Giorgi I (?) King of Georgia1
M, #66181, d. 1027
Father | Bagrat III-IV Bagratuni of Abkhazia and Iberia1 b. c 963, d. 7 May 1014 |
Last Edited | 6 Apr 2020 |
Giorgi I (?) King of Georgia married Meriam/Mariam (?) of Vaspourakan, Regent of Georgia, daughter of Sénéqérim-Hovhannès (?) Roi de Vaspourakan and Kouschkousch (?) of Armenia,
; his 1st wife.1,2 Giorgi I (?) King of Georgia married Alda (?) of Ossetia.1
Giorgi I (?) King of Georgia died in 1027.1
; Giorgi I, King of Georgia (1014-27), +1027; 1m: Meriam of Vaspurakan; 2m: Alda of Ossetia.1 Giorgi I (?) King of Georgia was also known as George I (?) King of Georgia.3 He was King of Georgia between 1014 and 1027.1
; his 1st wife.1,2 Giorgi I (?) King of Georgia married Alda (?) of Ossetia.1
Giorgi I (?) King of Georgia died in 1027.1
; Giorgi I, King of Georgia (1014-27), +1027; 1m: Meriam of Vaspurakan; 2m: Alda of Ossetia.1 Giorgi I (?) King of Georgia was also known as George I (?) King of Georgia.3 He was King of Georgia between 1014 and 1027.1
Family 1 | Alda (?) of Ossetia |
Child |
|
Family 2 | Meriam/Mariam (?) of Vaspourakan, Regent of Georgia |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Bagrat 2 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/georgia/bagrat2.html
- [S4742] Wikipédia - L'encyclopédie libre, online https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikip%C3%A9dia:Accueil_principal, Mariam Arçrouni: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mariam_Ar%C3%A7rouni. Hereinafter cited as Wikipédia (FR).
- [S1953] Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia, online http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_I_of_Georgia. Hereinafter cited as Wikipedia.
Meriam/Mariam (?) of Vaspourakan, Regent of Georgia1,2,3
F, #66182
Father | Sénéqérim-Hovhannès (?) Roi de Vaspourakan2 |
Mother | Kouschkousch (?) of Armenia2 |
Last Edited | 6 Apr 2020 |
Meriam/Mariam (?) of Vaspourakan, Regent of Georgia married Giorgi I (?) King of Georgia, son of Bagrat III-IV Bagratuni of Abkhazia and Iberia,
; his 1st wife.1,3
; Per Wikipedia (Fr.):
"Mariam Arçrouni ou Maria de Vaspourakan est une fille de Sénéqérim-Hovhannès, roi de Vaspourakan, et de Kouschkousch Bagratouni, et la première femme de Georges Ier, roi de Géorgie. En tant que reine-mère, elle a été régente de Géorgie de 1027 à 1037 au nom de son fils Bagrat IV et impliquée dans la diplomatie avec l'empire byzantin.
Biographie
"Elle est la première épouse du roi Georges Ier (1014-1027), mais semble avoir été répudiée pour que ce dernier puisse épouser Alda, fille du roi d'Alanie. Maria retrouve son importance après la mort de son mari et l'accession au trône de son fils Bagrat IV en 1027. Pendant la minorité de Bagrat, elle partage la régence avec les grands du royaume et particulièrement avec les ducs Liparit III Orbeliani et Ivane Abazasdze. Vers 1031-32, Mariam se rendit à Constantinople pour négocier avec le nouveau Basileus Romain III Argyre et revient avec un traité de paix, la dignité de curopalate et la main d'Hélène Argyre, nièce de Romain III, pour son fils.
"Mariam continue de jouer un rôle éminent dans la politique de la Géorgie, même après la majorité de Bagrat. Les chroniques géorgiennes parlent d'Arméniens qui deviennent ses sujets en raison de son lignage, évènement qui est peut-être une allusion au contrôle d'Ani par les Géorgiens avant qu'elle ne soit finalement annexée par les Byzantins en 1045. Elles mentionnent également un différend entre Bagrat et sa mère à propos de l'avenir de Démétrius, demi-frère consanguin de Bagrat, qui trahit son frère en 1033 en livrant la forteresse d'Anacopia aux Byzantins. Mariam plaida pour la réconciliation entre les deux frères et tenta vainement de faire revenir le rebelle à une conduite loyale. Durant l'exil forcé de Bagrat à Byzance, Mariam l'accompagna et passa trois ans à la cour de l'empereur Constantin IX Monomaque1.
"Mariam s'est distinguée par ses dons à l'église et aux fondations monastiques, notamment à celui d'Iviron (Mont Athos). Ce monastère est connu pour sa correspondance avec l'éminent moine et érudit géorgien George l'Hagiorite sous les auspices duquel Mariam allait devenir religieuse. Selon la Vie de George l'Hagiorite, après le mariage de sa petite-fille Marie avec Michel VII Doukas (1065), Mariam se rend à Antioche, dans le but d'effectuer le pèlerinage à Jérusalem, emportant avec elle des messages pour le gouverneur et le patriarche d'Antioche. Ceux-ci dissuadèrent la reine de traverser les terres sarrasines qui tenaient Jerusalem2.
"La mort de Mariam n'est pas mentionnée dans les chroniques, on sait qu'elle était présente à la mort de Bagrat IV, en 10723. Elle est certainement morte en 1103, comme indiqué dans les registres de l'église géorgienne à Ruis [i] Urbnisi.
Notes et références
** (en) Cet article est partiellement ou en totalité issu de l’article de Wikipédia en anglais intitulé « Mariam of Vaspurakan » (voir la liste des auteurs).
1. (en) Mariam Lordkipanidze, Georgia in the XI-XII centuries, Ganatleba, George B. Hewitt, 1987 (lire en ligne [archive]), p. 132.
2. (en) Lynda Garland & Stephen Rapp, Mary 'of Alania': Woman and Empress Between Two Worlds, p. 120-121 extrait de Lynda Garland, Byzantine Women: Varieties of Experience, 800-1200v, Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2006 (ISBN 0-7546-5737-X).
3. Un passage de la Chronique géorgienne fait dire à Bagrat : « Mère, j'ai pitié de vous, parce que tous vos enfants sont morts avant vous, et donc vous allez mourir. » dans (en) Robert W. Thomson, Rewriting Caucasian History. The Medieval Armenian Adaptation of the Georgian Chronicles. The Original Georgian Texts and the Armenian Adaptation, Oxford University Press, 1996 (ISBN 0-19-826373-2), p. 305.
Bibliographie
** Cyrille Toumanoff, Les dynasties de la Caucasie chrétienne de l'Antiquité jusqu'au xixe siècle : Tables généalogiques et chronologiques, Rome, 1990, p. 103-104."3
; his 1st wife.1,3
; Per Wikipedia (Fr.):
"Mariam Arçrouni ou Maria de Vaspourakan est une fille de Sénéqérim-Hovhannès, roi de Vaspourakan, et de Kouschkousch Bagratouni, et la première femme de Georges Ier, roi de Géorgie. En tant que reine-mère, elle a été régente de Géorgie de 1027 à 1037 au nom de son fils Bagrat IV et impliquée dans la diplomatie avec l'empire byzantin.
Biographie
"Elle est la première épouse du roi Georges Ier (1014-1027), mais semble avoir été répudiée pour que ce dernier puisse épouser Alda, fille du roi d'Alanie. Maria retrouve son importance après la mort de son mari et l'accession au trône de son fils Bagrat IV en 1027. Pendant la minorité de Bagrat, elle partage la régence avec les grands du royaume et particulièrement avec les ducs Liparit III Orbeliani et Ivane Abazasdze. Vers 1031-32, Mariam se rendit à Constantinople pour négocier avec le nouveau Basileus Romain III Argyre et revient avec un traité de paix, la dignité de curopalate et la main d'Hélène Argyre, nièce de Romain III, pour son fils.
"Mariam continue de jouer un rôle éminent dans la politique de la Géorgie, même après la majorité de Bagrat. Les chroniques géorgiennes parlent d'Arméniens qui deviennent ses sujets en raison de son lignage, évènement qui est peut-être une allusion au contrôle d'Ani par les Géorgiens avant qu'elle ne soit finalement annexée par les Byzantins en 1045. Elles mentionnent également un différend entre Bagrat et sa mère à propos de l'avenir de Démétrius, demi-frère consanguin de Bagrat, qui trahit son frère en 1033 en livrant la forteresse d'Anacopia aux Byzantins. Mariam plaida pour la réconciliation entre les deux frères et tenta vainement de faire revenir le rebelle à une conduite loyale. Durant l'exil forcé de Bagrat à Byzance, Mariam l'accompagna et passa trois ans à la cour de l'empereur Constantin IX Monomaque1.
"Mariam s'est distinguée par ses dons à l'église et aux fondations monastiques, notamment à celui d'Iviron (Mont Athos). Ce monastère est connu pour sa correspondance avec l'éminent moine et érudit géorgien George l'Hagiorite sous les auspices duquel Mariam allait devenir religieuse. Selon la Vie de George l'Hagiorite, après le mariage de sa petite-fille Marie avec Michel VII Doukas (1065), Mariam se rend à Antioche, dans le but d'effectuer le pèlerinage à Jérusalem, emportant avec elle des messages pour le gouverneur et le patriarche d'Antioche. Ceux-ci dissuadèrent la reine de traverser les terres sarrasines qui tenaient Jerusalem2.
"La mort de Mariam n'est pas mentionnée dans les chroniques, on sait qu'elle était présente à la mort de Bagrat IV, en 10723. Elle est certainement morte en 1103, comme indiqué dans les registres de l'église géorgienne à Ruis [i] Urbnisi.
Notes et références
** (en) Cet article est partiellement ou en totalité issu de l’article de Wikipédia en anglais intitulé « Mariam of Vaspurakan » (voir la liste des auteurs).
1. (en) Mariam Lordkipanidze, Georgia in the XI-XII centuries, Ganatleba, George B. Hewitt, 1987 (lire en ligne [archive]), p. 132.
2. (en) Lynda Garland & Stephen Rapp, Mary 'of Alania': Woman and Empress Between Two Worlds, p. 120-121 extrait de Lynda Garland, Byzantine Women: Varieties of Experience, 800-1200v, Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2006 (ISBN 0-7546-5737-X).
3. Un passage de la Chronique géorgienne fait dire à Bagrat : « Mère, j'ai pitié de vous, parce que tous vos enfants sont morts avant vous, et donc vous allez mourir. » dans (en) Robert W. Thomson, Rewriting Caucasian History. The Medieval Armenian Adaptation of the Georgian Chronicles. The Original Georgian Texts and the Armenian Adaptation, Oxford University Press, 1996 (ISBN 0-19-826373-2), p. 305.
Bibliographie
** Cyrille Toumanoff, Les dynasties de la Caucasie chrétienne de l'Antiquité jusqu'au xixe siècle : Tables généalogiques et chronologiques, Rome, 1990, p. 103-104."3
Family | Giorgi I (?) King of Georgia d. 1027 |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Bagrat 2 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/georgia/bagrat2.html
- [S4742] Wikipédia - L'encyclopédie libre, online https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikip%C3%A9dia:Accueil_principal, Sénéqérim-Hovhannès de Vaspourakan: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/S%C3%A9n%C3%A9q%C3%A9rim-Hovhann%C3%A8s_de_Vaspourakan. Hereinafter cited as Wikipédia (FR).
- [S4742] Wikipédia (FR), online https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikip%C3%A9dia:Accueil_principal, Mariam Arçrouni: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mariam_Ar%C3%A7rouni
Alda (?) of Ossetia1
F, #66183
Last Edited | 26 Sep 2004 |
Alda (?) of Ossetia married Giorgi I (?) King of Georgia, son of Bagrat III-IV Bagratuni of Abkhazia and Iberia.1
Family | Giorgi I (?) King of Georgia d. 1027 |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Bagrat 2 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/georgia/bagrat2.html
unknown (?)1
?, #66184
Father | Romanus III Argyropolus (?) Emperor of Byzantium1 d. c 1034 |
Mother | Zoe Porphyrogenita (?) Empress of Byzantium1 b. 980, d. Jun 1050 |
Last Edited | 26 Sep 2004 |
Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Bagrat 2 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/georgia/bagrat2.html
Borena (?) of Ossetia1
F, #66186
Last Edited | 22 Aug 2020 |
Borena (?) of Ossetia married Bagrat IV (?) King of Georgia, son of Giorgi I (?) King of Georgia and Meriam/Mariam (?) of Vaspourakan, Regent of Georgia,
; his 2nd wife.1
; his 2nd wife.1
Family | Bagrat IV (?) King of Georgia b. c 1020, d. 1072 |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Bagrat 2 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/georgia/bagrat2.html
- [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/GEORGIA.htm#MariaMMikhaelVIIByzantium. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
(?) Palaiologina1
F, #66187
Father | Ioannes V Palaiologos Emperor of Byzantium1 b. 18 Jun 1332, d. 16 Feb 1391 |
Mother | Helene Kantakuzene1 b. 1333, d. Nov 1396 |
Last Edited | 26 Sep 2004 |
(?) Palaiologina married Murad I (?) Sultan of the Ottoman Empire, son of Orhan I (?) Emir of Bithynia, Bey of the Ottoman Empire and Theodora Kantakuzene, in 1389.1
Family | Murad I (?) Sultan of the Ottoman Empire b. bt 1319 - 1326, d. 1389 |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S1671] Count W. H. Rüdt-Collenberg, The Rupenides, Hethumides and Lusignans: The Structure of the Armeno-Cilician Dynasties (11, Rude de Lille, Paris 7e, France: Librairie C. Klincksieck for the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation Armenian Library (Lisbon), 1963), Chart B (R2): Relationship Table XIII - XIV Century. Hereinafter cited as Rudt-Collenberg: The Rupenides, etc.
Eirene Palaiologos1,2
F, #66188, b. 1349, d. after 1363
Father | Ioannes V Palaiologos Emperor of Byzantium1,2 b. 18 Jun 1332, d. 16 Feb 1391 |
Mother | Helene Kantakuzene1,2 b. 1333, d. Nov 1396 |
Last Edited | 26 Sep 2004 |
Eirene Palaiologos was born in 1349.1 She married Halil (?) Emir of Bithynia, son of Orhan I (?) Emir of Bithynia, Bey of the Ottoman Empire and Theodora Kantakuzene, in 1359.3,2,1
Eirene Palaiologos died after 1363.1
; Eirene Palaiologina, *1349, +after 1363; m.her Turkish cousin Halil of Bithynia (+ca 1362/63.)1
Eirene Palaiologos died after 1363.1
; Eirene Palaiologina, *1349, +after 1363; m.her Turkish cousin Halil of Bithynia (+ca 1362/63.)1
Family | Halil (?) Emir of Bithynia d. bt 1362 - 1363 |
Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Byzantium 8 page - The Palaiologos family: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/byzant/byzant8.html
- [S1671] Count W. H. Rüdt-Collenberg, The Rupenides, Hethumides and Lusignans: The Structure of the Armeno-Cilician Dynasties (11, Rude de Lille, Paris 7e, France: Librairie C. Klincksieck for the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation Armenian Library (Lisbon), 1963), Chart B (R2): Relationship Table XIII - XIV Century. Hereinafter cited as Rudt-Collenberg: The Rupenides, etc.
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, updated 15 May 2003, Byzant 5 page - Kantakuzenos family: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/byzant/byzant5.html
Theodora Kantakuzene1
F, #66189, b. between 1330 and 1331, d. after 1381
Father | Ioannes VI Palaiologos Kantakuzenos Emperor of Byzantium1 b. 1295, d. 10 Jun 1383 |
Mother | Eirene Asanina1 d. bt 1369 - 1370 |
Last Edited | 26 Sep 2004 |
Theodora Kantakuzene was born between 1330 and 1331.1 She married Orhan I (?) Emir of Bithynia, Bey of the Ottoman Empire, son of Osman I (?) Emir of Bithynia, circa June 1346.1,2,3,4
Theodora Kantakuzene died after 1381; died after being released as a hostage at Galata.1
; Theodora Kantakouzene, *ca 1330/31, +after 1381, after being released as a hostage at Galata; m.early summer ca VI.1346 Emir Orchan, son of Osman, Emir of Bithynia (+1359/62.)1
Theodora Kantakuzene died after 1381; died after being released as a hostage at Galata.1
; Theodora Kantakouzene, *ca 1330/31, +after 1381, after being released as a hostage at Galata; m.early summer ca VI.1346 Emir Orchan, son of Osman, Emir of Bithynia (+1359/62.)1
Family | Orhan I (?) Emir of Bithynia, Bey of the Ottoman Empire b. c 1288, d. bt 1359 - 1362 |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Byzant 5 page - Kantakuzenos family: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/byzant/byzant5.html
- [S1671] Count W. H. Rüdt-Collenberg, The Rupenides, Hethumides and Lusignans: The Structure of the Armeno-Cilician Dynasties (11, Rude de Lille, Paris 7e, France: Librairie C. Klincksieck for the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation Armenian Library (Lisbon), 1963), Chart B (R2): Relationship Table XIII - XIV Century. Hereinafter cited as Rudt-Collenberg: The Rupenides, etc.
- [S1672] Brainy Encyclopedia, online http://www.brainyencyclopedia.com/, Orhan I: http://www.brainyencyclopedia.com/encyclopedia/o/or/orhan_i.html. Hereinafter cited as Brainy Encyclopedia.
- [S1673] TheFreeDictionary.com by Farlex, online http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com, Murad I: http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Murad%20I. Hereinafter cited as TheFreeDictionary.com by Farlex.
Orhan I (?) Emir of Bithynia, Bey of the Ottoman Empire1,2,3,4
M, #66190, b. circa 1288, d. between 1359 and 1362
Father | Osman I (?) Emir of Bithynia1 d. 1326 |
Last Edited | 26 Sep 2004 |
Orhan I (?) Emir of Bithynia, Bey of the Ottoman Empire was born circa 1288.5 He married Theodora Kantakuzene, daughter of Ioannes VI Palaiologos Kantakuzenos Emperor of Byzantium and Eirene Asanina, circa June 1346.1,2,3,4
Orhan I (?) Emir of Bithynia, Bey of the Ottoman Empire died between 1359 and 1362; Byzant 5 page says d. 1359/62; Rudt-Collenberg says d. 1359.1,2
; Orhan I was the bey (chief) of the newborn Ottoman Empire (at the time known as the Osmanli tribe) from 1326 to 1359. Orhan conquered most of eastern Anatolia and took part of the political gambling in the Byzantine Empire by marrying the daughter of a Byzantine prince who was a rival to the king. When the prince - with Orhan's support - overthrew the king, Orhan acquired the Dardanelles and the peninsula of Gallipoli as a gift and established the first Turkish territory in Europe.3 He was Bey of the Ottoman Empire between 1326 and 1359.4
Orhan I (?) Emir of Bithynia, Bey of the Ottoman Empire died between 1359 and 1362; Byzant 5 page says d. 1359/62; Rudt-Collenberg says d. 1359.1,2
; Orhan I was the bey (chief) of the newborn Ottoman Empire (at the time known as the Osmanli tribe) from 1326 to 1359. Orhan conquered most of eastern Anatolia and took part of the political gambling in the Byzantine Empire by marrying the daughter of a Byzantine prince who was a rival to the king. When the prince - with Orhan's support - overthrew the king, Orhan acquired the Dardanelles and the peninsula of Gallipoli as a gift and established the first Turkish territory in Europe.3 He was Bey of the Ottoman Empire between 1326 and 1359.4
Family | Theodora Kantakuzene b. bt 1330 - 1331, d. a 1381 |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Byzant 5 page - Kantakuzenos family: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/byzant/byzant5.html
- [S1671] Count W. H. Rüdt-Collenberg, The Rupenides, Hethumides and Lusignans: The Structure of the Armeno-Cilician Dynasties (11, Rude de Lille, Paris 7e, France: Librairie C. Klincksieck for the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation Armenian Library (Lisbon), 1963), Chart B (R2): Relationship Table XIII - XIV Century. Hereinafter cited as Rudt-Collenberg: The Rupenides, etc.
- [S1672] Brainy Encyclopedia, online http://www.brainyencyclopedia.com/, Orhan I: http://www.brainyencyclopedia.com/encyclopedia/o/or/orhan_i.html. Hereinafter cited as Brainy Encyclopedia.
- [S1673] TheFreeDictionary.com by Farlex, online http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com, Murad I: http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Murad%20I. Hereinafter cited as TheFreeDictionary.com by Farlex.
- [S1674] Infoplease.com, online http://www.infoplease.com/index.html, Orkhan: http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/people/A0836868.html. Hereinafter cited as Infoplease.com.
Halil (?) Emir of Bithynia1
M, #66191, d. between 1362 and 1363
Father | Orhan I (?) Emir of Bithynia, Bey of the Ottoman Empire1,2 b. c 1288, d. bt 1359 - 1362 |
Mother | Theodora Kantakuzene1,2 b. bt 1330 - 1331, d. a 1381 |
Last Edited | 26 Sep 2004 |
Halil (?) Emir of Bithynia married Eirene Palaiologos, daughter of Ioannes V Palaiologos Emperor of Byzantium and Helene Kantakuzene, in 1359.1,2,3
Halil (?) Emir of Bithynia died between 1362 and 1363; murdered; Byzant says d. 1362/63; Rudt-Collenberg says d. 1360.1
; Halil, +murdered ca 1362/63; m.Eirene Palaiologina (*1349, +after 1363.)1
Halil (?) Emir of Bithynia died between 1362 and 1363; murdered; Byzant says d. 1362/63; Rudt-Collenberg says d. 1360.1
; Halil, +murdered ca 1362/63; m.Eirene Palaiologina (*1349, +after 1363.)1
Family | Eirene Palaiologos b. 1349, d. a 1363 |
Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Byzant 5 page - Kantakuzenos family: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/byzant/byzant5.html
- [S1671] Count W. H. Rüdt-Collenberg, The Rupenides, Hethumides and Lusignans: The Structure of the Armeno-Cilician Dynasties (11, Rude de Lille, Paris 7e, France: Librairie C. Klincksieck for the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation Armenian Library (Lisbon), 1963), Chart B (R2): Relationship Table XIII - XIV Century. Hereinafter cited as Rudt-Collenberg: The Rupenides, etc.
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, updated 15 May 2003, Byzantium 8 page - The Palaiologos family: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/byzant/byzant8.html
Osman I (?) Emir of Bithynia1
M, #66192, d. 1326
Last Edited | 26 Sep 2004 |
Osman I (?) Emir of Bithynia was born in 1259.2
Osman I (?) Emir of Bithynia died in 1326.2
; Osman I or Othman I [o-thmän'] , 1259–1326, leader of the Ottoman Turks and founder of the dynasty that established and ruled the Ottoman Empire. The Osmanli or Ottoman Turks derive their name from Osman. He proclaimed (1290) his independence from his overlord, the Seljuk Turks, upon the collapse of their empire. Aided by an influx of Muslim warriors, he expanded his state in NW Asia Minor at the expense of the petty Christian lords who were his neighbors. He nevertheless inaugurated a policy of religious tolerance. Just before his death in 1326, his son and successor, Orkhan, took the city of Bursa from the Byzantines.
The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2004, Columbia University Press.2
Osman I (?) Emir of Bithynia died in 1326.2
; Osman I or Othman I [o-thmän'] , 1259–1326, leader of the Ottoman Turks and founder of the dynasty that established and ruled the Ottoman Empire. The Osmanli or Ottoman Turks derive their name from Osman. He proclaimed (1290) his independence from his overlord, the Seljuk Turks, upon the collapse of their empire. Aided by an influx of Muslim warriors, he expanded his state in NW Asia Minor at the expense of the petty Christian lords who were his neighbors. He nevertheless inaugurated a policy of religious tolerance. Just before his death in 1326, his son and successor, Orkhan, took the city of Bursa from the Byzantines.
The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2004, Columbia University Press.2
Family | |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Byzant 5 page - Kantakuzenos family: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/byzant/byzant5.html
- [S1674] Infoplease.com, online http://www.infoplease.com/index.html, Osman I: http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/people/A0836991.html. Hereinafter cited as Infoplease.com.
Murad I (?) Sultan of the Ottoman Empire1
M, #66193, b. between 1319 and 1326, d. 1389
Father | Orhan I (?) Emir of Bithynia, Bey of the Ottoman Empire1,2 b. c 1288, d. bt 1359 - 1362 |
Mother | Theodora Kantakuzene1 b. bt 1330 - 1331, d. a 1381 |
Last Edited | 26 Sep 2004 |
Murad I (?) Sultan of the Ottoman Empire was born between 1319 and 1326.3
Murad I (?) Sultan of the Ottoman Empire died in 1389.3 He married (?) Palaiologina, daughter of Ioannes V Palaiologos Emperor of Byzantium and Helene Kantakuzene, in 1389.1
; Murad I (nick-named Hüdavendigar\, the God-like one) was the ruler of the Ottoman Empire from 1359 to 1389. He established the Empire by building up a society and government in the newly conquered city of Adrianople (which Murad renamed Edirne) and by expanding the realm in Europe, bringing most of the Balkan under Ottoman rule and forcing the Byzantine emperor to pay him tribute. It was Murad who changed the Osmanli tribe into an empire. He established the title of sultan in the 1380s and the institutions of the Janissaries and the devs,irm; the government of the divan; and the military judge, the kaziasker. Murad was assassinated by Milosh Obilich, a Serbian noble, during the Battle of Kosovo.4
; Sultan of the Ottoman Empire.1
Murad I (?) Sultan of the Ottoman Empire died in 1389.3 He married (?) Palaiologina, daughter of Ioannes V Palaiologos Emperor of Byzantium and Helene Kantakuzene, in 1389.1
; Murad I (nick-named Hüdavendigar\, the God-like one) was the ruler of the Ottoman Empire from 1359 to 1389. He established the Empire by building up a society and government in the newly conquered city of Adrianople (which Murad renamed Edirne) and by expanding the realm in Europe, bringing most of the Balkan under Ottoman rule and forcing the Byzantine emperor to pay him tribute. It was Murad who changed the Osmanli tribe into an empire. He established the title of sultan in the 1380s and the institutions of the Janissaries and the devs,irm; the government of the divan; and the military judge, the kaziasker. Murad was assassinated by Milosh Obilich, a Serbian noble, during the Battle of Kosovo.4
; Sultan of the Ottoman Empire.1
Family | (?) Palaiologina |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S1671] Count W. H. Rüdt-Collenberg, The Rupenides, Hethumides and Lusignans: The Structure of the Armeno-Cilician Dynasties (11, Rude de Lille, Paris 7e, France: Librairie C. Klincksieck for the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation Armenian Library (Lisbon), 1963), Chart B (R2): Relationship Table XIII - XIV Century. Hereinafter cited as Rudt-Collenberg: The Rupenides, etc.
- [S1672] Brainy Encyclopedia, online http://www.brainyencyclopedia.com/, Orhan I: http://www.brainyencyclopedia.com/encyclopedia/o/or/orhan_i.html. Hereinafter cited as Brainy Encyclopedia.
- [S1673] TheFreeDictionary.com by Farlex, online http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com, Murad I: http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Murad%20I. Hereinafter cited as TheFreeDictionary.com by Farlex.
- [S1672] Brainy Encyclopedia, online http://www.brainyencyclopedia.com/, Murad I: http://www.brainyencyclopedia.com/encyclopedia/m/mu/murad_i.html
Beyazid I (?) Sultan of the Ottoman Empire1
M, #66194, b. 1347, d. 1403
Father | Murad I (?) Sultan of the Ottoman Empire1 b. bt 1319 - 1326, d. 1389 |
Mother | (?) Palaiologina1 |
Last Edited | 26 Sep 2004 |
Beyazid I (?) Sultan of the Ottoman Empire was born in 1347.2 He married (?) Palaiologina, daughter of Ioannes V Palaiologos Emperor of Byzantium and Helene Kantakuzene, in 1389.1
Beyazid I (?) Sultan of the Ottoman Empire died in 1403.3,2
; Beyazid I , 1347–1403, Ottoman sultan (1389–1402), son and successor of Murad I. He besieged Byzantine Emperor Manuel II at Constantinople, then overcame the Turkish rulers in E Anatolia and defeated the army of Sigismund of Hungary (see Sigismund, Holy Roman emperor) at Nikopol. Ottoman expansion led to conflict with the conqueror Timur, and the two armies met at Ankara in 1402. Beyazid's troops consisted only of Serbs and the Janissaries, since the Tatars and most of his Turkish vassals had deserted him. His army was routed, and he died as Timur's prisoner. His sons fought (1402–13) each other for the succession; Muhammad I emerged victorious. The name appears in other forms, e.g., Bajazet, Bayazid, and Beyazit.
The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2004, Columbia University Press.2
; Beyazid I (c.1354 - 1403), nicknamed Yildirim, the Thunderbolt, was the sultan of the Ottoman Empire from 1389 to 1402. He ascended to the throne following the assassination of his father Murad I and immediately had his younger brother strangled to prevent him from staging a coup.
In revenge for the death by stealth of Murad in the Battle of Kosovo, Beyazid massacred his Serb prisoners. Nevertheless, he was able to conclude a treaty with the Serb leader, Stephen Bulcovic, and granted Serbia considerable autonomy. In 1391 he laid siege to Constantinople. On the demand of the Byzantine emperor John V Palaeologus a new Crusade was organized to defeat Beyazid. In 1396, the Christian allies, under the leadership of the Hungarian King and Holy Roman Emperor Sigismund, was defeated in the Battle of Nicopolis. The siege of Constantinople lasted until 1398 when the Byzantines paid a considerable tribute to break the siege.
In 1400, the Mongol warlord Timur Lenk had succeeded in rousing the local kingdoms that had been conquered by the Turks to join him in his attack on Beyazid. In the fateful Battle of Ankara, on July 20, 1402, Beyazid was captured by Timur and kept chained in a cage as a trophy. There are many stories about Beyazid's captivity, including one that describes how Timur used him as a footstool. One year later, Beyazid died -- some accounts claim that he committed suicide.3
; Beyazid I , 1347–1403, Ottoman sultan (1389–1402), son and successor of Murad I. He besieged Byzantine Emperor Manuel II at Constantinople, then overcame the Turkish rulers in E Anatolia and defeated the army of Sigismund of Hungary (see Sigismund, Holy Roman emperor) at Nikopol. Ottoman expansion led to conflict with the conqueror Timur, and the two armies met at Ankara in 1402. Beyazid's troops consisted only of Serbs and the Janissaries, since the Tatars and most of his Turkish vassals had deserted him. His army was routed, and he died as Timur's prisoner. His sons fought (1402–13) each other for the succession; Muhammad I emerged victorious. The name appears in other forms, e.g., Bajazet, Bayazid, and Beyazit.
The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2004, Columbia University Press.2
; Sultan of the Ottoman Empire.1
Beyazid I (?) Sultan of the Ottoman Empire died in 1403.3,2
; Beyazid I , 1347–1403, Ottoman sultan (1389–1402), son and successor of Murad I. He besieged Byzantine Emperor Manuel II at Constantinople, then overcame the Turkish rulers in E Anatolia and defeated the army of Sigismund of Hungary (see Sigismund, Holy Roman emperor) at Nikopol. Ottoman expansion led to conflict with the conqueror Timur, and the two armies met at Ankara in 1402. Beyazid's troops consisted only of Serbs and the Janissaries, since the Tatars and most of his Turkish vassals had deserted him. His army was routed, and he died as Timur's prisoner. His sons fought (1402–13) each other for the succession; Muhammad I emerged victorious. The name appears in other forms, e.g., Bajazet, Bayazid, and Beyazit.
The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2004, Columbia University Press.2
; Beyazid I (c.1354 - 1403), nicknamed Yildirim, the Thunderbolt, was the sultan of the Ottoman Empire from 1389 to 1402. He ascended to the throne following the assassination of his father Murad I and immediately had his younger brother strangled to prevent him from staging a coup.
In revenge for the death by stealth of Murad in the Battle of Kosovo, Beyazid massacred his Serb prisoners. Nevertheless, he was able to conclude a treaty with the Serb leader, Stephen Bulcovic, and granted Serbia considerable autonomy. In 1391 he laid siege to Constantinople. On the demand of the Byzantine emperor John V Palaeologus a new Crusade was organized to defeat Beyazid. In 1396, the Christian allies, under the leadership of the Hungarian King and Holy Roman Emperor Sigismund, was defeated in the Battle of Nicopolis. The siege of Constantinople lasted until 1398 when the Byzantines paid a considerable tribute to break the siege.
In 1400, the Mongol warlord Timur Lenk had succeeded in rousing the local kingdoms that had been conquered by the Turks to join him in his attack on Beyazid. In the fateful Battle of Ankara, on July 20, 1402, Beyazid was captured by Timur and kept chained in a cage as a trophy. There are many stories about Beyazid's captivity, including one that describes how Timur used him as a footstool. One year later, Beyazid died -- some accounts claim that he committed suicide.3
; Beyazid I , 1347–1403, Ottoman sultan (1389–1402), son and successor of Murad I. He besieged Byzantine Emperor Manuel II at Constantinople, then overcame the Turkish rulers in E Anatolia and defeated the army of Sigismund of Hungary (see Sigismund, Holy Roman emperor) at Nikopol. Ottoman expansion led to conflict with the conqueror Timur, and the two armies met at Ankara in 1402. Beyazid's troops consisted only of Serbs and the Janissaries, since the Tatars and most of his Turkish vassals had deserted him. His army was routed, and he died as Timur's prisoner. His sons fought (1402–13) each other for the succession; Muhammad I emerged victorious. The name appears in other forms, e.g., Bajazet, Bayazid, and Beyazit.
The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2004, Columbia University Press.2
; Sultan of the Ottoman Empire.1
Family | (?) Palaiologina |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S1671] Count W. H. Rüdt-Collenberg, The Rupenides, Hethumides and Lusignans: The Structure of the Armeno-Cilician Dynasties (11, Rude de Lille, Paris 7e, France: Librairie C. Klincksieck for the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation Armenian Library (Lisbon), 1963), Chart B (R2): Relationship Table XIII - XIV Century. Hereinafter cited as Rudt-Collenberg: The Rupenides, etc.
- [S1674] Infoplease.com, online http://www.infoplease.com/index.html, Beyazid I: http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/people/A0807396.html. Hereinafter cited as Infoplease.com.
- [S1672] Brainy Encyclopedia, online http://www.brainyencyclopedia.com/, Beyazid I: http://www.brainyencyclopedia.com/encyclopedia/b/be/beyazid_i.html. Hereinafter cited as Brainy Encyclopedia.
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Byzantium 8 page - The Palaiologos family: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/byzant/byzant8.html
(?) Palaiologina1
F, #66195
Father | Ioannes V Palaiologos Emperor of Byzantium1 b. 18 Jun 1332, d. 16 Feb 1391 |
Mother | Helene Kantakuzene1 b. 1333, d. Nov 1396 |
Last Edited | 26 Sep 2004 |
(?) Palaiologina married Beyazid I (?) Sultan of the Ottoman Empire, son of Murad I (?) Sultan of the Ottoman Empire and (?) Palaiologina, in 1389.1
Family | Beyazid I (?) Sultan of the Ottoman Empire b. 1347, d. 1403 |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S1671] Count W. H. Rüdt-Collenberg, The Rupenides, Hethumides and Lusignans: The Structure of the Armeno-Cilician Dynasties (11, Rude de Lille, Paris 7e, France: Librairie C. Klincksieck for the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation Armenian Library (Lisbon), 1963), Chart B (R2): Relationship Table XIII - XIV Century. Hereinafter cited as Rudt-Collenberg: The Rupenides, etc.
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Byzantium 8 page - The Palaiologos family: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/byzant/byzant8.html
Mehmed I Celebi (?) Sultan of the Ottoman Empire1
M, #66196, b. circa 1389, d. 1421
Father | Beyazid I (?) Sultan of the Ottoman Empire1 b. 1347, d. 1403 |
Mother | (?) Palaiologina1 |
Last Edited | 26 Sep 2004 |
Mehmed I Celebi (?) Sultan of the Ottoman Empire was born circa 1389.2
Mehmed I Celebi (?) Sultan of the Ottoman Empire died in 1421.2
; Mehmed I Çelebi (nicknamed Kirisci, the Executioner) was one of the sons of sultan Beyazid I of the Ottoman Empire. When Timur Lenk defeated the Ottomans in the Battle of Ankara a civil war broke out in the empire, called the Ottoman Interregnum. When Mehmed stood as victor in 1413 he crowned himself as sultan in Adrianople (Edirne). He restored the empire, moved the capitol from Bursa to Adrianople and conquered parts of Albania, the Byzantine Empire, the Turkish emirate Candar and the Christian Kingdom of Cilicia. Mehmed died in 1421.3
; Muhammad I or Mehmet I (Muhammad the Restorer), 1389?–1421, Ottoman sultan (1413–21), son of Beyazid I. By defeating his brothers he reunited most of his father's empire. He consolidated his authority and thus renewed Ottoman power. His son, Murad II, succeeded him.
The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2004, Columbia University Press.2
; Sultan of the Ottoman Empire.1,2
Mehmed I Celebi (?) Sultan of the Ottoman Empire died in 1421.2
; Mehmed I Çelebi (nicknamed Kirisci, the Executioner) was one of the sons of sultan Beyazid I of the Ottoman Empire. When Timur Lenk defeated the Ottomans in the Battle of Ankara a civil war broke out in the empire, called the Ottoman Interregnum. When Mehmed stood as victor in 1413 he crowned himself as sultan in Adrianople (Edirne). He restored the empire, moved the capitol from Bursa to Adrianople and conquered parts of Albania, the Byzantine Empire, the Turkish emirate Candar and the Christian Kingdom of Cilicia. Mehmed died in 1421.3
; Muhammad I or Mehmet I (Muhammad the Restorer), 1389?–1421, Ottoman sultan (1413–21), son of Beyazid I. By defeating his brothers he reunited most of his father's empire. He consolidated his authority and thus renewed Ottoman power. His son, Murad II, succeeded him.
The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2004, Columbia University Press.2
; Sultan of the Ottoman Empire.1,2
Citations
- [S1671] Count W. H. Rüdt-Collenberg, The Rupenides, Hethumides and Lusignans: The Structure of the Armeno-Cilician Dynasties (11, Rude de Lille, Paris 7e, France: Librairie C. Klincksieck for the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation Armenian Library (Lisbon), 1963), Chart B (R2): Relationship Table XIII - XIV Century. Hereinafter cited as Rudt-Collenberg: The Rupenides, etc.
- [S1674] Infoplease.com, online http://www.infoplease.com/index.html, Muhammad I: http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/people/A0834340.html. Hereinafter cited as Infoplease.com.
- [S1672] Brainy Encyclopedia, online http://www.brainyencyclopedia.com/, Mehmed I: http://www.brainyencyclopedia.com/encyclopedia/m/me/mehmed_i.html. Hereinafter cited as Brainy Encyclopedia.
Theodoros Palaiologos Despot of the Peloponnese1
M, #66197, b. 1351, d. 1407
Father | Ioannes V Palaiologos Emperor of Byzantium1 b. 18 Jun 1332, d. 16 Feb 1391 |
Mother | Helene Kantakuzene1 b. 1333, d. Nov 1396 |
Last Edited | 26 Sep 2004 |
Theodoros Palaiologos Despot of the Peloponnese married Bartholomaia Acciacjuoli, daughter of Nerio Acciacjuoli Lord of Corinth.1
Theodoros Palaiologos Despot of the Peloponnese was born in 1351.1
Theodoros Palaiologos Despot of the Peloponnese died in 1407 at Mistra, Peloponnese, Greece (now).1
; Theodoros Palaiologos, Despot of the Peloponnese (1382-1407), *1351, +Mistra 1407; m.Bartholomaia Acciacjuoli (+1397), daughter and heiress of Nerio Acciajuoli, Lord of Corinth.1 He was 1382/1407Despot of the Peloponnese.1
Theodoros Palaiologos Despot of the Peloponnese was born in 1351.1
Theodoros Palaiologos Despot of the Peloponnese died in 1407 at Mistra, Peloponnese, Greece (now).1
; Theodoros Palaiologos, Despot of the Peloponnese (1382-1407), *1351, +Mistra 1407; m.Bartholomaia Acciacjuoli (+1397), daughter and heiress of Nerio Acciajuoli, Lord of Corinth.1 He was 1382/1407Despot of the Peloponnese.1
Family 1 | Bartholomaia Acciacjuoli d. 1397 |
Family 2 | |
Child |
Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Byzantium 8 page - The Palaiologos family: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/byzant/byzant8.html
Bartholomaia Acciacjuoli1
F, #66198, d. 1397
Father | Nerio Acciacjuoli Lord of Corinth1 |
Last Edited | 26 Sep 2004 |
Bartholomaia Acciacjuoli married Theodoros Palaiologos Despot of the Peloponnese, son of Ioannes V Palaiologos Emperor of Byzantium and Helene Kantakuzene.1
Bartholomaia Acciacjuoli died in 1397.1
; Bartholomaia Acciacjuoli (+1397), daughter and heiress of Nerio Acciajuoli, Lord of Corinth.1
Bartholomaia Acciacjuoli died in 1397.1
; Bartholomaia Acciacjuoli (+1397), daughter and heiress of Nerio Acciajuoli, Lord of Corinth.1
Family | Theodoros Palaiologos Despot of the Peloponnese b. 1351, d. 1407 |
Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Byzantium 8 page - The Palaiologos family: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/byzant/byzant8.html
Nerio Acciacjuoli Lord of Corinth1
M, #66199
Last Edited | 26 Sep 2004 |
Family | |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Byzantium 8 page - The Palaiologos family: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/byzant/byzant8.html
(?) Palaiologina1
F, #66200
Father | Theodoros Palaiologos Despot of the Peloponnese1 b. 1351, d. 1407 |
Last Edited | 26 Sep 2004 |
(?) Palaiologina married Emir Suleiman (?), son of Beyazid I (?) Sultan of the Ottoman Empire and (?) Palaiologina, in 1404.2,1
; [illegitimate] a daughter; m.1404 Emir Suleiman (+1410.)1
; [illegitimate] a daughter; m.1404 Emir Suleiman (+1410.)1
Family | Emir Suleiman (?) d. 1410 |
Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Byzantium 8 page - The Palaiologos family: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/byzant/byzant8.html
- [S1671] Count W. H. Rüdt-Collenberg, The Rupenides, Hethumides and Lusignans: The Structure of the Armeno-Cilician Dynasties (11, Rude de Lille, Paris 7e, France: Librairie C. Klincksieck for the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation Armenian Library (Lisbon), 1963), Chart B (R2): Relationship Table XIII - XIV Century. Hereinafter cited as Rudt-Collenberg: The Rupenides, etc.
Emir Suleiman (?)1
M, #66201, d. 1410
Father | Beyazid I (?) Sultan of the Ottoman Empire1 b. 1347, d. 1403 |
Mother | (?) Palaiologina1 |
Last Edited | 26 Sep 2004 |
Emir Suleiman (?) married (?) Palaiologina, daughter of Theodoros Palaiologos Despot of the Peloponnese, in 1404.2,1
Emir Suleiman (?) died in 1410; Byzant 8 page says d. 1410; Rudt-Collenberg says d. 1411.1,2
Emir Suleiman (?) died in 1410; Byzant 8 page says d. 1410; Rudt-Collenberg says d. 1411.1,2
Family | (?) Palaiologina |
Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Byzantium 8 page - The Palaiologos family: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/byzant/byzant8.html
- [S1671] Count W. H. Rüdt-Collenberg, The Rupenides, Hethumides and Lusignans: The Structure of the Armeno-Cilician Dynasties (11, Rude de Lille, Paris 7e, France: Librairie C. Klincksieck for the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation Armenian Library (Lisbon), 1963), Chart B (R2): Relationship Table XIII - XIV Century. Hereinafter cited as Rudt-Collenberg: The Rupenides, etc.
Henry Kent1
M, #66202
Last Edited | 27 Sep 2004 |
Henry Kent married Martha Brashears, daughter of Benois [Benjamin] Brasseur and Mary Richford, in 1674.1
Family | Martha Brashears b. c 1658 |
Citations
- [S1675] Steven C. Perkins, "Perkins email 22 Sept 2004: "Brasseur (was Duvall Questions)"," e-mail message from e-mail address (unknown address) to e-mail address, 22 Sept 2004. Hereinafter cited as "Perkins email 22 Sept 2004."
Mareen (The Emigrant) Duvall1,2,3,4
M, #66203, b. 1630, d. 5 August 1694
Father | Thomas Duvall5 b. 1600 |
Mother | Nicola Staggard6 b. c 1600 |
Last Edited | 6 Aug 2022 |
Mareen (The Emigrant) Duvall was born in 1627.3 He was born in 1630 at Nantes, Departement de la Loire-Atlantique, Pays de la Loire, France; This site cites the following reference for Mareen Duvall's birth:
1. Edmund West, comp.. Family Data Collection - Births [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2001. (showing b. 1625 in Laval, Normandy, France)
2. Heritage Consulting. Millennium File [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2003.
Original data: Heritage Consulting. The Millennium File. Salt Lake City, UT, USA: Heritage Consulting. (showing b. 1625 in Nantes)
3. Yates Publishing. U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2004.
Original data: This unique collection of records was extracted from a variety of sources including family group sheets and electronic databases. Originally, the information was derived from an array of materials including pedigree charts, family history articles, querie. Source number: 868.000; Source type: Electronic Database; Number of Pages: 1; Submitter Code: SGK.2 He married Marie-Bouth Parran in 1658
; his first wife; van de Pas says m. "abt 1659."7,2,3 Mareen (The Emigrant) Duvall married Susannah Brashears, daughter of Benois [Benjamin] Brasseur and Mary Richford, in 1673
; his 2nd wife.1,2,8,3 Mareen (The Emigrant) Duvall married Mary Stanton in 1693 at Anne Arundel Co., Maryland, USA,
;
His 3rd wife; her 1st husband.9,10
Mareen (The Emigrant) Duvall died on 5 August 1694 at Middle Plantation, Anne Arundel Co., Maryland, USA; This site cites the following reference for Mareen Duvall's birth:
1. Edmund West, comp.. Family Data Collection - Births [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2001. (showing d. Aug 1694.)2,3
; [quote]Mareen DUVALL "the Emigrant" resided at about 1659 in England. He emigrated before 1664 from Anne Arundel Co., MD. He had an estate probated on 14 Feb 1694/95 in Anne Arundel Co., MD. He signed a will on 2 Aug 1694 in Anne Arundel Co., MD. He died on 5 Aug 1694 in Anne Arundel Co., MD. He had an estate probated on 13 Aug 1694 in Anne Arundel Co., MD. He had an estate probated on 18 Sep 1694 in Anne Arundel Co., MD. He had an estate probated on 29 Aug 1695 in Anne Arundel Co., MD. He was. He Estate Administ.
He was married to Mary about 1659. Mary died about 1680. Mareen DUVALL "the Emigrant" and Mary had the following children: +2 i. John DUVALL. +3 ii. Lewis DUVALL. +4 iii. Eleanor DUVALL. +5 iv. Mareen DUVALL 'The Elder'. +6 v. Samuel DUVALL.
He was married to Susannah BRASHEARS (daughter of Benois (Benjamin) BRASHEARS/BRASSEUR and Mary) about 1680. Susannah BRASHEARS was born after 1647. She died about 1692. Mareen DUVALL "the Emigrant" and Susannah BRASHEARS had the following children: +7 i. Katherine DUVALL. +8 ii. Elizabeth DUVALL. +9 iii. Susannah DUVALL. +10 iv. Mareen DUVALL "The Younger". +11 v. Mary DUVALL. +12 vi. Johanna DUVALL. +13 vii. Benjamin DUVALL.
He was married to Mary STANTON after 1692. Mary STANTON died on 19 Jan 1733 in Prince George's Co., MD, USA. She was buried after 19 Jan 1733 in Queen Ann Parish, Prince George's Co., MD, USA. She had an estate probated on 28 May 1765 in Prince George's Co., MD, USA.[end quote]11
; From ancestry webstie: [quote]MAREEN DUVALL'No more striking figure'
September 9, 2007
BY SCOTT FORNEK Political Editor
Born Mareen DuVal, Obama's great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great grandfather was a French Protestant -- called Huguenots -- who fled his homeland sometime around 1650 to escape religious persecution from Catholics and the French Crown. After a stay in England, he settled in Maryland, changing his name along the way to Duvall.
"No more striking figure in colonial history is found than the personal achievements of this fleeing immigrant," J.D. Warfield wrote in The Founders of Anne Arundel and Howard Counties, Maryland (1905). "He came as one of the one hundred and fifty adventurers, brought over by Colonel William Burgess. He settled near Colonel Burgess, in Anne Arundel County, on the south side of South River and became one of the most successful merchants and planters of that favored section."
"No more striking figure in colonial history is found than the personal achievements of this fleeing immigrant," J.D. Warfield wrote in The Founders of Anne Arundel and Howard Counties, Maryland (1905). "He came as one of the one hundred and fifty adventurers, brought over by Colonel William Burgess. He settled near Colonel Burgess, in Anne Arundel County, on the south side of South River and became one of the most successful merchants and planters of that favored section."
Burgess was a leading figure in 17th century Maryland, at one point serving as deputy governor. And Duvall did pretty well, too.
» Click to enlarge image
Barack Obama is distantly related to Vice President Dick Cheney. (AP file)
» Click to enlarge image
Barack Obama is distantly related to former President Harry S Truman. (AP file)
Burgess was a leading figure in 17th century Maryland, at one point serving as deputy governor. And Duvall did pretty well, too.
"The land records of Anne Arundel and Prince George Counties show that this Huguenot planter and merchant held a vast estate, and left his widow and third wife so attractive as to become the third wife of Colonel Henry Ridgely, and later the wife of Rev. Mr. Henderson, the commissary of the Church of England," Warfield writes.
One of Mareen Duvall's sons, "Mareen the Younger," apparently was not crazy about his step-mother's first remarriage.
"The younger Mareen objected to his guardian, Col. Ridgeley, but the courts did not sustain him," Warfield writes.
Mareen Duvall Sr.'s great-grandson, John Miles Duvall, had a pretty adventurous life himself.
He served in the Revolutionary War. And, after that, he traded along the Atlantic Coast, but met his end at the hands of pirates in 1787, according to Kentucky: A History of the State (1887).
******
Mareen Duvall is also the link between Barack Obama and Harry Truman (Duvall is his ninth-great grandfather as well) and Barack Obama and Vice President Dick Cheney (Duvall is Cheney's eighth-great grandfather).
Sources: The founders of Anne Arundel and Howard Counties, Maryland: A genealogical and biographical review from wills, deeds and church records by J. D. Warfield. (1905). Source: Kentucky: A History of the State (1887).[end quote]11
Reference: From Early Colonial Settlers:
mm note: parents are not proved
===
Duvall, Mareen, A. A. Co.,2nd Aug., 1694; 13th Aug., 1694.
To wife Mary, extx., part of 600 A., "Middle Plantation” during life, and she is not to be molested by any of testator's children.
To son Lewis and hrs., 300 A., part of "Middle Plantation" on which eld. son Mareen now lives; also to inherit wife Mary's portion at her decease.
To dau. Eliza: and hrs., 375 A., "Bowdell's Choice" in Calvert Co.
To son Benjamin and hrs., 200 A., part of 400 A., "Howerton's Range” in Calvert Co.
To dau. Catherine and hrs., residue of "Howertons' Range."
To son Mareen, the younger, son of late wife Susannah, and hrs., 300 A., "The Plains" in Calvort Co.
To dau. Mary and hrs., 320 A., "Marley's Grove," and 300 A., "Marley's Lot," A. A. Co.
To young. dau. Johanna, 311 A.,"Larkin's Choice," and 200 A.,"Duvall's Range."
To son John, 5 shillings.
To dau. Eliza:, wife of John Roberts, and to son Samuel, personalty.
Sons John and Lewis and son-in-law Robert Tyler to assist wife in executorship. Sons to be of age at 18 yrs. and daus at 16 yrs.
Test: Wm. Roper, Wm. Goodman, Rich'd Cheser, Jervis Morgan, Clement Davis. 2. 327.
===
Maren Duvall 13A.234 I AA £947.5.8 Sep 3 1694
The amount of the inventory also included #81302.
Appraisers: James Sanders, Samuell Young.
List of debts: Richard Jones, John Larkins, John Nicholdson, John Boyd, Edward Carter, Samuel Young, Richard Rawlins, John Jacob, Ellinor Pindill, Hugh Abrahams, John Selman, Francis Swanson, John Young, John Best, Thomas Seaborne, Charles Harrison, Robert Goldesborrow, Thomas Everton„ Robert Morris, Samuel Austin, Mr. Story, Benjamin Clarke, Thomas Cheney, Richard Cheshire, William Cotter, John Duvall, Edward Snelling, William Jones, Sr., William Jones, Jr., Richard Galloway, Daniell Richardson, George Cape, Mordica Moore, Maj. Ninian Beale, John Merriton, Gabriell Parrott, Francis Johnson, George Burgas, John Elsey, James Ellis (dead), Dr. Hunt, Leonard Wayman, Nicholas Aldridge, Cortne Crotof, Robert Gott.
List of bad debts: Richard Rhodes, Abell Hill (dead), Thomas Teaton (runaway), Joseph Story, George Parker (dead), Arthur Herrin (runaway), James Greenif (dead), John Lanslet (runaway), John Rasterick (runaway), William Hooker (runaway), Toby Barrington Tomas Tuldersby (runaway).
Mentions: Philips (commander), Nicholas Smith (commander "Hopewell")
consigned to Michaell Yoakly, Samuell Philips (commander "Baltimore"), John Harris (commander "James & Benjamin") consigned to Perry & Lane, John Broomskell (commander "Ruth") consigned to Perry & Lane.
Mentions: dispute between widow (unnamed) and executor (unnamed).
===
Maren Devall 10.462 I AA £947.5.8 Oct 8 1695
The amount of the inventory also included #81302.
Appraisers: James Sanders, Samuell Young.
List of debts: Richard Jones, John Larkin, John Nicholson, John Boyd, Edward Carter, Samuell Young, Richard Rawling, John Jacob, Ellinor Pindle, Hugh Abrams, John Sollman, Francis Swanson, John Young, John Bell, Thomas Seaborne, Charles Harrison, Robert Gouldsbrough, Thomas Everton, Robert Morris, Samuell Austin, Mrs. Storey, Benjamin Clarke, Thomas Cheney, Richard Cheisere, William Cotter, John Devall, Edward Snellin, William. Jones, Sr., William Jones, Jr., Richard Galloway, Daniell Richardson, George Coape, Mordekay Moore, Maj. Ninion Beale, Wollfron Hunt, John Merriton, Gabriell Parrett, Francis Johnson, George Burgos, John Ellsey„ James Ellis (dead), Lenard Wayman, Nicholas Aldridge, Cortue Crotof, Robert Gott, Richard Rhoads, Abell Hill (dead), Thomas Talon (runaway), Joseph Storry, George Parker (dead), Anthony Herring (runaway), James Greniff, John Laufler (runaway), John Basterick, William Hooker (runaway), Tobie Barrington, Thomas Talderrby (runaway).
Mentions: George Phillips, Samuell Phillips, Nicholas Smith, John Harris, John Brunshill, widow (unnamed), executor (unnamed).
===
Mareen Duvall 18,183 A AA #7178 May 15 1699
Payments to: Charles Chyney, Abell Browne, Col. Ninian Beall, Thomas Boudle, Capt. Hall, Henry Hanslapp, Capt. Isaack Lild,(?),
Executrix: Mary Ridgdey, wife of Col. Henry Ridgdey, Sr.
===
William Hapcoate 1.140 I AA #1677 Oct 20 1674
Appraisers: Marin du Vall, John Gray.
===
John Norwood 1.142 I AA #82310 Nov 28 1674
Appraisers: William Jones, John Beamon.
List of debts; estate of Francis Pine, Marin du Valli Job Walton.
Sources [S161] Newman-Duvall. Newman, Harry Wright. MAREEN DUVALL OF MIDDLE PLANTATION [Maryland].
; van de Pas cites: Ancestry of Barack Obama, 2006 and 2007 , Reitwiesner, William Addams, Reference: nr.3552.
; More info on Duvall lineage at: http://search.ancestry.com/Browse/BookView.aspx?dbid=25957&iid=dvm_LocHist010768-00088-0&sid=&gskw= from Register of Maryland's heraldic families : period from 1634, March 25th to March 25th, l935, tercentenary of the founding of M.2
1. Edmund West, comp.. Family Data Collection - Births [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2001. (showing b. 1625 in Laval, Normandy, France)
2. Heritage Consulting. Millennium File [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2003.
Original data: Heritage Consulting. The Millennium File. Salt Lake City, UT, USA: Heritage Consulting. (showing b. 1625 in Nantes)
3. Yates Publishing. U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2004.
Original data: This unique collection of records was extracted from a variety of sources including family group sheets and electronic databases. Originally, the information was derived from an array of materials including pedigree charts, family history articles, querie. Source number: 868.000; Source type: Electronic Database; Number of Pages: 1; Submitter Code: SGK.2 He married Marie-Bouth Parran in 1658
; his first wife; van de Pas says m. "abt 1659."7,2,3 Mareen (The Emigrant) Duvall married Susannah Brashears, daughter of Benois [Benjamin] Brasseur and Mary Richford, in 1673
; his 2nd wife.1,2,8,3 Mareen (The Emigrant) Duvall married Mary Stanton in 1693 at Anne Arundel Co., Maryland, USA,
;
His 3rd wife; her 1st husband.9,10
Mareen (The Emigrant) Duvall died on 5 August 1694 at Middle Plantation, Anne Arundel Co., Maryland, USA; This site cites the following reference for Mareen Duvall's birth:
1. Edmund West, comp.. Family Data Collection - Births [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2001. (showing d. Aug 1694.)2,3
; [quote]Mareen DUVALL "the Emigrant" resided at about 1659 in England. He emigrated before 1664 from Anne Arundel Co., MD. He had an estate probated on 14 Feb 1694/95 in Anne Arundel Co., MD. He signed a will on 2 Aug 1694 in Anne Arundel Co., MD. He died on 5 Aug 1694 in Anne Arundel Co., MD. He had an estate probated on 13 Aug 1694 in Anne Arundel Co., MD. He had an estate probated on 18 Sep 1694 in Anne Arundel Co., MD. He had an estate probated on 29 Aug 1695 in Anne Arundel Co., MD. He was. He Estate Administ.
He was married to Mary about 1659. Mary died about 1680. Mareen DUVALL "the Emigrant" and Mary had the following children: +2 i. John DUVALL. +3 ii. Lewis DUVALL. +4 iii. Eleanor DUVALL. +5 iv. Mareen DUVALL 'The Elder'. +6 v. Samuel DUVALL.
He was married to Susannah BRASHEARS (daughter of Benois (Benjamin) BRASHEARS/BRASSEUR and Mary) about 1680. Susannah BRASHEARS was born after 1647. She died about 1692. Mareen DUVALL "the Emigrant" and Susannah BRASHEARS had the following children: +7 i. Katherine DUVALL. +8 ii. Elizabeth DUVALL. +9 iii. Susannah DUVALL. +10 iv. Mareen DUVALL "The Younger". +11 v. Mary DUVALL. +12 vi. Johanna DUVALL. +13 vii. Benjamin DUVALL.
He was married to Mary STANTON after 1692. Mary STANTON died on 19 Jan 1733 in Prince George's Co., MD, USA. She was buried after 19 Jan 1733 in Queen Ann Parish, Prince George's Co., MD, USA. She had an estate probated on 28 May 1765 in Prince George's Co., MD, USA.[end quote]11
; From ancestry webstie: [quote]MAREEN DUVALL'No more striking figure'
September 9, 2007
BY SCOTT FORNEK Political Editor
Born Mareen DuVal, Obama's great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great grandfather was a French Protestant -- called Huguenots -- who fled his homeland sometime around 1650 to escape religious persecution from Catholics and the French Crown. After a stay in England, he settled in Maryland, changing his name along the way to Duvall.
"No more striking figure in colonial history is found than the personal achievements of this fleeing immigrant," J.D. Warfield wrote in The Founders of Anne Arundel and Howard Counties, Maryland (1905). "He came as one of the one hundred and fifty adventurers, brought over by Colonel William Burgess. He settled near Colonel Burgess, in Anne Arundel County, on the south side of South River and became one of the most successful merchants and planters of that favored section."
"No more striking figure in colonial history is found than the personal achievements of this fleeing immigrant," J.D. Warfield wrote in The Founders of Anne Arundel and Howard Counties, Maryland (1905). "He came as one of the one hundred and fifty adventurers, brought over by Colonel William Burgess. He settled near Colonel Burgess, in Anne Arundel County, on the south side of South River and became one of the most successful merchants and planters of that favored section."
Burgess was a leading figure in 17th century Maryland, at one point serving as deputy governor. And Duvall did pretty well, too.
» Click to enlarge image
Barack Obama is distantly related to Vice President Dick Cheney. (AP file)
» Click to enlarge image
Barack Obama is distantly related to former President Harry S Truman. (AP file)
Burgess was a leading figure in 17th century Maryland, at one point serving as deputy governor. And Duvall did pretty well, too.
"The land records of Anne Arundel and Prince George Counties show that this Huguenot planter and merchant held a vast estate, and left his widow and third wife so attractive as to become the third wife of Colonel Henry Ridgely, and later the wife of Rev. Mr. Henderson, the commissary of the Church of England," Warfield writes.
One of Mareen Duvall's sons, "Mareen the Younger," apparently was not crazy about his step-mother's first remarriage.
"The younger Mareen objected to his guardian, Col. Ridgeley, but the courts did not sustain him," Warfield writes.
Mareen Duvall Sr.'s great-grandson, John Miles Duvall, had a pretty adventurous life himself.
He served in the Revolutionary War. And, after that, he traded along the Atlantic Coast, but met his end at the hands of pirates in 1787, according to Kentucky: A History of the State (1887).
******
Mareen Duvall is also the link between Barack Obama and Harry Truman (Duvall is his ninth-great grandfather as well) and Barack Obama and Vice President Dick Cheney (Duvall is Cheney's eighth-great grandfather).
Sources: The founders of Anne Arundel and Howard Counties, Maryland: A genealogical and biographical review from wills, deeds and church records by J. D. Warfield. (1905). Source: Kentucky: A History of the State (1887).[end quote]11
Reference: From Early Colonial Settlers:
mm note: parents are not proved
===
Duvall, Mareen, A. A. Co.,2nd Aug., 1694; 13th Aug., 1694.
To wife Mary, extx., part of 600 A., "Middle Plantation” during life, and she is not to be molested by any of testator's children.
To son Lewis and hrs., 300 A., part of "Middle Plantation" on which eld. son Mareen now lives; also to inherit wife Mary's portion at her decease.
To dau. Eliza: and hrs., 375 A., "Bowdell's Choice" in Calvert Co.
To son Benjamin and hrs., 200 A., part of 400 A., "Howerton's Range” in Calvert Co.
To dau. Catherine and hrs., residue of "Howertons' Range."
To son Mareen, the younger, son of late wife Susannah, and hrs., 300 A., "The Plains" in Calvort Co.
To dau. Mary and hrs., 320 A., "Marley's Grove," and 300 A., "Marley's Lot," A. A. Co.
To young. dau. Johanna, 311 A.,"Larkin's Choice," and 200 A.,"Duvall's Range."
To son John, 5 shillings.
To dau. Eliza:, wife of John Roberts, and to son Samuel, personalty.
Sons John and Lewis and son-in-law Robert Tyler to assist wife in executorship. Sons to be of age at 18 yrs. and daus at 16 yrs.
Test: Wm. Roper, Wm. Goodman, Rich'd Cheser, Jervis Morgan, Clement Davis. 2. 327.
===
Maren Duvall 13A.234 I AA £947.5.8 Sep 3 1694
The amount of the inventory also included #81302.
Appraisers: James Sanders, Samuell Young.
List of debts: Richard Jones, John Larkins, John Nicholdson, John Boyd, Edward Carter, Samuel Young, Richard Rawlins, John Jacob, Ellinor Pindill, Hugh Abrahams, John Selman, Francis Swanson, John Young, John Best, Thomas Seaborne, Charles Harrison, Robert Goldesborrow, Thomas Everton„ Robert Morris, Samuel Austin, Mr. Story, Benjamin Clarke, Thomas Cheney, Richard Cheshire, William Cotter, John Duvall, Edward Snelling, William Jones, Sr., William Jones, Jr., Richard Galloway, Daniell Richardson, George Cape, Mordica Moore, Maj. Ninian Beale, John Merriton, Gabriell Parrott, Francis Johnson, George Burgas, John Elsey, James Ellis (dead), Dr. Hunt, Leonard Wayman, Nicholas Aldridge, Cortne Crotof, Robert Gott.
List of bad debts: Richard Rhodes, Abell Hill (dead), Thomas Teaton (runaway), Joseph Story, George Parker (dead), Arthur Herrin (runaway), James Greenif (dead), John Lanslet (runaway), John Rasterick (runaway), William Hooker (runaway), Toby Barrington Tomas Tuldersby (runaway).
Mentions: Philips (commander), Nicholas Smith (commander "Hopewell")
consigned to Michaell Yoakly, Samuell Philips (commander "Baltimore"), John Harris (commander "James & Benjamin") consigned to Perry & Lane, John Broomskell (commander "Ruth") consigned to Perry & Lane.
Mentions: dispute between widow (unnamed) and executor (unnamed).
===
Maren Devall 10.462 I AA £947.5.8 Oct 8 1695
The amount of the inventory also included #81302.
Appraisers: James Sanders, Samuell Young.
List of debts: Richard Jones, John Larkin, John Nicholson, John Boyd, Edward Carter, Samuell Young, Richard Rawling, John Jacob, Ellinor Pindle, Hugh Abrams, John Sollman, Francis Swanson, John Young, John Bell, Thomas Seaborne, Charles Harrison, Robert Gouldsbrough, Thomas Everton, Robert Morris, Samuell Austin, Mrs. Storey, Benjamin Clarke, Thomas Cheney, Richard Cheisere, William Cotter, John Devall, Edward Snellin, William. Jones, Sr., William Jones, Jr., Richard Galloway, Daniell Richardson, George Coape, Mordekay Moore, Maj. Ninion Beale, Wollfron Hunt, John Merriton, Gabriell Parrett, Francis Johnson, George Burgos, John Ellsey„ James Ellis (dead), Lenard Wayman, Nicholas Aldridge, Cortue Crotof, Robert Gott, Richard Rhoads, Abell Hill (dead), Thomas Talon (runaway), Joseph Storry, George Parker (dead), Anthony Herring (runaway), James Greniff, John Laufler (runaway), John Basterick, William Hooker (runaway), Tobie Barrington, Thomas Talderrby (runaway).
Mentions: George Phillips, Samuell Phillips, Nicholas Smith, John Harris, John Brunshill, widow (unnamed), executor (unnamed).
===
Mareen Duvall 18,183 A AA #7178 May 15 1699
Payments to: Charles Chyney, Abell Browne, Col. Ninian Beall, Thomas Boudle, Capt. Hall, Henry Hanslapp, Capt. Isaack Lild,(?),
Executrix: Mary Ridgdey, wife of Col. Henry Ridgdey, Sr.
===
William Hapcoate 1.140 I AA #1677 Oct 20 1674
Appraisers: Marin du Vall, John Gray.
===
John Norwood 1.142 I AA #82310 Nov 28 1674
Appraisers: William Jones, John Beamon.
List of debts; estate of Francis Pine, Marin du Valli Job Walton.
Sources [S161] Newman-Duvall. Newman, Harry Wright. MAREEN DUVALL OF MIDDLE PLANTATION [Maryland].
; van de Pas cites: Ancestry of Barack Obama, 2006 and 2007 , Reitwiesner, William Addams, Reference: nr.3552.
; More info on Duvall lineage at: http://search.ancestry.com/Browse/BookView.aspx?dbid=25957&iid=dvm_LocHist010768-00088-0&sid=&gskw= from Register of Maryland's heraldic families : period from 1634, March 25th to March 25th, l935, tercentenary of the founding of M.2
Family 1 | Marie-Bouth Parran b. 1634, d. 1680 |
Children |
|
Family 2 | Susannah Brashears b. 1655, d. 1692 |
Children |
|
Family 3 | Mary Stanton b. b 1677, d. 13 Jan 1732 |
Citations
- [S1675] Steven C. Perkins, "Perkins email 22 Sept 2004: "Brasseur (was Duvall Questions)"," e-mail message from e-mail address (unknown address) to e-mail address, 22 Sept 2004. Hereinafter cited as "Perkins email 22 Sept 2004."
- [S2338] Ancestry.Com Family Trees, online http://trees.ancestry.com/, Bertha Hector family tree
Mareen "The Emigrant" Duvall: http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/29485974/person/12515106619. Hereinafter cited as Ancestry.Com Family Trees. - [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Mareen Duvall: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00489605&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S3744] Early Colonial Settlers of Southern Maryland and Virginia's Northern Neck Counties, online <http://www.colonial-settlers-md-va.us/>, Mareen Duvall 1630 - 1694 seen 6 Aug 2022 at https://www.colonial-settlers-md-va.us/getperson.php?personID=I10103&tree=Tree1. Hereinafter cited as Early Settlers of So Md and VA Northern Neck.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Thomas Duvall: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00602063&tree=LEO
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Nicola Staggard: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00602064&tree=LEO
- [S2338] Ancestry.Com Family Trees, online http://trees.ancestry.com/, Bertha Hector family tree
Mary Bouth: http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/29485974/person/12515145793 - [S2338] Ancestry.Com Family Trees, online http://trees.ancestry.com/, Bertha Hector family tree
Susannah Brasseur Brashears: http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/29485974/person/12515106620 - [S2338] Ancestry.Com Family Trees, online http://trees.ancestry.com/, Bertha Hector family tree
Mary Stanton: http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/29485974/person/12515224440 - [S3744] Early Settlers of So Md and VA Northern Neck, online http://www.colonial-settlers-md-va.us/, Mary MNU Duvall Bef 1677 - 1717 seen 6 Aug 2022 at https://www.colonial-settlers-md-va.us/getperson.php?personID=I11693&tree=Tree1
- [S2338] Ancestry.Com Family Trees, online http://trees.ancestry.com/, Bertha Hector family tree
Mareen "The Emigrant" Duvall: http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/29485974/person/12515106619/media/3?pgnum=1&pg=0&pgpl=pid%7cpgNum - [S2338] Ancestry.Com Family Trees, online http://trees.ancestry.com/, Bertha Hector family tree
http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/29485974/person/12515145794 - [S2338] Ancestry.Com Family Trees, online http://trees.ancestry.com/, Bertha Hector family tree
Mareen The Elder Duvall: http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/29485974/person/12515215621 - [S3744] Early Settlers of So Md and VA Northern Neck, online http://www.colonial-settlers-md-va.us/, Mareen Duvall 1662 - 1735; seen 15 July 2022 at https://www.colonial-settlers-md-va.us/getperson.php?personID=I22389&tree=Tree1
- [S2338] Ancestry.Com Family Trees, online http://trees.ancestry.com/, Bertha Hector family tree
Lewis Duvall: http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/29485974/person/12515224437 - [S2338] Ancestry.Com Family Trees, online http://trees.ancestry.com/, Bertha Hector family tree
Eleanor Duvall: http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/29485974/person/12515136803 - [S2338] Ancestry.Com Family Trees, online http://trees.ancestry.com/, Bertha Hector family tree
Samuel Duvall: http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/29485974/person/12515224436 - [S3744] Early Settlers of So Md and VA Northern Neck, online http://www.colonial-settlers-md-va.us/, Samuel Duvall seen 14 July 2022 at https://www.colonial-settlers-md-va.us/getperson.php?personID=I10099&tree=Tree1
- [S2338] Ancestry.Com Family Trees, online http://trees.ancestry.com/, Bertha Hector family tree
Susannah Duvall: http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/29485974/person/12515136806 - [S2338] Ancestry.Com Family Trees, online http://trees.ancestry.com/, Bertha Hector family tree
Captain Marcen Mars Dore Duvall: http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/29485974/person/12510961908 - [S2338] Ancestry.Com Family Trees, online http://trees.ancestry.com/, Bertha Hector family tree
Mareen (The Younger) Duvall: http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/29485974/person/12515136800 - [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Mareen Duvall 'the Younger': http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00489545&tree=LEO
- [S2338] Ancestry.Com Family Trees, online http://trees.ancestry.com/, Bertha Hector family tree
Catherine Duvall: http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/29485974/person/12515136808 - [S2338] Ancestry.Com Family Trees, online http://trees.ancestry.com/, Bertha Hector family tree
http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/29485974/person/12515136810 - [S2338] Ancestry.Com Family Trees, online http://trees.ancestry.com/, Bertha Hector family tree
Mary Duvall: http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/29485974/person/12515136811 - [S2338] Ancestry.Com Family Trees, online http://trees.ancestry.com/, Bertha Hector family tree
Johanna Duvall: http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/29485974/person/12515136812 - [S2338] Ancestry.Com Family Trees, online http://trees.ancestry.com/, Bertha Hector family tree
John Duvall: http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/29485974/person/12515136813 - [S2338] Ancestry.Com Family Trees, online http://trees.ancestry.com/, Bertha Hector family tree
Benjamin Duvall: http://trees.ancestry.com/tree/29485974/person/12515136814
Nathaniel Robbins1
M, #66205
Last Edited | 27 Sep 2004 |
Nathaniel Robbins married Mary Brashears, daughter of Benois [Benjamin] Brasseur and Mary Richford, on 7 May 1669 at Maryland, USA,
; her 1st husband.1
; her 1st husband.1
Family | Mary Brashears b. b 1663 |
Citations
- [S1675] Steven C. Perkins, "Perkins email 22 Sept 2004: "Brasseur (was Duvall Questions)"," e-mail message from e-mail address (unknown address) to e-mail address, 22 Sept 2004. Hereinafter cited as "Perkins email 22 Sept 2004."
Christopher Ellis1
M, #66206
Last Edited | 27 Sep 2004 |
Christopher Ellis married Mary Brashears, daughter of Benois [Benjamin] Brasseur and Mary Richford, after 1670 at Prince George's Co., Maryland, USA,
; her 2nd husband.1
; her 2nd husband.1
Family | Mary Brashears b. b 1663 |
Citations
- [S1675] Steven C. Perkins, "Perkins email 22 Sept 2004: "Brasseur (was Duvall Questions)"," e-mail message from e-mail address (unknown address) to e-mail address, 22 Sept 2004. Hereinafter cited as "Perkins email 22 Sept 2004."
Ann Sterling1
F, #66207
Last Edited | 27 Sep 2004 |
Ann Sterling married John Brashears, son of Benois [Benjamin] Brasseur and Mary Richford, circa 1660 at Maryland, USA.1
Family | John Brashears b. b 1663, d. c 1696 |
Citations
- [S1675] Steven C. Perkins, "Perkins email 22 Sept 2004: "Brasseur (was Duvall Questions)"," e-mail message from e-mail address (unknown address) to e-mail address, 22 Sept 2004. Hereinafter cited as "Perkins email 22 Sept 2004."
Oljath (?)1
F, #66208
Father | Abaka (?) Ilchan of Iran1 b. 1234, d. 1 Apr 1282 |
Last Edited | 27 Sep 2004 |
; Rudt-Collenberg says she m. 1. Wakhthan II, King of Gerogia (d. 1292) and m. 2. David VI, King of Georgia (d. 1310). This was David VIII, King of Georgia (1293-1310/11) according to Bagrat 3 page.1,2
Citations
- [S1671] Count W. H. Rüdt-Collenberg, The Rupenides, Hethumides and Lusignans: The Structure of the Armeno-Cilician Dynasties (11, Rude de Lille, Paris 7e, France: Librairie C. Klincksieck for the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation Armenian Library (Lisbon), 1963), Chart XIV (M): The House of the Ilkhans. Hereinafter cited as Rudt-Collenberg: The Rupenides, etc.
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Bagrat 3 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/georgia/bagrat3.html
Hulagu Ilkhan (?)1
M, #66209, b. 1217, d. 8 November 1265
Father | Tuluj (?)1 d. 1231 |
Last Edited | 27 Sep 2004 |
Hulagu Ilkhan (?) was born in 1217 at Persia.1
Hulagu Ilkhan (?) died on 8 November 1265 at Persia.1
Hulagu Ilkhan (?) died on 8 November 1265 at Persia.1
Family | |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S1671] Count W. H. Rüdt-Collenberg, The Rupenides, Hethumides and Lusignans: The Structure of the Armeno-Cilician Dynasties (11, Rude de Lille, Paris 7e, France: Librairie C. Klincksieck for the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation Armenian Library (Lisbon), 1963), Chart XIV (M): The House of the Ilkhans. Hereinafter cited as Rudt-Collenberg: The Rupenides, etc.
Tuluj (?)1
M, #66210, d. 1231
Father | Djingis (?) Khan1 b. c 1162, d. 1227 |
Last Edited | 27 Sep 2004 |
Tuluj (?) died in 1231.1
Family | |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S1671] Count W. H. Rüdt-Collenberg, The Rupenides, Hethumides and Lusignans: The Structure of the Armeno-Cilician Dynasties (11, Rude de Lille, Paris 7e, France: Librairie C. Klincksieck for the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation Armenian Library (Lisbon), 1963), Chart XIV (M): The House of the Ilkhans. Hereinafter cited as Rudt-Collenberg: The Rupenides, etc.