____________________________ | _Nicholas BARSHAM _____|____________________________ | (1496 - 1545) _Thomas BARSHAM _____| | (1528 - 1607) | | | ____________________________ | | | | |_Mrs. Ann BARSHAM _____|____________________________ | _William BARSHAM ________________| | (1558 - ....) | | | ____________________________ | | | | | _Thomas JENNISON ______|____________________________ | | | | |_Audrey JENNISON ____| | (.... - 1572) | | | ____________________________ | | | | |_Joan PEPPYS __________|____________________________ | _William BARSHAM ____________| | (.... - 1684) | | | _William III YELVERTON _____+ | | | (1491 - ....) | | _William IV YELVERTON _|_Margaret Gamond or GERNON _ | | | (.... - 1585) | | _Henry YELVERTON ____| | | | (.... - 1601) | | | | | _Henry Fermor or FERMOU ____ | | | | | | | | |_Anne FERMOUR _________|____________________________ | | | | |_Ann YELVERTON __________________| | | | | _Robert DRURY ______________+ | | | (1456 - 1537) | | _William DRURY ________|_Anne CALTHORPE ____________ | | | (1499 - 1558) (.... - 1494) | |_Bridget DRURY ______| | (1534 - ....) | | | _Henry SOTEHYLL ____________+ | | | | |_Elizabeth SOTHEL _____|_Jane EMPSON _______________ | (.... - 1575) | |--Hanna BARSHAM | (1638 - 1710) | ____________________________ | | | _______________________|____________________________ | | | _James SMITH ________| | | | | | | ____________________________ | | | | | | |_______________________|____________________________ | | | _John (Bland or) SMITH __________| | | (.... - 1668) | | | | ____________________________ | | | | | | | _______________________|____________________________ | | | | | | |_Adrian _____________| | | | | | | ____________________________ | | | | | | |_______________________|____________________________ | | |_Annabelle (Bland or) SMITH _| (1613 - 1683) | | _Thomas DRAKE ______________+ | | (1477 - 1541) | _William DRAKE ________|_Agnes BUTLER ______________ | | (1490 - 1555) (.... - 1550) | _William DRAKE ______| | | m 1578 | | | | ____________________________ | | | | | | |_______________________|____________________________ | | |_Isabel (Isabel) (Esbell) DRAKE _| (.... - 1639) | | ____________________________ | | | _______________________|____________________________ | | |_Joan MERRYLLS ______| (.... - 1617) m 1578| | ____________________________ | | |_______________________|____________________________
[17593]
Find A Grave memorial 7104371 offers: "Hannah Barsham, daughter of William and Annabella Bland Barsham was born 7 Jan 1637 in Newton, Massachusetts and died 18 Aug 1710 in Newton. She married Lieutenant John Spring in 1656 in Watertown, MA. Source: Francis Jackson, A history of the early settlement of Newton, county of Middlesex ... (3602 Maureen Lane, Bowie, MD 20715: Heritage Books, Inc, Copyright 1987), p. 416." and reports Hannah and John had Mary Spring Ward (1659-1731),
Abigail Spring Ward (1666-1742) and John Spring (1678-1754).
She was a Roman Catholic who during a religious revival in 1833 became a member of St. John Episcopal Church in Tallahassee.
Margo Armistead of Tallahassee posted in her linkedin.com web site: "From the diary of Marie Louise Morris De Vere De Milly (my ancestor) speaking of her father: 'He was appointed, much against his will, one of the Judges of Louis XVI. Though no admirer of his policy, he pitied the unfortunate Monarch. His strong oppostion to the terrible sentence passed upon Louis XVI was the cause of his exile from his own Country for nine years, for he was warned on the night of the day the Monarch was executed that if he were found the next day, his fate would be the same as Louis XVI.'"
Marianne Miller posted in genealogy.com in 2008: "I am in possession of some type-written information transcribed from a family bible from the Morris family; it gives very detailed information about the family, as written by Marie Louise Morris De Vere DeMilly (b. Nov. 11, 1818). The notation by the transcriber states the Family Bible is 99 years old and in the possession of John Malcolm Morris, Jr. given to him by his mother after the death of his father, John M. Morris, Sr. The transcription was done sometime in the 1960s as both my sister and myself are listed in the genealogy (b. 1963 and 1960 respectively), but my brother is not (b. 1969). . . . I would be more than happy to fax the 9 pages of transcribed history that includes genealogy starting with James M. Morris De Vere (b. 1761) and his wife Elizabeth Cadmark [sic] Marie De Vere (b. June 27, 1792) and ending with my generation, including me, Jay Schrader (b. Dec. 1960) and my sister and cousins."
In 2013 a file in Ancestry.com offered:
MEMOIRS OF THE MORRIS-deVERE FAMILY, By MARIE LOUISE MORRIS-deVERE (DeMILLY)
After the Revolution of 1830 father (General James Michael Morris-deVere) having lost nearly all of his property, decided to immigrate to a new country to live. He was quite an old man then, past seventy, with a wife and eight children depending upon him.
Father came very near embarking for south America with a colony from France, fortunately something happened to prevent his going for after a lapse of about a year, some of the party returned quite disheartened having actually been whipped out by a large band of orang-atangs that attacked them with clubs, tore down their cabins; trampled and destroyed their crops. Some had died there and some returned before the end of the first year.
All this made my father more determined to direct his course to the United States and having received title deeds to a large tract of land from his good friend General LaFayette, and being greatly encouraged by him to come to Florida and settle on the LaFayette Grant. (A colony of 100 French settlers were sent by General LaFayette under Count de La Porte, General James Michael Morris-deVere, and one Rosset. (See copy of original letter now in vault in office of the Secretary of State of Florida, attached).
Illness of my father prevented us from leaving France along with the others and Count de LaPorte was entrusted with the title deeds, being considered a true friend and he having promised that if anything happened to father he would be a father to his children and a friend to his widow. (Alas, for the promises of a faithless friend!).
I was just twelve years old when we left sunny France for a foreign country. I had been sent to a convent school for six years and had been closely confined by my studies and religious doctrines.
I possessed a lovely recollection of our home in fair Normandy - her blue lakes and skies, her vales and vine-clad hills were fresh in my memory as the green velvety grass which carpeted her sunny slopes. I felt like an encaged bird on the ship coming to America. I ran up and down the deck laughing and singing. The sailors told me yarns and adventures of their foreign ports - I wished I was a boy so I could become a sailor.
One incident I must relate which occurred a few days before we sailed and which made a lasting impression upon my childish heart. My father took us all to the Cathedral to witness the ceremony of ________________________. The Church was draped in black, a full length image of the Savior was stretched upon a bier, candles were lit which made the gloom seem deeper; mournful requiems were sung by sweet, solemn voices accompanied by a deep toned organ. The Priest addressed an earnest discourse, dwelling on last scene of Gethsemane and Calvary - not a sound broke the stillness save his solemn voice, every eye was intent upon him, every ear strained to catch his softened tones - he fell to his knees holding up the crucifix and claimed Sinners behold your Savior. Every being in that vast audience instantly knelt and worshipped God in posture, if not in spirit and in truth.
After a quick and uneventful voyage we arrived in New York, where we made a short stay, then we sailed for Savannah, Georgia, from there we journeyed to Florida in wagons. Some months had passed from the time de LaPorte and Rosset and the others had reached Florida, Tallahassee.
When we arrived in Tallahassee [10 June 1831] we found that the deeds to my father's share of the land had been destroyed and his part of the land sold. We could do nothing at the time but submit, until my father could write to the Marquis about it. It was the sickly season in and around Tallahassee, everyone in my family were taken down with fever except myself. My brother, the youngest son, Benjamin Franklin, had died a few days after our arrival while we were on Lake LaFayette where my father was to have owned land. We think my little brother must have been bitten by a rattlesnake or eaten poison berries. The French girl my parents had brought all the way from France left us at Savannah, where she became frightened at stories told her of Indians and Negroes and took a return boat to New York.
My mother, weakened by the hardships we had endured and grief over the death of my brother did not rally from the fever and soon died here in Tallahassee. My father, sick, deserted by supposed friends, cheated of his property, a stranger in a strange land, completely heart-broken over events, only lived three week after my mother's death.
Seven children in a foreign land, the oldest brother, James, being sixteen, and none of them able to speak English. I was no longer the gay young girl who had come to a new country with high hopes, and a happy heart. For weeks I had been the only nurse to those who were sick. I had not time for grief or despondency. My little brothers and sisters required my constant care and the darling baby sister called me mama. She was just beginning to talk. God was good to send to us a friend in a Frenchman who had been in this country a good many years. Monsieur John Lambert. As my father had been a Mason in France in high standing and the Masons in Tallahassee came to our aid, and homes were found for my four brothers and five year old sister, Francis. A wealthy lady offered to take me and my baby sister, Rosalie, give us a good home, treat us kindly, and I was to talk French with her daughters to perfect them in their pronunciations as they were studying that language and I had had eight years of the best schooling in a convent in France. Though Mrs. Randell was born and bred a lady-and God had blessed her with wealth, a kind and indulgent husband, still she did not keep her promise to treat us kindly. No, though forty years have passed and silver threads are streaking my once bright brown hair and my darling sister has dwelt with the angels for many years, tears fill my eyes and my heart swells with sorrow and indignation at the treatment we received at her hands. No sooner had she taken us to Jefferson County, where their plantation was, far from our kind friend, Monsieur Lambert, than she began to treat us badly by a course of petty tyranny that seems incredible to any one in whose bosom beats a mother's heart.
She took my baby sister from me and sent her to the Negro quarters where she was housed in a cabin with a dirt floor, her meals sent by a Negro who was commanded to set the plate before her, she might eat or let it alone as it pleased her. No nurse to attend her, poor baby less than two years old. What was worse, she separated us at night; she was torn from my arms and placed in out buildings, entirely alone while I was locked in another room to keep me from her. The lady said she must be weaned from me saying that I had something else to do besides nurse my little sister. How often I lay awake at night listening to her piteous cries of 'mama', 'mama'. How I tried to break the door down in order to get to her and comfort my darling. Alas, I only bruised my poor hands and beat my poor head against the grate for naught - all my efforts were in vain, tears, prayers, entreaties were in vain - nothing touched the cold proud heart - when tired nature gave way, I would sleep but only to dream of my sorrow or that woman's cruelty - if a brief respite was given me and I dreamed of my happy childhood days and a vision of Normandy came into my troubled sleep. The waking reality was the more bitter. I would kneel and pray God to take the poor baby that she might escape the miseries of her situation. This went on for 12 months and I was made a servant of, until Monsieur Lambert learned of the situation and took me and my baby sister to his home to live and I was married from his home and baby Rosalie lived to be eight years old.
[49707] See the unverified file LCC4-Z9B in familyserch.org which states the 1880 federal census lists him in Scranton, Lackawanna Co., PA and the 1900 federal census may list him in West Pittston, Lucerne Co., PA - this file states he is son of George Burnett Foster (b. in 1849) & Augusta S. Kirkpatrick (b. in 1856; m. 8 June 1876 in Scranton, Lackawanna Co., PA.
_____________________ | _____________________|_____________________ | _______________________| | | | | _____________________ | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | _____________________| | | | | _____________________ | | | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | | |_______________________| | | | | _____________________ | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | _John Paul FOSTER _____| | (1919 - 2003) m 1940 | | | _____________________ | | | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | | | _______________________| | | | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | | | |_____________________| | | | | _____________________ | | | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | | |_______________________| | | | | _____________________ | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | |--James Anthony ("Tony") FOSTER | | _____________________ | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | _______________________| | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | | _Roy SPARROW ________| | | (1899 - 1979) m 1920| | | | _____________________ | | | | | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | | | | |_______________________| | | | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | |_Ruth Valetta SPARROW _| (1921 - ....) m 1940 | | _____________________ | | | _____________________|_____________________ | | | _Charles Oliver YOUSE _| | | (1869 - 1910) m 1896 | | | | _____________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|_____________________ | | |_Ruth Mina YOUSE ____| (1900 - 1996) m 1920| | _John BRINER ________+ | | (1813 - 1892) m 1834 | _Henry J. BRINER ____|_Sarah HENRY ________ | | (1844 - 1907) m 1873 (1811 - 1893) |_Alice Jane BRINER ____| (1876 - 1971) m 1896 | | _____________________ | | |_Catherine SIMPSON __|_____________________ (1848 - 1918) m 1873
[8229] living - details excluded
_Johann Conrad GEIB __________________ | (1694 - 1762) _John HANSGEIB ______|______________________________________ | (1737 - 1818) m 1763 _John B. GEIB _______| | (1764 - 1825) m 1786| | | _Ulrich LEIB _________________________ | | | (1700 - 1769) | |_Veronica LEIB ______|______________________________________ | (1749 - 1825) m 1763 _Abraham GEIB _______| | (1803 - 1863) m 1829| | | _Christian Schnebele Geunder HERSHEY _+ | | | (1712 - 1782) | | _Jacob HERSHEY ______|______________________________________ | | | (1738 - 1798) m 1760 | |_Barbara HERSHEY ____| | (1767 - 1838) m 1786| | | _Christian EBY _______________________ | | | (1698 - 1756) | |_Barbara EBY ________|_Elizabeth MAYER _____________________ | (1740 - 1816) m 1760 (1708 - 1787) _Henry Royer GEIB ____________| | (1834 - 1916) | | | _Johann Emig ROYER ___________________+ | | | (1707 - 1769) | | _Daniel ROYER _______|______________________________________ | | | (1741 - 1784) m 1761 | | _Samuel ROYER _______| | | | (1784 - 1862) | | | | | _John Henry KEMPER ___________________+ | | | | | (1696 - 1769) m 1728 | | | |_Catherine KEMPER ___|_Catharine REICHEN ___________________ | | | (1754 - 1818) m 1761 (1705 - 1761) | |_Catharine ROYER ____| | (1812 - 1887) m 1829| | | ______________________________________ | | | | | _____________________|______________________________________ | | | | |_____________________| | | | | ______________________________________ | | | | |_____________________|______________________________________ | | |--Daniel P. GEIB | (1872 - ....) | ______________________________________ | | | _____________________|______________________________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | | ______________________________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|______________________________________ | | | _Ephraim PFAUTZ _____| | | (1811 - 1897) | | | | ______________________________________ | | | | | | | _____________________|______________________________________ | | | | | | |_____________________| | | | | | | ______________________________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|______________________________________ | | |_Martha (or Margaret) PFAUTZ _| (1851 - 1911) | | ______________________________________ | | | _____________________|______________________________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | | ______________________________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|______________________________________ | | |_Nancy W. GIBBLE ____| (1813 - 1892) | | ______________________________________ | | | _____________________|______________________________________ | | |_____________________| | | ______________________________________ | | |_____________________|______________________________________
[17154] Gladys is dau. of Andrew Alison Grindle and Nellie Louise Peaslee.
[59468]
[S107]
"The Gray Family of Hancock Co., Maine," Amon A. Gray & Walter A. Snow (1987)
_James (Sr.) LEACH ________________+ | (1738 - 1822) m 1761 _Obed LEACH ____________|_Alice FREEMAN ____________________ | m 1801 (1739 - 1824) _Hiram Freethy LEACH _| | (1803 - 1891) m 1829 | | | _Israel BARTLETT __________________+ | | | (1737 - ....) | |_Mary BARTLETT _________|___________________________________ | (1783 - 1866) m 1801 _Hiram Freethy (Jr) LEACH _| | (1832 - 1911) m 1857 | | | _Peletiah LEACH ___________________+ | | | (1757 - 1839) | | _John LEACH ____________|_Mary GRINDLE _____________________ | | | (1783 - 1856) m 1806 (1765 - 1839) | |_Abigail LEACH _______| | (.... - 1832) m 1829 | | | _Daniel (Jr.) WARDWELL ____________+ | | | (1760 - 1844) m 1778 | |_Abigail WARDWELL ______|_Mary HUTCHINS ____________________ | (1789 - 1855) m 1806 (1770 - 1835) _Ellery Franklin LEACH _| | (1869 - 1923) m 1891 | | | _John SNOWMAN _____________________+ | | | (.... - 1801) m 1754 | | _William SNOWMAN _______|_Sarah STAPLES ____________________ | | | (1765 - 1839) m 1790 (1733 - ....) | | _William SNOWMAN _____| | | | (1794 - 1876) m 1817 | | | | | _Charles (The "Patriot") HUTCHINS _+ | | | | | (1742 - 1834) m 1764 | | | |_Judith HUTCHINGS ______|_Mary PERKINS _____________________ | | | (1772 - 1862) m 1790 (1745 - 1797) | |_Sarah N. SNOWMAN _________| | (1841 - 1921) m 1857 | | | _Nathaniel ATKINS _________________+ | | | (1736 - ....) m 1759 | | _Nathaniel (Jr) ATKINS _|_Mary PARKER ______________________ | | | (1765 - 1844) m 1789 (1740 - 1781) | |_Mary ATKINS _________| | (1798 - 1882) m 1817 | | | _John PIKE ________________________+ | | | (1728 - 1802) m 1760 | |_Hannah PIKE ___________|_Hannah LOMBARD ___________________ | (1772 - 1799) m 1789 (1737 - 1831) | |--Marion Ella LEACH | (1897 - 1983) | _James (Sr.) LEACH ________________+ | | (1738 - 1822) m 1761 | _John LEACH ____________|_Alice FREEMAN ____________________ | | (.... - 1845) m 1786 (1739 - 1824) | _David LEACH _________| | | (1791 - 1870) m 1822 | | | | ___________________________________ | | | | | | |_Mary SIMPSON __________|___________________________________ | | (1771 - 1845) m 1786 | _David T. LEACH ___________| | | (1834 - 1905) | | | | ___________________________________ | | | | | | | _Henry DORR ____________|___________________________________ | | | | (1762 - 1842) | | |_Dorcas D. DORR ______| | | (1801 - ....) m 1822 | | | | _Lemuel WEEKS _____________________+ | | | | (1733 - 1821) m 1750 | | |_Abigail WEEKS _________|_Margaret ("Peggy") GOODING _______ | | (.... - 1847) |_Bertha Matilda LEACH __| (1872 - 1950) m 1891 | | _Daniel WARDWELL __________________+ | | (1734 - 1803) m 1755 | _Samuel WARDWELL _______|_Sarah STAPLES ____________________ | | (1774 - 1858) | _Washington WARDWELL _| | | (1814 - ....) m 1833 | | | | _Aaron BANKS ______________________+ | | | | (1738 - 1823) m 1764 | | |_Mary ("Polly") BANKS __|_Mary PERKINS _____________________ | | (1772 - 1862) (1743 - 1833) |_Ella M. WARDWELL _________| (1849 - 1875) | | _Isaac PERKINS ____________________+ | | (1746 - ....) m 1770 | _George PERKINS ________|_Olive WEBBER _____________________ | | (1777 - ....) m 1797 (1752 - 1835) |_Eleanor V. PERKINS __| (1813 - 1877) m 1833 | | _Daniel (Sr.) WEBSTER _____________ | | (1751 - ....) |_Patience WEBSTER ______|___________________________________ m 1797
_Joseph LEACH _____________+ | (1773 - ....) _John LEACH _________|_Thirza EATON _____________ | (1799 - 1824) m 1821 (1773 - ....) _John L. LEACH ____________| | (1821 - 1866) | | | _Joab GRAY ________________+ | | | (1771 - 1821) m 1794 | |_Tryphena GRAY ______|_Abigail WILSON ___________ | (1804 - 1878) m 1821 (1774 - 1856) _Frederick S. LEACH _| | (1856 - 1941) | | | ___________________________ | | | | | _Frederick SAUNDERS _|___________________________ | | | (1803 - ....) m 1831 | |_Sarah Elizabeth SAUNDERS _| | (1834 - 1891) | | | _Eliphalet Lowell GRINDLE _+ | | | (1769 - 1843) m 1789 | |_Nancy GRINDLE ______|_Nancy Anne GRAY __________ | (1812 - 1896) m 1831 (1773 - 1823) _George Ithiel LEACH ______| | (1894 - 1957) m 1914 | | | ___________________________ | | | | | _____________________|___________________________ | | | | | ___________________________| | | | | | | | | ___________________________ | | | | | | | | |_____________________|___________________________ | | | | |_Rose Ella SAUNDERS _| | (1862 - 1901) | | | ___________________________ | | | | | _____________________|___________________________ | | | | |___________________________| | | | | ___________________________ | | | | |_____________________|___________________________ | | |--Phyllis Rose LEACH | (1923 - 2005) | ___________________________ | | | _____________________|___________________________ | | | ___________________________| | | | | | | ___________________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|___________________________ | | | _____________________| | | | | | | ___________________________ | | | | | | | _____________________|___________________________ | | | | | | |___________________________| | | | | | | ___________________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|___________________________ | | |_Evelyn Catherine MCENTEE _| (1896 - 1967) m 1914 | | ___________________________ | | | _____________________|___________________________ | | | ___________________________| | | | | | | ___________________________ | | | | | | |_____________________|___________________________ | | |_____________________| | | ___________________________ | | | _____________________|___________________________ | | |___________________________| | | ___________________________ | | |_____________________|___________________________
[52918] Find A Grave memorial 20929187 offers Phyllis' obituary: "Forf Fairfield - Phyllis R. (Leach) Witham, beloved wife of the late Chester B. Witham, went home to be with her Lord Monday evening, Oct. 31, 2005, in a Presque Isle healthcare facility after an extended illness. She was born Sept. 19, 1923, at Presque Isle, the daughter of George and Evelyn (McAtee) Leach. Phyllis attended local schools and was married to Chester Witham July 2, 1942. Following the death of Chester in 1981, Phyllis was married to Wilson Pendexter in 1983, who also predeceased her. Mrs. Witham had been employed by SAD 20 for several years and attended the United Pentecostal Church of Fort Fairfield. She was a former member of the Odd Fellows of Fort Fairfield and the R.S.V.P. Phyllis was a wonderful cook, had a heart of gold and possessed a dedicated love for her family. She will be remembered as a loving mother and grandmother. Phyllis is survived by two sons, James Witham and Bonnie Gallagher of Caribou and Daniel Witham and his wife, Lorena; four brothers, Richard Leach of Easton, Merle Leach of New York, George Leach and his wife, Marjorie and Darrell Leach and his wife, Mary, all of Presque Isle; two sisters, Christine Leach of Presque Isle and Evelyn Miller and her husband, Ronald, of Florida; three grandchildren, Chester Witham of South Portland, Elizabeth Witham of Stockton, Calif. and Sabrina Witham of Presque Isle; numerous nieces and nephews. She will be dearly remembered by Rena LaFrancis and Myrtle Hartley, both of Presque Isle, who Phyllis loved as her own sisters."
__ | __|__ | __| | | | | __ | | | | |__|__ | _William LEVET ______| | | | | __ | | | | | __|__ | | | | |__| | | | | __ | | | | |__|__ | _William LEVET ______| | | | | __ | | | | | __|__ | | | | | __| | | | | | | | | __ | | | | | | | | |__|__ | | | | |_____________________| | | | | __ | | | | | __|__ | | | | |__| | | | | __ | | | | |__|__ | | |--William LEVET | (.... - 1577) | __ | | | __|__ | | | __| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | |__|__ | | | _____________________| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | | __|__ | | | | | | |__| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | |__|__ | | |_____________________| | | __ | | | __|__ | | | __| | | | | | | __ | | | | | | |__|__ | | |_____________________| | | __ | | | __|__ | | |__| | | __ | | |__|__
[23069] William m. Elizabeth Wentworth, daughter of William Wentworth of Spratborough, England.
[2739] James de Harcourt resided at St.-James-de-Benvron. James was also Lord of Field Dalling. See "Britain's Royal Family: A Complete Genealogy," Alison Weir (London, U.K.: The Bodley Head, 1999), page 48. https://www.geni.com reports without proof that James is son of Hasculf FitzEudo de Saint-Hilaire-du-Harcouët and Maud (Matilda). Hasculf held the barony of Field Dalling/St.Hilary in Co. Norfolk. [http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~whosyomama/2/8182.htm (not verified) reports: "James married Aveline Ales Canamor Scotland, daughter of King of Scotland Alexander I Scotland, and Queen Of Scotland Sibyl Elizabeth de Falaise. (Aveline Ales Canamor Scotland, was born about 1109.)" but this cannot be correct.]