Notes


Matches 301 to 350 of 10,692

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301 Antioch Baptist Church Cemetery Dean, Edna Naoma (I36238)
 
302 Antioch Cemetery Carver, Christopher Columbus (I36110)
 
303 Antioch Cemetery Fountain, Virgil L (I36162)
 
304 Antioch Cemetery Fountain, Stella (I36163)
 
305 Antioch Cemetery Moss, Fannie M (I36169)
 
306 Antioch Cemetery Sullivan, James T (I36176)
 
307 Antioch Cemetery Farmer, Mary (I36191)
 
308 Antioch Cemetery Carver, Ora (I36192)
 
309 Antioch Cemetery Carver, Ernest Lee (I36193)
 
310 Antioch Cemetery Carver, John (I36194)
 
311 Antioch Cemetery Carver, Homer (I36196)
 
312 Antioch Cemetery Carver, Jesse C (I36198)
 
313 Antioch Cemetery Cain, Bessie S (I36199)
 
314 Antioch Cemetery Simmons, Annie Mae (I36219)
 
315 Antioch Cemetery Lockhart, Amiziah Dover (I46295)
 
316 Antioch Cemetery Thompson, Florence A (I46296)
 
317 Antioch Church Cemetery Barnett, Sarah (I1128)
 
318 Antioch Church Cemetery Brannon, Elizabeth Jane (I2122)
 
319 Antioch Church Cemetery Hall, Catherine (I5898)
 
320 Antioch Church Cemetery Hoschar, Andrew John (I7320)
 
321 Antioch Church Cemetery Hoschar, Fred E (I7331)
 
322 Antioch Church Cemetery Hoschar, Frederick K (I7366)
 
323 Antioch Church Cemetery Hoschar, Vinton E (I41159)
 
324 Antioch Church Cemetery Hartley, Mabel V (I48499)
 
325 Antioch Methodist Cemetery Martin, Temperance (I21279)
 
326 Antioch Methodist Cemetery Wadsworth, General Harrison (I21287)
 
327 Antioch United Methodist Church Cemetery Spainhour, John Wesley (I55902)
 
328 Antioch United Methodist Church Cemetery Spainhour, Walter Francis (I55909)
 
329 Antioch United Methodist Church Cemetery Kreeger, Mary Alma (I55924)
 
330 Antioch United Methodist Church Cemetery Shore, Sarah Charlotte (I55950)
 
331 Antioch United Methodist Church Cemetery Shore, John Jacob Levi (I55951)
 
332 Antioch United Methodist Church Cemetery Helsabeck, Charity (I55952)
 
333 Antioch United Methodist Church Cemetery Spainhour, Nannie Shore (I55959)
 
334 Aplin Ridge Cemetery Marks, Amanda Belle (I46278)
 
335 Aplin Ridge Cemetery Stalnaker, Spencer Clebert (I46279)
 
336 Apoplexy Pigg, Milton Henry (I31024)
 
337 Apoplexy Unkefer, Joshua George Jr (I47520)
 
338 Apoplexy Neff, Ollie May (I48203)
 
339 Appendicitis Bagby, William Benjamin (I877)
 
340 Appendicitis Ferguson, James W (I31011)
 
341 Appendicitis Bagby, William Johnston (I45601)
 
342 Appendicitis Meador, William Abijah (I53563)
 
343 Archibald Douglas, Duke of Touraine, Earl of Douglas, and Wigtown, Lord of Annandale, Galloway 13th Lord of Douglas, (1372-1424) was a Scottish nobleman and warlord. He is sometimes given the epithet "Tyneman" (Old Scots:Loser), but this may be a reference to his great-uncle Sir Archibald Douglas.

Master of Douglas:

The eldest legitimate son of Archibald Douglas, 3rd Earl of Douglas and Joanna de Moravia of Bothwell, he was born either at Threave Castle or at Bothwell Castle c.1372 and was known as the Master of Douglas until his accession. By 1390 he had married the Princess Margaret of Carrick, a daughter of King Robert III of Scotland. Around this time, his father bestowed upon him the regalities of the Ettrick Forest, Lauderdale and Romannobridge, Peeblesshire.

On 4 June 1400, King Robert appointed him Keeper of Edinburgh Castle for life, on a pension of 200 merks a year.
 
Douglas, 4th Earl of Douglas, Duke of Touraine Archibald (I38004)
 
344 Arduin Glaber (Italian: Arduino Glabrio, Glabrione, or il Glabro, meaning "the Bald"; died c. 977) was the Count of Auriate from c. 935 and Margrave of Turin from c. 950. He placed his family, the Arduinici, on a firm foundation and established the march of Turin through conquests and royal concessions. The Chronicon Novaliciense, the chronicle of the abbey of Novalesa, is the primary source for his life.

Arduin was the eldest son of Roger, Count of Auriate, a Frankish nobleman who immigrated to Italy in the early tenth century. Auriate comprised the region bounded by the Alps, the Po River, and the Stura, today the regions of the Saluzzese and Cuneese. Arduin succeeded his father sometime around 935.

Count Arduin (Ardoino comes) is first documented on 13 April 945, when he sat in judgement at a conference (placitum) of count Lanfranc at Pavia in the presence of King Lothair II. It was probably earlier, between 940 and 942, that he had acquired Turin and the Susa Valley, bring Novalesa back under Christian control. In 941 King Hugh exiled Berengar of Ivrea and abolished the March of Ivrea. Since Berengar's family, the Anscarids, had thitherto held Turin, it is probably that Hugh bestowed it on Arduin at this time. By the spring of 942 Berengar had arrived at the court of Otto I of Germany.

Berengar returned on Hugh's death, he dominated the younger Lothair II and his mother Adelaide. He appears as summus consiliarius (highest counsellor) in March-April 945 and consors regni (royal consort) in June 948. Arduin moved closer to Berengar during this period and probably benefited from Berengar's coronation on 15 December 950. On 13 November 950 he was given the administration of the abbey of Novalesa, legally by Lothair, but probably through Berengar. At that time Turin was Arduin's principal residence. Though he is not recorded with the title of marchio (margrave) until 20 June 967, it was probably during the reorganisation of the marches on Berengar's succession that he received the title and the marca Arduinica. The march consisted of the counties of Auriate, Turin, Asti, Albenga, and probably Bredula, Alba, and Ventimiglia.

The early twelfth-century Vita Mathildis, biography of Matilda of Canossa, by Domnizo places Arduin at the siege of Canossa by Berengar in 951, after Adelaide, the former queen mother, had sought the protection of Adalbert Atto of Canossa. This story is probably false, since Arduin was cultivating a marital alliance with Adalbert Atto, whose daughter Prangarda eventually married his son and successor, Manfred I.

From an early date Arduin was certainly occupied with the Saracens who had occupied the Susa Valley and established a base at Fraxinetum in neighbouring Provence. He may have expelled them from the valley in 940-41. To this he probably added Albenga, Alba, and Ventimiglia by conquest. He definitely took part in the wars of William I and Rotbold II of Provence against the Saracens of Fraxinetum. According to Liutprand of Cremona in his Antapodosis, in 972 or 973 Arduin and Rotbold led the successful assault on Fraxinetum itself.[2] William meanwhile attacked the abductors of Abbot Maieul of Cluny. According to a later comital document of 1041, he took the cities of Tenda, Briga, and Saorgio from them and granted them concessions. Arduin was last recorded alive on 4 April 976. Despite the fact that he repatriated their land from the Saracens, the monks of Novalesa-who had fled Saracen incursions in 906 and were still in Turin as late as 929-accused him of disrespecting their rights: Ardoinus vir potens ... nobis tulit [vallem Segusinam] tantum ... erat plenus viciis ... superbia tumidus ... in adquirendis rebus alienis avaricie faucibus succensus.

Arduin married a woman named Vmille in the Necrologio Sanctæ Andreæ Taurinensis, probably Emilia or Immula. They had two daughters: Alsinda, who married Giselbert II of Bergamo, and Richilda, who married Conrad of Ivrea. Arduin was succeeded by his eldest son Manfred. He had two younger sons named Arduin and Otto. 
Glaber, Count of Auriate Arduin (I37449)
 
345 Ariel Cemetery Baxter, Dora I (I33139)
 
346 Ariel Cemetery Watts, John Martin (I33149)
 
347 Ariel Cemetery (Grave 16) Baxter, Mary Catherine (I33136)
 
348 Arkadelphia Cemetery Shipp, Mary Francis (I45481)
 
349 Arkadelphia Cemetery Eaton, Samuel B (I48981)
 
350 Arkadelphia Cemetery Eaton, John Obed (I48983)
 

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