
Carney & Wehofer Family
Genealogy Pages
Notes
Matches 2,351 to 2,400 of 13,647
# | Notes | Linked to |
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2351 | AFN: V4Q8-ZJ | BLENNERHASSET, Elizabeth (I23749)
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2352 | AFN: VB42-HT | Rotrud Princess Of Italy (I9657)
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2353 | AFN:15C2-D28 | MONTAGU, Robert (I23703)
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2354 | AFN:1872-PCG | LE BELWARD, William (I25035)
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2355 | AFN:1872-PH9 | LE BELWARD, Richard (I25043)
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2356 | AFN:1872-PJH | LE BELWARD, John (I25044)
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2357 | AFN:1872-PLW | LE BELWARD, William (Richard) (I25039)
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2358 | AFN:1872-PPJ | KEVELIOC, Beatrix (I25036)
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2359 | AFN:1872-PQQ | LE BELWARD, David (I25027)
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2360 | AFN:1872-PVK | LE BELWARD, Peter Thornton (I25033)
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2361 | AFN:1872-PWR | LE BELWARD, David Golbourne (I25034)
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2362 | AFN:1872-PX0 | LE BELWARD, Robert Cholmondeley (I25042)
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2363 | AFN:84ZR-22 | LE DESPENCER, Hugh (I23255)
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2364 | AFN:8HV8-XW Probably not a child in this family. She was born before parents. dl | VENABLES, Amabilia (I25071)
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2365 | AFN:8WK7-87 | MAINWARING, William (I25054)
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2366 | AFN:8WK7-F3 | MAINWARING, Roger (I25056)
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2367 | AFN:8WKH-9H | SALMON (SALEMON), Mary (I25063)
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2368 | AFN:95XZ-8W Probably not a child in this family. Wrong generation. | VENABLES, William (I25098)
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2369 | AFN:95XZ-93 Probably not a child in this family. Wrong generation. | VENABLES, Hugh (I25099)
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2370 | AFN:9H3P-93 | DE HERON, Margaret (I5636)
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2371 | AFN:9N4V-7V | WILLOUGHBY, Sanchia (I23880)
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2372 | AFN:9N4V-KL | WILLOUGHBY, Robert (I24602)
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2373 | AFN:9NH5-JN | MONTACUTE, John (I21689)
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2374 | AFN:TNVR-8G | WILLOUGHBY, Hugh (I23881)
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2375 | Afonso IV, Rei de Portugal was born in 1291.2 He was the son of Deniz, Rei de Portugal and Isabel de Aragón.3 He married Beatriz de Castilla, daughter of Sancho IV, Rey de Castilla y León and Maria de Molina, in 1309.2 He died in 1357.2 He succeeded as the Rei Afonso IV de Portugal in 1325.1 Afonso IV, Rei de Portugal also went by the nick-name of Afonso 'the Bold'.4 Children of Afonso IV, Rei de Portugal and Beatriz de Castilla Maria de Portugal+2 b. 1313, d. 1357 Pedro I, Rei de Portugal+1 b. 1320, d. 1367 Eleonore de Portugal1 b. 1328, d. 1348 Citations [S16] Jirí Louda and Michael MacLagan, Lines of Succession: Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe, 2nd edition (London, U.K.: Little, Brown and Company, 1999), table 46. Hereinafter cited as Lines of Succession. [S16] Louda and MacLagan, Lines of Succession, table 47. [S16] Louda and MacLagan, Lines of Succession, table 115. [S38] John Morby, Dynasties of the World: a chronological and genealogical handbook (Oxford, Oxfordshire, U.K.: Oxford University Press, 1989), page 120. Hereinafter cited as Dynasties of the World. Alfonso IV de Portugal, apodado el Bravo (Lisboa, 8 de febrero de 1291 - Lisboa, 28 de mayo de 1357), fue rey de Portugal desde 1325 hasta su muerte. Era el único hijo legítimo del rey Dionisio I de Portugal y de su mujer Santa Isabel de Portugal. Es recordado como un soldado valiente y un experimentado general, de ahí su apodo el Bravo. Fue uno de los primeros promotores de la marina portuguesa. Destinó fondos públicos a aumentar la flota comercial y ordenó las primeras expediciones portuguesas. Las Islas Canarias fueron objetivo de sus expediciones junto a mallorquines y castellanos, todas ellas precedidas de las expediciones genovesas, como la de Lanceloto Malocello. Entró en pleito con su hijo (el infante Pedro de Portugal) por la relación con la doncella gallega Inés de Castro, durante una etapa de conflictos dinásticos con el reino de Castilla que desencadenaría en el interregno de 1383-1385 Alfonso era el heredero legítimo al trono de su padre. Sin embargo, según diversas fuentes, no era el hijo favorito del rey ya que su medio hermano, Alfonso Sánchez, hijo ilegítimo del rey, gozaba del favor real. La rivalidad entre ellos desembocó en diversos conatos de guerra civil. El 7 de enero de 1325, Dionisio murió y Alfonso se convirtió en rey. Vengándose de su hermanastro, lo desterró a Castilla y expropió todas las tierras y posesiones que su padre le había donado. Alfonso Sánchez no se rindió y, desde Castilla, orquestó una serie de intentos de usurpación de la corona. Tras diversos intentos de invasión fallidos, ambos hermanos firmaron un tratado de paz, arreglado por la reina madre Isabel. En 1309, Alfonso IV se casó con la infanta Beatriz de Castilla, hija del rey Sancho IV de Castilla y de su esposa María de Molina. La primera hija del matrimonio, María, casó con el rey Alfonso XI de Castilla en 1328. En esas fechas, el heredero de Alfonso, su hijo Pedro se prometía con otra princesa castellana, Constanza Manuel. Estos acuerdos estuvieron en peligro por el comportamiento de Alfonso XI que menospreciaba a su esposa en público. Alfonso IV, molesto por el trato dado a su hija, inició una guerra con Castilla. La guerra terminó tras cuatro años de enfrentamientos gracias a la intervención de la propia María. En 1336 las tropas portuguesas invadieron el reino de Castilla y pusieron sitio a la ciudad de Badajoz, pero poco después fueron derrotadas por el ejército castellano-leonés en la batalla de Villanueva de Barcarrota, librada en 1336, lo que obligó al monarca lusitano a regresar al reino de Portugal junto a su ejército, pues tenía conocimiento de que varios ejércitos castellanos, que le superaban en número, se aproximaban a él. En 1339 se firmó un tratado de paz en Sevilla; ese mismo año, las tropas portuguesas desempeñaron un importante papel en la victoria de la Batalla del río Salado contra los benimerines. La última etapa del reinado de Alfonso IV estuvo marcada por las intrigas políticas. La guerra civil entre el rey Pedro I de Castilla y su hermanastro Enrique de Trastamara hizo que numerosos nobles castellanos se exiliaran a Portugal. Estos emigrantes crearon una facción entre la corte portuguesa, buscando privilegios que pudieran compensar de alguna forma lo perdido en el exilio. Poco a poco fueron ganando poder, especialmente después de que Inés de Castro, hija de un importante noble y doncella de la infanta Constanza, se convirtiera en la amante del esposo de su ama: Pedro, el heredero de Portugal. Alfonso IV, que no estaba satisfecho con la elección amorosa de su hijo, esperó que la relación fuera una simple aventura amorosa. Desgraciadamente para los asuntos políticos no fue así. Pedro estaba realmente enamorado de Inés, reconoció a los hijos que tuvo con ella y, lo peor de todo, favoreció a los nobles castellanos que la rodeaban. Además, tras la muerte de su esposa en 1349, Pedro se negó a casarse con otra mujer que no fuera Inés. La situación fue empeorando con los años y el anciano Alfonso perdió el control de la corte. El heredero de Pedro, Fernando, era un niño enfermizo mientras que los hijos ilegítimos de Inés crecían fuertes y sanos. Preocupado ante un inminente conflicto dinástico (que culminaría en el interregno de 1383-1385), en 1354 Alfonso trasladó su corte a Montemor-o-Velho y se inició una conspiración para deshacerse de Inés de Castro. Tres consejeros, Pedro Coelho, Diego López Pacheco y Álvaro Gonçalves, son señalados como los más incisivos en presionar al rey para que se la asesine. Inés es asesinada en la Quinta das Lágrimas en enero de 1355. Los principales implicados fueron protegidos por Alfonso (Pedro jamás le perdonó esta decisión). Lleno de ira, el propio Pedro se puso al frente de un ejército y devastó el país entre los ríos Duero y Miño antes de la muerte de Alfonso, el 28 de mayo de 1357. Se encuentra sepultado en la Catedral de Lisboa. Contrajo matrimonio el 12 de septiembre de 1309 con la infanta Beatriz de Castilla, hija de Sancho IV de Castilla, y de la reina María de Molina: •María de Portugal (1313-1357), contrajo matrimonio con Alfonso XI de Castilla, rey de Castilla y fueron los padres de Pedro I de Castilla; •Alfonso (1315), heredero, murió en la infancia; •Dionísio (n. 12 de febrero de 1317), heredero, murió pocos meses después de nacer; •Pedro I de Portugal (1320-1367), rey de Portugal a la muerte de su padre; •Isabel (21 de diciembre de 1324-11 de julio de 1326). Fue sepultada en el monasterio de Santa Clara de Coímbra; •Juan (1326-1327); •Leonor (1328-1348), contrajo matrimonio con Pedro IV de Aragón. Algunos historiadores aseguran que no tuvo ningún hijo extramatrimonial, pero otros, como Francisco Fernández de Béthencourt y Luis de Salazar y Castroe afirman que tuvo una hija ilegítima llamada María Alfonso de Portugal (1316-1384), casada con Fernando Alfonso de Valencia, maestre de la Orden de Santiago y bisnieto de los reyes Alfonso X y Sancho IV de Castilla, con quien tuvo varios hijos. | PORTUGAL, Affonso IV Dinisez King Of (I7573)
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2376 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | HURST, Udo Eric (I594769263)
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2377 | AFT 0579. ·renounced his arian faith for Catholicism||This conversion would be the cause of revolt and his eventual death. birth ABT 0555. † death 13 Apr 0585, in Tarragona, Spain. ·Beheaded by his father, Leovigild, for betraying him. His betrayal was to marry an zealous orthodox catholic, Ingund, and convert from arianism. Hermenegild rebelled with the help of Byzantium. Leovigild bribed Byzantium to betray his son and Hermenegild was thus captured and killed. "Most contemporary writers suggested that Hermenegild was executed as a rebel, but Pope Gregory I, in his Dialogues, stated that he was killed for refusing to receive communion from an Arian bishop." event 1585.·was canonized||His Feast Day is 13 April. "His cult was subsequently authorized for Spain by Pope Sixtus V and for the whole church by Urban VIII." | VISIGOTH, Hermenegild II "The Holy" Of (I187)
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2378 | After being wounded at Lookout Mountain, TN., John was hospitalized on November 24, 1863. The Confederate Hospital was overrun by Union Troops and John was transferred to the USA General Hospital in Chattanooga, TN. Listed on Union muster rolls as John Carney (Rebel). Found head stone at Brightwater Cemetery April 15, 1998 John Carney was in Co,. D, 40th AL Inf, Choctaw Co, Al 1870 Choctaw Co Al Census P 38 Butler HH 308 Listed in 1880 Choctaw Co, Al Census, family #29. Census state that John Carney's father was born in TN and his mother in NC | CARNEY, John (I1710)
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2379 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | O'LEARY, Serene Ann Levite (I6668)
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2380 | After her husband died in 1755, Susannah moved with her sons, to Orange County N.C. According to an account by Nancy Ann Gooch (Benton), she and her brother, James, lived with her grandmother, Susanna, and uncle, Thomas Hart, while they were growing up. Ann and James were the youngest of Keziah's children by William Gooch. William Gooch remarried when Ann was about 9, and James, 7. If they had to go and live with the father and new step-mother, this must have been hard on Ann. Ann described her father as a "disrespectable officer of Lord Tyron," and that she grew up as a "Hart". James was not left land in his father's will, which may indicate that they didn't have such a good relationship either. See Thomas Hart sources; Nancy Ann Gooch (Benton) sources; James Gooch sources | RICE, Susannah (I30969)
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2381 | After Malinda died, possible second wife is Jane Children all Ramsey... can't explain Rainey found earlier in some work. | RAMSEY (RAINEY), Stephen William (I29384)
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2382 | After Moses' death in 1852, his daughter, Indiana Territory Parker and her husband, Daniel Spencer, remained here and raised a family. The earliest documentation establishing the operation as Spencer's Mill appear just before the Civil War in 1856. The mill was operated by Daniel and Indiana's son, Samuel Spencer, as a water turbine driven corn and flour mill. In order to grind corn and wheat for local farmers in this area, French burr stones were bought and shipped for $14.14 from overseas and used as ballasts for weight during the crossing of the Atlantic. | PARKER, Indiana Territory (I753)
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2383 | After Nathaniels father was killed when he was but a few months old, Elizabeth married on Jan. 1, 1747 Samuel Vining and he raised Nathaniel. | COMBS, Elizabeth (I2072)
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2384 | After Samuel Allen died Widow Martha (nee Chapman) Allen married Samuel Arnold, thus confusion as to Allen or Arnold for maiden name of Rachel. | ALLEN, Rachel (I463)
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2385 | After Samuel Allen died Widow Martha (nee Chapman) Allen married Samuel Arnold. | ALLEN, Samuel (I29334)
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2386 | After Samuel Allen died Widow Martha (nee Chapman) Allen married Samuel Arnold. | CHAPMAN, Martha (I29335)
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2387 | After the death of Chilperic II, he appoints the child Theuderic (Thierry IV) as King of Austrasia and Neustria | Charles Martel "The Hammer" Mayor Of Palace (I11289)
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2388 | After the death of Erchinoald's wife, he wished to marry her, but she fled and only returned after he had married someone else | ANGLIA, Balthild (Saint Bathildis) Of (I9530)
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2389 | After the Social War he wrote the "Lex Julia" granting citizenship to every peaceful Italian south of the Po River. | ROMAN EMPIRE, Lucius Julius Caesar Consul Of (I24399)
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2390 | after wedding moved to Chapel Hill, North Carolina 2nd cousin 1x removed 146cM 8 segments | BUNCH, Patricia "Patty" Ellen (I594782813)
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2391 | Age 14 and lilving in Post Oak, Johnson, Missouri in 1860 Census In 1900 Census living in Osage, Labette, Kansas In 1920 Census Samuel was lliving in Montgomery, Kansas | OLIPHANT, Samuel David (I6135)
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2392 | age 75, beloved husband of Janella, nee Knaack; dear father of Karl (Lisa), Paul (Kathy) and the late Mark; loving grandfather of Kaitlyn, Karl Jr. and Tylor; fond brother of Walter (Linda), Dwight, the late Alois (Juanita) and the late Ronald (Lois) Kosary; also survived by many nieces nephews and other relatives. Member of Bremen V.F.W. Post#2791 and Korean War Veterans Association. In lieu of flowers donations to St. Jude Children's Research Hospital. Resting at the Kosary Funeral Home, 9837 S. Kedzie, Evergreen Park, Monday June 4, 2007 3 to 9 p.m. where funeral services will be held Tuesday June 5, 2007 at 10 a.m. Interment Bethania Cemetery. 708-499-3223 | KOSARY, Julius Stark (I30947)
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2393 | Aged 102 years at death | WISDOM, Nancy Ann (I24473)
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2394 | Aged 26 at death of her mother in 1348. | PERCY, Joan De (I13161)
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2395 | Agen (47), France | WEST, Duodene Of The (I468)
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2396 | Agnes (died May 1545), daughter of Hugh Tilney and sister and heiress of Sir Philip Tilney, of Skirbeck and Boston, Lincs. [Burke's Peerage] -------------------- Agnes, daughter of Hugh Tylney, buried 31 May 1545. [Magna Charta Sureties, Line 63-10] -------------------- Agnes was imprisoned in the Tower of London in 1541 (with her son Lord William Howard and Margaret his wife, and her daughter the Countess of Bridgewater), and attainted for misprision of treason in concealing the 'evil life' of her step-granddaughter, Katherine Howard, before her marriage to the King Henry VIII. "Agnes Howard, duches of Norff' of Lambeth" was buried testate at Thetford Abbey on 31 May 1545. [Plantagenet Ancestry, Faris] | TYLNEY, Agnes (I13480)
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2397 | Agnes de St. John was born in 1275 at Basing, Hampshire, England. She was the daughter of John de St. John and Alice FitzPiers. She married Sir Hugh de Courtenay, 1st Earl of Devon, son of Sir Hugh de Courtenay and Eleanor le Despencer, in 1292. She died on 11 June 1345. As a result of her marriage, Agnes de St. John was styled as Countess of Devon on 22 February 1334/35. Children of Agnes de St. John and Hugh de Courtenay, 1st Earl of Devon 1. Elizabeth de Courtney 2. Hugh de Courtenay, 2nd Earl of Devon b. 12 Jul 1303, d. 2 May 1377 3. Thomas Courtenay b. 1311, d. 1362 https://www.thepeerage.com/p930.htm#i9294 | ST. JOHN, Agnes (I3860)
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2398 | AGNES LEGH was born about 1445 of Adlington Hall, Cheshire, England, to Robert Legh, Esq. (1409-1479) and Isabell de Stanley (1414-1481.) She married Sir Andrew Brereton about 1470 of Cheshire, England. Agnes Legh died about 1493 of Chester, Cheshire, England, age 48. About Agnes Legh •Agnes Legh •F, #44398, b. circa 1445 •Father Robert Legh, Esq. b. 3 May 1410, d. 29 Jan 1479 •Mother Isabella Stanley •Agnes Legh was born circa 1445 at of Adlington, Cheshire, England. She married Sir Andrew Brereton, son of Sir William Brereton and Philippa Hulse, circa 1459. •Family Sir Andrew Brereton b. c 1440 •Children •Elizabeth Brereton+ b. c 1470 •Sir William Brereton+ b. 1473 •Ellen Brereton+ b. c 1477, d. 22 Sep 1541 Cheshire - Adlington Hall - Timbered courtyard_from_the_south-west Adlington, Cheshire, England Adlington Hall is a country house in Cheshire, England. The oldest part of the existing building, the Great Hall, was constructed between 1480 and 1505; the east wing was added in 1581. The Legh family has lived in the hall and in previous buildings on the same site since the early 14th century. Chester Cheshire The Rows Children of Andrew Brereton and Agnes Legh: 1.Margaret or Katherine Brereton (1467-1549) 2.Elizabeth Brereton (1472-1540) 3.*SIR WILLIAM BRERETON (1473-1541) 4.John Brereton (1475-1541) 5.Ellen Brereton (1477-1541) 6.Andrew Brereton (1478-1530) 7.Matilda Brereton (1481-1540) 8.Johanna Brereton (1483-) 9.Matthew Brereton (1484-1530) 10.Alice Brereton (1490-1552) 11.Catherine Brereton (1492-1541) + | LEIGH, Lady Agnes (I594776151)
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2399 | Agnes was an only child. | DE TREGODICK, Agnes (I11608)
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2400 | AGNES WENTWORTH, married ROBERT CONSTABLE, Knt., of Flamborough, Yorkshire, and Somerby, Lincolnshire, Sheriff of Yorkshire and for Lincolnshire, Knight of the Shire for Yorkshire and for Lincolnshire, Mayor of York, Justice of the Peace for East Riding, Yorkshire from 1453 until his death, son and heir of Robert Constable, Knt. of Flamborough, Yorkshire and Somerby, Lincolnshire, by Agnes, daughter of William Gascoigne, of Gawthorpe, Yorkshire, Chief Justice of the King's Bench. He was born at Holme on Spalding Moor 4 April 1423. They had six sons, Marmaduke, Knt., Robert, Knt., Philip, John [Dean of Lincoln], William, Knt., and Roger, and seven daughters, Elizabeth (wife of Thomas Metham, Knt.), Margaret, Agnes (wife of Walter Griffith, Knt., and Gervase Clifton, Knt.), Margery (wife of Ralph Bigod, Knt.), Anne, Agnes (wife of William Scargill, Knt.), and Katherine. He was appointed keeper of Fastolf's lands in Suffolk, 1448-53. He was summoned to a Great Council for Yorkshire in 1455 as a Lancastrian. He was pardoned by the Yorkists later the same year. In 1461 he was appointed steward of all the lands in Yorkshire and Lincolnshire forfeited by the Earl of Northumberland and Lord Roos. He was pardoned in 1462. He was sent on an embassy to Scotland in 1464. He was negotiating a truce with the Scots at Newcastle in 1466. He was part owner of a pirate ship in 1473. He was one of the appointed to keep the border in 1484. He remained on the Bench throughout every revolution. He was pardoned by King Henry VII in 1486. SIR ROBERT CONSTABLE died testate 23 may 1488. His widow, Agnes, died 20 April 1496. Source: Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial And Medieval Families, by Douglas Richardson, Kimball G. Everingham | WENTWORTH, Agnes (I4966)
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