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4351 Margaret Miller has birth year as 1836. McQuaig, Margaret (I22281)
 
4352 Margaret of France, Queen of England
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tenure 8 September 1299 – 7 July 1307
Born c. 1279 Paris, France
Died 14 February 1318 Marlborough Castle, Wiltshire
Burial Christ Church Greyfriars, Newgate
Spouse Edward I of England
Issue Thomas, Earl of Norfolk
Edmund, Earl of Kent
House Capet
Father Philip III of France
Mother Maria of Brabant

Margaret of France (c. 1279 – 14 February 1318)[1] was Queen of England as the second wife of King Edward I. She was a daughter of Philip III of France and Maria of Brabant,

Early life
Her father died when she was three years old and she grew up under guidance of her mother and Joan I of Navarre, her half-brother King Philip IV's wife.[2]

Marriage
The death of Edward's beloved first wife, Eleanor of Castile, at the age of 49 in 1290, left him reeling in grief. However, it was much to Edward's benefit to make peace with France to free him to pursue his wars in Scotland. Additionally, with only one surviving son, Edward was anxious to protect the English throne with additional heirs. In summer of 1291, the English king had betrothed his son and heir, the future Edward II, to Blanche, half-sister to the French King Philip IV, in order to achieve peace with France. However, hearing of her renowned beauty, Edward decided to have his son's bride for his own and sent emissaries to France. Philip agreed to give Blanche to Edward on the conditions that a truce would be concluded between the two countries, and that Edward would give up the province of Gascony.

Edward agreed, and sent his brother Edmund Crouchback, Earl of Lancaster, to fetch the new bride. Edward had been deceived, for Blanche was to be married to Rudolph, the eldest son of King Albert I of Germany. Instead, Philip offered her younger sister Margaret to marry Edward (then 55). Upon hearing this, Edward declared war on France, refusing to marry Margaret. After five years, a truce was agreed upon under the influence of Pope Boniface VIII. A series of treaties in the first half of 1299 provided terms for a double marriage: Edward I would marry Margaret and his son would marry Isabella, Philip's only surviving daughter. Additionally, the English monarchy would regain the key territory of Guyenne and receive £15,000 owed to Margaret as well as the return of Eleanor of Castile's lands in Ponthieu and Montreuil as a dower first for Margaret, and then Isabella.[3]

Edward was then 60 years old, at least 40 years older than his bride. The wedding took place at Canterbury on 8 September 1299. Margaret was never crowned due to financial constraints, being the first uncrowned queen since the Conquest. This in no way lessened her dignity as the king's wife, however, for she used the royal title in her letters and documents, and appeared publicly wearing a crown even though she had not received one during a formal rite of investiture.[5]

Edward soon returned to the Scottish border to continue his campaigns and left Margaret in London, but she had become pregnant quickly after the wedding. After several months, bored and lonely, the young queen decided to join her husband. Nothing could have pleased the king more, for Margaret's actions reminded him of his first wife Eleanor, who had had two of her sixteen children abroad.

In less than a year Margaret gave birth to a son, Thomas of Brotherton who was named after Thomas Becket, since she had prayed to him during her pregnancy. That Margaret was physically fit was demonstrated by the fact that she was still hunting when her labour pains started.[6]

The next year she gave birth to another son, Edmund.

Many who fell under the king's wrath were saved from too stern a punishment by the queen's influence over her husband, and the statement, Pardoned solely on the intercession of our dearest consort, queen Margaret of England, appears. In 1305, the young queen acted as a mediator between her step-son and husband, reconciling the heir to his aging father, and calming her husband's wrath.[7]

She favored the Franciscan order and was a benefactress of a new foundation at Newgate. Margaret employed the minstrel Guy de Psaltery and both she and her husband liked to play chess.[8] She and her stepson, the future king Edward II (who was only two years younger than she), also became fond of each other: he once made her a gift of an expensive ruby and gold ring, and she on one occasion rescued many of the prince's friends from the wrath of the King.

The mismatched couple were blissfully happy. When Blanche died in 1305 (her husband never became emperor), Edward ordered all the court to go into mourning to please his queen. He had realised the wife he had gained was "a pearl of great price" as Margaret was respected for her beauty, virtue, and piety. The same year Margaret gave birth to a girl, Eleanor, named in honour of Edward's first wife, a choice which surprised many, and showed Margaret's unjealous nature.

In 1307, Edward went on summer campaign to Scotland. Margaret accompanied him. Edward died in Burgh by Sands.

Widowhood
Margaret never remarried after Edward's death in 1307, despite being only 26 when widowed. She was alleged to have stated that "when Edward died, all men died for me".

Margaret was not pleased when Edward II elevated Piers Gaveston to become Earl of Cornwall upon his father's death, since the title had been meant for one of her own sons.[9] She attended the new king's wedding to her half-niece, Isabella of France, and a silver casket was made with both their arms. After Isabella's coronation, Margaret retired to Marlborough Castle (which was by this time a dower house), but she stayed in touch with the new Queen and with her half-brother Philip IV by letter during the confusing times leading up to Gaveston's death in 1312. Margaret, too, was a victim of Gaveston's influence over her step-son. Edward II gave several of her dower lands to the favourite, including Berkhamsted Castle. In May 1308, an anonymous informer reported that Margaret had provided ₤40,000 along with her brother, Philip IV, to support the English barons against Gaveston.[10] Due to this action, Gaveston was briefly exiled and Margaret remained fairly unmolested by the upstart until his death in June 1312.

She was present at the birth of the future Edward III in November 1312. On 14 February 1318 she died in her castle at Marlborough. Dressed in a Franciscan habit, she was buried at Christ Church Greyfriars in London, a church she had generously endowed. Her tomb, beautifully carved, was destroyed during the Reformation.[11]

Issue
In all, Margaret gave birth to three children:[12]
Thomas of Brotherton, 1st Earl of Norfolk (1 June 1300 – 4 August 1338)
Edmund of Woodstock, 1st Earl of Kent (5 August 1301 – 19 March 1330)
Eleanor of England (4 May 1306 – 1311)[12] Died at Amesbury Abbey, buried at Beaulieu Abbey. [13]

References
1. Parsons, John Carmi (2004). "Margaret (1279?–1318)" (http://www.oxforddnb.com). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Online ed.). Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. Retrieved January 15, 2008.
2. Hilton, Lisa (2008). Queens Consort: England's Mediaeval Queens. London: Weidenfeld & Nichelson. p. 238. ISBN 978-0-7538-2611-9.
3. Weir, Alison (2005). Queen Isabella: Treachery, Adultery, and Murder in Medieval England. New York: Ballantine Books. pp. 4–5. ISBN 0-345-45319-0.
4. Boutell, Charles (1863), A Manual of Heraldry, Historical and Popular, London: Winsor & Newton, p. 275
5. Williamson, David (1986). Kings and Queens of Britain. Topsfield, MA: Salem House Publ. p. 75. ISBN 0-88162-213-3.
6. Hilton, Lisa (2008). Queens Consort. p. 240.
7. Weir, Alison (2005). Queen Isabella. p. 18.
8. Hilton, Lisa (2008). Queens Consort. p. 241.
9. Hilton, Lisa (2008). Queens Consort. p. 247.
10. Weir, Alison (2005). Queen Isabella. p. 45.
11. Weir, Alison (2005). Queen Isabella. p. 117.
12. Michael Prestwich. Edward I, University of California Press, 1988. pg 131.
13. Alison Weir. Eleanor of England, Britain's Royal Families: The Complete Genealogy, page 88.

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title=Margaret_of_France,_Queen_of_England&oldid=786133080"
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de France, Marguerite (I25434)
 
4353 Margaret of Provence
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Queen consort of France
Tenure 27 May 1234 – 25 August 1270
Coronation 28 May 1234
Born Spring 1221 Forcalquier, Alpes-de-Haute-Provence
Died 20 December 1295 (aged 74) Paris
Burial Saint Denis Basilica
Spouse Louis IX of France
Issue among others...
Isabella, Queen of Navarre
Louis of France
Philip III of France
John Tristan, Count of Valois
Peter, Count of Perche
Blanche, Infanta of Castile
Margaret, Duchess of Brabant
Robert, Count of Clermont
Agnes, Duchess of Burgundy
House Barcelona
Father Ramon Berenguer IV, Count of

Margaret of Provence (1221 – 20 December 1295) was Queen of France as the wife of King Louis IX.

Family
Margaret was born in the spring of 1221 in Forcalquier.[1] She was the eldest of four daughters of Ramon Berenguer IV, Count of Provence, and Beatrice of Savoy. Her younger sisters were Queen Eleanor of England, Queen Sanchia of Germany, and Queen Beatrice of Sicily. She was especially close to Eleanor, to whom she was close in age, and with whom she sustained friendly relationships until they grew old.[2]

Marriage
In 1233, Blanche of Castile sent one of her knights to Provence, partly to offset the troublesome Raymond VII, Count of Toulouse, and partly to meet Margaret, whose grace and beauty were widely reported. Margaret and her father entertained the knight well, and soon Blanche was negotiating with the count of Provence, so that his daughter might marry the king. Margaret was chosen as a good match for the king more for her religious devotion and courtly manner than her beauty. She was escorted to Lyon by her parents for the marriage treaty to be signed. From there, she was escorted to her wedding in Sens by her uncles from Savoy, William and Thomas. On 27 May 1234 at the age of thirteen, Margaret became wife of Louis IX of France and queen consort of France.[3] She was crowned the following day.[1] The wedding and her coronation as queen were celebrated at the cathedral of Sens.[3]

The marriage was a difficult one in numerous aspects.[3] Blanche still wielded strong influence over her son, and would throughout her life.[4] As a sign of her authority, shortly after the wedding Blanche dismissed Margaret's uncles and all of the servants she had brought with her from her childhood. Margaret resented Blanche and vice versa from the beginning.[3] Margaret, like her sisters, was noted for her beauty, she was said to be "pretty with dark hair and fine eyes",[5] and in the early years of their marriage she and Louis enjoyed a warm relationship. Her Franciscan confessor, William de St. Pathus, related that on cold nights Margaret would place a robe around Louis' shoulders, when her deeply religious husband rose to pray. Another anecdote recorded by St. Pathus related that Margaret felt that Louis' plain clothing was unbecoming to his royal dignity, to which Louis replied that he would dress as she wished, if she dressed as he wished.

They enjoyed riding together, reading, and listening to music. The attentions of the king and court being drawn to the new queen only made Blanche more jealous, and she worked to keep the king and queen apart as much as possible.

During the Seventh Crusade
Margaret accompanied Louis on the Seventh Crusade (their first). Her sister Beatrice also joined. Though initially the crusade met with some success, like the capture of Damietta in 1249, it became a disaster after the king's brother was killed and the king then captured.

Queen Margaret was responsible for negotiations and gathering enough silver for his ransom. She was thus for a brief time the only woman ever to lead a crusade. In 1250, while in Damietta, where she earlier in the same year successfully maintained order,[3] she gave birth to her son Jean Tristan.[6][7]

The chronicler Jean de Joinville, who was not a priest, reports incidents demonstrating Margaret's bravery after Louis was made prisoner in Egypt: she decisively acted to assure a food supply for the Christians in Damietta, and went so far as to ask the knight who guarded her bedchamber to kill her and her newborn son if the city should fall to the Arabs. She also convinced some of those who had been about to leave to remain in Damietta and defend it. Joinville also recounts incidents that demonstrate Margaret's good humor, as on one occasion when Joinville sent her some fine cloth and, when the queen saw his messenger arrive carrying them, she mistakenly knelt down thinking that he was bringing her holy relics. When she realized her mistake, she burst into laughter and ordered the messenger, "Tell your master evil days await him, for he has made me kneel to his camelines!"

However, Joinville also remarked with noticeable disapproval that Louis rarely asked after his wife and children. In a moment of extreme danger during a terrible storm on the sea voyage back to France from the Crusade, Margaret begged Joinville to do something to help; he told her to pray for deliverance, and to vow that when they reached France she would go on a pilgrimage and offer a golden ship with images of the king, herself and her children in thanks for their escape from the storm. Margaret could only reply that she dared not make such a vow without the king's permission, because when he discovered that she had done so, he would never let her make the pilgrimage. In the end, Joinville promised her that if she made the vow he would make the pilgrimage for her, and when they reached France he did so.[8][9]

Political significance
Her leadership during the crusade had brought her international prestige and after she returned to France, Margaret was often asked to mediate disputes. She feared the ambitions of her husband's brother Charles though, and strengthened the bond with her sister Eleanor and her husband Henry III of England as a counterweight. In 1254, she and her husband invited them to spend Christmas in Paris.

Then, in 1259, the Treaty of Paris came about since the relationship between Louis and Henry III of England had improved. Margaret was present during the negotiations, along with all her sisters and her mother. In later years Louis became vexed with Margaret's ambition. It seems that when it came to politics or diplomacy she was indeed ambitious, but somewhat inept. An English envoy at Paris in the 1250s reported to England, evidently in some disgust, that "the queen of France is tedious in word and deed," and it is clear from the envoy's report of his conversation with the queen that she was trying to create an opportunity for herself to engage in affairs of state even though the envoy was not impressed with her efforts. After the death of her eldest son Louis in 1260, Margaret induced the next son, Philip, to swear an oath that no matter at what age he succeeded to the throne, he would remain under her tutelage until the age of thirty. When Louis found out about the oath, he immediately asked the pope to excuse Philip from the vow on the grounds that he himself had not authorized it, and the pope immediately obliged, ending Margaret's attempt to make herself a second Blanche of Castile. Margaret subsequently failed as well to influence her nephew Edward I of England to avoid a marriage project for one of his daughters that would promote the interests in her native Provence of her brother-in-law, Charles of Anjou, who had married her youngest sister Beatrice.

Later years
After the death of Louis on his second crusade in 1270,[3] during which she remained in France, she returned to Provence. She became a more politically active figure after his death.[3] As Emmerson notes, she was particularly exigent - to the point of raising troops - in defending her rights in Provence, where her husband's brother, Charles of Anjou, maintained his political authority and control of property after his wife's (her sister's) death, contrary to the intentions of the old count, who had died in 1245.[3] She was devoted to her sister Queen Eleanor of England, and they stayed in contact until Eleanor's death in 1291. Her last years were spent doing pious work, including the founding of the Franciscan nunnery of Lourcines in 1289.[3] Margaret herself died in Paris, at the Poor Clares monastery she had founded,[10] on 20 December 1295, at the age of seventy-four. She was buried near (but not beside) her husband in the Basilica of St-Denis outside Paris. Her grave, beneath the altar steps, was never marked by a monument, so its location is unknown; probably for this reason, it was the only royal grave in the basilica that was not ransacked during the French Revolution, and it probably remains intact today.

Issue
With Louis IX of France eleven children[3] were born:
1. Blanche (1240 – 29 April 1243)
2. Isabella (2 March 1241 – 28 January 1271), married Theobald II of Navarre
3. Louis (25 February 1244 – January 1260)
4. Philip III of France (1 May 1245 – 5 October 1285), married firstly Isabella of Aragon, by whom he had issue, including Philip IV of France and Charles, Count of Valois; he married secondly Maria of Brabant, by whom he had issue, including Margaret of France.
5. John (born and died in 1248)
6. John Tristan (1250 – 3 August 1270), born in Egypt on his father's first Crusade and died in Tunisia on his second
7. Peter (1251–1284)
8. Blanche (1253–1323), married Ferdinand de la Cerda, Infante of Castile
9. Margaret (1254–1271), married John I, Duke of Brabant
10. Robert, Count of Clermont (1256 – 7 February 1317), married Beatrice of Burgundy, Lady of Bourbon, by whom he had issue. It is from him that the Bourbon kings of France descend in the male line.
11. Agnes (c. 1260 – 19 December 1327), married Robert II, Duke of Burgundy

References
1. Richardson 2011, p. 121.
2. Howell 2001, p. 3.
3. Emmerson 2013, p. 448.
4. Shadis 2010, p. 17-19.
5. Costain 1951, p. 125-126.
6. Joinville 1963, p. 262-263.
7. Hodgson 2007, p. 167-170.
8. Joinville 2008.
9. Hodgson 2007, p. 105-106, 120-125.

Sources
Costain, Thomas B. (1951). The Magnificent Century.

Emmerson, Richard K. (2013). Key Figures in Medieval Europe: An Encyclopedia. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-136-77519-2.

Hodgson, Natasha (2007). Women, Crusading and the Holy Land in Historical Narrative. Boydell.

Howell, Margaret (2001). Eleanor of Provence: Queenship in Thirteenth-Century England. Blackwell Publishers Ltd.

Joinville; Villehardouin (1963). Shaw, M.R.B., ed. Joinville and Villehardouin: Chronicles of the Crusades. NY: Penguin Classics.

Joinville; Villehardouin (2008). Smith, Caroline, ed. Chronicles of the Crusades. Penguin Classics.

Murray, Jacqueline (1999). Conflicted Identities and Multiple Masculinities.

Richardson, Douglas (2011). Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study In Colonial And Medieval Families (2 ed.). ISBN 978-1-461-04513-7.

Robson, Michael (2007). "Queen Isabella (c.1295/1358) and the Greyfriars: An example of royal patronage based on her accounts for 1357/1358". Franciscan Studies. Franciscan Institute Publications. 65: 325–348. doi:10.1353/frc.2007.0006.

Sanders, I.J. (1951). "The Texts of the Peace of Paris, 1259". The English Historical Review. Oxford University Press. 66 (258): 81–97. doi:10.1093/ehr/lxvi.cclviii.81.

Shadis, Miriam (2010). Berenguela of Castile (1180–1246) and Political Women in the High Middle Ages. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-312-23473-7.

Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Margaret_of_Provence&oldid=785705834"
Categories: 1221 births 1295 deaths House of Aragon French queens consort Frankish queens consort
Women of medieval France Christians of the Seventh Crusade Women in medieval European warfare
Women in war in France Women in 13th-century warfare
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de Provence, Marguerite Berenger (I25535)
 
4354 Margaret thome Mawde (Crowther) (Thome is a surname, supposedly, claiming she's Margaret Thome-Mawde?)
Birthdate: 1485
Birthplace: Buckinghamshire, UK
Death: Died 1541 in Brentwood, UK
Immediate Family:
Wife of Richard Mawde, Sir
Mother of Agnes Maud 
Crowther, Lady Margaret Thome (I33155)
 
4355 Margaret was born on board the sailing ship Cornwall on the voyage to New Zealand, and, according to custom, was named after the vessel which was her birthplace Muir, Margaret Cornwall (I27698)
 
4356 Margaret, Duchess of Norfolk

Spouse(s) John Segrave, 4th Baron Segrave
Sir Walter Mauny
Issue
John de Segrave
John de Segrave (again)
Elizabeth de Segrave
Margaret de Segrave
Thomas Mauny
Anne Mauny
Isabel Mauny
Father Thomas of Brotherton
Mother Alice Hales
Born c.1320
Died 24 March 1399
Buried Grey Friars, London

Margaret, Duchess of Norfolk
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Margaret, in her own right Countess of Norfolk (sometimes surnamed Brotherton or Marshal;[1] c. 1320–24 March 1399), was the daughter and eventual sole heir of Thomas of Brotherton, eldest son of Edward I, by his second marriage. In 1338 she succeeded to the earldom of Norfolk and the office of Earl Marshal.

Family
Margaret (b. about 1320), was the daughter of Thomas of Brotherton and Alice de Hales (d. in or before 1330). Her paternal grandparents were Edward I and Margaret (1279?–1318), daughter of Philippe III of France (d.1285).[2] Her maternal grandparents were Roger de Hales of Hales Hall in Loddon, Roughton, Norfolk and Alice.[3][4] She had a brother and sister:
Edward of Norfolk, who married Beatrice de Mortimer, daughter of Roger de Mortimer, 1st Earl of March, but died without issue before 9 August 1334.[5] Alice of Norfolk, who married Sir Edward de Montagu.[6]

Life
In 1335 aged 15 (the typical age of marriage for maidens of that era), she was married to John Segrave, 4th Baron Segrave, and proceeded to have four children - two sons and two daughters - by him. In 1350, she sought a divorce on the ground that they had been contracted in marriage (in other words betrothed) before she was of marriageable age, and that she had never consented to cohabit with him. She made known her intention of traveling to the continent in order to plead personally with the Pope for a divorce. King Edward III prohibited her from leaving England, but she set off incognito anyway, having taken care to obtain a safe conduct from the King of France.

The following year (1351) Edward III charged her with having crossed the English Channel in contravention of his prohibition.[7] The inquisition, regarding this incident, shows that Margaret unlawfully crossed the Channel and met with a servant of her future husband, Sir Walter de Mauny, who broke his lantern with his foot so she could pass unnoticed and acted as her guardian during her sojourn in France. This incident and the involvement of her future husband's retainer may indicate the real motivation for Margaret seeking a divorce.

The divorce case was ultimately heard by the Pope's auditor, the Dean of St. Hilary's at Poitiers. However, Margaret's first husband died in 1353, before the divorce could be finalized. Shortly thereafter, and just before 30 May 1354, she married Sir Walter de Mauny without the King's licence. They were married 18 years, and had three children before he died at London on 8 or 13 January 1372.[8]

On 29 September 1397, Margaret was created Duchess of Norfolk for life.[8] She died 24 March 1399, and was buried in the choir of Grey Friars in the City of London.[8]

The executors of her will are reported to be John Sileby & Walter fitz Piers, who in 1399 were reported to be attempting to recover money due to her estate.[9]

Marriages and issue
Margaret married firstly, about 1335,[4] John Segrave, 4th Baron Segrave, by whom she had two sons and two daughters:[10]

John de Segrave, who died young.[10]

John de Segrave (d. before 1 April 1353), second of that name, who was contracted to marry Blanche of Lancaster, younger daughter and coheiress of Henry of Grosmont, 1st Duke of Lancaster. However the contract was later declared void[11] and Blanche later married John of Gaunt. About 1349, a double marriage was solemnized in which John Segrave married Blanche Mowbray, while John's sister, Elizabeth Segrave, married Blanche Mowbray's brother, John de Mowbray, 4th Baron Mowbray, Pope Clement VI having granted dispensations for the marriages at the request of Lancaster, in order to prevent 'disputes between the parents', who were neighbours.[12][13][11]

Elizabeth de Segrave, 5th Baroness Segrave, who married John de Mowbray, 4th Baron Mowbray.[11]

Margaret de Segrave, who died young, before 1353.[11]

Shortly before 30 May 1354, Margaret married secondly, and without the King's licence, Sir Walter Mauny,[14] by whom she had a son and two daughters:[11]
Thomas Mauny, who was drowned in a well at Deptford at the age of ten.[11]
Anne Mauny, who married John Hastings, 2nd Earl of Pembroke.[11]
Isabel Mauny, who was living in 1358, but died without issue before 30 November 1371.[11]
Distinction

As her brother had died without issue, she succeeded to the earldom of Norfolk and the office of Earl Marshal at her father's death in 1338. To date, she is the only woman to have held the latter office.

Fictional representations
Margaret is a character in Georgette Heyer's last novel My Lord John, where she is portrayed sympathetically as a kindly though outwardly formidable old lady.

References
1. "Brotherton [Marshal], Margaret". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/53070 (https://doi.org/10.1093%2Fref%3Aodnb%2F53070) . (Subscription or UK public library membership (https://global.oup.com/oxforddnb/info/freeodnb/libraries/) required.)
2. Waugh 2004.
3. Richardson II 2011, p. 631.
4. Archer II 2004.
5. Richardson II 2011, p. 634.
6. Richardson II 2011, pp. 634-5.
7. Richardson II 2011, pp. 637-8.
8. Richardson II 2011, p. 638.
9. Plea Rolls of the Court of Common Pleas. National Archives; CP 40/555; http://aalt.law.uh.edu/H4/CP40no555/bCP40no555dorses/IMG_0329.htm; first entry
10. Richardson II 2011, p. 639.
11. Richardson II 2011, p. 640.
12. Cokayne 1936, p. 384.
13. Archer I 2004.
14. Sumption 2004.

Sources
Archer, Rowena E. (2004). "Mowbray, John (III), fourth Lord Mowbray (1340–1368)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/19452. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)

Archer, Rowena E. (2004). "‘Brotherton, Margaret, suo jure duchess of Norfolk (c.1320–1399)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/53070. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)

Cokayne, George Edward (1936). The Complete Peerage, edited by H.A. Doubleday and Lord Howard de Walden. IX. London: St. Catherine Press. pp. 380–5.

Cokayne, George Edward (1949). The Complete Peerage, edited by Geoffrey H. White. XI. London: St. Catherine Press. pp. 609–10.

Richardson, Douglas (2011). Everingham, Kimball G., ed. Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families. III (2nd ed.). Salt Lake City. ISBN 144996639X.

Richardson, Douglas (2011). Everingham, Kimball G., ed. Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families. II (2nd ed.). Salt Lake City. ISBN 1449966349.

Sumption, Jonathan (2004). "Mauny, Sir Walter (c.1310–1372)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/17985. (Subscription or UK public ibrary membership required.)

Waugh, Scott L. (2004). "Thomas, first earl of Norfolk (1300–1338)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/27196. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)

Calendar Inquisitions Miscellaneous, vol. 3, 1937

Calendar of Entries in the Papal Registers: Letters, 4, 1902

Segrave, Charles, The Segrave Family: 1066 to 1935

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Duchesses of Norfolk
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de Brotherton, Margaret (I25426)
 
4357 Margaret: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Marshal_(Marshal_of_England)

"The name of Gilbert’s wife is not known."
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ENGLISH%20NOBILITY%20MEDIEVAL1.htm#JohnFitzGilbertMarshaldied1165 
de Venoix, Margaret (I35565)
 
4358 Margaretha Catharina Hamann. Baptized to 4.5.1753. Baptized in Harmstorf/Hansuehn. Died to 12.11.1778. Died in Harmstorf. Buried to
15.11.1778. Buried in Hansuehn. From the property Gueldenstein. Parents: Hard TIG Hamann & IDA Lucia Schumacher. 
Hamann, Margaretha Catharina (I23019)
 
4359 Margie Loesing
Boonville - Margie Ella (Allen) Loesing, 96, of Boonville, passed away, surrounded by her loving family, at University Hospital in Columbia, MO on Monday, November 1, 2021.
Visitation for Margie will be held from 9:30 to 11:00 a.m., Friday, November 5, 2021, at Immanuel Lutheran Church in Boonville. Private family burial will be in Walnut Grove Cemetery. The family is planning to have a Celebration of Life in the summer of 2022.
Margie Allen was born in Moniteau County, near McGirk, MO on January 16, 1925, the only child of Ray Allen and Edith (Siebert) Allen. Margie was born on a farm and moved to California, MO at 3 months of age. Margie attended public schools in California, MO and graduated in 1942. She attended and graduated from Missouri State Teachers College in Warrensburg, MO. Upon graduating, she became a Kindergarten teacher in Liberty, MO, and taught there until she married. She married Clarence Loesing, son of Bruno and Stella (Turner) Loesing on April 9, 1950 at the Baptist Church in California, MO. Margie and Clarence became the parents of five children and raised them on their farm in Boonville, MO where she was a devoted wife and mother. She was an active and devout member of the Lutheran Church where she served on multiple committees. She spent her time working on the farm, cooking, gardening, and taking care of the family. She especially enjoyed baking and spending her free time with family and friends.
Margie Loesing was preceded in death by her parents, Ray and Edith Allen, husband Clarence Loesing, and great grandson Wyatt Loesing. She is survived by her children, Tom (Gina) Loesing of Boonville, James (Cathie) Loesing of Columbia, Pam Loesing, Patty Loesing and Martha (Pete) Friesen, all of St. Louis, MO. She also leaves behind thirteen grandchildren, seventeen great-grandchildren and eight great-great-grandchildren, as well as many friends and neighbors.
Memorials are suggested to the Immanuel Lutheran Church of Boonville, or Down Syndrome Innovations of Kansas City (formerly known as the Down Syndrome Guild of Greater KC). 
Allen, Margie Ella (I24135)
 
4360 Margret crab Ratzborg. Baptized to 25.2.1759. Baptized in with Gueldenstein/Hansuehn. Died to 31.3.1797. Died in Harmstorf/Hansuehn.
Buried to 3.4.1797. Buried in Hansuehn. In the trusting entry the nut/mother becomes as? Ann Catrin Holsten indicated. Parents:
Gregorius Ratzborg & Anna Catharina Holsten 
Ratzborg, Margret Krabbe (I4135)
 
4361 MARGUERITE de Sully (-14 Dec 1145). "Henricus comes Augensis filius comitis Willermi" made donations to the abbey of St Michel, Tréport with the consent of "Margarita comitissa et fratres supradicti comitis Robertus, Willelmus major, Willelmus minor" by a charter dated 1101[784]. The necrology of the church of Eu records the death "15 Dec" of "Margareta Augensis comitissa, mater Johannis comitis"[785]. m as his third wife, HENRI I Comte d'Eu, son of GUILLAUME I Comte d'Eu & his [first/second] wife --- (-Fécamp 12 Jul 1140). [Medieval Lands.] de Sully, Marguerite (I34192)
 
4362 Maria Gerber daughter of the court judge David Gerber in Jena, widower of the mayor Kagel von Schmalkaloen, died 1749 in Jlmenau. Gerber, Maria (I28597)
 
4363 Marian Frances Stegner(1927 - 2011)
Marian Frances Stegner, of Boonville, passed away April 29 at Cooper County Memorial Hospital. She was 83 years old.
Marian Frances Young was born December 8, 1927, in New Franklin, Missouri to James Dewey and Mary Frances Davidson Young. On March 21, 1942, at the Four Square Church parsonage, she married Albert George Stegner. He preceded her in death Dec. 8, 2010.
Mrs. Stegner was formerly employed at Toastmaster in Boonville as the Credit and Collections Senior Representative. She also served as the secretary of the Boonville First Baptist Church. Frances was an active member of the Boonville First Baptist Church where some her favorite activities were helping with Vacation Bible School, making banners for the sanctuary, participating in choir and helping in the church kitchen at various functions.
Cherishing her memory are her children, Gary Dale Stegner and wife, Mary Lou of Jefferson City, George David Stegner and wife, Celeste of Bates City, and Shirley Frances Stegner of Columbia; her grandchildren, Lesley Anne Fanara, Gregory George Stegner, Carrie Mae Putman, Joshua James Sumpter and Richard Austin Tipton and nine great-grandchildren.
In addition to her husband and parents, she was preceded in death by two brothers, James Robert Young and Charles William Young; a sister, Mary Elizabeth Millard; and two grandchildren, David Paul Stegner and Sarah Frances Rook.
Funeral services will be at 1 p.m., Wednesday, May 4, 2011 at the Boonville First Baptist Church. Visitation will be Tuesday evening from 5 to 7 p.m. at Markland-Yager Funeral Home in New Franklin.
Burial will be at Walnut Grove Cemetery in Boonville.
Memorial contributions are suggested to Boonville First Baptist Church in care of Markland-Yager Funeral Home, PO Box 126, New Franklin, Missouri 65274. 
Young, Marian Frances (I2366)
 
4364 Marie of Brabant, Queen of France
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Queen consort of France
Tenure 21 August 1274 – 5 October 1285
Born 13 May 1254 Leuven
Died 12 January 1322 (aged 67) Les Mureaux, France
Burial Cordeliers Convent, Paris
Spouse Philip III of France
Issue Louis d'Évreux
Blanche, Duchess of Austria
Margaret, Queen of England
House House of Reginar
Father Henry III, Duke of Brabant
Mother Adelaide of Burgundy
Religion Roman Catholic

Marie of Brabant (13 May 1254 – 12 January 1322[1]) was Queen consort of France by marriage to Philip III of France. Born in Leuven, Brabant, she was a daughter of Henry III, Duke of Brabant, and Adelaide of Burgundy.

Queen
Marie married the widowed Philip III of France on 21 August 1274. His first wife, Isabella of Aragon, had already given birth to three surviving sons: Louis, Philip and Charles.

Philip was under the strong influence of his mother, Margaret of Provence and his minion, surgeon and chamberlain (Chambellan) Pierre de La Broce. Not being French, Marie stood out at the French court. In 1276, Marie's stepson Louis died under suspicious circumstances. Marie was suspected of ordering him to be poisoned. La Brosse, who was also suspected, was imprisoned and later executed for the murder. Margaret suspected Marie of ordering the death of Louis, and Philip did seem to agree more with his mother than his wife.

Queen dowager
After the death of Philip III in 1285, Marie lost some of her political influence, and dedicated her life to their three children: Louis (May 1276 – 19 May 1319), Blanche (1278 - 19 March 1305) and Margaret (died in 1318). Her stepson, Philip IV was crowned king of France on 6 January 1286 in Reims. Together with Joan I of Navarre and Blanche of Artois, she negotiated peace in 1294 between England and France with Edmund Crouchback, the younger brother of Edward I of England.[2]

Marie lived through Philip IV's reign and she outlived her children. She died in 1321, aged 66, in the monastery at Les Mureaux, near Meulan, where she had withdrawn to in 1316. Marie was not buried in the royal necropolis of Basilica of Saint-Denis, but in the Cordeliers Convent, in Paris. Destroyed in a fire in 1580, the church was rebuilt in the following years.

Notes
1. Viard, VIII:362n3.
2. Morris, 267-268.

Sources
Morris, Marc (2008). Edward I and the Forging of Britain. Windmill Books 2009.

Grandes Chroniques de France. Jules Marie Édouard Viard, trans. and ed. Paris: Librairie Ancienne Honoré Champion, 1930.

Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?
title=Marie_of_Brabant,_Queen_of_France&oldid=773632567"
Categories: 1256 births 1321 deaths French queens consort Women of medieval France
People from Leuven House of Reginar
This page was last edited on 3 April 2017, at 14:22.
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de Brabant, Maria (I25533)
 
4365 Marie Vitu and Pavel Kouba were married about 1857. While in Nebraska, their daughter Frances and her husband Frank Havlik left for Oconto Co, WI and took the father, Pavel Kouba with them. Their daughter, Antonie and her husband, Frank Bartu left for Linn Co, OR and took the mother, Marie Vitu Kouba with them.

Scio Tribune February 26, 1925
Mrs. Kuba Dies
Mrs. Mary Kuba, age 90 died at her home on route 3 Wednesday morning at 8:30. She was the mother o Mrs. Frank Bartu, Sr. Funeral arrangements had not been made when we went to press

Scio Tribune March 5, 1925
Laid to Rest Friday
Mrs. Mary Kouba who died on Wednesday Feb. 25, 1925 was laid to rest Friday, Feb 27, 1925 in Franklin Butte Cemetery, the funeral eulogy by Rev. J. Y. Stewart at the Christian Church. Mary Kouba was born Feb. 3, 1835 in Dacice, Morava, Austria-Hungaria and was therefore 90 years 22 days old. She came to America in 1882 and to Oregon in 1900 and had continued to live here ever since. She is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Frantiska Havlik of Wisconsin and Antona Bartu of Scio and one son, Paul Kouba of Kansas, also by 10 grandchildren and 18 great grandchildren. One by one the pioneers are passing over the last trail ne'er more to return. 
Vitu, Marie (I9621)
 
4366 Marie was buried in Forest Hill Cemetery. Marie gave her birth date as 1902, but John H. Dickinson (1902) said she was 9 years older. That would give Marie's birth date as 1895. The newspaper article on Marie's first marriage also gave her age at that date. The newspaper article referred to is from the Pioneer Register, Salem, SD Jan. 17, 1918. This information is from Wm. and Laurel Dickinson, Stone Mountain GA. Love, Marie Marguerite (I5628)
 
4367 Marie was last known to be single, living at home, but going out to work by day.
She is single and lives at home but goes out to work by day per Antonette Mares 4/9/1938. 
Menzel, Marie (I6032)
 
4368 Marie was married in Vienna, Austria.
Married in Vienna. per Antonette Mares 4/9/1938. 
Mares, Marie (I19871)
 
4369 Marie was the adopted daughter of John Langlotz and Minnie nee’ Schubert Langlotz. Schubert, Marie A (I20915)
 
4370 Marion J. Passler, Jr., 80, of Kansas City, Kan., passed away Monday, Jan. 14, at Providence Medical Center. The funeral service will be 11 a.m. Wednesday, Jan. 16, at the Skradski Funeral Home, 340 N. Sixth St., where visitation will begin after 10 a.m. Burial will follow in Chapel Hill Memorial... Passler, Marion John II (I15236)
 
4371 Marjorie A. McCreery, 89, of Pilot Grove, passed away Monday, April 9, 2012 at Katy Manor Nursing Home in Pilot Grove. She was born February 20, 1923 in Pilot Grove to Arthur W. and Charlotte Mae Mitzel Tally. She was married May 6, 1943 to Presley Beuford McCreery, who preceded her in death on May 24, 1997. She graduated from Pilot Grove High School. She liked her gardening and knitting. Survivors include three sons -- Robert and Richard McCreery of Overland Park, KS; Ray McCreery of Shawnee, KS; three daughters -- Charlotte Goyer and Carol Hulse of Shawnee, KS; and Kathy Bousman of Lenexa, KS; eight grandchildren, seven great-grandchildren, and one great great-granddaughter. She was preceded in death by her parents, husband, two brothers -- Raymond and K.P. Tally, and three sisters -- Elma Tally, Cora Dunn and Mildred Stoecklein. Funeral services for Ms. McCreery will be at 1:00 PM, Saturday, April 14, 2011 at the Meisenheimer Funeral Chapel in Pilot Grove, with burial in the Pilot Grove Cemetery. Visitation will be from 5:00 to 7:00 PM, Friday, April 13 at the funeral home. Memorials to the Katy Manor Nursing Home. Tally, Marjorie A (I4604)
 
4372 Mark Mott, Gent.
From GENI

Mark Mott, Gent.
Also Known As: "Mark John Mott"
Birthdate: April 25, 1549 (88)
Birthplace: Braintree, Essex, England
Death: Died December 14, 1637 in Braintree, Essex, England
Father:
John Mott
Mother:
Alice Mott
Spouse:
Frances Mott
Children:
John Mott;
Mary Cole;
Adrian Mott;
Frances Forward;
Grace Camp;
Thomas Mott;
Mark Mott;
Dorothy Talcott;
James Mott;
Dorcas Mott;
Adam Mott;
Alice Mott
Sarah Henley
Siblings:
John Mott

About Mark Mott, Gent.
Mark Mott left a will dated 1 March 1635/36 The will of Mark Mott of Braintree, gent., made when he was very old, was dated 1 Mar 1636, and proved 7 May 1638, and does not name all his children..1

He is called "gentleman" in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury (PCC). This was the Archbishop's court, for people who had property in more than one diocese. They tended to be wealthy, though they might not be if they lived on the border of two dioceses. This might have been the case in Saffron Walden, since Cambridgeshire (Diocese of Ely) was just a few miles away.

The will states:

To the poor of Braintree £5.

To the poor of Booking 20/-.

To my son John £100. (this is our followed line)

The Manor of Shimpling Hall county Norfolk belonging to Alice wife of the said John Mott.

My daughter Sara Woolrich. To my cousin Collyns' minister of Braintree

To each of my children 20/- to buy a ring.

To Mark son of Alice Draper my grandchild £5.

My son Adrian Mott to have residue of goods & to be executor. Wit: Thomas Jekyll, Richard Cuting, Nicholas Jekyll. Proved at London, 7 May, 1638, by Ex. named. 
Mott, Mark (I24975)
 
4373 Marriage date from Francis Doutt Smith Family: Hazel, Joseph Ignatius / Pulley, Sarah Elizabeth (F2045)
 
4374 Marriage license was done in Boonville but the marriage was most likely in Morgan County, Missouri Greenstreet, Richard Larimore (I32746)
 
4375 Marriage performed by police justice Family: Thomey, August / Schlecht, Amelia V (F962)
 
4376 Marriage record 1656 Lieen proves she had a previous marriage and was a widow.

Niclaes de Puwy, camletworker, "youngman" (single man) from near Atrecht, living at the Minnebroedergraft, assisted by Jean de Puwy, his father at the Langegratf married 6 Oct 1656 at the Waalse Kerk (Walloon Church), Leiden; Cathalijna Renard, widow of Maerten Piertersz, living in the Veruwerstreet, assisted by Marija Reijniers, her sister, at the Oude Chingel

Baptism 31 Jan 1631 Leiden South Holland, Netherlands daughter of Jan de Vos & Maria de Mon - witnesses Catarina Jans, Adraen de Mon, Nicolas de Vos & Josijne Hasaek.

1st marriage states she was born in Leiden. There are 3 possibilities but it is the one 1631 because the parents are Jan de Vos and Maria de Mon and a Jan and Marie Renar are the godparents of her first child. Her surname throughout life was stated as Renar(d) in some records and de Vos in others.

Catherine DePuty died intestate 1`705 in Staten Island - Probate admin to eldest son John on 13 Jul 1705 
Renard, Catherina (I26984)
 
4377 Marriage record, roughly translated
On 02 Mar 1862 comes Johann Nichol Schulz, day laborer of Hofstaedten, born on 04 Sep 1819, son of Margaretha Barbara Kessel, step-son of Georg Knauer with
Anna Barbara Thoma, day laborer , born 13 Mar 1814 in Hofstaedten, daughter of Johann Ludwig Thomæ of Hofstaedten and his wife born Schrauter of Grossgardnstadt, to be married here in the Kloster Church.

Death and Baptism records, roughly translated

died 29 Feb 1888, Anna Barbara Thoma, daughter of the master potter: Johann Ludwig Thomæ of Hofstaedten and his wife Kunigunda Schrauter who was born in Großgarnstadt.

Born 18 Mar 1814, witnessed by Johann Kiesser.

Ownership of house number 124 in Sonnefeld.

1855 - Barbara Thomæ, Mr. Schulz
1864 - Wife Barbara Schulz
1873 - 1/2 Georg Forkel, brick mason (Mauer)
- 1/2 Gertraud nee' Thomæ Schmidt
1919 - 1/2 Ernst Mueller, day laborer
- 1/2 Auguste Schmidt,
- Dorothea nee' Siegelin Mueller
1919 Erbengemeinschaft Mueller
The house is a clay and lattice framework. It size is due to the so-call Tropical House and stands with the gable side facing towards Wiedhausen. Each apartment was composed of three rooms which were occasionally occupied by 13 people. In the separate annexes or sheds were timber yards, a goat, pigsty and ? house. Some square meters is still gardened. 
Thomæ, Anna BARBARA (I1114)
 
4378 Marriage record, roughly translated.

On 27 Aug 1871 comes to the Kloster Church Sonnefled
Johann Peter Schmidt, farm hand of Sonnefeld, born 14 Mar 1831 in Esbach, son of day laborers Conrad Schmidt of Esbach and his wife Anna Barbara Weber of Wisenfeld with
Anna Gertruad Thomæ, illegimate child born 03 Feb 1845, daughter of day laborer Anna Barbara Thomæ, now married to Johann Nicol Schulz, day laborer of Hofstaedten.

About house Number 124 at Herrngasse 11 in Sonnefeld, Germany
The house itself is built in mud bricks, has the size of the so-called drip houses and stands with the gable side to the road which leads in the direction of Weidhausen. Each room consisted of three rooms with a total of 13 persons. With the separately constructed Nebegebäuden, (Schuppen) were wooden storage, a goat as well as pig stall, besides cattle were accommodated. In addition, there were still a few square meters of garden. 
Thomæ, Anna GERTRAUD (I14083)
 
4379 Marriage witnessed by Robert Orr and Janet Mary nee’ McQuigg Brown McQuigg, Sarah Evelyn (I9076)
 
4380 Marriage witnessed by Thomas and Catherine Henery. McQuigg, Elizabeth (I10127)
 
4381 Marriages and issue[edit]
On an unknown date, Elizabeth Cheney married her first husband Sir Frederick Tilney, of Ashwellthorpe, Norfolk, and Boston, Lincolnshire. He was the son of Sir Philip Tilney and Isabel Thorpe. They made their principal residence at Ashwellthorpe Manor. The couple had one daughter:

Elizabeth Tilney (before 1445 – 4 April 1497), married firstly in about 1466, Sir Humphrey Bourchier, by whom she had three children; and secondly on 30 April 1472, Thomas Howard, Earl of Surrey, who later became the 2nd Duke of Norfolk, by whom she had nine children. These children included Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk, Elizabeth Howard, mother of Anne Boleyn, and Lord Edmund Howard, father of Catherine Howard.[citation needed]
Sir Frederick Tilney died in 1445, leaving their young daughter Elizabeth as heiress to his estates. Shortly before 1 December 1446, Elizabeth Cheney married secondly Sir John Say, of Broxbourne, Hertfordshire, Speaker of the House of Commons, and a member of the household of King Henry VI. He was a member of the embassy, led by William de la Pole, which was sent to France in 1444 to negotiate with King Charles VII for the marriage between King Henry and Margaret of Anjou.[2] Her father settled land worth fifty marks clear per annum upon the couple and their issue before Candlemas, 1453. They made their home at Broxbourne, Hertfordshire.[2]

Sir John Say and Elizabeth had three sons and four daughters:

Sir William Say (1452- 1529), of Baas (in Broxbourne), Bedwell (in Essendon), Bennington, Little Berkhampstead, and Sawbridgeworth, Hertfordshire, Lawford, Essex, Market Overton, Rutland, etc., Burgess (M.P.) for Plympton, Knight of the Shire for Hertfordshire, Sheriff of Somerset and Dorset, 1478–9, Sheriff of Essex and Hertfordshire, 1482–3, Justice of the Peace for Hertfordshire, 1486–1506, and, in right of his 1st wife, of East Lydford, Radstock, Spaxton, Wellesleigh, and Wheathill, Somerset, and, in right of his 2nd wife, of Wormingford Hall (in Wormingford), Essex, Great Munden, Hertfordshire, etc. He married (1st) before 18 November 1472 (date of letters of attorney) Genevieve Hill, daughter/heiress of John Hill, of Spaxton, Somerset. She was still alive in 1478. He married (2nd) shortly after 18 April 1480 Elizabeth Fray, widow of Sir Thomas Waldegrave, by whom he had two daughters, Mary Say and Elizabeth Say.[2] Mary, the eldest daughter married Henry Bourchier, 2nd Earl of Essex and 6th Baron Bourchier, by whom she had one daughter, Anne Bourchier, 7th Baroness Bourchier.[citation needed]
Thomas Say, of Liston Hall, Essex.
[Master] Leonard Say, clerk, Rector of Spaxton, Somerset. See Testamenta Eboracensia, 4 (Surtees Soc. 53) (1869): 86–88 (will of Leonard Say, clerk).
Anne Say (died 1478/1494), married Henry Wentworth, K.B., of Nettlestead, Suffolk, Goxhill, Lincolnshire, Parlington and Pontefract, Yorkshire, and of London, Esquire of the Household, Knight of the Body, Sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk, 1481–82, Sheriff of Yorkshire, 1489–90, 1492, Knight of the Shire for Yorkshire, 1491–92, by whom she had issue, including Margery Wentworth, mother of Jane Seymour.
Mary Say, married Sir Philip Calthorpe, Knt., by whom she had issue.
Margaret Say, married Thomas Sampson, Esq.
Katherine Say, married Thomas Bassingbourne. 
Cheney, Elizabeth (I35703)
 
4382 Married Simmons, Jeremiah (I32827)
 
4383 Married Family: Geiselherr, Herr Peter / Stromer, Margarete von Reichenbach (F11488)
 
4384 Married 14 oct 1551 by contract to Colin Campbell "The Leach" Stewart, Joan (I31020)
 
4385 Married a baker Smith, Laura Cecelia (I11060)
 
4386 Married a Barker.
After the death of her parents, she went to live with her grandparents (Patton). 
Norris, Kathleen (I20769)
 
4387 Married a Bingham and had at least one child, Verama Estes bingham (1905-1928) Estes, Rozella M (I23207)
 
4388 Married a Boss.
Newspapers: Boonville Daily News: Obituary, Obituary of Julia Margaret Hilden - 10 Apr 1991. 
McDonough, Armene (I3383)
 
4389 Married a Bunnell at some point. McDonough, Mary Raciott (I20528)
 
4390 Married a Clayton A Woodridge of Chariton, Missouri Aurig, Viola Caroline (I2894)
 
4391 Married a Davidson McQuigge, Lorna (I35241)
 
4392 Married a Draper.
Newspapers: Boonville Daily News: Obituary, Obituary of Julia Margaret Hilden - 10 Apr 1991. 
McDonough, Ellen (I17795)
 
4393 Married a FRICKE. Toellner, Sophia (I16622)
 
4394 Married a HARRIS. Mill, Lucy Maude (I2271)
 
4395 Married a hay field landlord, died 1905, childless. Scheller, Helene (I29888)
 
4396 Married a Heckman. Street, Paula Elizabeth (I16183)
 
4397 Married a HENDERSON and living in Mankato, Minnesota from the obituary of her brother, Thomas, found in the 26 Aug 1996 issue of the Boonville Daily News. Miller, Margaret Catherine (I21178)
 
4398 Married a Hicks Krumm, Caroline Pauline (I24477)
 
4399 Married a Hilden.
Newspapers: Boonville Daily News: Obituary, Obituary of Louis Franz Schupp. 
Schupp, Earlene (I10843)
 
4400 Married a Hoff and will living in Clear Creek Township, she had a child in Jan 1885 Brummel, Anna (I31620)
 

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