Norsk
     
Premium familieside
Velkommen
My name is Jennifer Marshall and I am the Webmistress of this site.

This site was created using MyHeritage.com. This is a great system that allows anyone like you and me to create a site for their family and even publish their family tree on the Internet.
If you have any comments or feedback about this site, please click here to contact me.
Our family tree is posted online on this site! There are 2085 names in our family site. The earliest event is the birth of William Simper (1669). The most recent event is the death of Samuel Harl Marshall (Dec 8 2011).
The site was last updated on 23. mai 2012, and it currently has 224 registered member(s). Klikk here dersom du også vil bli medlem.  

Enjoy!

Gå til familietreet

Gå til familiebilder
Slektsnytt
I dag

Debbie Noakes meldte seg inn på en annen slektsside: Neill Web Site
Denise Miller meldte seg inn på en annen slektsside: Leigh's Tree
Drew meldte seg inn på en annen slektsside: Ryan - Rose Web Site
Gary Ross MOWAT opprettet en ny slektsside: MOWAT, Peter (1825 - 1893) Web Site
I går

Scotskiwi meldte seg inn på en annen slektsside: Yeates Web Site
sylvaney Knight meldte seg inn på en annen slektsside: Yeates Web Site
Marie Hewson meldte seg inn på en annen slektsside: Fletcher Web Site
Roz Cazz meldte seg inn på en annen slektsside: Porter Web Site
Greg Weekes meldte seg inn på en annen slektsside: GILLIBRAND Web Site
Brian Sydney Beck meldte seg inn på en annen slektsside: Herschell Web Site
Denise Miller meldte seg inn på en annen slektsside: Emohruo and Name Web Site
Charles HAWES meldte seg inn på en annen slektsside: Emohruo and Name Web Site
mai 21, 2012

Garry Wilson meldte seg inn på en annen slektsside: Rodgers-Sheridan Web Site
Rick Benzies meldte seg inn på en annen slektsside: Family site (Family Tree Legends)
Kerryl Gardner meldte seg inn på en annen slektsside: Fell Web Site
John Houston meldte seg inn på en annen slektsside: Porter Web Site
Daryll Goodsell meldte seg inn på en annen slektsside: Porter Web Site
Mary Catherine Nolan nee Scully meldte seg inn på en annen slektsside: Benjamin and Matilda Hart
mai 20, 2012

Margaret Orth meldte seg inn på en annen slektsside: Smith and Glockler FAMILY TREE
Roz Cazz meldte seg inn på en annen slektsside: CameronBoyer Web Site
Drew meldte seg inn på en annen slektsside: CameronBoyer Web Site
Scotskiwi meldte seg inn på en annen slektsside: CameronBoyer Web Site
Maureen Tait meldte seg inn på en annen slektsside: Hatton and Bradley Tree Web Site
Jerry Winter meldte seg inn på en annen slektsside: CameronBoyer Web Site
mai 19, 2012

Allen Sutton meldte seg inn på en annen slektsside: McBride Web Site
Michael Thomas Ross meldte seg inn på en annen slektsside: drummond family tree Web Site
Mary Catherine Nolan nee Scully meldte seg inn på en annen slektsside: Barford Web Site
Sharon Long meldte seg inn på en annen slektsside: Wilkinson Family Tree Web Site
Michael Worthington meldte seg inn på en annen slektsside: Gibson Family Web Site
Janine McClure meldte seg inn på en annen slektsside: hibbett roebuck ancestry Web Site
 
Vis eldre nyheter
Nyhetsartikler
Slektsforskning:Schubert name
Publisert av Jennifer Marshall 23. okt 2010 00:25
There are several words in German to describe a cobbler or shoe maker including Schuh, Schuster and Schubert, as well as the popular Schumacher. All are loosely based upon a pre 7th century High german word 'schuoch' plus the variouis suffix such as 'wurte' or 'macher' or 'mann'. What is certain is that the name is recorded in very many forms including Schuoch, Schbuser, Schubart, Schubert, Schubbert, Schubort, Schuckert, Schuhose, Schukraft, Schuhler, Schumann, Schumeier, the Polish Szubert, and the Czech Subrt. Like many names of fame it has modest beginings but in the highly skilled guilds of the medieval period, shoe making was considered both essential and only available as a trade to those prepared to serve a long apprenticeship of at least seven years. Occupational surnames were probably the first to be created in about the 12th century, but they were not originally hereditary. There are many examples of occupational surnames where the son later took a wholly different occupation to the father. This lead to such 'identifications' as Heinrich Schneider filius Schuh, or loosely Heinrich the tailor, the son of the shoe maker. The next generation if there was one, could then choose between either Schuh or Schneider, or perhaps if the occupation changed again, take something quite different to both! Only after the 15th century did names become wholly hereditary, and then usually as a result of taxation, as the authorities insisted on continuous 'family' names. In this case early examples of the surname recording include Richardus Schumacher of Konstanz in 1276, Haunold Schuheler of Nierderneusiedel in 1339, and Apel Schuwurt, a burger of Wurzberg in 1435. Later recordings are those of Gregor Schubert of Striegau in 1552, and Christian Schubart of Nurnberg (1739 - 1791).

© Copyright: Name Orgin Research www.surnamedb.com 1980 - 2010



Read more: http://www.surnamedb.com/Surname/schubert#ixzz139mC2G8m
0 Kommentarer|13 visninger|Vis hele artikkelen

Slektsforskning:The Perkins Surname
Publisert av Jennifer Marshall 23. okt 2010 00:23
Recorded in the spellings of Parkins, Perkins, and the rare Purkins, this ancient surname is medieval English, but of Old French and ultimately Greek origins. It is a patronymic from the personal name 'Piers or Pierre' through the later Peter or Peterkin. Introduced into Britain at the Norman Invasion of 1066, and also by the Crusaders of the 12th century on their return from the Holy Land, it consists of the basic 'Per or Par' with the two additive diminutives, 'kin', indicating close relationship, such as son, or nephew, and the plural 's', a shortened form of 'son'. In its full length it is often recorded as 'Parkinson' and less so as 'Perkinson'. There is an occasional secondary origin from the French 'parc'. As such this was an occupational surname for a keeper of royal hunting grounds, known as 'The Parks'. Early examples of the recordings include Robert Parkyn of Stafford in the County Rolls of 1327, and John Perkyn of Somerset, in the Hundred Rolls of 1380. Later recordings included John Perkins who married Penelope Vaughan at the famous church of St Dunstans in the East, Stepney, London, England, on March 24th 1599, and Sir William Perkins (also spelt Parkyns) who was executed on Tower Hill in 1696, for planning to assassinate King William 111 of Orange and England. The first of the name into America was James Perkyns, aged 42, who sailed from London to the colony of Virginea on January 2nd 1634 in the ship 'Bonaventure'. Surnames became necessary when governments introduced personal taxation. In England this was sometimes known as the Poll Tax. Throughout the centuries, surnames in every country have continued to "develop" often leading to astonishing variants of the original spelling.

© Copyright: Name Orgin Research www.surnamedb.com 1980 - 2010



Read more: http://www.surnamedb.com/Surname/Perkins#ixzz139lNHiHq
0 Kommentarer|13 visninger|Vis hele artikkelen

Slektsforskning:The Surname Marshall
Publisert av Jennifer Marshall 23. okt 2010 00:14

The Surname Marshall was derived from the Old French word 'mareschal', an occupational name, one who tends horeses, a shoe-smith & farmer.

The name was brought to England in teh wake of the Norman Conquest of 1066

Occupational surnames originally denoted the actual occupation followed by the individual.

0 Kommentarer|20 visninger|Vis hele artikkelen

Slektsforskning:The Surname Richards
Publisert av Jennifer Marshall 23. okt 2010 00:10
This surname RICHARDS was derived from the Old German 'Ricard' a font name meaning powerful and brave. The name was introduced into England by the Norman/French during the Norman Conquest of 1066, and was usually Latinized as Ricardus in medieval documents. Surnames as we know them today were first assumed in Europe from the 11th to the 15th century. They were not in use in England or in Scotland before the Norman Conquest, and were first found in the Domesday Book of 1086. The employment in the use of a second name was a custom that was first introduced from the Normans. They themselves had not long before adopted them. It became, in course of time, a mark of gentler blood, and it was deemed a disgrace for gentlemen to have but one single name, as the meaner sort had. It was not until the reign of Edward II (1307-1327) it became a general practice amongst all people. Early records of the name mention Ricard (without surname) listed as a tenant in the Domesday Book of 1086. Ada...

0 Kommentarer|14 visninger|Vis hele artikkelen
Onsdag, 23. mai 2012
mai 2012
SMTOTFL
  12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
2728293031
Besøk
0002312
 
Laster...
Laster...