The lead coffin found near the body of King Richard III during archeological excavations in Leicester has taken a surprise turn!
Archaeologists had thought the 600-year-old metal casket, which was
found in a stone tomb at Greyfriars in August, might belong to
knight Sir William de Moton. But analysis is showing that the skeleton appears to be that of a female.
Working with a newly found list of burials at the Friary, scientists are attempting to discover just who is buried in this high status coffin.
Sunday, October 20, 2013
Tuesday, October 15, 2013
DNA Kits from Ancestry - Free Shipping
Free Shipping with DNA Kit Purchase at Ancestry.com! Use Code: FREESHIPDNA
Monday, October 07, 2013
Have archaeologists discovered the grave of Alexander the Great?
Could archaeologists have discovered the grave of Alexander the Great?
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Alexander The Great |
At a site in Greece archaeologists have uncovered what could be the grave of Alexander the Great. The warrior king - who ruled much of the known world in the 4th century BC - was thought to be buried in Egypt. But a few experts now believe otherwise after they uncovered a marble-faced wall 500 metres long and three metres high under an artificial mound, dating from the right time in history. However many believe it will turn out to be the grave of some other important individual.
Labels:
Alexander The Great,
Archaeology,
Death,
Genealogy,
Graves
Tuesday, September 03, 2013
Don't Miss NARA Virtual Genealogy Fair Today!
The National Archives is holding its first-ever virtual Genealogy Fair on September 3 and 4 (2013) 10 a.m.–4 p.m. EST
The
Fair will be streamed online through Ustream. It's free, and there's no
reservations or passwords. You can ask questions through the chat
function, or tweet your questions to @usnatarchives #genfair2013.
Experts from the National Archives will be
discussing Native American and African American history, immigration,
Civil War pensions, U.S. Colored Troops, and Navy Deck logs.
We hope to "see" you there: http://www.archives.gov/dc-metro/know-your-records/genealogy-fair/
Recorded sessions will be available online after the event.
Monday, September 02, 2013
Special Deal on Flip-Pal Mobile Scanner
The following specials are valid until 11:59 p.m. Mountain Time, Wednesday, September 4, 2013 or while supplies last.
Save $20 on the Flip-Pal mobile scanner and Deluxe Carry Case Bundle!
(Regular Price: $179.98, Sale Price: $159.98) Place your order
Save $25 on the Flip-Pal mobile scanner Rechargeable Bundle!
This bundle includes the Flip-Pal mobile scanner, a Deluxe Flip-Pal mobile scanner Carry Case and an Eneloop AC Battery Charger with a 4-Pack of AA Rechargeable Batteries. (Regular Price: $209.97, Sale Price: $184.97) Place your order
Save $40 on the Really Big Bundle!
Do you want it all? This bundle includes a Flip-Pal mobile scanner, a Deluxe Flip-Pal mobile scanner Carry Case, a Flip-Pal mobile scanner Sketch Kit, a Picture Keeper PK 8, an Eneloop AC Battery Charger with a 4-Pack of AA Rechargeable Batteries, a Flip-Pal mobile scanner Cleaning Cloth and a Flip-Pal Window Protector Sheets 3-pack.
(Regular Price: $288.93, Sale Price: $248.93) Place your order
Questions? Please contact customer support staff at 1-855-477-3547 or at support@flip-pal.com
Read Olive Tree Genealog reviews and about the wonderful projects you can complete using the Flip-Pal Mobile Scanner. Create books, tea-towels, wall hangings, Christmas gifts and more.
Saturday, August 31, 2013
Amateur archaeologists discover subterranean slave world under Roman emperor’s villa
A discovery beneath the Roman Emperor Hadrian’s Villa at Tivoli of a subterranean jigsaw of tunnels and roads is interesting. It wasn't discovered by professional archaeologists but by Italian caving enthusiasts.
Continue reading and see photos at http://news.nationalpost.com/2013/08/29/possible-that-an-entire-underground-city-was-found-in-italy-by-amateurs/
Continue reading and see photos at http://news.nationalpost.com/2013/08/29/possible-that-an-entire-underground-city-was-found-in-italy-by-amateurs/
Thursday, August 22, 2013
Using Flip-Pal Mobile Scanner to Turn Ancestors Recipes or Letters into Wall Hangings
The following blog post is republished with permission from Olive Tree Genealogy Blog
I saw this blog post How to turn handwritten recipes into tea towels several months ago and thought "what a great idea!" I'd hoped to get one made myself to show you but time constraints and health issues have prevented me from creating my own.
Because I want to share this with my readers, you should read the original blog post. I'd suggest using your Flip-Pal Mobile Scanner
to scan old letters or Grandma's recipes then start creating your towel or napkin or even a wall hanging. Wouldn't that be a nice Christmas gift for a family member!
As you can see I have my Grandmother's recipe in her handwriting and am scanning it in hopes of finding enough time to create my own tea towels for gifts.
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Scanning my Grandmother's Recipe |
Because I want to share this with my readers, you should read the original blog post. I'd suggest using your Flip-Pal Mobile Scanner
As you can see I have my Grandmother's recipe in her handwriting and am scanning it in hopes of finding enough time to create my own tea towels for gifts.
Thursday, August 15, 2013
National Acadian Day
It's National Acadian Day Acadians are the descendants of the 17th-century French colonists who settled in Acadia, a colony of New France
If you have Acadian ancestors, you may want to check out these sites:
* Acadian Genealogy Homepage Acadian-Cajun Family Genealogy and French-Canadian Genealogy
* Parish Registers fonds, which contains transcriptions of parish registers of various Acadian parishes and from the Gaspé peninsula.
* Biographies of the 37 main Acadian families from the Université de Moncton’s website. [French language only]
If you have Acadian ancestors, you may want to check out these sites:
* Acadian Genealogy Homepage Acadian-Cajun Family Genealogy and French-Canadian Genealogy
* Parish Registers fonds, which contains transcriptions of parish registers of various Acadian parishes and from the Gaspé peninsula.
* Biographies of the 37 main Acadian families from the Université de Moncton’s website. [French language only]
Thursday, August 01, 2013
Texas Man Builds Fake Cemetery With Tombstones From Actual Dead People
A Houston Texas man, tired of homeless people sleeping on his property, installed three grave sites complete with fake headstones.
Much to his surprise, it turned out that the headstones were discarded from a local monument company and are inscribed with the names of actual deceased people.
The three tombstone markers are inscribed
Johnny Mack Chappell, Dee Brown Hancock 1922-1973, and Sandra Ruth Howen 1939-1986
Video & Details at:
Daily Mail Online: Texas man tired of homeless people sleeping on his property builds a fake GRAVEYARD complete with old tombstones - only to find out they were made for real dead people
ABC News: Phony Tombstones Used as Scarecrow for Vagrants
Much to his surprise, it turned out that the headstones were discarded from a local monument company and are inscribed with the names of actual deceased people.
The three tombstone markers are inscribed
Johnny Mack Chappell, Dee Brown Hancock 1922-1973, and Sandra Ruth Howen 1939-1986
Video & Details at:
Daily Mail Online: Texas man tired of homeless people sleeping on his property builds a fake GRAVEYARD complete with old tombstones - only to find out they were made for real dead people
ABC News: Phony Tombstones Used as Scarecrow for Vagrants
Wednesday, July 24, 2013
Tomb Found At Richard III Burial Site To Be Opened
Archaeologists suspect the tomb may contain the skeleton of the medieval knight Sir William de Moton of Peckleton, who died between 1356 and 1362, or perhaps one of two heads of the Grey Friars order in England, Peter Swynsfeld or William of Nottingham.
Credit: The Templar Church By artur84 on FreeDigitalPhotos.net
Labels:
Archaeology,
Death Customs,
Genealogy,
Grey Friars,
Knights,
Medieval Tombs,
Richard III
Tuesday, July 23, 2013
Censuses of Canada West and Canada East, 1842 now available online
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Sample page 1842 Census Canada West |
Library and Archives Canada is pleased to announce that Canadians can now access the Census of Canada West, 1842 as well as the Census of Canada East, 1842 online. In 1841, Upper Canada was renamed Canada West, and Lower Canada became Canada East. These two jurisdictions are now known as the provinces of Ontario and Quebec.
Each census is partly nominal and contains the names of heads of
family, their occupation and the number of residents for each family.Users can search these new databases by the names of heads of family, as
well as by geographical information such as district and sub-district names.
Enumerators visited 17 census districts, divided into sub-districts.
These units were made up of cities, towns, parishes, villages and
townships. Not all returns have survived. The returns for
eight districts and 51 sub-districts have been preserved and are searchable online.
You can see the list of
Districts covered at Districts and Sub-districts: 1842 Census (Canada West) and Districts and Sub-districts: 1842 Census (Canada East)Friday, July 12, 2013
Ancient Jewish tombstones hidden from Nazis during WWII rediscovered in Vienna
"It was 1943 when Vienna's Nazi overlords gave the order to destroy the city's oldest Jewish cemetery, demanding it be levelled and the tombstones attesting to centuries of Jewish existence there be destroyed.
Desperate to save their heritage, the city's shrinking Jewish community decided to act. Defying the possibility of prison, deportation or execution, they buried the gravestones and kept them from Nazi hands." [Source: Edmonton Journal]
Continue reading this story
Credit: Image courtesy of digitalart / FreeDigitalPhotos.net
Monday, July 01, 2013
Tips for Finding an Ancestor's Death Record
Death Records
Olive Tree Genealogy
published on AncestorsAtRest with permission
Can't find your ancestor in death records?
Most genealogists search death records such as Cemetery records, Obituaries and Vital Stats (Death Registrations or Certificates). If we don't find our ancestor in one of those death records, we're stuck! Where to search next? My ADF (Ancestor Death Finder) can help.What happens when a loved one dies? What events take place around the death of a family member? What kind of death record paper trail is created on the death of an individual? The answers to these questions will lead you to other sources of death records and hopefully end that brick-wall.
When an ancestor dies, many records of that death might be created. Let's talk about records kept before an ancestor death and those created after a death.
Continue reading
Saturday, June 29, 2013
Summer Sale at FamilyTree DNA
Join the Genealogy Revolution. Search for your surname in the largest DNA database of its kind! My Surname |
We have been working with Illumina to offer our Family Finder autosomal test for only $99 during our summer event. In fact, if we receive enough orders at $99, Illumina may be able to help us keep it at this extremely low of rate of $99!
As you take advantage of our summer event, remember that the permanency of the $99 Family Finder test is actually in your hands!
Beginning on Thursday, June 27, 2013 and running until Friday, July 26, 2013, we will offer the following:
- Family Finder was $289 Now $99
- mtDNA Full Sequence was $289 Now $189
- Y-DNA37 was $169 Now $129
- Y-DNA67 was $268 Now $208
- Y-DNA111 was $359 Now $308
- Family Finder + Y-DNA37 was $368 Now $228
- Family Finder + Y-DNA67 was $467 Now $307
- Family Finder + mtDNAFullSequence was $398 Now $288
- Comprehensive Genome (Y-DNA67, FMS & FF) was $666 Now $496
REMEMBER: ALL ORDERS FOR THIS Family Tree DNA SALE MUST BE PLACED AND PAID FOR BY 11:59pm CST, JULY 26, 2013, TO RECEIVE THESE SPECIAL PRICES.
Thursday, June 27, 2013
Jane Doe - Who Was She?
If you like puzzles and mysteries you will want to read this blog post on Olive Tree Genealogy blog called Help Solve the Mystery: Who Was This Woman?
Get your sleuthing hats on! Woman commits suicide, investigators find she wasn't who she said she was. A locked box holds clues to her real identity. Who was she? Help investigators solve the puzzle of Lori (Kennedy) Ruff
Get your sleuthing hats on! Woman commits suicide, investigators find she wasn't who she said she was. A locked box holds clues to her real identity. Who was she? Help investigators solve the puzzle of Lori (Kennedy) Ruff
Tuesday, June 25, 2013
Petition to Bring 1921 Canadian Census online NOW!
If you have not been following the saga of the 1921 Canadian Census please take a moment to read Call to Action! Government puts Canadian 1921 Census Release on Hold
Summary:
Please share this post with others - in private emails or on appropriate forums and mailing lists (meaning please keep it on topic). Feel free to blog about the petition and provide the link for signing on your own blogs. Anyone can sign no matter where you live so I hope to see our American, English, Australian and other friends and neighbours helping to bring this census online ASAP.
Summary:
- The 1921 Canadian Census was released by Statistics Canada (either January or June 1st this year, government agency accounts differ) to Library and Archives Canada (LAC) for scanning and releasing to the public.
- It was due for release the first week of June but with no explanation from LAC the opening was delayed.
- LAC has not been forthcoming with any details or fanfare or explanation as to when we might see this census
- A source at LAC revealed information that the Federal Government put the census release on indefinite hold because the only people interested were "3 little old ladies in Kingston [Ontario]"
Please share this post with others - in private emails or on appropriate forums and mailing lists (meaning please keep it on topic). Feel free to blog about the petition and provide the link for signing on your own blogs. Anyone can sign no matter where you live so I hope to see our American, English, Australian and other friends and neighbours helping to bring this census online ASAP.
Sunday, June 16, 2013
Happy Fathers Day X 100
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5 Generations of Massey men. |
Thursday, June 13, 2013
Special Deals on Y-DNA Upgrades for Father's Day
My Surname |
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Sunday, June 09, 2013
Coffin Plate Of Eleaza Albee 1884
I am not sure of the name on this Coffin Plate but it looks like Eliza or Eleaza Albee. I will let you decide. I am sure with a little work we can figure it out.
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Hard to read coffin plate. |
El????? Albee
Died Jan 19 1884
Aged 71 years
I had a look in the 1880 U.S. Federal Census and I found 2 possible hits.
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Sunday, June 02, 2013
The Coffin Plate Of Thompson Tyler 1856
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