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Amie Gaveston
- Preferred Name: Amie Gaveston[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7]
- Alternate Name: Amy Gaveston
- Gender: F
- FSID: KC9N-ZC2
- Death: 30 NOV 1357 in Stratfield Mortimer, Berkshire, England at LATI: N1.3743 LONG: E1.0465 with note: FamilySearch.
Wakefield, Stratfield Mortimer, Berkshire, England
- Birth: AFT 6 JAN 1312 in Tonbridge, Kent, England at LATI: N1.1694 LONG: E0.3167
- Notes:
=== Life Sketch ===
Amie was an illegitimate daughter of Piers de Gaveston per "'Proving' Illegitimacy: Amey, the daughter of the King's Favorite, Piers de Gaveston, Not of his wife" by Paul C. Reed, FASG, National Genealogical Society Quarterly, Volume 88 Number 1, Mar 2000.
=== Person note ===
She was the extra-marital, illegitimate daughter of Piers Gaveston. Her mother was not Margaret De Clare.
=== Amy was born after 6 Jan 1312. ===
Amy was born after 6 Jan 1312.
=== Amy de Gaveston was a damsel of the Cham ===
Amy de Gaveston was a damsel of the Chamber to Queen Philippa. 16A-31. Weis.
=== From Farr Genealogy:
Granddaughter of K ===
From Farr Genealogy:
Granddaughter of King Edward I of England
TAG Vol. 35, pgs. 100-102
100
PIERS DE GAVASTON
ANCESTOR OF BULKELEY AND OTHER AMERICAN FAMILIES?
John G. Hunt·, of Arlington, Virginia
On page 13 of Mr. Donald L. Jacobus Bulkeley Genealogy (1933) is traced the descent of Rev. Peter Bulkeley from Mary, daughter of Robert Corbet of Morton, Shropshire. Her descent from Piers de Gavaston, who is not generally known to have left descendants, is believed to be as follows. Further evidence, either for or against, will be welcomedœ. Many of the historical details here given are not found in the new Complete Peerage or other British sources.
I. Piers de Gavaaton was patently son of Sir Ernaud de Gavaston, a knight of Edward I, whose wife was the lady Clarmunda de Marsan et de Louvigny, known in her lifetime as the lady Marcia [Walter Phelps Dodge, Piers Gavaston). Sir Ernaud evidently descended from "Ernald Gast" whom King John in 1200 granted certain lands near Bordeaux [Charter Rolls for that year]. Also see C. F. Tout, The Place of Edward II in English History (2nd .d., 1936, p. 12, note, which adds corroborative details touching Gavaston's Gascon kinsfolk. Piers became a favorite with Edward II, who created him Earl of Cornwall, and his sad story is well known.
He married, 1 Nov. 1307, Margaret, daughter of Gilbert de Clare, Earl of Gloucester, by his wife Joan de Acre, the king's sister (Dodge, op. cit.; Complete Peerage, new ed., sub Clare and Cornwal] His rise was rapid and his career was brief. He was executed 19 June 1312. In spite of the assertion in Dugdale's Baronage, in the 11th edition of Encyclopaedia Britannica, vol. 11, p. 539, and in the new edition of the Complete Peerage, that Piers left an only daughter, he and his wife had the following issue:
1. Joan, b. Ca. 1309, d. Jan. 1325 aged 15 years [Calendar of Inquisitions, Misc., vol. II, p. 326, No. 1329; cf. VCH, Wiltshire, vol. V]. "Joan, daughter of Piers de Gavaston, late earl of Cornwall, died in the priory of Amesbury on the feast of St. Hilary, 18 Edward II, she was of age of 15 years and died of illness. Thomas de Multon, lord of Egremont, alienated none of her lands before or after her death."
2. Another daughter (Amy, we hope to show), born soon after the feast of Epiphany (6 Jan.) 1312. Attention is called to the following in Rerum Britannicum Medii Aevi Scriptores (1883), Chronicles of Edward I and II, vol. II, Gesta Edwardi de Caernarvon auctore
Bridlingtoniensi, pp. 41-42:
"petrus rediit in Angliain
Item, secundum vim et virtutem ordlnaticmun praedlctarius Petrus de Gavastone saepedictus exilium admisit et modicum exulavit qula ante Nativitatem Domnini in Angliam est reversus, domino regis sicut prius adhaesit, ipsiusque secretarius est effectus; nec multum post Epiphaniam Domini in comitiva regis venit Eboracuxn [York], ubi coruitissa conjux sua filiam peperit; ob quam causam ibidem per tempus aliquot morabatur." The Monk of Malmesbury whose Vita Edwardi Secundi was published in 1957 writes (p. 21): "As Christmas [1311] approached the lord king and Piers set out for York and celebrated the feast at York," but a note states that the king was at York 18 Jan. to 8 April (1312], but not for Christmas.
II. Amy de Gavaston is believed to be this second daughter of Piers to whom his countess gave birth not long after Epiphany (6 Jan.) 1312. The first recorded of the dozen or so damsels of the chamber of Queen Philippa [wife of Edward III], Amy de Gavaston, was on 16 June 1332 granted for life the manor of Woghfield, Berks [Patent Rolls]. Lands in Essex were released to her 25 Feb. 1333, when she will have attained her 21st year [ibid.].
By 18 June 1338 she had married John de Driby [ibid.] and on 13 June 1340 is styled Anne, wife of John de Driby, when their manor of Wokefield, Berks, is named [ibid.]. The manor identifies her, and we suggest that her name, written Arnie, was (as we shall later see in the will of her daughter Alice) misread as Anne, a very easy mistake to make.
There are several factors to support the thesis that Amy de Gavaston, wife of John de Driby, was daughter to Sir Piers:
(1) Her age corresponds with that of the unknown daughter of Piers born early in 1312.
(2) It is most improbable that a niece or other relative of Piers (or for that matter, an illegitimate daughter of his) would have had the influential connections, after his fall, to have the standing at Court which Amy de Gavaston enjoyed.
(3) Margaret de dare, widow of Piers de Gavaston, took as her second husband Hugh de Audley, cousin german to Roger de Mortimer of Wigrnore, whose forfeited lands of Woghfield (Wokefield) were granted for life in 1332 to Amy de Gavaston.
(4) As Margaret was cousin german to Edward III, he woula quite naturally make her daughter Amy a damsel in the chamber of his queen and would, without difficulty,
102 THE AMERICAN GENEALOGIST
have granted Wokefield to Amy for life at the supplication of Margaret. All the lands of Piers de GaVaStOfl had escheated to the Crown on his demise, by reason of forfeiture, at the insistence of the barons who put Piers to death.
(5) Amy s daughter Alice (n�e de Driby) by her will in 1412 appointed as supervisor William, lord Ros [d. 1414], whose grandmother, Margaret, lady Stafford, was daughter of Margaret de Clara by her second husband, Hugh de Audley. Hence, if Amy was daughter of Margaret de Clara, the supervisor appointed by her daughter Alice was son of Alice s first cousin of the half blood. Often the person named as supervisor in mediaeval wills was the most influential kinsman.
(6) Margaret de dare's daughter and heiress by her second husband, Hugh de Audley, Margaret (b. ca. 1317), married ca. 1335 Half, lord Stafford (1299-1372), and had daughters named Elizabeth, Margaret and Beatrix (the last married Thomas, lord Ros, and was mother of the William, lord Ros, above mentioned). These Stafford ladies would be first cousins of the half blood of Alice de Driby, and we shall note that she named her three daughters Elizabeth, Margery, and Beatrix.
(7) Margaret de Clara was lady for life of Oakham and Egelton, Rutland. Feudal Aids, vol. 4, p. 207, gives "A D 1316, Ocham, Rutlands., held by Margreta de Gavaston, corn. Cornwall, lady of Okham & Egelton." When Amy's daughter Alice (n�e de Driby) lost her first husband, Sir Half Basset, in 1378, she as his widow obtained possession of lands he had held in her right: of Bredon, co. Leicester, of a carucate of land in West Keal, cc. Lincs., and of a rent of 3 shillings in Oak-ham, Rutland [C-. W. Watson in Misc. Gen. et Her., 5th series, vol. 8, pp. 202-6]. Bredon had come from the Driby family. Did the small Oakham right come in some way from her grandmother, Margaret de Gavaston? The daughter of Alice, Elizabeth Basset, was grandmother of Henry, Lord Grey of Codnor (1434-1495), who in 1 Rich. III had a grant of Oakharn and Egelton for his "good service against the rebels"did the ancestral connection play a part in the grant of these specific places? If not, it is a strange coincidence.
Notes:
The following is from "TAG Vol 40, pgs. 95-96"
œ THE EULKELEY DESCENT FROM PIERS DE GAVASTON
THIRD PAPER
By John G. Hunt, B.S.C., of Arlington, Va.
In this magazine for 1959 (35:100-106) and for 1961 (37:45-51) we presented reasons for supposing that Piers de Gavaston has living descendants, although the New Complete Peerage claims that his "only daughter" Joan died young. That he had another daughter, Amy or Anne, married to John de Driby (or Dryby), we Suspected but could not prove by direct positive evidence. We aie indebted to the research of Mr. Walter Lee Sheppard, Jr., for actual proof (the fine dated 1334. quoted under V below) that Amy (Anne) was indeed a daughter of Piers (Peter) ae Gavaston.
V. John de Dryby, born probably about 1268; he "appears to have had a black mark against him, for it is his next brother, Simon, when their uncle Hugh Dryby dies, who gets Dryby manor, and when Simon dies in 1323 he leaves it for life to his widow Margery and then to his younger brother, Robert" [Curzon and Tipping, Tattershall Castle, pp. 25 et seq.].
This John ae Dryby was legitimate, and a parson, as proved by a fine (recently noted by Walter Lee Sheppard, Jr.] quoted at page 18, Farnham's Leicestershire Medieval Pedigrees, 1925: "Fine, Trinity, 1334, between John de Dryby, of Tateshale, parson of a rnediety of,the church of Hedersete, pltf., and Roger de Estbriggeford, chaplain, and John Cleymond of Kirketon, dfdts., of the manor of Breedon, etc.; the manor is declared to be the right of Roger who granted it to John de Dryby for life with reversion to John son of Thomas de Dryby and Anne, daughter of Peter de Gavaston and the heirs of John."
96 THE AMERICAN GENEALOGIST
From the DeLisle and Dudley MSS, vol. I, p. 171, we note a charter of John de Dryby, lord of Tateshale, granting to Roger de Estbriggeford the chapel of St. Nicholas within the castle of Tattershall; witnesses: John de Kirketon, Humphrey de Littilberie, Robert de Littilberie, knights, and others: Monday, 13 Dec. 1333.
The said John de Dryby had the Breedon (or Bredon), Leics., estates settled upon him for life by his mother in 1323, when an inq. ad quod damnum shows that she wished, however, to ensure that the reversion of the estates would be to her right heirs. Moreover, in the same year she sought to prevent him from getting her other lands, granting Tatteshale, etc., to Gilbert de Bernake, parson of Tatter shall, in order to receive them back to her for life with remainder to Robert her son, "on whose death they shall remain to Wm. Bernake and Alice his wife" (her only daughter) and their issue [vol. 17, Great Britain, Record Office, Lists and Indexes; and Curzon and Tipping, op. cit.].
She must, however, have had a change of heart before she died. The inquisition following Joan's death in Oct. 1329 shows that eleven days before she died she had settled Breedon upon J
=== TAG Vol. 35, pgs. 100-102 100 PIERS DE ===
TAG Vol. 35, pgs. 100-102 100 PIERS DE GAVASTON ANCESTOR OF BULKELEY AND OTHER AMERICAN FAMILIES? John G. Hunt², of Arlington, Virginia On page 13 of Mr. Donald L. Jacobus Bulkeley Genealogy (1933) istraced the descent of Rev. Peter Bulkeley from Mary, daughter ofRobert Corbet of Morton, Shropshire. Her descent from Piers deGavaston, who is not generally known to have left descendants, isbelieved to be as follows. Further evidence, either for or against,will be welcomed¹. Many of the historical details here given are notfound in the new Complete Peerage or other British sources. I. Piers de Gavaaton was patently son of Sir Ernaud de Gavaston, aknight of Edward I, whose wife was the lady Clarmunda de Marsan et deLouvigny, known in her lifetime as the lady Marcia [Walter PhelpsDodge, Piers Gavaston). Sir Ernaud evidently descended from "ErnaldGast" whom King John in 1200 granted certain lands near Bordeaux[Charter Rolls for that year]. Also see C. F. Tout, The Place ofEdward II in English History (2nd .d., 1936, p. 12, note, which addscorroborative details touching Gavaston's Gascon kinsfolk. Piersbecame a favorite with Edward II, who created him Earl of Cornwall,and his sad story is well known. He married, 1 Nov. 1307, Margaret, daughter of Gilbert de Clare, Earlof Gloucester, by his wife Joan de Acre, the king's sister (Dodge, op.cit.; Complete Peerage, new ed., sub Clare and Cornwal] His rise wasrapid and his career was brief. He was executed 19 June 1312. In spiteof the assertion in Dugdale's Baronage, in the 11th edition ofEncyclopaedia Britannica, vol. 11, p. 539, and in the new edition ofthe Complete Peerage, that Piers left an only daughter, he and hiswife had the following issue: 1. Joan, b. Ca. 1309, d. Jan. 1325 aged 15 years [Calendar ofInquisitions, Misc., vol. II, p. 326, No. 1329; cf. VCH, Wiltshire,vol. V]. "Joan, daughter of Piers de Gavaston, late earl of Cornwall,died in the priory of Amesbury on the feast of St. Hilary, 18 EdwardII, she was of age of 15 years and died of illness. Thomas de Multon,lord of Egremont, alienated none of her lands before or after herdeath." 2. Another daughter (Amy, we hope to show), born soon after the feastof Epiphany (6 Jan.) 1312. Attention is called to the following inRerum Britannicum Medii Aevi Scriptores (1883), Chronicles of Edward Iand II, vol. II, Gesta Edwardi de Caernarvon auctore Bridlingtoniensi, pp. 41-42: "petrus rediit in Angliain Item, secundum vim et virtutem ordlnaticmun praedlctarius Petrus deGavastone saepedictus exilium admisit et modicum exulavit qula anteNativitatem Domnini in Angliam est reversus, domino regis sicut priusadhaesit, ipsiusque secretarius est effectus; nec multum postEpiphaniam Domini in comitiva regis venit Eboracuxn [York], ubicoruitissa conjux sua filiam peperit; ob quam causam ibidem per tempusaliquot morabatur." The Monk of Malmesbury whose Vita Edwardi Secundiwas published in 1957 writes (p. 21): "As Christmas [1311] approachedthe lord king and Piers set out for York and celebrated the feast atYork," but a note states that the king was at York 18 Jan. to 8 April(1312], but not for Christmas. II. Amy de Gavaston is believed to be this second daughter of Piers towhom his countess gave birth not long after Epiphany (6 Jan.) 1312.The first recorded of the dozen or so damsels of the chamber of QueenPhilippa [wife of Edward III], Amy de Gavaston, was on 16 June 1332granted for life the manor of Woghfield, Berks [Patent Rolls]. Landsin Essex were released to her 25 Feb. 1333, when she will haveattained her 21st year [ibid.]. By 18 June 1338 she had married John de Driby [ibid.] and on 13 June1340 is styled Anne, wife of John de Driby, when their manor ofWokefield, Berks, is named [ibid.]. The manor identifies her, and wesuggest that her name, written Arnie, was (as we shall later see inthe will of her daughter Alice) misread as Anne, a very easy mistaketo make. There are several factors to support the thesis that Amy de Gavaston,wife of J ohn de Driby, was daughter to Sir Piers: (1) Her age corresponds with that of the unknown daughter of Piersborn early in 1312. (2) It is most improbable that a niece or other relative of Piers (orfor that matter, an illegitimate daughter of his) would have had theinfluential connections, after his fall, to have the standing at Courtwhich Amy de Gavaston enjoyed. (3) Margaret de dare, widow of Piers de Gavaston, took as her secondhusband Hugh de Audley, cousin german to Roger de Mortimer ofWigrnore, whose forfeited lands of Woghfield (Wokefield) were grantedfor life in 1332 to Amy de Gavaston. (4) As Margaret was cousin german to Edward III, he woula quitenaturally make her daughter Amy a damsel in the chamber of his queenand would, without difficulty, 102 THE AMERICAN GENEALOGIST have granted Wokefield to Amy for life at the supplication ofMargaret. All the lands of Piers de GaVaStOfl had escheated to theCrown on his demise, by reason of forfeiture, at the insistence of thebarons who put Piers to death. (5) Amy s daughter Alice (née de Driby) by her will in 1412 appointedas supervisor William, lord Ros [d. 1414], whose grandmother,Margaret, lady Stafford, was daughter of Margaret de Clara by hersecond husband, Hugh de Audley. Hence, if Amy was daughter of Margaretde Clara, the supervisor appointed by her daughter Alice was son ofAlice s first cousin of the half blood. Often the person named assupervisor in mediaeval wills was the most influential kinsman. (6) Margaret de dare's daughter and heiress by her second husband,Hugh de Audley, Margaret (b. ca. 1317), married ca. 1335 Half, lordStafford (1299-1372), and had daughters named Elizabeth, Margaret andBeatrix (the last married Thomas, lord Ros, and was mother of theWilliam, lord Ros, above mentioned). These Stafford ladies would befirst cousins of the half blood of Alice de Driby, and we shall notethat she named her three daughters Elizabeth, Margery, and Beatrix. (7) Margaret de Clara was lady for life of Oakham and Egelton,Rutland. Feudal Aids, vol. 4, p. 207, gives "A D 1316, Ocham,Rutlands., held by Margreta de Gavaston, corn. Cornwall, lady of Okham& Egelton." When Amy's daughter Alice (née de Driby) lost her firsthusband, Sir Half Basset, in 1378, she as his widow obtainedpossession of lands he had held in her right: of Bredon, co.Leicester, of a carucate of land in West Keal, cc. Lincs., and of arent of 3 shillings in Oak-ham, Rutland [C-. W. Watson in Misc. Gen.et Her., 5th series, vol. 8, pp. 202-6]. Bredon had come from theDriby family. Did the small Oakham right come in some way from hergrandmother, Margaret de Gavaston? The daughter of Alice, ElizabethBasset, was grandmother of Henry, Lord Grey of Codnor (1434-1495), whoin 1 Rich. III had a grant of Oakharn and Egelton for his "goodservice against the rebels"did the ancestral connection play a part inthe grant of these specific places? If not, it is a strangecoincidence. Notes: The following is from "TAG Vol 40, pgs. 95-96" ¹ THE EULKELEY DESCENT FROM PIERS DE GAVASTON THIRD PAPER By John G. Hunt, B.S.C., of Arlington, Va. In this magazine for 1959 (35:100-106) and for 1961 (37:45-51) wepresented reasons for supposing that Piers de Gavaston has livingdescendants, although the New Complete Peerage claims that his "onlydaughter" Joan died young. That he had another daughter, Amy or Anne,married to John de Driby (or Dryby), we Suspected but could not proveby direct positive evidence. We aie indebted to the research of Mr.Walter Lee Sheppard, Jr., for actual proof (the fine dated 1334.quoted under V below) that Amy (Anne) was indeed a daughter of Piers(Peter) ae Gavaston. V. John de Dryby, born probably about 1268; he "appears to have had ablack mark against him, for it is his next brother, Simon, when theiruncle Hugh Dryby dies, who gets Dryby manor, and when Simon dies in1323 he leaves it for life to his widow Margery and then to hisyounger brother, Robert" [Curzon and Tipping, Tattershall Castle, pp.25 et seq.] . This John ae Dryby was legitimate, and a parson, as proved by a fine(recently noted by Walter Lee Sheppard, Jr.] quoted at page 18,Farnham's Leicestershire Medieval Pedigrees, 1925: "Fine, Trinity,1334, between John de Dryby, of Tateshale, parson of a rnediety of,thechurch of Hedersete, pltf., and Roger de Estbriggeford, chaplain, andJohn Cleymond of Kirketon, dfdts., of the manor of Breedon, etc.; themanor is declared to be the right of Roger who granted it to John deDryby for life with reversion to John son of Thomas de Dryby and Anne,daughter of Peter de Gavaston and the heirs of John." 96 THE AMERICAN GENEALOGIST From the DeLisle and Dudley MSS, vol. I, p. 171, we note a charter ofJohn de Dryby, lord of Tateshale, granting to Roger de Estbriggefordthe chapel of St. Nicholas within the castle of Tattershall;witnesses: John de Kirketon, Humphrey de Littilberie, Robert deLittilberie, knights, and others: Monday, 13 Dec. 1333. The said John de Dryby had the Breedon (or Bredon), Leics., estatessettled upon him for life by his mother in 1323, when an inq. ad quoddamnum shows that she wished, however, to ensure that the reversion ofthe estates would be to her right heirs. Moreover, in the same yearshe sought to prevent him from getting her other lands, grantingTatteshale, etc., to Gilbert de Bernake, parson of Tatter shall, inorder to receive them back to her for life with remainder to Roberther son, "on whose death they shall remain to Wm. Bernake and Alicehis wife" (her only daughter) and their issue [vol. 17, Great Britain,Record Office, Lists and Indexes; and Curzon and Tipping, op. cit.]. She must, however, have had a change of heart before she died. Theinquisition following Joan's death in Oct. 1329 shows that eleven daysbefore she died she had settled Breedon upon John (who then was aged‘xl years and more according to the jurors). This was a gift withoutany strings; thus he had the free disposition of Breedon, even thoughhe was a parson, and thus not likely t
=== NAT'L GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY QUARTERLY, Vo ===
NAT'L GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY QUARTERLY, Vol. 88, No. 1, Mar 2000, pg. 32: "Proving Illegitimacy: Amie, the Daughter of the King's Favorite, Piers de Gaveston--Not That of His Wife".
=== Source: Frederick Lewis Weis & Walter Le ===
Source: Frederick Lewis Weis & Walter Lee Sheppard, Jr., Ancestral Roots of certain American colonists..., (Edition 7, Genealogical Publishing Company, Baltimore, 1992), 16A-31. Damsel of the Chamber to Queen Philippa.
Preferred Parents:
Father: Piers Gaveston 1st Earl of Cornwall, b. ABT 1284 in Hill, Warwickshire, England d. 19 JUN 1312 in Hill, Warwickshire, England
Mother: Margaret de Clare, b. 12 OCT 1293 in Tonbridge Castle, Tonbridge, Kent, England d. 9 APR 1342 in Chebsey, Staffordshire, England
Family 1: John de Driby, b. ABT 1310 in Wokefield, Berkshire, England d. 30 NOV 1357 in Wokefield, Berkshire, England
- m. 1334 in Wakefield, Yorkshire, England
- Alice Driby Lady of Bytham, b. 1340 in Wakefield, Yorkshire, England d. 12 OCT 1412 in Stamford, Lincolnshire, England
Sources:
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: Amy Gaveston -
Author: Ancestry Family Trees, Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members., Page number: Ancestry Family Trees
Note: This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created.
This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created.
This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created.
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2743641295
- Title: Book - Ancestral Roots
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: Amy Anne de Gavaston - birth:
Author: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Note: birth:
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2554080740
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: Amy de Gavaston -
Author: The American Genealogist, Editor: 1932-1965, Donald Lines Jacobus; 1965-1984, George McCracken; 1985- , Ruth Wilder Sherman and David L. Greene., New Haven : D.L. Jacobus, 1937-, LDS Family History Library, 35 N West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA, 801-240-2331, Page number: Vol. 35, pg. 101-102
Note: birth:
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2680862636
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: Amy Anne de Gavaston - Church record: birth-name: Amy De Gaveston
Note: Church record: birth-name: Amy De Gaveston
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2198996020
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: Amy Anne de Gavaston - birth:
Author: World Family Tree Vol. 10, Ed. 1, Brøderbund Software, Inc., Release date: May 6, 1997, Not Given, Page number: Tree #3541
Note: birth:
Customer pedigree.
death:
Customer pedigree.
Customer pedigree.
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2554080701
- Title: Legacy NFS Source: Amy de Gaveston -
Author: Ancestral Roots of Certain Americian Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr, Page number: 16a-31
Note: Source Media Type: Book
Page: Migrated from user-supplied source citation: urn:familysearch:source:2736741115
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