Description: Individuals with Notes.
Matches 5651 to 5700 of 17371 » Comma-delimited CSV file
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# | Person ID | Last Name | First Name | Birth Date | Death Date | Living | note | Tree |
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5651 | I45505 | Hanover | Augusta Sophia | 02 Nov 1777 | 27 May 1848 | 0 | St. James Palace | tree1 |
5652 | I61350 | Hanover | Augustus Frederick | 27 Jan 1773 | 21 Apr 1843 | 0 | St. James Palace | tree1 |
5653 | I44744 | Hanover | Charlotte Augusta | 7 Jan 1796 | 6 Nov 1817 | 0 | [royalfam.ged] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_IV_of_the_United_Kingdom |
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5654 | I45394 | Hanover | Charlotte Augusta Matilda | 29 Sep 1766 | 06 Oct 1828 | 0 | St. James Palace | tree1 |
5655 | I44637 | Hanover | Edward Augustus | 02 Nov 1767 | 23 Jan 1820 | 0 | Kent Mausoleum | tree1 |
5656 | I44637 | Hanover | Edward Augustus | 02 Nov 1767 | 23 Jan 1820 | 0 | St. James Palace | tree1 |
5657 | I58797 | Hanover | Ernest Augustus | 17 Nov 1887 | 30 Jan 1953 | 0 | Penzing Hall | tree1 |
5658 | I58797 | Hanover | Ernest Augustus | 17 Nov 1887 | 30 Jan 1953 | 0 | Marienburg Castle | tree1 |
5659 | I45873 | Hanover | Ernest Augustus of Cumberland | 1845 | 1923 | 0 | [royalfam.ged] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ernst_August_of_Hanover%2C_3rd_Duke_of_Cumberland He had six children. |
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5660 | I65996 | |||||||
5661 | I45373 | Hanover | Frederick | 16 Aug 1763 | 05 Jan 1827 | 0 | St. James Palace | tree1 |
5662 | I60407 | Hanover | Frederick Louis | 31 Jan 1701 | 31 Mar 1751 | 0 | Westminster Abbey | tree1 |
5663 | I60407 | Hanover | Frederick Louis | 31 Jan 1701 | 31 Mar 1751 | 0 | Leicester-House | tree1 |
5664 | I46468 | Hanover | George | 28 May 1660 | 11 Jun 1727 | 0 | [royalfam.ged] George I, elector of Hanover, succeeded to the British throne on the death of Queen Anne in 1 714. The succession was determined by the Act ofSettlement of 1701, which passed over the leg itimate but Roman Catholic representatives of the Stuart line in favor of the Protestant hous e of Hanover, descended from the daughter of James I. George quarreled both with his wife, Sophia Dorothea (1666-1726), whom he divorced and incarc erated (from 1694 until her death) in punishment forher alleged infidelity, and with his son , Prince George, who consorted with his political opponents. The prince succeeded to the thro ne as George II when George I died on June 12, 1727. Died of stroke. Reigned from 1714 to 1727. |
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5665 | I44610 | Hanover | George | 04 Jun 1738 | 29 Jan 1820 | 0 | St. George Chapel, Windsor Castle | tree1 |
5666 | I44610 | Hanover | George | 04 Jun 1738 | 29 Jan 1820 | 0 | Norfolk-House, St. James Square | tree1 |
5667 | I44610 | Hanover | George | 04 Jun 1738 | 29 Jan 1820 | 0 | Norfolk-House, St. James Square | tree1 |
5668 | I44610 | Hanover | George | 04 Jun 1738 | 29 Jan 1820 | 0 | Windsor Castle | tree1 |
5669 | I44610 | Hanover | George | 04 Jun 1738 | 29 Jan 1820 | 0 | George III was the longest reigning of male British monarchs. Born onJune 4, 1738, he was th e son of Frederick, prince of Wales, and the grandson of George II. He succeeded his grandfat her in 1760, his father having died in 1751. George had high but impractical ideas of kingship. On his accession he sought to rule withou t regard to party, to banish corruption from political practice, and to abandon the Hanoveria n preoccupations of his predecessors. The chief minister chosen to implement his new system o f politics, the third earl of Bute (1713-92), however, was an unpracticed politician who mere ly succeeded in disrupting the established politics of the day without creating a viable alte rnative. The result was 10 years of ministerial instability and public controversy, which end ed only in 1770 with the appointment of Frederick, Lord North, an able and congenial minister . Although never an autocratic monarch in the sense that his opponents contended, George III wa s always a powerful force in politics. He was a strong supporter of the war against America , and he viewed the concession of independence in 1783 with such detestation that he consider ed abdicating his throne. At the same time, he fought a bitter personal feud with the Whig le ader Charles James Fox, and his personal intervention brought the fall of the Fox-North minis try in 1783. He then found another minister, William Pitt, the Younger, who suited him. Eve n as late as 1801 he preferred, however, to force Pitt to resign as prime minister rather tha n permit Catholic Emancipation, a measure that he interpreted as contrary to his coronation o ath to uphold the Church of England. After 1801 George III was increasingly incapacitated by an illness ,sometimes identified as p orphyria, that caused blindness and senility. His recurring bouts of insanity became a politi cal problem and ultimately compelled him to submit to the establishment of a formal Regency i n 1811.The regent was his oldest son, the future George IV, one of 15 children borne him by h is wife, Charlotte Sophia of Mecklenburg-Strelitz. George III was bitterly criticized by Whig historians of his own and later days. But 20th-cen tury scholarship has somewhat redressed the balance, and he is now seen as a strong-minded bu t public-spirited monarch who perhaps ascended the throne at an overly young and impressionab le age. He learned quickly, however, and developed into a shrewd and sensible statesman, alth ough one of conservative views. To the court he brought a sense of public duty and private mo rality that proved popular in a society already being transformed by the evangelical revival . He showed considerable interest in agricultural improvement and was an avid collector of pa intings and books. The best loved of the Hanoverian rulers, he enjoyed a personal reputatio n that stood his house in good stead during the disastrous reign of his son George. George II I died on Jan. 29, 1820. > Can anyone point me to a good online source for the children of King > George III of England including illegitimate, what's known of. I used > to think there was a newsgroup for royalty but couldn't find one, > apologies this being off-topic. 1) George, Prince of Wales, later George IV (1762-1830) 2) Frederick, Duke of York (1763-1827) 3) William, Duke of Clarence, later William IV (1765-1837) 4) Edward, Duke of Kent (1767-1820) (father of Queen Victoria) 5) Princess Augusta (1768-1840) 6) Princess Elizabeth, m. Frederick of Hesse-Homburg (1770-1840) 7) Ernest, Duke of Cumberland, later King of Hanover (1771-1851) 8) Augustus, Duke of Sussex (1773-1843) 9) Adolphus, Duke of Cambridge (1774-1850) 10) Princess Sophia (1777-1845) 11) Prince Octavius (1779-1783) 12) Prince Alfred (1780-1782) 13) Princess Amelia (1783-1810) 14) Princess Mary, m. the Duke of Gloucester (1776-1857) George III had no illegitimate children, having a most un-Hanoverian fidelity to Queen Charlotte. |
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5670 | I44719 | Hanover | George | 12 Aug 1762 | 26 Jun 1830 | 0 | St. James Palace | tree1 |
5671 | I44719 | Hanover | George | 12 Aug 1762 | 26 Jun 1830 | 0 | Windsor Caslte | tree1 |
5672 | I44719 | Hanover | George | 12 Aug 1762 | 26 Jun 1830 | 0 | [royalfam.ged] George IV, who served as prince regent from 1811 to 1820 (see Regency)before succeeding his f ather, George III, to the throne, brought the standing of the British monarchy lower than a t any other time in its modern history. Born on Aug. 12, 1762, he consorted as a young man wi th his father's parliamentary opponents, including Charles James Fox. In1785 he illegally mar ried Mrs. Maria Fitzherbert. He subsequently denied the marriage in order to secure Parliamen t's payment of his debts, and in1795 he married Princess Caroline of Brunswick, whom he late r attempted to divorce on his accession as king. Although long an ally of the Whigs, he decli ned to bring them into power when he became regent, and he was thereafter associated with dee ply conservative causes, especially the maintenance of official discrimination against Roma n Catholics and Protestant dissenters. His personal profligacy and his treatment of Queen Car oline brought him great unpopularity. He spent extravagant sums on the arts. Some of the rich est portions of the royal collection and, above all, the Royal Pavilion at Brighton remain a s monuments to his cultural interests. He died on June 26, 1830, and was succeeded by his bro ther,William IV. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_IV_of_the_United_Kingdom |
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5673 | I61653 | Hanover | George Augustus | 30 Oct 1683 | 25 Oct 1760 | 0 | Westminster Abbey | tree1 |
5674 | I61653 | Hanover | George Augustus | 30 Oct 1683 | 25 Oct 1760 | 0 | Kensington Palace | tree1 |
5675 | I61653 | Hanover | George Augustus | 30 Oct 1683 | 25 Oct 1760 | 0 | [royalfam.ged] George II succeeded to the British throne and the electorate of Hanover on the death of his f ather, George I, in 1727. Born on Nov. 10, 1683, in Hanover, he remained largely Hanoverian i n his interests, although,unlike his father, he learned fluent English. He visited the electo rate regularly during most of his reign and sometimes utilized his position asking of Englan d to the advantage of his German territory. Although George has been represented as a king manipulated by his own ministers--notably Si r Robert Walpole and the duke of Newcastle--and byhis highly intelligent wife, Queen Carolin e (1683-1737), he was by no means a weak monarch. He played a larger part in the direction o f foreign and military policy than most contemporaries suspected, and at Dettingen (1743), i n the War of the Austrian Succession, was the last British monarch to appear in person on th e battlefield. His reign witnessed the final collapse of the Jacobites after their uprising o f 1745 and closed with Britain's brilliant successes in the Seven Years' War (1756-63) unde r the leadership of William Pitt the Elder. George had long detested Pitt, but he eventuall y came to recognize his merits. George's son, Frederick, predeceased him, so when George II died on Oct.25, 1760, he was succ eeded by Frederick's son, George III. Although he was vulnerable to management by others, Geo rge II was undoubtedly aknowledgeable and skillful politician, within the narrow framework o f Hanoverian interests in which he worked. Died of aneurysm |
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5676 | I46453 | Hanover | George William | 13 Nov 1717 | 17 Feb 1718 | 0 | Kensington Palace | tree1 |
5677 | I65635 | Hanover | Henry Frederick | 07 Nov 1745 | 18 Sep 1790 | 0 | Leicester House | tree1 |
5678 | I45494 | Hanover | Mary | 25 Apr 1776 | 30 Apr 1857 | 0 | St. James Palace | tree1 |
5679 | I44300 | Hanover | Victoria | 24 May 1819 | 22 Jan 1901 | 0 | Kensington Palace | tree1 |
5680 | I44300 | Hanover | Victoria | 24 May 1819 | 22 Jan 1901 | 0 | [royalfam.ged] Victoria, queen of Great Britain and Ireland (r. 1837-1901), the longest-reigning monarch i n English history, established the monarchy as a respected and popular institution while it w as irrevocably losing its place as an integral part of the British governing system. Born in Kensington Palace, London, on May 24, 1819, Victoria was the only child of Edward, du ke of Kent and son of George III, and Princess Victoria, daughter of the duke of Saxe-Coburg . Emerging from a lonely, secluded childhood to take the throne on the death of her uncle, Wi lliam IV, Victoria displayed a personality marked by strong prejudices and awillful stubbornn ess. She was strongly attached to the Whig prime minister Lord Melbourne; after he resigned i n 1839, Sir Robert Peel, his would-be successor, suggested that she dismiss the Whig ladies o f her court. Victoria, however, refused. In part because of this "bed chamber crisis," Melbou rne resumed office for two more years. Victoria and her court were greatly transformed by her marriage to her first cousin, Prince A lbert of Saxe-Coburg, in 1840. Although her name now designates a supposedly prudish age, i t was Albert who made a point of straitlaced behavior, and introduced a strict decorum in cou rt. He also gave a more conservative tinge to Victoria's politics, leading her to become clos e to Peel. The couple had nine children. Victoria populated most of the thrones of Europe wit h her descendants. Among her grandchildren were Emperor William II of Germany and Alexandra , consort of Tsar Nicholas II of Russia. Albert taught Victoria the need for hard work if she was to make her views felt in the cabine t, and during the prince's lifetime Victoria did, by insistently interjecting her opinions, f orce the ministers to take them into account. Opposing the policy of Lord Palmerston of encou raging democratic government on the Continent, for example, she was partly responsible for hi s departure as foreign secretary in 1851. She also helped form cabinets. Her political import ance was based, however, upon the temporarily factionalized state of Commons between 1846 an d 1868, when royal intervention was needed to help glue together majoritycoalitions. Always prone to self-pity, Victoria fully indulged her grief at Albert's death in 1861. She r emained in mourning until her own death, making few public appearances and spending most of e ach year on the Isle of Wight and in the Scottish Highlands, where her closest companion wa s a dour Scottish servant, John Brown. Her popularity declined as a result, and republican se ntiment appeared during the late 1860s. Victoria, however, regained the people's admiration when she resumed her determined efforts t o steer public affairs. She won particular esteem for defending the popular imperialist polic ies of the Conservative ministries of Benjamin Disraeli, who flattered her relentlessly and m ade her empress of India in 1876. Conversely, she flayed William E. Gladstone, the Liberal pr ime minister, whom she intensely disliked, for ostensibly weakening the empire. Although Vict oria also attacked Gladstone for encouraging democratic trends, the celebrations of her golde n and diamond jubilees in 1887 and 1897 demonstrated her great popularity. In Victoria's later career, her attempts to influence government decisions ceased to carry si gnificant weight. The Reform Act of 1867, by doubling the electorate, strengthened party orga nization and eliminated the need for a mediator--the monarch--among factions in Commons. Victoria died on Jan. 22, 1901. She was succeeded by her son, Edward VII.Her letters have bee n published in three series (1907; 1926-28; 1930-32). |
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5681 | I58281 | Hanover | William Henry | 21 Aug 1765 | 20 Jun 1837 | 0 | Buckingham House, St. James' Park | tree1 |
5682 | I58281 | Hanover | William Henry | 21 Aug 1765 | 20 Jun 1837 | 0 | St. James Palace | tree1 |
5683 | I58281 | Hanover | William Henry | 21 Aug 1765 | 20 Jun 1837 | 0 | St. George Chapel | tree1 |
5684 | I58281 | Hanover | William Henry | 21 Aug 1765 | 20 Jun 1837 | 0 | Windsor Castle | tree1 |
5685 | I37490 | Hansman | Henry | 0 | [Winch.FTW] [Winch3.ged] GEDCOM provided by Carolyn Proffitt Winch GEDCOM provided by Carolyn Proffitt Winch GEDCOM provided by Carolyn Proffitt Winch GEDCOM provided by Carolyn Proffitt Winch |
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5686 | I63129 | HARALDSDATTER | GYDA | Abt. 1050 | 0 | [royalfam.ged] Elizabeth II (Alexandra Mary) WINDSOR Queen of England is the 29th great granddaughter of Gy da HARALDSDATTER Princess of England. |
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5687 | I65706 | |||||||
5688 | I6260 | Hardin | Hester | 1780 | Abt 1852 | 0 | King.GEDCOM. Electronic. Date of Import: December13, 2001. [1760681.ged] Last name nay have been Oatley. |
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5689 | I14839 | Hardin | John Harvey | 14 Oct 1860 | 06 May 1916 | 0 | Sources: Dee Lansford GEDCOM, 24 September 1995. Dennis W. King.Ftw, (5386 S SALIDA CT, AURORA CO, USA 80015). King.Ged, (Date of Import: Dec 13, 2001), "Electronic," Date of Import: Dec 13, 2001. 'Smoky Mountain Clans, Volume 3', Donald B. Reagan, 1983, p 235. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, "Electronic." |
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5690 | I13855 | Hardin | William Calvin | 1837 | 1864 | 0 | William's Surname has been seen listed as Hardin, Harden and Hardon. He was killed in the Civil War near Elk River, Alabama in 1864. |
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5691 | I13855 | Hardin | William Calvin | 1837 | 1864 | 0 | Additional Sources: Dee Lansford GEDCOM, 24 September 1995. 'Smoky Mountain Clans, Volume 3', Donald B. Reagan, 1983, p 232, 235. |
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5692 | I14851 | Hardin | William Calvin | 16 Feb 1863 | 30 Dec 1938 | 0 | Sources: Dee Lansford GEDCOM, 24 September 1995. Dennis W. King.Ftw, (5386 S SALIDA CT, AURORA CO, USA 80015). King.Ged, (Date of Import: Dec 13, 2001), "Electronic," Date of Import: Dec 13, 2001. 'Smoky Mountain Clans, Volume 3', Donald B. Reagan, 1983, p 235. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, "Electronic." |
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5693 | I17933 | Hardin | William Calvin | Jul 1879 | 0 | Sources: Dee Lansford GEDCOM, 24 September 1995. Dennis W. King.Ftw, (5386 S SALIDA CT, AURORA CO, USA 80015). King.Ged, (Date of Import: Dec 13, 2001), "Electronic," Date of Import: Dec 13, 2001. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, "Electronic." |
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5694 | I14855 | Hardman | Harriet | 1862 | 26 Jul 1893 | 0 | King.GEDCOM. Electronic. Date of Import: December13, 2001. [Benjiman Furbee Descendants.FTW] After Harriet's death, her daughters lived with her sister Florence Hardman Smith, wife of Thomas Smith. |
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5695 | I11792 | Hardman | Ira | 18 Dec 1872 | 02 Jul 1942 | 0 | King.GEDCOM. Electronic. Date of Import: December13, 2001. [Benjiman Furbee Descendants.FTW] [Furbee.FTW] Ira was a Construction Contractor. |
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5696 | I49937 | Harford | Frances Mary | 1762 | 0 | [hollcalv.ged] Info from Greg NELSON, Salem, OR. |
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5697 | I39843 | Hargrove | Hezekiah | 0 | [Winch.FTW] [Winch6.ged] GEDCOM provided by Carolyn Proffitt Winch GEDCOM provided by Carolyn Proffitt Winch |
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5698 | I57537 | Harlan | Aaron | 24 Dec 1685 | Nov 1732 | 0 | [hollcalv.ged] He left a will. _History and Genealogy of the HARLAN Family_, pp. 16-17 Info from Judy REGAN, Lafayette, TN. Info from Sandra STUTTERS, Pueblo, CO. Info from Barbara BROWNE, Silver Spring, MD. Info from Carmen FINLEY, Santa Rosa, CA. |
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5699 | I47558 | Harlan | Aaron | Abt 1724 | 1798 | 0 | [hollcalv.ged] He was married by Episcopal priest. He moved to Chatham Co., NC, then Laurens Dist., SC, then Union Dist., SC. He was a farmer. He was a Quaker -- disowned for "neglecting meetings" in 1749. "Hist. & Gen. HARLAN Family," 1914, pp. 37-38 Info from Barbara BROWNE, Silver Spring, MD. |
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5700 | I47652 | Harlan | Aaron | Bet. 1746 - 1749 | 0 | [hollcalv.ged] He was mentioned in grandfather HOLLINGSWORTH's will. |
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