Matches 7,201 to 7,233 of 7,233
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7201 | was the son of William Rees-Mogg and Ann James | Rees-Mogg, Rev. Henry James (I36573)
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7202 | was the son of William Thomas Spencer Fitzwilliam, 6th Earl Fitzwilliam and Lady Frances Harriet Douglas | Fitzwilliam, William "Viscount Milton" (I11930)
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7203 | Went to Ireland in 1595. MP for Ennis, Co. Clare in 1613. Resided at Kilnaboy and Bohersallagh, Co. Clare. Ironmaster. Obtained the grant of Sarney in 1640. Sir Bindon Blood, in his memoirs, written in 1932, states that the first Blood in Ireland was Capt. Edmund Blood of Mackney House, near Duffield in Derbyshire, who went over in 1595 as a Captain in a force raised in the English Midlands. He was taken to Co. Clare by Lord Inchiquin to introduce law and order "among the wild and unruly." He was elected MP for Ennis in 1613. He owned Kilnaboy Castle and Bohersallagh House. Frost's History of Clare states: "Another tradition about the Captain and his eldest son Dean Neptune Blood of Kilfenora Cathedral in West Clare, a "Pillar of the Church" has it that they added to their incomes by levying tolls on the ships that passed, at that time in large numbers, to and from the Port of Galway. They arranged this by means of a small harbour on the coast just outside the southern limit of the Bay of Galway, which was protected by a castle and afforded shelter to a number of longboats with well-armed crews, who boarded the ships and levied the tolls. When the Cromwellians took Limerick in 1651, and carried out a "settlement" in Clare, they are said to have objected to these doings, even to the extent of calling them piracy, of burning the boats, blowing up the castle and dispersing the fighting men; but, strange to say, at the same time they gave the Dean compensation in the shape of three grants of confiscated land - this last transaction being officially on record to this day." | Blood, Capt. Edmund (I172)
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7204 | Went to Ireland in 1595. MP for Ennis, Co. Clare in 1613. Resided at Kilnaboy and Bohersallagh, Co. Clare. Ironmaster. Obtained the grant of Sarney in 1640. Sir Bindon Blood, in his memoirs, written in 1932, states that the first Blood in Ireland was Capt. Edmund Blood of Mackney House, near Duffield in Derbyshire, who went over in 1595 as a Captain in a force raised in the English Midlands. He was taken to Co. Clare by Lord Inchiquin to introduce law and order "among the wild and unruly." He was elected MP for Ennis in 1613. He owned Kilnaboy Castle and Bohersallagh House. Frost's History of Clare states: "Another tradition about the Captain and his eldest son Dean Neptune Blood of Kilfenora Cathedral in West Clare, a "Pillar of the Church" has it that they added to their incomes by levying tolls on the ships that passed, at that time in large numbers, to and from the Port of Galway. They arranged this by means of a small harbour on the coast just outside the southern limit of the Bay of Galway, which was protected by a castle and afforded shelter to a number of longboats with well-armed crews, who boarded the ships and levied the tolls. When the Cromwellians took Limerick in 1651, and carried out a "settlement" in Clare, they are said to have objected to these doings, even to the extent of calling them piracy, of burning the boats, blowing up the castle and dispersing the fighting men; but, strange to say, at the same time they gave the Dean compensation in the shape of three grants of confiscated land - this last transaction being officially on record to this day." | Blood, Capt. Edmund (I172)
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7205 | Widow of (Unknown) Wilbraham | (Unknown), Dorothy (I53503)
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7206 | Widow of Charles henry roberts | Drewett, Elizabeth Ann (I136314)
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7207 | widow of Claude Hume Campbell Guinness; and daughter of Albert Llewellyn Nugent, 3rd Baron Nugent and Elizabeth Baltazzi | Nugent, Zoe Virginia "Baroness Manners" (I37188)
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7208 | widow of John Bath, Chief Justice of the Common Pleas of Ireland 1556-59; d. 3 Jul 1617), dau. of Patrick Dowdall, of Termonfeighan | Dowdall, Genet (I85969)
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7209 | widow of John Bryan, of Bawnmore, and daughter of Walter Walsh of Castlehale | Walsh, Ursula (I42095)
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7210 | widow of Maj John Frederick Foley, Baron de Rutzen; d. 24 Jul 1999), only dau. of Sir Henry Erasmus Edward Philipps, 2nd Bt., of Picton Castle, co. Pembroke, by his wife Victoria Gladys Elizabeth Gwynne-Hughes, only child of John William Gwynne-Hughes, of Tregeyb, co. Carmarthen | Philipps, Sheila Victoria Katrin (I85940)
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7211 | widow of Walter Golding; mar. (3) Richard Bellew), dau. and cohrss. of Walter Bath, of Rathfeigh | Bath, Maud "Baroness Louth" (I85956)
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7212 | Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Drake) states that he was the third son of John Drake (d.1558), of Ashe in Musbury, Devonshire, and Amy Grenville, daughter of Sir Roger Grenville of Stowe, Cornwall. | Drake, Richard (I73909)
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7213 | Wikipedia shows the wife of Roman Msistlavich as named Euphrosyne... Euphrosyne according to the Medieval Lands Project was the oldest daughter, and was a nun. The third child was the wife of Roman Msistlavich and is un-named, but " Anna has not been identified in Byzantine sources so far consulted, but it is not impossible that she was the same person as this unnamed daughter." | |
7214 | William Blood's great-grandson, General Sir Bindon Blood, was knighted in 1899, and arms were granted for all descendants of "Young Will of Roxton". William married Elizabeth Bindon whose own family had arms granted to them, and the arms were joined to make the Blood Family Arms. (blood_cranagher.jpg) | Blood, Col. William (I194)
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7215 | William Blood's great-grandson, General Sir Bindon Blood, was knighted in 1899, and arms were granted for all descendants of "Young Will of Roxton". William married Elizabeth Bindon whose own family had arms granted to them, and the arms were joined to make the Blood Family Arms. (blood_cranagher.jpg) | Blood, Col. William (I194)
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7216 | William Brereton, of Ashley, and his wife Jane, daughter of Sir Peter Warburton of Arley. He was the grandson of Sir Richard Brereton, of Lea Hall, the third son of Sir William Brereton IX., of Brereton, and the founder of the family branch of Ashley. He was High Sheriff of Cheshire in 1609. He died in 1630, and his wife in 1627. | Brereton, William of Ashley (I47792)
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7217 | William came to South Australia on the "Steadfast", arriving in Nov 1852. | Howie, William (I51755)
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7218 | William came to South Australia on the "Steadfast", arriving in Nov 1852. | Howie, William (I51755)
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7219 | William Cavendish ... m. 1st his cousin Mary, dau of Timothy Tyrell of Shotover ... (Burke's 107th Peerage, Vol 3, P. 4094. This William Cavendish's mother (and therefore Mary Tyrell's mother-in-law) was "Mary, dau of Sir Timothy Tyrrell, of Shotover, Oxon... (Burke's 107th Peerage, Vol 3, P. 4094.) who was married to Henry Cavendish. However the relationship between Sir Timothy Tyrrell and Timothy Tyrell is not clear."Cousin" could mean any number of degrees. "Shotover" is Shotover Park, a country house and park in Wheatley, Oxfordshire. There were only two Timothy Tyrells of Shotover - a father and son - the younger was the father of William Cavendish's mother Mary, and the elder was this Timothy's father, so could not have been the father of William's wife. | Tyrrell, Mary (I14674)
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7220 | William did not marry William did not marry | Smithwick, William Henry (I8473)
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7221 | William did not marry. William did not marry. | Courtney, William Maunsell (I8505)
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7222 | William died in infancy. | |
7223 | William is often showed as having married Jeanne de Calabre. This is incorrect. An explanation of this can be seen here: http://chronauvergne.16mb.com/calabre.html "It is quite common to meet, in the course of the internet pages dealing with the genealogy of the Counts of Auvergne, the character of Joan of Calabria. She is most often cited as the wife of William the Younger , Count of Auvergne or Clermont... "Prudhomme has shown that Joan of Calabria is only a lure. His conclusion can be summed up as follows: "The name of Jeanne de Calabre [...] must be removed from the list of alliances of the Counts of Auvergne." He also demonstrated that the wife of William VII was Marchise d'Albon. He cites as evidence of this union an act of 1223, a donation of the Count of Vienna to his Auvergnate family: "And ab amita mea dominates Marchisia and Delphino de Arvernia, consobrino meo, ejusdemque Delphini filio nomine Wilelmo." -------------------------------------------- 1st Dauphin d'Auvergne https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_rulers_of_Auvergne#List_of_Dauphins_of_Auvergne | |
7224 | William was adopted by a Dr Jennings (or Jenkins), and came to South Australia on the barque "Emerald Isle", arriving on July 24, 1838. He was a crew member. | Baker, William (I52663)
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7225 | William was adopted by a Dr Jennings (or Jenkins), and came to South Australia on the barque "Emerald Isle", arriving on July 24, 1838. He was a crew member. | Baker, William (I52663)
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7226 | William was attainted for his support of the Jacobite rebellion. | Bourke, William 8th Baron Bourke of Castleconnell (I35763)
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7227 | William was the son of Joseph Money Riches and Henrietta Cocking. | Riches, William Edgar (I1387)
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7228 | William was the son of Joseph Money Riches and Henrietta Cocking. | Riches, William Edgar (I1387)
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7229 | William was the son of William Maunsell and Bridget Winthrop. William was the son of William Maunsell and Bridget Winthrop. ID: Merged with a record that used the ID Data(Maunsell) | Maunsell, William (I50584)
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7230 | William was the son of William Minchin and Dorothea Grove. | Minchin, William (I2697)
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7231 | William, his wife, and their seven children, travelled to South Australia aboard the "Canton", a 3 mast ship built 1834 at Hylton, near Sunderland. The Canton departed London and Plymouth in April 1838 under the command of Captain J. Mordaunt, arriving in Adelaide on May 2nd, 1838. | Sergeant, William Foster (I51835)
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7232 | [4] Daniel-Francis: ... His brother, John-Collins MacCarthy, of St. Paul, Minn., married Anne-Eliza, daughter of John H. Grindall, by whom he had issue—Charles-Grindall, Daniel-Francis, Mary-Agnes, John-Edward, and Annie-Florence. | MacCarthy, John Collins (I96736)
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7233 | [4] Daniel-Francis: This Daniel-Francis MacCarthy, of St. Paul, Minn., married Elizabeth, daughter of Joseph Allen, by whom he had issue—Charles-Allen, Catherine-Louise, Joseph-Pius, Ellen-Frances, and Daniel. | MacCarthy, Daniel Francis (I96735)
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