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6851 Ruth Ann Stegner Crossett
Kansas City, MO - June 15, 1952 - July 22, 2021
Ruth Ann Crossett passed into the arms of Jesus on July 22, 2021. She was born to Ruth and Charles Stegner in 1952. Her siblings were beloved by her: Mary Gentry (sister), C. Keith (Irina), Ken (Shirley) and John (Karin) Stegner (brothers). She attended Bob Jones Academy then William Jewell College where she met and married her husband of 48 years, Tom Crossett.
She is survived by her sister and brothers, her children: Jessica Martin (Kevin), Lori Crossett and James Crossett. Her son, T. Lindsay, predeceased her and greeted her at the gates of Heaven on June 22. She is also survived by her wonderful grandchildren: Lily, Tessa, Asher, Makai, Ziva, Remy, Declan, Everly, Inara and Finneas (all Martins!).
What can be said of Ruth Ann? She was a daughter, sister, wife, mother (and grandmother) as well as a friend. From a very young age she was a Jesus-follower. She made sure her children knew Him, too. Her friends are too many to mention. Anyone who met her, loved her. She could have accomplished many worldly feats with her skills and personality. Instead, she chose to be a wife and mother …. noble callings!
At the time of her death, Ruth Ann was a member of Gashland Evangelical Presbyterian Church. However, she also leaves many beloved brothers and sisters-in-Christ at Green Valley Baptist and Frederick Blvd. Baptist Church in St. Joseph, Pleasant Valley Baptist Church, Liberty Christian Fellowship and Desperation Church.
Truly, hers was a life lived with great love. We who are left will miss her.
A "Celebration of Life" service is scheduled August 5, 2021 at 1:00p.m., at Gashland Evangelical Presbyterian Church. 
Stegner, Ruth Ann (I6844)
 
6852 s/o Hugh Trian of Trianstone (Tryaneston) the s/o trian, who held Trianstone,Kent
Robert Train held Trianstone kent until 1199 when King john took his manor of Trianstone as an escheat & banished Robert from England. 
de Trian, Robert (I33736)
 
6853 S2 US Navy World War I Grau, John Lewis (I16021)
 
6854 Saar Monistary, de Trèves, Travis Ansoud (I32176)
 
6855 Sabatewitz Georgii, Carl Gottlob (I32625)
 
6856 Saint Margaret of Scotland
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Saint Margaret of Scotland
StMargareth edinburgh castle2.jpg
Image of Saint Margaret in a window in St Margaret's Chapel, Edinburgh
Queen Consort of Scotland
Tenure 1070-93
Born c. 1045
Kingdom of Hungary
Died 16 November 1093
Edinburgh Castle, Edinburgh, Kingdom of Scotland
Burial Dunfermline Abbey, Fife, Kingdom of Scotland
Spouse King Malcolm III of Scotland
married 1070; widowed 1093
Issue
more... Edmund, Bishop of Dunkeld
Ethelred
King Edgar of Scotland
King Alexander I of Scotland
King David I of Scotland
Queen Matilda of England
Mary, Countess of Boulogne
House Wessex
Father Edward the Exile
Mother Agatha
Saint Margaret
Queen of Scots
Venerated in Roman Catholic Church and Anglican Communion
Canonized 1250 by Pope Innocent IV
Major shrine Dunfermline Abbey, Fife, Scotland
Feast
16 November,

10 June (pre-1970 General Roman Calendar)
Attributes reading
Patronage Scotland, Dunfermline, Fife, Shetland, The Queen's Ferry, and Anglo-Scottish relations
Saint Margaret of Scotland (c. 1045 – 16 November 1093), also known as Margaret of Wessex, was an English princess of the House of Wessex. Margaret was sometimes called "The Pearl of Scotland". Born in exile in the Kingdom of Hungary, she was the sister of Edgar Ætheling, the shortly reigned and uncrowned Anglo-Saxon King of England. Margaret and her family returned to the Kingdom of England in 1057, but fled to the Kingdom of Scotland following the Norman conquest of England in 1066. In 1070 Margaret married King Malcolm III of Scotland, becoming Queen of Scots. She was a very pious Roman Catholic, and among many charitable works she established a ferry across the Firth of Forth in Scotland for pilgrims travelling to St Andrews in Fife, which gave the towns of South Queensferry and North Queensferry their names. Margaret was the mother of three kings of Scotland, or four, if Edmund of Scotland, who ruled with his uncle, Donald III, is counted, and of a queen consort of England. According to the Vita S. Margaritae (Scotorum) Reginae (Life of St. Margaret, Queen (of the Scots)), attributed to Turgot of Durham, she died at Edinburgh Castle in Edinburgh, Scotland in 1093, merely days after receiving the news of her husband's death in battle. In 1250 Pope Innocent IV canonized her, and her remains were reinterred in a shrine in Dunfermline Abbey in Fife, Scotland. Her relics were dispersed after the Scottish Reformation and subsequently lost. Mary, Queen of Scots at one time owned her head, which was subsequently preserved by Jesuits in the Scottish College, Douai, France, from where it was subsequently lost during the French Revolution.

Contents [hide]
1 Early life
2 Return to England
3 Journey to Scotland
4 Progeny
5 Piety
6 Death
7 Veneration
7.1 Canonization and feast day
7.2 Institutions bearing her name
8 Ancestry
9 See also
10 Notes
11 References
12 Further reading
13 External links
Early life

Margaret from a medieval family tree.
Margaret was the daughter of the English prince Edward the Exile, and granddaughter of Edmund Ironside, king of England. After the Danish conquest of England in 1016, King Canute the Great had the infant Edward exiled to the continent. He was taken first to the court of the Swedish king, Olof Skötkonung, and then to Kiev. As an adult, he travelled to Hungary, where in 1046 he supported the successful bid of King Andrew I for the Hungarian crown. King Andrew I was then also known as "Andrew the Catholic" for his extreme aversion to pagans and great loyalty to the Roman Catholic Church. The provenance of Margaret's mother, Agatha, is legally disputed, but Margaret was born in Hungary c. 1045. Her brother Edgar the Ætheling and sister Cristina were also born in Hungary around this time. Margaret grew up in a very religious environment in the Hungarian court.

Return to England
Still a child, she came to England with the rest of her family when her father, Edward the Exile, was recalled in 1057 as a possible successor to her great-uncle, the childless St. King Edward the Confessor. Whether from natural or sinister causes, her father died immediately after landing, and Margaret continued to reside at the English court where her brother, Edgar Ætheling, was considered a possible successor to the English throne. When Edward the Confessor died in January 1066, Harold Godwinson was selected as king, possibly because Edgar was considered too young. After Harold's defeat at the Battle of Hastings later that year, Edgar was proclaimed King of England, but when the Normans advanced on London, the Witenagemot presented Edgar to William the Conqueror, who took him to Normandy before returning him to England in 1068, when Edgar, Margaret, Cristina, and their mother Agatha fled north to Northumbria, England.

Journey to Scotland
According to tradition, the widowed Agatha decided to leave Northumbria, England with her children and return to the continent. However, a storm drove their ship north to the Kingdom of Scotland in 1068, where they sought the protection of King Malcolm III. The locus where it is believed that they landed is known today as St Margaret's Hope, near the village of North Queensferry, Fife, Scotland. Margaret's arrival in Scotland, after the failed revolt of the Northumbrian earls, has been heavily romanticized, though Symeon of Durham implied that her first meeting of Malcolm III may not have been until 1070, after William the Conqueror's Harrying of the North.

King Malcolm III was a widower with two sons, Donald and Duncan. He would have been attracted to marrying one of the few remaining members of the Anglo-Saxon royal family. The marriage of Malcolm and Margaret occurred in 1070. Subsequently, Malcolm executed several invasions of Northumberland to support the claim of his new brother-in-law Edgar and to increase his own power. These, however, had little effect save the devastation of the County.

Progeny
Margaret and Malcolm had eight children, six sons and two daughters:

Edward (c. 1071 — 13 November 1093), killed along with his father Malcolm III in the Battle of Alnwick
Edmund of Scotland (c.1071 – post 1097)
Ethelred of Scotland, Abbot of Dunkeld, Perth and Kinross, Scotland
Edgar of Scotland (c.1074 — 11 January 1107), King of Scotland, regnat 1097-1107
Alexander I of Scotland (c.1078 — 23 April 1124), King of Scotland, regnat 1107-24
Edith of Scotland (c. 1080 – 1 May 1118), also named "Matilda", married King Henry I of England, Queen Consort of England
Mary of Scotland (1082-1116), married Eustace III of Boulogne
David I of Scotland (c.1083 – 24 May 1153), King of Scotland, regnat 1124-53
Piety

Malcolm greeting Margaret at her arrival in Scotland; detail of a mural by Victorian artist William Hole
Margaret's biographer Turgot of Durham, Bishop of St. Andrew's, credits her with having a civilizing influence on her husband Malcolm by reading him narratives from the Bible. She instigated religious reform, striving to conform the worship and practices of the Church in Scotland to those of Rome. This she did on the inspiration and with the guidance of Lanfranc, a future Archbishop of Canterbury. She also worked to conform the practices of the Scottish Church to those of the continental Church, which she experienced in her childhood. Due to these achievements, she was considered an exemplar of the "just ruler", and moreover influenced her husband and children, especially her youngest son, the future King David I of Scotland, to be just and holy rulers.

"The chroniclers all agree in depicting Queen Margaret as a strong, pure, noble character, who had very great influence over her husband, and through him over Scottish history, especially in its ecclesiastical aspects. Her religion, which was genuine and intense, was of the newest Roman style; and to her are attributed a number of reforms by which the Church [in] Scotland was considerably modified from the insular and primitive type which down to her time it had exhibited. Among those expressly mentioned are a change in the manner of observing Lent, which thenceforward began as elsewhere on Ash Wednesday and not as previously on the following Monday, and the abolition of the old practice of observing Saturday (Sabbath), not Sunday, as the day of rest from labour (see Skene's Celtic Scotland, book ii chap. 8)." The later editions of the Encyclopædia Britannica, however, as an example, the Eleventh Edition, remove Skene's opinion that Scottish Catholics formerly rested from work on Saturday, something for which there is no historical evidence. Skene's Celtic Scotland, vol. ii, chap. 8, pp. 348–350, quotes from a contemporary document regarding Margaret's life, but his source says nothing at all of Saturday Sabbath observance, but rather says St. Margaret exhorted the Scots to cease their tendency "to neglect the due observance of the Lord's day."

She attended to charitable works, serving orphans and the poor every day before she ate and washing the feet of the poor in imitation of Christ. She rose at midnight every night to attend the liturgy. She successfully invited the Benedictine Order to establish a monastery in Dunfermline, Fife in 1072, and established ferries at Queensferry and North Berwick to assist pilgrims journeying from south of the Firth of Forth to St. Andrew's in Fife. She used a cave on the banks of the Tower Burn in Dunfermline as a place of devotion and prayer. St. Margaret's Cave, now covered beneath a municipal car park, is open to the public. Among other deeds, Margaret also instigated the restoration of Iona Abbey in Scotland. She is also known to have interceded for the release of fellow English exiles who had been forced into serfdom by the Norman conquest of England.

Margaret was as pious privately as she was publicly. She spent much of her time in prayer, devotional reading, and ecclesiastical embroidery. This apparently had considerable effect on the more uncouth Malcolm, who was illiterate: he so admired her piety that he had her books decorated in gold and silver. One of these, a pocket gospel book with portraits of the Evangelists, is in the Bodleian Library in Oxford, England.

Malcolm was apparently largely ignorant of the long-term effects of Margaret's endeavours, not being especially religious himself. He was content for her to pursue her reforms as she desired, which was a testament to the strength of and affection in their marriage.

Death
Her husband Malcolm III, and their eldest son Edward, were killed in the Battle of Alnwick against the English on 13 November 1093. Her son Edgar was left with the task of informing his mother of their deaths. Margaret was not yet 50 years old, but a life of constant austerity and fasting had taken their toll. Already ill, Margaret died on 16 November 1093, three days after the deaths of her husband and eldest son. She was buried before the high altar in Dunfermline Abbey in Fife, Scotland. In 1250, the year of her canonization, her body and that of her husband were exhumed and placed in a new shrine in the Abbey. In 1560 Mary Queen of Scots had Margaret's head removed to Edinburgh Castle as a relic to assist her in childbirth. In 1597 Margaret's head ended up with the Jesuits at the Scottish College, Douai, France, but was lost during the French Revolution. King Philip of Spain had the other remains of Margaret and Malcolm III transferred to the Escorial palace in Madrid, Spain, but their present location has not been discovered.

Veneration

Site of the ruined Shrine of St. Margaret at Dunfermline Abbey, Fife, Scotland

St Margaret's Chapel in Edinburgh Castle, Edinburgh, Scotland

St Margaret's Church in Dunfermline, Fife, Scotland
Canonization and feast day
Pope Innocent IV canonized St. Margaret in 1250 in recognition of her personal holiness, fidelity to the Roman Catholic Church, work for ecclesiastical reform, and charity. On 19 June 1250, after her canonisation, her remains were transferred to a chapel in the eastern apse of Dunfermline Abbey in Fife, Scotland. In 1693 Pope Innocent XII moved her feast day to 10 June in recognition of the birthdate of the son of James VII of Scotland and II of England. In the revision of the General Roman Calendar in 1969, 16 November became free and the Church transferred her feast day to 16 November, the date of her death, on which it always had been observed in Scotland. However, some traditionalist Catholics continue to celebrate her feast day on 10 June.

She is also venerated as a saint in the Anglican Church.

Institutions bearing her name
Several churches throughout the world are dedicated in honour of St Margaret. One of the oldest is St Margaret's Chapel in Edinburgh Castle in Edinburgh, Scotland, which her son King David I founded. The Chapel was long thought to have been the oratory of Margaret herself, but is now thought to have been established in the 12th century. The oldest edifice in Edinburgh, it was restored in the 19th century and refurbished in the 1990s. Numerous other institutions are named for her as well.
Queen of Scotland

Born in exile in Hungary. Margaret and her family returned to England in 1057, but fled to the Kingdom of Scotland following the Norman conquest of England of 1066. Around 1070 Margaret married Malcolm III of Scotland, becoming his queen consort. She was a pious woman, and among many charitable works she established a ferry across the Firth of Forth for pilgrims traveling to Dunfermline Abbey. Margaret was the mother of three kings of Scotland (or four, if one includes Edmund of Scotland, who ruled Scotland with his uncle, Donald III) and of a queen consort of England. She died at Edinburgh Castle in 1093, just days after receiving the news of her husband's death in battle. In 1250 she was canonized by Pope Innocent IV, and her remains were reinterred in a shrine at Dunfermline Abbey. Her relics were dispersed after the Scottish Reformation and subsequently lost. Per Wikipedia.org 
Aetheling, Queen of Scotland and Saint Margaret (I25448)
 
6857 Saint Mihiel Americal Cemetery and Memorial Haller, Richard William (I27467)
 
6858 Saint Olga (Church Slavonic: Ольга, died 969 AD in Kiev) was a regent of Kievan Rus' for her son Svyatoslav from 945 until 960. She is known for her obliteration of the Drevlians, a tribe that had killed her husband Igor of Kiev. Even though it would be her grandson Vladimir that would convert the entire nation to Christianity, for her efforts to spread Christianity through the Rus' Olga is venerated as a saint. While her birthdate is unknown, it could be as early as AD 890 and as late as 5 June 925.[1]

Grand Princess of Kiev, Equal to the Apostles
Born
Pskov
Died
11 July 969
Kiev
Venerated in
Roman Catholicism
Eastern Catholicism, especially in the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church
Eastern Orthodoxy
Feast
July 11/24

Early life Edit

Olga was reportedly from Pskov. The Primary Chronicle gives 879 as her date of birth, which is unlikely, given the birth of her only son probably some 65 years after that date. She was, hypothetically, of Varangian extraction.

She married the future Igor of Kiev arguably in 903, but perhaps as early as 901-902.

Regency Edit

After Igor's death on 945, Olga ruled Kievan Rus as regent on behalf of their son Svyatoslav.[2]

In 947, Princess Olga launched a punitive expedition against the tribal elites between the Luga and the Msta River.[3] Following this successful campaign, a number of forts were erected at Olga’s orders. One of them is supposed to be Gorodets in the Luga region[4] a fortification dated to the middle of the 10th century. Because of its isolated location, Gorodets does not seem to have been in any way associated with the pre-existing settlement pattern. Moreover, the fort produced another example of square timber frames designed to consolidate the rampart that was seen at Rurikovo Gorodische. The same building technique was in use a century later in the Novgorod fortifications.

Olga remained regent ruler of Kievan Rus with the support of the army and her people. She changed the system of tribute gathering (poliudie) in the first legal reform recorded in Eastern Europe. She continued to evade proposals of marriage, defended the city during the Siege of Kiev in 968, and saved the power of the throne for her son.

Drevlian Uprising Edit
The following account is taken from the Primary Chronicle. Princess Olga was the wife of Igor of Kiev, who was killed by the Drevlians. At the time of her husband's death, their son Svyatoslav was three years old, making Olga the official ruler of Kievan Rus' until he reached adulthood. The Drevlians wanted Olga to marry their Prince Mal, making him the ruler of Kievan Rus', but Olga was determined to remain in power and preserve it for her son.

The Drevlians sent twenty of their best men to persuade Olga to marry their Prince Mal and give up her rule of Kievan Rus'. She had them buried alive. Then she sent word to Prince Mal that she accepted the proposal, but required their most distinguished men to accompany her on the journey in order for her people to accept the offer of marriage. The Drevlians sent the best men who governed their land. Upon their arrival, she offered them a warm welcome and an invitation to clean up after their long journey in a bathhouse. After they entered, she locked the doors and set fire to the building, burning them alive.

With the best and wisest men out of the way, she planned to destroy the remaining Drevlians. She invited them to a funeral feast so she could mourn over her husband's grave. Her servants waited on them, and after the Drevlians were drunk, Olga's soldiers killed over 5,000 of them.[2] She then placed the city under siege.[2] She asked for three pigeons and three sparrows from each house; she claimed she did not want to burden the villagers any further after the siege.[2] They were happy to comply with the request.

Now Olga gave to each soldier in her army a pigeon or a sparrow, and ordered them to attach by thread to each bird a piece of sulfur bound with small pieces of cloth. When night fell, Olga bade her soldiers release the pigeons and the sparrows. So the birds flew to their nests, the pigeons to the cotes, and the sparrows under the eaves. The dove-cotes, the coops, the porches, and the haymows were set on fire. There was not a house that was not consumed, and it was impossible to extinguish the flames because all the houses caught on fire at once. The people fled from the city, and Olga ordered her soldiers to catch them. Thus she took the city and burned it, and captured the elders of the city. Some of the other captives she killed, while some she gave as slaves to her followers. The remnant she left to pay tribute.[5]

The story, however, is most likely a myth.[2]

Relations with the Holy Roman Emperor Edit
Seven Latin sources document Olga's embassy to Holy Roman Emperor Otto I in 959. The continuation of Regino of Prüm mentions that the envoys requested the emperor to appoint a bishop and priests for their nation. The chronicler accuses the envoys of lies, commenting that their trick was not exposed until later. Thietmar of Merseburg says that the first archbishop of Magdeburg, Saint Adalbert of Magdeburg, before being promoted to this high rank, was sent by Emperor Otto to the country of the Rus' (Rusciae) as a simple bishop but was expelled by pagan allies of Svyatoslav I. The same data is repeated in the annals of Quedlinburg and Hildesheim.

Christianity

Olga was the first ruler of Rus' to convert to Christianity, done in either 945 or 957. The ceremonies of her formal reception in Constantinople were detailed by Emperor Constantine VII in his book De Ceremoniis. Following her baptism, Olga took the Christian name Yelena, after the reigning Empress Helena Lekapena. The Slavonic chronicles add apocryphal details to the account of her baptism, such as the story of how she charmed and "outwitted" Constantine and spurned his proposals of marriage. In actuality, at the time of her baptism, Olga was an old woman, while Constantine already had a wife.

Olga was one of the first people of Rus' to be proclaimed a saint for her efforts to spread Christianity throughout the country. Because of her proselytizing influence, the Eastern Orthodox Church, the Ruthenian Greek Catholic Church, and the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church call Saint Olga by the honorific Isapóstolos, "Equal to the Apostles". She is also a saint in the Roman Catholic Church. However, she failed to convert Svyatoslav, and it was left to Vladimir I, her grandson and pupil, to make Christianity the lasting state religion. During her son's prolonged military campaigns, she remained in charge of Kiev, residing in the castle of Vyshgorod with her grandsons. She died in 969, soon after the Pechenegs' siege of the city.[6][7]

Notes

1. “Princess Olga of Kiev". Russiapedia. Retrieved 18 May 2016.

2. a b c d e Clements 2012, p. 7.

3. Laurentian Codex (1997:60)

4. Lebedev 1982:225-238; Zalevskaia 1982:49-54

5. Russian Primary Chronicle

6. extracts of the Primary Chronicle in English translation, University of Oregon

7. Primary Sources - A collection of translated excerpts on Medieval Rus, University of Washington Faculty Web Server (November 6, 2004)

References

Clements, Barbara Evans (2012). A History of Women in Russia: From Earliest Times to the Present. Indiana University Press.

Additional History:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olga_of_Kiev

https://www.ffish.com/family_tree/descendants_igor/d1.ht 
of Kievian Rus', Saint Olga (I34395)
 
6859 Saint Pauls Church Family: Fowzer, Edward / Huggins, Isabella (F12047)
 
6860 Saline Churchyard Newell, John (I14624)
 
6861 Samuel had two children (Ernest L. born 1893) and Brooksie M,born 1895 by his first wife Bertha Melton. It appears that they two were divorced and then Samuel married Hattie Weber. I suspect his first two children were born in or around Rocheport, Missouri. Tudor, Samuel HARRY (I31157)
 
6862 Samuel John McQUigg of Islandcarragh, lives in a house built in 1892 on a farm repurchased by the McQuigg family. The McQuigg who farmed here emigrated and sold to Thomspons (the same Thompson as James Maye Thompson of Bushmills Road), who sold to Logue, who resold to the McQuiggs who farmed on the opposite side of the road. This latter farm was never bought or sold since the McQuiggs came to Islandcarragh. His uncles James and Moore inherited a farm at Senirl from their father. Moore McQuigg emigrated to Kalzmazoo where he built in 1929 the fine First Presbyterian Church in this city at a cost of $375,000. James McQuigg sold senirl to Henry McNickle and bought a farm at Ballyhunsley from Mrs. McVicker who married his brother Samuel of Islandcarragh. The Ballyhunsley farm is now Robert Bleakley's

The McQuiggs of Ballyclough were the same family. The mcQUigg farms in Islandcarragh and Ballyclough marched one another, and there was a path across the fields between the two farmsteads. The line of this path can still be traced. A Samuel McQuigg of Ballyclough was married to a Lyle of Carncoggie; his grandson William John led he singing in the old Presbyterian church of Benarden or Carcoggie. A Miss Dyson, a missionary in Egypt, is descended from the McQuiggs of Ballyclough. The McQuiggs of Berehill were also the same family. The Ballyclough farm is now Cochranes: Cochranes originally came from the Limavady district. Another related McQuigg family was McQuigg of Ballyrock; this farm is now owned by Robert Walker of Ballyrock. 
McQuigg, Samuel John (I11293)
 
6863 Samuel was a widower when he married Nancy McQuigg and a farmer of Ballyclough. Moore, Samuel (I19474)
 
6864 Sanders says he succeeded to the barony of Kempsford by 1155, and refers to him as "Pain I de Mundubleil". He writes that he "appears to have lost control of his lands some time between March 1166 and Mich. 1167 but to have regained possession of them by 1168". [1]

He died 1170 and was succeeded by his son and heir Patrick III de Chaworth, who died 1237. 
de Chaworth, Payne I (I35599)
 
6865 Sandra Lee Schlotzhauer, 65, of Sedalia, died Friday, September 9, 2005, at her home. She was born at Boonville on November 14, 1939, a daughter of Clarence W. & Sara Alberta (Cassing) Thoma. She was a 1957 graduate of Smith Cotton High School and had worked at Mattingly's and Wal-Mart. She enjoyed being a homemaker. She hobbied at making and selling crafts, exhibiting those at craft shows and the Missouri State Fair. She was a member of Wesley United Methodist Church.

Mrs. Schlotzhauer is survived at home by her husband of 43 years, Gene Schlotzhauer; two sons, Mike Schlotzhauer of Smithton and Steve Schlotzhauer of St Peters; two sisters, Betty Jean Carpenter and Nancy Jane Lane, both of Sedalia; and two grandsons, Taylor and George Schlotzhauer.

The public may call after 11:00 a.m. Sunday at McLaughlin Funeral Chapel, where the family will receive friends from 6 to 8 p.m. Services will be at 10:30 a.m. Monday at Wesley United Methodist Church, with Rev. Barbara Phifer officiating. Burial will be in Memorial Park Cemetery.

Pallbearers will be Ed Cain, Jim Farris, James Lane, Tony Neth, Rod Schlotzhauer, and James Stevenson. 
Thoma, Sandra Lee (I23604)
 
6866 Sarah and her brother Levi Eldridge (# 20963576) and another sister Arminda moved to Kentucky with their widowed mother Jane "Jenny" (Gilley) Eldridge some time between 1810 and 1820. They probably moved here with Stephen Caudill and others who came to Kentucky about the same time. Sarah's brother Levi married Stephen's daughter Easter. Arminda is believed to have married and eventually moved to Brown County, OH. Eli and his first wife Tabitha Pennington had four children. Sarah and Eli had 12 children. Info found on Sarah's memorial on findagrave.com. See link at:
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=Boggs&GSfn=Sarah&GSbyrel=all&GSdy=1880&GSdyrel=in&GSob=n&GRid=68067161&df=all& 
Eldridge, Sarah Margaret (I31692)
 
6867 Sarah Cole
From GENI

Sarah Cole (Beck)
Birthdate: 1599 (60)
Birthplace: Probably England
Death: Died 1659 in St. Jerome's, St. Mary's County, Province of Maryland

Immediate Family:
Spouse:
William Cole
Children:
William Cole;
Mary Gwither;
Jane Cole;
William Cole, ll;
John Cole;
Richard Cole 
Beck, Sarah (I24961)
 
6868 Sarah Isles
From GENi

Sarah Isles
Birthdate: 1590
Birthplace: England
Death: (Date and location unknown)
Immediate Family:
Father:
Thomas Isles
Mother:
Mary Iles
Spouse:
Thomas Godfrey
Children:
Jane Harrison;
Sir Edmund Berry Godfrey;
Edward Godfrey;
Benjamin Godfrey;
Peter Godfrey;
Richard Godfrey;
John Godfrey
Michael Godfrey 
Isles, Sarah (I25274)
 
6869 Sarah McVicker was a widow when they married. I believe that Samuel was first married to Sarah Baird, but she died before 10 Dec 1897 without children. It is also listed that Sarah McVicker was married in Ballyhunsley. McVicker, Sarah (I2853)
 
6870 Sarah SIMMONS Birth: MAY 1858 in Crawford County, Pennsylvania She said she was born in Ohio in the 1900 census. Living 4 JUN 1904 Pettis County, Missouri Sarah White was living in Sedalia when her father died. Father: Russell SIMMONS b: JUN 1816 in New York Mother: Charlotte BURLEEN b: ABT 1820 in Pennsylvania Marriage 1 James S WHITE b: NOV 1852 in Missouri Married: 7 JAN 1874 in Pettis County, Missouri Children Thaddeus B WHITE b: OCT 1877 in Sedalia, Pettis County, Missouri Marriage 2 Mr DRISKELL b: ABT 1855 Married: AFT 1900 Lillie Shipp said that Sarah married Mr Driskell after her husband, James, died. SPOUSE! Russell Simmons obituary in Sedalia Capital, 1904. Simmons, Sarah J (I32752)
 
6871 Sarah Soule daughter of John Soule Rebecca Simmons, was born
about 1660 in Duxbury, Plymouth, Massachusetts Bay, British Colonial America.
She was married about 1680 to Adam Wright in Plymouth, Plymouth, Massachusetts Bay, British Colonial America.

She died 16 March 1690 in Duxbury, Plymouth, Massachusetts Bay, British Colonial America.

Burial March 1690 in The Green, Middleborough, Plymouth, Massachusetts Bay, British Colonial America. 
Soule, Sarah (I32942)
 
6872 Sarah Thomas
From Geni

Sarah Thomas (Harrison)
Birthdate: 1628 (59)
Birthplace: Bristol, England
Death: Died November 25, 1687 in Anne Arundel, Maryland

Immediate Family:
Father:
Edmund Harrison
Mother:
Jane Harrison
Spouse:
Lt. Philip Thomas
Children:
Martha Arnell / Arnold;
Philip Thomas, II;
Sarah Mears;
Elizabeth Harrison Cole
Samuel Thomas, Sr.
Sibling:
Godfrey Harrison

About Sarah Thomas
http://our-royal-titled-noble-and-commoner-ancestors.com/p2617.htm#i78636
'Sarah Harrison
b. circa 1628, d. 25 November 1687
Father
Edmund Harrison b. c 1605
Mother
Jane Godfrey
Sarah Harrison was born circa 1628 at of Bristol, Gloucestershire, England. She married Philip Thomas, son of Evan Thomas and Sarah, circa 1651 at England. Sarah Harrison died on 25 November 1687 at Anne Arundel, MD.
'Family Philip Thomas b. c 1620, d. 1674
Child
◦Elizabeth Thomas+ b. c 1654 
Harrison, Sarah (I24782)
 
6873 Saratoga Springs, NY - Calvin R. McQuigge of West Circular St. passed away peacefully at his home Sunday, Dec. 21, 2008. He was 78. Born on Nov. 9, 1930 in Havelock Ontario, he was the son of the late Thomas and Cora Jane (Cobert) McQuigge. Calvin was an avid horseman and Yankee fan. He was track superintendent at Saratoga Raceway until his retirement. In addition to his parents, he is predeceased by his beloved wife Jean. Survivors include his sister, Veleeta Ibey of Ontario Canada; two sons, Jeffrey McQuigge of Gansevoort and his wife Martha and Thomas McQuigge of Saratoga Springs and his wife Lisa; two daughters, Rene McQuigge of Neptune Beach, FL and Diane McQuigge of Greenfield Center; six grandchildren, Amy, Eric, April, Kellylin, Krystal and Ally; and two great grandchildren, Cooper and Ty. There will be no calling hours. Burial will be at the convenience of the family. Any contributions in Calvin's memory may be made to Community Hospice of Saratoga, 179 Lawrence St., Saratoga Springs, NY 12866. Arrangements are under the direction of the William J. Burke & Sons/Bussing & Cunniff Funeral Homes of 628 North Broadway (584-5373). McQuigge, Calvin R (I35206)
 
6874 Saughter of the forestry master Stephan Grahner in Schönau on the offices of Schleusingen, Suhl, Benshausen and Kühndorf and his housewife Margaretha Leipold, daughter of Caspar Leipold, Professor and Schöppenstuhlassessors in Coburg. Grahner, Sabine Elisabetha (I29352)
 
6875 Saw military service in World War Ii, Pacific Campaign. His occupation for most of his life was owning and running Lloyd's Grocery, on of the family groceries in Boonville. He was also a volunteer fireman, city councilman, active in VFW and the American Legion. From Glenda Sue nee' Amick. Wolfe, Lloyd Ray (I12382)
 
6876 Schmidt, Karl (Carl) Günther
* Sulzbach 11.03.1804, † Jena 12.02.1855
V: Rudolf Ludwig Gottlieb Schmid, * (1748), v 21.07.1814 (65 ¾ J), H II 1807; M: Anna Juliette Johannetta Baumann, * (1755), v 16.03.1806 (51 yrs)
Lessons with the father until 1814; educated with close relative, N.N. Krause, cons., Sp. GenSup. Weimar; 1816 Klingesches boys institute Jena; Gym. Weimar; University of Jena; Reader Porstendorf; b. his brother in
Jenaprießnitz (1 y), candidate 26.09.1827; Dr. phil. ord. u. subscr. Weimar 20.02.1834
1834 (27.04.) - 1848 Adiak. Blankenhain u. Pf. Lengefeld, 1848 (28.09.) - 1853 Pf. Sprötau

H 18.04.1835 Bertha Holbein, * (1814), v (Baden) 27.08.1885 (as a widow), lived in Jena, 1872
unmarried daughter Martha to Karlsruhe / Baden, to support her youngest daughter
4 children (1 p., 3 d.)
S.N., small v
T. Martha, * (1838), single (1872)
T.N., HN.N., Pf.
T. (jg.) N.N., kindergarten teacher, Karlsruhe (1872)
Bem .: also Schmid. Stroke 30.06.1852; em. Michael 1853. 
Schmid, Karl Günther (I29244)
 
6877 Schmidt, Ulrich Rudolf
* Sulzbach 14.06.1808, †
V: Rudolph Ludwig Gottlieb (Rudolf Ludewig) S., * Jena (1748), † Sulzbach 21.07.1814, 1784 - 1795 Diak. Lobeda
u. Pf. Wöllnitz, 1793 - 1814 Pf. (And Rutha u. Sulza), 1804 - 1814 Pf. Sulzbach
University of Jena 1827 - 1834; Candidate Easter 1834, resigned from the candidate list 1834 - 1847, 2. Ex.
09/14/1851
ord. u. subscr. Weimar 30.11.1848
1848 - 1851 Col. Dornburg, 1851 - 1878 Diak. Lobeda
Bem .: also Schmid. Author: The Meaning of Our Time (1871). Em. 1878, retired Jena; gr. picture 1867; Brothers:
Karl (Carl) Günther S., 1834 - 1848 Adiak. Blankenhain u. Pf. Lengefeld 
Schmid, Ulrich Rudolf (I29251)
 
6878 Schönweide Suburban area of Berlin Family: Essig, Ed / Schwartz, Caroline (F11083)
 
6879 School at Neustadt bei Coburg, the general gymnasium at Coburg, graduated from the University of Wittenberg in 1691, and obtained his masters degree on 04 Apr 1696, He was ordained on 16 May 1704.

From 1704 - 1709 he was the personal deacon to the widow of the Duke Albrecht of Coburg. And then until 1719 he also was a cantor, pastor, and adjunct to Meeder. From 1719 to 1739 he was the adjunct to Rodach and on 22 Feb 1737 was appoint first pastor to Rodach.

A long standing member of the Society of Science and Charity. He wrote the Life of Ernest the Pious that was published in Leipzig in 1704. 
Eyring, Elias Martin (I9806)
 
6880 Scott County, Tennessee
FNB Chronicles

This page was created 06 Sep 2008

Joseph Griffith: Land Grant Settler of Brimstone

By JOSETTA GRIFFITH
FNB Chronicle Editor

It was taxation without representation that caused the colonies to go to war to gain independence from the crown of England. JOSEPH GRIFFITH was only seventeen years of age when he enlisted in 1775. The war ended in 1781 and the treaty of peace for the Revolutionary War was signed in 1783.

A Revolutionary War land grant (filed in Anderson County, TN.) lured JOSEPH and his family from Virginia to the mountainous area called Brimstone in Tennessee. According to surveys dated in 1808 and 1809 JOSEPH GRIFFITH owned two tracts (126 acres and 64 acres) on New River. The long, fertile valleys along the banks of Brimstone Creek provided lush grasses for livestock, rich soil for crops and the hardwood trees that covered the mountains provided logs for houses and barns. It’s uncertain just where JOSEPH settled on Brimstone, but his descendants are many and are scattered throughout America. One of the most famous relatives of JOSEPH GRIFFITH is RICHARD MILHOUS NIXON, former President of the United States of America. His great, great, great grandmother was ANN GRIFFITH, a sister to JOSEPH GRIFFITH.

The Tombstone of Revolutionary War soldier Joseph Griffith, who was a land grand settler in Scott County

Researchers have proven that all the Scott County Griffiths originated from JOSEPH GRIFFITH, who was born October 22, 1758 somewhere in Maryland. His ancestors have been traced back to Wales, 1630, by some accounts, and possibly back to AD 948 by some documents. He was living in Brunswick County, VA. when he enlisted in the Revolutionary War. JOSEPH GRIFFITH was a personal "life" guard of General GEORGE WASHINGTON and witnessed CORNWALLACE surrender his sword to General WASHINGTON. His place of residence was listed as Morgan County, TN. when he applied for a Revolutionary War pension in 1833. Scott County, TN. was formed from parts of Morgan, Campbell, Anderson and Fentress counties in 1849. An 1832 map of Tennessee surveyed by MATHEW RHEA shows the parent counties of the area later to become Scott County and all of the land area south of the New river (which encompasses all of the Brimstone area, as well as, the Glenmary area) lay in what was then known as Morgan County, TN.

The area known as Brimstone lies in the long valleys through which Brimstone Creek flows from its headwaters in the Rhoda Creek area northward where it empties into the New river between the settlements of Low Gap and New River. The valleys of Brimstone slope upward to Round Mountain, Signal Mountain, Gosnell and Flower Mountain on the eastern boundary and Wright Mountain and the Griffith Mountains bound the western side. The headwaters of Brimstone Creek flow from near the Hamby Gap through which travelers could get to the Emery section of Morgan County. The area of convergence of Rhoda Creek and Brimstone Creek is known as Rhoda Creek and may have been named after JOSEPH’s daughter, RHODA.

The main road to Brimstone begins at Robbins, TN. near G&K Hicks Grocery. Other ways to the Brimstone Road are by way of Low Gap to Mt. Pleasant Church, through Glenmary on the Wolf Creek Road to the Indian Fork Road to the Leon Walker Bridge, and by way of haul roads across the mountains from the Bull Creek and Smokey Creek areas.

Documents on file with the Pension Department of the United States show that on April 20, 1833, JOSEPH GRIFFITH applied for a Revolutionary War pension.

Tomb beside Joseph Griffith’s Revolutionary War marker in the Goad Cemetery on the Robert Byrge Farm at Brimstone.

The following is a transcript of the affidavit in connection with the application:

"State of Tennysee Morgan County. On the 20th day of April 1833 personally affirmed before me THOMAS JACK a justice of the peace and one of the justices of the Court of pleas and quarter sysion for the county of Morgan aforesaid JOSEPH GRIFFITH resident in the county of Morgan State of Tennysee. And at the house of the residence of the said JOSEPH GRIFFITH who is a very aged & affirm man & who not having any record of his age, & who from old age infirmity of years is unable to get to court and who being first duly sworn according to law doth on his oath make the following declaration in order to obtain the benefit of the provisions made by the act of Congrys paysed June 7th 1832, that he enlisted as a private regular in the Army of the United States the day & date cannot now from old age & consequent loys of memory be now recollected but it was about six years before the surrender of (CORNWALLIS) at York. He entered and served in the 7th Regiment of the Virginia Line his time of enlistment was to be during the war. Applicant lived in Brunswick County, State of Virginia and enlisted & entered in the service as aforesaid under the following officers to wit: Captain EDWARD YARBOWER Lieutenant name not now recollected Major LIN Col. JOSEPH (Crrokett) CROCKETT, Genl. WASHINGTON. Was marched to Peters Burg was in battle at Peters Burg was stationed there about six weeks. Was then marched to Richmond was in the battle of Richmond was marched to Divers Points (Different Points) all of which cant now be recollected but was in the service at Richard & was then at Dificrent points (different points). Wherever neysity called for him some three or four years. He was, then marched up the country after the Brittish Army in the State of North Carrolinia (Carolina) was in the battle fought with the Torries at Musgrove’s Mill where the Torries was defeated was marched & placed under the command of General GREEN was then marched to Guilford was in the battle of Guilford was then marched to Divers Points (different points) pursuing the Brittish Army until the seige of York was in the seige was one of General WASHINGTON’s Life Guards on the day that CORNWALLICE surrendered. Saw CORNWALLICE deliver his sword to General WASHINGTON. Applicant was then marched as one of the Guards over the prisoners to King and Queens county near Apple tree church was then honorably but verbably discharged. Applicant cant from old age & consequent

(Continues on page 4)

(Continued from page 1)

loss of memory recollect the precise length of service but it was not less than six years and that as a private enlisted regular soldier applicant herby realizes his army claim to pension or annuity. Except the private, and he declares that his name is not on the pension roll of any agency of any State applicant makes oath that he is unable to get to court applicant has no documentary evidence by which he can prove his service nor is there any persons living whos testimony he can procure by whom applicant can prove his absolute services but the following persons citizens and neighbors of him can testify to his character as a soldier of the Revolution to wit ANDREW LEWALLEN JOHN PATTEN WILLIAM SEXTON ARCHILLUS GIBSON HENRY BEGLEY MOSES SEXTON, this applicant has lived ever since the Revolutionary Warm the states of Virginia, Tennysee, Kentucky, Indiania & Illinois applicant now resides in Tennysee, Morgan County.

his JOSEPH (X) GRIFFITH mark"

JOSEPH GRIFFITH was inscribed on the Roll of East Tennysee at, the rate of 20 dollars-cents per annum to commence on the 4th day of March, 1831. Certificate of Pension ifsued the 17th day of June 1833 and sent to LEVI TREWHITT Morgan C.H. (court house)

Arrears to the 4th of March 40.00
Semi-anl. allowance ending 4 Sept. 10.00
50.00

JOSEPH died May 20, 1833 without knowing that he had been awarded the Pension. He is buried in the Goad Cemetery (on the ROBERT BYRGE farm) just off the Brimstone Road in Scott County. JOSEPH was one of eleven children born to ISSAC GRIFFITH and ANN BURSON. His brothers and sisters were:

ABRAHAM GRIFFITH b. 1752?

RACHEL GRIFFITH b. 1753?

HANNAH GRIFFITH b. 7/28/1752

MARY GRIFFITH b. 1755?

ANN GRIFFITH b. 1754

SARAH GRIFFITH b. 1757?

JOSEPH GRIFFITH b. 1758?

MARTHA GRIFFITH b. 1759?

ISAAC GRIFFITH, Jr. b. 1760?

JOHN GRIFFITH b. 1761?

JAMES GRIFFITH b. 1762? 
Griffith, Joseph (I13879)
 
6881 Sea View Cemetery Crockett, Mrs. Abigale (I16716)
 
6882 SEARCH

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Virgil Schuster
1932 - 2020
Virgil Schuster Obituary

Virgil Edward Schuster, 87, originally from Pilot Grove, Missouri and a longtime resident of Scottsdale, Arizona, passed away surrounded by loved ones on January 10th, 2020. Virgil was born May 10th, 1932 to Leonard and Gertrude Schuster from Pilot Grove, Missouri. He was a born engineer and held a Masters Degree in Electrical Engineering. He had a full career which included stints working for the National Security Association and NASA. He also held two patents during his time at Motorola, from which he retired in 1996. His lifelong passions included wood working in his garage, making grandfather clocks and dredging for gold with his children

and grandchildren. He was a long time member of St. Daniel's Catholic Church and was very active in the parish: including participating on the building fund for the new church in 1979. He is preceded in death by his parents, Leonard and Gertrude Aggeler Schuster of Pilot Grove, Missouri; his wife of 45 years, Mary Williamson Schuster of Columbia, Missouri; and a brother, Wilbur Schuster (Shirley) Pilot Grove, Missouri. He is survived by a sister, Marjorie Schuster Spaedy (Darrell) Bunceton, Missouri; four brothers, Norbert Schuster (Louise) of Pilot Grove, Marvin Schuster (Ruth) Cataula, Georgia, James Schuster (Rosemary) Pilot Grove, and Darrell Schuster (Julie) Nashville, Tennessee; four sons, Brian Schuster, David Schuster (Robin), Edward Schuster and Rob Schuster (Michelle); six daughters, Eileen Schuster Merrill (Rich), Deborah Schuster Scotten (Jeff), Rita Schuster Neri, Brenda Schuster Freeland (Brian), Denise

Schuster Valadez (Stephen) and Molly Schuster Mahai (Borz); 28 grandchildren; and 23 great grandchildren. We love him and will miss him dearly. In Virgil's honor, services will be held at St. Daniel's Catholic Church (1030 N. Hayden Rd. Scottsdale, Arizona 85257) on January 14, 2020, visitation at 9:30 a.m., rosary at 10:30 a.m. followed by mass at 11 a.m. He will be laid to rest at Saint Martins Cemetery in Pilot Grove.

A funeral Mass will be held 11 a.m. Friday, January 17, 2020 at St. Joseph Catholic Church in Pilot Grove with burial immediately following in St. Martins Cemetery near Pilot Grove. Visitation will be from 9 to 11 a.m. Friday morning at the church.

In lieu of flowers, donations can be sent to Hospice of the Valley.
Published in Boonville Daily News from Jan. 15 to Jan. 25, 2020 
Schuster, Virgil Edward (I17277)
 
6883 Sebald Stromer H716 - Reichs Forstmeister
Parents unknown

(* about? 1140)

Reich Forestry and Jägermeister in Nuremberg.

Children:
1. Gerhaus Stromer H715 , (* about? 1175)

∞ with Leopold Schürstab H714

(* about? 1175), † 1227

See Schb-20 / a

2. Heinrich, (* about? 1180) - Reichsforstmeister in Nuremberg, see Stro-20 / a

Regesten:
• Mr. Leopold Schürstab , † 1227, ∞ 1200 with Gerhaus Stromerin , Tv Sebald Stromer , Reich Forestry and Jägermeister.

• 1297 tournament.
[Biedermann panel 545 Waldstromer]

• The tournament 1297 is an invention.

• Not documented.

Regesten zu Gerhaus Stromer:
• Only according to Biedermann. Neither Gerhaus nor Leopold Schürstab are documented. [Scratching] 
Stromer, Sebald (I30326)
 
6884 Second daughter of Johannes and inherits the little farm estate. Hoflander, Barbara (I31575)
 
6885 Second marriage for Virginia Irene.

Virginia Duvall, 91, Marshall, died April 14, 2010, at Fitzgibbon Hospital in Marshall.
Funeral service were April 19, at Campbell-Lewis Chapel in Marshall, with Rev. Vernon Maxted officiating. Burial was in Old Lamine Cemetery in Cooper County. Memorials may be made to the Community Food Pantry.

Virginia was born September 7, 1918, in Malta Bend,the daughter of the late Phillip Nickerson and Jesse Viola Jackson Nickerson. She married Ed Duvall on March 7, 1941, in Boonville. He preceded her in death on December 1, 1996.

She had lived in Saline County most of her life and was a cake baker. She retired from ConAgra Frozen Foods.

She was a member of Bethany Baptist Church, Union Extension Club and Frilly Frosters Club and was a 4-H leader for many years.

Survivors include one daughter and son-in-law, Carolyn and Russell Lawrence of rural Lawson; two sons and a daughter-in-law, Ronald and Phyllis Duvall of Marshall and Edward Duvall of rural Warsaw; seven grandchildren; seven great-grandchildren; one brother, Houston "Phil" Nickerson of Columbia; and several nieces and nephews.

In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her stepmother, Grace Nickerson; two sisters, Emma Sublette and Dorothy Howard Meinershagen; and three brothers, Leroy, Marvin and Virgil Nickerson. 
Nickerson, Virginia Irene (I988)
 
6886 Second marriage to Arthur Pethan; alternate birth location of Jefferson City, Cole, Missouri Nelson, Ola Mae (I306)
 
6887 Second marriage to Martha Robien. Hurt, James T (I15892)
 
6888 Second Wife Family: Bell, Thomas / McGuire, Sarah JANE (F7752)
 
6889 Second wife of Frank S Fisher. She moved from Toronto to Alberta to be with her son, William Fisher. McQuigge, Iris Corena (I26688)
 
6890 Second wife of Narvin Raymond Jackson Roach, Neva Ula (I3095)
 
6891 See http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~mabry/imm_antrim.html for more on this family

Present at the death of his father-in-law. 
Mayberry, Thomas (I587)
 
6892 See Notes with John McDowell, born 1714, in Londonderry, Ulster Co., Ireland. Same as Jane McDowell sister of John McDowell born 1716 in Ireland McDowell, Jennie (I26955)
 
6893 Seeking verification of William's burial at Highwood Cem. per family records, or is he with wife Juliet at Allegheny Cem?

residence:
... 1850 Jul 28, Kittanning, Armstrong Co PA -- **W N Forgey 21 abt 1829 PA, nail cutter, lodging w/Sherriff John MECHLING & family
... 1851, US City Directories, Pittsburgh PA -- William N FORGEY, grinder, 29th & Smallman & William FORGEY, nailor, same addr
... 1860 Jun 19, Pittsburgh, Allegheny Co PA -- family: **William N FORGY 31, nail cutter, wife Juliet 26, chr: Albert 06, John 04, James 01
~~~~~
Civil War Pension Index -- William N FORGEY, serv: D38 PA Inf; filed 10 Jul 1889 
Forgey, William Nelson (I7)
 
6894 Seems strange that she was born after her mother died, but I just transcribe them. Klipper, Anna Kunigunde (I9837)
 
6895 Seigneur of De Preuilly, Lion, and Mauléon de Preuilly, Fulcuffe (I34219)
 
6896 Seisyll ap Clydog was King of Ceredigion in Wales some time in the late 7th or early 8th century. He gave his name to the later kingdom of Seisyllwg, which consisted of Ceredigion plus the region known as Ystrad Tywi; as such he was possibly the king responsible for the expansion. However, there is no contemporary evidence of this, and almost nothing is known of his life or reign.

Seisyll appears in the Harleian genealogies for the kings of Ceredigion.[1] Here, he is named as the son of Clydog or Clitauc Artgloys, and is the sixth in descent from Ceredig, the traditional founder of Ceredigion. The Harleian also names him as the father of Arthgen, presumably the King of Ceredigion whom the Annales Cambriae record as dying in 807.[2] Seisyll's name appears to derive from the notional Late Latin *Saxillus, which comes from the same root as the Welsh sais, meaning Saxon or Englishman.[3]

Seisyll ap Clydog is generally taken to be the Seisyll for whom Seisyllwg was named.[3] As such, historians such as John Edward Lloyd and Egerton Phillimore believed that he was the king who founded that kingdom.[4] However, contemporary sources continue to use the name Ceredigion for the realm of Seisyll and his successors.[3] As such, "Seisyllwg" may represent a substantially later political development.

He gave his name to the region known as Ystrad Tywi; as such he was possibly the king responsible for the expansion. However, there is no contemporary evidence of this, and almost nothing is known of his life or reign. 
ap Clydog, King Seisyll (I33493)
 
6897 Senchus Fer n Alban Domangart, moreover, had two sons i. Gabran and Comgell, two sons of Fedelm, daughter of Brion, son of Eocho Mugmedon.

Reign of Domangart, son of Fergus Mor #1, son of Erc (or son of Mac Misi Mor, son of Fergus?) Born in Scotland. He married Fedelmia, daughter of Eochy Mogmedon. Died in 506. Father of Gabhran, #5. (501–507) The Tripartite Life of St. Patrick says that Domangart was present at Patrick's death bed. The Annals of the Four Masters note that, in the year 462, "Domhangort, son of Nissi" died. According to O'Donovan's notes, this Domanghort was King of Alba.

Wikipedia
Domangart Réti was king of Dál Riata in the early 6th century, following the death of his father, Fergus Mór.

He had at least two sons: Comgall and Gabrán, both of whom became kings in succession. The Tripartite Life of St. Patrick states that he was present at the death of the saint, c. 493. Domangart died around 507 and was succeeded by Comgall.

His byname, Réti, appears in Adomnán's Life of Saint Columba, in the form Corcu Réti, perhaps a synonym for Dál Riata. Corcu, a Primitive Irish language term for a kin group, usually combined with the name of a divine or mythical ancestor, is apparently similar to the term Dál. Alternatively, rather that representing an alternative name for all of Dál Riata, it has been suggested Corcu Réti was the name given to the kin group which later divided to form the Cenél nGabráin of Kintyre and the Cenél Comgaill of Cowal, thus excluding the Cenél nÓengusa of Islay and the Cenél Loairn of middle and northern Argyll. 
mac Fergus, King Domangart (I33650)
 
6898 Separated from the healthy persons were bedridden patients, in modern linguistic usage called "siech," who were housed in their own infirmary. In the sources, the infirmary of the hospital appears as a "poor" or "nursery", in Franconia also as "Sutte". Thus, in 1403 the merchant Konrad Kumpf donated two beds for the hospital in Windsheim, "which were to be occupied with sick people." In Bamberg St. Katharinenspital the needy "lying in the sutte" benefited from the endowments of a wealthy benefice, middle In the 14th century, the donated beds in the Nuremberg Heilig-Geist hospital for sick people carried the coats of arms of the bourgeois donor families. Kumpf, Conrad (I30689)
 
6899 Septuagesima Sunday in Alstadt (City Center) Family: Hintz, Peter / Mörlin, Barbara (F11406)
 
6900 Served as pastor to Gumpershausen from 12 Dec 1644 until his deah in 1680, Rau, Johann Christoph (I9647)
 

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