(1) Sir John Perrott was Viceroy of Ireland.
From The English Succession, date of birth and death, 1509-1547
References:
(1) Burke's Peerage, LXV, LXVI.
(2) Index Card to St. George Temple Records, No. 16766, Book W, page 615.
From The English Succession, date of birth and death, 1509-1547
References:
(1) Burke's Peerage, LXV, LXVI.
(2) Index Card to St. George Temple Records, No. 16766, Book W, page 615.
Catherine D' ARAGON Qn. of England
Marriage annulled 1533
References:
(1) Royal Ancestors of Some American Families, compiled by Michel L. Call.
(2) The Plantagenet Ancestry of King Edward III and Queen Philippa, George
Andrews Moriarty.(3) Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, Frederick Lewis Weis.
(4) Stammtafeln Zur Geschichte Der Europaischen Staaten, Wilhelm Karl, Prinz
Von Isenburg.(5) Complete Peerage, G. E. Cokayne.
(6) The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Gerald Paget.
(7) The American Genealogist.
(8) The Genealogist.
(9) The New England Historical and Genealogical Register.
(10) The Ancestry of Richard Plantagenet and Cecily Neville, Ernst Friedrick
Kraentzler.(11) The Plantagenet Ancestry, W. H. Turton.
(12) Tableaux Genealogiques des Souverains de la France et de seu Grands
Feudataires, Paris, 1863.(13) The House of Adam, Georgia B. Schwartz, 4 volumes.
(14) Archive Records, The Genealogical Society, Salt Lake City, Utah.
From The English Succession, date of birth and death, 1509-1547
References:
(1) Burke's Peerage, LXV, LXVI.
(2) Index Card to St. George Temple Records, No. 16766, Book W, page 615.
References:
(1) Magna Charta Sureties, page 55.
The Oxford Illustrated History of the British Monarchy, by John Cannon and Ralph Griffiths. This source gives the year as 1536 when she was executed.
From A Brief HISTORY of the WELLS FAMILY, compiled by Fred Roe
Anne Boleyn was born in 1507 and died in 1536. She was the second wife of King Henry VIII of England, of importance in English history, not for anything which she did but because Henry's desire to marry her led to the separation of the English Church from the Church of Rome. She was educated at the French court, and about 1525 became lady of honor to the English Queen, Catherine. Being conspicuous at court, Henry VIII became attracted to her beauty and soon fell in love with her. She refused to listen to his addresses, however, unless he would divorce Catherine. Because the Pope would not permit the divorce, Henry denied his supremacy over the Church of England adn forced Archbishop Crahmer to pronounce a divorce legal. Meanwhile, however, he married Anne in January 1533, and in the following May she was crowned at Westminister with great splendor. In September she became the mother of Elizabeth, who was later one of England's great rulers. King Henry VIII soon tired of Anne, and to make possible his marriage with Jane Seymour, he had her thrown into prison on a charge of indiscretion. Though she vigorously protested her innocence and prayed for release, she was condemned to death, and on May 19, 1536, was beheaded. Historians have never settled to their own satisfaction the question of her guilt or innocense. Many historians think that her crime was not proven.
References:
(1) Burke's Peerage, lxv, lxvi.
From Mary, Queen of Scots, by Antonia Fraser, Elizabeth was Queen of England, on the throne 1558 to 1603, time of her death.
ELIZABETH, Daughter of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn, was born in Greenwhich, in 1533 and died in 1603. Queen Elizabeth reigned in England from 1558 to 1603. The reign of the "Good Queen Boss" of England was one of hte most glorious periods in the history of her country. Adored in her own day as almost more then mortal, she has not loacked severe critics in the years that have followed, but as to the importance of her reign there cannot be two opinions. In literature teh names of Shakespere, Bacon, and Specer made it of surpassing worth; daring mariners sought new shores, and by their accounts stirred the immaginations of those at home; the beginning of the colonial empire was made; and living conditions were so changed for the better that England was like a new country. Indeed, it was the transition time from medievil to modern England, and for most of the great advancement Elizabeth was given credit, justly and unjustly. Elizabeth never married.
From The English Succession, date of birth and death, 1509-1547
References:
(1) Burke's Peerage, LXV, LXVI.
(2) Index Card to St. George Temple Records, No. 16766, Book W, page 615.
References:
(1) Magna Charta Sureties, page 34.
(2) Index Card to Salt Lake Temple Records, No. 6064, Book Y, page 169.
(3) Index Card to Salt Lake Temple Records, No. 1920, Book 3 U, page 71.
(4) Index Card to Salt Lake Temple Records, No. 5497, Book Y, page 153.
(5) Royal Ancestors, Call, page 29.
References:
(1) Burke's Peerage, lxv, lxvi.
From Mary, Queen of Scots, by Antonia Fraser, Edward VI was on the throne of England from 1547 to 1553, the time of his death.
The Oxford Illustrated History of the British Monarchy, by John Cannon and Ralph Griffiths.
From The English Succession, date of birth and death, 1509-1547
References:
(1) Burke's Peerage, LXV, LXVI.
(2) Index Card to St. George Temple Records, No. 16766, Book W, page 615.
From The English Succession, date of birth and death, 1509-1547
References:
(1) Burke's Peerage, LXV, LXVI.
(2) Index Card to St. George Temple Records, No. 16766, Book W, page 615.
References;
(1) Burke's Peerage, LXV, LXVI.
(2) Index Card to Salt Lake Temple Records, No. 4158, Book 3 T, page 151.
From The English Succession, date of birth and death, 1509-1547
References:
(1) Burke's Peerage, LXV, LXVI.
(2) Index Card to St. George Temple Records, No. 16766, Book W, page 615.
References:
(1) Royal Daughters of England, pages 321, 322.
(2) Burke's Peerage, 99th Ed., page 257.
(3) Dictionary of National Biography, vol. 9, page 308-312.
(4) Archive Records, The Genealogical Society, Salt Lake City, Utah.
(5) Information supplied by Brian Michael Leese, 107 South Main Street,
Salt Lake City, Utah.(6) Index Card to Manti Temple Records, No. 17224 Book C 2, page 616.
References:
(1) The Demarest Family, XX, I, II, I.
(2) Index Card to Salt Lake Temple Records, No. SL 20996, No. 27619, Book 6 Y, Page 1316.