[14301] Alice was of Coningsby, Lincolnshire and d. 1374/75 according to http://www.lds.net/pages/kawillden/dod/pafg66.htm#3516
__
|
__|__
|
__|
| |
| | __
| | |
| |__|__
|
_Alonzo COFFIN ______|
| (1816 - 1883) m 1843|
| | __
| | |
| | __|__
| | |
| |__|
| |
| | __
| | |
| |__|__
|
|
|--Clara COFFIN
| (1848 - 1906)
| __
| |
| __|__
| |
| __|
| | |
| | | __
| | | |
| | |__|__
| |
|_Maria E. BATEMAN ___|
(1817 - 1859) m 1843|
| __
| |
| __|__
| |
|__|
|
| __
| |
|__|__
[24550] John's other children are Jacob (1816-1888), Catherine (m. 12 March 1840 in Wayne Co., OH Elizabeth Jackson - both buried in Meng Cemetery, Ashland Co.), Hanna (1825-1859, m. 1843 William Ryland), Elizabeth (b. 1828, m. 1851 in Ashland Co., OH William Harpster). One World Tree on Ancestry.com reports he m. 10 June 1828 in Chambersburg, Franklin Co., PA Eva Gsell (b. 1808 in PA of Henry Gsell, she d. 1 Feb 1894 in Ashland Co., OH).
_Joseph HEICHEL ______+
| (1819 - 1889) m 1843
_John Luther HEICHEL ___|_Ann Rebecca BASFORD _
| (1850 - ....) m 1875 (1825 - 1910)
_Byron George HEICHEL _|
| (1881 - 1963) |
| | ______________________
| | |
| |_Mary Falina EASTERDAY _|______________________
| (1857 - 1934) m 1875
_John Rodney HEICHEL _____|
| |
| | ______________________
| | |
| | ________________________|______________________
| | |
| |_Susan Luthera ARTHUR _|
| (1880 - 1957) |
| | ______________________
| | |
| |________________________|______________________
|
|
|--Robert Mark HEICHEL
|
| ______________________
| |
| ________________________|______________________
| |
| _______________________|
| | |
| | | ______________________
| | | |
| | |________________________|______________________
| |
|_Shirley Josephine MINER _|
|
| ______________________
| |
| ________________________|______________________
| |
|_______________________|
|
| ______________________
| |
|________________________|______________________
[14998] living - details excluded
_lrpád, Prince of HUNGARY _
| (.... - 0907)
_Zaltas (Zoltán), Prince of HUNGARY _|___________________________
|
_Taksony, Prince of HUNGARY _|
| |
| | ___________________________
| | |
| |_____________________________________|___________________________
|
_Géza, Prince of HUNGARY _|
| (.... - 0997) |
| | ___________________________
| | |
| | _____________________________________|___________________________
| | |
| |_____________________________|
| |
| | ___________________________
| | |
| |_____________________________________|___________________________
|
|
|--Stephen (István) I, King of HUNGARY
| (.... - 1038)
| ___________________________
| |
| _____________________________________|___________________________
| |
| _____________________________|
| | |
| | | ___________________________
| | | |
| | |_____________________________________|___________________________
| |
|__________________________|
|
| ___________________________
| |
| _____________________________________|___________________________
| |
|_____________________________|
|
| ___________________________
| |
|_____________________________________|___________________________
[22870] In Hungarian, he is István. http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Ithaca/7730/Christianity/HunIstvan.html in 2003 presents: "King Stephen I (also known as King Saint Stephen) is one of the most important personalities of Hungarian history. He was the first Christian Hungarian king, the founder of the Hungarian Kingdom and the organizer of the Hungarian Christian Church. Stephen was born around 970 to Prince Géza and Sarolt, the Christian daughter of the Transylvanian leader Gyula. He received the pagan name Vajk at birth, but he was given the name of the first Christian martyr, Stephen, at his baptism in 972. Stephen married the deeply religious Gizella (Giselle), the daughter of Henry II, Prince of Bavaria, in AD 996. Many missionaries and knights came along with Gizella from Bavaria. After the death of Prince Géza in AD 997, Stephen was elected Prince of Hungary. At the very beginning of his reign, a pagan revolt led by his relative Koppány broke out. Koppány planned to kill Stephen, succeed him on the throne and marry the widowed Sarolt. According to chronicles, the young Stephen girded himself with a sword for the first time. He gathered his army, asked for God's help, then defeated the enemy near Veszprém. Vencellin, the German captain of the army, killed Koppány in the battle. Not only the Hungarian throne was at stake in the battle between Stephen and Koppány, but the nation's religious future as well: paganism or Christianity. With God's help, Stephen triumphed in the battle and Christianity won. The Hungarians defended Europe against the pagan invasions in the centuries to follow. Thus, the formerly pagan Hungarian nation became the bulwark of the Christian Europe. Stephen was crowned king in Esztergom at the turn of the millennium, around Christmas in AD 1000, with a crown sent by Pope Sylvester II, meaning that the pope recognized him as a sovereign Christian king. Thereby, the independent Kingdom of Hungary had been born. Stephen subdued the Hungarian tribes of the Carpathian Basin either in battles or by peaceful means, and repressed the insurgencies. From the alliance of the Hungarian tribes, he founded the Christian Hungarian Kingdom encompassing the whole Carpathian Basin. The country was divided into ten bishoprics and about fifty royal counties. The 10 dioceses were those of Esztergom, Veszprém, Kalocsa, Eger, Győr, Pécs, Vác, Csanád, Bihar and Transylvania. Among other things, Stephen continued and finished the construction of the Benedictine Abbey at Pannonhalma, founded the Nunnery at Veszprémvölgy, the Abbey at Bakonybél and the Monastery at Pécsvárad. He built a cathedral in Esztergom and the Church of St. Peter and Paul at buda. Stephen decreed that every ten villages should build a church. Inside the abbeys and monasteries schools were established, which became centers of culture. The friars taught Christian European culture in these schools, and their students became not only missionaries, but also the chief men of the king and the counties. The pilgrims who were on their way to the Holy Land through the Carpathian Basin were received by Stephen in the royal court. He provided them with money and organized their secure jurney across the country. For the Hungarian pilgrims visiting the Holy Land and Rome, he built guesthouses in Constantinople, Jerusalem, Ravenna and Rome. Stephen eliminated pagan customs with just laws, and he strengthened Christianity. He gave generously to the churches, visited them frequently, and supervised their renovation in person. According to the Illustrated Chronicle of Mark Kalt (one of the most trustworthy documents on early Hungarian history, written between 1358-1370), Stephen carried a purse full of silver dinars on his belt and whenever he saw a poor man, he took care of him personally. The monk from Venice, Gerard (Gellért), who later became the bishop of Csanád, preached the Gospel to the Hungarians for the first time in the Monastery at Pécsvárad. Afterwards, he was introduced to King Stephen, who asked him to stay in Hungary and preach the Gospel to the people there. Subsequently, Gerard converted and baptized many Hungarians. Stephen wrote the Admonitiones (Admonitions) in Latin for his beloved and talented Christian son Imre. This writing was the most noteworthy piece of literature in Hungary at that time. After his power was consolidated, Stephen planned to abdicate in the favor of Imre and dedicate the rest of his life to God. The Illustrated Chronicle reports about this in chapter 69: 'After God's glory and mercy was made manifest in King Saint Stephen, by driving off kings before him and subduing the principalities and powers of the neighboring nations, King Saint Stephen decided and was determined to leave all the pomp of this world, to lay down the crown of the fleeting earthly kingship and to dedicate himself to God only. He planned to cast off worldly problems, to spend his life in quiet peacefulness and contemplation, and to give the crown to his son, Prince Imre, who was blessed and full of holy virtues and was raised this way.' But Imre died unexpectedly in 1031: "By God's secret decision, he died, so that wickedness would not change his soul and false imaginations would not deceive his mindas the Book of Wisdom teaches about early death." (Chapter 63) Mourning took its toll on Stephen and he became very ill: 'The great and bitter anguish made King Saint Stephen very sick; after many days his health recovered somewhat, but his old health never returned. He suffered from pains in the foot and was tormented by sadness, mainly because he couldn't find anyone among his brethren who would keep the Hungarians in their Christian faith after his death. For Hungarians were attracted more to pagan rituals than to the faith in Christ.' (Chapter 69) 'King Stephen died on August 15, 1038 at Székesfehérvár (a city in central Hungary) and he was buried there. His people mourned for three years: The songs played on lutes turned sorrowful all over Hungary immediately. The people of the country, nobles and common people, rich and poor, all wept together over the death of the blessed king. With many tears and cries did they mourn the merciful father of the orphans. For grief and sadness did they dress in mourning. Young men and virgins did not dance for three years. The musical instruments which played sweet melodies became silent. Everyone, every faithful heart mourned him with great, inconsolable lamentation.' (Chapter 70) The feast day of King Stephen is celebrated in Hungary on August 20. It is the greatest national holiday of the Hungarians." His birth name was Vajk (Turkish for rich or master). Stephen's life and times are dramatically portrayed in "The Last Apocalypse: Europe at the Year 1000 A.D.," James Reston, Jr. (New York: Doubleday, 1998), Chapter 9. Also see http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephen_of_Hungary and http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/HUNGARY.htm.
_____________________
|
_______________________________|_____________________
|
_______________________|
| |
| | _____________________
| | |
| |_______________________________|_____________________
|
_William Wilson ("Wilce") JAMES _|
| (1854 - 1930) m 1874 |
| | _____________________
| | |
| | _______________________________|_____________________
| | |
| |_______________________|
| |
| | _____________________
| | |
| |_______________________________|_____________________
|
|
|--Martha JAMES
|
| _John B. BOYDSTUN ___+
| | (1766 - 1820) m 1795
| _John Gardner BOYDSTUN ________|_Nancy Ann GARDNER __
| | (1805 - 1847) m 1826 (1775 - 1854)
| _James Berry BOYDSTON _|
| | (1827 - 1897) m 1851 |
| | | _____________________
| | | |
| | |_Elizabeth "Betsy" ATTERBERRY _|_____________________
| | (.... - 1836) m 1826
|_Elizabeth Jane BOYDSTON ________|
(1855 - 1941) m 1874 |
| _Benjamin REA _______
| |
| _Thomas REA ___________________|_____________________
| | (1807 - 1878)
|_Hannah Caroline REA __|
(1832 - 1917) m 1851 |
| _____________________
| |
|_______________________________|_____________________
_Franz Frederick Anton, Duke of SAXE-COBURG ______________+
| (1750 - 1806) m 1777
_Leopold I George of SAXE-COBURG ____|_Auguste Caroline Sophie of Lobenstein and EBERSDORF _____
| (1790 - 1865) m 1832 (1757 - 1831)
_Philip, Count of FLANDERS _______|
| (1837 - 1905) m 1867 |
| | _Louis Philippe, King of FRANCE __________________________+
| | | (1773 - 1850)
| |_Louisa Marie D'ORLEANS _____________|_Marie Amelie of BOURBON _________________________________
| (1812 - 1850) m 1832 (1782 - 1866)
_Albert I, King of The BELGIANS _|
| (1875 - 1934) m 1900 |
| | _Karl Anton Friedrich Fürst VON HOHENZOLLERN-SIGMARINGEN _
| | | (1785 - 1853) m 1808
| | _Charles Anthony HOHENZOLLERN _______|_Marie Antoinette MURAT __________________________________
| | | (1811 - 1885) m 1834 (1793 - 1847)
| |_Marie HOHENZOLLERN ______________|
| (1845 - 1912) m 1867 |
| | _Ludwig Karl, Grand Duke of BADEN ________________________+
| | | (1786 - 1819) m 1806
| |_Josephine Zahringen of BADEN _______|_Stéphanie Louise Adrienne DE BEAUHARNAIS ________________
| (1813 - 1900) m 1834 (1789 - 1860)
|
|--Marie JOS
| (1906 - ....)
| __________________________________________________________
| |
| _Maximilian Joseph, Duke of BAVARIA _|__________________________________________________________
| |
| _Karl Theodor "Gackl" of BAVARIA _|
| | (1839 - 1909) m 1874 |
| | | _Maximilian I Joseph WITTELSBACH _________________________+
| | | | (1756 - 1825) m 1797
| | |_Ludovica ("Louise") WITTELSBACH ____|_Caroline of BADEN _______________________________________
| | (1808 - 1892) (1776 - 1841)
|_Elizabeth of BAVARIA ___________|
(1876 - 1965) m 1900 |
| __________________________________________________________
| |
| _____________________________________|__________________________________________________________
| |
|_Maria Josepha of PORTUGAL _______|
(1857 - 1943) m 1874 |
| __________________________________________________________
| |
|_____________________________________|__________________________________________________________
[13755] Marie m. 1930 Umberto II (1904-1983).
[23279] http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~pmcbride/rfc/gw71.htm states Alfred m. Gundreda (b. ca. 1069), and that Alfred is son of Otomar Knyvett (b. ca. 1040) and his wife Emma Dammartin (b. ca. 1044, daughter of Nicholas Dammartyn).
_Christian BRILLHART _+
| (1805 - 1885)
_Andrew J. BRILLHART _|_Mary Ann UTZ ________
| (1830 - 1897) m 1885 (1804 - 1881)
_James McClelland BRILLHART _|
| (1875 - 1948) |
| | ______________________
| | |
| |_Almyra JOHNS ________|______________________
| m 1885
_Raymond McClelland BRILLHART _|
| (1916 - ....) |
| | ______________________
| | |
| | ______________________|______________________
| | |
| |_Lily PREBLE ________________|
| |
| | ______________________
| | |
| |______________________|______________________
|
|
|--Leta Mae MCCLELLAND
|
| ______________________
| |
| ______________________|______________________
| |
| _____________________________|
| | |
| | | ______________________
| | | |
| | |______________________|______________________
| |
|_Gladys PROSSER _______________|
|
| ______________________
| |
| ______________________|______________________
| |
|_____________________________|
|
| ______________________
| |
|______________________|______________________
[15622] living - details excluded
_Abraham SCHNEIDER ____+
| (1788 - 1873)
_John Schweitzer SNYDER _|_Susanna SCHWEITZER ___
| (1824 - 1901) (1790 - 1870)
_Rudolph SNYDER _____|
| (1852 - 1924) m 1881|
| | _Gottfried SCHREFFLER _
| | | (1787 - 1870) m 1808
| |_Susanna SCHREFFLER _____|_Eva Gretha LEBO ______
| (1826 - 1902) (1790 - 1872)
_Millard SNYDER _______________________|
| (1904 - 1966) m 1930 |
| | _Andreas GEIST ________+
| | | (1801 - 1878)
| | _Daniel H. GEIST ________|_Magdalena HEPLER _____
| | | (1832 - 1901) (1803 - 1869)
| |_Sarah Alice GEIST __|
| (1861 - 1929) m 1881|
| | _Jacob UPDEGRAVE ______
| | | (1812 - 1879)
| |_Cecelia UPDEGRAVE ______|_Catherine KIMMEL _____
| (1841 - 1906) (1814 - 1889)
|
|--Millard SNYDER
|
| _______________________
| |
| _________________________|_______________________
| |
| _____________________|
| | |
| | | _______________________
| | | |
| | |_________________________|_______________________
| |
|_Margaret Mae, wife of Millard SNYDER _|
(1912 - 1993) m 1930 |
| _______________________
| |
| _________________________|_______________________
| |
|_____________________|
|
| _______________________
| |
|_________________________|_______________________
[15983] living - details excluded