Report: individuals with associated notes
Description: personen met geassocieerde notities
Matches 1501 to 1550 of 1702
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# | Person ID | Last Name | First Name | Birth Date | Death Date | Living | note | Tree |
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1501 | I7264 | TALVAS | William I | 995 | 1052 | 0 | While as treacherous and self-serving as any of his family before him he surpassed them in wickedness and cruelty.He had married a Hildeburg, daughter of a nobleman named Arnulf, but he had his wife strangled on her way to church, according to Orderic, because she loved God and would not support his wickedness. | tree1 |
1502 | I7118 | TANFIELD | Gernegan Jernegan de | Abt 1176 | 1214 | 0 | North Riding, Yorkshire, England | tree1 |
1503 | I16222 | TARR | Richard | 26 Aug 1695 | 22 Jun 1724 | 0 | Killed by Indians while of a fishing vessel in Fox Harbour along with 4 other men | tree1 |
1504 | I9932 | TARR | Sarah | Abt 1750 | 26 Aug 1836 | 0 | Sarah remained a widow for nearly 25 years after her husband's death | tree1 |
1505 | I16937 | TASKER | Samuel | 1695 | 1 Jun 1704 | 0 | Killed by Indians | tree1 |
1506 | I2731 | TEMPLE | Abraham | 1597 | 1639 | 0 | Very little is known about Abraham and Abigail Margaret (Gifford) Temple. They were married before 1623 in England and had 5 children. They were in Salem in 1636 where he was granted ten acres, a relatively small grant. Robert, our ancestor, was the only one of their children born in America. Abraham dropped out of public records after 1639, so it is likely he had died. Abigail Margaret died sometime after 1651. | tree1 |
1507 | I2686 | TEMPLE | Peter | 1576 | 7 Apr 1657 | 0 | Stowe, Buckinghamshire, England | tree1 |
1508 | I2686 | TEMPLE | Peter | 1576 | 7 Apr 1657 | 0 | Stowe, Buckinghamshire, England | tree1 |
1509 | I2267 | TEMPLE | Sarah | 14 Apr 1746 | 1791 | 0 | Sarah TEMPLE74911 was born on 14 April 1746 in Framingham, Middlesex, MA.23365,58485 She died in 1791 at the age of 45 in Peterborough, Hillsborough, NH.23365 Date estimated from probate. She turned over to a guardian in 1791 in Peterborough, Hillsborough, NH.77402 Parents: Thomas TEMPLE and Sarah PARKER. Spouse: Moses TUCKER. |
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1510 | I2688 | TEMPLE | Susan | 1599 | 0 | Stowe, Buckinghamshire, England | tree1 | |
1511 | I5805 | TERRIOT | Anne | 1672 | 1755 | 0 | Port Royal, New Brunswick, Canada | tree1 |
1512 | I5831 | Terriot | Germain | 1662 | 29 Jul 1737 | 0 | Port Royal, Nova Scotia, Canada | tree1 |
1513 | I11938 | TESSIER | Pierre | 26 Dec 1695 | 15 Jan 1750 | 0 | Pierre Capico | tree1 |
1514 | I6738 | TETHERLY | Ann | Apr 1632 | 19 Sep 1717 | 0 | http://oldberwick.org/oldberwick/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=692%3Asome-old-families-of-shorey-s-brook&catid=49&Itemid=70 | tree1 |
1515 | I5870 | Theriault | Jean | 1670 | 0 | Port Royal, Nova Scotia, Canada | tree1 | |
1516 | I5858 | THERIAULT | Marguerite | 1667 | 28 Apr 1771 | 0 | Port Royal, Nova Scotia, Canada | tree1 |
1517 | I5840 | Theriot | Jean | 1696 | 1758 | 0 | Grand Pre, New Brunswick, Canada | tree1 |
1518 | I1062 | THIBAULT | Anastasie Osite | 22 May 1817 | 23 May 1892 | 0 | St-Vallier, Bellechasse, Quebec, Canada | tree1 |
1519 | I1317 | THIBEDEAU | Susanne | May 1867 | 25 Oct 1910 | 0 | Age: 43 | tree1 |
1520 | I4593 | THIBODEAU | Basile | 1720 | 1755 | 0 | Killed during the deportation of Acadia | tree1 |
1521 | I4575 | THIBODEAU | Bruno | 1786 | 26 Jan 1803 | 0 | Richibucto Village, Kent, New Brunswick, Canada | tree1 |
1522 | I4575 | THIBODEAU | Bruno | 1786 | 26 Jan 1803 | 0 | Richibucto Village, Kent, New Brunswick, Canada | tree1 |
1523 | I4578 | THIBODEAU | Eustache | 1789 | 28 Apr 1871 | 0 | Richibucto Village, Kent, New Brunswick, Canada | tree1 |
1524 | I4603 | THIBODEAU | Germain | Abt 1794 | 0 | Richibucto Village, Kent, New Brunswick, Canada | tree1 | |
1525 | I4599 | THIBODEAU | Jean Baptiste | Abt 1805 | 28 May 1868 | 0 | Richibucto Village, Kent, New Brunswick, Canada | tree1 |
1526 | I4599 | THIBODEAU | Jean Baptiste | Abt 1805 | 28 May 1868 | 0 | Richibucto Village, Kent, New Brunswick, Canada | tree1 |
1527 | I4554 | THIBODEAU | Jean David | Nov 1760 | 28 Feb 1813 | 0 | Richibucto Village, Kent, New Brunswick, Canada | tree1 |
1528 | I4602 | THIBODEAU | Joseph | 25 Sep 1808 | 0 | Richibucto Village, Kent, New Brunswick, Canada | tree1 | |
1529 | I4601 | THIBODEAU | Laurent | 10 Apr 1805 | 5 May 1894 | 0 | Richibucto Village, Kent, New Brunswick, Canada | tree1 |
1530 | I4601 | THIBODEAU | Laurent | 10 Apr 1805 | 5 May 1894 | 0 | Richibucto Village, Kent, New Brunswick, Canada | tree1 |
1531 | I4597 | THIBODEAU | Madeleine | 30 Sep 1800 | 10 Feb 1827 | 0 | Richibucto Village, Kent, New Brunswick, Canada | tree1 |
1532 | I4597 | THIBODEAU | Madeleine | 30 Sep 1800 | 10 Feb 1827 | 0 | Richibucto Village, Kent, New Brunswick, Canada | tree1 |
1533 | I4598 | THIBODEAU | Marguerite | 6 Sep 1796 | 0 | Richibucto Village, Kent, New Brunswick, Canada | tree1 | |
1534 | I4565 | THIBODEAU | Marguerite Josephe | Oct 1762 | 1853 | 0 | Richibucto Village, Kent, New Brunswick, Canada | tree1 |
1535 | I4561 | THIBODEAU | Marie Madeleine | Dec 1763 | 1807 | 0 | Cocagne, Kent, New Brunswick, Canada | tree1 |
1536 | I4577 | THIBODEAU | Simon | Abt 1791 | 0 | Richibucto Village, Kent, New Brunswick, Canada | tree1 | |
1537 | I6762 | THOMPSON | DAVID | 17 Dec 1592 | 13 Dec 1628 | 0 | English Explorer. David Thomson (sometimes spelled Thompson) was the first non-Native American settler of, and founder of, the State of New Hampshire. He also founded the city of Piscataqua, New Hampshire. David was apprenticed as a seaman as a youth, and made frequent trips to America. His first journey to America was in 1607, well before the pilgrims voyaged to the new land in 1620. He made another trip to New England in 1616. Thomson and others built a shelter in Biddleford Pool, Maine, to prove to Sir Fernando Gorges, a powerful British nobleman, that it was possible to survive through the winter in New England. Upon arrival, the ship was attacked by Native Americans until Thomson interceded. In his prior trips to America, he gained favor with the natives, including a native named Squanto. Thomson established a fishing trade, and when Miles Standish of Plymouth asked for Thomson's assistance to feed the starving Pilgrims, Thomson provided enough salted cod to keep the Pilgrims alive in 1623. Thomson's appearance in Plymouth that year was the source of the second Thanksgiving Day at Plymouth. Thomson moved south from New Hampshire to Boston, Massachusetts. An island was named after David, and today, Thompson's Island remains one of the last undeveloped parts of the city of Boston. David Thomson disappeared in 1628, never to be seen or heard from again. It is suspected that he drowned in Boston Harbor. A book titled "First Yankee" was written about the life of David Thomson From: https://www.nh.gov/almanac/history.htm?fbclid=IwAR06qmB-n-Kp0zI71dAXbQn0LdTfj0Oaj2ee3X35oO0k1rz_xzyHw-dzCLc Early historians record that in 1623, under the authority of an English land-grant, Captain John Mason, in conjunction with several others, sent David Thomson, a Scotsman, and Edward and Thomas Hilton, fish-merchants of London, with a number of other people in two divisions to establish a fishing colony in what is now New Hampshire, at the mouth of the Piscataqua River. One of these divisions, under Thomson, settled near the river’s mouth at a place they called Little Harbor or "Pannaway," now the town of Rye, where they erected salt-drying fish racks and a "factory" or stone house. The other division under the Hilton brothers set up their fishing stages on a neck of land eight miles above, which they called Northam, afterwards named Dover. Nine years before that Captain John Smith of England and later of Virginia, sailing along the New England coast and inspired by the charm of our summer shores and the solitude of our countrysides, wrote back to his countrymen that: "Here should be no landlords to rack us with high rents, or extorted fines to consume us. Here every man may be a master of his own labor and land in a short time. The sea there is the strangest pond I ever saw. What sport doth yield a more pleasant content and less hurt or charge than angling with a hook, and crossing the sweet air from isle to isle over the silent streams of a calm sea?" Thus the settlement of New Hampshire did not happen because those who came here were persecuted out of England. The occasion, which is one of the great events in the annals of the English people, was one planned with much care and earnestness by the English crown and the English parliament. Here James the first began a colonization project which not only provided ships and provisions, but free land bestowed with but one important condition, that it remain always subject to English sovereignty. |
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1538 | I4957 | THOMPSON | Mary | 1659 | 1 Apr 1738 | 0 | http://oldberwick.org/oldberwick/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=692%3Asome-old-families-of-shorey-s-brook&catid=49&Itemid=70 | tree1 |
1539 | I9048 | THOMPSON | Miles | 1627 | 30 Jun 1708 | 0 | · A Miles THOMPSON is mentioned in the court record of Boston 27 May 1643. This would fit with Miles being the son of David Thomson and Amias Cole, as Amias was remarried and living in Boston during that time frame. · Could the infant mentioned when David died be Miles??? and not John?? dates fit 1627; David died ca. 1628??? *see below · Miles lived in Kittery, ME, which is next door to the original Piscataqua settlement. · He lived on what was called the "Thompson" property...was it named after him or David & Amyes?? · He was born ca. 1626/7 which would be well-timed in David's and Amyes' lives. A. David was still living. B. D & A's previous child, Ann-2, had been baptised (see Devon Parish records) in 1620 and died shortly thereafter. · In later years, Amyes and her daughter Mary Maverick Palgrave Hooke lived in Kittery as well. Were they on the "Thompson" property, too? Were they there because Miles was there? Or is it mere coincidence? * From "Robert Chapman - David Thomson Allied Family Lines" "Because the legal term in England and New England was "infant" for a minor child who had not yet reached his majority, some genealogists have apparently been confused by the fact that David's son, John, was termed an "infant" at the time of his father's death. ... Since John was born ca 1619, he was about 8 or 9 years old when his father died, and was properly termed legally an "infant" in the records of the Courts." NOTE: Doesn't mean there were not other children. http://oldberwick.org/oldberwick/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=692%3Asome-old-families-of-shorey-s-brook&catid=49&Itemid=70 |
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1540 | I962 | THORNE | Thomas | 8 Mar 1537 | 29 Oct 1588 | 0 | Hastings, Northamptonshire, England | tree1 |
1541 | I513 | THORNTON | Susannah | Abt 1801 | 31 Mar 1855 | 0 | North Shields, Durham, England | tree1 |
1542 | I513 | THORNTON | Susannah | Abt 1801 | 31 Mar 1855 | 0 | St Columba Churchyard | tree1 |
1543 | I513 | THORNTON | Susannah | Abt 1801 | 31 Mar 1855 | 0 | In the 1841 Census, there are 3 Poulter children ages 23-12 (John, Margaret, and Esther) living with Susannah and William and their children. It is possible that Poulter is a former married name and Susanah was already a widow when she married William. | tree1 |
1544 | I7492 | |||||||
1545 | I15023 | TIBBETTS | Henry | 4 Jul 1596 | 27 Jan 1676 | 0 | Henry Tibbetts b. 1596 England d. 1676 Dover Neck, Dover, Strafford, New Hampshire, United States Parents and Siblings F. Unknown In England TibbettsBET 1548 AND 1583 - BET 1609 AND 1667 M. Unknown (17030) m. BET 1572 AND 1623 Remembrance Tibbetts Henry Tibbetts1596 - 1676 Spouse and Children H. Henry Tibbetts1596 - 1676 W. Elizabeth Austin (8)1596 - 1674 m. BET 1612 AND 1644 Jeremiah Tibbetts1631 - 1677 Samuel TIBBITSABT 1633 - Henry Tibbetts1635 - 1640 - 1713 Rebecca Tibbetts1636 - 1680 Thomas TIBBETTSABT 1638 - Nathaniel TIBBETTS1640 - Spouse and Children H. Henry Tibbetts1596 - 1676 W. Mary Unknown Rebecca Tibbetts Thomas Tibbetts (4) ▼Facts and Events Name Henry Tibbetts Gender Male Birth 1596 England Marriage BET 1612 AND 1644 england before 1631to Elizabeth Austin (8) Death[1] 1676 Dover Neck, Dover, Strafford, New Hampshire, United States Listed as age 39 on ship's roll, with wife Elizabeth, sons Jeremiah and Samuel, ages 4 and 2. He probably located first at Boston, though there is no record of him there. He was one of the first proprietors of Dover Neck, NH in 1642, receiving a 20 acre grant on the west side of the Back River. He also was granted a 3 1/2 acre house lot on High Street. The house later served as a garrison during Indian attacks. He later moved to Low Street, near his son Jeremiah. Henry was active in civic life, serving as constable, fence viewer, etc. He was also taxed in Dover from 1648 to 1675. ▼References ↑ May Tibbetts Jarvis. Henry Tibbetts of Dover, NH and some of his descendants. The New England Historical and Genealogical Register. (New England Historic Genealogical Society), 98:57-64, 132-136, 215-225, 293-300, 99:52-56, 110-116, 244-249, 323-328, 100:34-43, 144-152. Weis, Frederick Lewis; Walter Lee Sheppard; and David Faris. The Magna Charta sureties, 1215: The Barons Named in the Magna Charta, 1215 and Some of Their Descendants Who Settled in America During the Early Colonial Years. (Baltimore [Maryland]: Genealogical Pub. Co., c1991). Anderson, Robert Charles. The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to New England, 1620-1633. (Boston: New England Historical & Genealogical Society, 1995-). At Court 10 September 1645 John "Awlte" and Remembrance his wife sued Capt. Thomas Wiggin for wages due to his wife before she came to Pascataquack, New England. Henry Tybbets witnessed that her time of service "did begin the first of March before she came to New England" [NHPP 40:18]. Retrieved from "http://www.werelate.org/wiki/Person:Henry_Tibbetts_%282%29" |
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1546 | I15019 | TIBBETTS | Jeremiah | 1631 | 5 May 1677 | 0 | Jeremiah Tibbetts was born in England in 1631, and died on June 20, 1677, in Dover Neck (now, Dover), Strafford Co., N.H., aged 46 yrs. He married Mary Canney in Dover Neck in about 1654/5. Mary Canney was born in 1636 in Dover Neck, Strafford Co., N.H., and died there on July 2, 1706, aged 70 yrs.[1] Parents: Henry Tibbetts and Elizabeth Austin; and Thomas Canney and Mary Loome. Jeremiah Tibbetts was called Jeremy in the old Dover records. He was brought to New England by his parents in 1635, when he was four years old. Jeremiah was constable of Dover Neck in 1663 and 1666, and keeper of the Dover jail in 1670 and for several years thereafter. In 1665, he “stood up” for the jurisdiction of Massachusetts. He had several grants of land from the town. The following church records show when five of their twelve children were born and when one of their children married. “Jeremiah : the Son of Jeremiah Tibbet by Mary his wife bo[rn] : ye 5 June 1656 "Mary theire daughtr borne ye 15 Aprill : 1658 : "Thomas Tibbet Son of Jer : Tibbet by Mary his wife bo : 24 feb : 1659 "Hannah Tibbet daughtr of Jer : Tibbet by Mary his wife bo : 25 feb : 1661 "Joseph Tibbet Son : of Jer : Tibbet by Mary his wife bo : ye 7th August 1663 "… "Samuel Tibbets mar : to Dorothy Tuttle Sept 1[s]t 1686” [2] Jeremiah Tibbetts wrote his will on May 5, 1677. It mentions his children by name and his father-in-law, Thomas Canney. The will was proved October 31, 1677. The inventory was completed on June 20, 1677, and his estate totaled £272.00.00. His will stated in essence: “In the name of God Amen: I, Jeremiah Tippetts of Dover Upon Puscataqua: now lying upon my sick bed but of my perfect mind & memory do commit and bequeath my soul & spirit to God that gave it & my outward estate as follows: "First I desire that my body be decently buried & that my funeral charges with all lawful debts due from me be honestly discharged & satisfied. "Next I ordaine & appoint my son Jeremiah that the remainder of that ten acres of land which I bought of the town which lies now without fence, with two yearling steers already in his possession be to him & his forever & on the account of thirteen pounds given to my said son by his grandfather Thomas Canny which I made use of for my own behalf. "Thirdly I do appoint & ordain to be in the hands of Mary my wife for the bringing up of our small children all my present estate: Except what shall hereafter be nominated: & the one half of my now dwelling house & barn to be for her own proper use during her life time but the former during her widowhood or as my executors shall see cause: it is to be understood that I assign my wife the new end of the house: "4thly, I do hereby bequeath to my son Jeremiah to be delivered into his own custody at one and twenty years of his age & to be for him & his forever the other half of my house & barn with the one half of that fenced ground which is of the ten acres which I bought of the town: "5thly, I do bequeath to my son Thomas at his one & twentieth year of age to be for him & his forever, the other half of the fenced ground which is of that ten acres which I bought of the town and also the half of my dwelling house & barn now left in the custody of my wife to be his forever after my wife deceases: "6ly, I do hereby bequeath to my daughter Mary Rawlings one cow: "7ly, I ordain & appoint that my executor hereafter named shall pay or cause to be paid to my daughter Hannah ten pounds & on ye behalf of ten pounds given to her by her grandfather Canny & made use of by myself for my own use: & behalf: "8ly I do hereby appoint & ordaine that whatsoever of my estate shall remain unspent after the raising & bringing up of my children whether moveable or unmoveable it be justly & equally divided among my children now following: namely, Hannah, Joseph, Samuel, Benjamin, Ephraim, Martha, Elizabeth, Nathaniel & Henry: "And for the execution of this my will & testament: I do by these presents appoint & ordain Mary my wife & Jeremiah my eldest son to be my true & lawful executors: to be overseers for the right management of all & every the premises aforesaid I do hereby appoint & ordain my brother Joseph Canny & my trusting & loving friend Sergeant John Roberts: to all which I sign and seal this 5th day of May one Thousand six hundred seventy & seven as Witness my hand: 1677. "Teste The X sign of Jeremiah Tippett (seal) "Job Clements "John Roberts”[3] Children of Jeremiah Tibbetts and Mary Canney: Jeremiah Tibbetts (1656-aft 1677); Mary Tibbetts Rawlings (1658-bef 1677); Captain Thomas Tibbetts (1659-1748); Hannah Tibbetts Perkins (1661-aft 1677); Joseph Tibbetts (1663-aft 1677); Capt. Samuel Tibbetts (1666-aft 1677); Benjamin Tibbetts (abt 1668-aft 1677); Ephraim Tibbetts (abt 1669-aft 1677); Martha Tibbetts (abt 1670-aft 1677); Elizabeth Tibbetts Bickford (abt 1672-aft 1677); Nathaniel Tibbetts, captured and carried away by Indians Nov. 5, 1705, and assumed dead (abt 1673/4-abt 1705); and Henry Tibbetts (1676-1727). [1] Source for most of the information is New Eng. Hist. & Gen. Register, Vol. 98, 62-63. [2]Collections of the Dover, N.H., Historical Society (Dover N.H.: Scales & Quimby, 1894), 124. [3]Probate Records of the Province of New Hampshire ... 1635-1771, Vol. 31, 181-184. Jeremiah "Jeremy" Tibbetts was mentioned many times in the court, including holding many offices, taken from New Hampshire Court Records, pp. 113, 128, 178, 193, 213, 270-271. P. 113 (1655) "The grand jury do present Jan Canny the wiffe of Thomas Canny for a fame (rumor, public report) for beatting his sone in lawe Jerimy Tibbits and his wiffe: And likwise for striking hir husband in a cannow (canoe?) and giving him revilling spechis. Admonished by the course and to pay fees two shillings and six pence." P. 128 (May 1657): "A jurie beinge sworne to inquire into the death of George Branson & apoynted to view his corpse, whoe died: John Dam, William Furber, John Bickford, John Roberts, Anthonie Nutter, John Woodman, William Williams, Richard Cater, Richard Yorke, Raph Wamly, Thomas Nocke, Jerimiah Tippetts, Richard Bray. Wee the aforesaid jurie havinge searched the bodie of George Branson doe finde by the testimonie of John Alt that Branson went well out of his house, and hee went after him & found branson liinge one the grounde and crying the bull had killed mee: with one wounde up towards his shoulders, and another athwart the small of his backe; with his members brooke all which wee apprehend was the cause of his death: Edward Shaw wittnessinge the same with John Alt." P. 178 (1663): "At a countie court held in Dover the 30 of June 1663: John Meader & Jer: Tibbit tooke oath of Constable for the yeare ensewing for Dover." P. 193 (June 1664): "Jer: Tibbit Constable of Dover for not making timely return of his warrants is sentenced to pay a fine of six shillings 8d". Jer: Tibbet making request to this court to have his fine taken of pleading his cannoo was taken away and som other excuse, the court grants his request & remits it." P. 213 (1666): "Jeremiah Tibbet is continewed as prison keeper for this yeer ensuing & to be allowed the same Sallery as formerly." P. 270-271 (1671): "It appearing that Jer: Tibbett prison keeper opened ye prison dore & lett ye prisoners have light & had like to have burned downe the prison the Court sentence him to repaire the prison at his owne cost as good as it was beore by ye 15th of July next or pay 5l & fees. |
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1547 | I15019 | TIBBETTS | Jeremiah | 1631 | 5 May 1677 | 0 | From http://www.ux1.eiu.edu/~cwinkleblack/tibbetts.html Jeremiah Tibbetts. b. 1631 in England. Came to New England in 1635 with his parents on the ship "James" and settled in Dover, N. H. He married Mary Canney, daughter of Thomas Canney of Dover, in c. 1654/5. He died in 1677 in Dover Neck, N. H., where he had been keeper of the jail for years. Mary d. Ju. 2, 1706 in Dover Neck, and married a second time to Nathaniel Loomis. Granted 100 a. in 1658 which James Clements owned in 1719. Witnessed ag. Richard Pinkham in 1660. Prison keeper of Dover 1670, when he wit. in suit H. Symonds v. Barefoot. Will, 5 May - 20 June 1677 (inv.), gives to s. Jeremiah 10 a. and two yearling stears in his poss. on Acc. of 13 pounds givin hem by his gr.fa. Canney which the testator used in his own behoof; to w. Mary half the ho. and barn for life, and all else to bring up 'our small children'; w. and s. Jeremiah execs., Job Clements and John Roberts overseers. |
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1548 | I10159 | TIPTOFT | John | Abt 1383 | 27 Jan 1443 | 0 | John Tiptoft (or Tibetot), K.B. 1st Lord Tiptoft, Knight of the Shire for Huntingdonshire and Somerset, Speaker of the House of Commons, Treasurer of the Household, Chief Butler of England, Lord High Treasurer (1408-1410), Seneschal of Landes and Aquitaine, Councillor of Regency, Steward of the Household. He was born circa 1383 (age 30 in 1413). He first married (before 25 Oct 1407) Philippe Talbot, daughter of John Talbot by his wife Katherine. They had no children. He married secondly (by license dated 28 Feb 1421/2) Joyce Cherleton (or Charleton), daughter of Edward Cherleton by Eleanor de Holand. They had one son, John, and three daughters: Philippe, Joan and Joyce. John and his second wife also had a daughter, Margaret, who "embraced the religious life."[1] Joan, the older sister of John's second wife, inherited the lordship of Powys, so John Tiptoft was not the lord of Powys, although his son was summoned to parliament as John de Charleton de Powys.[1] |
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1549 | I10158 | TIPTOFT | Joyce | 1430 | 1470 | 0 | Dudley Castle | tree1 |
1550 | I10422 | TOURS | Ermengarde of | 20 Mar 851 | 0 | "Her voice is as pure as gold and clear as the note of zither. Her skin is as roses mixed in snow. Her blonde hair circles her head like a chrysolith. Her eyes are lively, her white neck like milk, lillies, ivory. Her graceful hands are like the snow." | tree1 |
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