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51
In 1900, Margaret was living with her brother, Charles, in Coldwater, Butler, Iowa. 
Rosburg, Margaret (I3267)
 
52
James is living with his brother, William, in Clinton, Henry, Missouri where they are renting a farm together. They will continue this for the rest of their lives.

In 1940 he was living with his sister, Mary Frances nee' Densman Young. 
Densman, James Thomas (I9146)
 
53
Johann Caspar Hornschuch (born July 15, 1737 in Albertshofen , † April 16, 1794 in Billinghausen ) was a German Lutheran clergyman and a pioneer of beekeeping and asparagus production .

He was one of the sons of the teacher Johann Jakob Hornschuch (1713-1772) and was determined by father after the salvation of various accidents in childhood for a theological career. He was first vicar in Taschendorf and joined in 1763 as court chaplain and pastor of Ziegenbach in the services of the Counts Castell in Castell . There he married the Maria Christina Charlotta Knoll (1740-1827) in 1765. The marriage came from seven children. The eldest son Carl Heinrich Friedrich Hornschuch (1766-1839) gained importance in Kitzingen as a founder. In 1774 Hornschuch moved as pastor to Billinghausen, where he died in 1794.

Hornschuch has earned particular merit in that he introduced beekeeping in Castell and cultivated in Billinghausen as the first asparagus . 
Hornschuch, Johann Caspar (I28716)
 
54
Johann Caspar Hornschuch (born July 15, 1737 in Albertshofen , † April 16, 1794 in Billinghausen ) was a German Lutheran clergyman and a pioneer of beekeeping and asparagus production .

He was one of the sons of the teacher Johann Jakob Hornschuch (1713-1772) and was determined by father after the salvation of various accidents in childhood for a theological career. He was first vicar in Taschendorf and joined in 1763 as court chaplain and pastor of Ziegenbach in the services of the Counts Castell in Castell . There he married the Maria Christina Charlotta Knoll (1740-1827) in 1765. The marriage came from seven children. The eldest son Carl Heinrich Friedrich Hornschuch (1766-1839) gained importance in Kitzingen as a founder. In 1774 Hornschuch moved as pastor to Billinghausen, where he died in 1794.

Hornschuch has earned particular merit in that he introduced beekeeping in Castell and cultivated in Billinghausen as the first asparagus . 
Hornschuch, Johann Jacob (I28706)
 
55
Johann Dietrich was the owner of the house at Stechbahn 2 in Korbach from 1720 to 1747. On the occasion of the marriage of his daughter Anna Elisabeth, half of the property was transferred to his son-in-law Josias Gottfried Hammerschmidt

The neighboring house Im Sack 7 belonged to Johann Dietrich Goette’s brother, Justus Andreas Goette. 
Goette, Johann Dietrich (I32663)
 
56
John Alexander MacDowell
Also Known As:"MacDowall"
Birth circa 1575:Galloway, Scotland
Death:Died 1631 in Gleno, Antrim, Ulster, Ireland
Place of Burial:Glenoe, Antrim, Ulster, Ireland
Immediate Family:
Son of Uchtred MacDowall of Garthland and Margaret Kennedy of Girvanmainly
Husband of mary wylie
Father of Alexander McDowell and isabella mcdowell
Brother of Uchtred MacDowall of Garthland; Cathrine MacDowall of Garthland and Thomas MacDowall
Half brother of Margaret MacDowall of Garthland and Janet Hay

John Alexander MacDowell's Timeline
1573 Birth of John; Galloway, Scotland
1595 Age 20; Birth of Alexander McDowell; Glenoe, Antrim, Ulster, Ireland
1595 Age 20; Marriage of John MacDowell to Mary McDowell; Gleno,Raloo Parish,County Antrim,Ireland
1607 Age 32; Birth of Isabella Mcdowell; Scotland
1635 Age 56; Death of John at Gleno, Antrim, Ulster, Ireland; Gleno, Antrim, Ulster, Ireland
1635 Age 56; Burial of John; Glenoe, Antrim, Ulster, Ireland 
McDowell, John Alexander (I26976)
 
57
John Archdeacon
Birth circa 1420: Slade, Devon, , England
Death: Died 1460 in England, United Kingdom
Place of Burial: England, United Kingdom
Immediate Family:
Son of John l'Arcedekne, Of Bawnballinlogh and Maude L. N.N.
Husband of Anne Archdeacon
Father of Thomas Archdeacon and Hannah Archdeacon 
Archdeacon, John (I26053)
 
58
John served as a private in the Mexican War. In return he received a land Grant in Lamar County, Texas.

John is also listed as a private in the 9th Brigade, Texas State Troops, Texas Militia on 10 Aug 1861. He is listed as a Confederate veteran. 
Densman, John (I8629)
 
59
Katherine (Kitty) Gerhardt Kenney, 86, of Boonville, passed away on October 16, 2018 at Lenoir Woods in Columbia following a brief illness.
Visitation will be held at Howard Funeral Home in Boonville from 5-7 p.m. on Friday, October 19. Services will be held at 11 a.m. on Saturday, October 20, at St. Johns United Church of Christ, 14191 Billingsville Road, Boonville, Mo. Burial will follow in the church cemetery.
Kitty was born to Herman and Ida (Bail) Gerhardt on January 16, 1932 at the Gerhardt home in Speed. She married Forrest Kenney on January 20, 1952. He preceded her in death on November 30, 2015.
She was a 1949 graduate of Boonville High School. Kitty's greatest treasure was her family. She was a homemaker and was also employed at Cooper County Abstract and First Christian Church in Boonville. She was a faithful member of St. Johns United Church of Christ in Billingsville her entire life, where she was baptized, confirmed and married. She volunteered in many capacities, including Sunday school teacher, choir, and was a member and officer of the Women's Guild.
Survivors include daughters Sharon Smith (Steve) of Columbia and Barbara Ayers (Doug) of Danville, Kentucky. She also leaves her beloved grandchildren; Sarah Smith Auer (Kris), Ryan Smith, Grant Neckermann (Kate), Andrea Smith, Kathleen Ayers and Hannah Ayers, as well as great grandchildren Jacob, Samantha and Elizabeth Auer and Ford Neckermann. Her sister, Roberta (Birdie) Kueckelhan and brother, Carl (Fritz) Gerhardt also survive. In addition to her husband, Kitty was also preceded in death by her parents, a sister, Wilma Cary, two brothers, Herman E. (Bud) Gerhardt and Albert (Jody) Gerhardt and a nephew, Bill Gerhardt. She will also be missed by her nieces, nephews, and many cousins. 
Gerhardt, Katherine Marie (I16076)
 
60
Letters of Administration of the personal estate of Henry M'Quig late of North-street Ballycastle County Antrim Merchant who died 24 August 1895 were granted at Belfast to Mary Anne M'Quig of Ballycastle the Widow 
McQuig, Henry (I35290)
 
61
Lucius Aurelius Gallus (suffect consul)
Lucius Aurelius Gallus was a Roman senator, who held a series of appointments during the first half of the second century AD. A military diploma found in Morocco attests that he was suffect consul on 18 August for one of the years between 129 and 132 as the colleague of ...cus Priscus.[1] Gallus is known entirely from inscriptions.
Life
The origins of Aurelius Gallus are enigmatic. Hans-Georg Pflaum speculates his grandfather may have been one of the signatories to a promulgation of Lucius Helvius Agrippa, proconsul of Sardinia, dated 18 March 69.[2]
An inscription from the base of a statue, erected by one Marcus Aemilius Alcima at Rome, who describes himself as Gallus' amicus but is otherwise unknown, provides us the details of his cursus honorum;[3] although the inscription has been known for years, due to uncertainty if it belonged to him, or one of his three homonymous descendants, it was not until an article by Pflaum that he was properly identified as the subject of the inscription.[4] The earliest office Gallus is recorded as holding was quaestor, which he discharged in the province of Asia; upon completion of this traditional Republican magistracy he was enrolled in the Senate. Two more of the traditional Republican magistracies followed: plebeian tribune and praetor.
Upon completing his term as praetor, Gallus was selected as legatus or assistant to the proconsular governor of Africa. Upon returning to Rome, he was appointed curator of a network of roads in Etruria: the Via Clodia, Annia, Cassia, Cimina, and the Via Nova Trajana; Pflaum dates his curatorship of these roads to the years 117-120.[5] Following this, Gallus was appointed legatus legionis or commander of the Legio III Gallica stationed at Raphaneae in Syria. He returned to Rome, where the sortition allocated him the public province of Gallia Narbonensis to govern; Werner Eck assigns the term 124/125 to his tenure in that province.[6] Gallus received two more appointments at Rome: first was prefectus frumenti dandi, or overseer of the distribution of wheat to the citizens of Rome; next was prefect of the aerarium Saturni, or the public treasury, where he was the colleague of Marcus Acilius Priscus Egrilius Plarianus. At this point, historian Mireille Corbier comments, "The prefecture of the aerarium Saturni is the culmination of a long line of Praetorian posts that led our senator to the four corners of the empire, and the consulate is the normal conclusion of a well-conducted, but uninspired (mais sans édat) career".[7]
His consulate followed soon after this last appointment; Corbier suggests Gallus was in his 50s when he acceded to this post.[7] Details of Gallus' life after the consulate have not been identified.
Family
As Gallus was a homo novus, or the first of his family to be consul, all that is known of his father is his praenomen from his filation: Lucius. Although the name of his wife has not come down to us, a son has been identified for him, Lucius Aurelius Gallus, consul in 146.[8] 
Lucius Aurelius Gallus (I33987)
 
62
Mary McDowell (Wylie)
Birth circa 1578 Ulster, Ireland
Death:Died 1631 in Gleno,Antrim,Ulster,Ireland
Place of Burial:Antrim, Antrim, UK
Immediate Family:
Daughter of thomas wylie and grace coxe
Wife of John MacDowell
Mother of Alexander McDowell and isabella mcdowell 
Wylie, Mary (I26975)
 
63
Maud Marshal, Countess of Norfolk & Surrey
Also Known As: "Matilda"
Birth September 1192 Pembroke, Pembrokeshire, Wales Died March 27, 1248 in Tintern, Monmouthshire, Wales Place of Burial: Tintern Abbey, Chapel Hill, Monmouthshire, England
Immediate Family:Daughter of William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke and Isabel de Clare, 4th Countess of Pembroke Wife of Hugh Bigod, 3rd Earl of Norfolk; William de Warenne, 5th Earl of Surrey and Walter de Dunstanville Mother of Matilda le Bigod; Roger Bigod, 4th Earl of Norfolk; Isabel Fitzgeoffrey; Hugh Bigod, Chief Justice of England; John Bigod and 7 others Sister of William Marshal, 2nd Earl of Pembroke; Richard Marshal, 3rd Earl of Pembroke; Gilbert le Marshall, 4th Earl of Pembroke (Knight Templar); Isabel Marshall of Pembroke; Anselm Marshal, 6th Earl of Pembroke and 4 others

“Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013):
“HUGH LE BIGOD, 5th Earl of Norfolk, hereditary Steward of the Household, hereditary Warden of Romford Forest, son and heir.
He married probably before Lent 1207 MAUD MARSHAL, eldest daughter of William Marshal, Knt., 4th Earl of Pembroke (or Strigoil), hereditary Master Marshal, by Isabel, daughter of Richard Fitz Gilbert (nicknamed "Strongbow"), 2nd Earl of Pembroke (or Strigoil) [see MARSHAL 3 for her ancestry].
They had four sons,
1. Roger, Knt. [6th Earl of Norfolk],
2. Hugh, Knt.,
3. Ralph, Knt., and possibly
4. William,
and one daughter,
5. Isabel.
In 1215 he and his father joined the confederacy of the barons against the king. Both father and son were selected to be one of the twenty-five barons elected to guarantee the observance of Magna Carta, signed by King John 15 June 1215. In consequence, Hugh and his father were among the barons excommunicated by Pope Innocent III 16 Dec. 1215. He made homage for the Earldom of Norfolk 2 August 1221. In the period, 1221-5, he granted the homage and service of Hervey the baker and the tenement he held in Heveningharn, Suffolk to Sibton Abbey, Suffolk. In the same period, he granted the manor of Stockton, Norfolk to Hamo Lenveise. In the same period, he granted land in Mettingham, Suffolk to John Fitz Augustine.
HUGH LE BIGOD, 5th Earl of Norfolk, died between 11 Feb. and 18 Feb. 1224/5. In May 1225 his widow, Maud, granted land in Stockton, Norfolk to her son, Ralph le Bigod.
Maud married (2nd) before 13 October 1225 (as his 2nd wife) WILLIAM DE WARENNE, 6th Earl of Surrey [see WARENNE 8], son and heir of Hamelin, 5th Earl of Surrey, Vicomte of Touraine, by Isabel, daughter and heiress of William de Warenne, 3rd Earl of Surrey [see WARENNE 7 for his ancestry].
They had one son,
1. John, Knt. [7th Earl of Surrey],
and one daughter,
2. Isabel.
In 1226-7 Mary daughter of William de Newmarch, of Cateby, Yorkshire, granted to Maud Bigot, countess of Warenne and Norfolk, the hermitage of St. Margaret's, Cateby on the Don, with land in Eadrnunde croft, and common of pasture for the cattle of the hermitage, rendering yearly to the grantor at Easter white gloves. In 1227 he joined the Earl of Cornwall at Stamford in his revolt against the king, but at Christmas was with the king at York. In 1229 he was about the make a voyage on the king's service. He was heir in 1234 to his sister, Isabel de Warenne, widow of Gilbert de l'Aigle. In 1236 he acted as Butler at the Coronation of Queen Eleanor of Provence, in place of his son-in-law, Hugh, Earl of Arundel. In 1238 he was cited to appear before Robert Grosseteste, Bishop of Lincoln, because mass has been celebrated in the earl's hall at Grantham, Lincolnshire. SIR WILLIAM DE WARENNE, 6th Earl of Surrey, died testate in London 27 May 1240, and was buried in the priory church of Lewes, Sussex. In the period, 1240-6 his widow, Maud, granted a tenement in Thorne, Yorkshire to Richard de Otley her chaplain. In 1241 she granted Sir Adam de Newmarch and his heirs a water-course and ditch in Balne, Yorkshire from Flaxcleyker to the Dike to be 8 feet wide and 4 feet deep. In the period, 1241-5, she granted land in Stockton, Norfolk to her son, Ralph le Bigod. Maud was co-heiress in 1245 to her brother, Anselm Marshal, 9th Earl of Pembroke, by which she inherited the marshalcy of England and honour of Chepstow, Monmouthshire. In 1246-8 she confirmed the union of Kilkenny Abbey with Duiske Abbey. In 1246-8 she granted three silver marks of annual rent to St. George's Nunnery, Thetford, Norfolk.
Maud, Marshal of England, Countess of Norfolk and Warenne, died 27 (or 29) March 1248.

Children of Hugh le Bigod, by Maud Marshal:
i. ROGER LE BIGOD, Knt., 6th Earl of Norfolk, hereditary Steward of the Household, hereditary Warden of Romford Forest, Chief Justice Itinerant in cos. Essex and Hertford, 1234, Marshal of England, 1246 (in right of his mother), Warden of the Town and Castle of Tulac, 1249, Warden of the Coast of Norfolk and Suffolk, 1257, Privy Councillor, 1258, Joint Guardian of England, 1259, Constable of Colchester and Orford Castles, son and heir, born about 1209. He may have been the unnamed son of Hugh le Bigod who was held hostage by King John during the civil war of 1215-17, and whose capture perhaps occurred when Framlingham was surrendered to royalist forces in March 1216. He married at Alnwick, Northumberland 1 June 1225 ISABEL OF SCOTLAND, daughter of William the Lion, King of Scots, by Ermengarde, daughter of Richard de Beaumont, Vicomte of Beaumont [see SCOTLAND 4 for her ancestry]. They had no issue. While still under age, he entered into his inheritance in 1228. He was knighted by King Henry III at Gloucester in 1233. He unsuccessfully disputed Simon de Montfort's claim to the Stewardship at the Coronation of Queen Eleanor. In 1242 he served the king in the early part of the disastrous campaign in Poitou. In 1245 he was chief of the English delegation to the Council of Lyons, and chief of the plenipotentiarires to treat of peace between the Emperor and the Pope. The same year he repudiated his wife, nominally on the ground of consanguinity. He was compelled by ecclesiastical sentence to take her back in 1253. The king confirmed his mother's commission of the marshalcy to him in 1246. In 1253 he witnessed a sentence of excommunication and anathema against violators of the liberties of the church and of the realm. In 1254 he brought over the king's message to the Grand Council for a supply of money. In 1257 he was member of an abortive embassy to France to demand certain rights. In 1258 he served as one of the ambassadors to attend the conference at Cambray. His wife, Isabel, appears to have been living in Gloucestershire in October 1263. Her exact date of death is unknown, but she was buried in the Black Friars, London. In 1270 he wrote the king asking him to allow Roger, son of his brother Hugh, to be his attorney as Marshal. SIR ROGER LE BIGOD, 6th Earl of Norfolk, died 3 (or 4) July 1270, and was buried 10 July at Thetford, Norfolk. Clutterbuck Hist. & Antiqs. of Hertford 2 (1821): 510-511 (Marshal-Bigod ped.). Dugdale Monasticon Anglicanum 4 (1823): 478; 5 (1825): 744 (charter of Isabel d'Aubeney, Countess of Arundel; charter witnessed by her brothers, 
Marshall, Countess Matilda (I26384)
 
64
Moy-Ith

Once upon a time a Milesian chieftain called Ith set out from Spain in search of the 'Isle of the West.' In a storm he was a driven up Lough Swilly and landed in the Lagan Valley where he found that the language spoken was the same as his own so that he was able to talk to the people. They were very suspicious of him because he talked in high terms about their climate and fertile soil.
Fearing that he was going to take their land they attacked him and his followers. Ith was mortally wounded and was carried back to Spain dead. Afterwards the place where the battle was fought was called "Moy-Ith".

The royal clans of Ulster, O'Neill and McLaughlin, were descended from Murdock Mac-Earca. O'Devlins and O'Donnellys probably sprang from a grandson of this Murdock Mac-Earca. An important point in the descent from Murdock Mac-Earca comes with Hugh Allen, king of Ireland, who distinguished himself by a series of victories over the descendants of Conall from Donegal. This king, Hugh
Allen, had two brothers, Niall Frossach and Connor, whose descendants afterwards came into prominence. From Niall Frossach through Hugh Finlay were descended both the McLaughlins and O'Neills-the O'Neills taking their surname from Niall Glundubh (Niall Black-knee). The McLaughlin and O'Neill stocks provided vigorous leaders and kings for the Owen clans in Ulster, as well as reaching at times the position of high king of Ireland. Murdock's line, from which kings were promised, provided an ample fulfillment. From the other brother of Hugh Allen-Connor there arose certain strong clans by whose combined power these northern kings were supported and maintained. It is from the descendants of Connor, the Clan Connor, that the second important thrust from the Owen Clan came. This clan is often known as Clan Connor Magh Ithe, or the Fir Magh Ithe (men of Magh Ithe). Magh Ithe is the rich countryside stretching southward from Inishowen, later known as the Laggan district in east Donegal. According to the O'Clery book of genealogies, Connor had twelve sons, from one of which called Drughan were descended the O'Cahans (O'Kanes). The O'Mullans were also descended from Connor. The McCloskeys, later prominent in County Derry, were descended from a Blosky O'Cahan mentioned the Annals under the year 1196.

It will be remembered that in earlier advances the hard core of resistance in County Derry formed by the Cianachta had been bypassed. The Cianachta, whose leading sept was the O'Connors af Glengiven in the Roe Valley, had held their position for many centuries. The overthrow of the Cianachta and the O'Connors came oddly enough from their namesakes, the Clan Connor. Between the years A.D. 900 and 1000, according to Dr. Kelly's reckoning, the families of Clan Connor moved out from the cramped territory of Magh Ithe, and eventually established themselves in the whole of the territory from the Foyle to the Bann in County Derry. No express record of the conquest of Cianachta exists, and the method of the conquest is a fascinating problem to which we must later turn. When the process of conquest ends, we find various septs of Clan Connor firmly settled in County Derry, the Clan Dermot and its chief family O'Carrolan south of the Faughan river, and the O'Cahans, O'Mullans and McCloskeys scattered elsewhere over North Derry. This intermittent expansion of the Owen clans, which has been described in the present chapter, occupied several centuries. Consequent upon this expansion, and concurrent with it, various other changes took place. These changes centre around the quest for power, and for a place from which the power obtained might be competently exercised. 
O'Neill, Connor Frasach (I35629)
 
65
Nicholas TUFTON
Birth: Abt 1475 Tufton, Northiam, Sussex, Eng
Death: 30 Dec 1538 Tufton, Northiam, Sussex, Eng
Marriage: Abt 1499 Kent, Eng
Margaret HEVER
Birth: Abt 1497 Kent, Eng
Death: Bef 1538 Northiam, Sussex, Eng
Children Marriage
1 Isabel TUFTON
Birth: Abt 1501 of Northiam, Sussex, Eng
John CRYOUR Marr: Abt 1521 of Northiam, Sussex, Eng
2 Margaret TUFTON
Birth: Abt 1507 of Northiam, Sussex, Eng
Mr. ASSHEHURST Marr: Abt 1528 of Northiam, Sussex, Eng
3 Joan or Johan TUFTON
Birth: Abt 1510 of Northiam, Sussex, Eng
Mr COOKE Marr: Abt 1537 of Northiam, Sussex, Eng
4 Anne TUFTON
Birth: Abt 1512 of Northiam, Sussex, Eng
MELLER Marr: Abt 1533 of Northiam, Sussex, Eng
5 John TUFTON, SHERIFF OF KENT
Birth: Aug 1519 of Northiam, Sussex, Eng
Death: 16 Oct 1567 Hothfield, Kent, Eng
Mary BAKER Marr: Abt 1545 of Cranbrook, Kent, Eng
6 Nicholas TUFTON
Birth: Abt 1524 Northiam, Sussex, Eng
Death: Bef 1538 of Northiam, Sussex, Eng
7 Agnes TUFTON
Birth: Abt 1526 Addisham, Northiam, Sussex, Eng
William DENNE Marr: Abt 1549 of Northiam, Sussex, Eng
8 Alice TUFTON
Birth: Abt 1528 of Northiam, Sussex, Eng
Richard SHARP OR SHARPE Marr: Abt 1548 of Northiam, Sussex, Eng

Nicholas Tufton - Margaret Hever
Nicholas Tufton was born at Tufton, Northiam, Sussex, Eng Abt 1475.
He married Margaret Hever Abt 1499 at Kent, Eng . Margaret Hever was born at Kent, Eng Abt 1497 .

They were the parents of 8 children:
Isabel Tufton born Abt 1501.
Margaret Tufton born Abt 1507.
Joan or Johan Tufton born Abt 1510.
Anne Tufton born Abt 1512.
John Tufton, Sheriff of Kent born Aug 1519.
Nicholas Tufton born Abt 1524.
Agnes Tufton born Abt 1526.
Alice Tufton born Abt 1528.
Nicholas Tufton died 30 Dec 1538 at Tufton, Northiam, Sussex, Eng .

Margaret Hever died Bef 1538 at Northiam, Sussex, Eng
---------------- 
Tufton, Sir Nicholas (I32007)
 
66
Parentage
Meurug was the son of Llywarch, King of Ceredigion and his wife, whose name is not known.

«b»Marriage«/b»
The name of Meurug's wife is unknown.

«b»Issue
Meurug & his wife had [two] children:«/b»

1.) Gwgawn drowned in the river Llychwr, Gower in the year 870/71]. He was king of Ceredigion. The Chronicle of the Princes of Wales records that "Gwgawn son of Meurug king of Ceredigion was drowned" in 871. The Gwentian Chronicle records that "Gwgan son of Morydd son of Llywarch Llwyd, king of Ceredigion was drowned in crossing the river Llychwr in Gower, to drive the black pagans out of that country" in 870.

2.) Angharad. Her parentage and marriage are recorded in a manuscript now at Jesus College. Angharad married Rhodri ap Merfyn "Mawr/the Great", son of Merfyn "Frych/the Freckled" ap Gwriad King of Gwynedd & his wife Nest of Powys (-killed Anglesey 878). 
ap Dyfnwallon, Lord Meurig (I33486)
 
67
Picture of
Added by Greg
Picture of
Added by Greg
Helen Marie Williams Bates
BIRTH 2 Jan 1924
Springfield, Greene County, Missouri, USA
DEATH 13 Mar 2010 (aged 86)
Topeka, Shawnee County, Kansas, USA
BURIAL
Walnut Grove Cemetery
Boonville, Cooper County, Missouri, USA
MEMORIAL ID 101337728 · View Source

MEMORIAL
PHOTOS 8
FLOWERS 2
Devoted wife of Henry, they were married on April 2nd 1951 in Lawton Oklahoma. Born in Springfield Missouri, but grew up with her three sisters in Wichita Kansas during the depression years.
Served in Womens Army Corps (WAC's) from 1949 to 1951. She was stationed at Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio Texas. During this time, she met movie actor John Wayne, and her future husband Henry Bates Jr. She and Henry had three sons: Charles Henry, Gene Wayne, and Gregory Lynn. They remained married for more than 50 years: until his death in 2008.
After their marriage, Henry and Helen settled down in Derby Kansas. Henry worked for Boeing Aircraft many years, but they moved to Topeka Kansas in 1972 after Henry started a job with the Postal Service in that city. Helen retired from Woolworths in 1985. After this, her and Henry spent much time traveling around the country with two different camping clubs, and their youngest son Greg.
Will always be remembered as a loving mother and devoted wife. 
Williams, Helen Marie (I31452)
 
68
PLEASE don't add or delete information on this site before you read all the information attached. There are many Boone families in Pennsylvania at this time. Squire & Sarah only had 12 children, so please don't add more.

--migrated from England to The Colonies before parents
--1719 married Sarah Morgan in PA
--father of frontiersman, Daniel Boone
--1765 died Rowan, NC

SQUIRE BOONE

Squire Boone was born in Bradninch, Exeter, Devonshire, England to George Boone III & Mary Milton Maugridge; he had the following siblings: George Boone IV, Sarah Boone Stover, Mary Boone b. in 1694 d. 1696; Mary Boone b. 1699 d. 1744, John Boone, Joseph Boone, Benjamin Boone, James Boone, & Samuel Boone.

Some years later the family moved to Exeter, Berks County, PA.

Squire married Sarah Morgan 23 July 1720 at the Gwynned Meeting of Quakers, Berks Co, Pennsylvania. Squire died 2 January 1765 and Sarah died 1777; both buried at Mocksville, North Carolina. [Gwynedd Meeting (the location of Squire's wedding) is located in what is now Montgomery County PA. It was Philadelphia County at the time of the wedding.]

They had the following children: Sarah, Israel Boone (buried at Joppa Cem.), Samuel, Jonathan, Elizabeth Boone Grant, Daniel Boone (famous pioneer), Mary Boone Bryan, George W., Edward, Nathaniel, Squire Boone Jr., and Hannah Boone Stewart Pennington.

Squire had accompanied his brother George, and his sister, Sarah, to America ahead of their parents.

The Jess M. Thompson Pike County History"
Thompson, Jess M.
Pittsfield, IL; Pike County Historical Society; 1967
Chapters 32, 76: "Squire Boone, son of George Boone III, married Sarah Morgan in Berks county,
Pennsylvania, on September 23, 1720... They became the parents of seven sons and four
daughters, as follows, in the order of their birth: Sarah, Israel, Samuel, Jonathan, Elizabeth, Daniel,
Mary, George, Edward, Squire and Hannah.. 
Boone, Squire Sr (I31850)
 
69
RALPH Murdac (-after 1130). The 1130 Pipe Roll records "Rad Mrdac" in Oxfordshire[1394]. "Radulfus Murdac" donated "dimidiam hidam terre apud Filching", previously donated by “avus meus Radulfus Murdac”, to Eynsham abbey by charter dated to [1173/74][1395]. m ---. The name of Ralph’s wife is not known. Ralph & his wife had one child:

NN Murdac (probably Ralph)

Ralph I Murdach, Lord of Broughton
heir & s/o Robert FitzMurdach &
b- 1060 - Normandy, France
m- Juliana
d- 1130 (or after) - Broughton Pogg, Oxfordshire, England

heir - Broughton Pogg, Oxfordshire

no date - Ralph Murdac granted lands in Filkins -to- Eysham Abbey
1130- Pope Roll- Oxfordshre 
Murdac, Sir Ralph I (I33779)
 
70
Richard was on the 1643 Plymouth list of Men Able to Bear Arms.

In 1644 Richard married at Plymouth Hester (sometimes seen as Esther) Cooke. The exact date of their union is not given in Plymouth Vital Records but if marriages are listed in order it would be between 2 and 6 November 1644. Richard was about 36 years old and had been in the Colony for about 8 years. Hester was born between1621-1625, the daughter of Francis and Hester (Mahieu) Cooke. She may have been born in Leiden and come to Plymouth on the Anne with her mother in 1623 or been born in Plymouth after their arrival. Francis came to Plymouth on the Mayflower.

Although only the births of two children were recorded, George Bowman, editor of the Mayflower Descendant, sorted out the family.

Richard and Hester had six children:

1. Adam, born about 1645, married first Sarah Soule (granddaughter of George Soule of the Mayflower); second Mehitable Barrows. He had six children by the first wife and four by the second.
2. John, predeceased his father, unmarried and without issue.
3. Esther, born Plymouth in 1649 (only year given in Vital Records), married Ephraim Tinkham, grandson of Peter Brown of the Mayflower, had six children.
4. Isaac, born at Plymouth 26 August 1652, died in 1675 or 76, without issue and apparently unmarried.
5. Samuel, died before his father, unmarried and without issue.
6. Mary, married Hugh Price and had two children.

Birth records for Esther and Isaac are the only ones found. John, Isaac and Samuel likely died in King Philip’s War, although their names aren’t included in Bodge’s Soldiers in King Philip’s War.

John wrote a will on 7 December 1675, probated 7 July 1676, that mentions his going to war and names his father Richard Wright, his brothers Adam, Isaac and Samuel and his sisters Esther and Mary Wright.

I descend through Adam Wright and his first wife Sarah Soule. I wrote about them here.

On 5 June 1644 and 4 June 1645 Richard was propounded as Freeman.

Richard Wright is on several committees and held several offices as follows: Jury 2 March 1646/7; jury 6 March 1648/9, 7 June 1649, 5 March 1649/50, 2 Oct 1650, 4 March 1650/1, 7 June 1651, 2 March 1651/2 4 October 1653, 6 December 1653, and 4 October 1655; Petty jury 1 June 1647, coroner's jury on the sudden death of John Bond, 23 July 1661; constable of Plymouth 6 June 1652.

On 7 June 1659 he was given liberty to look for land. He was granted land as an ancient freeman "on the northerly bounds of Taunton" on 3 June 1662. He was again given liberty to look for land on 8 June 1664. Land Richard Wright had received earlier from Francis Cooke was ratified by John Cooke on 5 July 1670. Following a request for land in the right of Peter Maycocke, sometimes a servant, the Court determined no right to his claim but allowed him to search for land 1 June 1675. Land was granted Richard Wright, 50 acres out of land that was Tatamamuck’s land, on 7 July 1680.

In another deed, dated 9 May 1669, Richard Wright, with wife Esther releasing dower, gave land in Plymouth to his son John. On 7 June 1676 Richard Wright received four pounds from the estate of his son Isacke Wright, deceased.

Richard was sued by his brother-in-law John Tomson on 1 March 1663 to receive half of the land at Manassakett allotted to Francis Cooke that was granted to Hester Cooke. Tomson argue his wife Mary Cooke should have received half of the land and was so granted by the court.

The heirs of Francis Cooke signed an agreement dated 8 June 1666: "The marke R: of Richard Wright in the behalfe of hester his wife."

Hester’s date of death is not known but she predeceased her husband. She likely died between 8 June 1666, when she signed an agreement of heirs of Francis Cooke, and before 7 December 1675, the date of her son John’s will.

Richard died in Plymouth on 9 June1691 "about two hours after being about 83 yeares old."

Richard wrote a will on 8 June 1691, the day before he died. He mentioned only his son Adam, his daughter Esther, and his widowed daughter Mary Price.

His will and inventory are transcribed in the Mayflower Descendant, Vol. 4, pg 165-67.
Originals are found in the Plymouth County Probate Records, Volume 1, pages 101 - 103.
I Richard Wright of ye Town of Plimouth in ye County and Colony of New Plimouth in New England being at Present of Sound and disposing mind and memory under bodily weaknesses not knowing when the hour of my death shall Come do make this my last Will and Testament in maner and forme following hereby Revoaking all former Wills First I comitt my soul to God that made it Resting on ye onely merrits of Christ my Redeemer for Eternall Salvation and my body to ye earth to be buried in a decent maner. My worldly Estate that God hath lent me I thus dispose: my will is that all my Estate Real and Personall House lands money or any moveables & Chattels in what kind soever be equally and faithfully divided betwixt my three Children Adam Esther and Mary Also my Will is that my daughter Mary have her living in my house During her Widowhoode and in as much as my son Adam hath heretofore had a full double portion in lands my will & desire is that my sd Son deal kindly in Carefull providing what in him lies for my daughter Mary price Also I Make my son and two daughters Executors of this my last Will & Testament Also I do hereby appoint & desire my loving friends John Nelson & Isaac Cushman to be Overseers of this my Will and I Intreate their care to se it faithfully prformed in a just distribution of my estate to my Children as is above Expressed In Attestation yt this is my last Will and Testament I Set to my hand & seal This Eigth day of june 1691 I desire also & Impower John Sturtevant to be on of ye overseers of this my will.
Signed Sealed & declared by The mark of
Richard Wright to be his Richard Wright
last will and Testament
In presence of
John Cotton
Nathll Southworth
ye mark M of Martha Cobb:
june 24th 1691 Mr John Cotton and Nathll Southworth two Of ye witnesses here named made oath in Plimouth before ye Magistrates of ye County of Plimouth that they were present and Saw ye above named Richard Wright Sign & Seal & heard him declare this above written to be his last will & Testament & yt to ye best of yr judgment he was of a disposing mind & memory when he so did
Attest Sam Sprague Clerk

June ye 19th day 1691 An Inventory of ye Estate of Richard Wright late deceased taken by us whose names are under written.

Item one Bed and Boulster 03 00 00
One Rugg and one Blanket 00 05 00
One Pillow 00 02 00
One Silkgrass Bed and Boulster 00 08 00
One Curtaine & two Cushions 00 01 06
One Trammill 00 03 00
One pair of Tongs 00 02 00
4 hooks 00 02 00
One Spade 00 02 00
One Ax
More: Old Iron 00 02 00
4 hinges 00 01 00
2 Iron Kittles 00 06 00
One Iron Skillet 00 02 06
One Iron Pot and Pott hookes 00 04 00
One ffrying Pan 00 00 06
One Warming Pan 00 08 00
One Brass Kettle 00 10 00
One Gun 00 18 00
One Sword 00 03 00
More Wooden Dishes 00 01 00
two Earthen Potts 00 00 04
One Barbours Bason 00 00 09
One Glass Bottle 00 00 04
One Book 00 01 06
One pair of sheers 00 00 06
One pair of Pillowbeers 00 03 00
3 sheetes 00 10 00
One Pewter 00 03 06
One Boul 00 02 00
One Pewter Bottle 00 01 06
One Pewter Pot 00 01 06
1 Pewter Bason and Sawcer 00 01 00
One chamber Pott 00 02 00
One Candlestick 00 00 04
One Pail 00 00 06
One chest 00 07 00
One chest 00 02 06
More old Cask 00 03 00
One Box 02 02 02
One Chaire 00 01 00
More Cloathing 02 04 04
One shirt 00 06 09
One shirt 00 04 06
One pair of Drawers 0 01 0
More in Small linnen 0 02 6
More in woollen Cloathing shoose & stockings & hat 0 14 0
One pewter platter 0 24 6
One Pewter Platter 0 02 6
One Pewter Platter 0 03 0
3 Porrengers 0 23 0
one Pewter Bason and Sawcer 0 24 0
one Bagg 0 26 0
one yearling in ye hand of Adam Wright 0 15 0
one ox & one Cow in ye hand of Ephraim Tinkam 4 10 0
More in ye hand of Ephraim Tinkam 0 24 6
one Blanket a Box & a Band 0 12 6
More in ye hand of Caleb Cooke 4 00 0
More in ye hand Mr Jno Cotton senr 1 01 11
More in Silver Money 5 18 24
More in ye hand of Joseph Sturtevant 0 02 6
More in ye hand of John Gray 0 27 11
One Table 0 01 0
More in ye hand of Ephraim Tinkam 1 10 0
Item the land both of upland and meddow 21 00 0
Item Charge for ye ffunerall 1 0 0
More due to William Shirtliff 0 1 4
More due to John Sturtevant 0 2 0
More due to Adam Wright 0 3 0
Isaac Cushman
John Sturtevant
June 24th 1691 Adam Wright made Oath in Plimouth before ye Magistrates of ye County of Plimouth That the before written is a True Inventory of ye estate of his ffather Richard Wright late of Plimouth deceased So far as he knoweth & that if more shall come to his knowledge he will discover it
Attest Samll Sprague Clerk

Note: There was a different Richard Wright, called Captain in records, who lived at Hingham and Rehoboth.

Sources Not Listed Above:

Eugene Stratton, Plymouth Colony, Its History and People, 1986
Ralph V. Wood, Mayflower Families Through Five Generations, Francis Cooke, 1996
Robert S. Wakefield, Richard Wright of Plymouth Mass., The American Genealogist, Vol 59, July 1983
George Ernest Bowman, Adam Wright’s Wives and Their Children, Mayflower Descendant, Volume 11, 1909
George Ernest Bowman, Richard and Hester Wright’s Children, Mayflower Descendant, Volume 24 
Cooke, Hester (I35827)
 
71
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Re: McQuiggs of Co. Antrim, IRELAND (Islandcarragh)
Posted by: Jay McAfee (ID *****5224) Date: August 12, 2004 at 00:38:12
In Reply to: Burials at Dunluce Graveyard, Co. Antrim by J McAfee of 1976

In old Dunluce (Cemetery) there is a tombstone to Anna Maria McKinley, died 1790, wife of John McQuigg of Islandcarragh. She is said to be the same McKinley as Francis of 1798 and President William (McKinley - US President). (page 359, Families of Ballyrashane, T. H. Mullin).
------------------------------------------

McQuiggs do not appear in the Hearth Money Roll for Ballyrashane parish or in the McNaghten tenant roll of 1713 or in the Protestant housekeepers of 1740. They must have come to Islandcarragh in the latter half of the eighteenth century as there are three tombstones to McQuiggs of Islandcarragh in old Dunluce graveyard. These three tombstones are erected to:

Anna Maria McKinlay, died 1790, wife of John McQuigg of Islandcarragh;
William McQuigg of Islandcarragh, died 1797 aged 67;
Samuel McQuigg, died 1824, and his wife, Molly Brown, died 1817.

The present representative of the family, Samuel John McQuigg of Islandcarragh, lives in a house built in 1892 on a farm purchased by the McQuigg family. The McQuigg who farmed here emigrated, and sold to Thompsons (the same Thompson as James Mayne Thompson of Bushmills Road), who sold to Logue, who re-sold to the McQuiggs who farmed on the opposite side of the road. This latter farm was never bought or sold since the McQuiggs came to Islandcarragh. S.J. McQuigg's uncles, James and Moore, inherited a farm at Senirl from their father.
Moore McQuigg emigrated to Kalamazoo, where he built in 1929 the fine First Presbyterian Church in this city at a cost of 375,000 dollars. James McQuigg sold Senirl to Henry McNickle and bought a farm at Ballyhunsley from Mrs. McVicker who married his brother Samuel of Islandcarragh. This Ballyhunsley farm is now Robert Bleakley's.
McQuiggs of Ballyclough were the same family. The McQuigg farms in Islandcarragh and Ballyclough marched one another, and there was a path across the fields between the two farmsteads. This line of this path can still be traced. A Samuel McQuigg of Ballyclough was married to a Lyle of Carncoggie; his grandson William John led the singing in the old Presbyterian church of Benvarden or Carncoggie. A Miss Dyson, a missionary in Egypt, is descended from the McQuiggs of Ballyclough. The McQuiggs of Berehill were also the same family. The Ballyclough farm is now Cochranes: Cochranes originally came from the Limavady district. Another related McQuigg family was McQuigg of Ballyrock; this farm is now owned by Robert Walker of Ballyrock. (pages 332-333, Families of Ballyrashane by T.H. Mullin).

William is on the 1790 Freeholders list for County Antrim and was living in Islandcarragh
Townland, Dunluce Civil Parish, County Antrim, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom

From the old Dunce parish Church yard:

Here leith the body
of William McQuigg
Late of Islandcarragh
who departed this life
the 3rd day of April, 1797
aged 67 years

**************************************************************
There are some that have William (1730) and Malcolm (1761) as brothers rather than father and son. 
McQuigg, William (I8375)
 
72
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Re: McQuiggs of Co. Antrim, IRELAND (Islandcarragh)
Posted by: Jay McAfee (ID *****5224) Date: August 12, 2004 at 00:38:12
In Reply to: Burials at Dunluce Graveyard, Co. Antrim by J McAfee of 1976

In old Dunluce (Cemetery) there is a tombstone to Anna Maria McKinley, died 1790, wife of John McQuigg of Islandcarragh. She is said to be the same McKinley as Francis of 1798 and President William (McKinley - US President). (page 359, Families of Ballyrashane, T. H. Mullin).
------------------------------------------

McQuiggs do not appear in the Hearth Money Roll for Ballyrashane parish or in the McNaghten tenant roll of 1713 or in the Protestant housekeepers of 1740. They must have come to Islandcarragh in the latter half of the eighteenth century as there are three tombstones to McQuiggs of Islandcarragh in old Dunluce graveyard. These three tombstones are erected to:

Anna Maria McKinlay, died 1790, wife of John McQuigg of Islandcarragh;
William McQuigg of Islandcarragh, died 1797 aged 67;
Samuel McQuigg, died 1824, and his wife, Molly Brown, died 1817.

The present representative of the family, Samuel John McQuigg of Islandcarragh, lives in a house built in 1892 on a farm purchased by the McQuigg family. The McQuigg who farmed here emigrated, and sold to Thompsons (the same Thompson as James Mayne Thompson of Bushmills Road), who sold to Logue, who re-sold to the McQuiggs who farmed on the opposite side of the road. This latter farm was never bought or sold since the McQuiggs came to Islandcarragh. S.J. McQuigg's uncles, James and Moore, inherited a farm at Senirl from their father.
Moore McQuigg emigrated to Kalamazoo, where he built in 1929 the fine First Presbyterian Church in this city at a cost of 375,000 dollars. James McQuigg sold Senirl to Henry McNickle and bought a farm at Ballyhunsley from Mrs. McVicker who married his brother Samuel of Islandcarragh. This Ballyhunsley farm is now Robert Bleakley's.
McQuiggs of Ballyclough were the same family. The McQuigg farms in Islandcarragh and Ballyclough marched one another, and there was a path across the fields between the two farmsteads. This line of this path can still be traced. A Samuel McQuigg of Ballyclough was married to a Lyle of Carncoggie; his grandson William John led the singing in the old Presbyterian church of Benvarden or Carncoggie. A Miss Dyson, a missionary in Egypt, is descended from the McQuiggs of Ballyclough. The McQuiggs of Berehill were also the same family. The Ballyclough farm is now Cochranes: Cochranes originally came from the Limavady district. Another related McQuigg family was McQuigg of Ballyrock; this farm is now owned by Robert Walker of Ballyrock. (pages 332-333, Families of Ballyrashane by T.H. Mullin).

John is lited on the 1790 Freeholders list for County Antrim and was living in Islandcarragh. 
McQuigg, John Sr (I5060)
 
73
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Re: McQuiggs of Co. Antrim, IRELAND (Islandcarragh)
Posted by: Jay McAfee (ID *****5224) Date: August 12, 2004 at 00:38:12
In Reply to: Burials at Dunluce Graveyard, Co. Antrim by J McAfee of 1976

In old Dunluce (Cemetery) there is a tombstone to Anna Maria McKinley, died 1790, wife of John McQuigg of Islandcarragh. She is said to be the same McKinley as Francis of 1798 and President William (McKinley - US President). (page 359, Families of Ballyrashane, T. H. Mullin).
------------------------------------------

McQuiggs do not appear in the Hearth Money Roll for Ballyrashane parish or in the McNaghten tenant roll of 1713 or in the Protestant housekeepers of 1740. They must have come to Islandcarragh in the latter half of the eighteenth century as there are three tombstones to McQuiggs of Islandcarragh in old Dunluce graveyard. These three tombstones are erected to:

Anna Maria McKinlay, died 1790, wife of John McQuigg of Islandcarragh;
William McQuigg of Islandcarragh, died 1797 aged 67;
Samuel McQuigg, died 1824, and his wife, Molly Brown, died 1817.

(Samuel) McQuigg of Ballyclough who departed this life (1817)

Samuel and Molly nee’ Brown McQuigg appear on the 1803 Agricultural Census for Ballyclough.

The present representative of the family, Samuel John McQuigg of Island Carragh, lives in a house built in 1892 on a farm purchased by the McQuigg family. The McQuigg who farmed here emigrated, and sold to Thompsons (the same Thompson as James Mayne Thompson of Bushmills Road), who sold to Logue, who re-sold to the McQuiggs who farmed on the opposite side of the road. This latter farm was never bought or sold since the McQuiggs came to Islandcarragh. S.J. McQuigg's uncles, James and Moore, inherited a farm at Senirl from their father.
Moore McQuigg emigrated to Kalamazoo, where he built in 1929 the fine First Presbyterian Church in this city at a cost of 375,000 dollars. James McQuigg sold Senirl to Henry McNickle and bought a farm at Ballyhunsley from Mrs. McVicker who married his brother Samuel of Islandcarragh. This Ballyhunsley farm is now Robert Bleakley's.
McQuiggs of Ballyclough were the same family. The McQuigg farms in Islandcarragh and Ballyclough marched one another, and there was a path across the fields between the two farmsteads. This line of this path can still be traced. A Samuel McQuigg of Ballyclough was married to a Lyle of Carncoggie; his grandson William John led the singing in the old Presbyterian church of Benvarden or Carncoggie. A Miss Dyson, a missionary in Egypt, is descended from the McQuiggs of Ballyclough. The McQuiggs of Berehill were also the same family. The Ballyclough farm is now Cochranes: Cochranes originally came from the Limavady district. Another related McQuigg family was McQuigg of Ballyrock; this farm is now owned by Robert Walker of Ballyrock. (pages 332-333, Families of Ballyrashane by T.H. Mullin).

Samuel is on the 1790 Freeholders list for County Antrim and was living in Ballyclough Townland, Dunluce Civil Parish, County Antrim, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom. 
McQuigg, Samuel (I14683)
 
74
See-About Mary Montifex, co-heiress of Montefichet
Mary Montifex
F, #102464, b. 1325
Last Edited=2 Mar 2005
Mary Montifex was born in 1325.2 She was the daughter of Sir William de Montifex.1 She married Sir John Drummond, 11th of Lennox, son of Sir Malcolm Drummond, 10th Thane of Lennox and Margaret de Graham.2

Her married name became Drummond.2 She was also known as Mary Montfichet.

Children of Mary Montifex and Sir John Drummond, 11th of Lennox

* Dougal Drummond 2
* Annabel Drummond+ b. c 1350, d. c Oct 14011
* Sir Malcolm Drummond b. 1351, d. 14032
* Margaret Drummond b. 13542
* Sir John Drummond, 12th of Lennox+ b. 1356, d. 14282
* Mary Drummond b. 13572
* William Drummond b. 13582
* Jean Drummond b. 13622
Notes
From Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Peerage and Baronetage of the British Empire (Google eBook) Bernard Burke Harrison, 1865 - Nobility - 1323 pages. Page 877:

"Sir John Drummond, m, in 1360, Mary, dau. of Sir William de Montifex, heiress of Stobhall, and of large possessions in Perthshire. His eldest dau. Annabella, a lady of great beauty and merit, m. King Robert III., was crowned with him at Scone, in September, 1390, and is ancestress of Queen Victoria, and of most of the crowned heads of Europe."

Known to be alive at January 31st, 1375 and died shortly afterwards

From Drummond Clan

"Meantime, by the marriage of Sir John Drummond, grandson of the Drummond who fought at Bannockburn, to Mary the daughter and heiress of Sir William de Montifex, the family had come into possession of Stobhall on the Tay and large possessions in Perthshire, and a further alliance with the royal house was made when Sir John’s eldest daughter Annabella became the wife of King Robert III., and was crowned with him at Scone in September, 1390. Through this marriage all the succeeding Kings of Scotland and of Britain have been descended from the House of Drummond, and there is Drummond blood in the veins of most of the crowned heads of Europe."

Citations
1. Alison Weir, Britain's Royal Family: A Complete Genealogy (London, U.K.: The Bodley Head, 1999), page 227. Hereinafter cited as Britain's Royal Family.
2. Derek Hughes, "re: 1st Lord Drummond," e-mail message from (unknown address) to Darryl Lundy, 22 December 2004, 13 February 2005 and 2 March 2005. Hereinafter cited as "re: 1st Lord Drummond".
Genealogical memoir of the most noble and ancient house of Drummond, David Malcolm, (Drummond-Genealogical memoir of the most noble and ancient house of Drummond 1808 by David Malcolm.pdf on file E://genealogy/books). GoogleBooks 
Montifex, Lady Mary Margaret (I34750)
 
75
Something strange this way comes when Fred and both of his wives all die on the same day. 
Rosburg, Minnie (I8534)
 
76
The German transcription :

13 J[anuar]. Lorenzen Thomaen
ein Söhnlein getaufft Ex.
Nicolaūs Schmid
Ar[chdiaconus]. Christophori filius.

The English translation :

13 J[anuary]. Lorenz Thomae
a son is baptized after
Nicolaus Schmidt
Ar[chdiaconus]. Christopher’s son. 
THOMÆ, Nicolaus (I33035)
 
77
The German transcription :

22 Jan[uar].  Ernsten Thomae ein
töchterlein getaūfft Ex. Veit
Schneiers tochter Anna.

The English translation :

22 Jan[uary]. [ 1613 ] Ernsten Thomae
little daughter baptized after Veit
Schneiers daughter Anna. 
THOMÆ, Anna (I33045)
 
78
The Thoma family lived from 1687 to 1772 in house number 46 in Hofstädten. It was in 1687 in the possession of Stephan Thomæ. In 1706 half of the house was owned by Johann Sebastian Thomæ and half by his daughter. In 1740 it was half owned by Johann Sebastian Thomæ and half by Christian Valentin Thomæ. In 1741 if was fully owned by Christian Valentine Thomæ. In 1765 it passed to George Friedrich Thomæ And in 1772 it passed into the possession of Waldaster Deysing. 
Thomæ, Johann Sebastian (I3668)
 
79
There are a number of Plucars buried in the National Cemetrery in Vining, Tama, Iowa but I could not find Anna buried there. But there are a number of Plucars buried there that could easily be her children. 
Kouba, Anna (I22278)
 
80
There is no real evidence for Joseph to be the son of Thomas and Nancy Densman. He is the right age to take the place of a male child on the 1830 census of Thomas and his family. Joseph always stated that his father was from Pennsylvania. There is no evidence of Joseph on the 1850 census. But I suspect that he left for the 1849 gold rush to California. And when that did not pan out he moved to Oregon where he shows up on the 1853, 1854, and 1858 state census records. He shows up on the 1860 census for Jacksonville, Jackson County, Oregon census. And he is still there in 1870 but he is now married. The census is faded, but I believe that I have it correct. By 1880 he is living in Douglas County, but still a miner but he is not longer married either through divorce or death. His son is no longer with him and I suspect he was dead. In 1893 he again married this time to Gustine Nixon and in 1900 they are living in Perdue, Douglas. In 1910 they are living in Logan County, Arkansas; the home of Gustine.

Like his brother, Thomas he was a miner. And in one of the census records (1900?) Thomas is visiting Joseph in Oregon and shows up on the census. 
Densman, Joseph (I2791)
 
81
Thomas Hargrave
Birth 1500 London,,Middlesex,England
Death: Died 1540 in London,,Middlesex,England
Immediate Family:
Husband of Rose Hargrave
Father of Elizabeth Cole 
Hargraves, Archdeacon Thomas (I25237)
 
82
Thomas served as a private in the 8th Regiment, Missouri State Militia Cavalry during the Civil War. He mustered out as a corporal. His wife, Melissa, applied for his pension. In 1870 he was living adjacent to his sister Anna Catherine Densman Simmons. 
Densman, Thomas Stephans Jr (I875)
 
83
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Mörlin. Jeremias (Jeremiah}
Born Braunschweig [Braunschweig, Braunschweig, Niedersachsen, Germany] on 12 Oct 1554, died Medenau [Logvino, Kaliningrad, Russia]? 1607, father; Joachim Mörlin Bishop of Samland. University Rostock [Rostock, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany] 1575 and Königsberg [Kaliningrad, Kaliningrad, Russia] 5 Jul 1575, teacher at the Old Town School in Königsberg [Kaliningrad, Kaliningrad, Russia]. Doctor of Philosophy Rostock [Rostock, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany] on 22 Mar 1580. In 1580 he became pastor in Medenau [Logvino, Kaliningrad, Russia]. Married Maria Klever, daughter of Martin Klever the Burggraf (Burgrave) to Laptau [Muromskoye, Kaliningrad, Russia].
Children:
1. Jeremias (Jeremiah) Mörlin, born Medenau [Logvino, Kaliningrad, Russia] in 1591, University of Königsberg [Kaliningrad, Kaliningrad, Russia] 27 Feb 1605.
2. Martin Mörlin born Medenau [Logvino, Kaliningrad, Russia], died. Siouxt (Kurland) 1646; University of Königsberg [Kaliningrad, Kaliningrad, Russia], 27.2.1605, on scholarship, University of Rostock [Rostock, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany] 1621, since 1633 pastor in Siouxt.
3. Kathe Mörlin, married Gotthard Grávius, pastor in Bartau [Barta, Liepaja, Latvia] (Kurland). 
Mörlin, Martin (I30114)
 
84
Verein für Familsenforschung ia Ost. und Westpreußen e. V.
Quellen, Mateialien und Sanımlungen
zu altpreußischen Familienfonschung (QMS)
Nr. 19/4

Das “Zwischenmanuskript” zum
Altpreußischen evangelischen Pfarrerbuch

Band 4: L.aasch bis Nutzelius

Auf der Grandlage der Samınlungen von
Friedwald Moeller
bearbeitet von
Walther Müller-Dultz, Reinhold Heling

und
Wilhelm Kranz

Hamburg 2013
In Selbstverlag des Vereins

Mörlin. Jeremias (Jeremiah}
Born Braunschweig [Braunschweig, Braunschweig, Niedersachsen, Germany] on 12 Oct 1554, died Medenau [Logvino, Kaliningrad, Russia]? 1607, father; Joachim Mörlin Bishop of Samland. University Rostock [Rostock, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany] 1575 and Königsberg [Kaliningrad, Kaliningrad, Russia] 5 Jul 1575, teacher at the Old Town School in Königsberg [Kaliningrad, Kaliningrad, Russia]. Doctor of Philosophy Rostock [Rostock, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany] on 22 Mar 1580. In 1580 he became pastor in Medenau [Logvino, Kaliningrad, Russia]. Married Maria Klever, daughter of Martin Klever the Burggraf (Burgrave) to Laptau [Muromskoye, Kaliningrad, Russia].
Children:
1. Jeremias (Jeremiah) Mörlin, born Medenau [Logvino, Kaliningrad, Russia] in 1591, University of Königsberg [Kaliningrad, Kaliningrad, Russia] 27 Feb 1605.
2. Martin Mörlin born Medenau [Logvino, Kaliningrad, Russia], died. Siouxt (Kurland) 1646; University of Königsberg [Kaliningrad, Kaliningrad, Russia], 27.2.1605, on scholarship, University of Rostock [Rostock, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany] 1621, since 1633 pastor in Siouxt.
3. Kathe Mörlin, married Gotthard Grávius, pastor in Bartau [Barta, Liepaja, Latvia] (Kurland). 
Klever, Margaretha (I30082)
 
85
Verein für Familsenforschung ia Ost. und Westpreußen e. V.
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zu altpreußischen Familienfonschung (QMS)
Nr. 19/4

Das “Zwischenmanuskript” zum
Altpreußischen evangelischen Pfarrerbuch

Band 4: L.aasch bis Nutzelius

Auf der Grandlage der Samınlungen von
Friedwald Moeller
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und
Wilhelm Kranz

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Mörlin. Jeremias (Jeremiah}
Born Braunschweig [Braunschweig, Braunschweig, Niedersachsen, Germany] on 12 Oct 1554, died Medenau [Logvino, Kaliningrad, Russia]? 1607, father; Joachim Mörlin Bishop of Samland. University Rostock [Rostock, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany] 1575 and Königsberg [Kaliningrad, Kaliningrad, Russia] 5 Jul 1575, teacher at the Old Town School in Königsberg [Kaliningrad, Kaliningrad, Russia]. Doctor of Philosophy Rostock [Rostock, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany] on 22 Mar 1580. In 1580 he became pastor in Medenau [Logvino, Kaliningrad, Russia]. Married Maria Klever, daughter of Martin Klever the Burggraf (Burgrave) to Laptau [Muromskoye, Kaliningrad, Russia].
Children:
1. Jeremias (Jeremiah) Mörlin, born Medenau [Logvino, Kaliningrad, Russia] in 1591, University of Königsberg [Kaliningrad, Kaliningrad, Russia] 27 Feb 1605.
2. Martin Mörlin born Medenau [Logvino, Kaliningrad, Russia], died. Siouxt (Kurland) 1646; University of Königsberg [Kaliningrad, Kaliningrad, Russia], 27.2.1605, on scholarship, University of Rostock [Rostock, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany] 1621, since 1633 pastor in Siouxt.
3. Kathe Mörlin, married Gotthard Grávius, pastor in Bartau [Barta, Liepaja, Latvia] (Kurland). 
Mörlin, Kathe (I30089)
 
86
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In Selbstverlag des Vereins

Mörlin. Jeremias (Jeremiah}
Born Braunschweig [Braunschweig, Braunschweig, Niedersachsen, Germany] on 12 Oct 1554, died Medenau [Logvino, Kaliningrad, Russia]? 1607, father; Joachim Mörlin Bishop of Samland. University Rostock [Rostock, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany] 1575 and Königsberg [Kaliningrad, Kaliningrad, Russia] 5 Jul 1575, teacher at the Old Town School in Königsberg [Kaliningrad, Kaliningrad, Russia]. Doctor of Philosophy Rostock [Rostock, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany] on 22 Mar 1580. In 1580 he became pastor in Medenau [Logvino, Kaliningrad, Russia]. Married Maria Klever, daughter of Martin Klever the Burggraf (Burgrave) to Laptau [Muromskoye, Kaliningrad, Russia].
Children:
1. Jeremias (Jeremiah) Mörlin, born Medenau [Logvino, Kaliningrad, Russia] in 1591, University of Königsberg [Kaliningrad, Kaliningrad, Russia] 27 Feb 1605.
2. Martin Mörlin born Medenau [Logvino, Kaliningrad, Russia], died. Siouxt (Kurland) 1646; University of Königsberg [Kaliningrad, Kaliningrad, Russia], 27.2.1605, on scholarship, University of Rostock [Rostock, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany] 1621, since 1633 pastor in Siouxt.
3. Kathe Mörlin, married Gotthard Grávius, pastor in Bartau [Barta, Liepaja, Latvia] (Kurland). 
Mörlin, Jeremias (I30113)
 
87
Vortiporius
Vortiporius or Vortipor (Old Welsh: Guortepir, Middle Welsh Gwrdeber or Gwerthefyr)[1] was a king of Dyfed in the early to mid-6th century. He ruled over an area approximately corresponding to modern Pembrokeshire, Wales. Records from this era are scant, and virtually nothing is known of him or his kingdom. The only contemporary information about Vortiporius comes from the Welsh ecclesiastic Gildas, in a highly allegorical condemnation from his De Excidio et Conquestu Britanniae (English: "On the Ruin and Conquest of Britain"). At the time the work was written (c. 540), Gildas says that Vortiporius was king of Dyfed, that he was grey with age, that his wife had died, and that he had at least one daughter.[2][3]
As a legendary king in Geoffrey of Monmouth's 12th-century treatment of the Matter of Britain, the Historia Regum Britanniae, Vortiporius was the successor of Aurelius Conanus and was succeeded by Malgo. He is not mentioned in the 9th-century Historia Brittonum attributed to Nennius. Vortiporius appears in the Irish genealogy given in the 8th-century work The Expulsion of the Déisi, in which his name is given as Gartbuir.[4] The pedigree given in the Harleian MS. 5389, written c. 1100, is nearly identical, with his name given as Guortepir.[5] In the Jesus College MS. 20, he is called Gwrdeber.[6] The genealogy in Expulsion says he was a descendant of Eochaid Allmuir (English: "Eochaid the Foreigner" [literally (from) Overseas]),[7] who is said to have led a sept of the Déisi in their settlement of Dyfed c. 270.[8]
A memorial stone was discovered in 1895 near the church of Castell
Dwyran in Carmarthenshire bearing a Christian cross and with inscriptions
in both Latin and in ogham.[9] Dedicated to Voteporigis in the Latin
inscription and Votegorigas in ogham, it was immediately assumed that this referred to Vortiporius. However, this assumption is refuted by modern linguistic analysis, which notes that the missing 'r' in the first syllable of 'Voteporigis'/'Votegorigas' is significant, and so the stone must be dedicated to a different person.[10]

Map showing Dyfed, after the late 7th century, showing its seven cantrefi.

Map showing the location of Dyfed in southwesternmost Wales.

Contents
Gildas
Possible monument stone

Geoffrey of Monmouth Family
See also
Citations
References

Gildas
In his De Excidio et Conquestu Britanniae (English: On the Ruin and Conquest of Britain), written c. 540, Gildas makes an allegorical condemnation of 5 British kings by likening them to the beasts of the Christian Apocalypse as expressed in the biblical Book of Revelation, 13-2: the lion, leopard, bear, and dragon.[11] In the course of his condemnations, Gildas makes passing reference to the other beasts mentioned in the Apocalypse, such as the eagle, serpent, calf, and wolf. Vortiporius is called "the spotted leopard" and the "tyrant of the Demetians", where Demetia is the ancient name of Dyfed.
Gildas restricts his attention to the kings of Gwynedd (Maelgwn Gwynedd), Dyfed (Vortiporius), Penllyn (probable, as its king Cuneglasus/Cynlas appears in royal genealogies associated with the region),[12] Damnonia/Alt Clud (Constantine), and the unknown region associated with Caninus. These are all Welsh kingdoms except for Alt Clud, which had a long and ongoing relationship with Gwynedd and its kings.
The reason for Gildas' disaffection for these individuals is unknown. He was selective in his choice of kings, as he had no comments concerning the kings of the other British kingdoms that were thriving at the time, such as Rheged, Gododdin, Elmet, Pengwern/Powys, or the kingdoms of modern-day southern England. Gildas claims outrage over moral depravity, and begins the condemnation of the five kings with an attack against the mother of one of the kings, calling her an "unclean lioness".[13][14]
Of Vortiporius Gildas says little other than offering condemnation for "sins" and providing the few personal
details previously mentioned. He is alleged to be the bad son of a good father. Gildas also attacks his
daughter, calling her "shameless",[2][3] and implies that Vortiporius raped or had a sexual relationship with her.[15]
Possible monument stone
A c. 5th-6th century monument bearing both Latin and Irish ogham inscriptions is known from Castell Dwyran, Carmarthenshire, Wales. Its Latin inscription reads Memoria Voteporigis Protictoris (English: Monument of Voteporix Protector). The ogham inscription carries only the Goidelic form of his name in the genitive: Votecorigas. Protector (spelled here Protictoris, in the genitive) in the Latin inscription may imply a Roman-era honorific bestowed upon his ancestors, retained as a hereditary title into the 6th century. However, linguist Eric Hamp questions whether this is truly a title, suggesting that Protector may rather be a Latin translation of Uoteporix (which has essentially the same meaning as the Latin), a "sort of onomastic explanatory gloss".[16] The ogham inscription in Goidelic shows that the Irish language was still in use at that time, and had not yet died out in South Wales.[17][18]
The stone's original location at the church is next to a meadow known locally as
Parc yr Eglwys. Local tradition carries the admonition that plowing must not be done near the church. Examination of the meadow showed evidence of large hut-circles.

The Latin inscription on the 'Monument of Voteporigis the Protector', from a rubbing of the stone.

There remains a substantial question
as to whether the stone refers to
Vortiporius or to a similarly named
individual, 'Voteporigis', as the 'r' in
the first syllable would give the name
different meaning. Rhys argued that
the two individuals were the same
person, saying that the 'r' had been
added at a later date, and offering
several suppositions as to how this
might have happened.[18] However, he was working before the twentieth century advancements in the study of ancient Celtic languages, and his philological conclusions are suspect. More recently, Patrick Sims- Williams[19] notes that the two names cannot refer to the same individual due to differences in their etymologies, adding that dating the stone to the time of Vortiporius may not be valid because it relies on the inexact dating of manuscripts and their transcriptions.[10]
Geoffrey of Monmouth
Geoffrey's mention of Vortiporius is contained in a brief chapter titled "Uortiporius, being declared king, conquers the Saxons". He says that Uortiporius succeeded Aurelius Conan, and after he was declared king, the Saxons rose against him and brought over their countrymen from Germany in a great fleet, but that these were defeated. Uortiporius then ruled peacefully for four years, beings succeeded by "Malgo" (Maelgwn Gwynedd).[20] Geoffrey's fertile imagination is the only source of this information.
The Myvyrian Archaiology of Wales, an early 19th-century collection of Welsh histories, repeats Geoffrey's account, referring to him as 'Gwrthevyr' (though Vortiporius' proper Modern Welsh spelling is Gwrdebyr; here the name has been confused with that of Vortimer, the son of Vortigern).[21] In his Britannicarum Ecclesiarum Antiquitates, James Ussher also repeats the account, attributing the information to Geoffrey.[22]
Family
Vortipor was a son of Aergol Lawhir,[23] so a grandson of Triffyn Farfog.[24] He had a son named Cyngar.
See also
Vortimer, also known as Gwrthefyr in Welsh sources
Citations
1. Koch, John, Celtic Culture: a historical encyclopedia, ABC-CLIO, 2006, p. 864: "In Old Welsh sources, the name Guortepir, corresponding to the Vorteporius of Gildas...is kept distinct from Guorthemir, but in Middle Welsh texts the two tend to fall together as Gwerthefyr, the former unhistorically taking the form of the latter."

2. Giles 1841:27–28, De Excidio, section 31 (in English)

3. Giles:246–279, De Excidio, section 31 (in Latin)

The ogham inscription on the 'Monument of Voteporigis the Protector', translated by John Rhys, reading from bottom to top (image was rotated 90 degrees clockwise).

4. Meyer 1901:112–113, The Expulsion of the Dessi. The Irish form is given as "Tualodor mac Rigin maic Catacuind maic Caittienn maic Clotenn maic Naee maic Artuir maic Retheoir maic Congair maic Gartbuir maic Alchoil maic Trestin maic Aeda Brosc maic Corath maic Echach Almuir maic Arttchuirp". Meyer's translation is "Teudor son of Regin, son of Catgocaun, son of Cathen, son of Cloten, son of Nougoy, son of Arthur, son of Petr, son of Cincar, son of Guortepir, son of Aircol, son of Triphun, son of Áed Brosc, son of Corath, son of Eochaid Allmuir, son of Artchorp".
5. Phillimore 1888:171, Harleian MS. 3859, "... Teudos map Regin map Catgocaun map Cathen map Cloten map Nougoy map Arthur map Petr map Cincar map Guortepir map Aircol map Triphun ...".
6. Phillimore 1887:86, Pedigrees From Jesus College MS. 20. "... Teudos M. Gwgawn M. Cathen M. Eleothen M. Nennue M. Arthur M. Peder M. Kyngar M. Gwrdeber M. Erbin M. Aircol lawhir M. tryphun M. Ewein vreisc M. Cyndwr bendigeit ...". Ewein vreisc is given here for Áed Brosc given elsewhere, and Erbin is inserted between Gwrdeber and Aircol, where he is not listed elsewhere.
7. Dictionary of the Irish Language, Compact Edition, Royal Irish Academy, 1998; allmuir, p. 37, column 289, line 078

8. Meyer, Kuno (1896), "Early Relations Between Gael and Brython" (https://books.google.co m/books?id=m1kJAAAAIAAJ&pg=RA4-PA55), in Evans, E. Vincent (ed.), Transactions of the Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion, Session 1895–1896, I, London: Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion, pp. 55–86

9. Laws, Edward (1895), "Discovery of the Tombstone of Vortipore, Prince of Demetia" (https://b ooks.google.com/books?id=EgFPAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA303), Archaeologia Cambrensis, Fifth Series, XII, London: Chas. J. Clark, pp. 303–306

10. Sims-Williams, Patrick (2003), The Celtic Inscriptions of Britain: Phonology and Chronology, c. 400 – 1200, Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, pp. 342, 346–347, ISBN 1-4051-0903-3
11. *Anonymous (1884), "Revelation 13-2" (https://books.google.com/books?id=ypcNAAAAYAA J&pg=RA6-PA219), The Holy Bible, New York: American Bible Society, p. 219 — "And the beast which I saw was like unto a leopard, and his feet were as the feet of a bear, and his mouth as the mouth of a lion: and the dragon gave him his power, and his seat, and great authority." (underlining added)
12. Lloyd 1911:133, A History of Wales, Vol. I

13. Giles 1841:24–25, De Excidio, sections 28 and 29 (in English)

14. Giles:244–245, De Excidio, sections 28 and 29 (in Latin)

15. Gildas, De Excidio, Chapter 31, "by the violation of a shameless daughter" (impudentis filiae quodam ineluctabili)
16. Hamp, Eric P."Voteporigis Protictoris", in Studia Celtica, 30, 1996, p. 293.
17. Lloyd 1911:132–133, A History of Wales, Vol. I

18. Rhys, John (1895), "Notes on the Inscriptions on the Tombstone of Votipores, Prince of Demetia" (https://books.google.com/books?id=EgFPAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA307), Archaeologia Cambrensis, Fifth Series, XII, London: Chas. J. Clark, pp. 307–313

19. Sims-Williams, Patrick, The Celtic Inscriptions of Britain: Phonology and Chronology (Oxford, 2003), pp. 346-47.

20. Giles, John Allen, ed. (1848), "Geoffrey of Monmouth's British History" (https://books.google. com/books?id=6GQNAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA272), Six Old English Chronicles, London: George Bell and Sons (published 1900), pp. 89–294

21. Jones, Owen; Morganwg, Iolo; Pughe, William Owen, eds. (1801), "Brut G. Ab Arthur" (http s://books.google.com/books?id=E94KAAAAYAAJ&pg=RA1-PA359), The Myvyrian Archaiology of Wales (Prose), II, London: Jones, Morganwg, and Pughe, p. 359

22. Ussher, James (1639), "Caput IV" (https://books.google.com/books?id=solLAAAAMAAJ&pg =PA56), in Elrington, Charles Richard (ed.), Britannicarum Ecclesiarum Antiquitates (caput XIV-XVII), Dublin: Hodges and Smith (published 1847), p. 56

23. Harleian MS 3859, "Guortepir map Aircol"

24. Harleian MS 3859, Aircol map Triphun

References
Davies, John (1990), A History of Wales (First ed.), London: Penguin Group (published 1993), ISBN 0-7139-9098-8
Giles, John Allen, ed. (1841), The Works of Gildas and Nennius (https://books.google.com/b ooks?id=3R1mCE7p44MC), London: James Bohn — English translation
Giles, John Allen, ed. (1847), History of the Ancient Britons (https://books.google.com/book s?id=XX3TAAAAMAAJ), II (Second ed.), Oxford: W. Baxter (published 1854) — in Latin
Lloyd, John Edward (1911), A History of Wales from the Earliest Times to the Edwardian Conquest (https://books.google.com/books?id=NYwNAAAAIAAJ), I (2nd ed.), London: Longmans, Green, and Co (published 1912)
Meyer, Kuno, ed. (1901), "The Expulsion of the Dessi" (https://books.google.com/books?id= pbm3KK8EsaAC&pg=PA101), Y Cymmrodor, XIV, London: Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion, pp. 101–135
Phillimore, Egerton, ed. (1887), "Pedigrees from Jesus College MS. 20" (https://books.googl e.com/books?id=HlUrAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA83), Y Cymmrodor, VIII, Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion, pp. 83–92
Phillimore, Egerton (1888), "The Annales Cambriae and Old Welsh Genealogies, from Harleian MS. 3859" (https://books.google.com/books?id=aFMrAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA141), in Phillimore, Egerton (ed.), Y Cymmrodor, IX, Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion, pp. 141– 183
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ap Aergol, King Gwerthefyr (I33517)
 
88
Walter Colepeper (b. 1398, d. 12 Dec 1462)
Walter Colepeper (son of Thomas Culpeper and Joyce Baynard) was born 1398 in Goudhurst, Kent, England, and died 12 Dec 1462 in Goudhurst, Kent, England. He married Agnes Roper on 1411 in Bayhall, Pembury, Kent, England.
Notes for Walter Colepeper:

BIOGRAPHY: Of the sons of Sir Thomas Colepeper, Walter succeeded to all the estates except Exton on the death of his half-brother, Sir John, and was the only one to leave sons....Walter Colepeper, who continued the line, married Agnes, the daughter of Edmund Roper, of St. Dunstans, Canterbury, and is so described on her tombstone at Goudhurst. She was also the widow of John, son of John de Bedgebury, a fact not mentioned in the pedigrees recorded in the Visitations, but which is amply evidenced by an undated Chancery Procceding, temp. Hen. VI., where Walter Coulpepir and Agneis, his wife, late the wife of John, son of John de Beggebury and Thomas Chaundeler, chaplain, appear as plaintiffs in a dispute relating to property in Goudhurst, Cranbrook and Hawkhurst, which John, son of Roger de Beggebury, left to pay for two chaplains to sing masses for his soul and for that of Johanna, his wife. By this marriage Walter Colepeper had, with two daughters--Margaret, married to Alexander Clifford, and Elizabeth, married to John Hardes, of Hardes, co. Kent--three sons, Richard, John and Nicholas. Agnes, his wife, predeceased him on the 2nd December, 1457, and was buried at Goudhurst, and Walter himself died on the 24th November, 1462, and was also buried at Goudhurst..Although the pedigree given above differs in many respects from those recorded in the Visitation, it is substantiated not only by many Inquisitions, Deeds and Grants, but also by a suit entered on membrane 484 of the De Banco Roll, Hilary, 4 Edward IV., whence the following pedigree is deduced:...John Culpeper(5)....Thomas Culpeper(6)......Thomas Culpeper(7)......Walter Culpeper(7)........John Culpeper(8) ........Richard Culpeper(8) ........Nicholas Culpeper(8) ......John Culpeper(7)......Nicholas Culpeper(7).This suit has reference to the fine levied in 1320, the John at the head of the pedigree being the son of Sir Thomas and Margery, and the plaintiffs, John, Richard and Nicholas Colepeper, claiming one quarter of these lands against Sir John Fogge, according to the customs of gavelkind, in right of their father Walter..Although Richard is entered in the Visitation in Kent, in 1619, as Walter Colepeper's eldest son, this was not the case, as Sir John, as the eldest son, inherited Hardreshull, co. Warwick, Bayhall, co. Kent, and Wigsell, co. Sussex. It appears also from the same Visitation that this Sir John married Agnes, daughter of John Bedgebury, but no mention whatever is there made of the undoubted fact that some time before 1460 he was the husband of Agnes Gainsford, which is clearly proved by the Proceedings in Chancery relating to the abduction of the two Wakehurst heiresses by Sir John's brothers, Richard and Nicholas, where it is expressly stated that a sister of John and William Gainsford was wedded to John Culpepyr, and later on in the same suit mention is made of John Culpeper and Agnes, his wife. The marriage is also alluded to in De Banco Roll, Trin., 5 Edward IV., m. 118d, and it explains the mention of Ottewell and George Gainsford (grandsons of the above John Gainsford, who married Anne Wakehurst, aunt of the co-heiresses, and sons of Sir John Gainsford, by Anne, daughter of Ottewell Worsley), as cousins in the will Walter Colepeper, of Calais, 1514--1516..The question arises, therefore, as to whether the record of Sir John's marriage with Agnes Bedgebury is not due to a mistake on the part of the heralds. In their pedigree they certainly omit these two important facts, viz., that before 1460 Sir John was the husband of Agnes Gainsford, and also that his father Walter's wife, of the same Christian name, was the widow of John Bedgebury. It seems therefore not improbable that these two marriages have been confused; such, indeed, must have been the case unless Sir John was twice married, and of this the Visitation affords no evidence whatever. Sir John Colepeper died 22nd December, 1480, and was buried at Goudherst..Source: Col. F. W. T. Attree, "The Sussex Colepepers".-----------------------At the time of their check at the hands of Edward II, the Culpepers seem to have recently inaugurated their characteristic practice of land acquisition by the time honored expedient of marrying heiresses. It was from their first manor so acquired, that of Bayhall in the Kentish parish of Pembury on the southern border of the weald, that they spread, as Hasted remarks, 'over the whole face of the county' of Kent; and, we may add, eventually of adjacent Sussex as well..In this process, the Walter Culpeper who fought at Agincourt, being of the seventh recorded generation of his family, put his roots in the ground a few miles southeast of Bayhall. About 1425 he married the widow of the last Bedgebury of Bedgebury in Goudhurst and was buried with that family in Goudhurst church. His tomb described him as 'arm. filius Thorne Culpeper militis... obiit 24 November 1462' (Weever, Antient Funeral Monuments, 1767 ed., p. 69); which identifies him genealogically as the Walter, son of Thomas, who himself left sons, John, Richard and Nicholas, as rehearsed in DeBanco Roll, 4 Edw. IV, Hilary Term, membrane 484..Source: Fairfax Harrison, "The Proprietors of the Northern Neck"2

Walter Colepeper:
Burial: Unknown, Bedgebury Chapel of St. Mary's Church, Goudhurst, co. Kent, England.15
Walter Colepeper and Agnes Roper:Marriage: 1411, Bayhall, Pembury, Kent, England.
Children of Walter Colepeper and Agnes Roper are:
+John Colepeper, b. 1424, Goudhurst, Kent, England, d. 09 Jan 1481, Goudhurst, co. Kent, England.

WALTER CULPEPER (SIR THOMAS, SIR JOHN, SIR THOMAS, SIR THOMAS
JOHN, THOMAS was born Abt.1400, and died November 24, 1462 in Goudhurst, Kent, England. He married AGNES ROPER Abt. 1425, daughter of EDMUND ROPER. She was born Abt. 1400, and died Abt. 1457.
More About WALTER CULPEPER:
Burial: Goudhurst, Kent, England
Children of WALTER CULPEPER and AGNES ROPER are:
i. NICHOLAS CULPEPER.
ii. MARGARET CULPEPER.
iii. ELIZABETH CULPEPER.
iv. RICHARD CULPEPER.
Notes for RICHARD CULPEPER:
Richard Culpeper known as "Richard .. 
Culpeper, Sir Walter (I32025)
 
89
Wilson R. Kouba, a much loved husband, father and grandfather passed away at the age of 90 Thursday July 16, 2009 at St Luke’s Hospital in Cedar Rapids.
Memorial service will be 10:00am Saturday July 18, 2009 at the Goettsch Funeral Home in Anamosa. Rev. Laurie Riley will officiate at the service. Friends many call starting at 9:00am Saturday at the funeral home in Anamosa. Thoughts, memories and condolences may be left at www.goettschonline.com.

Surviving is his wife Virginia; 3 children Keith (Becky) of Marion, Craig (Robin) of Fargo, North Dakota and Mary Ann (Larry) of Laytonville, CA; 7 grandchildren Jennifer, Jason, Chi, Sara, Cassandra, Mackenzie and Samantha; He was preceded in death by his parents.

Wilson was born March 31, 1919 to William and Amanda Kouba of Luzerne, Iowa. He attended Cornell College and graduated from College of Pharmacy at the University of Iowa. Wilson and Virginia Blocher were married April 25, 1942. Wilson served as a Pharmacist Mate in WWII. After working in Leon, Iowa and Humboldt, Iowa he bought the pharmacy in Anamosa in 1949 where he had a long and happy career at Kouba Pharmacy. While on Main Street Wilson was an active member of the Chamber of Commerce; Methodist Church; Anamosa Hospital; Fawn Creek Country Club and a Scout Leader to list some. 
Kouba, Wilson Rosburg (I17069)
 
90
Zoe Karbonopsina, also Karvounopsina or Carbonopsina, lit. 'with the Coal-Black Eyes' (Greek: Ζωὴ Καρβωνοψίνα, romanized: Zōē Karbōnopsina), was a Byzantine Greek empress consort and regent of the Byzantine empire. She was the fourth spouse of the Byzantine Emperor  Leo VI the Wise and the mother of Constantine VII, serving as his regent from 914 until 919.[1]

Contents
Zoe Karbonopsina was born into a Greek family. She was a relative of the chronicler Theophanes the Confessor and a niece of the admiral Himerios.
Empress

Desperate to sire a son, Leo VI married his mistress Zoe on 9 January 906, only after she had given birth to the future Constantine VII at the end of 905. However, this constituted his fourth marriage and was therefore un-canonical in the eyes of the Eastern Orthodox Church,[2] which had already been reluctant to accept his third marriage to Eudokia Baïana, who died in childbirth in 901.

Although the Patriarch Nicholas Mystikos reluctantly baptized Constantine, he forbade the emperor from marrying for the fourth time. Leo VI married Zoe with the assistance of a cooperative priest, Thomas, but Nicholas' continued opposition to the marriage led to his removal from office and replacement by Euthymios in 907. The new patriarch attempted a compromise by defrocking the offending priest but recognizing the marriage.

When Leo died in 912, he was succeeded by his younger brother Alexander, who recalled Nicholas Mystikos and expelled Zoe from the palace. Shortly before his death, Alexander provoked a war with Bulgaria. She returned upon Alexander's death in 913, but Nicholas forced her to enter the convent of St. Euphemia in Constantinople after obtaining the promise of the senate and the clergy not to accept her as empress. However, Nicholas' unpopular concessions to the Bulgarians later in the same year weakened his position and in 914 Zoe was able to overthrow Nicholas and replace him as regent.[3] Nicholas was allowed to remain patriarch after reluctantly recognizing her as empress.

Zoe governed with the support of imperial bureaucrats and the influential general Leo Phokas the Elder, who was her favorite. Zoe's first order of business was to revoke the concessions to Simeon I of Bulgaria, including the recognition of his imperial title and the arranged marriage between his daughter and Constantine VII. This renewed the war with Bulgaria, which began badly for the Byzantines who were distracted by military operations in Southern Italy and on the eastern frontier. In 915 Zoe's troops defeated an Arab invasion of Armenia, and made peace with the Arabs. This freed her hands to organize a major expedition against the Bulgarians, who had raided deep into Byzantine Thrace and captured Adrianople. The campaign was planned on a grand scale and intended the bribing and transportation of Pechenegs into Bulgaria by the imperial fleet from the north.

However, the Pecheneg alliance failed, and Leo Phokas was crushingly defeated in the Battle of Anchialus and again at Katasyrtai in 917. Zoe tried to ally with Serbia and the Magyarsagainst Simeon. This also failed to produce any concrete results, and the Arabs, encouraged by the empire's weakness, renewed their raids. A humiliating treaty with the Arabs of Sicily, who were asked to help subdue revolts in Italy, did little to improve the position of Zoe and her supporters.
Later life[

In 919, there was a coup involving various factions, but the opposition to Zoe and Leo Phokas prevailed; in the end the admiral Romanos Lekapenos took power, married his daughter Helena Lekapene to Constantine VII, and forced Zoe back into the convent of Saint Euphemia. 
Karbonopsina, Zoe (I34432)
 
91  Vollrath, Frank William (I3242)
 
92  Rau, Johann Gottfried (I5950)
 
93  Baker, Joseph (I31264)
 
94  Krumm, Andrew George (I2578)
 
95  Booth, Dorothy Elizabeth (I1509)
 
96  Allen, Nada Gertude (I6994)
 
97 - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugo_von_Tours -
Hugo and his wife Ava († around 840) had at least five children:
~ Irmingard (* around 805, † 20 March 851) ⚭ 821 Lothar I., King of Lorraine
~ Adelais (Adelheid) († nach 866) ⚭ I Konrad I. Graf im Argen- und Linzgau († 863) (Welfen), ⚭ II Robert der Tapfere (X 866) Graf von Paris (Robertiner)
~ Liutfrid I. (* um 800/805, † 865/866) Graf von Tours, Laienabt von Münster-Granfelden ⚭ NN
~ Bertha (* um 805, † nach 870), ⚭ 819 Gerhard II. (* 800, † 878/879) Graf von Paris, Graf (dux) von Vienne (Matfriede)
~ Hugo († before 25 January 835) buried in San Ambrogio in Milan

- https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugues_de_Tours#Descendance -
With his wife named Ava, daughter of Guerry de Morvois and Eve of Tours, Hugues III has six children:
~ Ermengarde († 20 March 851) wife of Lothaire Ier
~ Adélaïde († après 866), wife of first cousins ​​Conrad III as Welf, Conrad Ier as king of the two Burgundians, descendant of Konrad I, brother of the emperor Judith von Altdorf, dite de Bavière, wife of Louis le Pieux, she has a son of the name of Hugues who is for an archival time in Cologne. An interpolation of the Chronicle of Saint-Bénigne de Dijon, laisse penser qu'Adélaïde, widow of Conrad Ier of Burgundy, had paused in seconds noces le comte Robert le Fort, l'arrière-grand-père de Hugues Capet et donc l ' first of all the captain's line. It had also been advanced that Robert the Fort's wife had been, not Adelaide but a daughter of the latter and Conrad Ier of Burgundy, a daughter who could be named Emma; This legend could report to an Adelaide or Aélis who lived a century earlier and who effectively ousted Robert the Fort
~ Berthe wife of Girart de Vienne
~ Hugues († before 25 January 835)
~ Luitfrid de Monza († between 864 and 866), Count of Alsace and Lombardy, Councilor of Lothaire II. His daughter, Eve of Tours, wife of Unroch III of Frioul
~ Beranger († 838) 
de Morvois, Ava (I32333)
 
98 - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugo_von_Tours -
Hugo and his wife Ava († around 840) had at least five children:
~ Irmingard (* around 805, † 20 March 851) ⚭ 821 Lothar I., King of Lorraine
~ Adelais (Adelheid) († nach 866) ⚭ I Konrad I. Graf im Argen- und Linzgau († 863) (Welfen), ⚭ II Robert der Tapfere (X 866) Graf von Paris (Robertiner)
~ Liutfrid I. (* um 800/805, † 865/866) Graf von Tours, Laienabt von Münster-Granfelden ⚭ NN
~ Bertha (* um 805, † nach 870), ⚭ 819 Gerhard II. (* 800, † 878/879) Graf von Paris, Graf (dux) von Vienne (Matfriede)
~ Hugo († before 25 January 835) buried in San Ambrogio in Milan

- https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugues_de_Tours#Descendance -
With his wife named Ava, daughter of Guerry de Morvois and Eve of Tours, Hugues III has six children:
~ Ermengarde († 20 March 851) wife of Lothaire Ier
~ Adélaïde († après 866), wife of first cousins ​​Conrad III as Welf, Conrad Ier as king of the two Burgundians, descendant of Konrad I, brother of the emperor Judith von Altdorf, dite de Bavière, wife of Louis le Pieux, she has a son of the name of Hugues who is for an archival time in Cologne. An interpolation of the Chronicle of Saint-Bénigne de Dijon, laisse penser qu'Adélaïde, widow of Conrad Ier of Burgundy, had paused in seconds noces le comte Robert le Fort, l'arrière-grand-père de Hugues Capet et donc l ' first of all the captain's line. It had also been advanced that Robert the Fort's wife had been, not Adelaide but a daughter of the latter and Conrad Ier of Burgundy, a daughter who could be named Emma; This legend could report to an Adelaide or Aélis who lived a century earlier and who effectively ousted Robert the Fort
~ Berthe wife of Girart de Vienne
~ Hugues († before 25 January 835)
~ Luitfrid de Monza († between 864 and 866), Count of Alsace and Lombardy, Councilor of Lothaire II. His daughter, Eve of Tours, wife of Unroch III of Frioul
~ Beranger († 838) 
de Tours, Hugues (I32334)
 
99 -- http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/RUSSIA,%20Rurik.htm#_Toc481496211 --

!! "THE NAME OF RURIK'S WIFE IS NOT KNOWN." !!

The earliest generations of the so-called Rurikid family are reconstructed solely on the basis of the sparse information in the Povest' vremennykh let or 'Tale of the Years of Time', better known as the Primary Chronicle and also sometimes known as Nestor´s Chronicle[1].  As pointed out by Franklin & Shepard[2], the extant manuscripts of the Primary Chronicle which date from the 12th century should not be taken at face value as they must have been compiled from patchy sources of information.  It is likely that the compilers exaggerated the role of Rurik's family in the 9th and 10th centuries, in order to establish a lengthy, credible history for the Russian principalities which were flourishing by the 12th century.  In particular, the alleged establishment by "Oleg" in 882 of the principality of Kiev should be treated with caution.  Nevertheless, the historical existence of Rurik´s supposed son Igor, and Igor´s son Sviatoslav, is corroborated by the De Administrando Imperio of Emperor Konstantinos VII Porphyrogennetos[3], written in the mid-10th century and therefore contemporary with Sviatoslav´s reign.

The arrival of Scandinavian traders in the territories which later developed into "Rus" should be seen in the context of the Khazar and Pecheneg 9th and 10th century occupations of the area, which would appear to have left little opportunity for the establishment of powerful principalities by Scandinavian newcomers, at least in the open plain lands.  Archaeological evidence corroborates Scandinavian presence at Gorodishche, Timerëvo and other Upper Volga sites in the late 9th century.  This indicates an increasing, although still limited, number of immigrants tempted no doubt by trading opportunities, but Franklin & Shepard point out that it provides little evidence of organised government[4].  Chirovsky discusses the development of two theories concerning the origin of Russia: the "Normanistic" theory, developed by 18th century historians of German descent who supported a literal reading of the Primary Chronicle and emphasised Norse rule over the Slavs who were unable to rule themselves), and the "anti-Normanistic" theory, which posits the rapid assimilation of small groups of Norse immigrants into the local Slav community and is based on a broad interpretation of the Primary Chronicle[5].  Franklon & Shepard state that there is no firm evidence of Scandinavian settlement at the same time, either in the middle Dnieper area around Kiev or on the northern coast of the Black Sea[6].  A Scandinavian-origin trading community at Kiev appears to have been formed during the early 900s as an offshoot of the more northerly settlements, although it is possible that the Khazars still exercised hegemony in this area as late as [930][7].  The Kiev settlement appears to have developed quickly: the De Administrando Imperio describes the Rus way of life[8].  In 941, it was on the point of launching an attack on Constantinople, and in the late 950s it established diplomatic contacts both with the emperor in Constantinople and with the German emperor.

The titles attributed to the rulers of the Rus principalities are a source of confusion, in particular the use of "Grand Prince/Grand Duke" as opposed to "Prince/Duke", especially in relation to the rulers of Kiev and Vladimir.  Chirovsky points out that all Kievan princes were theoretically equal  (they are all referred to in the Russian chronicles as "Knyaz", female "Knyaginya") and that Vsevolod III Prince of Vladimir was the first prince to start calling himself "Grand Prince/Duke" ("Veliki Knyaz")[9].  The author suggests that Vsevolod adopted this title to strengthen the separation of the principality of Vladimir from Kiev and also to place himself over the lesser princes of the Russian north.  Use of the title by Vladimir´s descendants was confirmed when Prince Iaroslav Vsevolodich received the title "Grand Prince of Vladimir" from Khan Batu of the Golden Horde in 1243, in return for swearing allegiance.  In the present document, the rulers of Kiev are referred to as "Grand Prince" to indicate their position of supremacy over the other principalities and to reflect the fact that they appointed the rulers of these principalities from among the various members of their own family.

The system of princely appointments from Kiev was first formalised by Grand Prince Iaroslav under his 1054 testament[10], which made it clear that appointments to appanage territories were "temporary", and emphasised the common good of the whole realm in such a system[11].  In practice, the appointments were changed rapidly, giving little opportunity for any principality to develop its own hereditary leadership (except while the 1097 Liubech family accord was being observed).  Over time, certain family lines of the dynasty did establish hereditary succession for themselves in particular principalities.  However, a further problem arose with the fragmentation of this patrimony into even smaller territories to provide property for junior male members of the family.  This fragmentation increased with the expansion of the different families.  Family rivalry inevitably intensified: the sources record numerous examples of individual princes being dispossessed by more powerful rivals.  The decline was halted temporarily by the 1097 Liubech accord, but the fragmentation and dynastic rivalry soon resumed and was only eliminated when all principalities were annexed by Moscow in the early 16th century.

From the time of Grand Prince Iaroslav I, the genealogy of the dynasty can be considered more reliable.  However, there are still many gaps and uncertainties, particularly relating to the female members of the family.  Iaroslav I's testament, referred to above, provided the basis for the tradition of succession to the title of Grand Prince of Kiev which, on the death of each grand prince, was inherited by the oldest surviving male member of each generation of the descendants of Iaroslav I's sons, passing from one branch to another before passing to the oldest member of the succeeding generation.  A further requirement was that the title of grand prince must previously, at some time, have been held by the successful candidate's father.  In this way, various branches of the family were excluded from the succession.  For example, the descendants of Iaroslav I's oldest son by his second marriage, Vladimir Iaroslavich, never held the title as their progenitor predeceased his father.

Iaroslav I consolidated the dynasty's contacts with other European ruling families by arranging dynastic marriages.  The countries included the Scandinavian kingdoms, reflecting the dynasty's sense of origin, its neighbours Byzantium, Hungary and Poland, and countries further afield such as France and several of the Germanic states.  This policy of foreign marriages was pursued by Iaroslav's successors but did not survive long into the 13th century.  After that time, the Rus principalities restricted contacts with their western neighbours, and the Russian princes mainly sought brides from among the ever-growing number of collateral branches of their own dynasty.

The Grand Prince of Kiev was recognised as the nominal head of the family and overlord of the other Rus principalities.  However, he took no active part in the government of the other territories, except through the appointment of their princes from among members of his family.  The principalities of Chernigov, Galich (Galicia), Novgorod, Pereyaslavl, Polotsk, Riazan, Smolensk, Suzdal, Turov and Volynia thus developed separately.  Appointments to rule these principalities appear to have followed no particular pattern.  Government of the principalities was exchanged and reshuffled with great regularity, all under the direction of the Grand Prince of Kiev, motivated by personal and family considerations, not least the wish to prevent rival princes from consolidating too much power in particular locations.

The principality of Kiev proper was relatively small in area compared to the other Rus principalities, although the city of Kiev was strategically well-placed on the River Dnepr which gave direct access to the Black Sea in the south and indirect access to the Baltic in the north.  Kiev was bounded on its southern border by territory controlled by the Kumans.  The territorial integrity of the principality was soon fragmented as additional principalities were created for junior members of the ruling family.

As Kiev's central authority declined in the 13th century, the line of the princes of Suzdal-Rostov assumed the role of "superior ruler", the focus of their political power transferring to the city of Vladimir and, in the 15th century, to Moscow.

The main near contemporary sources for the history of the Rurikid dynasty are as follows[12]:
§  the Ipatevskiy Chronicle, consisting of its three components, the so-called "Primary Chronicle" up to 1117, a south Russian compilation made in 1200 at the Vydubetskiy Monastery near Kiev, and the Chronicle of Galicia and Volynia (1200-1292).
§  the Lavrentevskiy Chronicle, the chief source for the history of Suzdalia which was copied in 1377 from a 1305 compilation, and its derivatives (the Chronicle of Pereyaslavl-Suzsalskiy which covers events from 1138 to 1214, and the Moscow Academy manuscript of the Suzdal Chronicle which brings the text up to 1419).
§  the Novgorod First Chronicle, in two versions up to 1330 and 1446/47.
§  the Moscow svod of 1479.
Only the Primary Chronicle and the Novgorod First Chronicle have been studied in the compilation of the present document.

The descent of the Rurikid dynasty from Grand Prince Vladimir I (who died in 1015) has been treated in detail by N. de Baumgarten.  Although his works date from 1927[13] and 1934[14], they have the great advantage of citing the primary sources on which the information is based.  Nevertheless, his citations are not as helpful as they could be, firstly because the publications include no key to the abbreviations which the author uses and no full list of works cited, and secondly because the absence of exact quotations means it is impossible to judge the weight of their evidence.  In any case, many of the works cited are in the Russian language.  The outline genealogies in the present document, into which primary source information has been fitted, were compiled mainly from Baumgarten´s works.  Few primary sources have been noted for the members of the dynasty set out in chapters 7 to 12. 
of Novgorod, Princess Efanda-Edvina (I34402)
 
100 -- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oda_of_Metz --

Oda of Metz was a German noblewoman. SHE WAS THE DAUGHTER OF Gerhard I of Metz (9CD1-KW4). HER MOTHER, ODA OF SAXONY (LB2S-623), was a daughter of Otto I Duke of Saxony and thus a member of the Liudolfings.

In 930, Oda married Gozlin, Count of Bidgau and Methingau, who gained fame as military commander for his brother, Adalberon I of Metz. Because she outlived her husband by twenty years, she was head of the household and ran the estate and lands until their children had reached adulthood.

They had the following children:

~ Reginar, count of Bastogne (d. 18 Apr 963)
~ Henry (d. 6 Sep 1000)
~ Godfrey (935/940 – 3 Sep 995/1002), count of Verdun[1]
~ Adalberon (935/940 – 23 Jan 989), archbishop of Reims 969-989

-- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oda_of_Metz -- 
of Metz, Oda (I32099)
 

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