


New France Genealogy
Montjoie Saint Denis!
Notes
Matches 2,101 to 2,150 of 3,768
# | Notes | Linked to |
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2101 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Le Mans. MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married 22 May 1127 | Family F3051
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2102 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Lisieux.. MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married May 1119 | Family F3237
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2103 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Mainz. | Family F3148
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2104 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Minden, Saxony, Germany. | Family F3224
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2105 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Oct 862/863 | Family F2372
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2106 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Port Royal, Acadia, New France. MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Abt 1693 | Family F3455
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2107 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Quebec, QC, Canada. MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married 21 Nov 1684 | Family F3593
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2108 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Québec, QC, Canada. | Family F2147
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2109 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Quebec. | Family F9256
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2110 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Quebec. | Family F9263
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2111 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Quebec. | Family F9332
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2112 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Quebec. | Family F9333
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2113 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Rouen. MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Nov 1196 | Family F3228
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2114 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Sainte-Justine-de-Newton, QC, Canada. | Family F2135
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2115 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Sault-aux-Récollets, , , ,. | Family F11891
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2116 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married St. Basile, NB, Canada. | Family F618
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2117 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Ste. Anne de Beaupre, Montmorency, Quebec. MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Quebec. | Family F3635
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2118 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Thury-Harcourt, Caen, Normandie (Calvados), France. | Family F2162
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2119 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Vieux-Belleme, Mortange, Orne, France aboard the ship "La Paix" with the French Regiment of Carignan-Salières. | Family F9158
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2120 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Waterford, Munster, Ire. MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married 1170 | Family F11959
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2121 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Westminster Abbe, Westminster, Middlesex, England. | Family F3217
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2122 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Westminster, London, England. | Family F2994
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2123 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married WFT Est 1647-1671 | Family F1245
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2124 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married WFT Est 1671-1706 | Family F1445
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2125 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married WFT Est 1711-1746 | Family F862
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2126 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Windsor, England. MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married , Windsor, Berkshire, England. | Family F3195
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2127 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married Worms. | Family F3220
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2128 | MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married York Minster. MARRIAGE: Also shown as Married 24 Jan 1327 | Family F3193
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2129 | MARRIAGE: Ref: 1671 Acadian Census Ref: Stephen White's Dictionnaire Genealogique Des Familles Acadiennes, vol. 2 pg. "1487" | Family F3563
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2130 | MARRIAGE: Ref: Stephen White's Dictionnaire Genealogique Des Familles Acadiennes, vol 1, p., "195" | Family F3565
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2131 | MARRIAGE: REF: Stephen White's, "Dictionnaire Genealogique Des Familles Acadiennes", vol 2, pg. "1403" | Family F3569
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2132 | MARRIAGE: _FREL Natural _MREL Natural | Family F3541
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2133 | MARRIAGE: _FREL Natural _MREL Natural _FREL Natural _MREL Natural _FREL Natural _MREL Unknown _STATMARRIED | Family F3493
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2134 | MARRIAGE: _MENDDeath of one spouse | Family F1122
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2135 | MARRIAGE: _STATMARRIED | Family F3498
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2136 | Married in Our Lady of Lourdes, Brockton Ma | Family F566
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2137 | Married in Sacred Heart Church. | Family F508
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2138 | Married in St. Colman Church? | Family F567
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2139 | Married in St. Jean-Baptiste Parish | Family F589
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2140 | Married the daughter of the King of France. Ancestry and Progentry of Captain James Blount - Immigrant, by Robert F. Pfafman, p E-20. The Descent from Adam of the Royal Family of England. | King Of Ireland Ugaine Mor (I25902)
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2141 | Married to the King of Britain Ancestry and Progentry of Captain James Blount - Immigrant, by Robert F. Pfafman p E-24. There are two fathers listed for Coliur, King of Britian- Meric, King of Britian and Cyillin King of Siluria. | Unknown (I26574)
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2142 | Mary (Polly) was his niece. | Harnden, Mary (I6822)
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2143 | Mary is found living with her son Orbin in the 1851 Canadian Census. This proves that Ziba did not marry his niece. His real wife survived him. | Polly, Mary (I7279)
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2144 | Mary was the twin of Hephsibah. | Harnden, Mary (I6872)
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2145 | Mary Winchester, the wife of John Aldis, was probably the widow of Jonathan Winchester, who joined the Roxbury Church in 1677 and died two years later in Roxbury. Mary, the widow of Jonathan Winchester, was received into full communion in 1681. From NEHGR, 1924, Vol. 78, p. 10 and 11. Jonathan Wiinchester, son of John, died 8 May 1678/9. He married Mary___, who married secondly, at Wrentham, 23 May 1682, John Aldis, by whom she had one son and five daughters. John and Mary Aldis lived five years in Wrentham and afterwards in West roxbury, near the Dedham line. (Cf. Register, Vol. 4, p. 85, and Dedham Historical Register, Vol. 14, p. 62 for the Aldis family.) Mary Winchester, widow of Jonathan, was appointed 29 April, 1679 administratrix of the estate of her late husband, which was appriased at L30. 7s. 6d. and consisted chiefly of 8 acres of land at Muddy River. Three entries in the Roxbury church records are as follows "1677 month 3 day 6 Jonathan Winchester, Mary his wife, both received to land hold on the Covenant" "1679 month 1 day 8 Jonathan Winchester, died of a feav." "1681-1-27 Mary widdow Winchester this day received to the full comunion of the Church." They had one child, Mary, born after 1671, as under her grandfathers will of 1691 she was to receive 8 or 10 acres of land at Muddy River "when shee shall accomplish the age of 20 years." | Winchester, Mary (I7437)
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2146 | Matilda of Flanders (French: Mathilde de Flandre; Dutch: Mathilda van Vlaanderen) (c. 1031 ? 2 November 1083) was the wife of William the Conqueror and, as such, Queen consort of the Kingdom of England. She bore William nine children, including two kings, William II and Henry I. Matilda, or Maud, was the daughter of Baldwin V, Count of Flanders and Adèle of France, herself daughter of Robert II of France.[1] According to legend, when Duke William II of Normandy (later known as William the Conqueror) sent his representative to ask for Matilda's hand in marriage, she told the representative that she was far too high-born to consider marrying a bastard.[a] After hearing this response, William rode from Normandy to Bruges, found Matilda on her way to church, dragged her off her horse by her long braids, threw her down in the street in front of her flabbergasted attendants and rode off. Another version of the story states that William rode to Matilda's father's house in Lille, threw her to the ground in her room (again, by her braids), and hit her (or violently battered her) before leaving. Naturally, Baldwin took offense at this but, before they could draw swords, Matilda settled the matter[2] by refusing to marry anyone but William;[3] even a papal ban by Pope Leo IX at the Council of Reims on the grounds of consanguinity did not dissuade her. William and Matilda were married after a delay in c.?1051-2.[4] A papal dispensation was finally awarded in 1059 by Pope Nicholas II.[5] Lanfranc, at the time prior of Bec Abbey, negotiated the arrangement in Rome and came only after William and Matilda agreed to found two churches as penance,[6] There were rumors that Matilda had been in love variously with the English ambassador to Flanders and with the great Saxon thegn Brictric son of Algar, who (according to the account by the Continuator of Wace and others[7]) in his youth declined her advances and whose great fiefdom was thereupon seized by her. Brictric's lands were granted after her death in 1083 by her eldest son King William Rufus (1087-1100) to Robert FitzHamon (d.1107),[8] the conqueror of Glamorgan, whose daughter and sole heiress Maud brought them to her husband Robert de Caen, 1st Earl of Gloucester (d.1147), a natural son of Matilda's younger son King Henry I (1100-1135). Thus Brictric's fiefdom became the feudal barony of Gloucester.[9] Whatever the truth of the matter, years later when she was acting as Regent for William in England, she used her authority to confiscate Brictric's lands and threw him into prison, where he died.[10] When William was preparing to invade England, Matilda outfitted a ship, the Mora, out of her own money and gave it to him.[11] This indicated that she must have owned rich lands in Normandy to be able to do so. Additionally, William entrusted Normandy to his wife during his absence. Matilda successfully guided the duchy through this period in the name of her fourteen-year-old son; no major uprisings or unrest occurred.[12] Even after William conquered England and became its king, it took her more than a year to visit her new kingdom.[13] Even after she had been crowned queen, she would spend most of her time in Normandy, governing the duchy, supporting her brother's interests in Flanders, and sponsoring ecclesiastic houses there. She had just one of her children in England; Henry was born in Yorkshire when Matilda accompanied her husband in the Harrying of the North.[14] Matilda was crowned queen on May 11, 1068, in Westminster during the feast of Pentecost, in a ceremony presided over by the archbishop of York. Three new phrases were incorporated to cement the importance of English consorts, stating that the Queen was divinely placed by God, shares in royal power, and blesses her people by her power and virtue.[15][16] For many years it was thought that she had some involvement in the creation of the Bayeux Tapestry (commonly called La Tapisserie de la Reine Mathilde in French), but historians no longer believe that; it seems to have been commissioned by William's half-brother Odo, Bishop of Bayeux, and made by English artists in Kent.[17] Matilda bore William nine or ten children. He was believed to have been faithful to her and never produced a child outside their marriage. Despite her royal duties, Matilda was deeply invested in her children's well-being. All were known for being remarkably educated. Her daughters were educated and taught to read Latin at Sainte-Trinité in Caen founded by Matilda and William in response to the recognition of their marriage.[18] For her sons, she secured Lanfranc, Archbishop of Canterbury of whom she was an ardent supporter. Both she and William approved of the Archbishop's desire to revitalize the Church.[19] She stood as godmother for Matilda of Scotland, who would become Queen of England after marrying Matilda's son Henry I. During the christening, the baby pulled Queen Matilda's headdress down on top of herself, which was seen as an omen that the younger Matilda would be queen some day as well.[20] Matilda fell ill during the summer of 1083 and passed away in November 1083. Her husband was present for her final confession.[21] William died four years later in 1087. Contrary to the common belief that she was buried at St. Stephen's, also called l'Abbaye-aux-Hommes in Caen, Normandy, where William was eventually buried, she is entombed in Caen at l'Abbaye aux Dames, which is the community of Sainte-Trinité. Of particular interest is the 11th-century slab, a sleek black stone decorated with her epitaph, marking her grave at the rear of the church. In contrast, the grave marker for William's tomb was replaced as recently as the beginning of the 19th century. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matilda_of_Flanders | of Flanders, Matilda (I21977)
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2147 | Mattathias married the Dau of Simon "the Just" | Mattathias (I25980)
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2148 | Matthew 1st chapter States that Eleazar was the father of Matthan, Matthan already had a father listed, a daughter was added to Eleazar and a wife to Matthan - the graet-grandfather of Jesus, this reconnect the pedegree line as listed in Matthew (Women are not listed except Mary, the mother Jesus. and Ruth, the wife of Booz). | Estha bnt Eleazar (I26572)
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2149 | May have been an intermediate king between 973 and 977 | mac Causantín, Rí Alban Amlaíb (I7699)
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2150 | May have been McCoy | McKay, Rose-Mary (I925)
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