The
genealogy of the line of Farndales, descended from William and Jane ffarnedaill
Return to the Home Page of the Farndale Family
Website |
The story of one family’s journey through two
thousand years of British History |
The 84 family lines into which the family is divided.
Meet the whole family and how the wider family is related |
Members of the historical family ordered by date of
birth |
Links to other pages with historical research and
related material |
The story of the Bakers of Highfields, the Chapmans,
and other related families |
This webpage comprises the genealogical family tree of the Skelton Line
and then summarises the deeper ancestry of this line of the Farndales.
The Skelton Line is a family of the
early seventeenth century.
The family tree is colour coded to
show the flow of relationships between individuals. You can also follow the
hyperlinks in brown text to link directly to other related family lines
and the hyperlink in blue text to reach the webpage of each individual, where
you can read about their lives in more detail.
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William
ffarnedaill 22
January 1599 Married
Jane (1602 to 1682) With
William, for the first time, we get to some more detailed record of him and
his family, including a full date of birth. William is not in my own direct
line of ancestry. But it is at this point that we start to get to different
lines to modern families named Farndale Skelton,
Moorsholm, Liverton |
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Georgs
Farndall 3
October 1624 to 19 January 1677/8 Skelton,
Great Ayton, Stockton |
Isabell
Farndayll 31
May 1628 Married
nee Atkinson Skelton |
James
Farndale 1630
to 22 October 1682 Skelton,
Liverton, Moorsholm |
Ann
ffarndell 30
September 1632 Skelton Died
at Birth |
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If you are
subscribed to Ancestry you can also visit the Farndale Family Tree on Ancestry, which links the
whole family together.
The Deeper Ancestry of the Skelton Line
The matrix below will transport
descendants of the Skelton Line into a personal journey into their deep
ancestry. It is an extract of the Farndale Story which is bespoke for the Skelton Line descendants. It will take you back
to the earliest history of our ancestors and each box will transport you to a
more detailed narrative to unlock your history.
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A Time Machine to a
different era of geological time in the heart of our ancestral home |
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The
Iron Age, Bronze Age, Neolithic, and Mesolithic evidence of the people of the
immediate vicinity to Farndale |
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Isurium Brigantum
(Aldborough) The Roman Regional
Capital of the lands around Kirkdale |
A Roman Villa on
palatial scale just south of Kirkdale |
A Roman Villa only
2km from Kirkdale in the heart of our ancestral lands |
71
CE to 580 CE The
lands which would become the lands of Kirkdale and Chirchebi in Roman
and Pagan times |
A
Roman arm purse which can be seen in the British Museum in London today,
found in about the second century CE by a cairn overlooking Farndale, which
will transport you back 2,000 years |
The Roman Capital of
northern England where Constantine was proclaimed Emperor |
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560
CE to 793 CE Kirkdale
and the Chirchebi Estate in the Anglo Saxon Period |
Kirkdale from its
founding in about 685 CE to the beginning of the Scandinavian period in about
800 CE |
Deirian and
Northumbrian York, a political, cultural and educational Hub on the European
stage The people who
dominated our ancestral lands |
Alcuin and the birth of modern education The world of Ecgbert
and Aethelbert, successors to Bede, and their pupil Alcuin, who took York’s
powerhouse of knowledge to the court of Charlemagne to pioneer the European
educational system |
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The powerful figure
at the heart of the aristocracy, who rebuilt Kirkdale and put our ancestral
lands firmly onto the national political stage |
793
CE to 1066 Kirkdale
and the Chirchebi Estate in the Scandinavian Period |
Anglo-Saxon-Scandinavian Kirkdale Kirkdale in the
Anglo-Saxon-Scandinavian period from about 800 CE to 1066, with a brief
summary of its history through to 1500 |
The Scandinavian
centre of northern England |
A
unique treasure whose secrets transport us into the world of the eleventh
century upon which you can stare today, imagining direct ancestors who did
the same a thousand years ago |
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Regime Change |
1066
to 1200 The
People of the Kirkbymoorside (“Chirchebi”) Estate after the Norman Conquest |
This history of the
Cistercian monastery of Rievaulx, in whose Chartulary the name Farndale was
first recorded in 1154 |
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Our
Pioneer ancestors who left Farndale but took its name to settle in new places |
Tales
of a surprisingly large number of our forebears who were poachers in
Pickering Forest. Their archery skills would foretell the legends of Robin
Hood and the English army at Agincourt |
Rural lifestyles from
the Norman Conquest |
A model which relies on extensive medieval evidence, to suggest
the most probable family tree of the earliest ancestors of the Farndales |
Thirteenth Century
Farndale Clearing
the dale to build our new home |
The story of the dale
of Farndale to 1500, to accompany the family story |
Tales
of archers and men at arms who fought with Richard II, Henry IV and Henry V
and an observation post in the home of the Nevilles and Richard III from
which to view the Wars of the Roses |
The history of the
village of Campsall north of Doncaster, where we find our ancestors in the
sixteenth century |
The History of Doncaster to 1500 The History of pre
industrial Doncaster from its Roman inception as Danum to the end of
the sixteenth century |
The
Family of William Farndale, the Fourteenth Century Vicar of Doncaster |
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Arrival in the old Bruce lands around Skelton
Castle The
Sixteenth and Seventeenth Families of Kirkleatham, Skelton, Moorsholm and
Liverton in Cleveland |
A
history of Kirkleatham and Wilton, the place where our family first settled
in Cleveland |
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A
history of Skelton and its old church. The Farndales arrived in Moorsholm in
the Parish of Skelton in about 1588 and lived there through the tumultuous
years of the Civil War |
The Skelton 1 Line |
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