#11
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Thanks, but hasn't that been OCR'd from the image on the other link, Maggie?
Apparently there are a couple of papers written about the family of Amundeville by C T Clay which might or might not have more info, but they don't seem to be available online, only if I pay about £10 to buy a copy. Probably not worth it that far back on a line which I know is not my biological line! |
#12
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I have found another copy of the tree on Google books:
https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=...etruda&f=false It could be C. Aum? Though I don't know what that would mean either! |
#13
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Aha! I just found this:
His son Jolland married a niece of his suzerain the Earl of Albemarle http://1066.co.nz/Mosaic%20DVD/libra...oudreuile.html |
#14
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Wikipedia says that "The word Albemarle is derived from the Latinised form of the French county of Aumale in Normandy" so I guess that would explain Aum. Also Wikipedia says that William the Conqueror's half-sister Adelaide was Countess of Aumale / Albamarla. So C. Aum seems more likely to refer to her than to the Earl of Albemarle, maybe?
Edit - just got down to the list of Adelaide's children and it shows her son as Stephen, Count of Aumale, so that would fit too. |
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