The Kingealogy Family Tree

The Study of Sapps and Kings

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Report: Notes: Individuals

         Description: Individuals with Notes.


Matches 151 to 200 of 17371  » Comma-delimited CSV file

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# Person ID Last Name First Name Birth Date Death Date Living note Tree
151 I65418    Maria Ana   7 Oct 1736  16 May 1813  (unmd)  tree1 
152 I644    MARIA ANN ELISABETH  Abt. Nov 1753  7 Jan 1796  Marias surname is listed as Bier in some records. As there are no parents showing for her I can not assume her maiden name to have been Bier even though the was quite a heavy "Bier" population in that area at that time.  tree1 
153 I65545    Maria Francisca Dorotea  21 Nov 1739  14 Jan 1771  (unmd)  tree1 
154 I60277    Maria Josefa   6 Jul 1744  8 Jul 1801  (unmd)  tree1 
155 I59395    Maria Szarlotta Leszczynska  23 Jun 1703  24 Jun 1768  Saint Denis  tree1 
156 I60981    Maria Teresa  11 Jun 1726  22 Jul 1746  Saint Denis  tree1 
157 I60096    Marie  21 Jun 1528  26 Feb 1603  Couvent St. Clara  tree1 
158 I58421    Marie Antoinette  2 Nov 1755  16 Oct 1793  Saint Denis  tree1 
159 I46841    Mary  2 Jun 1685  8 Feb 1687  Windsor Caslte  tree1 
160 I67768    Mary Margaret  Abt 1793  Bet. 1824 - 1848  Sources:
Information from an old Family Bible, Char King Scott, Correspondence, (1998), "Electronic."
King.Ged, (Date of Import: Dec 13, 2001), "Electronic."
Ronald Stuart Sapp and Kellie Sue Sapp King, "Pedigree Charts - Sapp and King Family History," August 28th 1988. 
tree1 
161 I62296    Maud   Abt 1215  Abt 1261  Now Forfar, Scotland  tree1 
162 I60288    Maximilian  31 Jul 1527  12 Oct 1576  [royalfam.ged]

A Hapsburg ruler who failed

EMPEROR MAXIMILIAN II
By Paula Sutter Fichtner
Yale University Press, $30, 344 pages, illus.
REVIEWED BY BRIDGET HEAL

"By virtually all standards, including his own, Emperor Maximilian II (1527-1576) was a failu re." So begins Paula Sutter Fichtner's account of the life and times of one of 16th-century E urope's least effective rulers.

As a Hapsburg, Maximilian was a member of one of Europe's leading dynasties. His uncle, Charl es V, had built up a massive empire, uniting the Netherlands, Spain, the New World, Naples, S icily and Germany under his leadership. Charles' son, Philip, inherited the Spanish part of t his empire and the Netherlands, while Germany passed to Charles' brother, Ferdinand, and then ce, in 1562, to Ferdinand's son, Maximilian.

Charles V and Philip II are two of the great figures of European history and have been the su bjects of numerous studies, but "Emperor Maximillian II" is the first full biography of Maxim ilian II in English. Perhaps not surprisingly, previous scholars have been deterred by Maximi lian's inadequacies — his inability to achieve any of his stated aims and his failure t o make any lasting impression on Europe's political and religious landscape. As the author po ints out, however, history is not just about great achievements. It is about the totality o f past experience, in which failure and defeat have inevitably played a central role. 
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163 I60182    Maximiliano  6 Jul 1832  19 Jun 1867  [royalfam.ged]

http://antiwar.com/pat/?articleid=1846
February 4, 2004 What Are We Doing in Russia's Neighborhood?
by Pat Buchanan

Napoleon III, Emperor of France, saw his opportunity.

With the United States sundered and convulsed in civil war, he would seize Mexico, impose a C atholic monarchy and block further expansion of the American republic.

In 1863, a French army marched into Mexico City. In 1864, Maximilian, the brother of Austria n Emperor Franz Joseph, was crowned Emperor of Mexico. The French empire had returned to Nort h America a century after its expulsion in 1763.

Secretary of State Seward did nothing until the Union armies had defeated the Confederacy. Th en, he called in Gen. John Schofield, who had wanted to lead an army of volunteers into Mexic o to drive the French out, and instructed him instead to go to Paris. "I want you to get you r legs under Napoleon's mahogany and tell him he must get out of Mexico," Seward told Schofie ld. To impress upon Napoleon that the Union was in earnest, President Johnson, at the urgin g of Grant and Sherman, sent Gen. Sheridan with 40,000 troops to the Rio Grande.

Napoleon got the message. The French army headed for the boats, and Maximilian went befor e a Mexican firing squad. 
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164 I62548    Mikhail  12 Jul 1596  13 Jul 1645  [royalfam.ged]

Carl M. Allstrom records in his "Dictionary of Royal Lineage" that
Marfa "The Nun", the mother of Mikhail Romanov, the 1st Romanov
Czar,was the illegitimate daughter of Ivan "The Terrible" and his
mistress Mayvi. too, in the book "Kingdoms of Europe" it says that
"The Nun" Marfa attended the coronation of her teenage son and blessed
him. earlier, the babe Mikhail was given to the Shestov Family to
raise; and Mikhail's father, Fedor [Filaret] Romanov, the Bishop of
Moscow, married Xenia Shestov, who became Mikhail's step-mother. 
tree1 
165 I63492    MSTISLAV  1076  15 Apr 1132  [royalfam.ged]

N. de Baumgarten in his "Genealogies et Mariages Occidentaux des Rurikides Russes du Xe au XI IIe siecle" (Roma, 1927) states on pp. 22-26 the details of the descendants of Great Prince V sevolod I including Euphrosine. He lists her as the eldest child of Mstislav-Harald's secon d marriage in 1122 to the daughter of Dimitri Zawiditch, possadnik of Novgorod, which daughte r died after 1168.

Some further details concerning this marriage can be found in Vol. XXV of the Camden Society' s 3rd Series of publications, namely: "The Chronicle of Novgorod, 1016-1471" translated & edi ted by Robert Michell & Nevill Forbes (London, 1914). It is written that Mstislav married th e still unnamed daughter sometime during 1122 in Kiev and that her father, Dmitri Zavidits, p osadnik of Novgorod, had died July 9, 1118 (p. 10).

I suppose Dmitri Zavidich was probably either of Slavic or Scandinavian origin. Presumably h e come from a family of Boyars in Novgorod as he was a Posadnik of that city.

Sincerely,
Kelsey J. Williams 
tree1 
166 I64618    Oscar Gustaf Adolf  16 Jun 1858  29 Oct 1950  [royalfam.ged]

He married Princess Victoria of Baden on September 20, 1881. She was the granddaughter of Sof ia of Sweden, and her marriage to Gustav V united the reigning Bernadotte dynasty with the fo rmer royal house of Vasa. 
tree1 
167 I64658    Otto   Abt 1359  29 Jun 1406  Unmd  tree1 
168 I2330               
169 I62017    PBEPIN  Abt 635  16 Dec 714  [royalfam.ged]

From: Jean-Michel.Francou@skf.com
Date: Sat, 11 Jun 2005 13:23:53 +0200

Dear Sam,

Please note that it should be "Herstal" and not Heristal

Pepin de Herstal Died in Jupille, Belgium
Herstal is presently in Belgium

Regards
Jean-Michel Francou 
tree1 
170 I63029    Pedro  12 Oct 1798  24 Sep 1834  [royalfam.ged]

Soon after the birth of his grandson, Joao VI finally returned to Portugal. Along with him we nt most members of the Braganza family, Pedro remained in Brazil to act as regent for his fat her. Initially Joao VI was appalled at Pedro's desire to remain in Brazil, but after his so n refused to back away from his decision, the king agreed to Pedro and Leopoldina remaining b ehind. Dom Miguel, the king's second son, did not question returning to Portugal for he neve r really adapted to life in Brazil. Besides it is quite possible that Miguel already foresa w his future as monarch of Portugal while his brother remained ruler of Brazil. Leopoldina' s life in Brazil was to be fraught with anxieties over her future, that of her children and t he decreasing attention paid her by her husband. Her first disappointment was the untimely de ath of little Prince Joao in 1822. The arrival of a second daughter one month after Joao's de ath did not improve much the parents' spirits. For Pedro an heir was a necessity since the he ir presumptive to Portugal and Brazil was his increasingly troublesome brother Dom Miguel . A third daughter, Paula Mariana, was born in 1823. In late 1822, Prince Regent Pedro of Bra ganza decided to stage a coup d"etat to emancipate Brazil from the Portuguese crown. Joao V I himself had recommended this course of action as a means of guaranteeing the Brazilian crow n would remain under the Braganzas. During the royal family's long stay in Brazil the colon y had learned how to rule itself without Lisbon"s guidance. Once Napoleon's regime was ousted , Lisbon faintly tried to restore its control over Brazilian affairs. This course of action w as deeply resented by the Brazilians who were deeply resentful of Portuguese involvement in t he country"s internal affairs. Thus to guarantee that Brazil would not be completely lost, Pr ince Regent Pedro gave his support to the independence movement that sealed the colony"s brea k from Lisbon. At the age of twenty-four, the Prince Regent became Emperor Pedro I of Brazil . In the meantime, Pedro I continued to neglect his Austrian consort. It seemed that the onl y reason why he spent any time with her was in an effort to produce the long-awaited heir. Th e couple's fourth daughter, Francisca Carolina, was born in 1824. Pedro"s impatience with Leo poldina knew no bounds and he continued to spend more time away from her and in the arms of h is mistresses. Leopoldina's life in Brazil had turned into a living inferno, far away from he r family, ignored by her husband, the young Brazilian empress slowly fell into deep depressio n. In Vienna, Emperor Franz I openly referred to his Brazilian son-in-law as a scoundrel. Non etheless, Pedro and Leopoldina continued their efforts to produce an heir. The arrival of Pri nce Pedro de Alcantara of Braganza in late 1825, was Leopoldina's crowning satisfaction. Exha usted by constant childbearing since her arrival in Brazil, Empress Leopoldina died practical ly ignored by her husband one year after the birth of the couple's only surviving son. 
tree1 
171 I62737    Peter   30 May 1672  28 Jan 1725  [royalfam.ged]

http://www.departments.bucknell.edu/russian/chrono2.html 
tree1 
172 I46616    Peter  6 Sep 1923  3 Nov 1970  [royalfam.ged]

Peter succeeded his father (under the Regency of his uncle Prince Paul of Yugoslavia) when h e was only 10 years old. He had to flee the Country in 1941 when it was invaded by Hitler. Yu goslavia was proclaimed a Republic on 29 November in 1945 and the monarchy abolished withou t Referendum. Peter died in Denver following a liver transplant almost destitute having turne d to alcohol. Some sources erroneously shows Peter died in California.

http://www.btinternet.com/~allan_raymond/Yugoslavian_Royal_Family.htm 
tree1 
173 I45246    PHILIP  1268  29 Nov 1314  St Denis  tree1 
174 I45246    PHILIP  1268  29 Nov 1314  [King Penrose Family.GED]

[WilliamKingAncestry.ged]

M E Sorley: The Sorley Pedigrees P. 26 
tree1 
175 I66612    Philip  1293  22 Aug 1350  Saint Denis  tree1 
176 I66612    Philip  1293  22 Aug 1350  [King Penrose Family.GED]

[WilliamKingAncestry.ged]

W Betham: Genealogical Tables Tab. 257, 353, 611
M L Call: The Royal Ancestry Bible Vol 2 Chart 1320 
tree1 
177 I66269               
178 I63188    Ramon Berenguer   Abt 1188    Young  tree1 
179 I59224    Richard  06 Jan 1367  14 Feb 1400  Westminster Abbey  tree1 
180 I66587    Robert   Abt 17 Sep 1250  11 Jul 1302  L'abbaye De Maubuisson  tree1 
181 I66587    Robert   Abt 17 Sep 1250  11 Jul 1302  Killed  tree1 
182 I66587    Robert   Abt 17 Sep 1250  11 Jul 1302  [King Penrose Family.GED]

[WilliamKingAncestry.ged]

M L Call: The Royal Ancestry Bible Vol 3 Chart 2884 
tree1 
183 I63180    SANCHA  21 Sep 1154  09 Nov 1208  Monasterio De Jaen  tree1 
184 I44895    Sancha   Abt 1225  9 Nov 1261  Hailes Abbey  tree1 
185 I63186    Sancho   Abt 1184    Young  tree1 
186 I65976    Stephanie  1 Feb 1965    [royalfam.ged]

http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Ithaca/3390/monaco.html 
tree1 
187 I66474    Thomas  Abt 1256  3 Feb 1332  [King Penrose Family.GED]

[WilliamKingAncestry.ged]

M E Sorley: The Sorley Pedigrees P. 46
M L Call: The Royal Ancestry Bible Vol 1 Chart 234
V M Norr: Some Early English Pedigrees P. 71 
tree1 
188 I45903    Thyra Amalie Karoline Charlotte   29 Sep 1853  26 Feb 1933  [royalfam.ged]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thyra_of_Denmark 
tree1 
189 I59941    Victoria Mary Louisa  17 Aug 1786  16 Mar 1861  Frogmore House  tree1 
190 I58094    William of Gloucester  24 Jul 1689  30 Jul 1700  Windsor Caslte  tree1 
191 I58094    William of Gloucester  24 Jul 1689  30 Jul 1700  Windsor Castle  tree1 
192 I18796  Abbott  Alice  Abt 1876    Died young.

Sources:
'Smoky Mountain Clans, Volume 3', 1983, Donald B. Reagan, p 261.
 
tree1 
193 I22849  Abbott  Clyde  Between 1881 and 1901  Between 1915 and 1987  King.GEDCOM. Electronic. Date of Import: December13, 2001.

Sources: 'Clabo Family Tree', Gardner Clabo, p 51. 
tree1 
194 I5975               
195 I18795  Abbott  John  Abt 1874    Died young.

Sources:
'Smoky Mountain Clans, Volume 3', 1983, Donald B. Reagan, p 261.
 
tree1 
196 I22931  Abbott  John Henry  16 Dec 1893  15 Feb 1970  Sources:
Dee Lansford GEDCOM, 24 September 1995.
King.Ged, (Date of Import: Dec 13, 2001), "Electronic." 
tree1 
197 I18791  Abbott  Martha Angeline  Abt 1870    Died young.

Sources:
'Smoky Mountain Clans, Volume 3', 1983, Donald B. Reagan, p 261.
 
tree1 
198 I6128               
199 I6014               
200 I18794  Abbott  Nancy Elizabeth  Abt 1872    Died young.

Sources:
'Smoky Mountain Clans, Volume 3', 1983, Donald B. Reagan, p 261.
 
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