Thursday, December 25, 2014

This Day in Goodlove History, December 25, 2014

11,945 names…11,945 stories…11,945 memories…
This Day in Goodlove History, December 25, 2014

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Jeffery Lee Goodlove email address: Jefferygoodlove@aol.com



Surnames associated with the name Goodlove have been spelled the following different ways; Cutliff, Cutloaf, Cutlofe, Cutloff, Cutlove, Cutlow, Godlib, Godlof, Godlop, Godlove, Goodfriend, Goodlove, Gotleb, Gotlib, Gotlibowicz, Gotlibs, Gotlieb, Gotlob, Gotlobe, Gotloeb, Gotthilf, Gottlieb, Gottliebova, Gottlob, Gottlober, Gottlow, Gutfrajnd, Gutleben, Gutlove

The Chronology of the Goodlove, Godlove, Gottlob, Gottlober, Gottlieb (Germany, Russia, Czech etc.), and Allied Families of Battaile, (France), Crawford (Scotland), Harrison (England), Jackson (Ireland), Jefferson, LeClere (France), Lefevre (France), McKinnon (Scotland), Plantagenets (England), Smith (England), Stephenson (England?), Vance (Ireland from Normandy), Washington, Winch (England, traditionally Wales), including correspondence with George Rogers Clark, and including ancestors William Henry Harrison, Andrew Jackson, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, James Monroe, John Adams, John Quincy Adams and Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Martin Van Buren, Theodore Roosevelt, U.S. Grant, Benjamin Harrison “The Signer”, Benjamin Harrison, Jimmy Carter, Robert E. Lee, Jefferson Davis, William Taft, John Tyler (10th President), James Polk (11th President)Zachary Taylor, and Abraham Lincoln.

The Goodlove Family History Website:

http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/g/o/o/Jeffery-Goodlove/index.html

The Goodlove/Godlove/Gottlieb families and their connection to the Cohenim/Surname project:

• New Address! https://www.familytreedna.com/public/goodlove/

• • Books written about our unique DNA include:

• “Abraham’s Children, Race, Identity, and the DNA of the Chosen People” by Jon Entine.

• “ DNA & Tradition, The Genetic Link to the Ancient Hebrews” by Rabbi Yaakov Kleiman, 2004





0 A.D.

There is also a question of the exact timing of Jesus’s birth. Jesus was not born on December 25, in the year zero. We know this because the Monk who devised our calendar in the sixth century, made a mistake in his math when he calculated the first year A.D. [1]

100_4017[2]

[3]

null

Credit: Photographed by Aurel Stein, circa 1910

The Tarim Mummies

During an excavation beneath the Tarim Basin in western China, archaeologists were surprised to discover more than 100 mummified corpses that dated back 2000 years. But a college professor named Victor Mair was downright stupefied when he came skull-to-skull with some of the blonde-haired and long nosed Tarim mummies after they were dug up and put on display at a museum. So in 1993, Mair returned to collect DNA samples from the mummies. Test results ultimately validated his hunch that the bodies were of European genetic stock. While Ancient Chinese texts from as early as the first millennium BC describe groups of far-east dwelling Caucasian people, there is no mention of how or why they ended up there.[4]



2000 YEARS AGO…Visible Only From Above, Mystifying 'Nazca Lines' Discovered in Mideast

Owen Jarus, LiveScience Contributor

Date: September 14, 2011 Time: 10:33 AM ET








wheel stone structure in jordan


The giant stone structures form wheel shapes with spokes often radiating inside. Here a cluster of wheels in the Azraq Oasis.
CREDIT: David D. Boyer APAAME_20080925_DDB-02372


They stretch from Syria to Saudi Arabia, can be seen from the air but not the ground, and are virtually unknown to the public.

They are the Middle East's own version of the Nazca Lines — ancient "geolyphs," or drawings, that span deserts in southern Peru — and now, thanks to new satellite-mapping technologies, and an aerial photography program in Jordan, researchers are discovering more of them than ever before. They number well into the thousands.

Referred to by archaeologists as "wheels," these stone structures have a wide variety of designs, with a common one being a circle with spokes radiating inside. Researchers believe that they date back to antiquity, at least 2,000 years ago. They are often found on lava fields and range from 82 feet to 230 feet (25 meters to 70 meters) across. [See gallery of wheel structures]

"In Jordan alone we've got stone-built structures that are far more numerous than (the) Nazca Lines, far more extensive in the area that they cover, and far older," said David Kennedy, a professor of classics and ancient history at the University of Western Australia.

Kennedy's new research, which will be published in a forthcoming issue of the Journal of Archaeological Science, reveals that these wheels form part of a variety of stone landscapes. These include kites (stone structures used for funnelling and killing animals); pendants (lines of stone cairns that run from burials); and walls, mysterious structures that meander across the landscape for up to several hundred feet and have no apparent practical use.

His team's studies are part of a long-term aerial reconnaissance project that is looking at archaeological sites across Jordan. As of now, Kennedy and his colleagues are puzzled as to what the structures may have been used for or what meaning they held. [History's Most Overlooked Mysteries]

Fascinating structures

Kennedy's main area of expertise is in Roman archaeology, but he became fascinated by these structures when, as a student, he read accounts of Royal Air Force pilots flying over them in the 1920s on airmail routes across Jordan. "You can't not be fascinated by these things," Kennedy said.

Indeed, in 1927 RAF Flight Lt. Percy Maitland published an account of the ruins in the journal Antiquity. He reported encountering them over "lava country" and said that they, along with the other stone structures, are known to the Bedouin as the "works of the old men."

Kennedy and his team have been studying the structures using aerial photography and Google Earth, as the wheels are hard to pick up from the ground, Kennedy said.

"Sometimes when you're actually there on the site you can make out something of a pattern but not very easily," he said. "Whereas if you go up just a hundred feet or so it, for me, comes sharply into focus what the shape is."

The designs must have been clearer when they were originally built. "People have probably walked over them, walked past them, for centuries, millennia, without having any clear idea what the shape was."

(The team has created an archive of images of the wheels from various sites in the Middle East.)

What were they used for?

So far, none of the wheels appears to have been excavated, something that makes dating them, and finding out their purpose, more difficult. Archaeologists studying them in the pre-Google Earth era speculated that they could be the remains of houses or cemeteries. Kennedy said that neither of these explanations seems to work out well.

"There seems to be some overarching cultural continuum in this area in which people felt there was a need to build structures that were circular."

Some of the wheels are found in isolation while others are clustered together. At one location, near the Azraq Oasis, hundreds of them can be found clustered into a dozen groups. "Some of these collections around Azraq are really quite remarkable," Kennedy said.

In Saudi Arabia, Kennedy's team has found wheel styles that are quite different: Some are rectangular and are not wheels at all; others are circular but contain two spokes forming a bar often aligned in the same direction that the sun rises and sets in the Middle East.

The ones in Jordan and Syria, on the other hand, have numerous spokes and do not seem to be aligned with any astronomical phenomena. "On looking at large numbers of these, over a number of years, I wasn't struck by any pattern in the way in which the spokes were laid out," Kennedy said.

Cairns are often found associated with the wheels. Sometimes they circle the perimeter of the wheel, other times they are in among the spokes. In Saudi Arabia some of the cairns look, from the air, like they are associated with ancient burials.

Dating the wheels is difficult, since they appear to be prehistoric, but could date to as recently as 2,000 years ago. The researchers have noted that the wheels are often found on top of kites, which date as far back as 9,000 years, but never vice versa. "That suggests that wheels are more recent than the kites," Kennedy said.

Amelia Sparavigna, a physics professor at Politecnico di Torino in Italy, told Live Science in an email that she agrees these structures can be referred to as geoglyphs in the same way as the Nazca Lines are. "If we define a 'geoglyph' as a wide sign on the ground of artificial origin, the stone circles are geoglyphs," Sparavignawrote in her email.

The function of the wheels may also have been similar to the enigmatic drawings in the Nazca desert. [Science as Art: A Gallery]

"If we consider, more generally, the stone circles as worship places of ancestors, or places for rituals connected with astronomical events or with seasons, they could have the same function of [the] geoglyphs of South America, the Nazca Lines for instance. The design is different, but the function could be the same," she wrote in her email.

Kennedy said that for now the meaning of the wheels remains a mystery. "The question is what was the purpose?"[5]



1 CE: The Greek story of Joseph and Asenath resolves the apparent problem that in Genesis the patriarch Joseph marries the daughter of an Egyptian priest. Here Asanath resolves the apparent problem that in Genesis the patriarch Joseph marries the daughter of an Egyptian priest. Here Asanath embraces the reputedly compassionate, patient God of Joseph before her marriage. The story, in which Asanath’s exemplary conversion brings her immortality, may serve as a tract for proselytes.[6]

1 A.D.

Following the defeat of Babylonia by the Persians, the Jews in exile were allowed to return to their homeland and rebuild their state. Over the next few centuries many Middle Eastern people converted to Judaism, not only in Israel but in the Jewish communities scattered throughout the Middle East. By 1 A.D. the total Jewish population in the Middle East probably exceeded 5 million. [7]

1 C.E.: Popular myth puts Jesus’ birth on December 25th in the year 1 C.E.[8]

[9]

1-200 A.D.: Vessel in the Form of a Clabash, Colima, Mexico, Ceramic and pigment.

[10]



1 to 200 A.D.: Figure of a Dog, Colima, Mexico, Ceramic and pigment.

2,000 years ago…

Earth Temps Over Last 18,000 Years


Compiled by R.S. Bradley and J.A. Eddy based on J.T. Houghton et al., Climate Change: The IPCC Assessment, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1990 and published in EarthQuest, vo. 1, 1991. Courtesy of Thomas Crowley, Remembrance of Things Past: Greenhouse Lessons from the Geologic Record[11]



[12]

First Century A.D.

The name of Crawford was created in Scotland sometime during the first century, A.D., when the Roman Conquest was in full swing. The place is known to be along the River Clyde, but more research is needed to pinpoint the exact spot. Since the River Clyde drains several shires, while winding its way northward to meet the Firth of Clyde, it is almost reasonable to choose one of these shires (or counties), preferably Lanarkshire. Here we find the site on which a very ferociaous battle was fought, between the Picks (Scots) and the Romans. During one of the conflicts, a tribe known as the Crow Tribe, engaged in the heaviest warfare, helping to bring a decisive victory in favor of the Scots.

The Romans, during their occupation of the British Islands, built two walls in defense of the Scottish area. One reaching from the Solvay Firth to the River Tyne. The second wall ‘Wall of Pius’ created a barrier between the Firth of Clyde and the Firth of Forth. Here we find our River Clyde and Lanarkshire between the two walls. One has difficulty in realizing the bloodshed caused by the warfare at this time. The Crow Tribe is most likely to have been the thickest of the fight and had no choice in the matter, due to their location in Lanark.

The Crow Tribe rallied and fought under a Crow totem for such they are named. In consideration of the Crow, this noted tribe produced family names as :Crowfoot, Crawfoot, Crawford, Crowford, Crafford, Crauford, ets… The ‘ford’ the climax of the name, represents the ford or crossing at the River Clyde, where some of their bloodiest battles were maneuvered. The Crow Tribe is likely to have been most trampled down, if it had not been for their gallantry and spirit. Thus, the production of brave soldiers by the name of Crawford. Centuries have passed and the Crawford name still ranks among those of outstanding military events of world history.

The Romans left very little in Scotland by which to be remembered. Except for the ruins of the two walls before mentioned and the name of Caledonia; and to this day the Scottish people are often referred to as Caledonians.

The Caledonians suffered plundering, raids and wars at the hands of other nations, from every direction and from exploitations originating on the mainland of Europe. The Gauls, Britons, Celts, Angles, Saxons and Norsemen, all of whom have made an impression on the Scots, until the former Scottish people compared to the Caledonians of today, might never be recognized. It may be stated that the Gayuls have accomplished more in Scotland than any other race. Gaulic influence has endured for generations on the Scottish soil.[13]

4 CE

Roman Emperor Augustus adopt his stepson Tiberius, who has demontrated military capabilities in central and eastern Europe.[14]

5 CE

The retelling of Genesis is composed in Aramaic and is found among the Dead Sea Scrolls. Similar to works such as 1 Ewpoch and Jubilees, the Genesis Apocryphon has Noah born of angels and Abram a healer and dream interpreter.[15]

James was born around 5 A.D. with the rest to follow.[16]

5-6 CE: Joazar ben Boethus ? - 6 CE (Sadducee) under Herodians and Romans.[17]. Joazar (reappointed) high priest of Israel. These local officials were expected to represent Roman interests (as when Joazar persuaded the people not to join in the rebellion in 6 C.E.) and to carry out whatever directives might be issued. [18]’

5 A.D. to 8 CE: When Jesus was about 12 years old he was taken to Jerusalem, where he listened to learned rabbis discuss the Torah, but, as in the case of Moses, we know little else of his childhood and nothing about his early manhood.[1][19]



There is just one mention of boy Jesus and it is only in a single gospel. At age 12 Jesus gets separated from his parents in Jerusalem. They discover him three days later in the temple. “They found him sitting among the teachers…all who heard him were amazed at his understanding…[20]

About 2000 years ago: One day about 2,000 years ago, a non Jew asked the great teach Rabbi Hillil to quickly teach him as much about Judaism as he could. “What is hateful to you, do not do to your neighbor,” Hillil said. “This is the whole of Jewish Law; the rest is commentary. Now go and study it.”[21]

There were alternative movements to Rabbinic Judaism in Rabbi Hillel’s time. Most of these movements for reform or change died out, but one sect would survive and ultimately thrive. As Judaism turned inward to establish the laws that would protect the religion from misinterpretation, this sect would spread outward, eventually becoming the dominant religion of the Roman world.[22]

5-10 A.D: Birth of Saul-Paul at Tarsus in Cilicia.[23]

About 6 A.D. : When Jesus was about 12 years old he was taken to Jerusalem, where he listened to learned rabbis discuss the Torah, but, as in the case of Moses, we know little else of his childhood and nothing about his early manhood.[24] Next to the events surrounding Jesus’ birth, this is the only other event from his childhood recorded in the Bible. Jesus was twelve years old, not quite a man according to Jewish custom, when this event occurred around A.D. 6. Luke 2:41-52.[25]

[26] Pulpit atTrinity Church, Boston MA. Designed by Charles Coolidge, executed by John Evans, 1916

“Every year his parents went to Jerusalem for the Feast of the Passover.[27] When he was twelve years old[28], they went up to the Feast, according to the custom. After the Feast was over, while his parents were returning home, the boy Jesus stayed behind in Jerusalem, thus they were unaware of it.Thinking he was in their company they traveled on for a day. Then they began looking for him among their relatives and friends. When they did not find him, they went back to Jerusalem to look for him. After three days they found him in the temple courts, sitting among the teachers[29], listening to them and asking them questions. Everyone who heard him was amazed at his understanding and his answers. When his parents saw him, they were astonished. His mother said to him, “Son, why have you treated us like this? Your father and I have been anxiously searching for you.”

Why were you searching for me? He asked. “Didn’t you know I had to be in my Father’s house?” But they did not understand what he was saying to them.”[30]

6 CE: Rome annexes Judea and Samaria and conducts census. When Judaea became a province in A.D. 6 and a census was held by Coponius, the first procurator, together with P. Sulpicius Quirinius, legate of Syria, Joazar the high Priest succeeded in persuading the Jews, who resented the census to submit to it quietly, except for a few extremists, who rebelled at the instigation of a Galilean named Judas. When the census was completed, Quirinius deposed Joazar because the people objected to him, and appointed Ananus in his place before leaving the province in Coponius’ care.[31]

6 A.D.: After the banishment of Archelaus to Vienna in Gaul in 6 A.D., the ephemeral rule of Judea by a Herodian ethnarch was replaced by a direct Roman take over. Following the census ordered in the same year by Publius Sulpicius Quirinius of Gospel fame, the legate of Syria, a Roman knight, Coponius, was appointed prefect of Judea, and as much, made directly responsible to the emperor for the military, financial and judicial administration of the region.Thus, despite the real power still possessed by the Sanhedrin and the aristocratic chief priests and Temple officials, Judea could not help but be humiliated by the presence of imperial Rome.[32]

6 CE: Roman Emperor Augustus reorganizes Judea as a Roman province after Samaritans and Judeans adamantly protest the administration of the ethnarch, Herod’s son Archelaus. The capital The capital is moved from Jerusalem to more Hellenized Caesarea. Herod’s other sons, Herod Antipas and Philipo, continue to govern Galilee and Transjordan, respectively.[33]

6 CE:A Roman census frives home the provincial status of Israel and, according to the Jewish Historeian Josephus[34], sparks the seditious Zealot movement. Led by Judah of Gamala and Zadok the Pharisee from Jerusalem, the Zealots see Jewish freedom and hastening trhe reign of God as intertwined goals.[35]

6 BCE: After his death in 4 BC, his son Archelaus was deposed as ruler of Judaea after ten turbulent years. Another son, Philip, inherited Galilee and Paraea. Philip was more successful, and ruled for thirty-three years. About the time of his death, and in the first year of the reign of the emperor Caligula, Joseph ben Matthias was born, scion of an ancient priestly family and son of a mother descended from Israel’s Maccabean kings. [36]

6 A.D.: Annas had officially served as high priest from 6 A.D., until the Romans removed him in 15 A.D.[37]

6 to 15: Ananus ben Seth, High Priest of Israel 6-15 A.D. under Herodians and Romans.[38]. Ananus, son of Seth, appointed high priest (the Annas of the New Testament) by Quirinius served in the post for nine years until some time in the first half of the procuratorship of Gratus, and whose son in law Caiaphas was the last of Gratus’ appointments. Later on, no less than five of his sons also assumed this position on and off until shortly before the war: Eleazar for one year under Gratus; Jonathan for a short time early in 37; Theophilus as Jonathan’s successor until 41; Matthias from 41 to 44; and Ananus in 62.[39]

After 6: The situation after 6 C.E. was, on the one hand, a continuation of what had held true since Herodian times; the high priesthood was not a hereditary position but was determined by outside forces, either the Herodians or the Romans.[40]

6 to 41: From 6 to 41 A.D. the religious leaders of the Jews were appointed by the representatives of the enemy and oppressor, and they could retain their position only by keeping in their good books. [41]

On the other hand, however, the first century priestly leadership was a throwback to pre-Herodian days, when the high priest was the most eminent political and religious figure in the city. The form of leadership that held sway throughout most of the Persian era and flourished in the Hellenistic era was now reintroduced, albeit with the important proviso that ultimate control of this office was in the hands of Rome or its appointees.[42]

December 17-25, 217: Saturnalia

By the beginning of December, writes Columella, the farmer should have finished his autumn planting (De Re Rustica, III.14). Now, at the time of the winter solstice (December 25 in the Julian calendar), Saturnus, the god of seed and sowing, was honored with a festival. The Saturnalia officially was celebrated on December 17 (XVI Kal. Jan.) and, in Cicero's time, lasted seven days, from December 17-23. Augustus limited the holiday to three days, so the civil courts would not have to be closed any longer than necessary, and Caligula extended it to five (Suetonius, XVII; Cassius Dio, LIX.6), which Claudius restored after it had been abolished (Dio, LX.25). Still, everyone seems to have continued to celebrate for a full week, extended, says Macrobius (I.10.24), by celebration of the Sigillaria, so named for the small earthenware figurines that were sold then.

Macrobius, in his Saturnalia, creates an imaginary symposium among pagan intellectuals in which he offers an explanation for the varying length of the holiday. Originally, it was celebrated on only one day, the fourteenth before the Kalends of January. With the Julian reform of the calendar, however, two days were added to December, and the Saturnalia was celebrated sixteen days before the Kalends (December 17), "with the result that, since the exact day was not commonly known—some observing the addition which Caesar had made to the calendar and others following the old usage—the festival came to be regarded as lasting for more days than one" (I.10.2). The original day now was given over to the Opalia, honoring Ops, who personified abundance and the fruits of the earth, and was the consort of Saturn. As the two deities represented the produce of the fields and orchards, so they also were thought to represent heaven and earth. It was for this reason, says Macrobius (I.10.20), that the two festivals were celebrated at the same time, the worshipers of Ops always sitting in prayer so that they touched the earth, mother of all.

In the Roman calendar, the Saturnalia was designated a holy day, or holiday, on which religious rites were performed. Saturn, himself, was identified with Kronos, and sacrificed to according to Greek ritual, with the head uncovered. The Temple of Saturn, the oldest temple recorded by the pontiffs, had been dedicated on the Saturnalia, and the woolen bonds which fettered the feet of the ivory cult statue within were loosened on that day to symbolize the liberation of the god. It also was a festival day. After sacrifice at the temple, there was a public banquet, which Livy says was introduced in 217 BC (there also may have been a lectisternium, a banquet for the god in which its image is placed in attendance, as if a guest). Afterwards, according to Macrobius (I.10.18), the celebrants shouted Io, Saturnalia at a riotous feast in the temple.

The Saturnalia was the most popular holiday of the Roman year. Catullus (XIV) describes it as "the best of days," and Seneca complains that the "whole mob has let itself go in pleasures" (Epistles, XVIII.3). Pliny the Younger writes that he retired to his room while the rest of the household celebrated (Epistles, II.17.24). It was an occasion for celebration, visits to friends, and the presentation of gifts, particularly wax candles (cerei), perhaps to signify the returning light after the solstice, and sigillaria. Martial wrote Xenia and Apophoreta for the Saturnalia. Both were published in December and intended to accompany the "guest gifts" which were given at that time of year. Aulus Gellius relates that he and his Roman compatriots would gather at the baths in Athens, where they were studying, and pose difficult questions to one another on the ancient poets, a crown of laurel being dedicated to Saturn if no-one could answer them (Attic Nights, XVIII.2).

During the holiday, restrictions were relaxed and the social order inverted. Gambling was allowed in public. Slaves were permitted to use dice and did not have to work. Instead of the toga, less formal dinner clothes (synthesis) were permitted, as was the pileus, a felt cap normally worn by the manumitted slave that symbolized the freedom of the season. Within the family, a Lord of Misrule was chosen. Slaves were treated as equals, allowed to wear their masters' clothing, and be waited on at meal time in remembrance of an earlier golden age thought to have been ushered in by the god. In the Saturnalia, Lucian relates that "During My week the serious is barred; no business allowed. Drinking, noise and games and dice, appointing of kings and feasting of slaves, singing naked, clapping of frenzied hands, an occasional ducking of corked faces in icy water—such are the functions over which I preside."

This equality was temporary, of course. Petronius speaks of an impudent slave, who had burst out laughing, being asked whether it was December yet (Satyricon, LVIII). Dio writes of Aulus Plautius cajoling his troops in his invasion of Britain. But they hesitated, "indignant at the thought of carrying on a campaign outside the limits of the known world." Only when they were entreated by a former slave dispatched by Claudius did they relent, shouting Io, Saturnalia (LX.19.3).

If a time of merriment, the season also was an occasion for murder. The Catiline conspirators intended to fire the city and kill the Senate on the Saturnalia, when many would be preoccupied with the celebration. Caracalla plotted to murder his brother then, and Commodus was strangled in his bath on New Year's eve.

At the end of the first century AD, Statius still could proclaim: "For how many years shall this festival abide! Never shall age destroy so holy a day! While the hills of Latium remain and father Tiber, while thy Rome stands and the Capitol thou hast restored to the world, it shall continue" (Silvae, I.6.98ff). And the Saturnalia did continue to be celebrated as Brumalia (from bruma, "the shortest day," winter solstice) down to the Christian era, when, by the middle of the fourth century AD, its festivities had become absorbed in the celebration of Christmas.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------




217 B.C.: Saturnalia underwent a major reform in 217 BC, after the Battle of Lake Trasimene, when the Romans suffered one of their most crushing defeats by Carthage during the Second Punic War. Until that time, they had celebrated the holiday according to Roman custom (more Romano). It was after a consultation of the Sibylline books that they adopted "Greek rite", introducing sacrifices carried out in the Greek manner, the public banquet, and the continual shouts of io Saturnalia that became characteristic of the celebration.[51] Cato the Elder (234–149 BC) was aware of a time before the so-called "Greek" elements had been added to the Roman Saturnalia.[52] It was not unusual for the Romans to offer cult to the gods of other nations in the hope of redirecting their favor (see evocatio), and the Second Punic War in particular created pressures on Roman society that led to a number of religious innovations and reforms.[53] Robert E.A. Palmer has argued that the introduction of new rites at this time was in part an effort to appease Ba'al Hammon, the Carthaginian god who was regarded as the counterpart of the Roman Saturn and Greek Cronus.[54] The table service that masters offered their slaves thus would have extended to Carthaginian or African war captives.[55][43]

December 25, 337 (14th of Tevet, 4098): Earliest possible date on which Christmas was reported to have been celebrated on December 25th.[44]

337-361: Jews began to be widely treated as second class citizens during the rule of Constantine’s son Constantius II (337-361). Taxes on Jews were increased, and Jews lost some of the rights of other Roman citizens. Jews could not marry Christians, they could not participate in the government, and they were no longer permitted to proselytize. [45]

341 CE: Interest in Yahweh as Creator did not enter Judaism until the exile to Babylon. It was a conception that was alien to the Greek world; creation exs nihilo was not an official doctrine of Christianity until the Council of Nicaea in 341.[46]

AD 343 – 381 Council of Laodicea - condemns Sabbath observance

[p. 310] Can. 16. “On Saturday [Greek sabbaton, “the Sabbath”] the Gospels and other portions of the Scripture shall be read aloud." [p. 316] Can. 29. “Christians shall not juidize and be idle on Saturday, but shall work on that day; but the Lord’s day they shall especially honor, and, as being Christians, shall, if possible, do no work on that day. If, however, they are found Judaizing, they shall be shut out [Greek anathema] from Christ.”[18][47]

Before December 25, 352 A.D.: In the early years of Christianity, Easter was the main holiday; the birth of Jesus was not celebrated. In the fourth century, church officials decided to institute the birth of Jesus as a holiday. Unfortunately, the Bible does not mention date for his birth (a fact Puritans later pointed out in order to deny the legitimacy of the celebration). Although some evidence suggests that his birth may have occurred in the spring (why would shepherds be herding in the middle of winter?), Pope Julius I chose December 25. It is commonly believed that the church chose this date in an effort to adopt and absorb the traditions of the pagan Saturnalia festival. First called the Feast of the Nativity, the custom spread to Egypt by 432 and to England by the end of the sixth century. By the end of the eighth century, the celebration of Christmas had spread all the way to Scandinavia. Today, in the Greek and Russian orthodox churches, Christmas is celebrated 13 days after the 25th, which is also referred to as the Epiphany or Three Kings Day. This is the day it is believed that the three wise men finally found Jesus in the manger.

By holding Christmas at the same time as traditional winter solstice festivals, church leaders increased the chances that Christmas would be popularly embraced, but gave up the ability to dictate how it was celebrated. By the Middle Ages, Christianity had, for the most part, replaced pagan religion. On Christmas, believers attended church, then celebrated raucously in a drunken, carnival-like atmosphere similar to today's Mardi Gras. Each year, a beggar or student would be crowned the "lord of misrule" and eager celebrants played the part of his subjects. The poor would go to the houses of the rich and demand their best food and drink. If owners failed to comply, their visitors would most likely terrorize them with mischief. Christmas became the time of year when the upper classes could repay their real or imagined "debt" to society by entertaining less fortunate citizens.[48]

December 25, 380: In Cappadocia, Gregory of Nyssa's sermons on St. Basil (who died before 1 January, 379) and the two following, preached on St. Stephen's feast (P.G., XLVI, 788; cf, 701, 721), prove that in 380 the 25th December was already celebrated there, unless, following Usener's too ingenious arguments (Religionsgeschichtliche Untersuchungen, Bonn, 1889, 247-250), one were to place those sermons in 383. Also, Asterius of Amaseia (fifth century) and Amphilochius of Iconium (contemporary of Basil and Gregory) show that in their dioceses both the feasts of Epiphany and Nativity were separate (P.G., XL, 337 XXXIX, 36).[49]

381 CE: Christianity officially became the state religion in 381, and other religions were outlawed. (Ecumenical councils of bishops, Constantinople).[50]

382 CE: Octagonal Church, Church of the Apostles, Jerusalem, built by Emperor Thodosius who made Christianity the official religion.[51]

December 25, 385: In 385, Silvia of Bordeaux (or Etheria, as it seems clear she should be called) was profoundly impressed by the splendid Childhood feasts at Jerusalem. They had a definitely "Nativity" colouring; the bishop proceeded nightly to Bethlehem, returning to Jerusalem for the day celebrations. In 385, therefore, December 25, was not observed at Jerusalem.[52]

386 A.D.: Tradition tells us the date of St. Patricks birth as 386 A.D. in a civilized town by the sea but like everything in his life the location is widely disputed.[53]

December 25, 388: In Antioch, on the feast of St. Philogonius, Chrysostom preached an important sermon. The year was almost certainly 386, though Clinton gives 387, and Usener, by a long rearrangement of the saint's sermons, 388 (Religionsgeschichtl. Untersuch., pp. 227-240). But between February, 386, when Flavian ordained Chrysostom priest, and December is ample time for the preaching of all the sermons under discussion. (See Kellner, Heortologie, Freiburg, 1906, p. 97, n. 3). In view of a reaction to certain Jewish rites and feasts, Chrysostom tries to unite Antioch in celebrating Christ's birth on 25 December, part of the community having already kept it on that day for at least ten years. In the West, he says, the feast was thus kept, anothen; its introduction into Antioch he had always sought, conservatives always resisted. This time he was successful; in a crowded church he defended the new custom. It was no novelty; from Thrace to Cadiz this feast was observed — rightly, since its miraculously rapid diffusion proved its genuineness. Besides, Zachary, who, as high-priest, entered the Temple on the Day of Atonement, received therefore announcement of John's conception in September; six months later Christ was conceived, i.e. in March, and born accordingly in December.

Finally, though never at Rome, on authority he knows that the census papers of the Holy Family are still there. [This appeal to Roman archives is as old as Justin Martyr (First Apology 34-35) and Tertullian (Adv. Marc., IV, 7, 19). Julius, in the Cyriline forgeries, is said to have calculated the date from Josephus, on the same unwarranted assumptions about Zachary as did Chrysostom.] Rome, therefore, has observed 25 December long enough to allow of Chrysostom speaking at least in 388 as above (P.G., XLVIII, 752, XLIX, 351).[54]

390-420 CE: According to Moslem tradition, conversion to Judaism started under Abu Karib Asad (ruled 390-420), who became a Jew himself and propagated his new faith among his subjects. Arabic sources expressly state that Judaism became widely spread among Berdouin tribes of Southern Arabia and that Jewish converts also found with the Hamdan, a North Yemenit tribe. This time, many of the upper strata of society embraced the Jewish faith. Thye position of Judism in Yemen reached its zenith under DHu NuuwAs.[55]

391: The emperor Theodosius ultimately outlawed the practice of Judaism, along with all pagan religions, in 391.[56]

December 25 and January 1, 418-427: John Cassian records in his "Collations" (X, 2 in P.L., XLIX, 820), written 418-427, that the Egyptian monasteries still observe the "ancient custom" of Christs birth; but on 29 Choiak (25 December) and 1 January.[57]

December 25, 496 A.D.: On Christmas Day in 496 A.D. The Basilica in Reams in Northern France is bathed in the light of a thousand candles. The air inside the sanctuary is thick with insence as the local bishop sends up a silent prayer of thanksgiving. This is a red letter day for the Catholic Church. This morning the king of Europes newest barbarian superpower, the Franks, will renounce his pagen roots and become a Christian. Clovis will cement not only his own spiritual allegiance but that of an entire nation. In France this is seen as the beginning of France becoming a Christian nation. It was a very strategic move. By choosing Catholism Clovis united his people.[58]

December 25, 600 years before Christ…

The Persian God Mithra, 600 years before Christ, was born December 25, performed miracles, resurrected on the third day, known as the lamb, the way, the truth, the light, the savior, the Messiah.[59]

600 B.C. Bysantium was a Greek City-State founded around 600 B.C. named after its King Bysantus. They settled where a thin strip of water connected Asia to Europe and the Black Sea to eventually the Mediteranium. This strip of water is called the straight of Bosphorus.[60]

600 BCE: The Cavalry have arrived. Humans ride into battle on horseback. Putting a man with iron weapons on horseback makes him nearly unstoppable. This advancement makes empires possible.[61]

100_3848[62]

The history of the Henschel homestead begins in 1849 with Johann & Christianna Henschel. The Henschels co-existed with the Indian until 1870 when they were relocated. Upon relocation, “Old Solomon” a Potawatomi Indian gifted the Henschels a dugout canoe which is presently on display at the Sheboygan Museum.

The property was no doubt a sacred and ceremonial site. Mounds and fortifications were recorded in early Wisconsin archeological books. One day while out plowing, Herman’s (Johann’s son) horses dropped through a mound...and what he found was….(come to the museum and get the rest of the story!) As of 2008, Henschels are in the process of rebuilding this mound.



In 1996, through an excavation by the University of Marquette, Henschel’s is the official location of “Wisconsin’s OLDEST red ochre burial site”. (600 to 800 BC)

When you drive over the hill and see the Sheboygan Marsh (once a glacial lake) below...you will see why you will soon be stepping foot onto sacred ground…



“The View Alone—is Worth the Trip”

The museum houses stone tools, projectile points, pottery, copper implements, bone tools and much more. You’ll be shown how the Native Americans threw their weapons—utilizing a tool called an ATLATL. [63]



600 B.C.

100_3849[64]

100_3850[65]

100_3851[66]

100_3853[67]

100_3854[68]

100_3859[69]

600 - 300 BC (approximately) East Germanic tribes move from Scandinavia into the area between the Oder and Vistula rivers.[70]



[71]

December 25, Christmas Day, 800 AD :In St. Peters Basilica in Rome a new Emperor is crowned, the first in nearly 300 years. The Pope is on hand to do the crowning and to announce the formation of a new Roman empire. The new emperor and the most powerful man in Europe since the days of ancient Rome is Charlemagne.[72] Charlemagne’s domain stretched from the North Sea to the Mediterranean and it encompassed modern France, Germany, Holland, Switzerland, Austria, Poland and most of Italy. Not since the fall of Rome had so much of the continent under one man.[73]

December 25, 800: Charlemagne

Page protected with pending changes level 1


Charles the Great


Charlemagne denier Mayence 812 814.jpg


A coin of Charlemagne with the inscription KAROLVS IMP AVG (Karolus Imperator Augustus)


Holy Roman Emperor


Reign

December 25, 800 – January 28, 814


Coronation

December 25, 800
Old St. Peter's Basilica, Rome


Predecessor

Position Established


Successor

Louis I


King of the Lombards


December 25, 800: Coronation of Charlemagne as Holy Roman Emperor, in Rome. Charlemagne supported most of the policies and edicts Pope Gregory the Great and Pope Stephen IV. However, he ignored their edicts concerning Jews. For the most part, Jews were allowed to participate in the economic and social life of the Empire within the limits of Medieval Society. The Jews of Narbonne (France) supported Charlemagne’s father Pepin in his war with the Moslems and Charlemagne remembered this. Unfortunately, Charlemagne’s policies toward the Jews died with him in 814.[74]

802 - Death of King Beorthric of Wessex.[75]
802 - King Egbert ( 802 - 839 ) [76] Egbert returns from exile in Charlemagne and becomes King of Wessex. [77]

King Egbert













Name: King Egbert (Ecgberht)
Born: c.769
Parents: Ealhmund of Kent (Father)
Relation to Elizabeth II: 34th great-grandfather
House of: Wessex
Became King: 802
Married: Redburh of Francia
Children: Aethelwulf
Died: 839
Buried at: Winchester
Succeeded by: his son Aethelwulf

Egbert (Ecgberht in Anglo Saxon) king of Wessex (802-39), and the first Saxon king recognized as sovereign of all England . He was the son of a Kentish noble but claimed descent from Cerdic (reigned 519-34), founder of Wessex, the kingdom of the West Saxons in southern England. During the late 8th century, when King Offa of Mercia (reigned 757-96) ruled most of England, Egbert lived in exile at the court of Charlemagne. Egbert regained his kingdom in 802. He conquered the neighboring kingdoms of Kent, Cornwall, and Mercia, and by 830 he was also acknowledged as sovereign of East Anglia, Sussex, Surrey, and Northumbria and was given the title of Bretwalda (Anglo-Saxon, "ruler of the British"). During following years Egbert led expeditions against the Welsh and the Vikings. The year before his death he defeated a combined force of Danes and Cornish at Hingston Down in Cornwall. He was succeeded by his son Aethelwulf, the father of Alfred.[78]

804: Saxons finally conquered by Charlemagne.[79]

C. 796-806 Muhammad Ibn Ibrahim Al-Fazari
Abu 'Abdallah Muhammad ibn Ibrahim al-Fazari. Son of the astronomer Ibrahim dealt with above, for whom he is sometimes mistaken (he may be the author of the astrological poem ascribed to his father). Died c. 796 to 806. Muslim scientist and astronomer. He was ordered by the Caliph al-Mansur in 772/3 to translate the Sanskrit astronomical work Siddhanta. This translation was possibly the vehicle by means of which the Hindu numerals were transmitted from India to Islam.
H. Suter: Die Mathematiker und Astronomen der Araber (p. 4,1900).
Cantor: Geschichte der Mathematik (I, 3rd ed., 698, 1907).
D. E. Smith and L. C. Karpinski: The Hindu-Arabic Numerals (p.92, Boston, 1911)[80]

807: Abbassid Caliph Harun al-Rashid orders all Jews in the Caliphate to wear a yellow belt, with Christians to wear a blue one. [81]

809: While the tenth-century Muslim scholars Ibn Rustah and Al-Masudi date the royal conversion to around 809, they make no claim that Khazaria had suddenly become a significant Jewish outpost. [82]

• “Surely those who believe

• And those who are Jews and Christians…

• Whoever believes in God

• And the last day and does good,

• They shall have their reward from God.”

• Koran 2:62



809: Harun al-Rashid, born in 763 or 766 at al-Ray; died at Tus in 809. Caliph from 786 to his death; the fifth and one of the greatest 'Abbasid monarchs. Magnificent patron of science, art, and literature. Many more Greek works were translated by his order. In 807 he presented a very remarkable water-clock to Charlemange (King of the Franks since 768; crowned Emperor of the West on Christmas 800 by Leo III in Rome)[83]



810: family de Baux

The Vances descend from a Baltic Goth family who overtook an ancient fortress in southern France after they were expelled from Italy. The medieval castle, Les Baux, still exists as ruins perched atop a rocky mountain ledge near Arles, France. From their castle, they took the name de Baux (pronounced “dee bow”).

The first record of a de Baux is that of Gossallin who, in about 810, married Herriasbeuck, daughter and heiress of William, Sovereign of the Court of Orange, and niece of Bertha, wife of Emperor Charlemagne.

The de Bauxs were feudal overlords owning seventy-nine villages and towns, mostly located along the Rhone River from Marseille north to near Lyon. One author says of them “The Princes of Les Baux were a barbaric race, … with wild mountain blood in their veins. Their association with Christianity was certainly not of a very intimate kind. They were a blind, bloodstained race, believing in violence and retaliation as the one and only means of grace in this world and troubling themselves, till the moment of death, with very little about the next. They generally reaped as they had sown; feared, hated, and often dying deaths as terrible as those which they had inflicted on their victims.”

It was a powerful and influential family that married into a number of kingdoms and fiefdoms of Europe. They have been Dukes of Andrea; Princes of Joinville, Taranta, and Altamara; Sovereign Counts of Orange and Provence; and Kings of Vienne and Arles.

The de Bauxs also claim descendancy from the Magi King, Balthazar, one of the wise men following the star to Bethlehem upon the birth of Jesus. To make sure everyone understood their relationship to Balthazar and the birth of Jesus, the de Bauxs carried the symbol of the star of Bethlehem on the arms and armor they bore in tournaments as well as in battle. It was also on their coins and in wall hangings decorating their castle. Written on the tomb of Raymond de Baux (who many think is the direct ancestor of the Vances) is, “To the illustrious family of des Baux held to derive its origin from the ancient King of Armenia to whom under the guidance of a star, the Saviour of the world manifested himself”.[84]

December 25, 961: Otto I, Holy Roman Emperor




Otto the Great


Otto the Great.jpg


The Magdeburger Reiter: a tinted sandstone equestrian monument, c. 1240, traditionally intended as a portrait of Otto I, Magdeburg


Holy Roman Emperor


Reign

February 2, 962 – May 7, 973


Coronation

February 2, 962
Old St. Peter's Basilica, Rome


Predecessor

Berengar of Friuli


Successor

Otto II


King of Italy


Reign

December 25, 961 – May 7, 973


December 25, 1000: At the start of the 11th century, Hungary was established as a Christian kingdom by Stephen I of Hungary. In this case, Christian means Roman Catholic. Religious belief aside, Stephen used Catholicism as an instrument of national unification as he established his rule over pagans and those of his subjects who sought support from the Byzantine (Eastern Orthodox) Empire. Based on archeological evidence Jews had probably been living in what was now Hungary since the third century. The first written mention of Jews living in Hungary is found in a letter from the end of 10th century written by the famous Sephard, Hasdai ibn Shaprut. There were enough Jews living in Hungary by the end of the 11th century that at the council of Szabolcs, the Church prohibited marriages between Jews and Christians, work on Christian festivals, and the purchase of slaves. At the same time, the Hungarian King Kolman took measures to protect Hungarian Jews from Crusaders passing through the kingdom.[85]

1000

The wording of the first sentence of the Lord’s Prayer, in the Anglo-Saxopn Version (c. 1000) reads: “Faeder ure thu the eart on heofonum, si thin nama gehalgod.”[86]







Mississippian 1000-1400[87]





Mississippian 1000-1400[88]



2

Mississippian 1000-1400[89]





Like Cahokia, the communities of Etowah in Georgia, Spiro in Oklahoma, and Moundville in Alabama manaqged exgten sikve gtrade networks and b uilt large ceremonial centers with grand architecture. Each community was distinct from the others politically, but all shared simislar architecture, artistic traditions and styles of leasdership, a suite of traits archeaolost call mississippian.[90]



1000-1500: Middle Mississippian Farming economy. Permanent stockade villages. Pyrimidal and Flat Topped mounds. Well made pottery. Hyerarchical social organization. Astalan (Wisconsin) Cahokia (Missouri).[91]



1000-1500 A.D.: Oneota (Wisconsin) Corn Agriculture. Hunting. Fishing. Collecting also important. Permant villages and a variety of distinctive Artifact types. Less complex social organization.[92]



1001: Chola king Rajaraja I conquers Sri Lanka, Hakin mosque built in Cairo, Leif Ericssen in Vinland.[93]

1002: Death of Almanzor (Mohammed ibn abi-Amir al-Mansur) the chief minister of Omayyad caliphate at Cordoba – beginning of fall of caliphate, Death of 19 year old HRE Otto III – cousin Henry II the Saint rules, Birth of Edward the confessor, Massacre of St. Brice’s Day as Danishe settlers in England are murdered on order of Ethelred II, Basil II defeats Bulgarians at Vidin, start of Muzaffar as caliph of Cordoba, Leif Ericsson explores North American coast possibly as far south as Maryland, Ethelred marries Emma sister of Duke Richard of Normandy, Death of Otto III, Duke Henry of Bavaria becomes King Henry II of Germany (St. Henry), [94]



December 25, 1066: William the Conqueror




William the Conqueror


Bayeuxtapestrywilliamliftshishelm.jpg


William as depicted in the Bayeux Tapestry during the Battle of Hastings, lifting his helm to show that he is still alive


King of England


Reign

December 25, 1066 –
September 9, 1087


Coronation

December 25, 1066


Predecessor

Edgar the Ætheling (uncrowned)
(Otherwise) Harold II


Successor

William II


December 25, 1100: Baldwin of Boulogne is crowned as the first King of Jerusalem in the Church of the Nativity. This is one of those events loaded with subtle irony. This coronation was the culmination of the First Crusade, during which the Christian warriors drove the Jews from the City of David.[95]





Mississippian society, 1050-1100[96]



1100: Pueblos build circular rooms in N America, decline of Ghana empire in W Africa, probable founding of Katanga in Zaire, Height of Chimu civilization at Chan Chan, Peru, Anasazi build cliff dwellings, Rise of Incas in Peru, Hohokam people build religious platforms in AZ, first statues erected on Easter Island, Beginning of Hawaiian societies, Earliest Polynesian settlements on Pitcairn islands, Death of William II Rufus of England killed accidentally by Sir Walter Tyrel in the New Forest – succeeded by Henry I, Baldwin becomes King of Jerusalem, Baldin I becomes King of Jerusalem, Indian love poem “Gitagocinda”, “Chanson de Roland” the French heroic poem written, “Play of the Wise and Silly Virgins”, Indian allegorical play written, Ile-de-France becomes prevailing dialect, Old English gives way to Middle English, Gothic architecture, Castle Chillon in Switzerland, baptistery created in Florence, beginnings of secular music school in polyphonic style, start of decline of Islamic science, Sinchi ROca civilization in Peru, Third Pueblo Period in SW US, Munich and Stettin mentioned in records, probable colonization of Polynesia from S. America, Chinese invent magnifying glass, Shona people construct stone walls in Great Zimbabwe, Chinese publish illustrated texts in Botany, Song of Roland completed, Gothic architecture peaks, Old English replaced by Middle English, Start of period of architecture known as Gothic until 1500s, Hanseatic League (guilds) forms and starts to dominate trade, Polynesian islands colonized, end of William II Rufus of England – Henry I rules following his brother’s assassination to 1135, Baldwin of Bouillon Count of Edessa, Raymond of Toulouse named Count of Tripoli, Bohemund of Otranto Prince of Antioch, Colonization of Polynesian islands continues, Building of Great Zimbabwe, Godfrey of Jerusalem dies, brother Baldwin rules, Death of William Rufus (unliked son ofWilliam the Conqueror) of England - buried in Winchester Cathedral, brother Henry I becomes king of England, Robert I (brother) returns from crusades, Wm II killed by arrow... "accident?" Brother Henry I becomes king, issues charter of liberties, promising good government, Marries Edith, dau Malcolm III of Scotland, End of the Toltec civilization, rise of the Incan civilization, Khmer kingdom built, Begin Gothic style, The Numic peoples (Utes, Goshutes, Piutes) move into Utah, artesian and graftsmen's guilds developin European towns, Godfrey, crusader and leader of Jerusalem dies, brother Baldwin rules and accepts title of King, accidental death of William Rufus of England, younger brother Henry (the First) rules, Gunpowder used to build rockets, Chinese start work on mulit-colored printing. [97]

1100 A.D. Cahokia

With upwards of 30,000 inhabitants at its peak in about 1100 AD, Cahokia, Illinois remained the United States' first and biggest real city until the Northeast's population exploded in the late 18th century. This urban center of the Mississippi culture had organized leadership, commerce and a penchant for mound-building. Monk's Mound, the largest at 100 feet tall, dominates the site and was probably a mighty foundation for the home of the resident spiritual leader.[98]



[99]

AD 1100-1200

Cahokia is at the height of its power, and mound building continues at a fast pace.[100]











































In southern Illinois, across the Mississippi River from present day St. Louis, Missouri, stood the settlement of Cahokia. It was not only the largest Mississippian town, but also the largest community north of Mexico in the ancient Americas. From AD 900 to 1350, Cahokia’s powerful leaders oversaw a bustling society. By exchanging goods with leaders of other Mississippian centers, they built ties, both economic and political, with communities far and wide. [101]



The Knights templar eliminated the need for carrying coin by establishing the first system of credit. In the city of Jerusalem the Knights were given shelter by the Christian King of Jerusalem, Baldwin II. Shelter in the stables of the old Jewish Temple at the Temple mount, the most sacred of sites.

Nobody really knows what the first knights were doing there though it has been suggested that they were digging below the Temple mount. History tells of treasure buried below the Temple mount, atop the ruins of Solomons Temple.[102]

All of sudden the leading Sistergian, a man by the name of Bernard de Clairvaux, suddenly declaring that he wants to create this band of religious Knights called the Knights Templar. The Knights Templer were an offshoot of the Sistergian monastic movement. [103]



1101: Treaty of Alton – Robert of Normandy bought off after invading England, King Conrad dies, Roger II becomes count of Sicily, Minsk becomes new capital, Accession of Emperor Hai-tsung, Su Tung-p’o Chinese poet dies, Robert of England confronts Henry, Robert pushed back to Normandy, Robert of Normandy (Brother) invades, is unsuccessful, Robert, son of William the Conqueror and brother of England's Henry invades England, but settled peacefully. [104]

1102: Boleslav III Duke of Poland rules. [105]

1103: Death of Eric I as king of Denmark, Magnus III of Norway invades Ireland and is killed, Public Peace of Mainz for the Holy Roman Empire, “Method of Architecture” published in China. [106]

1104: Acre taken by Crusaders. [107]

1105: Henry IV captured by son and abdicates, colonization of Eastern Germany begins, Angouleme Cathedral built. [108]

December 25, 1137: Louis VII of France




Louis VII


Louis VII denier Bourges 1137 1180.jpg


Effigy of Louis VII, denier, Bourges


King of the Franks


Junior king

Senior king

October 25, 1131 – August 1, 1137
August 1, 1137 – September 18, 1180


Coronation

October 25, 1131 in Reims Cathedral(as junior king)
December 25, 1137 in Bourges(as king)


Predecessor

Louis VI


Successor

Philip II Augustus



Spouse

Eleanor, Duchess of Aquitaine
Constance of Castile
Adèle of Champagne


Issue


Marie, Countess of Champagne
Alix, Countess of Blois
Margaret, Queen of Hungary
Alys, Countess of the Vexin
Philip II of France
Agnes, Byzantine Empress


House

House of Capet


Father

Louis VI of France


Mother

Adélaide of Maurienne


Born

1120


[109]

December 25, 1172: Henry the Young King and Marguerite spent Chrismas (December 25) of 1172 in Normandy, whereas Henry II and Eelanor held their Christmas court at Chinon. Then there is a long gap before Marguerite emerges again***.[110]

December 25, 1312: Anti-Jewish riots broke out in different parts of Austria.[111]

1313: Henry VII of Luxembourg dies, death of Hugo von Trimberg the German poet, German Grey Friar Berthold Schwartz (re) invents gunpowder, Dante's Divine Comedy begun/[112]

December 25, 1369: The King of Sicily required Jews to wear a special badge.[113]

1370: Treaty of Stralsund ends war between Hanseatic League and the Danes.[114] 1370-1377 As will be shown, we can assume the correctness of this thesis of Weyl and Ginsburger. However the newst partial volume of the Germania Judaica, a detailed lexicon of towns for the medieval history of the German Jewish communities, in spite of citing the Ginsburger study, does not mention in the article abouyt Colmar the evidence of Gutleben in this city any more than the Jew Eberlin of Colmar who was well acquainted with Gutleben/Vivelin, and who after all could have been the ancestor of the Basel patrician family line of Eberler’s gen. [genealogy?] Grunenzwig. In the article about the town “Basel,” on the other hand, there is a relativiely extensive passage about the city physician Gutleben who lived there, but also without the slightest reference to his earlier professional work in Colmar. At the same time it is surprising that the Germania Judaica says nothing of the fact, as Moses Ginsburger has asserted, that Master Gutleben was the son of the physician Master Josset from Freiburg in Uchtland who was employed in Basel from 1370—1377.[115] Why did the Basel magisytrate not elect the fellow citizen Gutleben himself to the position of city physician in 1370?[116] 1370 to 1373 Perhaps, since the latter was at that time not yet a medical practitioner, and for that reason does not appear in the sources as “Master Gutleben the physician” before this time; furthermore, he will have learned this profession from 1370-1373 as a student of his father and finally practiced it for the first time in Freiburg in Breisgau.[117]1370-1390 Soon after these events, Lachlan of Duart and Eachin of Lockbui, Sons of Maqqillimore (MacLean), came to live in Skye in the reign of Robert II., A.D. 1370-90 but the usual consequence of a stranger entering into the country of another clan followed, and a bitter feud took place between them and the chief of the MacKinnons, which led to one of the most daring actions which has ever been recorded of any Highland chief. The Lord of the Isles had set out on some expedition to the mainland in a single galley, or as some think, to return to his castle of Ardtornis from hunting. He desired the MacLeans and MacKinnons to follow him, and the MacLeans resolved upon taking this opportunity of avenging many injuries which they had received from MacKinnon, or, as some suppose, to curb the rising influence of the MacKinnons. they killed the chief while in the act of mounting into his galley. Afraid of the vengeance of the Lord of the Isles for this deed of treachery, they proceeded to follow up their act by one more daring, and accordingly set sail after him. No sooner had they overtaken his galley than they at once boarded it and succeeded in taking the Macdonald himself prisoner in the very centre of his islands, and within sight of many of his castles.[118] Geoffrey Chaucer writes Book of the Duchess, Acamapitchtli chosen as king of Aztecs, Death of Casmir III of Poland, Black Prince sacks Limoges, Casimir III of Poland last of the House of Piasts dies – Louis of Hungary elected king, Carthusian monks build the Charterhouse in London, steel crossbow used as weapon of war, first use of the word “million”, Japanese playwrights Kanami Kiyotsugu and Zeami Motokiyo establish, Theologian Nicole Oresme publishes book detailing natural phenomena discouraging attribution to God or demons, Peace of Stralsund establishes power of Hanse towns with right to veto Danish kings, Edward the Black Prince sacks Limoges, Turkish Timur the Lame terrorized Middle East, Sicán state (Andes) conquered by Chimú, Kingdom of Vijayanagara dominates southern India, Geoffrey Chaucer writes Book of the Duchess. [119]

December 25, 1423: Henry V was appointed on December 25, to the governorship of Alençon, Essay, Exmes, Bonsmoulins, and Verneuil, places he continued to control until Michaelmas 1423. [120]

December 25, 1492 - Columbus' ship Santa Maria docks at Dominican Republic[121]

December 25, 1599: Portuguese settlers establish the village of Natal in Brazil. At this time, the only Jews living in Brazil were New Christians or Conversos. Dutch forces would occupy Natal from1633 to 1654, a period during which Jewish communities flourished under the religious toleration brought from Holland.[122]

December 25, 1604: Anne's masques, scaling unprecedented heights of dramatic staging and spectacle,[111] were avidly attended by foreign ambassadors and dignitaries and functioned as a potent demonstration of the English crown's European significance. Zorzi Giustinian, the Venetian ambassador, wrote of the (December 25) Christmas 1604 masque that "in everyone's opinion no other Court could have displayed such pomp and riches".[112] [123]

December 25, 1620: The pilgrims, English separatists that came to America, were even more orthodox in their Puritan beliefs than Cromwell. As a result, Christmas was not a holiday in early America.[124]

December 25, 1645: In the early 17th century, a wave of religious reform changed the way Christmas was celebrated in Europe. When Oliver Cromwell and his Puritan forces took over England in 1645, they vowed to rid England of decadence and, as part of their effort, cancelled Christmas. By popular demand, Charles II was restored to the throne and, with him, came the return of the popular holiday.[125]



At the battle of Worcester, in 1646, Lauchlan Mackinnon was made knight banneret. His son Daniel had two sons, John, whose great-great-grandson died in India, unmarried, in 1808, and Daniel, who emigrated to Antigua, and died in 1720. His eldest son and heir, William, of Antigua, an eminent member of the Legislature of the Islands, died at Bath, in 1767. [126]

December 25, 1653: Oliver Cromwell




December 25, 1653: Oliver Cromwell


Oliver Cromwell by Samuel Cooper.jpg


A 1656 Samuel Cooper portrait of Cromwell


1st Lord Protector of the Commonwealth of England, Scotland and Ireland


In office
December 25, 1653 – September 3, 1658


Preceded by

Council of State


Succeeded by

Richard Cromwell


Member of Parliament
for Huntingdon


In office
1628–1629


Monarch

Charles I


Member of Parliament
for Cambridge


In office
1640–1649


Monarch

Charles I



[127]

December 25, 1659 to 1681: From 1659 to 1681, the celebration of Christmas was actually outlawed in Boston. Anyone exhibiting the Christmas spirit was fined five shillings. By contrast, in the Jamestown settlement, Captain John Smith reported that Christmas was enjoyed by all and passed without incident.[128]


AnAnthony HARRISON

1600 - ABT 1660

Repository ID Number: I987



◾RESIDENCE: Immigrated To VA; Northumberland Co., VA
◾BIRTH: 1600, Camridge, ENG
◾DEATH: ABT 1660, VA [S836]
◾RESOURCES: See: [S9] [S836]

Father: Anthony HARRISON Of Over



Family 1 :

1. + Richard HARRISON

2. + George HARRISON

3. + Andrew HARRISON

4. + James HARRISON

Notes

Anthony came to Virginia by 1650 accompanied or induced to come through the efforts of Samuel BONNAM.

George was listed as a child of Anthony (ID# 987) by Tenn Cousins but other references indicated George (ID# 1015) is a child of John Harrison. We are currently using Otey's conclusions on this family. More research is necessary to determine actual ancestry. See further records on ID# 6346.

Anthony + (Jr) who migrated with his father to Virginia along with cousin Benjamin (alegedly the ancestor of Ben the Signer). [S9] [S461]


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


_John HARRISON of Cambridge_

| (1470 - 1538)

_Peter HARRISON Of Cambridge_|

| (.... - 1593) |

| |____________________________

|

_Anthony HARRISON Of Over_|

| (1563 - 1620) |

| | ____________________________

| | |

| |_____________________________|

| |

| |____________________________

|

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|--Anthony HARRISON

| (1600 - 1660)

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Sources

[S836]

[S9]

[S836]

[S9]

[S461]

[129]



1660: Reverend John13 Vance (1617 - ): England systematically removed the Irish Catholics from the north of Ireland and re-colonized it. Many of the new colonists were Scotchmen.

John was the first of the Vances to settle in Ireland. He was a Presbyterian minister and traveled to Ireland about 1660 to escape religious persecution and likely to search for new opportunities. He was also the first to use the name Vance. Under the Act of Settlement, John obtained the lease of a tract of land in the County of Tyon and there founded the village of Coagh. He married Sarah13 Williams, daughter of Ashe14 Reinty, Esq. of the County of Derry and had six children.

Their first son, Dr. Lancelot Francis Vance, died of fatigue at the siege of Londonderrry leaving one other son as heir, Patrick12.[130]


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------




1660: The first Africans were brought to Virginia in 1619. While initially not defined as perpetual slaves whose children would share their status, by the 1660’s Africans had become exactly that. The colony’s legislature and the courts recognized slavery as an “appropriate” and “normal” condition for Africans. The practice soon spread to all the colonies, except for Rhode Island. African slavery became the engine that drove the economic development of British North America. It brought great riches to some. It enabled relatively poor white farmers to acquire land and wealth and to enjoy a comfortable social status. Its existence profoundly shaped American ideas about freedom. And obviously the system of slavery was predicated on skin color, with whiteness the badge of privilege.[131]








1660: Volcano Long Island (Papua New Guinea), Northeast of New Guinea; Bismarck Volcanic Arc 1660 ±20; VEI 6; 30 cubic kilometers (7.2 cu mi) of tephra[5] [132]

December 25, 1729: [Note 1: 1 Born in Country Donegal, Ireland, December 25, 1729; died at his home, Smithfields, in Montgomery Country, Va., July 28, 1783. Colonel Preston, himself a man of no little prominence, was the father of Governor James Patton Preston and General Francis Preston, and the grandfather of General John Smith Preston, Major Thomas Lewis Preston, Senator William Campbell Preston, William Ballard Preston, Secretary of the Navy during the latter part of Zachary Taylor’s administration, and William Preston, U. S. Minister to Spain under Buchanan. In 1761, Colonel Preston married Susanna Smith, of Hanover County.]

December 25, 1758: Hailey’s Comet returns, just as Hailey said it would to great fanfare. Hailey didn’t see it however, he died 17 years previous. [133]

100_1742

Mount Vernon

“George Washington’s Workshop,” The History Channel



1759

Alexander Vance, Frederick Co. Va. Rent Rolls 1759.[134]

David Vance Frederick Col. VA Rent Rolls , 1759

James Vance, Frederick Co VA Rent Rolls 1759.[135]

John Vance, Frederick Co VA Rental Rolls 1759.

Joseph Vance, Frederick Co. VA Rent Rolls

Samuel Vance, Frederick Co. VA Rent Rolls, 1759.

William Vance Frederick Co. VA Rent Rolls, 1759. [136]



1759 Ann Crawford, d/o Elizabeth Vance[137] marries James Connell, brother to Zachariah Connell. [138]



Zachariah Connell, a son of James & Ann Williams Connell, married (1) Rebecca Rice and (2) Margaret Wallace. He died in 1813 and is buried on a hill overlooking Connellsville. Many of his descendants moved west, but there are still Connell’s in Connellsville.[139]

1759 MAP OF THE COUNTRY BETWEEN WILLS CREEK AND FORT DUQUESNE, from The Grand Magazine of Universal Intelligence and Monthly Chronicle of Our Times, January 1759, London: R. Griffiths & J. Hoey. This map is based upon a drawing by Capt. William Orme, an aide-de-camp to General Braddock, showing the march to the French Fort Duquesne (Pittsburgh) in 1755 that ended in disaster. It includes southwestern Pennsylvania, northern Virginia and western Maryland. Wills Creek is at Cumberland, Maryland, and the Virginians built a fort there that was the jumping off point for expeditions to the west. Numbers along the route of march refer to an explanatory table on a larger scale version of this map which was eventually published in Thomas Jeffrey's A General Topography of North America and the West Indies (1768), along with several others made by Orme. These maps are illustrated in Swift and also in Schwartz (1994). The map has a cartouche with a hanging vine and a compass rose. Longitude is west from Philadelphia, unusual for a map published in England, and indicates the map was prepared in America. Blank verso. Scale:1"=17 miles. Size: 8 x 5 inches. [140]



1759

At this period John of Mishinish resided at the family estate of that name in the northern part of the Island of Mull. He is said to have died there circa. 1759 but there is some reason to suppose that he followed his sons across the Atlantic.[141]



1759



"Among the earliest known records in America concerning the Reverend Daniel McKinnon, are those of Trinity Church, New Haven (now Connellsville), Pennsylvania, wherein, in the year 1880, which marked its hundredth anniversary, the 16th of December was set apart to hold a commemorative service. There were present... the Reverend W. G. Stonex, who read a paper, the subject of which was “Ministers Who Have Officiated In Trinity Church, 1780-1880." In connection with that early day (1759), we meet the name of the Reverend D. Allison (note: Law. Harrison Dr. married an Allison), who is referred to as "the Chaplain of a small detachment of 100 men" who were sent out to open a road-way to this region. This person, who was an undoubted clergyman of the church, and held regular Sunday services, could not have been the first christian minister in these parts. At a later day than this, yet still before the Revolutionary War, we are made aware, that there came to this vicinity, as a Church Clergyman, the Reverend Daniel McKinnon, tho "where he resided cannot be ascertained, nor do we know at what points he ministered, except that his name and labors are associated with the Church at Beaver." [142]



1759: In 1759 the disciples of the strange and sinister prophet Jacob Frank followed the example of their Messiah and converted en masse to Christianity, adhering to Jadaism in secret. [143]

December 25, 1761: Elizabeth Smith (b. December 25, 1761 / d. October 13, 1837).[144]

December 25, 1772 David Lindsay/Lindsey signs Dec. 25, 1772 Petition to employ peacher David McClure along with two other Bedford County communities. David's Signature is different from that of the one found on the 1788 Ruddle's Mill petition. Stewarts Crossing. Bedford, PA.[145]

December 25, 1775: William Rowland, born December 25, 1775, died November 27, 1856.[146]



December 25, 1776:(William Crawford) crossed the Delaware River with Washington.[147]



WILLIAM CRAWFORD, my 5th Great Grandfather

*Crossed the Delaware in retreat and again in victory on Christmas Day, 1776. [148]



“December 25, 1777: Toward evening we arrived at New York. Lieutenant Schotten, Ensign [Hieronymus] Berner, Ship Surgeon [Regimental Surgeon?] Gechter, Auditor [Johannes] Heinemann, and I at once debarked and took lodgings at Grimm’s Tavern.[149]

December 25, 1779: On the 25th all the commanders of the troops and the ships’ captains received their instructions concerning the signals. The call was “59” and the reply “Lord Hawke,” which were assigned so that in case a ship should drift away from the fleet and encounter another ship at night they could recognize each other. In the event they met in the daytime, a certain flag was to be hoisted and answered by another designated one. Moreover, each commander of troops on a ship received a sealed letter which he might open if he had been driven off course and was twice twenty-four hours distant from the fleet, in which he finds the rendezvous of the fleet. Should his ship face the danger of falling into enemy hands, it is his responsibility to destroy these instructions, including the signals and the sealed letter.[150]

THOMAS JEFFERSON TO CLARK, DECEMBER 25, 1780 [151]

[Letter Book of Thomas Jefferson, 1781, p. 10, Va. State Archives To COLO GEORGE ROGERS CLARKE,

RICHMOND December 25th. 1780

A powerful army forming by our enemies in the south renders it necessary for us to reserve as much of our militia as possible free to act in that quarter. at the same time we have reason to believe that a very extensive combination of british and indian savages is preparing to invest our western frontier to prevent the cruel murders and devastations which attend the latter species of war and at the same time to prevent its producing a powerful diversion of our force from the southern quarter in which they mean to make their principal effort and where alone success can be decisive of their ultimate object. it becomes necessary that we aim the first stroke in the western country and throw the enemy under the embarrassments of a defensive war rather than labour under them ourselves, we have therefore determined that an expedition shall be under taken under your command in a very early season of the approaching year into the hostile country beyond the Ohio, the principal object of which is to be the reduction of the British post at Detroit, and incidental to it the acquire possession of Lake Erie. the force destined for this enterprise is the Ilinois battalion. Colo. Crocket’s battalion, major Slaughter’s corps, with detachments of militia from the counties of Fayette, Lincoln militia, Jefferson, Ohio, Monongalia, Hampshire, Berkeley Frederic and Greenbrier making in the whole 2000 men. necessary garrisons only to be deducted our desire is that the execution of this may be so timed as that you may have the advantage of that interval of time, which intervenes between the breaking up of the ice in the wabache, and in the lake so as that you may avail yourself of the navigation of the former the moment it is open for the transportation of your Men and baggage and still find the latter blocked up and the vessels of the Enemy therein of course liable to be destroyed. That you may be fully possessed of the means which are to be in your hands for the purposes before mentioned, you are furnished with Copies of the orders given to the Lieutenants Commissaries & Quarter Masters in the Counties before enumerated; the substance of them is as follows Mr Rowland Madison is employed to carry 1000 lb of Rifle powder from New London & 1500 lbs. of lead from the lead Mines to Montgomery Court house, to purchase 300 pack horses with pack Saddles Halters and Bells ready and to lay in subsistence for them and for 137 Militia from Greenbriar County, who, by orders given to the Lieutenant of that County are to rendezvous, at Montgomery Court House by the 20th day of February there to take under their escort the ammunition and packhorses before mentioned and to be with them at the Falls of Ohio by the 15tb day of March Mr Madison is furnished with Money to purchase the horses and furniture and to lay in subsistende and forage from Montgomery Court House to the Falls of Ohio, where his duties cease.

Forty bell tents, 40 common tents, a Chest of Medicine, some Summer clothing will be sent from this place; 1000 lb of Rifle powder from Staunton 400 Camp kettles from Fredericksburg to the County Lieutenant of Frederick who is ordered to send them with 285 of his Militia to Pittsburg at which place they are to be the first day of March.

The County Lieutenants of Berkley and Hampshire are ordered to send the former 275 and the latter 255 of their respective Militias to be at Pittsburg by the first day of March.

Proper instructions are prepared for such persons as each of the County Lieutenants of Frederick Berkley and Hampshire shall appoint to act in the joint offices of Commissary and Quarter Master to Pittsburg where their Offices determine and Money is sent to each for the purpose of subsistence and transportation.

The County Lieutenants of Monongalia and Ohio are ordered to rendezvous one fourth of their Militia at Pittsburg by the first day of March. All these Militia are ordered to go under proper Officers well armed with Arms suitable to western service and to serve during the continuance of the expedition as herein described. Colo. Crocket is ordered to be with his battalion at Pittsburg by the same day, and Money to enable him to proceed is sent to him.

An Agent is sent to Baltimore and Philadelphia to purchase four tons of Canon powder and to send it to Pittsburg by the first day of March.

Application is made to Gen’ Washington to lend us of the Continental Stores at Pittsburg, 4 Cannon, six pounders mounted on field Carriages with ball suitable, a mortar with Shells, 2 Howitz, grape shot and other necessary furnitures, 1000 Spades, 200 pick axes, 500 axes, a travelling Forge, Ship Carpenter’s tools, and Boats for transportation down the river should we fail in having a sufficient number in readiness and to send us skilful persons to manage the Mortars.

John Francis Moore who was sometime ago sent to purchase in the vicinities of Fort Pitt provisions for the Western Posts, is now ordered to extend his purchases to 200000 rations of Beef & Flour, and to provide 100 light Barges fit for transporting Men and Stores either down or up stream. These to be all in readiness by the 1st of March (March 1) as we are not certain whether he may not be gone down the river, these powers were directed to himself, or in case of his absence to any Agent he should have appointed and if he appointed none, then to Mr William Harrison of Monongalia.

At Pittsburg we depend on orders to be given by you for the removal of Men and Stores to the Falls of Ohio by the 15 of March.(March 15)

The County Lieutenants of Fayette, Lincoln and Jefferson are ordered to rendezvous at the Falls of Ohio by the 15 March (March 15) 500 of their Militia, to be furnished between those Counties in proportion to their numbers, & to have ready at the same place and by the same day 50 Canoes each: Money is sent to pay for these. In those Counties you inform us you expect 100000 rations will be provided for you, you will of course order them to the falls of Ohio.

All the preceeding orders (except as to the numbers of Men from each County) are submitted to any alterations you may think necessary, and you are authorized to supply any deficiencies in them. The Staff Officers are submitted absolutely to you, and on removal of any of them by you or their death, resignation or declining to act you are to appoint others. The County Lieutenants are desired to keep up a constant correspondence with you, & the Staff Officers to inform you from time to time of their progress and to receive your orders. Thus you will perceive that we expect all to be in readiness at the Falls of Ohio by the 15 of March. (March 15)

What number of Men and whether of Regulars or Militia you shall leave to garrison the Posts at the falls & Mouth of the Ohio, is left to yourself. As the latter however is exposed to attack from an Enemy against whom this expedition will be no diversion of force, and as it is distant from succour, it is recommended to you to leave it surely garrisoned, and to take measures for its being supported from the Spanish side of the Missisipi should it be necessary.

You will then with such part of your force as you shall not leave in garrison proceed down the Ohio and up the Wabache or along such other route as you shall think best against Detroit. By the construction of a fort or forts for retreat at such place or places as you shall think best, and by such other cautions as you find necessary, you will provide for the ultimate safety of your men in case of a repulse. Should you succeed in the reduction of fort Detroit, and a hopeful prospect open to you of acquiring possession of Lake Erie, or should such prospect open during the investiture of the fort you are to pursue it. As soon as you shall have accomplished both Objects of the fort and Lake, or shall have accomplished the one and find the other impracticable; or as soon • as you shall find that neither is practicable you are to consider your expedition as ended, and to withdraw your whole force if you attain neither Object, or, if you acquire one or both of them, to retain for a Garrison at Detroit so many of the Illinois & Crochets battalions as you may think necessary and to send the rest back accross the Ohio; in the event indeed of declining to attempt the reduction of Detroit YOU are at liberty to consider whether some cnterprize against the hostile Nations of Indians may not he undertaken with your force, and if you think it can, and that it will be expedient for the public good and eligible on view of all circumstances you will undertake it and detain your force ‘till you shall have finished it. In every event, the Militia on their return are to be marched back to their

• Counties under their own Officers and there to be discharged.

Should you succeed in the reduction of the Post, you are to

• promise protection to the Persons and property of the French and American Inhabitants, or of such at least as shall not on tender refuse to take the Oath of fidelity to this Commonwealth. You are to permit them to continue under the laws and form of Goverment under which they at present live, only substituting the authority of this Commonwealth in all instances in lieu of that of his Britannic Majesty, and exercising yourself under that authority till further order those powers which the British Commandant of the post, or his Principal in Canada hath used regularly to exercise: To the Indian Neighbors you will hold out either fear or friendship as their disposition. and your actual situation may render most expedient.

Finally, our distance from the scene of action, the impossibility of foreseeing the many circumstances which may render proper a change of plan or direliction of object, and above all our full confidence in your bravery, discretion, and abilities induce us to submit the whole of our instructions to your own Judgment, to be altered or abandoned whenever any event shall turn up which may appear to you to render such alteration or abandonment necessary; remembering that we confide to you the persons of our Troops and Citizens which we think it a duty to risque as long as no longer than t.he object and prospect of attaining it may seem worthy of risque. If that Post be reduced we shall be quiet in future on our frontiers, and thereby immense Treasures of blood and Money be saved, we shall be at leisure to know our whole force to the rescue of our eastern Country from subjugation, we shall divert through our own Country a branch of commerce which the European States have thought worthy of the most important struggles and sacrifices, and in the event of peace on terms which have been contemplated by some powers we shall form to the American union a barrier against the dangerous extension of the British Province of Canada and add to the Empire of liberty an extensive and fertile Country, thereby converting dangerous Enemies into valuable Friends.

(Signed) T. J.[152]

December 25, 1802: The Duke's harsh discipline precipitated a mutiny by soldiers in his own and the 25th Regiment on Christmas Eve December 25, 1802. [153]

Before December 25, 1802:

Description: Conrad'sdepositionCopy

• "Conrad Cutliff aged nineteen years Deposeth &

• Saith that before Christmas in the year 1802

• he heard the Defdt [defendant]ask the Complt [complaintant] for

• the old deed to which the Complt replied

• let us go up to Moorfield & I will deliver

• the old deed when you make me a

• new one.

• (Transcription by Jim Funkhouser

• J.a.funkhouser@worldnet.att.net)



From the compiler…: I can remember sitting at my Grandma B’s and Grandpa Co’s table when I was 4 or 5 years old and first hearing about how our name is German and is from the Gottlieb and that Gott means “god or good” and Lieb means love. I suppose I started piecing it together, albeit unknowingly, ever since.



1803: In Werneck, there were six families (together 28 persons) .[154]



1803

In addition to the owners of slaves already mentioned, there are found the the names of persons registering slaves in Fayette County in and prior to 1803;

Hannah Crawford, widow.[155]

1803

John Crawford’s record in the Ohio State Auditor’s office; 1803, No. 2862, 300 acres to John Beasley, Vol. 3, page 342. , No. 2679, 175 acres to John Beasley, Vol. 3.[156]



In 1803, James Foley, a native of Virginia, born 1779, came to the county, selected land in Moorefield Township, upon which he settled permanently in 1805.




1803-1805

James FOLEY, b. 1779 in VA. d. 1864, age 84

Marr in 1808 to Mary MARSH b.1784 VA

Griffith, Catherine, Susan, John & James

1st Co. Commissioner in 1818, also served Legislature, two terms








Catherine Godlove was born in 1803 in Hardy County.

I must have overlooked or not located any military involvement or occupation of Daniel McKinnon, Sr. Prior to 1803 at which time Daniel, Sr. would have been age 36 when he moved to Clarke County, Ohio, with daughter Catherine, then six years of age. Since he came into possession of four sections of land consisting of 640 acres per section in Clarke County, I am suggesting we may find it was “Bounty Land” received for military pay.[157]



1803-1804 [158]



Foot Grenadiers
(General Davout)

Foot Chasseurs
(General Soult)


brownshim- Regiment of Foot Grenadiers
(Colonel Hulin)

brownshim- Regiment of Foot Chasseurs
(Colonel Soules)


Joseph LeClere was said to have been one of Napoleon’s Bodyguards.




1803


The San Antonio de Valero Mission is used as a military post. The arrival of the Second Company of San Carlos de Parras from the vicinity of the town of El Alamo in Coahuila is the possible source for the popular name of the former mission. A church parish is established and the remains of the church are used for services for soldiers at the post[159]




Thursday, December 25, 1817: The bill was signed by the Speakers of both branches of the Legislature, as being duly enrolled; Mr. Lucas from the joint committee of enrollment deposited it with the Secretary of State, and took his receipt therefore.

And so the long fight was ended. Ohio had gleaned another wisp for the sheaf on her escutcheon, and had added one more dart to its bundle of arrows. As a "Christmas gift" she had granted the right of local representation and self-government to the plucky pioneers of "Little Clark," and made them a community by themselves with a "local habitation and a name," the retrospect of which confirms even the brightest visions of those who struggled for this conclusion.

The creation of Clark County was the most bitterly contested of any of the early counties of Ohio. The nominal objection urged was that the territory proposed did not fill the constitutional requirements of 400 square miles. The real trouble seems to have been personal dislike and jealousy, between the leading citizens of the principal settlements in Green and the proposed county of Clark. It is unfortunate that the names of the principal actors in the controversy cannot be learned from the journals of the Legislature of that day, for, names excepted, the records furnish, to an active mind, a detailed history of the long struggle.

Perhaps more Governors of Ohio participated, in one way or another, in the passage of this bill than in that erecting any other county in the State; they were Thomas Kirker, Othniel Looker, Thomas Worthington, Jeremiah Morrow,. Duncan McArthur, Robert Lucas and Joseph Vance. The passage of the bill and its excellent management throughout the unequal contest was more directly attributable to Daniel McKinnon, Senator from Champaign County, and one of the first Associate Judges of Clark County; Joseph Tatman also did good work, as a Representative, and was made one of the first Associate Judges. At the time of its erection, the taxable acreage of the county was 229,624 acres, then valued at $528,644, or an average price of less than $2 per acre.

The whole number of voters was 4,648, and the total population amounted to 8065.

"When the news of the passage of the bill reached Springfield, the citizens assembled at the tavern kept by my father (Cooper Ludlow), on the northwest corner of Main and Factory streets, and celebrated the occasion by the burning of tar barrels in the street, and a free use of apple toddy and the other accompaniments belonging to a great jollification of that day."*

Of the authors of the petition, or those who signed it, or any of the details, there is no known evidence, except that of hearsay. At this late day it would be interesting to know who first suggested the name of Clark, who circulated the petition, and some of the incidents concerning its rise and progress at home, as well as in the Legislature. [160]



December 25, 1830”: Nancy GODLOVE b: DECember 25, 1830 in Ohio. [161]



December 25, 1865

The Union Stockyards open in Chicago, making that city the center of transcontinental commerce.[162]



December 25, 1868

President Johnson grants unqualified amnesty to all those who participated in the “rebellion.”[163]

December 25, 1868: Della Maud Heald b December 25, 1868 at Springville, Ia. [164]

December 25, 1868: President Johnson's second amnesty pardon

President Andrew Johnson, in a proclamation dated December 25, 1868 (15 Stat. 711), gave an unconditional pardon to those who "directly or indirectly" rebelled against the United States.

... unconditionally, and without reservation, to all and every person who directly or indirectly participated in the late insurrection or rebellion, a full pardon and amnesty for the offense of treason against the United States, or of adhering to their enemies during the late civil war, with restoration of all rights, privileges, and immunities under the Constitution and the laws which have been made in pursuance thereof.[93]

Lee, with this full amnesty pardon by President Johnson, could not be held liable for treason or insurrection against the United States. Lee was posthumously officially reinstated as a United States citizen by President Gerald Ford in 1975.[94]

December 25, 1892: Grover Rowell (b. December 25, 1892 in GA / d. February 5, 1971 in GA).[165]

December 25, 1901: Anna Coleman STEPHENSON. Born on February 14, 1884 in Chariton County, Missouri. Anna Coleman died in Kelso, Washington on November 1, 1960; she was 76. Buried on November 5, 1960 in Cowlitz View Memorial Garden Cemetery, Kelso, Washington.



On December 25, 1901 when Anna Coleman was 17, she married Edward Franklin SHANNON. Born on January 1, 1882 in Bosworth, Chariton County, Missouri. Edward Franklin died in Washington on September 28, 1972; he was 90.



They had the following children:

i. Rector F. (1903-1954)

ii. Agnes Tressa (1904-1989)

iii. Hattie Coleman (1906-1981)

iv. Ned Jay (1910-)

v. Gwendolyn (1912-)

vi. Anna Irene [5] (1916-2000)

vii. Hugh E. (1919-1973) [166]



1926 December 25, Hirohito became emperor of Japan, succeeding his father, Emperor Yoshihito (Hirohito was formally enthroned almost two years later). This marked the beginning of the Showa Period (1926-1989).[167]

1927 December 25, Mexican congress opened land to foreign investors, reversing the 1917 ban enacted to preserve the domestic economy. [168]

December 25, 1936: Marion Franklin Nix (b. June 8, 1863 in AL / d. December 25, 1936 in AL).[169] Marion Franklin Nix13 [John A. Nix12, Grace Louisa Francis Smith11, Gabriel Smith10, John “LR” Smith9, Ambrose J. Smith8, Christopher Smith7, Christopher Smith6, Thomas Smythe5, Thomas Smythe4, John Smythe3, Richard2, William1] (b. June 8, 1863 in AL / d. December 25, 1936 in AL) married Mamie Bullard. He married Martha Jane “Lucy” McElroy (b. June 13, 1859 / d. November 10, 1930 in AL), the daughter of Henry McElroy and Katy Unk, in 1883 in CA. [170]

December 25, 1941: Hong Kong capitulates to the Japanese.[171]

Late 1941: Al-Husseini and the Holocaust

Al-Husseini settled in Berlin in late 1941 and resided there for most of the war.[133] Various sources have affirmed that he visited the death camps of Auschwitz, Majdanek, Treblinka and Mauthausen.[133] Most of these allegations are completely unfounded,[133] but the suggestion that he visited Auschwitz in the company of Adolf Eichmann, though denied by Eichmann himself at his trial, is based on an affidavit by Rudolf Kastner, drawing on testimony from Dieter Wisliceny. Whatever the truth, speculations that go beyond the evidence to demonize him are unnecessary: it is undisputed that al-Husseini did cooperate with the Nazis.[133][172]\

December 25, 1953: Carter Henry Harrison IV (1860-1953)

Chicago, IL

Surnames Mentioned: BELL HARRISON OGDEN OWSLEY PRESTON

Repository ID # 5161 - extensive ancestry available in our online database.

PhotoLife and Times of Carter Harrison

By Milancie Hill Adams

Carter Harrison IV was born April 23, 1860. He was the third child of Carter Harrison III and Sophonisba Grayson Preston.

His childhood home was 231 Ashland Boulevard Chicago, Illinois. His father was a lucrative land owner and real estate agent who served as Mayor for four terms. His father was assassinated at the beginning of his fifth term during the Chicago World's Fair.

Carter Harrison HomeFrom Carter Harrison's autobiography, The Stormy Years, we are given the two following glimpses into Carter's childhood. First, Carter states that he attended a school located on the westside of Sheldon Street between Randolph and Lake Streets from 1868 to 1873, run by a Mr. John A Bell, a Scottish minister. He states "It was a strange kind of school in which the master, Scotch trained, never had a rattan father than twelve inches from his right hand. A great believer in corporal punishment, no morning was complete unless the rattan was wrapped around at least one youngster's legs. We probably needed all we got and more. ... If any of the thirty-odd boys, other than Dr. Antonio Lagorio of Pastuer Institute fame, his cousin, the two Owsleys, Harry and Heaton, and myself, came to good end, he failed to advertise it. Among the boys, about the best behaved, the most studious were the two Lagorios." Secondly, another place in his book he speaks of dinner his father and John hosted given in the parlor of Carter's home which the boys were not even allowed to festivities of although they could hear the lusty singing of Good Old Yale, Drink Her Down!, Excelsior and other classics. "It was a small but joyous gathering of the Chicago Yale Club given to song, horseplay and wassail; there was a huge punchbowl into which my father had poured pitcher after pitcher of Bourbon whisky drawn from the barrell in his cellar."

In 1873 when his Mother was pregnant with her tenth child the family physician advised they should go aboard to Europe. They returned home in 1876. Carter described himself as a very bashful youth, whose German was better than his English and who "would walk blocks in a roundabout course to avoid meeting a bevy of girls".

Against his father's earnest counsel He attended St. Ignatisus and completed a degree in Philosophy. He married December 14, 1887 Edith Ogden daughter of Rober N. Ogden.

Carter followed his father's footsteps and pursued both politics and real estate.

Carter Harrison Campaign PosterAs his father was an avid horseman he was a bicyclest and was a member of the Century Road Club which had awarded him 18 pendant bars each engraved with the date of a particular run. Carter Harrison Jr. used the bicycle as his campaign gimmick to help him win election in 1897. 'Not the Champion Cyclist, but the Cyclist's champion. "Shortly after the nominations I had the Owsley brothers send a brand new wheel with the scorcher handlebars of the schorchiest type to the Morrison photograph gallery. I then betook myselfto the gallery with my riding togs to be phographed head on, body bent double over the scorcher bars, an attitude that always gave a fiendish expression even to the mildest of faces. What with the rakish cap, the old grey sweater and the string of eighteen pwndant bars, I looked a professional a picture which I knew would carry weight with the vast army of Chicago wheelmen."

Carter served five terms as mayor of Chicago. Through out his adulthood as in his childhood his closest friends were the twins Heaton and Harry Owsley.




Carter Harrison Jr terms as Mayor of Chicago

*************************************
Democrat

Elected:

1st term: April 6, 1897 Defeated Nathaniel C. Sears (Republican), John Glambock (Socialist Labor), John Maynard Harlan (Independent Republican) & Washington Hesing (Independent Democrat)

2nd term: April 4, 1899 Defeated Zina R. Carter (Republican) & John P. Altgeld (Municipal Ownership)

3rd term: April 6, 1901 Defeated Elbridge Hanecy (Republican), Avery E. Hoyt (Prohibition), Gus Hoyt (Socialist Democrat), John R. Pepin (Socialist Labor), Thomas Rhodes (Sin. Tax) & John Collins (Socialist)

4th term: April 7, 1903 Defeated Graeme Stewart (Republican), Charles L. Breckon (Socialist), Daniel L. Cruice (Ind. Labor), Thomas L. Haines (Prohibition) & Henry Sale (Socialist-Labor)

5th term: February 28, 1911 (primary) Defeated Edward F. Dunne & Andrew J. Graham

April 4, 1911 (general) Defeated Charles Merriam (Republican), William A. Brubaker (Prohibition), A. Prince (Socialist Labor) & W. E. Rodriguez (Socialist)

Inauguration:
•1st term: April 15, 1897
•2nd term: April 10, 1899
•3rd term: April 8, 1901
•4th term: April 20, 1903
•5th term: April 17, 1911, 9:25 p.m.

Terms of office:
•1st term: 1897-1899
•2nd term: 1899-1901
•3rd term: 1901-1903
•4th term: 1903-1905
•5th term: 1911-1915

Birth: April 23, 1860
Death: December 25, 1953 [173]


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


December 25, 1961 Marina Oswald is called to the local passport office in Minsk,

where he is told that authority has been received to issue exit visas to her and her husband.

Marina is pregnant with their first child - who is to be born in June.

Oswald’s Diary: Dec 25th Xmas Day Tues. Marina is called to the passport & visa

office. She is told we have been granted Soviet exit visa's. She fills out the completing

blank and then comes home with the news. Its great (I think!). New Years, we spend at the

Zeger's at a dinner party at midnight. attended by 6 other persons. [174]

December 25, 1978: In Iran, Dr. Gholam Hossein Sadigi, who had been charged by the Shah with examining the possibilities of forming a civilian government, asked for more time. To facilitate his task he reportedly obtained concessions from the Shah over the lifting of press censorship and legal action against former ministers accused of corruption.[175]

December 25, 2009

100_0872

Sherri, Jacqulin, Anna, Jillian, and Jeff celebrate Christmas Dinner 2009 in Elgin.

100_2101

December 25, 2010. Christmas at Meadowview.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


[1] Who was Jesus, Green, 4/5/2009


[2] Ice Age Museum, Dundee, WI, July 23,2011.


[3] Volo Bog, IL June 24, 2012


[4] http://www.livescience.com/11361-history-overlooked-mysteries.html


[5] http://www.livescience.com/16046-nazca-lines-wheels-google-earth.html


[6] The Timetables of Jewish History, A Chronology of the most important People and Events in Jewish History, by Judah Gribetz, page 56.




[7] Mapping Human History by Steve Olson, 110.


[8] http://www.simpletoremember.com/vitals/Christmas_TheRealStory.htm


[9] The Art Institute of Chicago, 11/1/2011


[10] The Art Institute of Chicago, 11/1/2011.


[11] http://www.geocraft.com/WVFossils/ice_ages.html


[12] The Grand Canyon, September 5, 2011


[13] From River Clyde to Tymotchtee and Col. William Crawford by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969, pg. 1-2.


[14] The Timetables of Jewish History, A Chronology of the most important People and Events in Jewish History, by Judah Gribetz, page 56.


[15] The Timetables of Jewish History, A Chronology of the most important People and Events in Jewish History, by Judah Gribetz, page 56.


[16] The Hidden History of Jesus, His Royal Family, and the Birth of Chrisitanity, The Jesus Dynasty, by James D. Tabor page 292.


[17] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_High_Priests_of_Israel


[18] Smallwood, “High Priests and Politics” page 32. Jerusalem, by Lee I Levine, pg 353.


[19] [1] Jews, God and History by Max I. Dimont, 1962 pg. 137.


[20] Jesus:The Man. NTGEO 10/12/2005


[21] Introducing Islam, Dr. Shams Inati, page 42.


[22] Introducing Islam, Dr. Shams Inati, page 42.


[23] The world Before and After Jesus, Desire of the Everlasting Hills by Thomas Cahill, page 336.


[24] Jews, God and History by Max I. Dimont, 1962 pg. 137.


[25] The One Year Chronology Bible, NIV, page 1304.


[26] Photo by Jeff Goodlove, November 14, 2009


[27] Feast of the Passover. Annual attendance at three feast by all adult males (normally accompanied by their families) was commanded in the law: Passover, Pentecost and Tabernacles, Distance prevented many from attending all three, but most Jews tried to be at Passover.


[28] At age 12 boys began preparing to take their place in the religious community the following year.


[29] The Rabbis, experts in Judaism.


[30] Luke 2:41-250 Zondervan New International Version Study Bible, 2008


[31] The Historical Jesus for Dummies, by Catherine M. Murphy, PhD, Smallwood, “High Priests and Politics” page 17.


[32] Jesus the Jew, A Historian’s Reading of the Gospels by Geza Vermes, page 45.


[33] The Timetables of Jewish History, A Chronology of the most important People and Events in Jewish History, by Judah Gribetz, page 56.


[34] Josephus was from a priestly family. At the age of 29 he was appointed the Commander of Gallilee by the Jewish revolutionary government. He was a reluctant fighter. He believed that opposition to Rome was national suicide. (The Naked Archaeologist, Histi, 11/28/2005.


[35] The Timetables of Jewish History, A Chronology of the most important People and Events in Jewish History, by Judah Gribetz, page 56.


[36] The Enemies of Rome, by Philip Matyszak, page 193.


[37] The Hidden History of Jesus, His Royal Family, and the Birth of Christianity, The Jesus Dynasty, by James D. Tabor. Page 211.


[38] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_High_Priests_of_Israel


[39] Jerusalem, by Lee I Levine, pg 353., Smallwood, “High Priests and Politics” page 15.


[40] Jerusalem, by Lee I Levine, pg 353.


[41] Smallwood, “High Priests and Politics” page 22.


[42] Jerusalem, by Lee I Levine, pg 353.


[43] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saturnalia


[44] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/


[45] Introducing Islam, Dr. Shams Inati, page 84.


[46] A History of God by Karen Armstrong, pg 395


[47] [18]Charles Joseph Hefele, A History of the Christian Councils, Vol. 2, trans. and ed. by H. N. Oxenham (Edinburgh: T. and T. Clark, 1896), pp. 310, 316, 320. http://www.freewebs.com/bubadutep75/




[48] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pope_Julius_I


[49] http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03724b.htm


[50] Introducing Islam, Dr. Shams Inati, page 58-59.


[51] The Naked Archaeologist, What Happened to the JC Bunch, Part 1, 8/8/2008.


[52] http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03724b.htm


[53] Saint Patrick: The Man, the Myth, 1997, HISTI.


[54] http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03724b.htm


[55] Tracing
Your Jewish DNA for Family History & Ancestry by Anne Hart, pg 28.

[56] Introducing Islam, Dr. Shams Inati, page 84..


[57] http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03724b.htm


[58] The Dark Ages, HIST, 3/4/2007


[59] Religulous, by Bill Maher, January 25, 2008.


[60] Engineering an Empire, The Byzantines, 12/25/2006.


[61] History of the World in Two Hours, H2, 10/3/2011


[62] Henschel’s Indian Museum, Elkhart Lake, WI, July 23, 2011, Photo by Jeff Goodlove


[63] http://www.henschelsindianmuseumandtroutfarm.com/museum.html


[64] Henschel’s Indian Museum, Elkhart Lake, WI, July 23, 2011, Photo by Jeff Goodlove


[65] Henschel’s Indian Museum, Elkhart Lake, WI, July 23, 2011, Photo by Jeff Goodlove


[66]




[67] Henschel’s Indian Museum, Elkhart Lake, WI, July 23, 2011, Photo by Jeff Goodlove


[68] Henschel’s Indian Museum, Elkhart Lake, WI, July 23, 2011, Photo by Jeff Goodlove


[69] Henschel’s Indian Museum, Elkhart Lake, WI, July 23, 2011, Photo by Jeff Goodlove


[70] http://freepages.military.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~bonsteinandgilpin/germany.htm


[71] The Art Institute of Chicago, 11/1/2011


[72] The Dark Ages, HISTI, 03-04-07


[73] The Dark Ages, HISTI, 03-04-07


[74] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/


[75] http://www.britroyals.com/timeline.asp


[76] http://www.britroyals.com/timeline.asp


[77] http://www.britroyals.com/timeline.asp


[78] http://www.britroyals.com/kings.asp?id=egbert


[79] http://freepages.military.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~bonsteinandgilpin/germany.htm


[80] http://www.levity.com/alchemy/islam12.html


[81] www.wikipedia.org


[82] Abraham’s Children, Race, Identity, and the DNA of the Chosen People, by Jon Entine, page 200.


[83] http://www.levity.com/alchemy/islam12.html


[84] http://matsonfamily.net/WelchAncestry/family_vance.htm




[85] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/


[86] Trial by Fire, by Harold Rawlings, page 24.


[87] The Field Museum, Photo by Jeff Goodlove 12/27/2009


[88] The Field Museum, Photo by Jeff Goodlove 12/27/2009


[89] The Field Museum, Photo by Jeff Goodlove 12/27/2009


[90] The Field Museum, Photo by Jeff Goodove, 12/27/2009


[91] Henshel’s Indian Museum, Elkhart Lake, WI July 26, 2011.


[92] Henshel’s Indian Museum, Elkhart Lake, WI July 26, 2011.


[93] mike@abcomputers.com


[94] mike@abcomputers.com


[95] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/


[96] The Field Museum, Photo by Jeff Goodlove, 12/27/2009


[97] mike@abcomputers.com


[98] http://www.livescience.com/11347-top-10-ancient-capitals.html


[99] The Field Museum, Photo by Jeff Goodlove, 12/31/2009


[100] The Field Museum.


[101] The Field Museum, Photo by Jeff Goodlove 1227/2009


[102] Holy Grail in America, HISTI, 9/20/2009


[103] Holy Grail in America, HISTI, 9/20/2009


[104] mike@abcomputers.com


[105] mike@abcomputers.com


[106] mike@abcomputers.com


[107] mike@abcomputers.com


[108] mike@abcomputers.com


[109] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_VII_of_France


[110] http://henrytheyoungking.blogspot.com/2013/02/marguerite-of-france-young-queen-c1158.html


[111] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/


[112] mike@abcomputers.com


[113] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/


[114] http://freepages.military.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~bonsteinandgilpin/germany.htm


[115] The Gutleben Family of Physicians in Medieval Times, by Gerd Mentgen, page 1-2.


[116] The Gutleben Family of Physicians in Medieval Times, by Gerd Mentgen, page 3.


[117] The Gutleben Family of Physicians in Medieval Times, by Gerd Mentgen, page 3.


[118] M E M O I R S OF C LAN F I N G O N BY REV. DONALD D. MACKINNON, M.A. Circa 1888


[119] mike@abcomputers.com


[120] Anne Curry
Sources

GEC, Peerage · RotP · N. H. Nicolas, ed., Proceedings and ordinances
of the privy council of England, 7 vols., RC, 26 (1834–7) · TNA: PRO ·
BL · Bibliothèque Nationale, Collection Clairambault, manuscrits
français · Archives Nationales, série K, série JJ, série Xia ·
Chancery records · Rymer, Foedera · Recueil des croniques … par Jehan
de Waurin, ed. W. Hardy and E. L. C. P. Hardy, 5 vols., Rolls Series,
39 (1864–91), vols. 2–4 · Mémoires de Pierre de Fenin, ed. Mlle Dupont
(Paris, 1837) · J. Stevenson, ed., Letters and papers illustrative of
the wars of the English in France during the reign of Henry VI, king
of England, 2 vols. in 3 pts, Rolls Series, 22 (1861–4) · E. F. Jacob,
ed., The register of Henry Chichele, archbishop of Canterbury, 1414–
1443, 2, CYS, 42 (1937) · C. T. Allmand and C. A. J. Armstrong, eds.,
English suits before the Parlement of Paris, 1420–1436, CS, 4th ser.,
26 (1982) · M. Warner, ‘The Montagu earls of Salisbury, 1300–1428’,
PhD diss., U. Lond., 1991 · M. W. Warner, ‘Chivalry in action: Thomas
Montague and the war in France, 1417–1428’, Nottingham Medieval
Studies, 42 (1998), 146–73 · Chronique de Jean Le Fèvre, seigneur de
Saint-Remy, ed. F. Morand, 2 vols. (Paris, 1876–81) · HoP, Commons,
1386–1421 · Archives Municipales de Troyes, série BB · Archives
Départementales de la Marne, série E · S. Guilbert, ed., Registre de
délibérations du Conseil de ville de Reims (1422–36) (Reims, [1993]) ·
A. Desplanque, ‘Projet d'assassinat de Philippe le Bon par les
Anglais, 1424–25’, Mémoires publiés par l'Académie royale des
sciences, des lettres et beaux arts de Belgique, 33 (1865–7) ·
inquisition post mortem, TNA: PRO, C 139/41 · inquisition post mortem,
TNA: PRO, E 149/142/1 · inquisition post mortem, TNA: PRO, E 152/522,
568
Archives

GL, letter-book K | BL, Harley MSS · BL, Cotton MSS · BL, Lansdowne
MSS · TNA: PRO, ancient correspondence, SCI


Likenesses

tinted drawing, BL, MS Harley 4826, fol. 1* [paste-in] [see illus.]
Wealth at death

over £311—from lands in England: TNA: PRO, C 139/41; E 149/142/1; E
152/522, 568; will
© Oxford University Press 2004–10
All rights reserved: see legal notice Oxford University Press


Anne Curry, ‘Montagu, Thomas , fourth earl of Salisbury (1388–1428)’,
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Sept
2004; online edn, Jan 2008 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/
18999, accessed 20 May 2010]

Thomas Montagu (1388–1428): doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/18999

[Previous version of this biography available here: May 2006]

Back to top of biography




[121] http://www.historyorb.com/events/date/1492


[122] http://thisdayinjewishhistory.blogspot.com/


[123] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anne_of_Denmark


[124] http://www.history.com/topics/christmas


[125] http://www.history.com/topics/christmas


[126] Torrence and Allied Families, Robert M. Torrence pg 478.


[127] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oliver_cromwell


[128] http://www.history.com/topics/christmas


[129] http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~harrisonrep/Harrison/d0081/g0000003.html#I987


[130] http://matsonfamily.net/WelchAncestry/family_vance.htm


[131] The Jews of the United States, Hasia R. Diner, page 25.


[132] Timetable of worldwide volcanic activity. Wikipedia.


[133] Comets: Prophets of Doom, H2, 3/13/2006


[134] Virginia Census, 1809.


[135] AIS Census Rep Virginia 1809, page 528.


[136] AIS Census Rep Virginia 1809, page 528.


[137] Ann Crawford, the oldest daughter of Colonel William Crawford was born about 1743 in Virginia and spent her early life on the Crawford homestead in Frederick County. In 1759, at the approximate age of sixteen, she married James Connell, a son of James and Ann (Williams) Connell., who in 1740 had migrated to the Upper Shenandoah Valley from Maryland. James Connell, the younger, was born in 1742 and raised in the vicinity of Fredericksburg. James and Ann were attracted quite early to the Youghiogheny Valley in Pennsylvania, by her father and with their small family, soon joined the Crawford family at Stewarts Crossing. The journey was undoubtly made over Braddock’s Old Road, then the most accessible route into that region, which at that date, was a wilderness. The trip was supposedly made soon after Mr. Crawford brought the first of his family to their new homes. From the earliest land survey, of what later became Fayette County, Pennsylvania, it shows that Ann Connell held a Virginia Warrant, dated in 1767. This claim was not adjusted until October 31, 1785, more than a year after her death.

Following James Connell to the Youghiogheny, came his half— brother William and half-sister Rachel, who married Reason Began; an older brother Zachariah, who later founded Connellsville, and a younger brother Thomas. James Connell’s name is third in a list of twenty-four names on Lt. John Hickston’s Roll of Virginia Soldiers of 1776.. He supposedly died during the early part of the Revolutionary period, for later record of him seems to be lacking. It is quite likely that Ann was a widow prior to January 24, 1777, at which time her father acquired a deed from Ezekial Hickman, etal (and others), party of the one part, for three hundred acres, more or less, containing the home where Ann Connell and her family were living. Below the signature of William Crawford, party of the other part, was also the signature of Ann Connell and the document was witnessed by Providence Mounts, Benjamin Harrison and Thomas Moore, all of that date of Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania. The deed recorded February 18, 1784. It became part of Colonel William Crawford’s estate that was left to Ann in his will, signed on May 16, 1782, before the tragic Sandusky Expedition. Will Book 1, page 9, Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania.

Records in the family of John Rice Connell, nephew of Ann (Crawford) Connell, indicate that Ann was married secondly to her brother-in-law, William Connell. We find in the Connell History From Sources of Information of Zachariah Connell and his Descendants’ by Colonel M. A. Reasoner, 1932, that ‘Aunt Mary’ (Aunt Mary Ortman, see No. 53, page 26), has heard her father (John Rice Connell) say that his grandfather came from Ireland; that he was from the O’Connell family and at the same time, had dropped the ‘0’ and that he married a German woman for a second wife; that William Connell who married Annie Crawford, was a half-brother of Zachariah. They lived at Fredericksburg, Virginia. Aunt Mary thinks that the girl-sister was also a half-sister of Zachariah’s.

Mary Connell Ortman, wife of Reverend Simon Ortman of New Salem, Ohio, was born in Adams County, Ohio in 1827 and was living in 1894. She was the youngest and last surviving child of John Rice Connell and his second wife, Rachel Wykoff. John Rice Connell was the son of Zachariah and Rebecca (Rice) Connell. In the statement of Mary Ortman, she seems to have confused the tradition about her father’s grandfather, James Connell, who was the son of Thomas and was the same James who brought his family to Virginia, with the tradition about her father’s great-great-grand­father, James Connell, who came from Ireland to Maryland in 1678. To confuse the lives and events dealing with early ancestors of the same name, but of different generations is a common mistake often made in stories of traditional recollection, when without the assistance of recorded history.

Court records show that the Connells were early of Frederick County, Virginia. William Connell, the half-brother of Zachariah, became a Captain with the Westoreland County Militia 1778 to 1783. His marriage with Ann Connell could well have existed between dates in part; may have influenced Ann’s oldest son, John in his decision to leave the home place. John Rice Connell, the latter John’s first cousin, was sixteen years old when his Aunt, Ann Connell died. He would have more clearly recalled Ann’s second marriage with his Uncle William than that of her first marriage with his Uncle James Connell, who died when John Rice Connell was a small boy. If Mary Ortman’s statement is correct, it may be assumed that Captain William Connell died before the death of Colonel William Crawford and Ann Connell, for further record of him seems lacking and he is not mentioned in either the will or settlement of Ann’s estate. Ann Connell signed her will on the 17th of May, 1783 in Westmoreland County and it was proved the 23 of March, 1784. (Will Book 1, page 13, Fayette County, Pennsylvania).

She made bequeaths to her son, John Connell, money, to son William, one-half of her plantation, to son James Connell, the other half of the plantation. She made smaller bequeaths to her daughters, Nancy and Polly Connell. She named Zachariah Connell, Providence Mounts the executors. The will was signed by three witnesses, Samuel, Zachariah Connell and Thomas Hews. (Contributed by, accredited to and by permission of Dr. Samuel Adams of Portsmouth, Ohio, 1964, who is a descendant of Col. William Crawford, through Ann (Crawford) Connell.)

(From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford. 254-256.)






[138] Shenandoah Pioneers and Descendants by Cartmell. The Brothers Crawford, Allen W. Scholl, 1995


[139] Provided by the Connellsville Area Historical Society. Added to the site on February 2, 2000.








[140] http://www.mapsofpa.com/antiquemaps25.htm


[141] Memoirs of Clan Fingon, by Rev. Donald D. Mackinnon M. A.


[142] (Ellis's History of Fayette Co,. PA) Ancestors of Forrest Roger Garnett Page 224.3


[143] A History of God by Karen Armstrong, page 329.


[144] Proposed Descendants of William SMythe.


[145]http://doclindsay.com/spread_sheets/2_davids_spreadsheet.html


[146] Proposed Descendants of William SMythe.


[147] The Brothers Crawford


[148] Gerol “Gary” Goodlove:Conrad and Caty, 2003


[149] Lieutenant Rueffer, Enemy Views by Bruce Burgoyne, pgs. 244-245.


[150] Diary of the American War, A Hessian Journal by Captain Johann Ewald pgs.191-196.


[151] Printed also in Jefferson, Works (fed. ed.), III. 383.




[152] Collections of the Illinois State Historical Library, Volume III, Virginia Series, Volume III George Rogers Clark Papers. 1771-1781. James Alton James, Editor. Pg. 485-490.




[153] Wikipedia


[154] http://www.microsofttranslator.com/bv.aspx?from=de&to=en&a=http://www.alemannia-judaica.de/werneck_synagoge.htm


[155] History of Fayette County, Pennsylvania, by Franklin Ellis, 1882


[156] From River Clyde to Tymochtee and Col. William Crawford by Grace U. Emahiser, 1969. p. 186.


[157] Gerol “Gary” Goodlove Conrad and Caty, 2003


[158] http://napoleonistyka.atspace.com/IMPERIAL_GUARD_infantry_1.htm


[159] http://www.drtl.org/Research/AlamoChronology.asp


[160] HCCO


[161] http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=mp648&id=I9416


[162] On This Day in America by John Wagman


[163] On This Day in America by John Wagman.


[164] http://cwcfamily.org/egy3.htm


[165] Proposed Descendants of William Smythe.


[166] www.frontierfolk.net/ramsha_research/families/Stephenson.rtf


[167] (AP, 12/25/97)(Jap. Enc., BLDM, p. 216)


[168] (HN, 12/25/98)


[169] Proposed Descendatns of William SMythe


[170] Proposed Descendants of William SMythe.


[171] Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, Israel Gutman, Editor, page 1769


[172] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haj_Amin_al-Husseini


[173] Sources: Assorted notes of Edna B Owsley (Heaton's daughter), The Stormy Years (autobiography of Carter Harrison Jr.), and Ronnie Bodine (President of Owsley Historical Society), The Owsley's an Illinois Family a Birthday Book.

Submitted by Milancie Adams. Visit her website Keeping the Chain Unbroken: Owsley and Hill Family History Website for additional info on this family. Note - be sure to go to her home page and follow some of the other Harrison links in her family as well.






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The Harrison Genealogy Repository http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~harrisonrep




[174] http://www.assassinationresearch.com/v2n1/chrono1.pdf

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