Description: Individuals with Notes.
Matches 1 to 50 of 17371 » Comma-delimited CSV file
# | Person ID | Last Name | First Name | Birth Date | Death Date | Living | note | Tree |
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1 | I63460 | ADAELE ALIX | 1003 | 8 Jan 1079 | 0 | Monastaere De L'ordre De St. Benoist | tree1 | |
2 | I63460 | ADAELE ALIX | 1003 | 8 Jan 1079 | 0 | Monastaere De L'ordre De St. Benoist | tree1 | |
3 | I58187 | Adolphus | 1868 | 1927 | 0 | Kensington Palace | tree1 | |
4 | I67656 | AETHELWULF | Abt. 795 | 13 Jan 858 | 0 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%86thelwulf,_King_of_Wessex | tree1 | |
5 | I65972 | |||||||
6 | I59129 | Albert Francis Augustus Charles | 26 Aug 1819 | 14 Dec 1861 | 0 | [royalfam.ged] Albert, called the Prince Consort, was the husband of Queen Victoria of Britain. The son of t he Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, he was born on Aug.26, 1819, near Coburg, Bavaria. He married t he young Victoria in 1840. As her closest advisor, Albert exercised a restraining influence o n theimpulsive queen, especially in political matters. Among the political leaders of the per iod, Albert worked well with Sir Robert Peel but quarreled frequently with Viscount Palmersto n. In the Trent Affair of 1861 the prince actually moderated the hostility of Palmerston's go vernment toward the United States. Albert was a patron of the arts and sciences and one of the organizers ofthe Great Exhibitio n of 1851. His zeal for public moralism in many waysset the tone of mid-Victorian England. Al bert's death on Dec. 14, 1861, partly the result of overwork, deeply affected Victoria, who w ent intoseclusion for several years. ==================================================================== Yet a more promising throne loomed in the near distance. King William IV of Great Britain an d his wife, Queen Adelheid Luise, were unable to procreate any children who survived infancy . Their quickly arranged marriage during the Hannoverian wife search in the late 1810s faile d to continue the dynasty. By the time William IV inherited the throne from his brother Kin g George IV in 1830, little Princess Victoria of Kent was the established heiress to the grea test throne of Europe. And when the King of Great Britain died childless in 1837, his eightee n year old niece ascended the throne as Queen Victoria. By the end of Victorias second yea r as monarch, she still remained single. London became the most delightful and promising dest ination for many young continental princes. Victoria, desperately lonely in her London palace , wanted to find a suitable consort who could keep her company and provide the country with t he next generation of princes. Leopold had waited two decades for this opportunity and quickl y stepped in with his valuable counsel and matrimonial expertise. Among his several nephews , there was one in particular which Leopold had in mind as Victorias future husband, Princ e Albert of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha. Duke Ernst I and Duchess Louise had a very unhappy marriage. T he heiress of Gotha had arrived at Coburg in 1817 to find a husband who was not much interest ed in her. Duke Ernst paid more attention to the aggrandizement of his little duchy than to t he youthful girl he had married. Within two years of their wedding the couple had two princes , Ernst and Albert. Once having fulfilled her main role to secure the succession, Ernst pai d very little attention to Luise. In her loneliness, the young duchess sought companionship a mong the courtiers of her husbands little court. By the mid-1820s the marriage had collapse d, the ducal couple divorced and Luise fallen in love with a young German aristocrat. Left i n Coburg were the two little princes who never again saw much of their mother. Prince Ernst o f Saxe-Coburg-Gotha would succeed his father on the ducal throne; Prince Albert needed to fin d a future. Leopold I and Queen Louise-Marie were tremendously fond of the two princes. Erns t and Albert spent long periods at their uncles court in Brussels. While Ernst developed int o a licentious young man, Albert remained unspoiled, studious and conscientious of his futur e possibilities. In 1839 the brothers traveled to London to pay their respects to their roya l cousin. Although initially apprehensive about Albert as a husband, Victoria quickly surrend ered to his mild manner and good looks. There engagement was announced with great delight i n 1839. Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha and Queen Victoria of Great Britain were married i n London on 24 January 1840. No longer were the Coburgs considered a small, forgotten princel y house from the depths of the Thuringian woods. In one decade, the Coburgs had attained th e thrones of three European countries. |
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7 | I46578 | Alexander | 4 Dec 1888 | 9 Oct 1934 | 0 | [royalfam.ged] The Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes was renamed the Kingdom of Yugoslavia on 3 Octobe r 1929. King Alexander was assassinated on 9 October 1934 in Marseilles at the start of a sta te visit to France, by Velucko Kerin a Macedonian revolutionary, working with Croat revolutio nists. The assassin who was shot during the affray died a few hours later. Marie escaped poss ible assassination as she was recovering from an illness and being a poor sailor had travelle d separately from Yugoslavia to France by train. For strategic purposes Alexander had travell ed by boat from Yugoslavia to Marseilles and was due to meet up with his wife in Dijon/Lyon f or the final journey to Paris. |
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8 | I47018 | |||||||
9 | I47023 | |||||||
10 | I46191 | Alexander Augustus William | 1874 | 16 Jan 1957 | 0 | Kensington Palace | tree1 | |
11 | I46191 | Alexander Augustus William | 1874 | 16 Jan 1957 | 0 | [royalfam.ged] http://www.regiments.org/milhist/biography/royals/1874athl.htm |
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12 | I63198 | ALFONSO | 01 Mar 1105 | 21 Aug 1157 | 0 | Catedral De Toledo | tree1 | |
13 | I45233 | Alfonso Fernandez | 15 Aug 1171 | 24 Sep 1230 | 0 | September 23, 1230 is an alternate date of death for Alfonso. | tree1 | |
14 | I58054 | Alfred | 1874 | 1899 | 0 | Winter Palace | tree1 | |
15 | I45817 | ALIX ADBELAHIDE | Abt 1092 | Yes, date unknown | 0 | Abbaye De Montmartre | tree1 | |
16 | I44579 | Alphonso | 24 Nov 1273 | 19 Aug 1284 | 0 | Windsor Castle | tree1 | |
17 | I58033 | Anne | 2 Nov 1475 | 23 Nov 1511 | 0 | [tudors.ged] Removed later to Framlingham |
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18 | I47067 | Anne | 22 Sep 1601 | 20 Jan 1666 | 0 | Saint Denis | tree1 | |
19 | I44216 | Anne of Oldenburg | 14 Oct 1574 | 02 Mar 1618 | 0 | Westminster Abbey | tree1 | |
20 | I46842 | Anne Sophia | 12 May 1686 | 2 Feb 1687 | 0 | Windsor Caslte | tree1 | |
21 | I46842 | Anne Sophia | 12 May 1686 | 2 Feb 1687 | 0 | Windsor Caslte | tree1 | |
22 | I46842 | Anne Sophia | 12 May 1686 | 2 Feb 1687 | 0 | Windsor Castle | tree1 | |
23 | I65992 | Antoinette Louise Grimaldi | 28 Dec 1920 | 0 | [royalfam.ged] Three children were born to Princess Antoinette and her lover 1954. Her second husband, Jean-Charles Rey was married to her from 1961 to 1973. Her third husband was John Gilpin, a noted British ballet dancer, whom she married in 1983 an d who died two months later. |
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24 | I65519 | Antonio Francisco | 15 Mar 1695 | 19 Oct 1757 | 0 | (unmd) | tree1 | |
25 | I46458 | Augusta | 30 Nov 1719 | 8 Feb 1772 | 0 | Westminster Abbey | tree1 | |
26 | I45077 | Berenguela | 1171 | 8 Nov 1246 | 0 | Berengaria Queen of Castile is one of the ways this Queens name has been recorded. | tree1 | |
27 | I59082 | BERNARD | 797 | 17 Apr 818 | 0 | He plotted against his uncle, Emperor Louis the Pious, when the latter's Ordinatio Imperii made Bernard a vassal of his cousin Lothair. When his plot was discovered, Louis had him blinded, a procedure which killed him. | tree1 | |
28 | I65447 | Blanche | 1290 | Aft 13 Apr 1294 | 0 | Saint Denis | tree1 | |
29 | I65558 | Carlos | 2 May 1716 | 30 Mar 1736 | 0 | (unmd) | tree1 | |
30 | I59208 | Carlos | 12 Nov 1748 | 19 Jan 1819 | 0 | [royalfam.ged] http://www.chivalricorders.org/royalty/bourbon/spain/spanhis.htm |
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31 | I65973 | Caroline | 23 Jan 1957 | 0 | [royalfam.ged] http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Ithaca/3390/monaco.html |
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32 | I58157 | Catherine | 9 Feb 1671 | 5 Dec 1671 | 0 | Westminster Abbey | tree1 | |
33 | I58157 | Catherine | 9 Feb 1671 | 5 Dec 1671 | 0 | St. James Palace | tree1 | |
34 | I60191 | Catherine of Braganza | 25 Nov 1638 | 31 Dec 1705 | 0 | [royalfam.ged] It is believed that she may have been the queen for whom Queens Borough of New York City is n amed. |
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35 | I61242 | CHARLEMAGNE | 02 Apr 742 | 28 Jan 814 | 0 | St Denis | tree1 | |
36 | I61242 | CHARLEMAGNE | 02 Apr 742 | 28 Jan 814 | 0 | Notre Dame D'aix La Chapelle | tree1 | |
37 | I61242 | CHARLEMAGNE | 02 Apr 742 | 28 Jan 814 | 0 | Aix La Chapelle | tree1 | |
38 | I61242 | CHARLEMAGNE | 02 Apr 742 | 28 Jan 814 | 0 | Aix La Chapelle | tree1 | |
39 | I58065 | CHARLES | 13 Jun 823 | 6 Oct 877 | 0 | Saint Denis | tree1 | |
40 | I45073 | Charles | Abt 1294 | 1 Feb 1328 | 0 | Saint Denis | tree1 | |
41 | I59131 | CHARLES | 3 Dec 1368 | 22 Oct 1422 | 0 | Saint Denis | tree1 | |
42 | I45907 | Charles | 30 Jun 1490 | 7 Apr 1498 | 0 | Saint Denis | tree1 | |
43 | I58666 | Charles | 27 Jun 1550 | 30 May 1574 | 0 | Saint Denis | tree1 | |
44 | I58799 | Charles | 4 Jul 1666 | 22 May 1667 | 0 | St. James Palace | tree1 | |
45 | I58799 | Charles | 4 Jul 1666 | 22 May 1667 | 0 | Westminster Abbey | tree1 | |
46 | I58799 | Charles | 4 Jul 1666 | 22 May 1667 | 0 | St. James Palace | tree1 | |
47 | I44620 | Charlotte | 19 May 1744 | 17 Nov 1818 | 0 | St. George Chapel, Windsor Castle | tree1 | |
48 | I44620 | Charlotte | 19 May 1744 | 17 Nov 1818 | 0 | Kew Palace | tree1 | |
49 | I65173 | Christian | 8 Apr 1818 | 29 Jan 1906 | 0 | [royalfam.ged] Lost Duchies of Schleiswig and Holstein to Prussia. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_IX_of_Denmark Christian's grandsons included Nicholas II of Russia, Constantine I of Greece, George V of th e United Kingdom, Christian X of Denmark and Haakon VII of Norway. He was, in the last year s of his life, named Europe's "father-in-law". Today, most of Europe's reigning and ex-reigni ng royal families are direct descendants of Christian IX. Christian died peacefully of old age at 87 in Copenhagen and was buried in Roskilde Cathedral . |
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50 | I32109 | Cindy | 0 | King.GEDCOM. Electronic. Date of Import: December13, 2001. Sources: 'Clabo Family Tree', Gardner Clabo, p 170. |
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