Selected Families and Individuals for Genealogy of Ken Larson

Notes


Leonora (Eleanor) of Aquitaine

Princess Eleanor of England (October 13, 1162 - October 31, 1214), was also known as Leonora of Aquitaine and Leonora, Queen of Castile.
She was born in Domfront Castle, Normandy. She was the sixth child and second daughter of King Henry II of England and his wife Queen Eleanor of Aquitaine. When she was eight years old, in 1170, she was married to King Alfonso VIII of Castile.

They had 12 children:

Berengaria, Queen of Castile (1180-1246)
Sancho of Castile (1181-1181)
Sancha of Castile (1182-1184?)
Mafalda of Castile (1183?-1204)
Urraca, Queen of Portugal (1186-1220)
Blanca (Blanche), Queen of France (1188-1252)
Fernando of Castile (1189-1211)
Henry of Castile (1192?-1190's)
Constance of Castile (1196?-late 1190's)
Leonor, Queen of Aragon (1202-1244)
Constanza, Abbess of Las Huelgas (1203?-1243)
Henry I, King of Castile (1204-1217).

She died only twenty-eight days after her husband, in Burgos.


Joan Planagenet

Joan Plantagenet (October, 1165 - 4 September, 1199) was the seventh child of King Henry II of England and his consort, Eleanor of Aquitaine.
On 13 February, 1177, she married William II of Sicily and was crowned Queen of Sicily at Palermo Cathedral. They had one son, who died in infancy. Following William's death in 1189, she married, in 1196, Raymond VI of Toulouse. They had three children, the eldest being Raymond VII of Toulouse.

Joan died in childbirth and was buried at Fontevrault Abbey in France.


Joan Planagenet

Joan Plantagenet (October, 1165 - 4 September, 1199) was the seventh child of King Henry II of England and his consort, Eleanor of Aquitaine.
On 13 February, 1177, she married William II of Sicily and was crowned Queen of Sicily at Palermo Cathedral. They had one son, who died in infancy. Following William's death in 1189, she married, in 1196, Raymond VI of Toulouse. They had three children, the eldest being Raymond VII of Toulouse.

Joan died in childbirth and was buried at Fontevrault Abbey in France.


Tollak Tollakson Nedland

Sold 2 eng of farm to Per Svenson.


Lars Andreas Tollakson Nedland

Left for America


Tollak Tollakson Nedland

Saman med dei reiste brorsonen Tollak Olson Eitland 20/a år. Dei slo seg ned på Corn-Prerie i Wisc. Theodor Urstad, som har vitja dei i Amerika, fortel at dei lengta svært dei fyrste åra. Dei bygde seg hus og uthus i norsk stil, som stod då. Theodor var der i 1902. Borna var alle svært musikalske. Dei var også veldig flinke i arbeid og hadde laga seg feler og andre musikkinstrumenter sjøl. Dei spela mykje i lyd og lag i næraste byen, Vestby. Bernt Tobias var sjølkærd urmakar og gravør. Nokre av deira døtrer var flinke forretningsfolk og dreiv moteforretning i Chicago og leverte dei finaste drakter til storfolket i U.S.A.
To gjenter vitja Noreg ein gong og var på Nedland og såg pa fedretufter. Dei tala gamalt gylandsmål, som deira foreldre tala då dei reiste frå Noreg i 1865, endå dei var fødde i Amerika.

Rough translation:
The travel papers list Tollak Olson Eitland at 20 1/2 years. They ended up in Corn Prairie(?) Wisconsin. Theodor Urstad saw them in America, wrote them at great length for years(?). The history for their house and themselves is an achievement(?). Theordor was there in 1902.There was all great music. There was also jolly __ in working and had made a fiddle second musical instrument for the sea/lake? ____ in sound and made nourishing ___, Vestby. Bernt Tobias was a (sea/sailor) clockmaker and gravedigger(?). Plenty of our _____ business people and motor business in Chicago live their final times as important folksin the USA. Two vital Norse, ____ and from Nedland and thus ____. Their old speech is Gyland measure, like their old tales of the travel from Norway in 1865, and they are now native in America.


Gabriel Tollakson Nedland

Gabriel and his wife lived in Bukstad in Hidra in 1864


Tobine Gabrielsdatter Nedland

Mentioned in Bygdebok forGyland, but not in census for 1865. Child death perhaps?


Hosted by www.Geocities.ws

1