# |
Notes |
Linked to |
3901 |
Dagobert I, his father, recalled and made peace with Saint Amand, who was previously banished for criticizing the king's vices, and asked him to baptize his new-born son. The ceremony was performed at Orléans and Charibert II, Dagobert's half-brother who was King of Aquitaine at the time, was the god-father. | Saint Sigebert III King of the Austrasian Franks (I24063)
|
3902 |
Dairmait Mac Murchada was allied with Murtough MacLochlainn who was acknowledged as High King of Ireland in 1162. However, Murtough was overthrown in 1166 by Rory O'Connor and his Tiernan O'Rourke invaded Leinster, and Dairmait Mac Murchada fled to England in search of allies. King Henry II accepted Dairmait's allegiance, and gave him permission to recruit among his subjects for an expedition to Ireland. Dairmait struck a bargain with Richard FitzGilbert "Strongbow" deClare, 2nd Earl of Pembroke, who invaded Ireland, married Dairmait's daughter Aoife, and became King of Leinster when Dairmait died in 1171. King Henry II, fearful that Strongbow would set up an independent kingdom, came to Ireland to assert his authority over the lands that had been occupied. The King granted Leinster to Strongbow, Meath to Hugh de Lacy; and most of the Irish Kings quickly recognised Henry as their overlord. The Norse towns were of vital military and economic importance. King Henry annexed Dublin, Wexford, Waterford, Cork and Limerick; and left garrisons in all of them. Thus, Dairmait Mac Murchada is remembered for having brought the English to Ireland and is generally held in low esteem in Irish History. | Dairmait Mac Murchada King of Leinster and High King of Ireland (I5672)
|
3903 |
Daniel died at the age of 64 years. | Gleason, Daniel (I16194)
|
3904 |
Daniels (1892) gives the marriage year as 1729. | Town, John (I15421)
|
3905 |
Date is based on the fact that she died in her 24th year. | Metcalf, Abigail (I12915)
|
3906 |
Date of her mother's will | Sherman, Phebe (I11464)
|
3907 |
Date of marriage based on a year before the first child was born. | Pschirer, Mary Anna (I11952)
|
3908 |
Davis (1884) states she was buried on 4 May. | Elizabeth (I181)
|
3909 |
Davis (1995) and Nelson (1975) give his death date as 11 February 1673/74. | Colby, John (I157)
|
3910 |
Dawith served between 732 and 744 as as nakharar. | Dawith (I10064)
|
3911 |
Dawith was living about 600. | Dawith (I6094)
|
3912 |
Death was on the fourth or fifth. In the death record he is listed as Lt. John Stevens. | Stevens, Sgt. John (I1310)
|
3913 |
Death: Gozzaldi (1930) gives a second death date as before 1706. | Stone, Mary (I20579)
|
3914 |
Dedi I was living in 947. | Dedi I Count in the Northern Hessegau (I8983)
|
3915 |
Despite his earlier conversion, he is said to have died a pagan. | Rolf Ragnvaldsson Duke of Normandy (I3054)
|
3916 |
Did his parents take him back to England? | Hyde, Samuel (I4209)
|
3917 |
Doda 's name was also spelt Detta. | Doda (I3016)
|
3918 |
Doon was living in 949. | Doon (I8939)
|
3919 |
Doty (1897) Incorrectly gives the date as “8 December
1687/8, | Family: Henry Churchill / Mary Churchill (F8343)
|
3920 |
Dow (1894) and Farwell (1904) give his death date as 10 May 1737. | Elkins, Deacon Moses (I18895)
|
3921 |
Dow (1894) gives his death date as 31 August 1683. | Perkins, Abraham (I4970)
|
3922 |
Drake (1852) gives the date of his will as 27 September 1720 | Swett, Capt. Joseph (I1649)
|
3923 |
Drogo died while on a pilgrimage to Jerusalem. | Drogo of Mantes Count of Valois, Amiens, and Vexin (I24627)
|
3924 |
Dunbar (1935) gives her birth date as 21 June 1730. | Flanders, Sarah (I14434)
|
3925 |
Dunham (1907) gives her birth year as 1660 and her mother as Mercy Morton. | Dunham, Mercy (I18315)
|
3926 |
Dunham (1907) gives his birth date as 18 November 1637, but I cannot find where he found this date. | Dunham, Joseph (I994)
|
3927 |
Dunham (1907) gives his birth year as 1665. | Dunham, Nathaniel (I996)
|
3928 |
Dunham (1907) gives his birth year as 1682. | Dunham, Joseph (I18314)
|
3929 |
Dunham (1907) gives his birth year as about 1680. | Dunham, Micaiah (I18313)
|
3930 |
Dunham (1907) gives his death date as 24 December 1680. | Dunham, Captain Benajah (I18311)
|
3931 |
Dunham (1907) gives is birth year as 1689. | Dunham, Daniel (I18317)
|
3932 |
Dunham (1907) gives the year of his birth as 1658. | Dunham, Eleazer (I18319)
|
3933 |
Dunham (1907) gives their marriage year as 1689. | Family: Nathaniel Dunham / Mary Tilson (F922)
|
3934 |
During a hunting expedition, the king called at Corfe
Castle, where Ælfthryth and Æthelred were living. His stepmother offered him mead, and while he was drinking, she or one of her retinue stabbed him. He rode off, mortally wounded, but slumped from his horse; his foot caught in a stirrup and he was dragged into a bog, where, according to legend, the location of his body was revealed to searchers by a pillar of light This was the result of a plot hatched by his step-mother Ælfthryth so her son Æthelred II the Unrede could become king.
According to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle "No worse deed for the English race was done than this was, since they first sought out the land of Britain. Men murdered him, but God exalted him. In life he was an earthly king; after death he is now a heavenly saint. His earthly relatives would not avenge him, but his Heavenly Father has much avenged him". | Saint Edward "the Martyr" King of England (I22417)
|
3935 |
During he reign of Henry III, he fought against the king at the Battle of Lincoln in 1217 for which he lost his lands. They were later redeemed and he became a supporter of the king. | de Mowbray, William Baron of Axholme (I2900)
|
3936 |
During his reign, an expedition left Britain under Yrp Lluyddawg, and settled in Greece, never to return. | Cadell King of Britain (I2566)
|
3937 |
During his reign, Syria, under Antiochus III, seized Palestine and threatened Egypt. Rome intervened saving Egypt. | Pharaoh Ptolemy V Epiphanes (I9490)
|
3938 |
During his reign, there were wars with the Persians and Avars. At this time also, the Slavs were advancing into Thrace and Greece. | Tiberius II Constantine Emperor of the East (I9372)
|
3939 |
During King Philip's War, he was one of the defenders of the fort at Bogistow, near Medway-Sherborn, Massachusetts. His home was burnt by the Indians during King Philips War. | Rockwood, Nicholas (I501)
|
3940 |
During the Anglo-Welsh conflict between 1210 and 1212, she acted as a emissary between the two rulers. | Joan Princess of England (I6859)
|
3941 |
During the second century BCE, he was the King of the Britons. | Eidal King of the Britons (I2550)
|
3942 |
During the sixteenth century and English Reformation, King Henry VIII led the dissolution of the monasteries and many holy places were demolished. Edward's remains were hidden so as to avoid desecration.
In 1931, the relics were recovered by Wilson-Claridge during an archaeological excavation; their identity was confirmed by Dr. T. E. A. Stowell, an osteologist. In 1970, examinations performed on the relics suggested that the young man had died in the same manner as Edward. Wilson-Claridge wanted the relics to go to the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia. His brother, however, wanted them to be returned to Shaftesbury Abbey. For decades, the relics were kept in a cutlery box in a bank vault at the Midland Bank in Woking, Surrey because of the unresolved dispute about which of two churches should have them.
In time, the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia was victorious and placed the relics in a church in Brookwood Cemetery in Woking, with the enshrinement ceremony occurring in September 1984. The St Edward Brotherhood of monks was organized there as well. The church is now named St Edward the Martyr Orthodox Church, and it is under the jurisdiction of a traditionalist Greek Orthodox community. However, while the bones are of approximately the right date, they are of a man in his late twenties or early thirties rather than a youth in his mid teens. | Saint Edward "the Martyr" King of England (I22417)
|
3943 |
During the third century BCE, he was King of the Britons. | Sitsyllt King of the Britons (I2552)
|
3944 |
Ealdred was living in 926. | Ealdred Lord of Bamborough (I6024)
|
3945 |
Eastman (1867) gives her death date as 10 March 1698. | Smith, Sarah (I18465)
|
3946 |
Eddy (1930) gives his death year as 1763. | Eddy, Samuel (I1092)
|
3947 |
Edgar allowed his Danish subjects to retain Danish laws, he promoted a monastic revival and he encouraged trade by reforming the currency. He improved defense by organizing coastal naval patrols and a system for manning warships. | Edgar "the Peaceful" King of England (I2839)
|
3948 |
Edmund defeated two Norse kings in Northumbria and also defeated the Britons in Strathclyde who had been supporting the Norsemen. He then gave Strathclyde to King Malcolm I of Scotland in return for a treaty of alliance. This ensured a half century of peace between Scotland and Saxon England. | Edmund "the Magnificent" King of England (I2842)
|
3949 |
Edward held land at Rogerville and Raimes in the Duchy of Normandy and who once witnessed a charter there of William de Tancarville. | Edward FitzEdward (I24225)
|
3950 |
Edward I, his new young wife Margaret, who turned twenty-one that year and was pregnant with their first child, and the royal household, set out north from St Albans on 15 April 1300. The army had been summoned to Carlisle for mid-summer, for a new Scottish campaign. Queen Margaret parted company with the main household at Stamford on 5 May, and continued her own journey northward. Preparations had been made for her to use Cawood Castle, a residence of the Archbishop of York, for her confinement. She stopped in the village of Brotherton to hunt late that month, and went into labor, early and unexpectedly. Margaret had married Edward I on 10 September 1299 and, if conception occurred immediately, she was in her 38th week, but as she was apparently hunting and had not yet reached Cawood, she may have been a week or two earlier in her pregnancy. The labor was difficult, and Margaret reportedly called on St Thomas of Canterbury for assistance. The baby was delivered on 1 June, and named for the saint. Edward I rushed over to the village as soon as he was given the news, and stayed there until 9 June. | Thomas of Brotherton Earl of Norfolk, Marshall of England (I2805)
|
3951 |
Edward invaded Scotland and soundly defeated the Scots under Baliol. Edward forced Balliol to abdicate The Scottish barons did homage to Edward as their king. William Wallace incited a rebellion in 1297, defeated the English army at Stirling, and harassed England's northern counties. The next year, Edward defeated Wallace at the Battle of Falkirk but encountered continued resistance until Wallace's capture and execution in 1304. Robert the Bruce revolted in 1306 against England ultimately defeating Edward II at Bannockburn. | Edward I "Longshanks" King of England (I2808)
|
3952 |
Edward was a French Huguenot and was probably a scion of the family of Pierre de la Barre de Vaution of Rochelle.
| Devotion, Edward (I192)
|
3953 |
Egbert's name was also spelt Ecgbeorht.
| Egbert King of England (I2854)
|
3954 |
Egilwich's name was also spelt Heilwig. She was a Saxon. | Egilwich Abbess of Challes (I4702)
|
3955 |
Einaugige means One-eyed. | Eckbert "der Einaugige" Count in the Ambergau (I8648)
|
3956 |
Either she or her sister, Elizabeth, died before September 1662. | Rowell, Marguerite (I18520)
|
3957 |
Either she or her sister, Margerite, died before September 1662. | Rowell, Elizabeth (I18519)
|
3958 |
El Sabio means "the Wise". | Sancho VI "el Sabio" King of Navarre (I8838)
|
3959 |
Elias and Beatrix owned covenant in the Lancaster Church at which time their two oldest children were baptized. | Pope, Beatrix (I23922)
|
3960 |
Elizabeth was a child at their marriage. | Family: Sir Nicholas de Poyntz / Elizabeth la Zouche (F8774)
|
3961 |
Elizabeth was killed in the Rowlandson Garrison house in the Lancaster Massacre of 10 February 1676 along with two of her sons. The rest of her family was carried into captivity, where we know that Henry died. The fate of her daughters is unknown. | White, Elizabeth (I16398)
|
3962 |
Elizabeth's birth date was recorded as 17 (1) 1683. | Roper, Elizabeth (I20467)
|
3963 |
Elizabeth's last name is listed many different ways depending on the sources: Greeley, Grundy, Grunday, Grundey, and (Smith) Greely. | Woodward, Daniel (I14792)
|
3964 |
Ephraim died intestate. | Pond, Ephraim (I476)
|
3965 |
Ermengarde was the heiress of Tonnerre. | Ermengarde (I3239)
|
3966 |
Eticho II of the Nordgau was living about 698. | Eticho II of the Nordgau (I5021)
|
3967 |
Eudes served between 849 and 851 as the Rector of St. Aubin. | Eudes Count of Nantes and Angers (I22603)
|
3968 |
Eudokios Maleinos was living in 900. | Eudokios Maleinos (I6073)
|
3969 |
Eunice was from Sutton when married according to the records. | Family: Edward Goddard / Eunice Walker (F321)
|
3970 |
Eustace became the Count of Boulogne. | Eustace IV Count of Boulogne (I3325)
|
3971 |
Eystein was living about 710. | Eystein Earl of Throndheim (I9248)
|
3972 |
Father (natural): Henry of Bourbourg, Constible of Bourbourg
Mother (natural): Sybil Guisnes | Beatrice of Bourbourg (I24482)
|
3973 |
Father Robrecht II, Count of Vlaanderen and King of Jerusalem.
Mother: Clémence of Brittany | Baldwin VII Count of Flanders (I23837)
|
3974 |
Father: _____ Grove
Mother: Mary Holmes | Grove, Mary (I15058)
|
3975 |
Father: John LeStrange, 1st Lord Strange
Mother: Lady Mary FitzAlan | le Strange, John Lord Strange of Blackmere (I24824)
|
3976 |
Father: Anthony Fisher | Fisher, Josiah (I24584)
|
3977 |
Father: Aymon II "Vairvache"
Mother: Lucia de Nevers | Archambaud VII "the Strong" Sire de Bourbon (I24746)
|
3978 |
Father: David Warden
Mother: Rebecca ______ | Warden, Cynthia J. (I9948)
|
3979 |
Father: Donald, the 6th Earl of Mar | Isabel (I24527)
|
3980 |
Father: Edward Bridge
Mother: Mary Brooks | Bridge, Mary (I24848)
|
3981 |
Father: Fernando Perez de Traba
Mother: Sancha Gonzalez | Fernandez de Traba, Teresa (I21960)
|
3982 |
Father: George Parker | Parker, Ellen (I16506)
|
3983 |
Father: Guiomar III
Mother: unknown | Hervey le Breton of Léon Earl of Wiltshire (I24292)
|
3984 |
Father: Henry Bannister | Bannister, Isabel (I25027)
|
3985 |
Father: Henry de Ferrers, 2nd Lord Ferrers of Groby
Mother: Isabel de Verdun | de Ferrers, Philippa (I24821)
|
3986 |
Father: Henry Sapcott
Mother: unknown | Sapcotts, Winifred (I18281)
|
3987 |
Father: Hugh Stafford, Earl of Stafford
Mother: unknown | Stafford, Margaret (I21644)
|
3988 |
Father: John Bacon
Mother: Rebecca Hall | Bacon, Rebecca (I23018)
|
3989 |
Father: John de Acton | de Acton, Maud (I24545)
|
3990 |
Father: John de Lungvilliers | de Lunvilliers, Margaret (I24489)
|
3991 |
Father: John de Montague, Earl of Salisbury
Mother: Maud Franceys | de Montague, Margaret (I24503)
|
3992 |
Father: John de Sudeley (1305-1340)
Mother: Eleanor de Scales (____-1361) | de Sudeley, Joan (I23657)
|
3993 |
Father: John Haynes of Much Hadham | Haynes, Katherine (I19267)
|
3994 |
Father: John Orreby, Lord Oreby
Mother: Margaret ______ | Orreby, Joan (I23133)
|
3995 |
Father: John Spring
Mother: Abigail ______ | Spring, Abigail (I20522)
|
3996 |
Father: John Starr
Mother: Mary Bunker
She had been adopted by her uncle and aunt, Eleazer and Mary (Bunker) Lasher of Dedham, Massachusetts. | Starr, Lydia (I24849)
|
3997 |
Father: John, Lord Lovel
Mother: Isabel de Bois | Maud (I24324)
|
3998 |
Father: Joscelin de la Pomerai
Mother: _____ ______ | de la Pomerai, Henry (I24251)
|
3999 |
Father: Lope Diaz de Haro, Lord of Vizcaya and Najera
Mother: Aldonza Ruiz | Lopez de Haro, Urraca (I21961)
|
4000 |
Father: Louis Delisle (1645-____)
Mother: Louise DesGranges (1648-1721) | Delisle, Antoine (I23887)
|