Thursday, June 17, 2010

2010 Evans Family Reunion UPDATE

Kearney, Nebraska
July 2 - July 4th

WHAT TO BRING!

  • Lawn Chairs/Blanket
  • Two Picnic meals and drinks for your family/Grills provided. OOPS!

The meal plan has been changed a bit. Chris and Sue will provide Chicken and Sloppy Joes, Iced Tea and Lemonade for the Sat. Evening meal. You are asked to bring a side dish/dessert to share and drinks of your choice.

  • White Elephant Item to Auction
  • Your family Information sheet for the Family Tree
Friday - July 2nd - 5:00 - Welcome Party -Eagles Club, 17 West 24th Street
The Eagles Club. Cash Bar and Restaurant

Saturday - July 3rd - 9:30 AM- Brunch, Harmon Park, Sertoma Shelter
2nd Ave. & 31st Street
11:00 AM - Family Games and Fun
2:00 PM - BREAK TIME - Go for a swim, check out
your family history, nap under a shade tree.
4:00 PM - More games, Open MIC'. recite a poem,
do a skit, sing a song, do a magic trick.
Please be prepared and keep it short and keep it "clean".
* Plan the next reunion
* Silent Auction results
* Blessings on our family
* Set up your Tripod for a Family Portrait
* Saturday Evening Meal.
7:30 PM - Fireworks Tailgater - Yanney Park Parking Lot
2020 West 11th Street
Bring your own Food * Grill provided

Sunday - July 4th - 9:30 AM - Brunch at Donna's - 10 West 46th Street
Donna's Phone # 308-233-5035
10:00 AM - BRIEF, Alexander Family History Presentation
Learn about your Royal History.
Are you a King or Queen?
GO HOME!

Please feel free to contact Nancy trough e-mail at: nnixon2000@comcast.net or through "comments" section of this blog site. Nancy's Phone # 720-216-1989

Whose that Ancestor?


Aud

The Deeply Wealthy and Deeply Minded.

Aud was the second daughter of Ketil Flatnose, a Norwegian hersir, and Yngvid Ketilsdóttir, daughter of Ketill Wether, a hersir from Ringarike. Aud married Olaf the White (Oleif), son of King Ingjald, who had named himself King of Dublin after going on voyages to Britain and then conquering the shire of Dublin. They had a son named Thorstein the Red. After Oleif was killed in battle in Ireland, Aud and Thorstein journeyed to the Hebrides. Thorstein married there and had many children; he also became a great warrior king, conquering over half of Scotland; however, he was killed in battle after being betrayed by his people. After this happened Aud, who was at Caithness, learned of her son’s death and built a Knarr, a Viking era ship commonly built for Atlantic voyages. She did this secretly in the forest possibly because women were not allowed to be in possession of these ships, or because she did not want anyone to know that she was building one. After its completion, Aud sailed to the Orkneys. There she married off one of her granddaughters, Groa, the daughter of Thorstein the Red. Aud then set off for Iceland.[2]

On her ship were twenty men, all of which were free, but she was still the leader of them, proving that she was respected, but also that she was strong-willed enough to command a ship alone without the help of a man. She also a great deal of other men on her ship, who were prisoners from Viking raids near and around Britain. They all came from good families, and were called bondsmen. Aud gave these men their freedom once they were in Iceland, making them freed-men, a class between slave and free, where they were not owned, but did not have all the rights of a free man. She also gave them all a great deal of land to farm on and make a living. One of these men was Vifil, who was given Vifilsdal, part of Hvammur í Skeggjadal (commonly translated as "Hvamm"), the area in which Aud settled. When she arrived in Iceland, she claimed all the land in the Dales (Dalasýsla) between the Dagverdara and Skraumuhlaupsa. [3]

Aud is a very important figure in Icelandic history because she was one of the first settlers and claimed a great deal of land. However, more importantly, is the fact that she did this and was a woman. Women, who did not have all the capabilities of men at the time, but Aud was a very important figure for her time, as her name would suggest, and she took control of her circumstances, and became one of the legendary settlers of Iceland. Unlike most other Icelandic settlers Aud was a baptized and devout Christian. Aud put up crosses on her land and prayed regularly at Krossholar hill, now known as Krosshólaborg.[4]

Friday, May 7, 2010

Who's That Ancestor?

SOMERLED
Lord of the Isles
The Clan Chiefs of Scotland were seeking a new King who would help them defeat the Viking and English raiders. They went from clan to clan in their search, asking each clan who among you is a great leader? They believed in omens and would ask each contender for an "omen" to insure that he was the "chosen one". To their surprise the islanders on Mull recommended Somerled. They said "He is a well tempered man, in body shapely,of a fair and piercing eye, off middle stature with quick discernment." The Chieftans were surprised, they had known him to be as peaceful as a torch or beacon - unlit. Little did they know that the hour was coming when he would be changed, when he would blaze like a burnished torch, or a beacon on a hilltop against which the wind is blowing." But when the Isles' men, over whom his ancestors had ruled, were in dire need of a leader Somerled came forward in his true character. A local tradition in Skye tells that the Islesmen held a council at which they decided to offer Somerled the chiefship, to be his and his descendants forever.
They found Somerled fishing, and to him made their offer. Somerled replied, "Islesmen, there is a newly run salmon in the black pool yonder. If I catch him, I will go with you as your Chief; if I catch him not, I shall remain where I am." The Islemen, a race who believed implicitly in omens, were content, and Somerled cast his line over the black pool. Soon after a shining salmon leapt in the sun, and the skillful angler had the silvery fish on the river bank. The Islemen acclaimed him their leader, and as such he sailed back with them "over the sea to Skye," where the people joyously proclaimed that the Lord of the Isles had come. Such a tradition in Skye. Other accounts say that the scene of Somerled's first achievements was in Morven, and his conquest of the Isles later.
Somerled, Rex Insularum, took his place as a leader of men, from whom descended a race of Kings, a dynasty distinguished in the stormy history of the Middle Ages, who ranked themselves before the Scottish Kings.
"The mate of monarchs, and allied On equal terms with England's pride." The young hunter uprose a mighty warrior, who with dauntless courage and invincible sword struck terror into the hearts of his foes. Nor did he depend along on his matchless courage. In one of his first encounters with the Norse invaders he made full use of that "quick discernment" ascribed to him by the early chronicler. It happened that while on a small island with a following of only one hundred Islemen, he was surrounded by the whole Norwegian fleet, and, realizing that his small force was utterly inadequate to resist their attack, conceived a clever stratagem to deter the norsemen from landing on the island. Each of his men was ordered to kill a cow, and this having been done, and the cows skinned, Somerled ordered his little force to march round the hill on which they lay encamped; which having been done, in full view of the enemy, he then made them all put on the cowhides to disguise themselves, and repeat the march round the hill. He now ordered his men to reverse the cowhides, and for a third time march round the hill, thus exhibiting to the Norsemen the appearance of a force composed of three divisions. The ruse succeeded, for the enemy fleet withdrew.
Somerled (a.k.a. Sumarlidhi Höld) was born in about 1113 in Morvern. His father was Gillebride Mac Gille Adomnan, a descendant of a noble Gaelic family who were probably an offshoot of the House of Alpin at the time Kenneth I combined Dalriada with Pictavia. Somerled's mother was of Norse descent. The wider picture in Scotland at the time is set out in our Historical Timeline.

Somerled's grandfather, Gilledomman of the Isles, had been defeated by the Norse and exiled to Ireland. When he was a child, Somerled's more immediate family was also expelled from their home and sent to Ireland. His father Gillebride raised an army of 500 and returned to Morvern to regain their lands; but was beaten off and killed.

Much of Somerled's youth was spent on the margins of life in his native land. But some time around 1135 he became the leader of a rebellion against the Norse control. He successfully cleared Morvern, Lochaber and the northern part of Argyll from Norse influence and became known as Thane of Argyll: possibly with the formal endorsement of David I of Scotland who would have been grateful to see the Norse tide turned back in at least one part of Scotland.

In 1140, Somerled extended his area of influence by marrying Ragnhild, daughter of Olaf the Red (Olaf I The Red Godredson), the Norse King of Man, whose territory included the Hebrides. They had three sons, Dughall, Ragnald, and Aonghus. Somerled also had one son by a previous marriage: Gillecallum. Shortly afterwards Somerled helped suppress an uprising against Olaf the Red.

In 1143 Olaf the Red was murdered by the sons of his brother Harold but was succeeded as King of Man by his son (and Somerled's brother in law) Ochraidh Godred II the Black Olafson, or Godfrey the Black. Godfrey ruled with a heavy hand, and was deeply unpopular. In 1158 there was an uprising against Godfrey, and this time Somerled backed it.

Somerled's involvement proved decisive, and using a fleet of galleys fitted with rudders, the latest in naval technology, he defeated Godfrey and declared himself Ri Innse Gall or King of the Isles. What Somerled had achieved was to introduce a "third force" into the long-standing conflict between the Kings of Scotland and the Kings of Norway over the ownership of the Hebrides. While the title Ri Innse Gall dated back centuries before Olaf the Red, all its holders up to Godfrey the Black owed allegiance to the King of Norway. In contrast, Somerled's Kingdom of the Isles was not a subservient kingdom to the Kingdom of Norway, it was a separate kingdom, independent of both Norway and Scotland.

The newly powerful Somerled was seen as a serious threat by King Malcolm IV of Scotland, and in 1160 the two met in indecisive battle in Argyll. After an uneasy peace, conflict was resumed in early 1164. Somerled landed an army of 15,000 men from 164 galleys at Greenock. He intended to capture Renfrew, but somewhere near Inchinnan (close to the site of today's Glasgow Airport), Somerled was betrayed and killed, allegedly by a nephew in the pay of Malcolm IV. His army returned to their galleys and departed without engaging in a full scale battle. Accounts differ as to whether Somerled was buried on Iona or at Saddell Abbey.

Somerled is credited with breaking the stranglehold of the Norse on western Scotland and the Isles. There is a certain irony in this as he was himself Norse on his mother's side (and possibly in part on his father's side according to DNA studies); and he had married into the family of Olaf the Red. The independent kingdom he had briefly created was not to outlive him, but Somerled had changed things for good.

After his death, Somerled's Kingdom of the Isles was divided amongst his three sons from his marriage to Ragnhild. The descendants of Aonghus went on to form the Clan McRuari or McRory; the descendants of Dughall went on to form the Clan MacDougall; and the descendants of Ragnald's son Donald Mor McRanald would become the Clan Donald, who went on to found the Lordship of the Isles. Widespread DNA studies suggest that as many as 500,000 people living today are descended from Somerled: this is a number only bettered by Genghis Khan who, again according to DNA studies, is estimated to be the ancestor of 16 million people alive today.

Somerled (a.k.a. Sumarlidhi Höld) was born in about 1113 in Morvern. His father was Gillebride Mac Gille Adomnan, a descendant of a noble Gaelic family who were probably an offshoot of the House of Alpin at the time Kenneth I combined Dalriada with Pictavia. Somerled's mother was of Norse descent. The wider picture in Scotland at the time is set out in our Historical Timeline.

Friday, April 9, 2010

Who's that Ancestor?






The Man
The genuine Thorfinn was the son of Torf Einar and succeeded his father as the Viking Earl of Orkney around the year 947, although it appears that he shared the earldom with his brothers Arnkel and Erlend. It has to be said that not a great deal is known about him. It is known that he married Grelaug or Grelod the daughter of a Dungladr or Dungaldus who it appears was a subordinate 'earl' of Caithness at the time.
According to the Orkneyinga Saga, Gunnhildr the wife of Eirikr Bloodaxe fled back to the safety of the Orkneys after the death of her husband at the battle of Stainmore in 954. (In which battle incidentally both of Thorfinn's brothers Arnkel and Erlend were also killed.)
Gunnhildr and her sons appear to have then taken over the government of Orkney. (Presumably by grant of the king of Norway, as the earldom of Orkney was subject to Norway at the time.) As one of Gunnhildr's daughters named Ragnhild was then married to Thorfinn's son and eventual successor Arnfinn, there does not appear to have been to much animosity generated by this switch.
Gunnhildr subsequently decided to leave Orkney and left for Denmark at which point Thorfinn resumed his reign. The Orkneyinga Saga then informs us that Thorfinn died peacefully in his bed and was buried at Hoxa in North Ronaldsay; probably around the year 977.
There is rather disappointingly no explanation of how Thorfinn came by the name 'Skullsplitter' and there are no surviving accounts, whether historical or legendary that ascribe any heroic or bloodthirsty deeds to our Thorfinn. Or indeed make any reference to the actual splitting of skulls.
Of course it is worth mentioning that the Vikings were not without a sense of humour in the nicknames that they bestowed upon people. There was, for example, a Thorfinn the Short who was actually noted for being very tall, and it is therefore within the bounds of possibility that Thorfinn 'Skullsplitter' was so named because he was a gentle old soul who wouldn't have hurt the proverbial fly.
The Isle of Orkney home of Orkney Brewery has won world wide acclaim for it's "Skullsplitter" Ale. The lable has an imagined likeness of Thornfinn Einarsson (Skullsplitter) on it.

Friday, April 2, 2010

Who's that Ancestor?


At the reunion, we'll have a fun QUIZ game about our ancestors. You'll want to check in on this site every week or so, to learn about a different ancestor. This year we're focusing on our ALEXANDER branch of the family. Here's your first Alexander ancestor story:

Reverend James Alexander:
James' brother Andrew along with his wife Mary Maxwell and their 9 children were about to escape Ireland and the persecution that their Puritan religion had brought down on them. Along with other Puritan families, they pooled their resources to charter a ship to take them to the wilds of the American Frontier. It is thought that Mary indentured her grandchildren to local Lords in order to acquire the needed funds for their share. The day before the departure she either paid off their indenture ship or kidnapped her grandchildren. The Congregation requested that Rev. James would travel from their home church in Scotland to see them off. He traveled over the Irish Sea to Baptise the children and pray for the blessing of their trip. Upon their anchoring away and departing, (in the late 1680's) James remained on his knees on the dock. As the family waived and shouted their goodbyes to him, they were horrified to witness English soldiers arrest him and take him to the garrison jail. Mary Maxwell, ordered her sons to turn the ship back in order to rescue him. Of course the company on board objected, but Mary stood firm. According to a family journal, "she stood wide and with her fists on her hips, she ordered her sons, in only a manner that a mother can command, and demanded that they return to rescue James." The ship returned in the night and the Alexander men rescued Rev. James from the English garrison jail. It is likely that English soldiers were injured. There was no choice but to bring the hapless Rev. James to America with them. He later returned to Sheppard his flock in Scotland, unafraid of the English persecution and the warrant for his arrest. He has a long marriage and church service and left no heirs.

Friday, March 5, 2010

Who ARE YOU?

Don't let your memory disappear when you're gone. Please tell future generations who you are. Please take a moment to word process a SHORT story of your life and e-mail it to Nancy or bring it to the reunion. Fill in your full name, birth date and place, marriage date and place. The names of your parents, children, grandchildren along with their birthdates and place, marriage dates and place, death dates and place. Tell us about your commitments ie: Military service, missionary or church service, charity work, Pro Bono professional help. Tell your descendents about where you've lived, what kind of education you've had, either formal or self taught. What you do in your spare time, what accomplishments you're proud of. What your joys and sufferings have been. Inform them of the types of work and professions you've been envolved with. Tell of what made you proud in your work accomplishments. Tell about what you admired and were happy about with your parents. Tell about the characteristics of your shildren. Talk about your spiritual beliefs. If you have a tombstone, what do you want it to say? Tell about your spouse and why you fell in love with and married them. Please e-mail me the pictures of you and them (or bring them to the reunion and I will scan them at Mom's house and return them to you on Sunday morning.) I would like to have pictures of you when you were a baby, a 6-10 year old child, young adult and currently. It would be nice to have pictures of you posing with your artwork, motorcycle, favorite car, horse, dog, cat,house, garden, family, church, friends or whatever you REALLY liked in your life. Remember that this will be published on the world wide family tree. Future generations will be seeking out who there families were and will want to know EVERYTHING, the good AND the bad. This is your opportunity to influence future generations by explaining disappointments and consequences along with the joys of success and overcoming difficulties. They will find out the bare bones about your life anyway. It will be so enriching for them to get "the REST of the STORY"! Have fun authoring YOUR story.

Family Recipes

Please share your recipes in the "comments" below. We'll add them to this site in Alphabetical order for you to refer to at anytime. You can also print these out.