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Thursday, November 26, 2020

Bloodgood, Flatt, Soule, Delano: sticklers, extremists, precisionists, heretics refugees etc etc

 

https://www.geni.com/people/Lillie-Flatt/6000000009093585733

January 21, 1894 Grandmother Flatt

Birthplace: Estherville, IA, United States

Death:

Immediate Family:

Daughter of Wallace Marion Flatt and Olive Lorraine Flatt

______________


https://www.geni.com/people/Wallace-Flatt/6000000008908001425

 Great Grandfather,Wallace Marion Flatt

Birthdate: August 30, 1861

Birthplace: Stoughton, WI, United States

Death: December 24, 1922 (61)

Stanley, North Dakota, United States

Immediate Family:

Son of Walter B. Flatt and Hannah Priscilla Soule

______________


https://www.geni.com/people/Hannah-Soule/6000000008809282203

Great Great Grandmother, Hannah Priscilla Soule

Birthdate: November 01, 1843

Birthplace: Waterville, ME, United States

Death: August 19, 1911 (67)

Pomona, CA, United States

Immediate Family:

Daughter of Sullivan Soule and Temperance Soule

__________


https://www.geni.com/people/Sullivan-Soule/6000000008881087691

3G Grandfather, Sullivan Soule

Birthdate: January 20, 1819

Birthplace: Dexter, Penobscot, Maine, United States

Death: August 25, 1878 (59)

Rutland, Wisconsin, United States

Immediate Family:

Son of Zebedee Soule and Priscilla Soule

Husband of Esther Soule; Temperance Soule and Hannah Soule

_________


https://www.geni.com/people/Zebedee-Soule/6000000003564286791


4G Grandfather, Zebedee Soule

Birthdate: June 12, 1781

Birthplace: Winslow, Kennebec, Maine, United States

Death: April 05, 1867 (85)

Rutland, Dane County, Wisconsin, United States

Place of Burial: Stoughton, Riverside Cemetery, Wisconsin, United States

Immediate Family:

Son of Jonathan Soule and Honour Soule

Husband of Levinia Soule and Priscilla Soule

_____________

https://www.geni.com/people/Jonathan-Soule/6000000006802855924

5G Grandfather, Jonathan Soule

Birthdate: December 21, 1747

Birthplace: Duxbury, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, United States

Death: January 06, 1832 (84)

Waterville, Kennebec County, Maine, United States

Place of Burial: Waterville, Kennebec Co., Maine, United States

Immediate Family:

Son of Micah Soule and Mercy Soule

Husband of Honour Soule

____________


https://www.geni.com/people/Micah-Soule/6000000006802800232


6G Grandfather, Micah Soule

Birthdate: April 12, 1711

Birthplace: Duxbury, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, British Colonies in America

Death: November 04, 1778 (67)

Duxbury, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, United States

Place of Burial: Myles Standish Burying Ground, Duxbury, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, USA

Immediate Family:

Son of Josiah Soule and Lydia Soule (Delano)

Husband of Mercy Soule

___________


https://www.geni.com/people/Lydia-Soule-Delano/6000000003133084489


7G Grandmother, Lydia Soule (Delano)

Birthdate: March 1679

Birthplace: Duxbury, (Present Plymouth County), Plymouth Colony (Present Massachusetts), (Present USA)

Death: November 23, 1763 (84)

Duxbury, Plymouth County, Province of Massachusetts, (Present USA) 

Place of Burial: Duxbury, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, United States 

Immediate Family:

Daughter of John Delano and Mary Delano

Wife of Josiah Soule

___________


https://www.geni.com/people/John-Delano/6000000003180793211


8G Grandfather, John Delano

Also Known As: "Jonathan", "Lannoy"

Birthdate: 1644

Birthplace: Duxbury, Plymouth Colony

Death: September 05, 1721 (76-77)

Duxbury, Plymouth County, Province of Massachusetts 

Place of Burial: Duxbury, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, United States 

Immediate Family:

Son of Philippe Delano and Hester Delano

Husband of Mary Delano

___________


https://www.geni.com/people/Philippe-Delano/6000000001666670018

9G Grandfather, Philippe Delano (de la Noye)

Also Known As: "Philipp Delano", "Philippe de La Noye Delano", "Philipp DeLannoy", "Philipp de Lannoy", "Philippe de la Noye", "Phillipe De La Noye", "Phillip Delanoy", ""Delano or de Lannoy".", "Philip Delano", "Phillippe De La Noye", "DeLannoy", "De Lannoy"

Birthdate: December 07, 1602

Birthplace: Leiden, Rhynland (present Zuid-Holland), Holland, Republiek der Zeven Verenigde Nederlanden

Death: December 19, 1681 (79)

Bridgewater, (Present Plymouth County), Plymouth Colony (Present Massachusetts), Colonial America 

Place of Burial: Duxbury, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, United States 

Immediate Family:

Son of Jean de de Lanoy and Marie Mahieu


In November 1621 Philip Delano arrived in Plymouth Colony as a single man on the ship Fortune.

 While Bangs states that he was 16 years of age when he arrived he was actually closer to 20 though it is speculated he must at this time have been a servant of one of the other passengers, as he was a minor.[1][3]. 

Approximately 65 passengers embarked on Mayflower in the middle of July 1620 at either Blackwall or Wapping on the River Thames.[10] The ship then proceeded down the Thames into the English Channel and then on to the south coast of England to anchor at Southampton Water. 

She waited there for a rendezvous on July 22 with the Speedwell, which was coming from Holland with English separatist Puritans, members of the Leiden congregation who had been living in Holland to escape religious persecution in England, including Delano his uncle Francis Cooke and his cousin John Cooke.

 Both ships set sail for America around August 5, but Speedwell sprang a leak shortly after, and the two ships were brought into Dartmouth for repairs. They made a new start after the repairs, and they were more than 200 miles (320 km) beyond Land's End at the southwestern tip of England when Speedwell sprang another leak. It was now early September, and they had no choice but to abandon Speedwell and make a determination on her passengers. This was a dire event, as the ship had wasted vital funds and was considered very important to the future success of their settlement in America. 

Both ships returned to Plymouth, where some of Speedwell passengers joined Mayflower and others returned to Holland. Mayflower then continued on her voyage to America, and Speedwell was sold soon afterwards.[11].

 It appears Delano did not make the cut so came the next year. 

He may have lived first in Plymouth with his uncle, Mayflower passenger Francis Cooke and his son. Philippe's maternal aunt, Hester (Mahieu) was married to Cooke.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_Delano

*****

Philippe died in Bridgewater Mass. 1681. He was married first in 1634 & 2d 1657 & had five sons & four daughters. He used the names peculiar to this line; Thus Philippe — Jean — ? Gysbert — Jean — Philippe — (1621) — Philip Jr. & John (Jean). He appears on Hotten's List of Emigres to America as: "Philip De La Noye."

 He left Leiden to join the ship "Fortune " the first vessel to follow the "Mayflower." 

It came from London England bringing the Patent of Government, John Pierce & 35 colonists. They landed at Plymouth Massachusetts on November the eleventh 1621.

 It was at this time that the Narragansets sent the famous bundle of arrows tied with a snake skin to Gov. Bradford, who returned it stuffed with powder and bullets.

_______


https://www.geni.com/people/Jean-de-

Lanoy/6000000000795060879


etcetc etc Castles and cake

____________

"The Puritans were English Protestants in the 16th and 17th centuries who sought to purify the Church of England of Roman Catholic practices, maintaining that the Church of England had not been fully reformed and should become more Protestant."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Puritans


" Originally, Puritan was a pejorative term characterizing certain Protestant groups as extremist. 

Thomas Fuller, in his Church History, dates the first use of the word to 1564. Archbishop Matthew Parker of that time used it and precisian with a sense similar to the modern stickler"

"Puritans should not be confused with more radical Protestant groups of the 16th and 17th centuries, such as Quakers, Seekers, and Familists, who believed that individuals could be directly guided by the Holy Spirit and prioritized direct revelation over the Bible.[12]


In current English, puritan often means "against pleasure". In such usage, hedonism and puritanism are antonyms.[13]

 Puritans embraced sexuality but placed it in the context of marriage. Peter Gay writes of the Puritans' standard reputation for "dour prudery" as a "misreading that went unquestioned in the nineteenth century", commenting how unpuritanical they were in favour of married sexuality, and in opposition to the Catholic veneration of virginity, citing Edward Taylor and John Cotton.[14]

 One Puritan settlement in western Massachusetts banished a husband because he refused to fulfill his sexual duties to his wife"

________


"The Pilgrims were the English settlers who came to North America on the Mayflower and established the Plymouth Colony in what is today Plymouth, Massachusetts, named after the final departure port of Plymouth, Devon. 

Their leadership came from the religious congregations of Brownists, or Separatist Puritans, who had fled religious persecution in England for the tolerance of 17th-century Holland in the Netherlands.


They held many of the same Puritan Calvinist religious beliefs but, unlike most other Puritans, they maintained that their congregations should separate from the English state church, which led to them being labeled Separatists. 

After several years living in exile in Holland, they eventually determined to establish a new settlement in the New World and arranged with investors to fund them. 

They established Plymouth Colony in 1620. The Pilgrims' story became a central theme in the history and culture of the United States."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pilgrims_(Plymouth_Colony)


"The Separatist movement was controversial. Under the Act of Uniformity 1559, it was illegal not to attend official Church of England services, with a fine of one shilling (£0.05; about £19 today)[4] for each missed Sunday and holy day. 

The penalties included imprisonment and larger fines for conducting unofficial services. The Seditious Sectaries Act of 1593 was specifically aimed at outlawing the Brownists. 

Under this policy, the London Underground Church from 1566, and then Robert Browne and his followers in Norfolk during the 1580s, were repeatedly imprisoned. Henry Barrow, John Greenwood, and John Penry were executed for sedition in 1593. "


"William Brewster found himself involved with religious unrest emerging in Scotland. In 1618, King James had promulgated the Five Articles of Perth which were seen in Scotland as an attempt to encroach on their Presbyterian tradition. Brewster published several pamphlets that were critical of this law, and they were smuggled into Scotland by April 1619. 

These pamphlets were traced back to Leiden, and the English authorities unsuccessfully attempted to arrest Brewster. English ambassador Dudley Carleton became aware of the situation and began pressuring the Dutch government to extradite Brewster, and the Dutch responded by arresting Thomas Brewer the financier in September. Brewster's whereabouts remain unknown between then and the colonists' departure, but the Dutch authorities did seize the typesetting materials which he had used to print his pamphlets. 

Meanwhile, Brewer was sent to England for questioning, where he stonewalled government officials until well into 1620. He was ultimately convicted in England for his continued religious publication activities and sentenced in 1626 to a 14-year prison term."

_________

"n the United States, members of the Delano family include U.S. presidents Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Calvin Coolidge, astronaut Alan B. Shepard, and writer Laura Ingalls Wilder. 

Its progenitor is Philippe de Lannoy (1602–1681), a Pilgrim of Walloon descent, who arrived at Plymouth, Massachusetts, in the early 1620s.

 His descendants also include Eustachius De Lannoy (who played an important role in Indian History), Frederic Adrian Delano, Robert Redfield, and Paul Delano.

 Delano family forebears include the Pilgrims who chartered the Mayflower, seven of its passengers, and three signers of the Mayflower Compact."

__________


George Soule (c. 1601 – between 20 September 1677 and 22 January 1679)[1] was a colonist who was one of the indentured servants on the Mayflower and helped establish Plymouth Colony in 1620.[1]

 He was one of the signers of the Mayflower Compact."

"It is known that George came on the Mayflower and was credited to the household of Edward Winslow as a manservant or apprentice, along with Elias Story and a little girl Ellen More, who both died in the first winter.[2][self-published source][3][4] George Soule was mentioned in Bradford's recollections of the Winslow group: "Mr. Edward Winslow; Elizabeth, his wife; and *2* men servants, called Georg Sowle and Elias Story; also a little girle was put to him, called Ellen, sister of Richard More".[5] He continues: "Mr. Ed. Winslow his wife dyed the first winter; and he is maried with the widow of Mr. White, and hath *2* children living by her marigable besides sundry that are dead. One of his servants dyed, as also the little girle, soone after the ships arrival. But this man Georg Sowle, is still living and hath *8* children".[6]


Earlier researchers into Soule's origin believed in the London association of Winslow and Soule.[7] Thus, based on this belief, and for five years ending in 2009, noted Mayflower researcher and biographer Caleb Johnson managed a fairly intensive search for Soule's English origins; he examined a number of likely 'George Soules' in various parts of England and subsequently concluded that the most promising candidate of all the 'George Soules' he reviewed was that of Tingrith, Bedfordshire, baptized in February 1594/5.[8]


More recent work in 2017 has identified the parents of George Soule through a high-quality Y-DNA match[clarification needed] of Soule with families in Scotland and Australia. 

Following up on research published by Louise Walsh Throop in 2009, the DNA study pointed to Soule's parents as Jan Sol and his wife Mayken Labis, who are identified by their marriage as Protestant refugees in London, England, in 1586 and by the baptisms of their children before 1600 in Haarlem, Holland.[9] 

Their eldest known son Johannes Sol is identified by his baptism in 1591, as well as by his permissions in both Haarlem and Leyden to marry in Leyden. Johannes Sol, a printer in Leyden with one known publication, died suddenly, probably while helping William Brewster in the presswork for the Perth Assembly.[9] 

His apprentice, Edward Raban, apparently fled to Scotland in 1619 in order to avoid being apprehended by agents of the King of England.

 It appears he was accompanied by the pregnant widow of his master and probably took with him the missing press of Brewster, as well as the telltale type and initials from Brewster; Raban also apparently took with him the Sol press and type.

 Edward Raban in 1622 published a very veiled version of his master's shocking death, well hidden in a discussion of drunkenness and resultant whoredom.[10]

 It would appear all helpers in the press work and distribution of "Perth Assembly" took an oath of silence that was never breached, even after King James I died in 1625.[11]


Some researchers have pointed to circumstantial evidence that George Soule's family may have had Sephardic (Converso) Jewish roots, due to "Sol/Soule" being a common Sephardic name[12] and "Soule" (the version George used in his will) being a Basque province.[13]

 Soule's daughter-in-law, Rebecca Simonson, daughter of colonist, Moses Simonson, may have had Jewish ancestry,[14][15] and Soule's printing colleague, Edward "Raban was from a Jewish-descended family in Germany."[16]

***

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sephardi_Jews


"The divisions among Sephardim and their descendants today are largely a result of the consequences of the royal edicts of expulsion. Both the Spanish and Portuguese edicts ordered their respective Jewish residents to choose one of three options:


to convert to Catholicism and be allowed to remain within the kingdom,

to remain Jewish and be expelled by the stipulated deadline, or

to stay and be summarily executed as Jews."


It is likely[according to whom?] that George's presumed father Jan Sol, who married as a refugee in 1586 in London, was the grandson of Jan van Sol.[citation needed] This Jan van Sol was a zealous opponent of Anabaptism, which he saw in 1550 as divided into three movements: the Melchiorites (the peaceful Mennonite group), the Davidites, and the Batenburgers.[17]

 Jan van Sol was born at Dordrecht, in South Holland, but left the Netherlands in 1530 because of debts (he kept an inn there) and went east to Danzig. There he was known as Johann/Jan Solius (the Latin version of his name). In 1536 he bought the "Robitten" estate near Bardeyn in East Prussia.

 He returned in 1550 to Brussels but may have spent his last years, until about 1556, in the territory of Preussisch-Holland. A presumed son born about 1525, and by naming patterns was probably named Georg, would have married about 1555 perhaps in Brussels, and thus would have been the father of Jan Sol of the 1586 marriage record in London. This Jan Sol and wife Maecken had seven children baptized in the Dutch Reformed Church of Haarlem in 1590–99"


".On 9/19 November 1620, after about 2 months at sea, preceded by a month of delays in and around England, they spotted land, which was the Cape Cod Hook, now called Provincetown Harbor. After several days of trying to get south to their planned destination of the Colony of Virginia, strong winter seas forced them to return to the harbor at Cape Cod hook, where they anchored on 11/21 November.[19]


On 11 November 1620, Soule and others signed the Mayflower Compact.[1] Soule and three others were under 21 years of age, and one of the three had a baptismal record showing he was just 20 years old at the time of signing. 

It appears the signers were members of a church group, where the age of membership was 18. The original compact was lost. It was published, without any signers' names appended, several times after 1620.

 It was not until almost 50 years after the signing that the Compact was published with the names of the signers.

 Thus the print work crew of Brewster, Winslow, Soule and others was sheltered from exposure to the agents of King James I of England. 

When finally published with all names of signers, only Soule was still alive from the print work crew."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Soule_(Mayflower_passenger)


https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c7/Sol%C3%A1-Pirineos_Atl%C3%A1nticos.svg



"The territory is named Xiberoa in Souletin Basque, Zuberoa in standard Basque, Sola in Gascon and Soule in French; all of them derivate from Subola, previous name of the region attested for the first time in the year 635 in the diaries of a Franco-Burgundian expedition led by Duke Arnebert against the Basques.

 Subola comes from the name the Romans gave to the Aquitani tribe that inhabited the region by the time of their arrival, the Suburates, also called Sibusates by Julius Caesar in his Commentarii de Bello Gallico and Sybillates by Pliny the Elder"

"Soule has been continuously inhabited since the last glaciation, there are several deposits from the neolithic as well as fifteen protohistoric settlements. The first text written in Soule dates from the 7th century.


Ancient Soule

The territory was already inhabited in the Middle Paleolithic; Neanderthal prehistoric settlements have been found in the caves of Xaxixiloaga in Aussurucq and Etxeberri. At the end of the Neolithic the population had extended and assimilated knowledge from other peoples. 

There are protohistoric settlements that show a simple material life and a lifestyle dominated by migration. Rests of coins and other monetary artifacts have been found, proving the existence of an exchange economy in Soule, which very likely worked as an access point between Aquitaine—Novempopulania—in the north and the southern side of the Pyrenees.

At the time of the Roman arrival in the 1st century, Soule was inhabited by an Aquitani tribe named Suburates, who spoke the Aquitanian language (a form of Proto-Basque). 

As with other peoples in "Aquitaine, the Romans had a somewhat important influence in the territory, although Soule kept its language and culture and was relatively unimportant during the times of the Roman Empire, due to its isolation. "

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soule

__________


Perth Assembly was a controversial book published by the Pilgrims in Leiden in 1619 the year before they departed in the Mayflower for Massachusetts; the book was smuggled into Scotland in wine vats.

[1] King James I was offended by the book which was critical of the Five Articles of Perth which had been ratified by the General Assembly in Perth in 1618 and forced the episcopacy form of church governance on Scotland.[2]

 The printer was Johannes Sol ("Soule") and the primary publishers were Thomas Brewer and William Brewster who went into hiding in 1619 before surreptitiously departing for Plymouth to escape threat of arrest. 

Other Pilgrims, such as George Soule (presumably the brother of the printer Johannes Sol), were also believed to have been involved in the printing of the book, and the controversy caused them to flee on the Mayflower and disguise their origins.[3] 

Johannes Sol's apprentice, Edward Raban, fled to Scotland in 1620 with Sol's pregnant widow after his death in a printing ink accident"






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