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Searching for: +path:gen-medieval +(+date:jun +date:2001)
Viewing 1-25 of 1,725 matches from 36,113,247 documents1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 | Next

1. RE: Cokayne's Complete Peerage [1]
>Actually, a full third edition of CP is needed, with all the children in each >family named - but who would do, and who would sponsor, such a work nowadays? > The first several volumes are especially lacking in references which make later volumes so valuable. pcr
2. RE: Cokayne's Complete Peerage [1]
Actually, a full third edition of CP is needed, with all the children in each family named - but who would do, and who would sponsor, such a work nowadays?
3. Re: IPMs [1]
There is no official printed abstract for IPMs of Henry VIII yet. They did Henry VII and then went back to (slowly) fill in the gap between Henry V and Henry VII. Do you know that these IMPs exist? There is a calendar listing names, county, regnal year of the IPM and where the record survives (Chancery, Wards, Exchequer/piece number) published in the List and Index Society. There are also some brief abstracts for some IPMs Henry VIII-Charles I published in the old magazine called The Genealogist [Lo
4. Re: The D. Spencer Hines Challenge II [1]
"Paul J. Gans" writes: >One of my recent favorites is the one in which Hines accused >me of taking material from the postings of others and publishing >as my own. Peter didn't think that was plagiarism. Gans tries to make it look like the issue was Gans taking passages verbatim or even doing close paraphrasals. It wasn't. It could have been about taking information that may all be in the public domain but which Gans learned about on Usenet first, and Gans writing about it in
5. Artois et Flandre - ber et béerie [1]
Qui pourrait me dire ce qu'itait exactement le "ber". Je crois qu'il s'agissait d'une institution, la bierie, liie ` une seigneurie, sorte de relais judiciaire entre la cour comtale et des seigneurs parfois ... turbulents. En Artois je connais les bers d'Auxy : la bierie restera dans la famille d'Auxy pendant 11 ginirations, de Hugues I ` Marguerite, fille de Jean IV, puis elle passera aux Gavre, puis aux Egmont (le comte Lamoral d'Egmont, dicapiti avec le comte de Hornes par le duc d'Albe en 1568, itait b
6. Agnes Knotting/Agnes Montagu [1]
Can anyone help me identify who Agnes Knotting was in connection to the Montagu family (Salisbury Line). The Montagu's of Boughton web page lists that their decent began with a Richard Ladde, who changed his name to Montagu out of respect for his wife's forebears. The Boughton web page did not give the wife's name, but I was able to locate the name of Agnes Knotting married to Richard Montagu about 1450 from a book "Henry Duke Councilor,His Descendants and Connections" page 433. This same book shows that
7. Re: The D. Spencer Hines Challenge II [1]
I'm posting this on behalf of Roz Griston: mr.nyikos your challenge is prove hines is dishonest, a troll and a loon..(mentally ill/unbalanced). i accept your challenge. since joining gen-medieval over a year ago, i have observed and commented on hine's irratic behaviours. witnessed his assualts and insults. a loon is street word for lunatic. a lunatic is a mentally ill person. hines professes to have noble ancestry. yet when asked to supply his genealogical chart does not. but, o
8. Re: Teaching History & Genealogy [Was: Plantagenet...] [1]
>> If there is too much accent on memorizing dates to the exclusion of the >> actual events history will become boring. Dates are important, yes; >> but the interest is in the actual event and it's relation to other events. > Building Causal Chains is simply impossible without knowing Dates ---- > Names ---- Places. > And, yes, they must be Memorised. The problem is when somebody memorizes a date and thinks that amounts to a definite, final achievement. Sometimes a date in isolation only serves to misle
9. Re: Jane Fonda's Name [1]
In article , Roger Head wrote: > The broadcaster Roger Mudd is a direct descendant of the >Dr. Mudd that was hung for treating John Wilkes Booth, after >the assignation of Lincoln, and the subject of the saying >"Your name is Mudd". Delicious! This may be the most wonderful spoof of the year, or it may be a classic in its own right. I did not think it possible to cram so much error into just a bit more than thirty words! Of course, th
10. Re: Last ditch to make Off-T On-T [1]
fadoria2001@yahoo.com.br (=?iso-8859-1?q?Francisco=20Antonio=20Doria?=) wrote in message news:<20010621122456.12915.qmail@web12802.mail.yahoo.com>... > Gvdel's interest in theology was of common knowledge > at Princeton in the 50s. The ontological proof was > first discussed in letters to his mother, only > recently published; the technical machinery he uses > is... hum, hard, really. But is there any actual evidence at all that Gvdel's interest in theology prompted a popular view of Einstein's work as
11. Re: Continental genes [1]
I am not sure how helpful such a project would be. Perhaps you are thinking in terms of "race"...or localized gene pool. In general, the longer a group has resided in a particular locale, the greater the number of distinct lineages. Most Europeans probably descend from people who spent much of their early history migrating with a few notable exceptions, such as the Basques. It would be very interesting to look at the lineages, as revealed through DNA, within the Basque community. Such a study would also be
12. *** Warning from David Botts@The Database of One Million [1]
Hi Folks: Been a lurker for many a month as I am knee deep in nuclear power plant, network security and SAP computer system conversion audits. Have just received E-mail headed as below and thought I would pass the header text along. Perhaps my name was fished from prior postings to this group? Subj: is the value Date: 6/17/2001 12:20:35 PM Central Daylight Time From: tefleming@email.msn.com (tefleming) File: SETUP.EXE (65536 bytes) DL Time (TCP/IP): < 1 minute *****This attachment contains a
13. Re: Robert I of Flanders, Robert II Capet & Russian connection? [1]
postalagency@hotmail.com (Albert B. Bach) wrote in message news:<3a69c867.0106282320.599ea8fb@posting.google.com>... > I see nothing of note in Robert's ancestry. It's mostly > western/central european back before the vikings first cruised into > what became Rus. Yes, this is what I thought too. Its just that some people like to add some "Russian flavour" to all these things.. :) > > Who was Adele's mother? I have it that she married Canute the Holy, > and was mother of Charles the Good, the 13th Coun
14. Re: Robert I of Flanders, Robert II Capet & Russian connection? [1]
Hi Eliza. I just took a look at Canute the Holy's ancestors. They are, as I have it now: /-- Konung av Sverige Eirik VII Eymundson av Sverige, b. before 0829 /-- Konung av Sverige Bjsrn II Inn Gamli Eirmksson av Sverige, b. 0868, d. 0923 /-- Konung av Sverige O'lafr Bjsrnsson av Sverige, b. circa 0920 /-- Styrbjvrn Starke O'lafsson av Sverige, b. circa 0945, m. before 0970, d. 0986 /-- ^orkell Sprakal
15. Re: Lasceline de CLINTON [1]
CP 12(2):362 note d mentions Agnes, wife of Geoffrey de Clinton the Chamberlain as daughter of Roger, Earl of Warwick, citing J. Horace Round in _The Ancestor_ 11:153-57.
16. Re: GRADENIGO Pietro , doge of Venice [1]
1. Elisabetta Gradenigo 2. Pietro Gradenigo, podest` of Capodistria (today: Koper in Slovenija), doge of of Venezia, d. 13.8.1311, b. church of San Cipriano, Murano. 3. Tommasina Morosini (aunt of another Tommasina Morosini, wife of King Andras III of Hungary). 4. I have no info for him. After Pierre Aromax, Marco Gradenigo. 5. ? 6. ... Morosini 7. ? 12. Michiel Morosini (father of the hungarian queen) 13. ? Reference fo genealogy: Bianca Betto, "Linee di politica matrimoniale nella nobilita veneziana fin
17. Re: Pietro del Balso's Ancestry [1]
The common ancestor is Raymond de Baux, contender for the throne of Provence 1145, in Syria 1110, died Barcelona 1150. He married, bef. 1116, Stephanette de Gevaudun, died aft. 1160. Their first son: Hugues, Sire de Baux, died Sardinia 1179. Married 2nd. a dau. of Comita II, King of Torre (Sardinia). A quo: Kings and later "Iudicarii" de Arborea (and the Aragonese family of Arborea). Their third son: Bertrand I, Sire de Baux, Prince jure uxoris d'Orange, died 1180/1, bur. Abbaye of Sylvacanne. Married Ti
18. Re: New Generation of Email Viruses [1]
In article <9fm2bn$ckg$2@bob.news.rcn.net>, tiglath wrote: >This country is busy spending billions on a Missile Shield, which most >probably will never be used, while the daily threat to our information >data and infrastructure is given little attention and resources. If >a disgruntled teenager can wreak havoc in our cyberspace, just imagine >what a carefully prepared, orchestrated, and determine attack by a >government could do. i don't know how much the military is spending on resear
19. Re: OT Re: Is Leo an innocent? [1]
>At the risk of being attacked myself I must also say Leo has always >been helpful and shared his knowledge. Since this seems to be becoming a poll, let me add my vote for Leo...To me he has also always been extremely helpful and a fine gentleman. Gilbert von Studnitz
20. Re: Nach Gewin juengerer Sohn des ... [1]
Ah. That explains it. A little confusing if you aren't 100% confident of the language. Thank you. ErnstHoffmann1@compuserve.com (Ernst Hoffmann) wrote in message news:... > It simply means the abreviated citation of a source > "Following Gewin." where Gewin is the family name of the writer: > Dr J.P.J Gewin: Herkunft und Geschichte f|hrender Bayerisch-Vsterreichischer > Geschlechter im Hochmittelalter > > > > on 13.06.2001 15:32 Uhr, Albert B. Bach at po
21. Re: Fuhrer Nyikos (was Re: The D. Spencer Hines Challenge II) [1]
Curt Emanuel wrote: > Well, I have a feeling that this is blatantly obvious to everyone on > three newsgroups by now but I'll point it out. > > It appears that to Nyikos an accusation is equivalent to conviction. In fairness, it depends on who is doing the accusing. If it's Peter or a FOP (Friend Of Peter), then yes, the accusation suffices, and the other party must then provide evidence that the claim is false. It works the other way around for non-FOPs; they have to provide evidence that their claims
22. Maud Bigod [1]
I birth date I listed was my typo on the message, I should have typed abt 1880. Thank you to all that have responded. George W, Forby
23. Re: The D. Spencer Hines Challenge II [1]
scatha@bigpond.com (Tim O'Neill) writes: >Peter Nyikos wrote in message >> I have responded to *all* pieces of alleged evidence I have seen. >You haven't responded to the evidence that he lied regarding >my having failed a PhD. What evidence? All you've presented is the bare claim you are presenting now, and maybe a quote from Hines to the effect that you had failed. But where's the evidence that you never failed a Ph.D. candidacy exam, or a doctoral comprehensive exam, or a dis
24. Re: Lineage from Robert I of Flanders to Charlemagne? [1]
If you go to you'll be on a trail that leads to Charles the Great and other worthys, including a Robert or II, I believe. You gotta do the search though. I spent hours just following this site's pages. Also additions/corrections were not acknowledged by the hard-working author of that lengthy html-TOME. In alt.talk.royalty Elisabet Bartram wrote: > I've found wonderful geneology-sites of Internet, just to mention > Homer
25. Re: Monmouth's mouth [1]
I think that there is a strong tendency in today's cyber & literate world to under-estimate the extent to which our human memories have atrophied since the advent of widespread literacy. Having been in contact with individuals from non-literate (NOT PRE-literate) cultures,I have witnessed feats of memory that leave the literate rest of us in the dust. Cyber-memory is going to result in further atrophying of memory power in the human brain just as surely as calculators in the classroom left a generation of s

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