User:LizzieMack/sandbox
Supreme Judicial Council of Lebanon
Mistresses and Illegitimate Children
Edith
Matilda FitzRoy, Countess of Perche
Ansfriede
Ansfride's husband, Anschil de Severcuda, died in prison after angering William II and his lands were given away. Ansfride, now homeless and widowed, became Henry's mistress. https://www.google.com/books/edition/Domesday_People_Domesday_book/uiUScMEkEGoC?hl=en&gbpv=1&bsq=anschil%20de%20sevecurda
Richard of Lincoln (illegitimate son of Henry I of England) Born 1101
Sibyl Corbet
Sybilla of Normandy 1092
William
Rohese
Gundrada de Dunstanville
Edith FitzForne
Robert fitzEdith 1093
Isabelle de Beaumont
Isabel
Ede Greystone
wife of Robert d’Oilli
Hikenai
Mother Unknown
Robert, 1st Earl of Gloucester Born 1090 first kid
Matilda FitzRoy, Duchess of Brittany Date of birth?
Alice FitzRoy Date of birth?
William de Tracy
Chief Asa-havey | |
---|---|
Born | circa. 1820 |
Nationality | Comanche |
Other names | Asha-hab-beet; Esa-havey; Esihabitu; Milky Way; Starry Road; Wolf's Road |
Occupation | Chief |
Employer | Penataka band |
Known for | Captive exchanges |
Asa-Harvey was the chief of the Penataka band of Comanche.
Name
Asa-havey, when translated literally from Comanche, means "the wolf road". The Comanche used the phrase "wolf road"
Early Life
Almost nothing is known about Asa-havey's early life. He was most likely born sometime in the 1820's. In March of 1840, when he would have been a young man, his tribe, the Penataka, attempted to negotiate a deal with Anglo-Texans and sent a delegation of 33 chiefs and warriors, and 32 family members to San Antonio. Due to Anglo misunderstandings of Comanche culture a fight broke out resulting in 35 Comanche killed and 29 captured and imprisoned. It is unknown if Asa-havey was present at the scene, but it would have affected him deeply had he been there or not given the backlash the event caused in the Comanche community.[2]
Presumably, it was during this time that he left his "signature", a string of painted stars making reference to his name, at Paint Rock.
Chiefship
Asa-havey was peace chief of the Penataka band of Comanche by at least January 1846, when he signed the Treaty of Tehuacana Creek with the Republic of Texas along with Amorous Man, Old Owl, Buffalo Hump, Yellow Wolf, Santa Anna, Ketumse, and the Penataka war Chief Tosahwi.
The Clear Fork Reserve was created by the Texas Legislature in 1954 for his tribe, but it was attacked repeatedly by Anglo-Texans. In 1859 they were forced into Oklahoma.
In 1861, along with the Yamparika head chief Ten Bears, the Nokoni chief Horseback and Tosahwi, Asa-havey went to Fort Cobb where they met General Albert Pike of the Confederacy and signed a treaty with the Confederate States of America.
67-69 Fort Arbuckle
Fall of 1868 Fort Cobb
Feb 18th 1871 went to ft sill https://cdm17279.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p17279coll4/id/7199
March 28th, his wife dies
The Elm Creek raid 1864 Elonzo White, Mary, Cherry, and Charlie Johnson, Lottie and Millie Durgan, Elizabeth Carter Fitzgerald and her son Elijah https://books.google.com/books?id=bwpv7M66Z1MC&pg=PA36&lpg=PA36&dq=asa-havey+death&source=bl&ots=ZxvZmwurP0&sig=ACfU3U3BWqUClsAXE_GgM6s0ho7AHV88dA&hl=fr&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwioia_A3eniAhVC7qwKHWcNDck4ChDoATAEegQICBAB#v=onepage&q=asa-havey%20death&f=false
http://www.forttours.com/pages/white.asp Britt Johnson
- ^ Plains Indian Raiders: The Final Phases of Warfare from the Arkansas to the Red RiverSturtevant Nye, Wilbur
- ^ What Went Wrong? How Arrogant Ignorance and Cultural Misconceptions Turned Deadly Copeland, Cristen Paige