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851 The name is recorded in Jubillees 4:20
She was the daughter of Jared's brother 
Danel (I4727)
 
852 The name is recorded in Jubillees 4:20 Edna (I4726)
 
853 The name is recorded in Jubillees 4:27 Edna (I4728)
 
854 The name is recorded in Jubillees 4:33 Emzara (I4732)
 
855 The national Archives hold the following document:
Reference: C 1/1286/43-46
Description:
Short title: Aysbie v Goswell.
Plaintiffs: Robert AYSBIE (Ayshebye, Ashebie) of London.
Defendants: Ralph, son and heir of John GOSWELL.
Subject: Land at Hinton in Hurst of the entail of William Aysbie, husbandman, grandfather of complainant. WiltshireNow Berkshire
Date: 1551-1553

Probate records at Hurst, Berkshire, of the court of the Dean of Salisbury are 1573, describe him as a yeoman
Document reference Wiltshire, Salisbury Wills Index P5/3Reg/15C 
Goswell, Ralph (I4879)
 
856 The national Archives hold the following document:
Reference: C 1/1286/43-46
Description:
Short title: Aysbie v Goswell.
Plaintiffs: Robert AYSBIE (Ayshebye, Ashebie) of London.
Defendants: Ralph, son and heir of John GOSWELL.
Subject: Land at Hinton in Hurst of the entail of William Aysbie, husbandman, grandfather of complainant. WiltshireNow Berkshire
Date: 1551-1553 
Goswell, John (I4880)
 
857 The originator of the Coventry Act Coventry, John (I3413)
 
858 The pictured gravestone is at Saint Michael and All Angels Churchyard
Felton 
Norman, Barbara Jane (I4312)
 
859 The reference to the wedding is the IGI record
Batch No.: M011554 , Dates: 1813 - 1830, Source Call No.:0992079 , Type: Film, Printout Call No.:6908584 , Type: Film
It has him as William Henry Hughes and her as Mary Ann Ball.
His son's (WHCH b1836) wedding certificate has him listed as William Henry Childe Hughes, her as Mary Anne Ball and his occupation as "Gentleman".
The death certificate has him as William Henry Childe. Reg no. 127, 1938.
It states that he died of consumption and his occupation was schoolmaster.
His son WHC Hughes' death certificate gives his father's occupation as retired parole officer 
Hughes, William Henry Childe (I474)
 
860 The time of the tower of Babel in the plains of Shinnar
note that Noah dies 6 years after his birth.
Peleg is named after the division, implying that Noah has assigned lands for all of the descendants at this stage. 
Peleg (I1306)
 
861 There is a record of a Susan Goswell dying in Wandsworth, 16 Dec 1672 (Goswell), Susanah (I2932)
 
862 Thomas Childe (a 1634, presumed later of Northwicke) Childe, Thomas (I834)
 
863 Thomas Childe of the Birch, Kinlet, Sheriff of Salop

from http://www.memorial-inscriptions.org.uk/stpeters-kinlet.htm
Thomas CHILDE Esq., of "The Birch" second son of Sir William Childe K.T. Doctor of Law and the matters of High Court of Chancery, died April 12th 1708, age 52

high sherrif of Shropshire in 1705
from John Burke's "A genealogical and heraldic history of the commoners of Great Britain"

Thomas CHILDE Esq. was buried April 29th
source- http://uk-transcriptions.accessgenealogy.com/Kinlet/BT's.htm 
Childe, Thomas (I824)
 
864 Thomas Corbett of Longnor Corbett, Thomas (I882)
 
865 Thomas Coventry, 1st Lord (baron) of Aylesborough Coventry, Thomas (I915)
 
866 Thomas Goswell (b1832) listed on same 1841 census ?son ?grandson Goswell, Thomas (I2112)
 
867 Thomas Mason of Didlebery Mason, Thomas (I748)
 
868 Thomas Ottley of Pitchford Ottley, Thomas (I703)
 
869 Thomas Walker, alias Leighe Walker, Thomas (I817)
 
870 Thomas Woodward of Ripple Woodward, Thomas (I836)
 
871 Thwate Goswell, James (I3241)
 
872 TITL:
Duke of Austrasia, Brabant, and Major Domus of Kings of France
Aka-:
The Young
TITL: bet 0687 and 0714
Mayor of Austrasia and Neustria
TITL: bet 0687 and 0714
Mayor of the Palace to King Theuderic, in Austrasia
Fact: 0687
conquered Burgundy & Neustria in the Battle of Sestri 
Pepin, II (I1094)
 
873 TITL:
Mayor of Austrasia
TITL: bet 0741 and 0747
Mayor of the Palace 
Martel, Carloman (I1185)
 
874 TITL:
Princess of France
TITL:
Countess of Flanders
TITL: bet 0856 and 0858
Queen of Wessex (title banned by the W. Saxons)
_FA1:
2nd for her; soon renounced by him
_FA1: abt 0858
Judith was Æthelwulf's widow and Æthelbald's stepmother

marriage with Aethelbald was annulled

When Judith was about 12 years old, her father gave her in marriage to Ethelwulf, King of Wessex on October 1, 856 at Verberie sur Oise, France. Ethelwulf had been on pilgrimage to Rome, and had stopped at the Court of Judith's father, Charles the Bald on his journey back to Wessex. Soon after the two returned to England, Ethelwulf's eldest surviving son, Ethelbald, had devised a conspiracy with the Ealdorman of Somerset and the Bishop of Sherborne to oppose Æthelwulf's resumption of the kingship. In response to this crisis, Æthelwulf yielded western Wessex to his son while he himself retained central and eastern Wessex. Æthelwulf's restoration included a special concession on behalf of Saxon queens: the West Saxons previously did not allow the queen to sit next to the king. In fact they were not referred to as a queen, but merely the "wife of the king." This restriction was lifted for Queen Judith, probably because she was a high ranking European princess.

When Ethelwulf died on the 13th of January 858, he was succeeded by his son, Ethelbald. In the same year Ethelbald earned the censure of the Church by marrying Judith, his widowed teenage stepmother. The relationship was deemed incestuous and in direct contravention of church law. The marriage was eventually annulled in 860 on the grounds of consanguinity, the same year that Ethelbald died.

Through her marriages to two Kings of Wessex, Judith was twice Queen of Wessex and was both the stepmother and later sister-in-law of Alfred the Great. Interestingly, Judith's son by her third marriage, Baldwin II of Flanders would go on to marry Alfred's daughter, Ælfthryth (also known as Elfrida). By her third marriage, Judith was also the ancestress of another Queen of England, Matilda of Flanders, the consort of England's first Norman King, William the Conqueror. Thus Judith is not only an ancestress of the Counts of Flanders, but through Matilda, she is also direct ancestress of the Monarchs of England, including Queen Elizabeth II. 
Flanders, Queen Judith of (I1070)
 
875 TITL: bet 0818 and 0840
Count/Seigneur of Senlis, Peronne & St. Quentin 
Pepin, Count II (I1179)
 
876 Transported from England for 10 years for aggravated injury.
Sentenced in the Exeter Assizes on 24/7/1858
Left Portland, England on 10/11/1860 on the Palmerston and arrived in Western Australia on 11/2/1861. The convicts went to the Swan River Colony.
Was 26 years of age when transported.

Was hung in Perth Gaol on 1874 for murder of Mary Anne Lloyd at Stapelford, Beverley on 1 December 1873.
http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/114442157 
Goswell, Robert (I4079)
 
877 twin of Louis, he died in infancy Lothair (I1227)
 
878 Unmarried Goswell, Lottie L (I221)
 
879 unmarried Goswell, Harold A (I225)
 
880 Unmarried in 1881 Goswell, Henry (I2817)
 
881 Venissa (Genissa) Princess Of Roman Empire Venissa (I1548)
 
882 Vere Gordon Childe, called Gordon by his family, was the son of the
Reverend Stephen Henry Childe and Harriet Eliza Gordon the second of his three wives, having been born on 14 April 1892 in North Sydney. His main connection with the Blue Mountains is that his parents often took the family to their vacation house at 46, Wilson Street,
Wentworth Falls when it was called Chalet Fontenelle now it is Whispering Pines.
But the connection goes further for his parents, Stephen (died 23 May 1928) and
Harriet (died 26 July 1910 at Chalet Fontenelle are buried in the Church of England section of Wentworth Falls Cemetery, in WCE4 Plot 5, which is adjacent to the Great Western Highway opposite the eastern boundary of Mountain High Pies.

Gordon Childe attended Sydney Grammar School and in 1911 he entered Sydney University to study Latin, Greek and Philosophy; he graduated in 1914 with a University Medal (Mulvaney 1994, p.56). A classmate was H.V. Evatt, who was to become Leader of the Labor Party and President of the United Nations General Assembly; he “.. had been a close friend.”. Childe’s education continued when he went to Oxford University for 1914-1917 to learn about Archaeology but he also became involved in politics. As a pacifist, he was not well received when he returned to Australia in August 1917, nevertheless late that year he was appointed Senior Resident Tutor at St. Andrew’s College, University of Sydney. He made no secret of his political views, which proved so distasteful to the college authorities that,
anticipating dismissal, he resigned in June 1918. His frequently expressed beliefs brought him a lot of trouble in the repressive period between the World Wars, with job applications being blocked and his mail being censored. But he succeeded in getting an appointment to teach classics at Maryborough Grammar School, Queensland, where unruly students made his life so uncomfortable that he only stayed for a short time. At the end of 1919 he returned to Sydney and became personal secretary to the Leader of the Opposition Labor Party. After the Labor Party won the election in 1920 he was transferred to the NSW Agent-General’s office in London but he did not depart until September 1921. He held that position for almost a year until he was given a month’s notice on 20 April 1922 by the incoming Liberal Party,
although formal dismissal was delayed until 4 June 1922. As a result of his experiences he wrote a seminal volume ‘How Labor Governs’ which was published in 1923. hat dismissal was a turning point in his career for he next became an archaeologist and in succeeding
years he developed an internationally renowned reputation, being regarded as probably the leading authority of his era on prehistoric European archaeology. He was multi-lingual and travelled extensively to visit various archaeological digs, but he was also regarded as a great synthesiser of archaeological publications although his views were somewhat controversial. For several years he appears to have had only part-time employment until in 1925 he gained a job in the library of the Royal Anthropological Institute. His subsequent
appointments were Abercromby Professor of Archaeology, University of Edinburgh (1927-1946) and Director & Professor of Prehistoric European Archaeology, University of London (1946-1956).

In retirement, and at the age of 65, he arrived in Australia on his birthday 14 April 1957 to give lecturesand attend conferences and
“He also spent much time hiking and studying rock formations in the Blue Mountains near Sydney, an area associated with happy memories of his youth.” He last went to Katoomba on 11 October 1957 and “On the three occasions he visited Katoomba in these last months he stayed at the Carrington, a hotel he thought greatly superior to most in Australia.” Early on Saturday 19 October 1957, he took a taxi to Govetts Leap Lookout, Blackheath, but did not
return from a walk south-eastwards along the cliff edge. On the day after Childe’s disappearance, his body was discovered by a 15-year-old Blackheath schoolboy, Malcolm Longton , supposedly “ ... two-thirds of the way down a 1,500ft. cliff called Govett’s Leap and with some difficulty it was recovered on that Sunday.

TRhe above taken from the Blue Mountains Historical Journal, Issue 3 Oct 2012

Biography written up in Australian Archaeology
http://search.informit.com.au/documentSummary;dn=678278401355017;res=IELHSS 
Childe, Vere Gordon (I4325)
 
883 Vicar of Kinlet and Cleobury Mortimer, Prebendary of Hereford
Changed to Baldwyn-Childe of Kyre Park, Worcestershire 
Childe, Reverend Edward George (I1027)
 
884 Vincent Coventry of Cassington Coventry, Vincent (I926)
 
885 Vladimir Monomakh Grand Duke (Velikii Kniaz) of Kievan Rus' and is ancestor to dynasties of Galicia, Smolensk, and Yaroslavl, whose scions include Modest Mussorgsky and Peter Kropotkin. Monomakh, Vladimir (I1415)
 
886 Was beheaded Neville, Edward (I4576)
 
887 Was engaged in the first Crusade in 1096 and died in Pahphos, Cyprus, on returning from the Holy Lands Guelph (I4997)
 
888 Was engaged to another man during war but he was killed.
Farewell in Jan 1913, from Corwen Ave Mission and St Georges (?Mission) as some family members attended both.
Huband had gone ahead to prepare, some 8 months before.
Were seen off at Victoria Station. 
Owen, Amy (I201)
 
889 Was living at 53 Hawksbury Cres, Farrer, ACT Byrne, Living (I538)
 
890 Was looked after by Baldwin V of Flanders when her father died Flanders, Judith of (I4996)
 
891 Wedding on 8 8 1763
Sarah Hannington; Jane Goswell; Robeart Hanington 
Goswell, Robart (I2349)
 
892 Wedding on 8 8 1763
Sarah Hannington; Jane Goswell; Robeart Hanington 
Norman, Sarah (I2354)
 
893 Wedding record says he is a yeoman from the parich of Bangor in Surrey and that he is about 30 years old
Anne could be Kitchin or Ritchin 
Goswell, Richard (I4975)
 
894 When born lived in St Catheren's Lane, St Botolph Without Aldagate Goswell, Alexander (I4869)
 
895 When born lived in St Catheren's Lane, St Botolph Without Aldagate Goswell, William (I4871)
 
896 Whose descendants were the Ashurites, the Letushites and the Leumites Jokshan (I4713)
 
897 Widow at the time of her marriage on 11 Nov 1739 Goswell, Mary (I3720)
 
898 widow of Sir Patrick Strahan of Glenkindy Strahan, Patrick (I689)
 
899 Wife's name (Elizabeth) found from the Probate register, which also gives his occupation as carpenter and wheelwright at Theale.

Burial record on 06 Jul 1867 states he was 73 therefore born in 1794
Buried at Holy Trinity, Theale, Berkshire 
Goswell, Thomas (I2008)
 
900 William Burfeeld of Hertfordshire Burfeeld, William (I753)
 

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