Hij is getrouwd met Isabella Denne (Earde).
Zij zijn getrouwd
Kind(eren):
Thomas Denne is your 18th great grandfather.
You
‰ ᆒ Geneva Allene Welborn (Smith)
your mother ·Üí Henry Loyd Smith, R1b1a2a1a1b
her father ·Üí Edith Lucinda Smith (Lee)
his mother ·Üí William "Will" M Lee
her father ·Üí Martha Lee (Collier)
his mother ·Üí Lucinda Collier
her mother ·Üí Elizabeth France Haskell
her mother ·Üí Elizabeth Haskell
her mother ·Üí Abigail Lydia Hammond
her mother ·Üí Abigail Swift
her mother ·Üí Thomas Gibbs
her father ·Üí Thomas Gibbs, Sr.
his father ·Üí Thomas Gibbs, Sr.
his father ·Üí Jane Gibbes
his mother ·Üí Alice Turney (Blechyden)
her mother ·Üí Margaret Blechynden
her mother ·Üí Avice Crispe
her mother ·Üí Thomas Denne
her father ·Üí John Denne of Denne Hill
his father ·Üí Thomas Denne
his father
https://www.geni.com/people/Thomas-Denne/6000000004670578270
Thomas Denne
Gender:
Male
Birth:
circa 1370
Denne Hill, Kingstone, Kent, England
Death:
1420 (45-55)
Denne Hill, Kingstone, Kent, England
Immediate Family:
Son of Richard Denne, of Denne Hill and Agnes Denne
Husband of Isabella Denne
Father of John Denne of Denne Hill and Thomas Denne
Brother of Michael Denne; John Denne and Richard Denne
Birthplace: Denne, Kingstone, Kent, England
Death: Died 1420 in Denne, Kingstone, Kent, England
HISTORY OF EARLY DEANE/DEAN FAMILY
1030-1050 , England
Sir Bathurst Deane, an ancient authority of the Deane, Dene, Dee, Dean family has asserted that there were only four distinct Den (Deane) families in Britian and all others are branches of those four roots. One branch came to England with the Danish invaders in the ninth century, another branch from Normandy at the time of the reign of Edward the Confessor.
It is recorded the family of Deane's is one of the ancient lineage and can be traced to 1039 A.D. authentically. The best documented of these four families is the one descended from Roberto de Dena, a Norman noble holding an official appointment at the court of Edward the Confessor.
The origin of the name "Dena" is unknown but is believed to mean "of the valley" in later periods. It is improbable that it was a British territorial surname as such were not in use at the early date of Richard de Dene. Proof of its Norman origin is that the names de Deana, de Den, de la Dene, Dentatus and Dentatum are all found in Norman records prior to the Conquest. Further proof of the Norman origin is that persons bearing these names who were living in England at the time of the Conquest were not deprived of their estates as were the Saxon families. From the tenth to the thirteenth century, the Norman prefix "de" or "de la" was used in conjunction with the name Dene or Dena, but as the Saxon element became more prominent in English society, the Saxon prefix "ate" "at" or "a" is frequently found.
After the abolition of feudalities by Henry VIII, the Norman prefix was abandoned and the Saxon prefix was absorbedinto the name as "Adene", a name now borne by a number of English families. About the time of Elizabeth I, the name Dene gradually became Deane, and later many individuals dropped the final "e". Michael Dene of Dene Hill in Dorset, changed the spelling of his name to "Denne" and his descendents have continued that spelling. The Denes of Horwood in Devon are the only branch of the family that retain the old and correct spselling.
The Deanes were of the landed gentry and a number of them held large estates, not only in Kent and Sussex, Hampshire, Northampton, Gloucester, Wilts and Devon prior to 1300 A.D. Early Coats-of Arms were usually very simple with colors limited to the color of the metal of which they were made: Iron (sable), silver (argent) and gold (or). Two of the earlier Dene coats-of-arms were: Black with a fesse silver, and silver with a fesse dancette gold. Later, other colors such as red, purple and green were also used. The crescents of the Crusades were later added and the next change came with the Lion of Lincoln taking the place of the fesse. The arms of Richard de Dene were: Red, a lion sejent graurdant gold, on a chief silver three crescents red. A variant of these arms show the lion rampant.
Richard de Dene was the head of the ancient House of London during the reign of Edward III (1327-1377). Among his descendants was the Most Reverand, His Grace, Henry Deane, Archbishop of Canterbury and Lord High Chancellor of England during the rign of Henry VIII. It is recorded that the Deanes of Somersetshire are a branch of Richard de Dene's line. One of it's lines also claim decent (by marriage) from the more ancient Danish line.
John Walter Deane, who settled in Taunton, Massachusetts in 1637, came from the vicinity of Taunton, Somersetshire, England. William Henry Deane, founder of the Maryland Deane (Dean) family and whose son, William Richard Deane, died in Dorchester County in 1699, was also a descendant of the Deane families of Somersetshire and Dorset, a well known British family of ship builders and mariners.
It has been asserted that the Massachusetts Deanes and those of Maryland were blood kin and of the same stock. B.F. Johnson, Inc., compilers of "Men of Mark in England" and "Makers of America" asserts that certain Deanes of Massachusetts and Maryland were were of the same Somersetshire family. This is confirmed by a statement in "New England Families" published by the American Historical Society. William Armstrong Crozier, Fellow of the Royal Society England, states that John and Walter Deane of Massachusets and William Henry of Maryland came from Somersetshire, England and gives the Coat-of-Arms, Crest and Motto properly appertaining to them, which proves this branch to be in direct descent from Richard de Dene of London. It follows that the Arms borne by them, recorded by Crozier and verified by independent English records, are those which properly appertain also to the Deane Family of Dorchester County Maryland.
Additional Source: "Ancestral File v4.19," database, FamilySearch (http://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.2.1/MZMS-WZB : accessed 9 September 2012), entry for Thomas DENNE.
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Thomas Denne
M, #94475, b. circa 1370
Father Richard Denne b. c 1325, d. 1391
Mother Agnes Apulderfield b. c 1343
Thomas Denne was born circa 1370 at of Denne, Kingstone, Kent, England. He married Isabel de Earde, daughter of Robert de Earde, circa 1405 at of Kent, England.
Family Isabel de Earde b. c 1380
Child
John Denne+ b. c 1420, d. Dec 1475
From: http://our-royal-titled-noble-and-commoner-ancestors.com/p3145.htm#i94475
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Thomas Denne | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Isabella Denne (Earde) |
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