Carney & Wehofer Family
 Genealogy Pages

Notes


Matches 851 to 900 of 12,685

      «Prev «1 ... 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 ... 254» Next»

 #   Notes   Linked to 
851 , Normandie, France Family (F11534)
 
852 , Normandie, France Family (F11537)
 
853 , Of, Brittany, France AMIENS, Ralph "The Staller" Earl Of Hereford D' (I10643)
 
854 , Scotland HLODVERSDATTER, Hvarflad (Svanlaug) (Nereid) (I10636)
 
855 , Scotland SCOTLAND, Malcolm II Mackenneth King Of (I10676)
 
856 , Wessex, England ENGLAND, Elfgifu Princess Of (I10696)
 
857 ,, MS SATCHER, Margaret F. (I16229)
 
858 ,, MS CARNEY, Ida Mae (I18848)
 
859 ,,AL CARNEY, Harmon (I16205)
 
860 ,,AL CARNEY, Lydia F. (I16295)
 
861 ,,AL CARNEY, John W. (I18279)
 
862 ,,AL CARNEY, James L (I18834)
 
863 ,,AL CARNEY, George Washington (I18843)
 
864 ,,AL CARNEY, George Washington (I18843)
 
865 ,,AL CARNEY, King Anderson (I18844)
 
866 ,,AL CARNEY, Fannie (I18845)
 
867 ,,AL CARNEY, Laura Alzida (I18847)
 
868 ,,AL CARNEY, Laura Alzida (I18847)
 
869 ,,Normandy, France Family (F5345)
 
870 ,Choctaw, AL CARNEY, King Anderson (I18844)
 
871 ,Choctaw, AL Family (F8072)
 
872 ,Normandy, France HARCOURT, Humphrey Sgn De Pont-Audemer (I26004)
 
873 --- Michael Altschul, *A Baronial Family in Medieval England: The Clares,
1217-1314*, Baltimore MD (Johns Hopkins Press) 1965. p 39-40:

"Earl Gilbert the Red left a son and five daughters. Of his daughters by Alice de Lusignan, the elder, Isabella, was born in 1263. In 1297 she was betrothed to Guy, son and heir of William de Beauchamp, earl of Warwick. Guy de Beachamp succeeded his father as earl in 1298, but the projected marriage, although still pending, never took place. Not until 1216 was Isabella married, at the advanced age of fifty-three, to the Gloucestershire baron Maurice de Berkeley, and she died without issue in 1338. 
Family (F1900)
 
874 --- Michael Altschul, *A Baronial Family in Medieval England: The Clares,
1217-1314*, Baltimore MD (Johns Hopkins Press) 1965. p 39-40:
The other daughter, Joan, probably born sometime between 1264 and 1271, was married in 1284 to Duncan, earl of Fife, who died in 1288. The marriage of their son Duncan (d. 1353) to Mary, daughter of Joan of Acre and Ralph de Monthermer, has already been mentioned [see note under Joan of Acre]. In 1302 or shortly thereafter, Joan married another Scots baron, Gervase Avenel. They entered the fealty of her kinsman Robert Bruce and were declared rebels by King Edward II. Her estates in England, which her father had given as a marriage portion at the time of her betrothal to the earl of Fife, were forfeited, and later granted to Hugh Despenser, husband of Joan's half sister Eleanor, the eldest daughter of Earl Gilbert the Red and Joan of Acre."

********* 
CLARE, Joan De (I14383)
 
875 -------------------------------------------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------
Following copied from Sonja Griesbach, World Connect db=sgriesbach, rootsweb.com:
-------------------------------------------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------

Anne Boleyn
(1502-1536)
Born: 1502 at Blickling Hall, Norfolk
Queen of England
Died: 19th May 1536 at Tower Green, London

Anne Boleyn, the second Queen of Henry VIII, was the daughter of Sir Thomas Boleyn, afterwards Earl of Wiltshire, and Lady Elizabeth Howard. Anne was thus the maternal niece of Henry's courtier-statesman, the Duke of Norfolk. She spent some years at the French Court, before 1522, when she first seems to have attracted the notice of King Henry. Her elder sister, Mary, was, for a short time, the King's mistress at about that date. Anne was sought in marriage by the heir of the Percys and was perhaps privately contracted to him. By 1525, however, the King was secretly courting her.

At what date Anne actually became the King Henry?s mistress we do not know for certain. From 1527 onwards, it was publicly known that Henry was seeking a divorce from Catherine of Aragon and it soon became evident that, in spite of Wolsey's remonstrances, he intended Anne to take her place as Queen. She travelled about with him and had magnificent apartments fitted up for her wherever he was until her marriage with him, which took place privately some time on 25th January 1533. We do not even know precisely where the marriage took place - either Whitehall or Westminster - or by whom it was celebrated. But it was made public at Easter and Cranmer, as Archbishop, held an inquiry into its validity, in favour of which he pronounced. Anne was crowned with great magnificence on Whit Sunday.

The hatred of all but the most servile courtiers for Anne and for all the Boleyns was open and avowed. Her only surviving child, afterwards Queen Elizabeth I, was born in the September. But Henry was already tired of Anne and it is pretty clear that she was but a vulgar coquette of neither wit nor accomplishments and, strange to say, without any extraordinary beauty. As to her chastity, both before and after her marriage, it is difficult to pronounce with certainty. Acts of adultery, and even of incest, were alleged against her at her trial, which took place before a court of peers, with her uncle, the Duke of Norfolk, as president, in May 1536; but, though sentence was unanimously given against her, it could hardly be called a fair trial, as some of her alleged accomplices had been pre?viously convicted and put to death. She was beheaded on Tower Hill on 19th May 1536. 
BOLEYN, Anne (I13469)
 
876 -----Original Message-----
From: Dr. Georg Fischer
To: Tex Dick
Date: Thursday, June 18, 1998 12:23 PM
Subject::REDWINE Resesarch; Baechlein could be okay
Dear Tex,
"Baechlein" comes from "Bach" = little river, it's the diminuitive, an even smaller river, so that is a quite common German word. In the German script you could misread it from "Buchlein" or "Buechlein". I have to look up my CD at the weekend whether any of these is a probable German family name. Regards - Georg <>

-----Original Message-----
From: Dr. Georg Fischer
To: Tex Dick
Date: Tuesday, June 23, 1998 9:50 AM
Subject: BECHLER etc.
It is interesting to know that Baechlein" comes from "Bach" some here thought it would be Bechler. BECHLER is a common name, but I would not see a transition from BAECHLEIN to BECHLER. I think that the general problem is that names are even more difficult to decipher in the old script, and that people in your country guess them sometimes. BAECHLEIN could also be misread from BCHLER, which is very common. So I would need the original records were you have these names from. Regards - Dr. Georg Fisfer
punctum-transfer
Dr. Georg Fischer
Rotteckring 19 Tel. +49 7644 913016, Fax 913018
D-79341 Kenzingen, Germany 48d11m32s North, 7d46m46s East<>


Searching for surnames mostly in Upstate SC/GA: ADDISON, ALLISON, CANADY, COLEMAN, CORBIN, COX, CRAIG, DEAN, FOWLER, GILLILAN, HALEY, GORDON, GRAY, HENSON, JAMES, McMILLIAN, McPHERSON, MOODY, NEWTON, PARKER, PASSMORE, PATTERSON, PAYNE, POINDEXTER, REDWINE, REID, ROY, SHIRES, SWANN, WEST, WHITMIRE, WOODALL 
BAECHLER (I10006)
 
877 --Genealogical Notes, First Settlers of Connecticut and Massachussetts,by
Daniel Goodwin page 68
married 2: Capt. William Curtis, Esq. of Stratford, Connecticut, son of John Curtis, one of the first settlers of that town, by whom she had no children. She was his second wife. Wm. Curtis died 21 Dec 1702

1634, Christmas. P 288 Marvin Gen: (1904) In the Manuscript in Augmentation office in Rolls Court, Westminster Hall, London, wherein permission is granted her family to embark for America, Sara Marvyn appears as three years of age.

1635, Apl. 15. Do: Among the passengers of the Increase which sails today for the New World Sara Marvyn's name appears again. She arrives in New England about June first and comes with the family to Hartford CT, and grows up there. Before she has quite reached the age of seventeen she is ready for her soldier husband who is probably some nine or ten years her senior.

1676, Dec. 6. Oath was made by the relict of Ens. Wm Goodrich, dec'd, that the inventory presented represented a true presentment to the appraisers. In the distribution "the widdow received L100 personall estate & one third of the real estate during her naturall life."

1678, Dec. 20 Vol. III, p58 P Ct, Fairfield, Ct: In the will of her father Matthew Marvin of Norwalk CT, daughters Sarah and Elizabeth are not mentioned, neither are their husbands or children; while all the other children or their families are remembered. Perhaps Sarah and Elizabeth were rich enough.

1680 Vol. II, p372, Stiles: Sarah marries Capt. Wm Curtis of Stratford and moves thither to live.

Additional notes in the extract from One Bassett Family in America.

COMPLETE BOOK OF EMIGRANTS, 1607-1660, Coldham, p. 136 - 13 - 18 April 1635, Passengers embarked in the Increase of London, Mr. Robert Lea, bound [from London] for New England: Marthaw Marvyn, husbandman 35, his wife Elizabeth 31, Elizabeth Marvinn 31 [sic], Mathew Marvynn 8, Marie Marvynn 6, Sara Marvynn 3, Hanna Marvynn 6 months (PRO:E157/20)

Descendants of Reinold & Matthew Marvin, NEHGUS XVI, p. 251, 1862

AF#: 2WD5-QM

This individual has the following other parents in the Ancestral File:
Matthew /MARVIN/ (AFN:55JR-J3) and Elizabeth /GREGORY/ (AFN:1KLJ-GN) 
MARVIN (MERVYN), Sarah (I5412)
 
878 --Other Fields

Ref Number: 629 
LOOMIS, Benajah (I5564)
 
879 . It was the Reverend's son, John Wright, who was the purchaser of Kelvedon Hall in Kelvedon Hatch in 1538, which is the first known residence of Wrights in Kelvedon Hatch. But, prior to the move to Kelvedon Hall, some of the inherited lands in Havering had already formed the basis of the well established Wrightsbridge estate where the family resided prior to Kelvedon Hall. There, they were responsible for the maintenance of the King's bridge over the river, hence the name of the estate. The estate also operated a tannery on the river there and engaged in sheep raising, raising horses, and general farming. There was also property in the town of Romford which was passed on to later generations that appears to have been in the family since the late 1400s. All of this they owned long before the family bought (for 493 pounds sterling, 6s, 8d.) the tenancy of Kelvedon Hall from Richard Bolles, a descendant of the female side of the Multon family, who had been granted the tenancy of Kelvedon Hall by Westminster Abby in 1225. The local parish church, St. Nicholas, was located to the west of the manor house and was said to rest on the site of an original Anglo-Saxon church named for the patron saint of the Norse seaman. When Henry VIII seized the church lands in the area surrounding Kelvedon hatch, he sold the lordship to the Rich family of Essex. In 1547 Richard Rich was made a baron and given the Lordship of the Ongar Hundred, of which Kelvedon Hatch was a part. In a census of his new domain of the Hundred, Sir Richard Rich lists; "John Wright, yeoman of South Weald" as the holder of the tenancy of the Kelvedon Hall estate. This further substantiates the claim that the family's roots were in south Essex just prior to the purchase of Kelvedon Hall, and certainly during the lifetime of the Reverend John Wright.
Rev. John Wright, according to Morant's Essex (p. 121), was of White Notley and possessor of the advowsom of Upminster Church. He was also holder of the manor of Hoohall in County Essex. 
WRIGHT, John (I2815)
 
880 . Matthew Compton Sr. b. 1671 and died 9 August1747. He married Susanna Briscoe by 1702. she died 11 Jan 1739. Will of Matthew Compton, Sr. 3/19/1745 named his son Samuel; daughter, Susanna Whitely; daughter, Eleanor Slye; grandson Matthew Compton Parker and son, Matthew Compton. Matthew Compton, b. 1671 and died 8/9/1747 in Charles Co., son of John Compton and Mary Clarke. His wife: Susanna Briscoe, b. bef 1687 and died 1/11/1739, Charles Co., dau. of Col. Philip Briscoe and Susanna Swann. 5/4/1702: Indenture from Abel Wakefield, planter to Matthew Compton, cooper and his wife Susanna for 5000 lbs. tobacco pt. of tract called "Manchester" on the Wicomico River. Wit: Philip Briscoe, Sr. (Susanna's father). Charles Co. Ct. and Land Rec. Susanna Briscoe married Matthew Compton and they had 7 children.&&&& actually 8 BRISCOE, Sussanna (I10066)
 
881 . William Compton married (sometime after 1711 and before 1721) Mary CLARKE daughter of Thomas CLARKE and 1st wife Ann BARBER.
Maryland Calendar of Wills: Volume 8
page 100
Thompson, William,St. Mary's Co., 10th Jan., 1736-7; 20th June, 1740.
To son Thomas, personalty during life. At his death to pass to grandson Henry.
To grandsons Joseph, Richard Mathias, son of Mathias, and Richard, son of Thomas and kinsman William Compton, personalty. To wife Ann, extx., residue of estate during life. At her death to be divided bet. Ann and Mary, daus. of John Baker. Test: Dorothy Leigh, Alexander Ross and Will Reid. Note: By codicil, witnessed by John Steven, 12th Sept., 1739, to above will testator gives to son Thomas and grandson Thomas, personalty. Note: Widow desires legal rights in above estate. 22. 237.


Md. Calendar of Wills Vol. VI p.51 where John Clarke (son of Thomas Clarke and Ann Barber) refers to his sister Mary Clarke (Compton) (1727). his sister Mary Clarke (daughter of Thomas Clarke and ann Barber) (and grandaughter of Robert Clarke the Surveyor) married William Compton son of John Compton and Mary Clarke daughter of Robert Clarke the Surveyor. 
CLARKE, Thomas (I10103)
 
882 0014 . ?a favorite of Caesar Augustus (B.C. 27 - A.D. 14) ||This association with the Romans greatly promoted the peace with Britain and much civilized his people. aka: Cunobelinus of the Trinovantes 1 , 2 ., King (The Trinobantes were the most powerful of the Briton states. ) BRITAIN, Cynfelyn Of (I242)
 
883 0044 . ?slew the Roman called Hanno, avenging his brother BRITAIN, King Arviragus Gweirydd Of (I8991)
 
884 0050 B.C. , in circa. ?withstood invasions by Julius Caesar SICAMBRI, King Antharius Of The (I5125)
 
885 0051 B.C. . ?Octavius, her grandson, delivered the eulogy at her funeral, which was his first public appearance as Emperor. CAESER, Julia (I9091)
 
886 0338.?Died a year after Constantine (324-337). event 0321.?able to aid the Sarmate (another Germanic tribe to the far east) against the Romans||In this battle he is said to have 36,000 men. (What the Franks were doing so far east helping out a tribe against the Romans is questionable to me. - rbs) birth ABT 0260. event BEF 0337.?given permission to resettle the Franks in the Holland/Brabant region||The move was from the region between the continually warring Alamanni and Thuringi and done with the permission of the Romans (?). FRANCS, Clodomir IV Des (I210)
 
887 0350.?Slain in battle against the Romans. event 0342.?an opponent of Constantinus II, with an army of some 200,000 men FRANCS, Richimir II Des (I211)
 
888 0870 B.C. . ?Killed in the misguided attempt to fly. ?founded the city of Kaerbadum (Bath), the hot springs of which were thought to cure leprosy ?instituted necromancy, the practice of communicating with the dead BRITON, King Bleiddud The (I265)
 
889 1 BIRT
2 DATE 2 JUN 1663
2 SOUR S161215
3 DATA
4 TEXT Date of Import : Apr 29, 1999
2 SOUR S143893
3 DATA
4 TEXT Date of Import: May 12, 1999
2 SOUR S271104
3 DATA
4 TEXT Date of Import: Aug 25, 2001
1 DEAT
2 DATE 27 FEB 1739
2 PLAC Weathersfield, CT
2 SOUR S161215
3 DATA
4 TEX T Date of Import: Apr 29, 1999
2 SOUR S143893
3 DATA
4 TEXT Date of Impo rt: May 12, 1999
2 SOUR S271104
3 DATA
4 TEXT Date of Import: Aug 25, 20 01
2 SOUR S005504
3 DATA
4 TEXT Date of Import: Apr 8, 2001
Glastonbury, Hartford, Connetticut 
GOODRICH, Ephraim (I3695)
 
890 1 BIRT 2 DATE 1397 2 PLAC Aldward, Yorkshire, England 1 DEAT 2 DATE UNKNOWN CLARELL, Margaret (I8747)
 
891 1 DEAT 2 DATE 1330 2 PLAC Executed PLANTAGENET, Earl Of Kent Edmund Earl Of Kent (I13708)
 
892 1 NAME Ann /Martin/
2 GIVN Ann
2 SURN Martin 
TOMLIN, Ann (I1569)
 
893 1 NAME Ann /Ruiter/
2 GIVN Ann
2 SURN Ruiter 
RUTTER, Anne (I4979)
 
894 1 NAME Aveline /De Clare/ DE CLARE, Eveline (Aveline) (I13611)
 
895 1 NAME Geoffrey /FitzPiers/ 1 BIRT 2 DATE ABT. 1132 2 PLAC Walden, Essex, England 1 BIRT 2 DATE ABT. 1162 2 PLAC Walden, Essex, England 1 DEAT 2 DATE 14 OCT 1213 FITZ PIERS, Geoffrey Earl Of Essex (I13659)
 
896 1 NAME Joane (Isabel) /De Mortimer/ 1 BIRT 2 DATE ABT. 1194 2 PLAC Elmley, Worcestershire, England 1 DEAT 2 DATE 1268

He married twice:

Firstly, in 1212 at the age of 20, to Johanna Mortimer (d.1225), daughter of his warder Roger Mortimer (d. 1214) of Wigmore Castle, by whom he had issue including:
1. William (III) de Beauchamp (1215-1269), eldest son and heir, who married Isabel de Mauduit, sister and heiress of William Mauduit, 8th Earl of Warwick, by whom he was the father of William de Beauchamp, 9th Earl of Warwick.

Secondly, in 1225 or later, he married a certain Angaret (d.1280/3), of unrecorded family.

Death
Walter died on 11 April 1236.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_de_Beauchamp_(justice)


 
DE MORTIMER, Joane Isabelle (I3697)
 
897 1 NAME John [Sir] /Sutton/, 1st Lord Dudley
1 BIRT
2 DATE 25 DEC 1400
2 PLAC probably Dudley, Worcestershire, England
1 DEAT
2 DATE 30 SEP 1487


Source: Weis, Frederick Lewis, Ancestral Roots, Seventh Edition,[Genealogical Publishing Co., Baltimore], 1992, [81A-36].
Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, 1428-1430, Constable of the Tower of London,1470-1483. 
SUTTON, Sir. John V Baron (I13871)
 
898 1 NAME Richard /Plantagenet/ 1 DEAT 2 PLAC Cornwall, England

BIOGRAPHY: Richard was very wealthy and used it to be elected Holy Roman Emperor. His reign was not of any substance-pretty much symbolic. Late in life he gave up hope of ever actually ruling.
------------------------------------------

BIOGRAPHY: Richard, Count of Poitou by 18 Aug 1225 (renounced c Dec 1243), 1st Earl of Cornwall, so styled from 21 Aug 1227 and King of the Romans (ie. heir presumptive to the Holy Roman Empire), so elected at Frankfurt 13 Jan 1256/7 and crowned at Aachen 17 May 1257 but soon ejected and returned to England, three of the Electors apparently having thrown him over because his monetary inducements to them were too small, PC (1253); Constable of Wallingford Castle 1216; knighted Feb 1224/5 and granted by his brother Henry III 13 Feb 1224/5 the County of Cornwall during the King's pleasure, following which he was presumably invested as Earl of that county; Lt of Guienne 1226-7; Ambassador to Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II 1237 and Popes Innocent IV and Alexander IV 1250 and 1259 respectively; went on Crusade 1240-41; Co- or sole Regent during his brother Henry III's campaigns in Gascony 1253-54, fought with his brother Henry III against Simon de Montfort's barons at Battle of Lewes 1264, where he was captured; married 1st 30 March 1230/1 Isabel, 3rd daughter of William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke and widow of Gilbert de Clare, 5th Earl of Hertford and 2nd Earl of Gloucester, and had three sons (all died young or sp); married 2nd 22 Nov 1243 Sancha, sister of his brother Henry III's wife Eleanor and 3rd daughter and coheir of Raymond Berengar V, Count of Provence, and by her had two or three sons (also died young or sp, including the 2nd and last Earl of Cornwall); married 3rd 16 June 1269 Beatrice, 2nd daughter of Walram de Fauquemont (or Valkenberg, near Mastricht), Seigneur de Montjoie and brother of Engelbert Archbishop of Cologne, and died 2 April 1272, leaving by Jeanne de Valletort, and illegitimate son. [Burke's Peerage] 
PLANTAGENET, King Of The Romans Earl Richard Of Cornwall (I13688)
 
899 1 NAME Robert /De Holand/ 1 BIRT 2 DATE ABT. 1270 2 PLAC Upholland, Lancashire, England 1 DEAT 2 DATE 15 OCT 1328 DE HOLAND, Robert 1st Baron Holand (I25229)
 
900 1 NAME Thomas I /De Savoie/ 1 BIRT 2 DATE 1177 1 DEAT 2 DATE 1233 DE MAURIENNE, Count Thomas Of Savoy (I13671)
 

      «Prev «1 ... 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 ... 254» Next»