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Searching for: +path:gen-medieval +(+date:apr +date:2001)
Viewing 1-25 of 1,560 matches from 36,222,914 documents1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 | Next

1. Re: Salm inheritance [1]
Bert Kamp says... >I have also been worrying about this Richarda. >Apparently Richarda was included in the von der >Mark tables after an oral correction by dr G|nther >Aders (see Literatur- verzeichnis). His arguments >are unknown. I do not think the correction was correct. >My arguments are the following: >1. If Richarda was a Salm, she was named after >her grandmother Richarda of J|lich. The name >Richarda does not appear in the Von der Mark ancestry. >2. If Richarda was a Von der Mar
2. Spring 2001 issue of The Genealogist - out yet [1]
Has the Spring 2001 issue of "The Genealogist" from APSG and Picton Press come out yet? Thanks, Steven C. Perkins
3. Re: Disproof of the Bagley Claim (Part 2) [1]
Perhaps the most significant fact is that John Bagley called himself "yeoman" in his own will. No gentleman, or person posing as a gentleman, would do this.
4. Re: Jan 2001 TAG (was Tomlinson etc.) [1]
Oops, they are all from Marc Fitch's Index to Administrations in the PCC, 1631-1648, p. 416. They should read: [quote:] TOMLINSON, Edw., Cambridge. To Wm. GRAVES & his w. Magdalen G. als T., sis., 20 Aug. 1647, p. 124. Eliz., spin., Tipton, Staffs. To Edw. Bagley, neph. ex sis. 19 June 1635 p. 107. Gabriel, esq., Lond. Sent. pro conf. test., 3 July, W. 21 May 1658, Wooton 53. Jn., St. Cle. D., Mdx. To Lucy T., wid., rel., 21 Sept 1647, p 136. Thomlinson, Philip, bach., d. overseas. To Hugh BRO
5. Re: Tomlinson etc. [1]
> >If the property survives substantially unchanged then later deeds and >surveys will give perfectly adequate acreages, of course. > >-- >Tim Powys-Lybbe > As Tim pointed out, if surveys survive for that area, they are invaluable to show how ownership and boundaries properly fit together. Sometimes that is a difficult thing to determine from just the informtion in a lease. Some manorial surveys have been published, such as Settrington, Yorkshire, and Robertsbridge, Sussex. But you will find NUMERO
6. Re: family of Seguins [1]
>I`m interested the comital (or ducal) family of Seguins, who existed in the >IX century in Gascony. I know only about count Seguin I of Bordeaux, who >took his office from Charlemagne in 778 and Seguin II, who is known as dux >of Gascony. The last was killed by Vikings in 845. How can one link these >both Seguins? Were they father and son? And how long this line lasted after >Seguin II`s death in 845? Can anybody help me to answer these questions? > Alex, look at Web address: http://home.talkcity.co
7. Re: Yeoman in Elizabethan England Part 1. [1]
As people have posted some information explaining copyhold, I will only point out that Englishmen who held freehold property had the right to protection from the Crown, the national courts, etc. (or at least the right to access if they could afford it). Copyhold was subject to the custom of the manor and the judgment of the lord of the manor. This could bring up some 'unusual' applications of inheritance, such as some manors having the custom that certain land should descend to the YOUNGEST son, rather
8. End of Tomlinson discussion [1]
I'm sure there will be many hurrahs about this. After all the discussion we have had about primary and circumstantial evidence, Ken made a post that has convinced me that his ears are closed, and that this is not so much a discussion of how to properly interpret and apply documents and evidence during this period as it is that he is entrenched in the very way he has accussed others as being. It was his "The chose to rationalize..." post, where at least he listed the circumstantial evidence he thought
9. Re: Tomlinson, Elizabeth: Estate of [1]
I can tell you that Col. Hansen did not limit himself to "a few parish records". More than 100 Chancery suits, local Dudley town records, and Dudley family papers were extensively examined locally. If they were not mentioned in his article it is because nothing useful was found in the search.
10. Re: End of Tomlinson discussion [1]
I will pass over most of what Ken posted, as making any further statement would seem to be of no use. The comments I make below are so that readers of the group are not misled by statements. [Ken wrote:] >Paul has painted a picture of John Bagley, yeoman, a rustic country bumpkin better >suited for managing farmlands for a profit that hobnobbing with the gentry. > I attempted to show that John was a typical yeoman of his time, not a "country bumpkin." You are unfairly coloring my presentation with
11. Re: Temporary Subscriber [1]
I certainly agree that Leo has been a most helpful and cordial member of this list, and I too remember the attack to which he was subjected.
12. Re: Lady Jane Grey vs. Joan of Kent [1]
> John of Gaunt had his way after all. When his agnatic line with his > first wife, Blanche of Lancaster, petered out in Henry VI and his son, > Edward, Prince of Wales, who was killed in 1471, at the battle of > Tewkesbury ---- John of Gaunt's line with his second wife, Katherine de > Roet, picked up the slack Didn't John of Gaunt have Spanish wife and daughter as his second family, and Katherine de Roet and Beauforts as his third? Amanda
13. Re: Tomlinson, Elizabeth: Estate of [1]
>Elizabeth willed 50# to the poor, and that surprised nobody, because willing >things to the poor was supposed to buy one forgiveness of one's sins, It was typical in English wills of the period to make bequests to the churches or poor where you lived or had ties, but it was generally a matter of shillings and pence at that time. Even 10 pounds would have been considered a large amount for the poor. Paul
14. Re: Yeoman in Elizabethan England [part 2] [1]
> >Dear Paul: > I get the feeling that you're still missing the important point... > William was the inheriter of the Ward-Dudley Viscountship & >Barony [snip] Humble Ward was the FIRT member of his family to attain the peerage. What happened AFTER he married the granddaughter and heir of Lord Dudley is not pertinent to our discussion. Paul
15. Re: End of Tomlinson discussion [1]
[I wrote, citing PRO D25/31:] >Elizabeth Tomlinson, having children other than the plaintiff, provided for >their maintenance and preferment before making the deed seven years ago >granting to the plaintiff [Dud] her entire personal estate.' > I thought I ought to point out to interested parties, lest it be overlooked, that Dud claims Elizabeth Tomlinson had thoroughly provided for each of her children years before she died, and years before the making of her will (in which she left her clothing to be di
16. Re: Blount [1]
In article <37AD3220C826D4118E1200D0B75E4CCA01140F62@CBIEXM02WA>, bclagett@cov.com (Clagett, Brice) wrote: > Can a knowledgeable Brit tell how the surname Blount is pronounced? > > I believe it is "blunt," but seek confirmation or correction. > > The Blount lot I know pronouce it "blunt" Amanda
17. Re: Off Topic : Tomlinson, Elizabeth PART I [1]
<> Yes, in addition, it wasn't Edward's mistress that was how he wasted his money, so much as the attempt to devise a better way at smelting iron and developing usable charcoa
18. Re: Tomlinson, Elizabeth PART I [1]
>ADMINISTRATION BONDS for the PCC exist from the 16th century. The PRO class is PROBATE 54, but it is apparently not yet fully arranged. Paul
19. Re: Tomlinson, Elizabeth PART I [1]
[Ken wrote:] <> [snip] >Elizabeth had no real income, no property in her own name, nor any fortune other than being kept all her life by Edward Sutton. >> If she had no property, why was there a nuncupative will? Why were there lawsuits? Why was an administration granted? <> No. We are just treating the facts and evidence according to proper l
20. NEHGR [1]
Has anyone received the January issue of the New England Historic Genealogical Register? Paul
21. Re: Probable RD500/600 Subtractions [1]
Gary has told me many times that it is his job to find descents in secondary sources and put them forth, and the job of me and others to scrutinize them and prove them true or false. If you just analyze a couple of the very faulty generations (I'll help if need be), I'm sure he'd drop them. He'd prefer to have accurate lines in his work, and his manuscript wass heavily revised when I saw it last, with many notations. He put forth a Wentworth line which he posted reference to in the NEHGS newsletter o
22. Parents of Alice de Braiose, d bef 20 Jul 1331? [1]
Hi List, Anyone know which William de Braiose was the father of Alice, who married John de Mowbray and who d. before 20 Jul 1331? See Weis, Magna Carta Sureties, Line 63-4. Thanks in advance, Roger Tansey
23. Re: Tomlinson etc. [1]
> >999 year leases are common under English law. > > > >Amanda > > > > > Yes, which is my point. It was not something extraordinary. It may sou > nd > strange to American ears, but was not remarkable for the time and place. > Too > much emphasis is being placed on it by people not familiar with the reco > rds and > practice of that period. Also, it was not a GIFT, but a transaction. They still are common! Flats can only be held under a lease in English law, and there are therefore many 999 year leas
24. Re: To Paul Reed [1]
Volumes 1-10 of THE GENEALOGIST are available for $200.00, including Vol. 10, No. 3 now in preparation, and th eevery name index to all volumes. Those orders should be sent to A.P.S.G., Ltd., 255 North 200 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84103-4545, by check payable to A.P.S.G., Ltd. Picton Press is continuing to publish Vol. 11 and later issues for the American Society of Genealogists and subscription information on them may be received from Picton Press, P.O. Box 250, Rockport, ME 04856-0250.
25. Re: Germam Translation for von Brederlow(1285-1749) Part II [1]
>Pyritz war schon 1337 mit andern Gutern (sorry no umlots) in der Hand der >Familie, Gandolf v. B, (Brederlow) war 1313 Comthur des deutschen Ordens zu >Christmemel; this says "By 1337 Pyritz, along with other estates, was already in the hands of the family, in 1313 Gandolf v. B. was commander of the German Order at Christmemel." Gilbert von Studnitz

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