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Matches 11,001 to 11,050 of 12,685

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11001 Succeeded his father Theodoric I (Kingship was however a nominally elected title, not hereditary) VISIGOTHS, Thorismund (Torismund) King Of The (I11109)
 
11002 succeeded his father, and was king together with his brother, Eric, event 1 . ?a powerful man, a great warrior, and expert at all feats of arms ? death ?It was the custom of he and his brother Eric to ride and break in horses both to walk and to gallop, which nobody understood so well as they; and they vied with each other who could ride best, and keep the best horses. It happened one day that both the brothers rode out together alone, and at a distance from their followers, with their best horses, and rode on to a field; but never came back. The people at last went out to look after them, and they were both found dead with their heads crushed. As they had no weapons, except it might be their horses' bridles, people believed that they had killed each other with these. So says Thjodolf: -- "Alric fell, by Eric slain, Eric's life-blood dyed the plain, Brother fell by brother's hand; And they tell it in the land, That they worked the wicked deed With the sharp bits that guide the steed. Shall it be said of Frey's brave sons, The kingly race, the noble ones, That they have fought in deadly battle With the head-gear of their cattle?" AGNASSON, Alrek (I28771)
 
11003 Succeeded his father, Godefred ALEMANNI, Huocin (Godefried) King Of The (I9556)
 
11004 succeeded his father, with his brother Alf, to the kingly power in Sweden event ?a great warrior, always victorious; handsome, expert in all exercises, strong and very sharp in battle, generous and full of mirth; so that he was both renowned and beloved ? death ?He often sat long in the evening at the drinking-table; but Alf, his brother, a dour man, went willingly to bed very early. Queen Bera, Alf's wife, sat often till late in the evening, and she and Yngve conversed together for their amusement; but Alf soon told her that she should not sit up so late in the evening, but should go first to bed, so as not to waken him. She replied, that happy would be the woman who had Yngve instead of Alf for her husband; and as she often repeated the same, he became very angry. One evening Alf went into the hall, where Yngve and Bera sat on the high seat speaking to each other. Yngve had a short sword upon his knees, and the guests were so drunk that they did not observe the king coming in. King Alf went straight to the high seat, drew a sword from under his cloak, and pierced his brother Yngve through and through. Yngve leaped up, drew his short sword, and gave Alf his death-wound; so that both fell dead on the floor. burial?Yngve, and his brother Alf, were buried under mounds in Fyrisvold. Thus tells Thjodolf of it: -- "I tell you of a horrid thing, A deed of dreadful note I sing -- How by false Bera, wicked queen, The murderous brother-hands were seen Each raised against a brother's life; How wretched Alf with bloody knife Gored Yngve's heart, and Yngve's blade Alf on the bloody threshold laid. Can men resist Fate's iron laws? They slew each other without cause." ALREKSSON, King Yngve (I28770)
 
11005 Succeeded his older brother, Theobald I BAVARIANS, Garibald I King Of The (I9700)
 
11006 succeeded to the domains and kingdom after his father ? death ?When the earls heard that the Swedish king was laying Denmark waste, they collected an army, hastened on board their ships, and sailed by the south side to Lymfjord. They came unexpectedly upon Ottar, and the battle began immediately. The Swedes gave them a good reception, and many people fell on both sides; but as soon as men fell in the Danish army other men hastened from the country to fill their places, and also all the vessels in the neighbourhood joined them. The battle ended with the fall of Ottar and the greater part of his people. burial in Vendil, Jutland. ?The Danes took his body, carried it to the land, laid it upon a mound of earth, and let the wild beasts and ravens tear it to pieces. Thereafter they made a figure of a crow out of wood, sent it to Sweden, and sent word with it that their king, Ottar, was no better than it; and from this he was called Ottar Vendelcrow. Thjodolf tells so of it: -- "By Danish arms the hero bold, Ottar the Brave, lies stiff and cold. To Vendel's plain the corpse was borne; By eagles' claws the corpse is torn, Spattered by ravens' bloody feet, The wild bird's prey, the wild wolf's meat. The Swedes have vowed revenge to take On Frode's earls, for Ottar's sake; Like dogs to kill them in their land, In their own homes, by Swedish hand." event ?named for the wrong Vendel, it seems, not for Vendil in Jutland, as the Yngling Saga describes, but Vendel in Uppland, where the chief burial mound is known as "Ottars H?g" or the mound of Ottar Vendel-crow, and some further speculate (one Ari Thorgilsson, which derived from a history of Norway from 1170) that it was not Ottar who was Vendelkraka, but his father, Egil event ?continued to refuse the Danes under King Frode his due taxes, and this caused them to come to blows event ?launched a raid against the homeland of King Frode, when he learned the latter was away, he sailed over to Denmark, and ravaged there without opposition. As he heard that a great many people were collected at Sealand, he proceeded westward to the Sound, and sailed north about to Jutland; landed at Lymfjord; plundered the Vend district; burned, and laid waste, and made desolate the country he went over with his army EGILSSON, King Ottarr Of Uppsala (I28759)
 
11007 Succeeded Wallia, 4th King of the Visigoths who ruled from 415 - 418, who succeeded Sigeric who ruled briefly in 415. VISIGOTHS, Theodoric I "The Brave" King Of The (I9816)
 
11008 Sudbury, Middlesex, MA (original proprietor of the town) MAYNARD, Sir. John II Knight (I6359)
 
11009 Suevi, Vandals and Alans cross the Rhine. ROMAN EMPIRE, Honorius Emperor Of The West (I9812)
 
11010 Suffolk, other creations. The 3rd Earl of Suffolk of the de la Pole family, yet another Michael, married Elizabeth Mowbray, daughter of the Duke of Norfolk of the creation prior to the Howard one (though the two families were connected by marriage anyway). [Burke's Peerage, p. 2761]

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Michael was one of about 25 Englishmen killed at Agincourt.

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BARONY OF POLE (III)

EARLDOM OF SUFFOLK (VII, 3)

MICHAEL (DE LA POLE), EARL OF SUFFOLK, 1st son and heir, was born 1394-95; served in France during the campaign of 1415, being present with his father at the siege of Harfleur in September. He married, before 24 November 1403, Elizabeth, 3rd daughter of Thomas (MOWBRAY), DUKE OF NORFOLK, by his 2nd wife, Elizabeth, daughter of Richard (FITZALAN), EARL OF ARUNDEL. He died s.p.m., 25 October 1415, being slain at the battle of Agincourt, and is said to have been buried at Ewelme, Oxon. His widow took the veil at Bruisyard, Suffolk, before 17 January 1419/20, and was living, 1 December 1423. [Complete Peerage XII/1:442-3, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)] 
LA POLE, Michael De 3rd Earl Of Suffolk (I14312)
 
11011 Suffolk, other creations. The 4th de la Pole Earl of Suffolk played an important part in national and international affairs during Henry V's and Henry VI's reigns and was promoted first Marquess then Duke of Suffolk. The new Duke of Suffolk became a scapegoat for the increasing failure of English arms in France towards the end of the Hundred Years War and was first imprisoned in the Tower, then banished and finally done to death shortly after he had taken ship from English shores to go into exile. [Burke's Peerage, p. 2761]

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Murdered in an open boat and his head cut off and thrown on the beach.

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EARLDOM OF SUFFOLK (VIII, 4)

MARQUESSATE OF SUFFOLK (I)

DUKEDOM OF SUFFOLK (I)

EARLDOM OF PEMBROKE (XV, 1)

WILLIAM (DE LA POLE), EARL OF SUFFOLK, brother and heir male, was born 16 October 1396 at Cotton, Suffolk, and baptised in the church there. With his father and brother he was at the siege of Harfleur, September 1415, but appears to have been invalided to England in October. He served in the French wars continuously for 17 years (according to his own accounit) from July 1417; was granted the lordships of Hambye and Briquebec, in Normandy, 13 March 1417/8, taking part in the sieges of Cherbourg and Rouen later in that year;(a) Admiral of Normandy, 19 May 14 19; Capt. of Pontorson, 12 June, and Avranches, 27 ug, 1419-ro Dec. 1423; a Conservator of the truce with France, 27 Jan. 1419/,2o, and with Brittany, io Feb. 1420/r, after being at the siege of Melun, July-Nov. 1420; was Cupbearer at the Coronation of Queen Katherine, 21 February 1420/1; K.G. 3 May 1421; Governor of the marches of Lower Normandy, 28 September 1421; Guardian of the Cotentin, 10 October 1422-27 September 1423; served under the Earl of Salisbury in the Champagne campaign of 1423, and under the Duke of Bedford at the surrender of Ivry, 15 August, and the battle of Verneuil, 17 August 1424; Governor of Chartres, 26 September 1424. He was created, in or before 1425, COUNT OF DREUX, in Normandy. As Lieutenant-General of Caen, &c. and Constable of the Earl of Salisbury's army, he conducted the siege of Mont St. Michel in 1425. He led a raid into Brittany as far as Rennes in 1425/6, concluding a three months truce with the Duke of Brittany, April-June 1426; and took part in the unsuccessful siege of Montargis, July-September 1427. In 1428 he was at the siege of Orleans with the Earl of Salisbury, on whose death, 3 November, he was appointed to the chief command there, 13 November. Though the siege at first prospered, the city was relieved by Joan of Arc, 8 May 1429, and Suffolk retreated to Jargeau, where he was forced to surrender, 12 June following. He was, however, released before 15 March 1429/30, when he was appointed Lieutenant of Caen and the Cotentin till 1 June following; and he captured the castle of Aumale in July 1430. P.C. 30 November 1431. He had custody of the Duke of Orleans, 29 August 1432-11 November 1433. Lord Steward of the Household, 1433-50; joint Constable of Wallingford Castle and Steward of the Chiltern Hundreds, 18 June 1434; joint Ambassador to the Congress of Arras to treat for peace with France, 20 June 1435, and again 20 May 1436; High Steward of the Duchy of Lancaster, North of Trent, 23 April 1437-1450; Chief Justice of South Wales, (shortly before) 28 July 1438 (when he was going abroad on the King's business)---February 1439/40, and of North Wales, 19 February 1439/40 and (with Sir Thomas Stanley) 1 December 1443; Joint Keeper (with his wife) of Cornbury Park, Oxon, 16 July 1439; joint Warden of the New Forest and of Lyndhurst Park (in reversion), 28 November 1442; Keeper of the town of Dunwich, 12 February 1442/3. He and his wife Alice were granted, 27 February 1442/3, in reversion, in the event of the death s.p. of Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester, the then Earl, "nomen stilum titulum et honorem comitis Pembroch , with remainder to the heirs male of their bodies. As Chief Ambassador to France, 11 February 1443/4, he acted as proxy for the betrothal, 24 May 1444, in the church of St. Martin, Tours, of Henry VI to Margaret of Anjou, and concluded a two years truce with France, 28 May following. He was created, 14 September 1444, MARQUESS OF SUFFOLK . Steward and surveyor of all gold and other metal mines in England and Wales, 22 October 1444. He was instructed, 28 October 1444, to escort Margaret to England from Nancy, whence they arrived at Portsmouth, 9 April 1445. Commissioner to treat for peace with France, 20 July 1445 and 1 July 1447. On the death of the Duke of Gloucester abovenamed, 23 February 1446/7, he and his wife became EARL AND COUNTESS OF PEMBROKE, receiving a charter of confirmation, 3 March following. Lord Great Chamberlain of England for life, also Constable of Dover Castle and Warden of the Cinque Ports, 24 February 1446/7; Admiral of England during the minority of Henry, Duke of Exeter, 9 August 1447; joint High Steward of the Duchy of Lancaster, South of Trent, 11 December 1447; Governor and Protector of the Staple of Calais, 9 March 1447/8. He was further created, 2 June 1448, DUKE OF SUFFOLK. He became, however, extremely unpopular, the cession of Maine, the loss of Normandy, the retaining of public money to his own use, and even the death of the King's uncle, "the good" Duke of Gloucester, being laid to his charge. He was committed to the Tower, 28 January, and impeached by the Commons, 7 February and 9 March 1449/50; but on 17 March the King, by force of his submission and not "by wey of Jugement," ordered his banishment for 5 years from 1 May following, and he was released after protest by the Lords, 19 March 1449/50.

He married (licence 11 November 1430) Alice, the childless widow of Thomas (MONTAGU), 4th EARL OF SALISBURY (died 3 November 1428), and before that of Sir John PHILIP (died 2 October 1415), only child and (in 1434) heir of Thomas CHAUCER, of Ewelme, Oxon, Speaker of the House of Commons (son and heir of Geoffrey CHAUCER, the poet), by Maud, daughter and coheir of John DE BURGHERSH [LORD KERDESTON] of Ewelme. While leaving England in accordance with the King's sentence, his ship was intercepted by the Nicholas of the Tower in Dover Roads, 1 May, and he was murdered there, 2 May 1450, his head being cut off in an open boat, aged 53. His body was thrown upon the beach near Dover and was buried at Wingfield. After his death, although he was never under attainder, the Earldom of Pembroke seems to have lapsed. His widow, who was born about 1404, died 20 May (or possibly 9 June) 1475, and was buried at Ewelme. M.I. [Complete Peerage XII/1:443-8, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)] 
LA POLE, William De 1st Duke Of Suffolk (I14315)
 
11012 Suffolk, other creations. The [1st] Duke, for all his disgrace, had never been attainted and his son John de la Pole succeeded him in the titles. John married Elizabeth of York, sister of Edward IV and Richard III, with the result that his son the 3rd Duke (and 6th Earl) of Suffolk became after the Tudors had ascended the throne a potential claimant to it and a very real embarrassment to the new dynasty. The de la Poles, at any rate such of them who had not gone abroad or were content to live in obscurity, were accordingly liquidated by the usual Tudor methods of trumped up attainders and beheadings. [Burke's Peerage]

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BARONY OF POLE (III)

EARLDOM OF SUFFOLK (IX, 5)

MARQUESSATE OF SUFFOLK (II)

DUKEDOM OF SUFFOLK (II)

EARLDOM OF PEMBROKE (XVI, 2)

JOHN (DE LA POLE), DUKE OF SUFFOLK [1448], MARQUESS OF SUFFOLK [1444], and EARL OF SUFFOLK [1385], also, apparently, EARL OF PEMBROKE [1447] (but as that Earldom was never recognized to him or to his descendants no further notice of it is here taken), son and heir, was born 27 September 1442; joint Constable (in survivorship with his mother and father) of Wallingford Casde and Steward of the Chiltern Hundreds, 27 November 1445, (with his wife) 6 August 1461-August 1483, and sole, 21 September 1485-March 1488/9. Having married Elizabeth, 2nd daughter of Richard, DUKE OF YORK, he fought as a Yorkist at the battles of St. Albans, 17 February, Ferrybridge, 28 March, and (presumably) Towton, 29 March 1461; was Lord High Steward for the Coronation of (his wife's brother) Edward IV, 28 June 1461, from whom he received confirmation as Duke of Suffolk, 23 March 1462/3; and he bore St. Edward's sceptre at the Coronation of Elizabeth (Wydevill), the Queen Consort, 26 May 1465. In the Parliament of 1464-65 the attainder of 1387/8 was reversed, whereby the Barony of de la Pole (created according to modern doctrine by the writ of 1366) was revived and he probably (then or later) became LORD DE LA POLE. He was a Commissioner of array for cos. Oxford, Berks, Norfolk and Suffolk ex parte Edward IV, 1469-72, and was among the peers and others who swore to accept Edward, Prince of Wales, as heir to the Crown, 3 July 1471. High Steward of Oxford University, circa 1472; K.G. circa 1473; took part in Edward IV's expedition to France in 1475; Lieutenant of Ireland, 10 March-July 1478; Bearer of the sceptre with the dove at the Coronation of (his wife's brother) Richard III, 6 July 1483, and of the Queen's sceptre at that of (his wife's niece) Elizabeth (of York), the Queen Consort, 25 November 1487. He married, 1stly, between 28 January and 7 February 1449/50, his father's ward, Margaret, only daughter and heir of John (BEAUFORT), DUKE OF SOMERSET, by Margaret, widow of Sir Oliver ST. JOHN, sister and heir of John BEAUCHAMP, and daughter of John BEAUCHAMP, of Bletsoe. This child marriage was dissolved before 6 March 1452/3. He married, 2ndly, before October 1460, Elizabeth, sister of EDWARD IV and RICHARD III, 2nd daughter of Richard (PLANTAGENET), 3rd DUKE OF YORK, by Cecily, daughter of Ralph (NEVILL), 1st EARL of WESTMORLAND. He died between 29 October 1491 and 27 October 1492, being buried at Wingfield. M.I. there and at Ewelme. His widow, who was born 22 April 1444 at Rouen, died between 7 January 1502/3 and 3 May 1504, and was bur. with him. M.I. [Complete Peerage XII/1:448-50, XIV:602, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]

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John de la Pole, 2nd Duke (1442-91), married Elizabeth, sister to Edward IV and Richard III and from this marriage sprang John, Earl of Lincoln (c1464-1487), Edmund, Earl of Suffolk (c1472-1513, executed by Henry VIII), two churchmen, four daughters, and Richard, on whose death at the battle of Pavia (1525) the line became extinct. (Chambers Biographical Dictionary) 
LA POLE, John De 2nd Duke Of Suffolk (I14323)
 
11013 Suffolk, other creations. His [Michael 1st Earl of Suffolk] career as diplomat and official flourished (he was Lord Chancellor in the mid-1380's) but his being a favourite of Richard II made him unpopular with the more established nobility and he was tried "in absentia" for high treason and on being found guilty forfeited his titles. Shortly before Richard II's own fall the son, another Michael, was restored to his father's honours but this restoration was itself annulled on Henry IV's coming to the throne. Michael managed to make his peace with the new King, however, and had the Earldom restored to him a second time. [Burke's Peerage, p. 2761]

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Sir Michael de la Pole, b. in or before 1367, d. Harfleur 18 Sep 1415, 2nd Earl of Suffolk, son of Michael de la Pole, Earl of Suffolk 1385, d. 1388, and Katherine Wingfield. [Magna Charta Sureties]

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BARONY OF POLE (II)

EARLDOM OF SUFFOLK (VI, 2)

MICHAEL DE LA POLE, 1st son and heir, was born in or before 1367; knighted at the Coronation of Richard II, 15 July 1377; and was going to Calais and in command of men-at-arms and archers, 30 April 1386. After his father's death, 5 September 1389, his fealty was taken by the King before 3 December following, and despite the attainder he had livery, as son and heir, of his maternal and paternal entailed estates, 1389-92. He accompanied the Duke of Gloucester on his attempted voyage to Prussia, September 1391. The proceedings of the Parliament of 11 Richard II having been annulled by Parliament, 28 January 1397/8, he was restored to his father's dignities, becoming thus EARL OF SUFFOLK and (according to modern peerage law) LORD DE LA POLE, and obtaining a patent, 19 June 1398, of the Earldom (only) with remainder to the heirs male of his body, whom failing, those of his father. But the Parliament of 1399 having annulled the proceedings of 21 Richard II and confirmed those of 11 Richard II aforesaid, he fell again under his father's attainder, whereby all his honours were (again) forfeited. However, he obtained restoration of most of his father's estates and, in consideration of his services after the king's advent, was restored, 15 November 1399, as EARL OF SUFFOLK (no mention again being made of the alleged Barony of de la Pole), with a remainder similar to that of 1398 aforesaid. He was Chief Commissioner of array for Suffolk, 15 December 1399; appears to have taken part in Henry IV's expedition into Scotland, August 1400; P.C. 1401; was about to leave the realm on the King's business, 27 August 1408, and was one of the English representatives at the Great Council of Pisa, April 1409. While waiting at Southampton to accompany Henry V to France in 1415, he was appointed a Commissioner of oyer and terminer in that co., 31 July, and was one of the peers who took part in the trial of the Earl of Cambridge and Lord Scrope, 5 August.

He married (contract 1 February 1382/3, to marry on 13 April or soon after), before 23 November 1383, Katherine, daughter of Hugh (DE STAFFORD], 2nd EARL OF STAFFORD, by Philippe, daughter of Thomas (DE BEAUCHAMP), EARL OF WARWICK. He died of the flux 18 September 1415 at the siege of Harfleur and was buried at Wingfield. M.I. His widow died 8 April 1419 and was buried with him. M. I. [Complete Peerage XII/1:441-2, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)] 
LA POLE, Michael De 2nd Earl Of Suffolk (I14310)
 
11014 Suffolk, other creations: Following William de Ufford's death, when the Earldom of Suffolk of the second creation is deemed to have expired, the titles was conferred in 1385, barely three and a half years later, on Michael de la Pole, of a prosperous but bourgeois family from Hull. His career as diplomat and official flourished (he was Lord Chancellor in the mid-1380's) but his being a favourite of Richard II made him unpopular with the more established nobility and he was tried "in absentia" for high treason and on being found guilty forfeited his titles. Shortly before Richard II's own fall the son, another Michael, was restored to his father's honours but this restoration was itself annulled on Henry IV's coming to the throne. Michael managed to make his peace with the new King, however, and had the Earldom restored to him a second time. [Burke's Peerage, p. 2761]

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BARONY OF POLE (I)

EARLDOM OF SUFFOLK (V, 1)

MICHAEL DE LA POLE, 1st son and heir, was born about 1330; knighted before 16 November 1353; was in the retinue of the Duke of Lancaster in his attempted expedition to aid Charles of Navarre in 1355 and accompanied the Black Prince in that of 1359. He was summoned v.p. to Parliament 20 January 1365/6 and on to 28 September 1384, by writs directcd Michaeli de la Pole, whereby he is held to have become LORD DE LA POLE. He succeeded his father as above, 21 June 1366; was a Commissioner of array for the East Riding of Yorks and Kingston-upon-Hull, 10 February, and de walliis et fossatis for the waters of Hull and Derwent, 30 July 1367; served again in the French wars from 1369, taking part in the sieges of Limoges (under the Black Prince), September 1370, and Montfont (under the Duke of Lancaster), December 1370-January 1370/1; Admiral of the fleet from the mouth of the Thames towards the north, 24 November 1376 (re-appointed 14 August following)--5 Dec. 1377; Commissioner to receive the castle of Brest from the Duke of Brittany, 9 April 1378, in which year also he accompanied Lancaster's abortive naval expedition against St. Malo. He founded a small monastery of 13 monks of the Carthusian Order at Kingston-upon-Hull, 18 February 1378/9. P.C. before 18 March 1378/9; Chief Ambassador to Milan (to negotiate a marriage between Richard Il and Catherine, daughter of Barnarbo Visconti of Milan), 18 March 1378/9, also to Rome and to Wenceslas, King of the Romans and of Bohemia (to suggest a marriage between Richard II and Anne, sister of Wenceslas), during which latter embassy he was made prisoner (as was also, apparently, Anne) before 19 January 1379/80, and was ransomed "at a high price" before 28 March 1381; joint Governor of the King, November 1381; Lord Chancellor of England, 13 March 1382/3-23 October 1386.

While accompanying the King on his only expedition into Scotland, he was created, 6 August 1385, at Hoselaw, in Teviotdale, EARL OF SUFFOLK. Commissioner to treat with France at the request of the King of Armenia, 22 January and Chief Commissioner to inspect Calais, 13 March 1385/6. His favour with the King making him unpopular, he was impeached and convicted in the Parliament that met at Westminster, 1 October 1386, whereby many of his lands were forfeited, he was heavily fined and was committed to Corfe Castle. The King, however, sent him to Windsor, where he was soon released; and the above proceedings were declared void by the judges at Nottingham, 25 August 1387. He was with the King and Robert (de Vere), Duke of Ireland, in Wales and the Midlands during the summer of 1387 and returned with them to London, I0 November. But being accused by Gloucester, Arundel and Warwick (the "Lords Appellant"), he fled the realm in December 1387, and was in his absence found guilty of high treason by Parliament, 13 February 1387/8 (l), whereby all his honours were forfeited.

He married, before 18 October 1361, Katherine, daughter and heir of Sir John WINGFIELD, of Wingfield, Suffolk, by Eleanor, daughter and heir of Gilbert (or Ralph) de Glanville. She, who was aged 26 and more in 1375, was living, 18 February 1378/9, and died before 1 October 1386, being buried in the Church of the Carthusians at Kingston-upon-Hull. M.I. He died 5 September 1389 in Paris and was buried with her. M.I. [Complete Peerage XII/1:437-40, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)]

(l) The chroniclers say that he appeared before Calais Castle, of which his brother Edmund was Captain. The Governor of Calais, William Beauchamp, sent him back to the King who again allowed him to escape, this time from Hull, whither the King's serjeant was sent 20 Dec, to arrest him. According to Froissart, he and Vere crossed the North Sea together and landed at Dordrecht in Holland, but other accounts differ. Later he proceeded with Vere to Paris. Further orders for his arrest were issued 27 Dec 1387, 4 Jan and 20 Feb 1387/8. 
LA POLE, Michael De 1st Earl Of Suffolk (I13316)
 
11015 Suicide by hanging at age 12 after severe burns at age 6. CARPENTER, Frederick William (I594768472)
 
11016 Summary of Patrick
When Sir Patrick Ogilvie Of Wester Powrie was born in 1281, his father, Sir Patrick Ogilvey of Wester Powrie, was 29 and his mother, Marjory Ramsay, was -11. He had at least 2 sons with Marjory Ramsay. He died in 1329, at the age of 48.
 
OGILVIE, Patrick (I594772173)
 
11017 Supporting DOCUMENT Baptism Certificate: Baptized at 9 years in Mobile, Alabama. Child of Arthur Kearny and Hokey (Choctaw Indian) 4 May 1795 Jerry was elected as Captain of his village to represent them in government affairs. He was a corporal in the War of 1812 Nixon's Regiment. Per June Pollard: On his military discharge papers indicated he lived "in Amite" (probably Marion Co. later)...in l84l & l842 he purchased land in Madison Co. by cash and indicated he lived in Marion Co. MS. He owned lots of land in Madison Co., MS which his heirs filed for in AR but Jerry also owned property in other counties so it is uncertain where he is buried..

Captain was a title adaptated by the Choctaw from white mans ranking system to designate a lower level leader of a band of warriors; with the Chief known as Big Medal, his assistant as Little Medal, followed by Captains leading the groups of warriors.
Jerry was a Corporal in the Mil. The Capt Rank comes a Choctaw Title. War of 1812 Jerry Served in Nixon's Reg. Ikenaby served with Andrew Jackson.Ikanaby also served Choctaws in War of 1812.

1838 Jerry Affadavit names Wife Emmahka and Children, Harris, Martha, Daniel, Jemima, Lila,Jonas (Treaty of Doak , Date of the Treaty he had a wife and six children) He lived on Robinson Rd. Col Forrester is his Counsel

Grandfather was Irishman Carney who came in with the French in 1730 to Occupy the MS Valley may have lived in Amite County or Madison County on Robinson Rd.
Captain Jerry Carney - or Jeremiah Carney, Choctaw, signed 1820 and 1830 treaties. In 1831 he lived on the south side of Robinson Road in LeFlore's district, his family consisted of eight persons, including two males over 16 and four children under 16. He then owned nine slaves. He registered a claim for the SE1/4 S3, S4, part of S9 and S10 T9 R5E as well as S33 T10 RSE, but was granted only S4 T9N R5E (1). He was issued script for the section in 1848 (1) Choctaw Reserves, OIA, roll 189, frame 470; roll 195, frame 92. (2) General Land Office Automated Records, CD Rom series. Who was Who Among the Southern Indians - a genealogical notebook, 1698-1907) written by Don Martini.

Yates:
At the age of 9 Battle of Horse Shoe Bend. Jerry Kearney Baptism records 1795 at the age of 9 that would make him born 1786 in Indian traders. Other traders that I noticed was Ben > James wonder if he is the trader of James Springs where we saw Sam Carney > . Also, Turner Brashears was mentioned . He is the one that had > a Stand in Madison MS.e Carny Stands mentioned in the Natchez Archives on the > Trace. info on > where the Indian Trade places were, Nogales, AKA Walnut hill, Mobile, and > Chickasaw Bluffs The Pearl River area., Tombigbee lived Robinson Road Madison County, MS view image found land 2003 signed the 1830 Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek and Doaks Stand Article 14 of the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek gave the Choctaws a chance to choose a section of land and become citizens of MS or move to Oklahoma. About 500 square miles were requested but the Choctaws did not receive anything like The Choctaws received paper Oaths and property i Oklahoma and Arkansas Territories, that was taken from other tribes. Some Choctaw went to check the land and found it already settled by whites.Only 300 choctaws were allotted land. Several thousand others stayed in MS. Jerry Had trouble in obtaining land. that. www.bc.bia.edu Patent on Jerry Certificate #5422, Patentee Jermiah Carney, Issue Date 02/01/1841 The United States of America To all to whom these presents shall come, Greet? whereas: Jeremiah Carney according to the prov? the act of Congress on the 24 April 1820, entitles "An act making further provision for the sale of the Public Land Hand Written Document. "The East half of the South West quarter of Section two? five in Township ten North of Range five East? the District of Lands subject to sale at Columbus? MS containing seventy nine acres and ninety six? hundredth of an acre ect was purchased by Jeremiah Carney Date issued 04/12/1848 Patent sent to ? Comisioner Indian Affairs MAy 8th 184? Whereas under the fourteenth Article of the Treaty, concluded at Dancing Rabbit Creek on the twenty-seventh day of Septembe in the year of our lord one thousand eight hundred and thirty, ?sioners on the part of the United States and the Chiefs, Captains, and Head MEnof the Choctaw Nation, on t? Nations, Jeremiah Carney as head of a family became entitled out of the lands ceded/States by the said Treaty, to one Section and whereas it appears from a return, reported January 31st, 1845 by the ? of Indian Affairs to the General LAnd Office that under the aforesaid? theact of Cngress? approved 23rd August 1842 entitled "An act to??? Satisfaction of claims arising under the fourteenthe and nineteenth articles Treaty of Dancinc Rabbitt Creek, concluded in September one thousand 8 hundred abd thirty" "Section four containing Sis Hundred and ? acres and fourty hundredth of an acre in Township nine (North? Five East of the (Choctaw Meridian) in the North Easter ? District MS has been designated as the location? said Jermiah Carne and that the said location ? on the 18th JAnuary 1848 by the Secretary of WAR" Jeremiah (male)- "Hebrew, 'may God exalt'. The name of an Old Testament prophet, used in Ireland to anglicise Dermot. It was one frequently used but it is now much rarer." Treaty of Doak Stand made possible creation of Settlement of Yazoo County. Yazoo part of Hinds COunty, MS 2-12-1820. All of the Choctaw Sessions of 10-18-20 Yazoo-included, Washington, Holmes, Issqueena, Sharkey and part of Madison and Sunflower Pearl RIver to the MS River, 1827 Washington taken out of Yazoo 1828 Madison County, Formed etween Pearl River and Black Rivers, Land Big Black and Yazoo. Jerry also had a Stand on the Trace have located. (DJ) RE:Jerry being the Father of Ikenaby MS...well, that will not stand up against the Baptismal Record D.J. found in Mobile dated l795 with Jerry being "around 9 years of age" when baptised...this would make Jerry too young to have children - right? SO THE BOTOM LINE IS WE ARE SOLELY LACKING IN DATA TO ESTABLISH JERRY AS THE FATHER OF JOHN CARNEY, SR. OF MS Subject: American State Papers VOL VIII URL http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/ampage?collId=llsp&fileName=035/lls p035.db&Page=686 Link to the Choctaw who applied for citizenship a good copy to save Much has been written about the change in hereditary leadership to an electoral process in nearly all the books written on the Choctaw. This, while true, is misleading. Although the position of Chief generally went to the nephew of the Chief through the sister of the former Chief, the council would chose the canditate also based on his merits as a warrior. H.B. Cushman uses this example in reference to Pushmataha. Presumably, the need for this was that their may be more than one nephew who was vying for leadership. Additionally, the first Chiefs most books referred to as "elected" were descendants of the same three bloodlines as the former Chiefs Mushatubbee (David Folsom and Robert Kincaid), Apuckanubee (presumed relationship, Robert Cole, Greenwood Leflore, Thomas Leflore), and Pushmataha (Oklahoma (sometimes called Tappenhoma) Nittakechi, Pierre Juzan). The descendants of these families continued an active role in tribal government until the Dawes Commission act of 1896, many holding the office of Chief. WHY Jeremiah keeps > coming back to Marion Co. >> > June > There was a large settlement of Choctaw on Pearl River , > between Greens creek & White Sands creek in Lawrence co,Ms. > This is on the north border of Marion co,Ms > This is just across Pearl River from where John Carney had deeds. > Perhaps Jeremiah was there associating with relatives & friends? > > Ted

Census: 1840 Madison Couty, MS 1
Census: 1843 Yazoo Old Town, Neshoba, MS 1
Baptism: APR 1795 Church of Immaculate Conception Mobile, Al 1
Baptism: 1795 Mobile, French Colony, LA 1
Emigration: 1820 Treaty of Doak near Robinson Rd 9 miles from Treaty Ground. 1
Emigration: In Madison County, MS 1
Event: Event 1812 Nixons Regiment fought with Gen Jackson 1
Religion: Baptized Catholic may not have remained so 1 
CARNEY (KEARNEY), Capt. Jeremiah (Jerry) (I1356)
 
11018 Suppresses the rebellion instigated by the Frisian duke, Bobo, who is killed in the battle. Charles Martel "The Hammer" Mayor Of Palace (I11289)
 
11019 Supreme Judge of the Choctaw Nation EVERIDGE, Hon. Joel W. Sr. (I112680827)
 
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