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Thomas Beaufort

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Michelle.Mu...@ccmail.team400.ie

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Apr 27, 1999, 3:00:00 AM4/27/99
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2 Thomas Beaufort b: Abt. Jan-1376/77 d: 31-Dec-1426
Greenwich
.... +Margaret Neville b: Abt. 1385


What relation was Margaret Neville to Ralph Neville, Earl of Westmoreland, who
married Thomas's sister Joan?
Also, what was Thomas Beaufort's title?

thanks,

Michelle


Michelle.Mu...@ccmail.team400.ie

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Apr 27, 1999, 3:00:00 AM4/27/99
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ED MANN

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Apr 27, 1999, 3:00:00 AM4/27/99
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Descendants of Thomas Neville

1 Sir Thomas Neville aka: Knt. ref #: (F15:11)
2 Margaret Neville b: Abt. 1385 d: Abt. 1424 ref #: (F15:11)
+Sir Thomas Beaufort aka: Earl of Dorset / Duke of Exeter b: Abt.
Jan 1376/77 d: 31 Dec 1426 ref #: F15:11iii
3 Henry Beaufort ref #: (F15:11)

--
FWIW; AFAIK; IMHO; YMMV; yadda, yadda, yadda.

Regards, Ed Mann mailto:edl...@mail2.lcia.com

References:
Ä = Weis, _Ancestral_Roots_, 7th ed.
AACPW = Roberts & Reitwiesner, _American Ancestors and Cousins of
the Princess of Wales_, [page].
AAP = Roberts, _Ancestors_of_American_Presidents_, [page] or
[Pres. # : page].
BP1 = _Burke's_Presidential_Families_, 1st ed. [page].
BPci = _Burke's_Peerage_, 101st ed., [page].
BRF = Weir, _Britain's_Royal_Families_, [page].
BxP = _Burke's_Dormant_&_Extinct_Peerages_, [page].
EC1 = Redlich, _Emperor_Charlemagne's_Descendants_, Vol I, [page].
EC2 = Langston & Buck, _Emperor_Charlemagne's_Descendants_, Vol II,
[page].
EC3 = Buck & Beard, _Emperor_Charlemagne's_Descendants_, Vol II,
[page].
F = Faris, _Plantagenet_Ancestry_, [page:para].
NK1 = Roberts, _Notable_Kin_Volume_One_, [page].
Œ = Hardy, _Colonial_Families_of_the_Southern_States_of_America_,
[page].
S = Stuart, _Royalty_for_Commoners_, 2d ed. Caveat emptor.
W = Weis, _Magna_Charta_Sureties,_1215_, 4th ed.
WFT = Broderbund's World Family Tree CD, [vol]:[num] Caveat emptor.
WMC = Wurt's Magna Charta, [vol]:[page]

bharris

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Apr 27, 1999, 3:00:00 AM4/27/99
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Could anyone direct me to a source of Latin names that give the English
equivalent. The parish priest of a film I am reading in Derbyshire in 1580
writes the surname in English and the given name in Latin. Since it is a
rotten film of a rotten book I am having a hard time reading it; I want to
find Alice's baptism. Any help appreeciated. Betty


D. Spencer Hines

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Apr 27, 1999, 3:00:00 AM4/27/99
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Vide infra.

<Ahem.>

Perhaps Douglas Richardson will have the courtesy to pick up on this
one.

D. Spencer Hines

Lux et Veritas
--

D. Spencer Hines --- "Lenin's patience, never plentiful, was
exhausted. "Why," he demanded, "should we bother to reply to Kautsky?
He would reply to us, and we would have to reply to his reply.
There's no end to that. It will be quite enough for us to announce
that Kautsky is a traitor to the working class, and everyone will
understand everything." "The Unknown Lenin: From the Secret Archive"
**Yale University Press** (1996) Newsweek, 16 Sep 1996, p.100

bharris <bha...@inebraska.com> wrote in message
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bharris

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Apr 27, 1999, 3:00:00 AM4/27/99
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Reedpcgen

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Apr 29, 1999, 3:00:00 AM4/29/99
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>Could anyone direct me to a source of Latin names that give the English
>equivalent.

Betty, there are a number of sources, but one which might be more widely
available is David E. Gardner and Frank Smith's _Genealogical Research in
England and Wales_, v. 3, pp. 87-92 (Bookcraft: Salt Lake City, 1964).

In a month or two such a list will be at www.apsg.org. I am working on helping
get _The Genealogist_, v. 10, no. 3 to the printer by the end of May, so it's
delayed my putting links onto the preliminary web page.

For those interested, the first links at that will appear at www.apsg.org in
the next three or four weeks will be:

1. A complete list of probate courts and jurisdictions in England, with
corresponding FHL microfilm numbers prior to 1700, including specific
annotations on various manuscript indexes, etc.

2. A complete bibliography of sources for inquisitions post mortem, with online
examples of texts, annotations, etc.

3. Other bibliographies of basic records, such as CPR, CCR, CChartR, CurRR,
CAD, etc.

4. The beginning of an online paleography study which teaches readers how to
read scripts in probate and parish records century by century, letter by
letter, beginning with the very archaic freehand scrawl which occurred at the
end of the reign of Elizabeth and beginning of James, and the much more
readable script from mthe same period used by the PCC.

So, good things to come. It just takes time.

pcr

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