Notes |
- Between 1381 and 1385
Thomas Ingram of Sneynton (Sneiton) chaplain to Thomas de Maperleye of Notingham, his heirs and assigns.
Quitclaim with warranty of all lands in Sneynton which Thomas de Maperleye has by feoffment
of John Ingram brother of the said chaplain and Isabel his wife.
Dated Sneynton, Whitsunday 6 Richard II.
County: Yorkshire.
Place: Westminster.
Date: Two weeks from St Hilary, 3 Richard [II] [27 January 1380]. And afterwards one week from Holy Trinity in the same year [27 May 1380].
Parties: Master Walter de Skyrlawe, clerk, Walter Frost and Adam de Bedale, chaplain, querents, and William de Wormeslay of Brampton' and Ellen, his wife, deforciants.
Property: 3 messuages, 2 tofts, 8 and a half bovates and 3 acres of land, 16 acres of meadow, 8 acres of pasture, 4 acres of wood and 12 shillings of rent in Molscroft, Beuerlay and Iuerthorp'.
Action: Plea of covenant.
Agreement: William and Ellen have acknowledged the tenements and rent to be the right of Walter Frost, of which the same Walter, Master Walter and Adam have the tenements of their gift, and they have granted to Master Walter, Walter and Adam the rent, together with the homages and all services of Thomas Lumbard', Thomas Frost, John Ingram and Isabel, his wife, and Richard Gentilman and their heirs, in respect of all the tenements which they held before of William and Ellen in the aforesaid vills, to hold to Master Walter, Walter and Adam and the heirs of Walter Frost, of the chief lords for ever.
Warranty: Warranty by William and Ellen and the heirs of Ellen.
For this: Master Walter, Walter and Adam have given them 200 marks of silver.
- (Research):Baptisms 1558 - 1899, Plumtree Parish Church, Nottinghamshire
12 DEC 1567 JOHN INGRAM EDWARD
Haplogroup R1a
The fabled haplogroup R1a - or, more precisely, its subclade R1a1 - is said to indicate a "Viking origin" when it is found among men of British descent. This is the haplogroup that will earn you a "Viking" certificate from Oxford Ancestors, and its presence was the main focus of the Capelli study "A Y Chromosome Census of The British Isles".
It is believed to have originated among the Kurgan culture of western Asia, which is often credited with spreading the Indo-European languages to northwestern Europe. The Kurgans were nomads with a pastoral economy, and to this day their descendants bear the genetic traces of a dependence on livestock and animal products. The incidence of milk tolerance among the Swedes, for instance, is among the highest in the world.
R1a Haplotype #31
Although the haplotype below has plenty of matches in Europe, none fall in Scandinavia. The top European matches, in fact, fall in The Netherlands and the Rhineland. There is also one each in London and Berlin. The other European matches fall in Eastern Europe. The Asian matches fall largely in India, but with one in Turkey and one of the Indian matches among Jat Sikhs - a group reputedly of Indo-Iranian origin. This haplotype, as it is R1a and does have matches in India, fits the bill for a British R1a haplotype of Norse Viking origin. On the other hand, certain peculiarities in its distribution - in the vicinity of the Rhine, in Turkey and Hungary, and among Jats - suggest a possible origin among the Indo-Iranians, such as the Alans and Sarmatians.
A third possibility, especially given the Dutch and the Northern Germanic matches, is that this haplotype is Anglo-Danish in origin, rather than Norwegian. (Note: Our Ingrams Exactly)
19 389i 389ii 390 391 392 393 385a 385b
16 13 31 25 10 11 13 11 15
Geographical Locale %
Friesland, Netherlands 2.27
Missouri, USA [European] 1.69
Strasbourg, France 1.01
Panjab, India [Jat Sikhs] .93
Southern India .82
Vilnius, Lithuania .64
Turkey .63
Singapore [Indian] .55
Budapest, Hungary .52
Warsaw, Poland .42
London, England .35
Berlin, Germany .18
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