# |
Notes |
Linked to |
5901 |
He was murdered by Thierry I, whom he revolted against. | Munderic of Vitry-en-Perthois (I3403)
|
5902 |
He was murdered while returning from an embassy to Constantinople. | Duke Bodegisel II Governor of Aquitaine (I3400)
|
5903 |
He was murdered. | Gudrod Bjornsson Under-King of Vestfold (I3795)
|
5904 |
He was murdered. | Yazdagerd III King of Persia (I6200)
|
5905 |
He was murdered. | Duke Ansgise Mayor of the Palace (I3385)
|
5906 |
He was murdered. | Chilperic I King of the Franks (I5861)
|
5907 |
He was murdered. | Clovis (I22764)
|
5908 |
He was murdered. | Hermisdas IV King of Persia (I9374)
|
5909 |
He was murdered. | Hoel II King of Brittany (I9317)
|
5910 |
He was murdered. | Sapor III King of Persia (I9383)
|
5911 |
He was murdered. | Yazdegerd I King of Persia (I9381)
|
5912 |
He was murdered. | Tiridates IV "the Great" (I9586)
|
5913 |
He was murdered. | Antiochus VIII Philometer "Grypus" King of Syria (I9520)
|
5914 |
He was murdered. | Phraates IV Great King of Parthia (I9404)
|
5915 |
He was murdered. | Mithradates V Eurugates King of Pontus (I9442)
|
5916 |
He was murdered. | Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid Empire (I9431)
|
5917 |
He was murdered. | Thomas of Woodstock KG, Duke of Gloucester (I7066)
|
5918 |
He was murdered. | Herbert I Count of Vermandois (I3001)
|
5919 |
He was murdered. | Godfrey Count of Puttin and in the Ennsthal (I8578)
|
5920 |
He was murdered. | Alan III Duke of Brittany (I3746)
|
5921 |
He was murdered. | Gebhard I Count of Sulzbach (I4043)
|
5922 |
He was murdered. | Sancho Garcia III the Great King of Navarre, Count of Castile and Aragon (I4320)
|
5923 |
He was murdered. | Alexies Comnenus (I8893)
|
5924 |
He was murdered. | Igor Grand Prince of Novgorod and Kiev (I3445)
|
5925 |
He was named for his younger brother who died three days before his birth. | Gates, Simon (I20347)
|
5926 |
He was named for the fabled Knight of the Swan, from whom the Bohun, Earls of Hereford and Essex claimed descent. | de Bohun, Eneas (I21736)
|
5927 |
He was named in the Magna Charta. | Alan of Galloway Lord of Galloway (I6618)
|
5928 |
He was named in the Magna Charta. | de Albini, William Earl of Arundel (I2913)
|
5929 |
He was not in his father's 1714 will. | Elkins, Joseph (I18899)
|
5930 |
He was not in his father's will. | White, John (I16396)
|
5931 |
He was not listed on the census of 1667. | Giard, Antoine (I16953)
|
5932 |
He was not mentioned in his father's will. | Eddy, Jonathan (I12727)
|
5933 |
He was not mentioned in his father's will. | Hackett, John (I14147)
|
5934 |
He was not mentioned in his father's will. | Hackett, Mary (I14148)
|
5935 |
He was not mentioned in his father's will. | Hackett, Ephraim (I14149)
|
5936 |
He was not named in his father's will. | Heath, Richard (I21468)
|
5937 |
He was of the old royal Bugundian House. | Duke Ricomer (I5282)
|
5938 |
He was of the old royal Burgundian House. | Duke Ricomer (I5282)
|
5939 |
He was of Visagothic descent. | Sunifred Count of Urgel, Barcelona, Gerona and Osona, Margrave of Gothie (I3942)
|
5940 |
He was of Wigmore and Milicent. | de Mortimer, Ralph (I7292)
|
5941 |
He was Old King Cole of the nursery rhyme. | Coel Godebog King of Britain (I1228)
|
5942 |
He was on a pilgrimage to Jerusalem when he died. | Otto I von Scheyern Count in the Meddle Paar and Scheyern on the Ilm (I4082)
|
5943 |
He was on board a ship bound for France. | Légère, Marie (I15909)
|
5944 |
He was on board the Castle bound for New England. He may have died just before the voyage. | Iggleden, Stephen (I204)
|
5945 |
He was one of four men commissioned to fell the trees for a meeting house. | Phillips, Deacon Nicholas (I24227)
|
5946 |
He was one of the first settlers and signed the Combination at Exeter in 1639.
Whereas it hath pleased the Lord to move the heart of our dread sovereign Charles, by the grace of God king, etc., to grant license and liberty to sundry of his subjects to plant themselves in the western parts America, we, his loyal subjects, brethren in the church in Exeter, situate and lying upon the river Pascataquacke, with other inhabitants there, considering with ourselves the holy will of God and our own necessity, that we should not live without wholesome laws and government among us, of which we are altogether destitute, do in the name of Christ and in the sight of God combine ourselves together to erect and set up amongst us such government as shall be to our best discerning agreeable to the will of God, professing our.'selves subjects to our sovereign lord King Charles, according to the liberties of our English colony of the Massachusetts, and binding ourselves solemnly by the grace and help of Christ and in his name and fear to submit ourselves to such godly and Christian laws as are here established in the realm of England to our best knowledge, and to all other such laws which shall upon good grounds be made and enacted amongst us according to God, that we may live quietly and peaceably together in all godliness and honesty.
Mo. 5, 4, 1639. | Elkins, Henry (I1775)
|
5947 |
He was one of the last barons to swear allegiance to King John, and one of the first to take up arms against the king. He was one of the 25 Magna Charta Sureties. | de Mowbray, William Baron of Axholme (I2900)
|
5948 |
He was one of the leaders of the First Crusade. | Baldwin I King of Jerusalem (I24090)
|
5949 |
He was one of the original proprietors of Marlborough. in 1656, the following patition was sent to the colonial government:
To ye Honord Governour, Deputy Governor, Magistrates, & Deputies of ye Generll Court now Assembled in Boston
The humble Petition of severall of ye Inhabitants of Sudbury whose names are heere undr written Humbly Showeth That whereas yor Petitiors have lived divers yeares in Sudbury & God hath beene pleased to increase or Children wth are now divers of them growne to mans Estate, & wee many of us, growne into yeares : so as yt wee should bee glad to see them setled before ye Lord take us away from hence, as also God haveing given us some considerable quantity of Cattle ; so yt wee are so streightned yt wee cannott so Comfortably subsist, as could be desired ; & some of us haveing taken some paines to veiw the Country ; wee have found A place wch lyeth "Westwd about eight miles from Sudbury, wch wee conceive might bee comfortable for or Subsistance: Petition for ye It is therefore the humble request of yor Petitionrs to this honord Court : yt you would bee pleased to Graunt unto us — eight miles Square ; or so much Land as may containe to eight miles Square for to make A Plantation: If it shall please this honord Court to graunt or Petition, It is farthr then the request of yor Petitionrs to this honord Court that you will bee pleased to appoint mr Thomas Danforth or Lieftent ffisher to lay out the bounds of ye Plantation and wee shall sattisfy those whome this honord Court shall please to employ in it : So apprehending yor weighty occasio[n] wee shall not farther trouble this honord Court but sha[ll] ever pray for yo"' Happinesse
Edmond Rice, Thomas King, John Ruddocke
William Ward, John How, Peter Bent
John Bent Senr, John Maynard, Thomas Goodenow
John Woods, Edward Rice, Richard Newton
Henry Rice
That this is a true Coppy of an originall Petition presented to ye Generall Court May 1656: Lefte on file & thereto
compared is Attestd
Edward Rawson Secretar
| Ruddock, Deacon John (I23320)
|
5950 |
He was one of the signers of the following petition:
"To the Honable the Governour & Councill of their Majts Colony of the
Matthathusets in New England
The humble Addresse of the Inhabitants and train solders of ye Province of New Hampshire Febry 20 1689
Humbly shewetl,
That whereas since the late Revolution in yor Colony you have Exerted a power of Government over their Majts Subjects Inhabitants therein whch wee arc given to understand their Majts have been graciously pleas'd to approve off, and Impower'd you to continue the same till further order; And wee who were formerly under yor Government having been for some time distitute of power Sufficient to put our selves into A capacity of defence against the comon enemie, and having wth great Expectation awaited their Majts order for A settlemt amongst us whch not yet ariving considering also how liable wee are to destruction by the Enemy wch of our selves wee cannot prevent; wee are therefore Necessitated at present to Supplicate yor Honours for Government & Protection as formerly untill their Majts pleasure shall be known concerning vs. Hereby obliging our selves to A dve submission therto, and payment of our Eqvall proportion (according to our capacity) of the charge yt shall arise for the defence of the Country against the common Enemy, praying also that such persons may be Commissionated to comand the Militia as have already been, or shall be chosen by the trained soldiers in the respective Towns desireing yor Honrs to grant us this our reqvests & yor petrs shall ever pray." | Waterhouse, Richard (I24029)
|
5951 |
He was one of two men chosen to mowe, gather up and bring home thatch for ye meeting house. | Phillips, Deacon Nicholas (I24227)
|
5952 |
He was part of the King’s expedition to Champagne. | de Percy, Sir Henry Lord Percy (I21745)
|
5953 |
He was perhaps the Guienne King of Arms, but no contemporaneity records exist to prove this. | Roet, Sir Payne Guienne King of Arms (I8507)
|
5954 |
He was persecuted by Hormisdas IV. | Kafnai Exilarch at Babylon (I6204)
|
5955 |
He was present at the Battle of Hastings. | de Clare, Richard FitzGilbert Earl of Clare (I3587)
|
5956 |
He was present at the Battle of Hastings. | Giffard, Walter Lord of Longueville (I3594)
|
5957 |
He was present at the Church Council at Metz. | Saint Arnulf Mayor of the Palace and Bishop of Metz (I3397)
|
5958 |
He was present at the siege of Calais in 1347. | Roet, Sir Payne Guienne King of Arms (I8507)
|
5959 |
He was probably a Cromwellian soldier and brought to the new world with him a helmet and coat of chain mail. Caleb Butler, in his History of Groton gives this story: "John was a sturdy, strong man of stern countenance, and whenever he had any difficulty with the Indians, he would clothe himself with his coat of mail, helmet, cuirass, and gorget, which gave him a fierce and frightful appearance. They having once stolen from him a horse, he put on his armour and pursued them; and in a short time overtook the party. They were surprised to see him alone, and a chief approached him with uplifted tomahawk. John told him to strike, which he did, and finding the blow made no impression on his cap, he was much astonished, and asked John to let him put it on, and then strike on his head, as he had done on John's. The helmet being too small for the chief's head, the stroke settled it down to his ears, scraping off the skin of both sides of his head. They gave him up his horse, thinking him to be a supernatural being." | Prescott, John (I488)
|
5960 |
He was probably as Exilarch at Babylon. | Huna (I6205)
|
5961 |
He was probably named after his godfather, Bennet Averell of Sawbridgeworth, Hertforshire. | Eliot, Bennet (I1850)
|
5962 |
He was probably the Olaf slain by the Saxons on route to Rome for a pilgrimage. | Olaf of Dublin (I24447)
|
5963 |
He was probably unmarried. | Peck, Caleb (I13715)
|
5964 |
He was put on the throne by his mother. In 246 BCE, he made war on Ptolemy III Euergates, but was defeated. He was forced to give Asia Minor to his brother, Antiochus Hierax. Later he lost Parthia to the Arcasid dynasty. | Seleucus II Callinius King of Syria (I9528)
|
5965 |
He was raised to sebastokrator. | Isaac Komnenos (I22289)
|
5966 |
He was recorded while living with his parents. | Ward, Harold Harding (I749)
|
5967 |
He was recorded while living with his widowed mother. | Ward, Lawrence Carlyle (I752)
|
5968 |
He was removed 976/977 as the Margrave of Merseburg. | Gunter von Merseburg Margrave of Merseburg (I5091)
|
5969 |
He was returning from an expedition in Canada. | Wood, Samuel (I14908)
|
5970 |
He was said to be Chobham, Woking, UK: Foundations: The Journal of the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, volume 1, number 3, 2004. | Pantagenet, Sir Henry Earl of Lancaster and Leicester (I2890)
|
5971 |
He was sailing to France. | Blanchard, Pierre (I15835)
|
5972 |
He was sailing to New England. | Lee, Thomas (I4222)
|
5973 |
He was seen in 1136. | Uchtred Lord of Galloway (I6622)
|
5974 |
He was seen in 1174. | Gille Brigte mac Fergusa of Galloway (I7993)
|
5975 |
He was servant and friend of King Edward I. | de Grandision, Sir Otho (I24068)
|
5976 |
He was seven years old when his father died. Upon his mother's death, he became sole ruler. | Sitsyllt King of Britain (I2571)
|
5977 |
He was shot by an Indian on a Sunday morning while going between the fort and his house. Although mortally wounded, he succeeded in wresting the gun from the Indian and ran with it toward the fort until he was met by a party who went out to his rescue. | Wheeler, Abraham (I20110)
|
5978 |
He was slain by the sword in a battle waged near the villiage of Brecon. The site is beleived to have been a Roman legionary fortress dating from 100 AD. Both Bleddyn and his brother-in-law, Rhys ap Tewdwr were slain by the Normans under Bernard de Newmarch. | Bleddyn ap Maenarch Lord of Brecknock (I1203)
|
5979 |
He was slain. | Gruffydd ap Llewelyn Prince of North Wales (I6912)
|
5980 |
He was slain. | de Vere, Aubrey II Justiciar of England (I3581)
|
5981 |
He was starved to death under orders of King John. | de Braose, John (I23158)
|
5982 |
He was Steward of the Household of Richard I and one of the four earls who carried the silken canopy over the monarch's head at his second coronation. | de Bigod, Roger Earl of Norfolk (I3660)
|
5983 |
He was still alive in 1351. | Roet, Sir Payne Guienne King of Arms (I8507)
|
5984 |
He was still born and a twin. | Hatch, baby boy (I14244)
|
5985 |
He was stillborn. | Dushion, Taylor Alisha (I2537)
|
5986 |
He was styled Slight in deeds in 1349 to 1366. | Houghton, Sir Adam (I23528)
|
5987 |
He was summoned for service in Scotland. | de Percy, Sir Henry KG, Lord Percy (I7576)
|
5988 |
He was summoned to fight in Wales in 1257, and the next year, 1258, he was among the nobles sent to help the King of Scotland. In 1264, during the Barons' War, he accompanied the King to the siege of Northampton. He was taken prisoner at the Battle of Lewes in 1264, and freed after the battle of Eversham in 1265. | de Percy, Sir Henry Baron of Topcliffe (I7580)
|
5989 |
He was summoned to Parliament from 20 November 1394 to 24 December 1413. | de Ros, Sir William KG, Baron de Ros (I21779)
|
5990 |
He was summoned to parliament in 1342. | de Beaumont, Sir John Earl of Buchan (I23112)
|
5991 |
He was summoned to Parliament. | Percy, Sir Henry KG, Earl of Northumberland (I24203)
|
5992 |
He was superseded in the succession in favor of Manuel. | Isaac Komnenos (I22289)
|
5993 |
He was the 10th Earl of Arundel. | FitzAlan, Sir Richard KG, Earl of Arundel and Surrey (I21748)
|
5994 |
He was the 10th Earl of Warwick. | de Beauchamp, Guy Earl of Warwick (I7779)
|
5995 |
He was the 1st Baron Bergavenny. | de Beauchamp, William Lord Bergavenny (I24809)
|
5996 |
He was the 1st Baron Berkeley. | de Berkeley, Thomas "the Wise" Lord Berkeley (I6546)
|
5997 |
He was the 1st Baron Grey of Rotherfield. | de Grey, Sir John KG, Lord Grey of Rotherfield (I6107)
|
5998 |
He was the 1st Baron Meinell of Whorlton. | de Meinell, Nicholas Lord Meinell (I3640)
|
5999 |
He was the 1st Baron Mowbray of Axholme. | de Mowbray, Roger Baron Mowbray of Axholme (I2893)
|
6000 |
He was the 1st Baron Neville of Raby. | de Neville, Randolf (I7486)
|