National Society of Magna Carta Dames and the New England Genealogical and Historic Society. She was active in the Women's Suffrage Movement, Democratic Party State Central Committeewoman, served as a delegate to the National Democratic Convention in 1936 and vigorously engaged in local politics. She would have agreed with First Lady Hillary Clinton ("It Takes a Village," 1996) in the "view of government that dates back to the Pilgrims. In this view, government is an instrument both to promote the common good and to protect the individual's rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness." She was first president of the Mothers' Clubs of Kappa Kappa Gamma (her daughter Marian's sorority at The University of Akron) and of Chi Theta Tau. She is buried beside her husband in Castine. | Kenniston, Vivian Inez (I2234)
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3040 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Vladimir was a semi-barbaric Viking tribal chief of great leadership abilities; conquered and then was first ruler of a unified Russia; was baptised at Kherson in the Crimea on The Feast of the Epiphany, 988 and "converted" his subjects to Christianity, and formed many alliances (many sealed with marriages of his children) with the other leaders of Europe {-see Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1956 Edition, 23:231}. He was Grand Duke of Kiev about 978 to his death. His father sent him to govern Novgorod in 970 despite his youth. He became Grand Duke, i.e. leader of his people, by killing his brother Yaropolk, uniting Novgorod and Kiev. After becoming a Christian, Vladimir built churches, promoted charity, established Orthodox canon law and married (988) Princess Anna, sister of Byzantine Emperor Basil II (reigned 976-1025) and daughter of Romanus II (Emperor 959-63) and his second wife Theophano ________. Princess Anna's ancestry (the Macedonian dynasty) is given in "The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium" (NY: Oxford University Press, 1991), II:1262-63. "From the reign of Svyatoslav's youngest son, Vladimir, the Norman dynasty was definitely settled in Kiev." - Encycl. Brit., 1956, 19:692. His feast day is July 15th. Also see "The Rise of Christian Russia, Part II", A. Poppe (1978), pp. 197-244. | Vladimir, Saint Grand Prince ofKiev (I1325)
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3041 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] W.H.Turton gives a speculative ancestry from Leofric I, Earl of Leicester, presumed g3grandfather of Leofwine - "The Plantagenet Ancestry" (Balt.:Gen.Pub.Co.,1968), p. 130. Leofwine was known as earldorman of the Hwiccas and in 1017 was Earl of Mercia. Another proposed ancestry shows Leofwine as son of Elfwina of Mercia (daughter of Edward I the Elder [ID1631] and Edgiva) and Edolf or Edulph (of Saxony?). Leofwine acceeded in 1017. | Leofwine Earl of Mercia (I1297)
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3042 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] W.H.Turton identifies Ealdhun, Bishop of Durham, d. 1018, as father of "Ecgfrid" (wife of Uchtred) {"The Plantagenet Ancestry" (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co.,,1968),p.141}. {Cf. Weis, "Ancestral Roots," p. 134.} | Ealdhun Bishop of Durham (I1431)
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3043 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] W.H.Turton, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" (Balt.: Gen.Pub.Co., 1968),p.80, gives Richard as second child of Theodore d'Auton (d.879; son of Childebrande, 1st Count of Autun, and wife Dyname____). | Richard Duke of Burgundy (I1628)
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3044 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] W.H.Turton, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" (Balt.:Gen.Pub.Co.,1968),p.112, gives Beatrix' mother as ______ "of France,"daughter of Robert the Strong, Count of Blois (ID1428). "Ancestral Roots..." (Balt., 1992) 53-18 gives her mother as Bertha de Morvois. | Vermandois, Beatrix de (I1544)
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3045 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] W.H.Turton, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" (Balt.:Gen.Pub.Co.,1968),p.181, gives Conrad II as son of Conrad I and Adela of Tours. | Conrad Count Of Auxerre (I1704)
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3046 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] W.H.Turton, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1968), p. 6, states that Hugues l'Abbi (d. 844) is father of Tertullus d'Anjou (instead of Conrad of Paris), and that Hughes l`Abbi is a son of Charlemagne and Regine. Encyclopedia Britannica, 1956 Ed., 1:976: "...towards 861, Charles the Bald entrusted [the county of Anjou] to Robert the Strong, but he unfortunately met with his death in 866.... Hugh the Abbot succeeded him in the countship of Anjou as in most of his other duties, and on his death (886) it passed to Odo, the eldest son of Robert the Strong, who, on his accession to the throne of France (888), probably handed it over to his brother Robert. In any case, during the last years of the 9th century, in Anjou as elsewhere the power was delegated to a viscount, Fulk the Red, son of a certain Ingelgerius." | Conrad Count of Paris (I1795)
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3047 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] W.H.Turton, "The Plantagenet Ancestry" (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1968, p. 132), gives Morgan's ancestry to two g5grandfathers, Einion and Owen (via Cardigan nobility). | Gwernwy, Morgan (I1231)
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3048 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Waldeve, the eldest son, "was the first who had the territorial designation of Dunbar, about 1174. He was one of the hostages for the due performance of the treaty for the liberation of King William I." - Burke's "Dormant...Peerages". He left sons Patrick and Constantine and daughter Alicia (who m. Philip de Seton). Waldeve married Adelina ____________. | Waldeve Earl of Dunbar (I1007)
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3049 | [dunbar_tree.FTW] Waleran married second Adelais______. Meulan is "in the French Vexin" (Normandy). | Waleran Count of Meulan (I1287)
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3050 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Whiting, W. (I1624)
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