Notes
Matches 7,151 to 7,200 of 7,802
# | Notes | Linked to |
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7151 | Studied Theology | THOMÆ, Georgius Emmericus (I31054)
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7152 | Studied theology in Jena, 1689 substitute for his father in Mendhausen, in 1846 it was said about him "he followed in his father's footsteps and kept the church register more carefully than it was custom and practice at that time"; according to the Lehnsrevers of March 3rd, 1712 he owned goods in Ritschenhausen (State Archives Würzburg) | Heusinger, Johann Christian (I32599)
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7153 | Studied theology in Jena, 1721-1761 pastor of Mendhausen | Heusinger, Caspar Philipp (I32598)
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7154 | Studied Theology. | THOMÆ, Andreas (I31065)
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7155 | Studied under Dr. of Philosophy, Ernst Rittweger. | Rittweger, Gerhardt Hofrat (I28779)
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7156 | Studiert in Berlin 1848- 1851 bei Ernst Friedrich Gurlt The father is stated as the tenant of the mill | Mörlin, Carl Friedrich (I27898)
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7157 | STUDT, PH., REV., Pastor of the Lutheran Church, Luzerne; was born in St Clair County, Ill., in the year 1841; he .remained in said county until his 22d year; he then went to St Louis and commenced studying for the ministry; he attended Concordia College at that place (St Louis) four years, -at the end of which time he graduated; was ordained minister in 1866; since which time he has had pastoral charge of the Lutheran Church at this place (Luzerne). He married Miss Sophia E. M. Tatge, in Iowa City, this State, on the 10th of Nov., 1869; she was born in Kendall County, Ill., on the 13th of March, 1852; they have had four children -- Julius C. P., born in Luzerne on the 11th of Sept., 1871; Henry F., born in Luzerne on the 30th of March, 1873, died in infancy; August J., born in Luzerne on the 14th of Oct., 1874; Martin G. W., born in Luzerne on the 5th of Nov., 1877. The above is from the 1878 Biographical History of Benton County, Iowa. Buried in Lutheran Cemetery per JF Thoma. | Studt, Reverend Phillip (I5574)
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7158 | Stylianos Zaoutzes was a high Byzantine official of Armenian origin https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stylianos_Zaoutzes Stylianos Zaoutzes (Greek: Στυλιανὸς Ζαούτζης, but Ζαουντζᾶς in Skylitzes)[1] was a high Byzantine official of Armenian origin. Rising to high rank under Byzantine emperor Basil I (reigned 867–886), he then rose further to prominence under Basil's successor Emperor Leo VI the Wise (r. 886–912), who had a close friendship and possibly an affair with Stylianos's daughter Zoe Zaoutzaina. Stylianos Zaoutzes was Leo's leading minister during the first half of his reign, and was awarded the unique title of basileopator. His standing and influence declined after 895, but in 898, he became Leo's father-in-law when the Byzantine emperor married Zoe. He died in 899, in the same year as Zoe. Following an attempted coup by his relatives, the Zaoutzes clan was deprived of the considerable power it had amassed under Stylianos's tutelage. Biography Origins and early career[edit] Zaoutzes was of Armenian descent, and was born in the thema of Macedonia. It has been theorized by the historian Nicholas Adontz that Zaoutzes might be the son of a contemporary strategos of Macedonia named Tzantzes, the name also of Zaoutzes's son, but the connection is ultimately impossible to prove.[1][2] According to Steven Runciman, the surname Zaoutzes derives from the Armenian word Zaoutch, "negro", reflecting Zaoutzes's particularly dark complexion. In the same vein, Zaoutzes was known among Byzantines as "the Ethiopian".[3] Whatever his exact ancestry, he shared ethnic and geographical origin with the Emperor Basil I the Macedonian, a factor that probably played an important role in his ascent to high office during the latter's reign.[2] In late 882, the young Leo, Basil's second son and heir after the death of his elder brother Constantine in 879, was wedded to Theophano, a member of the Martinakes family. The bride was the choice of empress Eudokia Ingerina, and did not please Leo, who instead preferred the company of Zoe Zaoutzaina, the beautiful daughter of Stylianos Zaoutzes. Whether Zoe was actually his mistress is uncertain; Leo himself strenuously denied this in later accounts.[4] At that point, Zaoutzes held the post of mikros hetaireiarches, i.e. commander of the junior regiment of the Byzantine emperor's mercenary bodyguard, the hetaireia.[5] Leo's relations with his father Basil were always strained, and when Theophano informed him of this affair, Basil reportedly became enraged, beat Leo until he bled, and married Zoe off to one Theodore Gouzouniates.[6] Furthermore, in 883, Leo was denounced as plotting against Basil and was imprisoned; it was only through the intervention of patriarch Photios and Stylianos Zaoutzes that he was not also blinded.[7] This affair does not seem to have hurt Zaoutzes's own standing with Basil or his career, for by the end of Basil's reign he was protospatharios and megas hetaireiarches (senior commander of the hetaireia).[1] Rise to prominence Leo spent three years in prison, until released and restored to his rank in late July 886. Here too Zaoutzes played a major role, as he personally pleaded with the Byzantine emperor to secure Leo's release.[8] By that time, Basil was ailing, and on August 12, 886, he was gravely wounded during a hunt. Zaoutzes's participation in the hunt raised suspicions of a conspiracy, but his complicity is generally rejected, as Basil survived for nine days, during which he did not punish Zaoutzes.[9] Upon Basil's death, Leo was crowned emperor, but Zaoutzes, who was awarded the titles of patrikios and magistros and the office of logothetes tou dromou, effectively assumed control of the government, directing state policy.[1] One tradition, based on the Vita Euthymii (the hagiography of Patriarch Euthymios I), holds that Basil himself appointed Zaoutzes as regent (epitropos), but other sources indicate that his ascent to power was more gradual.[10] It is indicative of his authority that most of Leo's ordinances (novels) are directed to him in person, and in 893, he succeeded in getting his protégé, Antony Kauleas, elected as Patriarch of Constantinople.[11] In the same period (between 886 and 893), Emperor Leo VI himself delivered a homily on a church built on Zaoutzes's orders in Constantinople.[12] Zaoutzes's rise to prominence was consolidated in 891–893, when he was given the newly created title of basileopator ("father of the emperor").[13] His promotion to this new and enigmatic title has been a subject of controversy, as neither the reasons for the creation of the title nor its exact functions are known. The early date of his elevation precludes a relation to the eventual rise of his daughter Zoe to the imperial throne as Leo's empress. Gratitude for Zaoutzes's support against Basil may have played a role, and a common theory is that the office implied some form of tutorship over the emperor.[14] The office certainly confirmed Zaoutzes as the senior secular official of the Byzantine Empire. However, although Zaoutzes has traditionally been regarded as an all-powerful regent over a weak emperor, in no small part due to the account provided in the Vita Euthymii, the actual relationship between the two may have been quite different. A more careful evaluation of the source material has led modern scholarship to conclude that Leo was actively involved in government, and that Zaoutzes as chief minister was loyal and obsequious to his master.[15] An assessment of his record as the Byzantine Empire's first minister is difficult. Of the few available sources on his career, the Vita Euthymii, compiled years after Zaoutzes's death, is extremely hostile, seeking to pin the responsibility for several of the reign's failures or unpopular decisions on him, and thus preserve Leo from blame.[16] The account of the Vita is further colored by the fierce rivalry between Zaoutzes and Euthymios, then a synkellos and Leo's spiritual father, over influence on the Byzantine emperor.[17] Thus the Vita accuses Zaoutzes of being responsible for the sacking of the successful general Nikephoros Phokas the Elder from the army, as well as for the outbreak of hostilities with Bulgaria in 893: allegedly, two of his protégés moved the main market for Bulgarian goods from Constantinopleto Thessalonica and then proceeded to extract exorbitant fees from the Bulgarian merchants. When Leo, at the behest of Zaoutzes, rejected the merchants' protests, the Bulgarian Tsar Simeon I found a pretext to attack Byzantium.[1][18] It has, however, been recently suggested by the scholar Paul Magdalino that the transfer was in fact Leo's initiative, aiming to enrich Thessalonica, whose patron saint, Saint Demetrius, he showed special favor to.[19] Fall from favor and death[edit] Nevertheless, all this has led to the enduring image of an ineffectual leadership in foreign and military affairs under Zaoutzes.[20] This may explain why, despite the resumption of Leo's affair with Zoe, the relationship between Zaoutzes and the emperor became strained: tales of an alleged plot by Zaoutzes's son to murder Leo in 894/895 indicate a rift between the two, and although Zaoutzes himself was not involved, a major quarrel between them ensued shortly after.[21] Although they were reconciled, Zaoutzes's standing seems to have declined further thereafter, as two of his protégés, found guilty of accepting bribes, were punished by Leo.[22] Nevertheless, in late summer 898, following the death of Theophano on 10 November 897, and of Zoe's first husband Gouzouniates in early 898, Leo at last married Zoe, raising her to Augusta. In the next year, however, both Zoe and Stylianos died.[23] Following their deaths, Leo proposed to marry yet again, choosing Eudokia Baïana as his wife. Zaoutzes's numerous relatives, who had benefited from his patronage, were fearful of losing their positions to the new Empress's relations, and conspired to overthrow Leo. Chief among them was Basil, Zoe's nephew. The plot, however, was betrayed by the eunuch servant Samonas, and the conspiracy suppressed. The Zaoutzes relatives were exiled or confined to monasteries, and the clan's power broken.[1][24] Samonas himself was richly rewarded: he was taken into the imperial service and rapidly promoted, becoming parakoimomenos by 908, before he too fell from favor.[25] Stylianos's daughter Zoe Zaoutzaina. Stylianos Zaoutzes was Leo's leading minister during the first half of his reign, and was awarded the unique title of basileopator. His standing and influence declined after 895, but in 898, he became Leo's father-in-law when the Byzantine emperor married Zoe. He died in 899, in the same year as Zoe. Following an attempted coup by his relatives, the Zaoutzes clan was deprived of the considerable power it had amassed under Stylianos's tutelage. Origins and early career https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Basil%26leo.jpg Basil I and Leo. Illumination from the Madrid Skylitzes manuscript. Zaoutzes was of Armenian descent, and was born in the thema of Macedonia. It has been theorized by the historian Nicholas Adontz that Zaoutzes might be the son of a contemporary strategos of Macedonia named Tzantzes, the name also of Zaoutzes's son, but the connection is ultimately impossible to prove.[1][2] According to Steven Runciman, the surname Zaoutzes derives from the Armenian word Zaoutch, "negro", reflecting Zaoutzes's particularly dark complexion. In the same vein, Zaoutzes was known among Byzantines as "the Ethiopian".[3] Whatever his exact ancestry, he shared ethnic and geographical origin with the Emperor Basil I the Macedonian, a factor that probably played an important role in his ascent to high office during the latter's reign.[2] In late 882, the young Leo, Basil's second son and heir after the death of his elder brother Constantine in 879, was wedded to Theophano, a member of the Martinakes family. The bride was the choice of empress Eudokia Ingerina, and did not please Leo, who instead preferred the company of Zoe Zaoutzaina, the beautiful daughter of Stylianos Zaoutzes. Whether Zoe was actually his mistress is uncertain; Leo himself strenuously denied this in later accounts.[4] At that point, Zaoutzes held the post of mikros hetaireiarches, i.e. commander of the junior regiment of the Byzantine emperor's mercenary bodyguard, the hetaireia.[5] Leo's relations with his father Basil were always strained, and when Theophano informed him of this affair, Basil reportedly became enraged, beat Leo until he bled, and married Zoe off to one Theodore Gouzouniates.[6] Furthermore, in 883, Leo was denounced as plotting against Basil and was imprisoned; it was only through the intervention of patriarch Photios and Stylianos Zaoutzes that he was not also blinded.[7] This affair does not seem to have hurt Zaoutzes's own standing with Basil or his career, for by the end of Basil's reign he was protospatharios and megas hetaireiarches (senior commander of the hetaireia).[1] Rise to prominence[edit] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Follis-Leo_VI-sb1729.jpg Bronze follis of Emperor Leo VI (r. 886–912). Leo spent three years in prison, until released and restored to his rank in late July 886. Here too Zaoutzes played a major role, as he personally pleaded with the Byzantine emperor to secure Leo's release.[8] By that time, Basil was ailing, and on August 12, 886, he was gravely wounded during a hunt. Zaoutzes's participation in the hunt raised suspicions of a conspiracy, but his complicity is generally rejected, as Basil survived for nine days, during which he did not punish Zaoutzes.[9] Upon Basil's death, Leo was crowned emperor, but Zaoutzes, who was awarded the titles of patrikios and magistros and the office of logothetes tou dromou, effectively assumed control of the government, directing state policy.[1] One tradition, based on the Vita Euthymii (the hagiography of Patriarch Euthymios I), holds that Basil himself appointed Zaoutzes as regent (epitropos), but other sources indicate that his ascent to power was more gradual.[10] It is indicative of his authority that most of Leo's ordinances (novels) are directed to him in person, and in 893, he succeeded in getting his protégé, Antony Kauleas, elected as Patriarch of Constantinople.[11] In the same period (between 886 and 893), Emperor Leo VI himself delivered a homily on a church built on Zaoutzes's orders in Constantinople.[12] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:LeonVIDomestikosKatakalonBGhistory.jpg From the Madrid Skylitzes: Emperor Leo VI receives a Bulgarian embassy (top); the Bulgarian victory at Bulgarophygon in 896 (bottom). The account of the Vita Euthymii holds Zaoutzes and his corrupt clients responsible for the outbreak of the war, which saw several heavy Byzantine defeats. Zaoutzes's rise to prominence was consolidated in 891–893, when he was given the newly created title of basileopator ("father of the emperor").[13] His promotion to this new and enigmatic title has been a subject of controversy, as neither the reasons for the creation of the title nor its exact functions are known. The early date of his elevation precludes a relation to the eventual rise of his daughter Zoe to the imperial throne as Leo's empress. Gratitude for Zaoutzes's support against Basil may have played a role, and a common theory is that the office implied some form of tutorship over the emperor.[14] The office certainly confirmed Zaoutzes as the senior secular official of the Byzantine Empire. However, although Zaoutzes has traditionally been regarded as an all-powerful regent over a weak emperor, in no small part due to the account provided in the Vita Euthymii, the actual relationship between the two may have been quite different. A more careful evaluation of the source material has led modern scholarship to conclude that Leo was actively involved in government, and that Zaoutzes as chief minister was loyal and obsequious to his master.[15] An assessment of his record as the Byzantine Empire's first minister is difficult. Of the few available sources on his career, the Vita Euthymii, compiled years after Zaoutzes's death, is extremely hostile, seeking to pin the responsibility for several of the reign's failures or unpopular decisions on him, and thus preserve Leo from blame.[16] The account of the Vita is further colored by the fierce rivalry between Zaoutzes and Euthymios, then a synkellos and Leo's spiritual father, over influence on the Byzantine emperor.[17] Thus the Vita accuses Zaoutzes of being responsible for the sacking of the successful general Nikephoros Phokas the Elder from the army, as well as for the outbreak of hostilities with Bulgaria in 893: allegedly, two of his protégés moved the main market for Bulgarian goods from Constantinople to Thessalonica and then proceeded to extract exorbitant fees from the Bulgarian merchants. When Leo, at the behest of Zaoutzes, rejected the merchants' protests, the Bulgarian Tsar Simeon I found a pretext to attack Byzantium.[1][18] It has, however, been recently suggested by the scholar Paul Magdalino that the transfer was in fact Leo's initiative, aiming to enrich Thessalonica, whose patron saint, Saint Demetrius, he showed special favor to.[19] Fall from favor and death[edit] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Samonas_informs_the_Emperor_Leo_of_a_plot_to_kill_him.jpg Samonas revealing Basil's plot against Leo VI. Miniature from the Madrid Skylitzes Nevertheless, all this has led to the enduring image of an ineffectual leadership in foreign and military affairs under Zaoutzes.[20] This may explain why, despite the resumption of Leo's affair with Zoe, the relationship between Zaoutzes and the emperor became strained: tales of an alleged plot by Zaoutzes's son to murder Leo in 894/895 indicate a rift between the two, and although Zaoutzes himself was not involved, a major quarrel between them ensued shortly after.[21] Although they were reconciled, Zaoutzes's standing seems to have declined further thereafter, as two of his protégés, found guilty of accepting bribes, were punished by Leo.[22] Nevertheless, in late summer 898, following the death of Theophano on 10 November 897, and of Zoe's first husband Gouzouniates in early 898, Leo at last married Zoe, raising her to Augusta. In the next year, however, both Zoe and Stylianos died.[23] Following their deaths, Leo proposed to marry yet again, choosing Eudokia Baïana as his wife. Zaoutzes's numerous relatives, who had benefited from his patronage, were fearful of losing their positions to the new Empress's relations, and conspired to overthrow Leo. Chief among them was Basil, Zoe's nephew. The plot, however, was betrayed by the eunuch servant Samonas, and the conspiracy suppressed. The Zaoutzes relatives were exiled or confined to monasteries, and the clan's power broken.[1][24] Samonas himself was richly rewarded: he was taken into the imperial service and rapidly promoted, becoming parakoimomenos by 908, before he too fell from favor.[25] | Stylianos Basilopator Tzaoutzes (I34434)
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7159 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | McQuigg, Susan Iona (I1665)
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7160 | Südasrika | Nonne, Carl (I29052)
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7161 | Suder, Samuel Orwigsburg Landing Brommer, Mary Orwigsburg Landing Apl. 26, 1851 Rev. Leinbach. The above from Lee Reber | Family: Sutter, Samuel / Brommer, Barbara Maria (F3608)
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7162 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family: Beek, Ashtyn / Thoma, Sue Ellen Adele (F7175)
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7163 | Suname has also been written as Westphal and Westphalz Ida was widowed before 1845. She was Christian Friedrich Rosburg's first wife. And in 1845 there were no children alive from this marriage. | Westphalz, Ida (I8325)
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7164 | Suname has also been written as Westphal and Westphalz | Westphalz, N.N. (I11065)
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7165 | Superintendent to Heldburg Books: Antiquitates et Memorabilia historiae Franconicae besonders Hildburghausen, Page 417. | Montan, Erhart (I4354)
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7166 | Suposedly From Transylvania | Groland, Heinrich (I30358)
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7167 | Surname could possibly be Keisel. | Kessel, Joseph (I3119)
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7168 | Surname has been spelled Kahler | Keeler, Hans Michael (I14307)
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7169 | Surname is also spelled Heighham | Higham, Elizabeth Ann (I33181)
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7170 | Surname is spelled Welch or Welsh depending on the record. | Welsh, Frank Clare (I2519)
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7171 | Surname is variously spelled Ratzborg, Razborg, Rosburg. | Rosburg, Kai Friedrich (I8611)
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7172 | Survived by 1 brother, 3 sons, and 4 daughters | McQuaig, HERBERT Henry (I14140)
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7173 | Susan Cooke From GENi Susan Cooke (Brande) Birthdate: circa 1548 (75) Birthplace: Wickford, Essex, England, United Kingdom Death: Died February 1623 in England, United Kingdom Place of Burial: St Leonard, Shoreditch, Middlesex, England Immediate Family: Father: Thomas Brand of Boxford Mother: Katherine Brand Spouses: NN de Netherbury Thomas Cooke Children: Joanna Cooke; Thomas Francis Cooke; Joseph Cooke; Naomi Cooke Elizabeth Peters Siblings: Richard Brand Elizabeth Brand About Susan Cooke Name: Susan BRAND Given Name: Susan Surname: Brand Sex: F Birth: 1548 in Brent Pelham, , Hertfordshire, England Death: 1621 in , , , England Event: Alt. Death Unknown Abt 1621 , , , England 1 Event: Alt. Birth Unknown 1550 Wickford, , Essex, England 1 Change Date: 22 May 2007 Father: Thomas BRAND b: 1516 in Brent Pelham, , Hertfordshire, England Marriage 1 Thomas COOKE b: 1541 in Wickford, , Essex, England Note: CHAN22 May 2007 Children Thomas COOKE b: 1570 in Netherbury, , Dorset, England Sources: 1. The Next Generation of Genealogy Sitebuilding, Copyright © 2001-2007, created by Darrin Lythgoe, Sandy, Utah. All rights reserved. 2. Author: Ancestry.com Title: OneWorldTree Publication: - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc | Brand, Sarah Elizabeth (I24791)
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7174 | Susan was married prior to her marriage to Charles Oswald Passler to a Carnagie. She had at least one son, Henry C. Carnagie born in 1885. | Carnagie, Susan A (I24343)
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7175 | Susanna was the second wife fo Johannes Ruckert. | Anschütz, Susanna Dorothea (I4206)
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7176 | Suspect that Margaret was previously married and her information is given as Mrs. Margaret Shipman. Margaret Leone Chamberlin, age 95 of Pilot Grove Missouri died Wednesday, May 21, 2018 at Katy Manor. She was born December 2, 1922 in Eureka Springs, Arkansas to Howard and Anna M. Beck. Margaret began her teaching career in 1941 in a one room schoolhouse in Laclede County, Missouri. She received her undergraduate degree at Southwest Baptist University in Bolivar, Missouri and her Masters Degree in Education from the University of Missouri, Columbia. She taught school in Missouri for over 45 years in Laclede County, Independence and Pilot Grove.l One of her greatest joys was spending time on her riding lawnmower until age 90. She loved her flower gardens, butterflies and watching birds. She enjoyed helping her community by maintaining city flower beds and assisting at the Pilot Grove recycling center. Margaret was an active member of the Pilot Grove Baptist Church by serving as a Sunday School teacher and also as the pianist. Preceding Margaret in death were her husband Leslie Chamberlin; son James D. Shipman; siblings James Robert, Billy Frank and Helen Beck. Those surviving Margaret are her sons William D. Shipman and wife Pam, Don R. Chamberlin and wife Jody; daughter in law Janet Shipman; six grandchildren Brett, Kyle, Blake and Kara Chamberlin and Rob and Tim Shipman. The family is thankful for the loving care and many kindnesses shown by the staff of Hartmann Village, Katy Manor, Hospice Compassus and Dr. Drew Shoemaker. You truly are the angels among us. Memorial contributions are suggested to the Pilot Grove Baptist Church, Missouri Baptist Children's Home or a donation to a cause close to your heart. Funeral services for Margaret L. Chamberlin will be at 1:00 P.M., Thursday, May 24, 2018 at the Baptist Church in Pilot Grove, Missouri with burial immediately following in Pilot Grove City Cemetery. Visitation will be held from 5 to 7 P.M., Wednesday evening, May 23, 2018 at Meisnehemer Funeral Home in Pilot Grove, Missouri. | Beck, Margaret (I8262)
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7177 | Suspension Bridge | Colt, Harriet Elizabeth (I30962)
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7178 | Sviatoslav I Igorevich (Old East Slavic: С~тославъ / Свѧтославъ[1] Игорєвичь, Sventoslavŭ / Svantoslavŭ Igorevičǐ; Old Norse: Sveinald Ingvarsson) (c. 942 – 26 March 972), also spelled Svyatoslav was a Grand prince of Kiev[2][3] famous for his persistent campaigns in the east and south, which precipitated the collapse of two great powers of Eastern Europe, Khazaria and the First Bulgarian Empire. He also conquered numerous East Slavic tribes, defeated the Alans and attacked the Volga Bulgars,[4][5] and at times was allied with the Pechenegs and Magyars. His decade-long reign over the Kievan Rus' was marked by rapid expansion into the Volga River valley, the Pontic steppe, and the Balkans. By the end of his short life, Sviatoslav carved out for himself the largest state in Europe, eventually moving his capital in 969 from Kiev (modern-day Ukraine) to Pereyaslavets (identified as the modern village of Nufăru, Romania)[6] on the Danube. In contrast with his mother's conversion to Christianity, Sviatoslav remained a staunch pagan all of his life. Due to his abrupt death in ambush, his conquests, for the most part, were not consolidated into a functioning empire, while his failure to establish a stable succession led to a fratricidal feud among his three sons, resulting in two of them being killed. Name The Primary Chronicle records Sviatoslav as the first ruler of the Kievan Rus' with a name of Slavic origin (as opposed to his predecessors, whose names had Old Norse forms). The name Sviatoslav, however, is not recorded in other medieval Slavic countries. Nevertheless, Sveinald is the Old East Norse cognate with the Slavic form as attested in the Old East Norse patronymic of Sviatoslav's son Vladimir: Valdamarr Sveinaldsson. This patronymic naming convention continues in Icelandic and in East Slavic languages. Even in Rus', it was attested only among the members of the house of Rurik, as were the names of Sviatoslav's immediate successors: Vladimir, Yaroslav, and Mstislav.[7][need quotation to verify] Some scholars see the name of Sviatoslav, composed of the Slavic roots for "holy" and "glory", as an artificial derivation combining the names of his predecessors Oleg and Rurik (whose names mean "holy" and "glorious" in Old Norse, respectively).[8] Early life and personality Virtually nothing is known about Sviatoslav's childhood and youth, which he spent reigning in Novgorod. Sviatoslav's father, Igor, was killed by the Drevlians around 945, and his mother, Olga, ruled as regent in Kiev until Sviatoslav reached maturity (ca. 963).[9] Sviatoslav was tutored by a Varangian named Asmud.[10] The tradition of employing Varangian tutors for the sons of ruling princes survived well into the 11th century. Sviatoslav appears to have had little patience for administration. His life was spent with his druzhina (roughly, "company") in permanent warfare against neighboring states. According to the Primary Chronicle, he carried on his expeditions neither wagons nor kettles, and he boiled no meat, rather cutting off small strips of horseflesh, game, or beef to eat after roasting it on the coals. Nor did he have a tent, rather spreading out a horse-blanket under him and setting his saddle under his head, and all his retinue did likewise. [11] Sviatoslav's appearance has been described very clearly by Leo the Deacon, who himself attended the meeting of Sviatoslav with John I Tzimiskes. Following Deacon's memories, Sviatoslav was a blue-eyed man of average height but of stalwart build, much more sturdy than Tzimiskes. He shaved his blond head and his beard but wore a bushy mustache and a sidelock as a sign of his nobility.[12] He pre ferred to dress in white, and it was noted that his garments were much cleaner than those of his men, although he had a lot in common with his warriors. He wore a single large gold earring bearing a carbuncle and two pearls.[13] Religious beliefs Sviatoslav's mother, Olga, converted to Eastern Orthodox Christianity at the court of Byzantine Emperor Constantine Porphyrogenitus in 957,[14] at the approximate age of 67. However, Sviatoslav remained a pagan all of his life. In the treaty of 971 between Sviatoslav and the Byzantine emperor John I Tzimiskes, the Rus' are swearing by Perun and Veles.[15] According to the Primary Chronicle, he believed that his warriors (druzhina) would lose respect for him and mock him if he became a Christian.[16] The allegiance of his warriors was of paramount importance in his conquest of an empire that stretched from the Volga to the Danube. Family Very little is known of Sviatoslav's family life. It is possible that he was not the only (or the eldest) son of his parents. The Russo-Byzantine treaty of 945 mentions a certain Predslava, Volodislav's wife, as the noblest of the Rus' women after Olga. The fact that Predslava was Oleg's mother is presented by Vasily Tatishchev. He also speculated that Predslava was of a Hungarian nobility. George Vernadsky was among many historians to speculate that Volodislav was Igor's eldest son and heir who died at some point during Olga's regency. Another chronicle told that Oleg (? - 944?) was the eldest son of Igor. At the time of Igor's death, Sviatoslav was still a child, and he was raised by his mother or under her instructions. Her influence, however, did not extend to his religious observance. Sviatoslav had several children, but the origin of his wives is not specified in the chronicle. By his wives, he had Yaropolk and Oleg.[17] By Malusha, a woman of indeterminate origins,[18] Sviatoslav had Vladimir, who would ultimately break with his father's paganism and convert Rus' to Christianity. John Skylitzes reported that Vladimir had a brother named Sfengus; whether this Sfengus was a son of Sviatoslav, a son of Malusha by a prior or subsequent husband, or an unrelated Rus' nobleman is unclear.[19] Five wives: Maloucha & Maloucha Malkonva & Debrime & Maria Monomakh & Kilikiya Dietmarschen Notes ^ "E.g. in the ''Primary Chronicle'' under year 970". Litopys.org.ua. Retrieved 6 July 2013. ^ "Svyatoslav I - Prince of Kiev". Online Encyclopædia Britannica. Britannica.com. Retrieved 23 November 2017. ^ "Vladimir I - Grand Prince of Kiev". Online Encyclopædia Britannica. Britannica.com. Retrieved 23 November 2017. ^ A History of Russia: Since 1855, Walter Moss, pg 29 ^ Khazarian state and its role in the history of Eastern Europe and the Caucasus A.P. Novoseltsev, Moscow, Nauka, 1990. (in Russian) ^ Stephenson, Paul (2000). Byzantium's Balkan Frontier: A Political Study of the Northern Balkans, 900-1204. Cambridge University Press. p. 56. ISBN 978-0-521-77017-0. Retrieved 24 November 2017. ^ Литвина, А. Ф.; Успенский, Федор Борисович (2006). Выбор имени у русских князей в X-XVI вв: династическая история сквозь призму антропонимики [The choice of personal names for the Russian princes of the 10th-16th centuries: a dynastic history through the prism of anthroponymy]. Труды по филологии и истории: Именослов, имя (in Russian). Индрик [Indrik]. p. 43. ISBN 5-85759-339-5. Retrieved 25 August 2016. ^ See А.М. Членов. К вопросу об имени Святослава, in Личные имена в прошлом, настоящем и будущем: проблемы антропонимики (Moscow, 1970). ^ If Olga was indeed born in 879, as the Primary Chronicle seems to imply, she should have been about 65 at the time of Sviatoslav's birth. There are clearly some problems with chronology. ^ Primary Chronicle entry for 968 ^ Cross and Sherbowitz-Wetzor, Primary Chronicle, p. 84. ^ For the alternative translations of the same passage of the Greek original that say that Sviatoslav may have not shaven but wispy beard and not one but two sidelocks on each side of his head, see e.g. Ian Heath "The Vikings (Elite 3)", Osprey Publishing 1985; ISBN 978-0-85045-565-6, p.60 or David Nicolle "Armies of Medieval Russia 750–1250 (Men-at-Arms 333)" Osprey Publishing 1999; ISBN 978-1-85532-848-8, p.44 ^ Vernadsky 276–277. The sidelock is reminiscent of Turkic hairstyles and practices and was later mimicked by Cossacks. ^ Based on his analysis of De Ceremoniis, Alexander Nazarenko hypothesizes that Olga hoped to orchestrate a marriage between Sviatoslav and a Byzantine princess. If her proposal was peremptorily declined (as it most certainly would have been), it is hardly surprising that Sviatoslav would look at the Byzantine Empire and her Christian culture with suspicion. Nazarenko 302. ^ Froianov, I. Ia.; A. Iu. Dvornichenko; Iu. V. Krivosheev (1992). "The Introduction of Christianity in Russia and the Pagan Traditions". In Marjorie Mandelstam Balzer. Russian Traditional Culture: Religion, Gender, and Customary Law. M.E. Sharpe. p. 4. ISBN 978-1-56324-039-3. Retrieved 19 February 2017. ^ Primary Chronicle _____. ^ Shared maternal paternity of Yaropolk and Oleg is a matter of debate by historians. ^ She is traditionally identified in Russian historiography as Dobrynya's sister; for other theories on her identity, see here. ^ Indeed, Franklin and Shepard advanced the hypothesis that Sfengus was identical with Mstislav of Tmutarakan. Franklin and Shepard 200-201. Additional History: https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/Святослав_Игоревич https://www.ffish.com/family_tree/descendants_igor/d1.ht | Igorevich, Svyatoslav I (I34394)
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7179 | Sybil Chesney d/o Ralph II Chesney & b- m- 1st wife - Robert FitzWalter d- Horsford, https://www.geni.com/people/Sybil-Fitz-Walter/6000000002188040994?through=348880897100012678 | de Chesney, Lady of Rudham Sybil (I34170)
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7180 | Sycamore Street | Weber, John August "Gus" (I22805)
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7181 | Sylvia G. Thompson Residence Center | Schweitzer, Carol Jean (I9871)
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7182 | Tadc mac Briain (died 1023) was the son of Brian Boru and Echrad, daughter of Carlus mac Ailella of Uí Áeda Odba.[1] Tadc had one son, Toirdelbach Ua Briain (Turlough O'Brien), with his wife Mór, daughter of Gilla Brigte Ua Maíl Muaid of Cenél Fiachach.[2] After Brian Boru's death at the battle of Clontarf in 1014, Tadc was a serious contender to the kingship of Munster, rivalling his half brother Donnchad mac Briain.[3] Tadc was assassinated at the instigation of Donnchad in 1023.[ | O'Brien, King Tadg Ban (I33282)
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7183 | Talmon Sexton, 69, of Kingsport, went to be with his Lord; his son, Dwayne; and many other family members already in Heaven; on Wednesday, July 6, 2011 at Wellmont Holston Valley Medical Center, Kingsport. Talmon was born on September 28, 1941 to the late Willard and Sarah Harness Sexton in Robbins, TN. He was a loving husband, great dad and wonderful friend, "Talmon" - The King's Servant, was truly a gift from God to many people. He was a friend to all who met him, selfless in all aspects of life, he always put others first. Talmon was a very humble man and demonstrated it daily. He was retired from Eastman Chemical after 31 years of Service. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by a son, Dwayne Sexton; two sisters, Brenda Gail Sexton and an infant babygirl Sexton. Survivors include his loving wife of 50 years, Mary Sue Sexton of the home; three sons, James Dean Sexton, Talmon David Sexton, Jason Darrell Sexton & wife, Lindsay, all of Kingsport; nine grandchildren, Talmon Dwayne Sexton II, Jacob Tyler Sexton, Lauren Brooke Sexton, Corey Dylan Sexton, Thomas Dalton Sexton, Trevor Darrell Sexton, Tyler Norris, Josh Hall and Briley Hall; three sisters, Rosie Marlow & husband, Don, Beulah Huffman and Cinda Jeffers & husband, James, all of Huntsville, TN; three brothers, Hollis Sexton & wife, Ellen Cathalean of Robbins, TN, Kenneth Sexton of Oneida, TN and Bobby Sexton & wife, Willa of Robbins, TN; father in law & mother in law, Rev. Jim and Juanita Hoskins; special brothers in law, Ronnie, Steve, and Phil Hoskins; and a host of nieces, nephews, and family friends. The family will receive friends from 6 - 8 pm on Saturday, July 10, 2011 at Carter-Trent Funeral Home, 520 Watauga Street, Kingsport. A funeral service will follow in the chapel at 8 pm with Dr. Phil Hoskins and Dr. Shannon Salyer, officiating. A visitation will be held from 5 - 8 pm on Monday, July 11, 2011 at Four Oaks Funeral Homes in Huntsville TN. Graveside services will be held at 10 am on Tuesday, July 12, 2011 at Smithers (Moffitt) Cemetery, Robbins, TN. Pallbearers will be family and friends. | Sexton, Talmon (I19537)
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7184 | Tarrant's Cemetery | McCurry, Joseph Elijah (I31743)
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7185 | Tarrant's Cemetery | Tarrant, Rebecca (I31744)
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7186 | Taylor Home | Nieland, Darlene May (I23939)
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7187 | Technically, Pompeia does NOT have a "last" name recorded, however (in that a last name is a Family Name) it would be Pompeia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pompeia_gens https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pompeia_(sister_of_Pompeius_Strabo) Pompeia (flourished 2nd and 1st century BC) was a Roman woman. She was an ancestor of the Roman emperors Augustus, Claudius, Caligula and Nero. Early life and background[edit] Pompeia was born and raised into a noble family in Picenum (modern Marche and Abruzzo) a rural district in Northern Italy, off the Adriatic Coast. Pompeia's mother was a woman called Lucilia. Lucilia’s family originated from Suessa Aurunca (modern Sessa Aurunca) and she was a sister of satire poet Gaius Lucilius. Lucilius was a friend of Roman general Scipio Aemilianus Africanus. Her paternal grandfather was Gnaeus Pompeius, while her father was Sextus Pompeius. Pompeia had two elder brothers Sextus Pompeius and Gnaeus Pompeius Strabo. Through Strabo, she was a paternal aunt to triumvir Pompey and his sister Pompeia. Marriage[edit] Pompeia married Marcus Atius Balbus (148 BC-87 BC), a senator of plebs status from Aricia (modern Ariccia). Pompeia and Balbus had a son a younger Marcus Atius Balbus in 105 BC. Her son married Julia Minor, the younger of two sisters of dictator Gaius Julius Caesar. The younger Balbus and Julia had three daughters. Among Pompeia's descendants was the first Roman Emperor Augustus as well as all the following Julio-Claudian emperors except Tiberius. | Pompeia Lucilla (I34080)
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7188 | Tennessee, United States | Roach, Stephen (I27417)
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7189 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family: Johnston, Douglas Eugene / Simmons, Brenda Lee (F6937)
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7190 | Terrzie was known to be alive on 23 Feb 1938. She gave her mother's father's name as Sdomnicky. He was a shoemaker and lived in Zamberk, was married and had three children. Joseph Sdomincky married Marie Chocovou and had five children. Marie Sdomnicky married Philip Sdomnicky and had three children. Terrzie Sdomicky married Jan Maries and had seven children. She died in 1878 at the age of 58 years. | Mares, Terrzie (I15957)
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7191 | The 10 Feb 1618 marriage record reads: I“ . . . on the 10th of February in this place were married . . . Mr Christopher Thomas, son of Heinrich Thomae, citizen of Hilburg[hausen], and Anna Cob, . . . widow of Georg Tseretfuhÿ of pious memory.” | Kob, Mrs Anna (I3904)
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7192 | The 1851 census states that John was born in Renfrow Shire, Paisley, Scotland. | McCuaig, John (I27780)
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7193 | The 1880 census notes "he parted from his wife" | Hartman, Charles (I10675)
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7194 | The 1880 census notes that "husband left her". | Kessler, Maria Josephine (I6606)
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7195 | The ancestor of the Arnolds, Endres Arnold, 1504, a Hildburghausen mayor; his first son Simon was a rich and wise man, counsel died 1530, whose great-granddaughter Regina Arnold born 1617, and died 1659, married Johann Sauerbrey of Themar, a learned senator and mentor of the lower court; whose son Johann Sauerrey, born 10 Sep 1644 in 1694 Gymnasium Director in Coburg and 1700 Professor in Erfurt, died 04 Dec 1721. From a second son of the Endres Arnold clergy came in Mebritz and Pfersdorf, as well as City attorney and Auditeurs in Hildburghausen. | Arnold, Andreas (I28747)
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7196 | The area no longer exists, but is part of the larger area of Baden-Württemberg. | Zimmerman, George Joseph (I15880)
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7197 | The baptism with Mich’l Thoma as the godfather — only the last line is done — Sunday, 14 Aug 1625 ( Sunday, 24 August 1625 in the Gregorian Calendar ) The German transcription : Michl Thuma Scherster [ Schuster ] | THOMÆ, Michael (I33079)
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7198 | The Battle of Pinkie Cleugh by Ellen Castelow Isolated since his break from Rome and Catholic Europe, Henry VIII sought to secure his northern borders though an alliance with Scotland. Henry’s proposal involved the marriage of his son, Prince Edward to the young Scottish Queen Mary. When the Scottish Parliament rejected Henry’s overtures, he sought to change their mind through a show of force …the so called ‘Rough Wooing’. When Henry died in 1547, the Duke of Somerset (pictured at the top left of this article), uncle to the new King Edward VI, was now effectively ruling England as its Lord Protector. Like Henry, Somerset liked the idea of an alliance with Scotland but as previously, the Scots rejected the proposal as it would have meant them having to adopt the Reformation, thus breaking their links with the Papacy. And so the Rough Wooing would continue, but this time it would get really rough! Somerset gathered the English army at Berwick before marching his force of around 18,000 men north, along the east coast road to Edinburgh, closely supported by a fleet of 30 warships. It fell to the Earl of Arran to organise the Scottish defences, who managed to muster an army estimated at 22,000 strong in response to the English invasion. Moving out of Edinburgh, Arran organised his troops on the west bank of the River Esk, blocking Somerset’s march on the Scottish capital. With the Firth of Forth to his left, he sited some of his artillery pieces out into the estuary to keep the English warships at bay. The main action began on 10th September 1547 with a charge by the English cavalry which was driven off by the Scottish pikemen. The artillery pieces from both sides were now brought into the action, including the canons from the English ships lying offshore. Battered now from three sides and unable to respond, the Scottish resistance began to crumble. In the last pitched battle to be fought between English and Scottish armies, the English offered precious little mercy to the retreating Scots. Estimates claim Scottish losses at around 6,000, earning this epic defeat the title of ‘Black Saturday’. As for the wooing, the infant Queen Mary was smuggled out of Scotland to France, where she would later marry Francis, Dauphin of France, in 1558. May 11, 2018 - https://www.stewartsociety.org/history-of-the-stewarts.cfm?section=famous-stewarts&subcatid=17&histid=534 Henry Stewart, 1st Lord Methven (c. 1495 – 1552) was Master of the Scottish Artillery and last husband of Margaret Tudor, eldest daughter of Henry VII of England and Elizabeth of York. He was a son of Andrew Stewart, 1st Lord Avondale and his wife Margaret Kennedy. His brother was Andrew Stewart, 1st Lord Ochiltree. Henry was a fifth-generation male-line descendant of Murdoch Stewart, 2nd Duke of Albany through his son Walter. He was thus a fourth cousin, twice removed of James IV of Scotland, first husband of Margaret Tudor. Henry and Margaret Tudor were married on 3 March 1528. Margaret had divorced her second husband Archibald Douglas, 6th Earl of Angus. She was already mother to James V of Scotland and Margaret Douglas from her previous marriages. This third marriage would produce another daughter, Dorothea Stewart, who died young. Reaction to the marriage was swift: Margaret and Henry were besieged at Stirling Castle by Lord Erskine, with the support of James V and her former husband, the Earl of Angus. Henry was imprisoned. However, after James V joined his mother at Stirling, Henry was created Lord Methven. Margaret made Methven captain of her castle of Newark in Ettrick. After Margaret died in 1541, Methven was able to marry his mistress, Janet Stewart, daughter of John Stewart, 2nd Earl of Atholl and Lady Janet Campbell. Her maternal grandparents were Archibald Campbell, 2nd Earl of Argyll and Elizabeth Stewart. Elizabeth was a daughter of John Stewart, 1st Earl of Lennox and Margaret Montgomerie. Margaret was a daughter of Alexander Montgomerie, 1st Lord Montgomerie and Margaret Boyd. Henry and Janet were parents to four children: Henry Stewart, 2nd Lord Methven (d. 3 March 1572). Dorothea Stewart. Married William Ruthven, 1st Earl of Gowrie. Joan Stewart. Married Colin Campbell, 6th Earl of Argyll. Margaret Stewart (d. 1 January 1627). Married Andrew Stuart, eldest son of Andrew Stewart, 2nd Lord Ochiltree. They were parents to Andrew Stuart, 1st Baron Castle Stuart. | Stewart, Sir Henry (I28447)
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7199 | The Bearded King Triffyn Farfog (English: Triffyn the Bearded; born c. AD 385) was a legendary king of Dyfed, son of Aed Brosc [it], a Deisi invader from Ireland, of the dynasty of Eochaid Allmuir. Triffyn married Gwledyr, the heiress of the British kings of Dyfed, in the mid-5th century and inherited the kingdom.[citation needed]. He was the reputed father of King Aergol Lawhir. His fraternal nephew, Cormac mac Urb, was the grandfather of Brychan mac Anlach, eponymous founder of Brycheiniog. | mac Aed Brosc, King Triffyn (I33521)
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7200 | The birth date of 1906 is presumed since the record states that she is buried in her mother’s grave. Her mother died 25 Feb 1906 of Meninigitis. | Passler, Mabel H (I24348)
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