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Matches 1 to 50 of 1313
| Notes | Linked to | |
| 1 | At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Sheila NORRIS
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| 2 | Robert BATTERSBY
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| 3 | 1 NAME /Hollingsworth/ | Rachel MORT
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| 4 | 1 NAME /Mort/ | Mary UNKNOWN
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| 5 | 1 NAME William/DAVIES/ 2 SOUR S3 3 PAGE Date of Import: 28 Jan 2007 | William DAVIES
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| 6 | He was a Knight of the Garter who, in the 46th Edward III, being selected for his experience and valor, was sent as a lieutenant into Acquitaine and arrived at the port of Rochel, then besieged by the French, on the eve of St. John the Baptist. But no sooner had he got his ships within the harbor, than being suddenly attacked by the Spanish fleet, before he had been able to form his line of battle, he suffered so signal a defeat that few of his men escaped. His squadron was entirely consumed, himself and his principal officers made prisoners, and treasure to the amount of 20,000 marks, which Kind Edward had sent over to maintain the war, became a prize to the enemy. he subsequently captured four years' harsh captivity in Spain, from which he was eventually released through the interference of Bertrand Cickyn, Constable of France, but died on his journey from Paris (where he had removed from Spain) to Calais, being considered to have been poisoned by the Spaniards. He died on 16 Apr 1375. He married first Margaret Plantagenet, the 4th daughter of King Edward III, by whom he had no children. He secondly married Anne, daughter and sole heir, at length, of Sir Walter Manny, Knight of the Garter, by Margaret, Duchess of Norfolk. They had an only son, John. | John DE HASTINGS
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| 7 | http://worldconnect.genealogy.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=tjglad | Blanche PLANTAGENET
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| 8 | Kings of Hungary, Hainault Sources: Allstrom's Dict. of Royal Lineage, Vol. 1, pp. 133-141, 169 -177; Vol. 2, pp. 407-410/11, 378, 425/7. Betham's Gen. Tables, DXVI, CCLV, CCLVI, DLXVIII, CCLXIII. Williams' Historians' History of the World, Vol. 7, pp. 409 , etc., 638. Harrison's History of Yorkshire (Charts in front of Book). Britannica Enc., Vol. 1, p. 972; Vol. 3, p. 662; Vol. 13, p . 901; Vol. 25, p. 883. | Philippa of Hainault
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| 9 | Line in Record @I15430@ (RIN 17983) from GEDCOM file not recognized: _PRIMARY Y | Mary PLANTAGENET
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| 10 | Line in Record @I27393@ (RIN 22663) from GEDCOM file not recognized: _PRIMARY Y | Matilda STANLEY
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| 11 | Please tell me of any corrections as the data base is in constant change | Hugh MASSEY
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| 12 | Sir John Bold (died 1437), Sheriff of Lancashire, 1406; Governor of Conway Castle. Married Emmie, daughter of Sir John Ireland. Had a second son, Baldwin, ancestor of the Bolds of Upton, Cheshire; and third son, John, who founded a third line. Information obtained from Henry Harbin Byrom(HHB) via an email from Gary Kuschnereit. | John BOLD
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| 13 | The Lady of Halton. Her last name is sometimes spelled Garnett. Joan was born about 1267-1270, probably in Halton, and died on 28 November 1324. She was the daughter and sole heir of Benet [Benedict] Gernet. She married William de Dacre, Knight and Baron of Cumberland, in about 1281. | Joan DE GERNET
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| 14 | vol 1, pg 522, Ormerod's "History of Cheshire" | Alice WHITNEY
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| 15 | http://worldconnect.genealogy.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=tjglad | Marie DE ST. HILARE
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| 16 | http://worldconnect.genealogy.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=tjglad | Joan FITZALAN
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| 17 | http://worldconnect.genealogy.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=tjglad | Margaret FITZALAN
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| 18 | http://worldconnect.genealogy.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=tjglad | Richard FITZALAN
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| 19 | http://worldconnect.genealogy.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=tjglad | Thomas FITZALAN
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| 20 | http://worldconnect.genealogy.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=tjglad | Elizabeth PLANTAGENET
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| 21 | http://worldconnect.genealogy.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=tjglad | Henry Iv PLANTAGENET
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| 22 | In 1445 she was married to Thomas Norreys of Speke, Lancashire, Esquire (d. 1488), a distant cousin, the son of William Norreys of Speke. Lettice was the heir of her father's lands, which included lands in West Derby and in Formby. The Formby lands had passed down from as early as 1280 in this secondary line of the Norreys family, having separated from the Norreys of Speke when the brothers Alan and William, sons of John le Norreys, agreed to split their inheritance with Alan getting the Speke lands and William the Formby lands. Lettice was the eventual recipient of these Formby lands which she brought to her husband Thomas, who had held lands in Speke, having been a descendant of Alan le Norreys, the brother mentioned just above. In sum, the lands of the two family lines were once again brought together. Letttice and Thomas Norreys had three sons, William, Edmund, and Nicholas. | Lettice NORREYS
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| 23 | Maloney, Hendrick & Others - J. H. Maloney | Anne DE NEVILLE
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| 24 | Maloney, Hendrick & Others - J. H. Maloney | Anastasia DE NEVILLE
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| 25 | Maloney, Hendrick & Others - J. H. Maloney | Anne DE NEVILLE
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| 26 | Maloney, Hendrick & Others - J. H. Maloney | Elizabeth DE NEVILLE
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| 27 | Maloney, Hendrick & Others - J. H. Maloney | John DE NEVILLE
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| 28 | Maloney, Hendrick & Others - J. H. Maloney | Margaret DE NEVILLE
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| 29 | Maloney, Hendrick & Others - J. H. Maloney | Philippa DE NEVILLE
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| 30 | Maloney, Hendrick & Others - J. H. Maloney | Margaret De STAFFORD
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| 31 | Please tell me of any corrections as the data base is in constant change | William TIMPERLY
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| 32 | Please tell me of any corrections as the data base is in constant change | Alice
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| 33 | Please tell me of any corrections as the data base is in constant change | Ellen STANLEY
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| 34 | Please tell me of any corrections as the data base is in constant change | Margery STANLEY
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| 35 | This file contains my adopted and biological family. It also contains my husband's family. I t also has my Mayflower connection. | Alphonso PLANTAGENET
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| 36 | This file contains my adopted and biological family. It also contains my husband's family. I t also has my Mayflower connection. | Berengaria PLANTAGENET
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| 37 | This file contains my adopted and biological family. It also contains my husband's family. I t also has my Mayflower connection. | Eleanor PLANTAGENET
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| 38 | This file contains my adopted and biological family. It also contains my husband's family. I t also has my Mayflower connection. | Henry PLANTAGENET
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| 39 | # 1841: She lived in Overhall Fould Bedford # 1851: She lived in Mill Street Bedford and her occupation is shown as | Ann MORT
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| 40 | (probably the Mary Lee m. William Lee with whom the sisters Ellen & Emily are living on the 1891 census) FreeBMD has a Mary b. Leigh 8c 232 Jun 1868 AND Mary m. William Lee Sep 1888 Leigh 8c 351) | Mary BATTERSBY
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| 41 | ----------------------------------------------------------- ------------ following copied from James Stevens, World Connect db=:2052 409, rootsweb.com ----------------------------------------------------------- ------------ Following is a brief summary of Edmund's entry from the "Dictionary of National Biography" : In 1254, at the age of nine, Pope Innocent VI invested him with the kindom of Sicily and Apulia. The huge sums of money sought by the Pope and Edmund's father, KING HENRY III , to drive Manfred out of southern Italy made this venture very unpopular with the English barons. The scheme was finally abandoned in 1263. In 1264, England was in a state of civil war. KING HENRY III and PRINCE EDWARD were captured by the forces of Simon De Montfort, the Earl of Leicester, who was, for all practical purposes, the ruler of England . Meanwhile, Edmund and his mother, QUEEN ELEANOR were in Paris raising an army. After the Battle of Eversham in 1265 , where Simon de Montfort was slain and his forces defeated by PRINCE EDWARD who had escaped from captivity, Edmund returned to England with his mother. He was one of the magnates who urged THE KING to adopt the sweeping measure of confiscation (against those barons who had supported Montfort ) determined on in the parliament of Winchester, being moved, it was believed, by the desire of enriching himself. He had a large share of the spoils, being created Earl of Leicester and receiving the stewardship of the kingdom. In 1267 he was also created Earl of Lancaster. With his brother, PRINCE EDWARD, and several other magnates, Edmund took up the cross in 1268 and was with his brother at Acre in 127 1-72. Returning home before EDWARD, he reached England in December 1272, shortly after his father's death, was received with rejoicing by the Londoners, and went to his mother at Windsor. His crusade, during which he is said to have accomplished little or nothing , seems to have gained him the nickname of Crouchback (or crossed back). It is said, however, to have been asserted by John of Gaunt in 1385 that the name implied deformity, that Edmund was really the elder son of HENRY III, but had been passed over by his father as unfit to reign, and a desire of spreading this fable appears to have been entertained by Henry of Lancaster, Henry IV, and was perhaps implied in his challenge of the crown. By his marriage, after the death of his childless first wife (Aveline de Fortibus) to BLANCHE, the granddaughter of KING LOUIS VIII OF FRANCE, Edmund became Count of Champagne and Brie. From 1277 to 1296 Edmund was active in THE KING' s service. He commanded THE KING's forces in South Wales, acted as ambassador at the French court, unsuccessfully attempted to organize another crusade on behalf of THE KING, and, in conjunction with ROGER DE MORTIMER, EARL OF MARCH, defeated and executed Llewelyn in Wales. When war broke out with France in 1294/5, Edmund was again serving as ambassador there. Remaining loyal to KING EDWARD, he, of course, lost all claim to his French possessions. He led armies in Brittany and Gascony. He died in Bayonne deeply mortified that he was not provided the funds needed to keep his army in the field. "He was religoius, gay, and pleasant in disposition, open-handed, and a popular commander." Edmund Plantaganet, Crouchback (because of the cross he wore on his back), was born the fourth son of King Henry III. He was the 1st Earl of Lancaster. He married (1) Aveline Fortibus, daughter of William Fortibus, but all his children were by his second wife; and shortly before October 29, 1276, he married (2) Blanche of Artois, widow of Henry, King of Navarre, and daughter of Robert, Count of Artois, son of King Louis VIII. of France. She died in Paris May 2, 1302. In 1253 he was invested by the Pope in the Kingdom of Sicily and Apulia, at about this time he was also made Earl of Chester. These were of little value as the real King of Sicily was still living and the Earldom of Chester was transfered to his elder brother Edward. He soon obtained, however, both possessions and dignities, for upon the forfeiture of Simon de Montfort by the King of the Earldom of Leicester and also the honour of the Stewardship of England and the lands of Nicolas de Segrave. REF: Sharon Kay Penman, "The Reckoning": Split with his brother Edward over the latter's decision, after he took Nazareth (1271-1272), to allow his men to kill the Arab townsfolk, in reprisal for the Arabs' massacre of Christians at Jaffa & Antioch. | Edmund "Crouchback" PLANTAGENET
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| 42 | . He later lived at Fifield, Berkshire, which land he apparently acquired through marriage. He was married to Alice Fowler, daughter and sole heiress of John Fowler of Fifield in Bray, Berkshire, Esquire (d. 24 Aug 1479), and his wife Agnes Norreys (111.135.122.124; see above under William Norreys of Winkfield, Berkshire ). From this union descended the Norrises of Fifield, now extinct. Edmund was elected collector for the lands he held called "Adhelyng", and was living in 1504. Edmund and Alice had a son and heir, John Norreys of Fifield. | Edmund NORREYS
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| 43 | 12 Feb Esther Mort, effects under | Esther RYLEY
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| 44 | 12 May, Effects under | John MORT
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| 45 | 15 on 1891 census and living with father (who had remarried) FreeBMD has two possible births for Thomas, but the most likely is b. Leigh 8c 248, Dec 1875 (making him 15 at census time in the spring, turning 16 in late 1891) Two possible marriages in FreeBMD: Leigh 8c 267, Dec 1893 (Alice Ann Battersby or Emily Churton -- but he | Thomas BATTERSBY
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| 46 | 16 Aug Joseph Mort effects under | Joseph MORT
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| 47 | 17 Dec Paul Mort, effects under | Paul MORT
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| 48 | 1841 Census for Bedford Source: HO107/513/7 folio 35 Overhall Fould John Horridge Head 40 Silk Weaver Of this County Ann " 35 " Mary " 13 " Thomas " 8 " John " 6 " Ann " 4 " Evelen? " 1 " 1851 Census for Bedford Source: HO107/ 2204 folio 365 Mill St John Horridge Head Mar 56 Hand Loom Weaver Silk Bedford Ann " Wife Mar 49 Hand Loom Weaver Silk " Mary " Dau unm 22 Hand Loom Weaver Silk " Thomas " Son unm 19 Moulder at Foundry " John " Son 16 Hand Loom Weaver Silk " Ann " Dau 14 Hand Loom Weaver Silk " Amelia? " Dau 11 Nurse Girl Elizabeth " Dau 8 Emma " Dau 4 |
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| 49 | 1851 census birthplace Bury. | Joseph MORT
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| 50 | 1851 census birthplace is Newton | Mary WILLIAMSON
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