Notes
Matches 4,301 to 4,350 of 10,692
| # | Notes | Linked to |
|---|---|---|
| 4301 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p351.htm#i6643 | Le Goz, vicomte d' Avranches Richard (I8607)
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| 4302 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p353.htm#i4643 | De Montgomery, Earl of Shrewsbury Roger (I3853)
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| 4303 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p360.htm#i6666 | Salisbury, Edward of (I4466)
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| 4304 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p362.htm#i14644 | Le Meschin, 3rd Earl of Chester Ranulf (I9915)
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| 4305 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p363.htm#i4639 | De Bellême, comte d'Alençon Robert II (I3727)
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| 4306 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p363.htm#i6821 | De Briquessart, vicomte de Bayeaux Ranulf (I11591)
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| 4307 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p367.htm#i6782 | De Salisbury, Sheriff of Wiltshire Walter Fitz Edward (I3876)
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| 4308 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p367.htm#i6783 | De Chaworth, Sibyl (I3753)
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| 4309 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p369.htm#i6795 | De Gernon, 4th Earl of Chester Ranulph (I3800)
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| 4310 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p373.htm#i6979 | De Salisbury, 1st Earl of Wiltshire Patrick (I3875)
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| 4311 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p374.htm#i4635 | De Bellême, comte d'Alençon & de Ponthieu Guillaume III (I3725)
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| 4312 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p376.htm#i6940 | De Kevelioc, 5th Earl of Chester Hugh (I37263)
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| 4313 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p380.htm#i6942 | Fitzpatrick, 2nd Earl of Salisbury William (I11004)
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| 4314 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p388.htm#i6894 | Longespée, 3rd Earl of Salisbury William (I8834)
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| 4315 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p394.htm#i6859 | De Aldithley, Henry (I3698)
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| 4316 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p395.htm#i6861 | Longespée, William II (I8832)
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| 4317 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p398.htm#i6895 | Salisbury, Ela of (I12359)
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| 4318 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p401.htm#i6843 | De Aldithley, Justiciar of Ireland James (I3699)
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| 4319 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p407.htm#i6844 | Longespée, Ela (I8829)
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| 4320 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p413.htm#i7039 | De Audley, Lord Audley of Heleigh Hugh I (I7597)
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| 4321 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p418.htm#i8018 | De Audley, Lord Audley, 1st Earl of Gloucester Hugh (I3708)
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| 4322 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p420.htm#i25637 | Sutton, John II (I13765)
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| 4323 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p421.htm#i18715 | De Beauchamp, 11th Earl of Warwick Thomas (I3721)
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| 4324 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p44.htm#i4581 | Geoffroy, I (I5244)
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| 4325 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p55.htm#i6647 | Le Goz, vicomte d' Avranches Thurstan (I8608)
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| 4326 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p56.htm#i6736 | D'alençon, Hele (I3531)
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| 4327 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p57.htm#i6892 | Mainwaring, Ralph (I8993)
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| 4328 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p58.htm#i7107 | Ranulph, I (I11590)
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| 4329 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p58.htm#i7109 | De Normandie, Alix (I3859)
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| 4330 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p6.htm#i8264 | Glumra, Jarl of the Uplanders Eysteinn (I5317)
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| 4331 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p72.htm#i17054 | Óláfsdóttir, Drótt (I10769)
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| 4332 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p72.htm#i9471 | Saxland, Yrsa of (I12457)
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| 4333 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p72.htm#i9491 | Snjásdóttir, Drífa (I12923)
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| 4334 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p72.htm#i9497 | Gerðr (I5247)
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| 4335 | http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p72.htm#i9501 | Esageard, Eorthe of (I4620)
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| 4336 | Hubbard Hospice House | Lambert, Emmett Russell (I8491)
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| 4337 | Hufford Cemetery | Kimberland, Blanch (I44371)
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| 4338 | Hufford Cemetery | Smith, Ceicel Gene (I44372)
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| 4339 | Hugh Capet (c. 940 - 24 October 996), was the first King of France of the eponymous Capetian dynasty from his election to succeed the Carolingian Louis V in 987 until his death. Descent and inheritance: The son of Hugh the Great, Duke of France, and Hedwige of Saxony, daughter of the German king Henry the Fowler, Hugh was born about 940. His paternal family, the Robertians, were powerful landowners in the Île-de-France. His grandfather had been King Robert I and his grandmother Beatrice was a Carolingian, a daughter of Herbert I of Vermandois. This makes him the great-great-great-great-great grandson of Charlemagne on both his parents side through Louis the Pious and Pepin of Italy. King Odo was his great uncle and King Rudolph Odo's son-in-law. Hugh was born into a well-connected and powerful family with many ties to the reigning nobility of Europe. But for all this, Hugh's father was never king. When Rudolph died in 936, Hugh the Great organized the return of Louis d'Outremer, son of Charles the Simple, from his exile at the court of Athelstan of England. Hugh's motives are unknown, but it is presumed that he acted to forestall Rudolph's brother and successor as Duke of Burgundy, Hugh the Black from taking the French throne, or to prevent it from falling into the grasping hands of Herbert II of Vermandois or William Longsword, Duke of Normandy. In 956, Hugh inherited his father's estates and became one of the most powerful nobles in the much-reduced West Frankish kingdom. However, as he was not yet an adult, his uncle Bruno, Archbishop of Cologne, acted as regent. Young Hugh's neighbours made the most of the opportunity. Theobald I of Blois, a former vassal of Hugh the Great, took the counties of Chartres and Châteaudun. Further south, on the border of the kingdom, Fulk II of Anjou, another former client of Hugh the Great, carved out a principality at Hugh's expense and that of the Bretons. The realm in which Hugh grew up, and of which he would one day be king, bore no resemblance to modern France. Hugh's predecessors did not call themselves rois de France ("Kings of France"), and that title was not used until the time of his distant descendant Philip the Fair (died 1314). Kings ruled as rex Francorum ("King of the Franks") and the lands over which they ruled comprised only a very small part of the former Carolingian Empire. The eastern Frankish lands, the Holy Roman Empire, were ruled by the Ottonian dynasty, represented by Hugh's first cousin Otto II and then by Otto's son, Otto III. The lands south of the river Loire had largely ceased to be part of the West Frankish kingdom in the years after Charles the Simple was deposed in 922. The Duchy of Normandy and the Duchy of Burgundy were largely independent, and Brittany entirely so, although from 956 Burgundy was ruled by Hugh's brothers Odo and Henry. Election and extent of power: From 977 to 986, Hugh Capet allied himself with the German emperors Otto II and Otto III and with Archbishop Adalberon of Reims to dominate the Carolingian king, Lothair. By 986, he was king in all but name. After Lothair and his son died in early 987, Adalberon and Gerbert of Aurillac convened an assembly of nobles to elect Hugh Capet as their king. In front of an electoral assembly at Senlis, Adalberon gave a stirring oration and pleaded to the nobles: Crown the Duke. He is most illustrious by his exploits, his nobility, his forces. The throne is not acquired by hereditary right; no one should be raised to it unless distinguished not only for nobility of birth, but for the goodness of his soul. He was elected and crowned rex Francorum at Noyon in Picardy on 3 July 987, by the prelate of Reims, the first of the Capetian house. Immediately after his coronation, Hugh began to push for the coronation of his son Robert. Hugh's own claimed reason was that he was planning an expedition against the Moorish armies harassing Borrel II of Barcelona, an invasion which never occurred, and that the stability of the country necessitated two kings should he die while on expedition. Ralph Glaber, however, attributes Hugh's request to his old age and inability to control the nobility. Modern scholarship has largely imputed to Hugh the motive of establishing a dynasty against the pretension of electoral power on the part of the aristocracy, but this is not the typical view of contemporaries and even some modern scholars have been less sceptical of Hugh's "plan" to campaign in Spain. Robert was eventually crowned on 25 December that same year. 10th century West Francia (France): Hugh Capet possessed minor properties near Chartres and Angers. Between Paris and Orléans he possessed towns and estates amounting to approximately 400 square miles (1,000 km²). His authority ended there, and if he dared travel outside his small area, he risked being captured and held for ransom, though, as God's anointed, his life was largely safe. Indeed, there was a plot in 993, masterminded by Adalberon, Bishop of Laon and Odo I of Blois, to deliver Hugh Capet into the custody of Otto III. The plot failed, but the fact that no one was punished illustrates how tenuous his hold on power was. Beyond his power base, in the rest of France, there were still as many codes of law as there were fiefdoms. The "country" operated with 150 different forms of currency and at least a dozen languages. Uniting all this into one cohesive unit was a formidable task and a constant struggle between those who wore the crown of France and its feudal lords. As such, Hugh Capet's reign was marked by numerous power struggles with the vassals on the borders of the Seine and the Loire. While Hugh Capet's military power was limited and he had to seek military aid from Richard I of Normandy, his unanimous election as king gave him great moral authority and influence. Adémar de Chabannes records, probably apocryphally, that during an argument with the Count of Auvergne, Hugh demanded of him: "Who made you count?" The count riposted: "Who made you king?". Dispute with the papacy: Hugh made Arnulf Archbishop of Reims in 988, even though Arnulf was the nephew of his bitter rival, Charles of Lorraine. Charles thereupon succeeded in capturing Reims and took the archbishop prisoner. Hugh, however, considered Arnulf a turncoat and demanded his deposition by Pope John XV. The turn of events outran the messages, when Hugh captured both Charles and Arnulf and convoked a synod at Reims in June 991, which obediently deposed Arnulf and chose as his successor Gerbert of Aurillac. These proceedings were repudiated by Rome, although a second synod had ratified the decrees issued at Reims. John XV summoned the French bishops to hold an independent synod outside the King's realm, at Aachen, to reconsider the case. When they refused, he called them to Rome, but they protested that the unsettled conditions en route and in Rome made that impossible. The Pope then sent a legate with instructions to call a council of French and German bishops at Mousson, where only the German bishops appeared, the French being stopped on the way by Hugh and Robert. Through the exertions of the legate, the deposition of Arnulf was finally pronounced illegal. After Hugh's death, Arnulf was released from his imprisonment and soon restored to all his dignities. Legacy: Hugh Capet died on 24 October 996 in Paris and was interred in the Saint Denis Basilica. His son Robert continued to reign. Most historians regard the beginnings of modern France with the coronation of Hugh Capet. This is because, as Count of Paris, he made the city his power centre. The monarch began a long process of exerting control of the rest of the country from there. He is regarded as the founder of the Capetian dynasty. The direct Capetians, or the House of Capet, ruled France from 987 to 1328; thereafter, the Kingdom was ruled by collateral branches of the dynasty. All French kings through Louis Philippe, and all royal pretenders since then, have belonged to the dynasty. As of 2009, members of the Capetian dynasty are still the heads of state of the kingdom of Spain (in the person of the Bourbon Juan Carlos) and of the grand-duchy of Luxembourg. Marriage and issue: Hugh Capet married Adelaide, daughter of William Towhead, Count of Poitou. Their children are as follows: Robert II, who became king after the death of his father Hedwig, or Hathui, who married Reginar IV, Count of Hainaut Gisela, or Gisele A number of other daughters are less reliably attested. | Capet, 1st King of France Hugh (I15810)
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| 4340 | Hugh de Audley, Lord Audley, 8th Earl of Gloucester was born circa 1295. He was the successor of Gilbert (de Clare), 7th Earl of Gloucester and Hertford; 7th Earl of Gloucester and Hertford. Hugh was the son of Hugh, Lord Audley of Heleigh and Isolde de Mortimer. He married Margaret de Clare, daughter of Gilbert "the Red Earl" (de Clare), 6th Earl of Gloucester and Hertford and Joan (of Acre), Countess of Gloucester and Hertford, on 28 April 1317 at Windsor, England. Hugh was summoned to parliament in the lifetime of his father as "Hugh de Audley, Juniori" on 20 November 1317. 4th Lord Audley of Heleigh in 1325. 8th Earl of Gloucester between 1337 and 1347.5 Ambassador to France in 1341. He died on 10 November 1347. He was the predecessor of Thomas, "of Woodstock," 1st Duke of Gloucester, 13th Earl of Essex, and Earl of Buckingham; 1st Duke of Gloucester. | De Audley, Lord Audley, 1st Earl of Gloucester Hugh (I3708)
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| 4341 | Hugh de Kevelioc, 6th Earl of Chester married Bertred, daughter of Simon, Earl of Evereux, in Normandy. Hugh was a witness where Countess of Huntindon, Maud de Meschines daughter and in her issue co-heir of Hugh de Kevilioc, Earl of Chester. Hugh was the successor of Ranulph de Gernon, 5th Earl of Chester; Viscount of Avranches. He was born in 1147 at Kevelioc, Merionethshire, Wales. He was the son of Ranulph de Gernon, 5th Earl of Chester and Maud of Gloucester. Hugh was Viscount of Avranches at Normandy, France, between 1153 and 1181 and 6th Earl of Chester at England between 1153 and 1181. Hugh associated with N. N. (?) circa 1167 either first wife or a mistress?He married Bertrade de Montfort, daughter of Simon III de Montfort, comte de Évreux and Maud, in 1169 at Montfort, Normandy, France. The Great Rebellion: Henry II versus his heir, Henry "the Young King", his two older brothers, the Earl of Leicester, the King of Scots, the King of France, and the Count of Flanders. Hugh joined in the rebellion of the Earl of Leicester and the King of Scots against King Henry II, and in support of the monarch's son, Prince Henry, and taken prisoner, along with the Earl, at Alnwick in 1172/73. He was deprived of his earldom between July 1174 and January 1177. He rebelled against the king yet again, and was again pardoned and restored to his lands in 1176/77. He was restored to his earldom in January 1177. He died in 1181 at midsummer, Leek, Staffordshire, England, at age 34 years. Hugh was the predecessor of Ranulph de Blundevil, 7th Earl of Chester; Viscount of Avranches. | De Kevelioc, 5th Earl of Chester Hugh (I37263)
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| 4342 | Hugh de Mortimer (before 1117 to 26 Feb 1180/1) was a Norman English medieval baron. Lineage The son of Hugh de Mortimer (b ? - d 26 Feb 1148/50), the son of Ralf de Mortimer, he was Lord of Wigmore Castle, Cleobury Mortimer and at times, Bridgnorth, Bishop's Castle and Maelienydd. [edit]Anarchy During the Anarchy of King Stephen's reign, Mortimer was an ardant royalist until at least 1148. This was because Wigmore Castle had been confiscated from his father by King Henry I. He only seems to have returned to England from his Norman estates in 1137. [edit]Private Wars He did quarrel violently with his neighbouring Lords, most notably with Miles, earl of Hereford, his son Roger and Josse de Dinant, lord of Ludlow. The latter ambushed Mortimer and only released him after the payment of a substantial ransom. During this time Mortimer also took over the Royal castle at Bridgnorth. [edit]Opposition to King Henry II Hugh was one of the Barons who objected to Henry II's demand for the return of Royal castles in 1155. Henry II launched a campaign in May 1155 against Hugh, simultaneously besieging his three principal castles of Wigmore, Bridgnorth and Cleobury. On 7 July 1155, Hugh formally submitted to Henry II at the Council at Bridgnorth. He was allowed to keep his own two castles (though Cleobury had been destroyed during the siege) but Bridgnorth returned to the crown[1]. [edit]Marriage & issue Between 1148 and 1153 Hugh married Maud Le Meschin, daughter of William Le Meschin, lord of Skipton, Yorkshire, and Cecily de Rumigny. Matilda was the widow of Philip Belmeis of Tong. Their son Roger Mortimer of Wigmore succeeded his father as lord of Wigmore. | Le Meschin, Matilda (I15682)
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| 4343 | Hugh I (1053 - October 18, 1101), called Magnus or the Great, was a younger son of Henry I of France and Anne of Kiev and younger brother of Philip I. He was in his own right Count of Vermandois, but an ineffectual leader and soldier, great only in his boasting. Indeed, Steven Runciman is certain that his nickname Magnus (greater or elder), applied to him by William of Tyre, is a copyist's error, and should be Minus (younger), referring to Hugh as younger brother of the King of France. In early 1096 Hugh and Philip began discussing the First Crusade after news of the Council of Clermont reached them in Paris. Although Philip could not participate, as he had been excommunicated, Hugh was said to have been influenced to join the Crusade after an eclipse of the moon on February 11, 1096. That summer Hugh's army left France for Italy, where they would cross the Adriatic Sea into territory of the Byzantine Empire, unlike the other Crusader armies who were travelling by land. On the way, many of the soldiers led by fellow Crusader Emicho joined Hugh's army after Emicho was defeated by the Hungarians, whose land he had been pillaging. Hugh crossed the Adriatic from Bari in Southern Italy, but many of his ships were destroyed in a storm off the Byzantine port of Dyrrhachium. Hugh and most of his army was rescued and escorted to Constantinople, where they arrived in November of 1096. Prior to his arrival, Hugh sent an arrogant, insulting letter to Eastern Roman Emperor Alexius I Comnenus, according to the Emperor's biography by his daughter (the Alexiad), demanding that Alexius meet with him: "Know, O King, that I am King of Kings, and superior to all, who are under the sky. You are now permitted to greet me, on my arrival, and to receive me with magnificence, as befits my nobility."[1] Alexius was already wary of the armies about to arrive, after the unruly mob led by Peter the Hermit had passed through earlier in the year. Alexius kept Hugh in custody in a monastery until Hugh swore an oath of vassalage to him. After the Crusaders had successfully made their way across Seljuk territory and, in 1098, captured Antioch, Hugh was sent back to Constantinople to appeal for reinforcements from Alexius. Alexius was uninterested, however, and Hugh, instead of returning to Antioch to help plan the siege of Jerusalem, went back to France. There he was scorned for not having fulfilled his vow as a Crusader to complete a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and Pope Paschal II threatened to excommunicate him. He joined the minor Crusade of 1101, but was wounded in battle with the Turks in September, and died of his wounds in October in Tarsus. Family and children He married Adele of Vermandois, the daughter of Herbert IV, Count of Vermandois and Alice, Countess of Valois. They had nine children: Matilda(1080-1130), married Ralph I of Beaugency Beatrice (1082-after1144), married Hugh III of Gournay Ralph I (1085-1152) Elizabeth of Vermandois, Countess of Leicester (1085-1131) Constance (1086-??), married Godfrey de la Ferté-Gaucher Agnes (1090-1125), married Boniface of Savone Henry (1091-1130), Lord of Chaumont en Vexin Simon (1093-1148) William (c. 1094-c.1096) | Hugh, Count of Vermandois I (I15774)
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| 4344 | Hugh the Great (898-16 June 956) was duke of the Franks and count of Paris, son of King Robert I of France and nephew of King Odo. He was born in Paris, Ile-de-France, France. His eldest son was Hugh Capet who became King of France in 987. His family is known as the Robertians. Hugh's first wife was Eadhild, daughter of Edward the Elder, king of England, and sister of King Athelstan. At the death of Rudolph, duke of Burgundy, in 936, Hugh was in possession of nearly all the region between the Loire and the Seine, corresponding to the ancient Neustria, with the exception of the territory ceded to the Normans in 911. He took a very active part in bringing Louis IV (d'Outremer) from the Kingdom of England in 936, but in the same year Hugh married Hedwige of Saxony, a daughter of Henry the Fowler of Germany and Matilda of Ringelheim, and soon quarrelled with Louis. Hugh even paid homage to the Emperor Otto the Great, and supported him in his struggle against Louis. When Louis fell into the hands of the Normans in 945, he was handed over to Hugh, who released him in 946 only on condition that he should surrender the fortress of Laon. At the council of Ingelheim (948) Hugh was condemned, under pain of excommunication, to make reparation to Louis. It was not, however, until 950 that the powerful vassal became reconciled with his suzerain and restored Laon. But new difficulties arose, and peace was not finally concluded until 953. On the death of Louis IV, Hugh was one of the first to recognize Lothair as his successor, and, at the intervention of Queen Gerberga, was instrumental in having him crowned. In recognition of this service Hugh was invested by the new king with the duchies of Burgundy (his suzerainty over which had already been nominally recognized by Louis IV) and Aquitaine. But his expedition in 955 to take possession of Aquitaine was unsuccessful. In the same year, however, Giselbert, duke of Burgundy, acknowledged himself his vassal and betrothed his daughter to Hugh's son Otto. At Giselbert's death (8 April 956) Hugh became effective master of the duchy, but died soon afterwards, on the 16 or 17 June 956, in Dourdan. In the Divine Comedy Dante meets the soul of Duke Hugh in Purgatory, lamenting the avarice of his descendants. | France, Duke of the Franks, Count of Paris Hugh of (I15815)
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| 4345 | Hugh, Lord Audley of Heleigh was born circa 1260 at Audley, Staffordshire, England. He was the son of James de Aldithley, Justiciar of Ireland and Ela Longespée. Hugh married Isolde de Mortimer, daughter of Edmund, 1st Baron Mortimer of Wigmore and Margaret de Fiennes, before 1295 at Wigmore, Herefordshire, England He was Ambassador to France circa 1317. Hughwas a witness where Edward II, King of England called a Parliament and summoned his Barons in 1317. 1st Lord Audley of Heleigh in 1317. Hugh was summoned to Parliament as Lord Audley by Edward II in 1317. He was summoned to parliament as "Hugh de Audley, Seniori" by Edward II on 15 May 1321 at 14 Edward II. He was involved with the insurrection of Thomas, Earl of Lancaster, and was committed, a "close prisoner" to Wallingford Castle, but making his peace with the king he obtained his release, and suffered nothing further, in 1321/22 at 15 Edward II. Hugh died in 1325. | De Audley, Lord Audley of Heleigh Hugh I (I7597)
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| 4346 | Humphrey (or Onfroi or Umfrid) of Vieilles[1] (died c. 1050) was the first holder of the "grand honneur" of Beaumont-le-Roger, one of the most important groups of domains in eastern Normandy[2] and the founder of the House of Beaumont. His early life and origins are the subject of much discussion. He was the grandson of Torf (or Turolf), who some historians identify with Turstin le Riche, the father-in-law of Robert the Dane, and by others with an ancestor of the lords of Harcourt[3]. Whichever is the better hypothesis, we can be sure Humphrey descended from a Scandinavian Viking family. Besides Beaumont-le-Roger, he had lands dispersed through the whole of Normandy, in Cotentin, in Hiémois, in the Pays d'Auge, in Basse Seine (Vatteville-la-Rue), in Évrecin (Normanville) and in Vexin normand (Bouafles). These lands originated in the favour of the dukes Richard II and Robert II, from confiscated church lands. The "honneur" of Beaumont was, for example, constituted from the remains of the lands of the abbey of Bernay[4]. On the other hand, the possessions around Pont-Audemer came to him by family inheritance. In 1034, he 'founded' (or, rather, restored) the monastery at Préaux, a few kilometres from Pont-Audemer, with monks from the Saint-Wandrille. During the minority of Duke William the Bastard, Roger I of Tosny, holder of the "honneur" of Conches, attacked Humphrey's domains. But around 1040, Humphrey's son, Roger de Beumont, met and defeated Roger in battle, during which Roger was killed. [edit]Family and descendants His known children: Robert, the elder, assassinated by Roger de Clères[5]?; Roger de Beaumont, known as le Barbu († 1094), who succeeded his father. Two other possible children?: Guillaume de Beaumont, monk at the abbaye Saint-Pierre de Préaux Dumelme de Vieilles, monk at the abbaye Saint-Léger de Préaux. [edit]Notes and references ^ Vieilles is the name of a former village, now merged with Beaumont-le-Roger ^ Pierre Bauduin, La première Normandie (Xe-XIe siècles), Presses Universitaires de Caen, 2004, p.216-217. Among the other grands honneurs of the Pays d'Ouche, were those of Breteuil and of Conches ^ William of Jumièges reports that this Turolf was the brother of Turquetil, the first lord of Harcourt, and the uncle of Ansketil de Harcourt. The archaeologist Jacques Le Maho supports Torf's identification with Turstin ^ Veronica Gazeau, Monachisme et aristocratie au XIe siècle : l'exemple de la famille de Beaumont,, PhD thesis, University of Caen, 1986-1987 (dactyl.), p.67-73. The abbot of Bernay, Raoul, parent of Humphrey, would have entrusted to him between 1027 and 1040, part of the heritage of his monastery. Like other lords of the beginning of the 11th century, like the family of Bellême, he increased the family's power by recovering or winning of ecclesiastical lands ^ Orderic Vitalis, History of Normandy, Éd. Guizot, 1826, vol. III, livre VIII, p. 373. Charpillon et Caresme, Dictionnaire historique des communes de l'Eure, vol I, 1879, art. Beaumont-le-Roger [edit]Sources (French) Pierre Bauduin, La première Normandie (Xe-XIe siècles), Presses Universitaires de Caen, 2004 (French) Véronique Gazeau, Monachisme et aristocratie au XIe siècle : l'exemple de la famille de Beaumont, doctoral thesis, Université de Caen, 1986-1987 (dactyl.) Seigneurs de Beaumont-le-Roger on Medieval Lands | De Vielles, Humphrey (I15782)
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| 4347 | Huntington City Cemetery | Dameron, Susan Ann (I3550)
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| 4348 | Huntington City Cemetery | Johnston, Heber Caldwell (I7857)
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| 4349 | Huntington City Cemetery | Whitney, Francis Tufts (I38980)
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| 4350 | Huntington City Cemetery | Johnston, Beulah (I45723)
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