Jamie Redknapp Discovers Ancestor Carried Out One Of The Largest Robberies In History | DNA Journey

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 4 ต.ค. 2024
  • Freddie Flintoff and Jamie Redknapp face a new kind of challenge - discovering each other's family history using DNA and genealogy - which throws up many surprises for them both.
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ความคิดเห็น • 4

  • @MariaTorres-ml9wz
    @MariaTorres-ml9wz 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Fred's the total package 😊 blessings to him n his family

  • @John83118
    @John83118 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I'm rejuvenated by the dynamic insights of this content. A book with related content inspired new ways of thinking. "Temporal Echoes: Amelia's Odyssey Through Ancestral Shadows" by Vivian Rosewood

  • @hobi1kenobi112
    @hobi1kenobi112 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I dunno, why is nobody telling Freddie Flintoff that Flintoff is a Yorkshire place name? His immediate family is obviously from Lancashire, fair enough, but they failed to inform him that his surname originates in North Yorkshire. The below is from the Surname Database:
    'This unusual surname has its origins in a now "lost" place in the North Riding of Yorkshire. The epicentre of the surname recordings appears to lie in the triangle formed by the villages of Kirby in Cleveland, Helmsley, and the town of Thirsk. The name translates as "the hill or mound ("hoh" or "hough" - Olde English pre 7th Century) where flints are found. Rather curiously the placename does not appear in the report by the Historical Commission on lost medieval villages updated to 1990. Nevertheless the name is well recorded in Yorkshire from the early 17th Century, and in a variety of spellings, including: Flintoft, Flintoffe, Fintoph, Flintiff, and in London as Flintuff. It is also widely recorded in Lancashire, but not until 1769, when Thomas Flintoff was a christening witness at Goosnarch, on July 16th of that year. The earliest recordings include John Flintkofe of Catterick, on November 3rd 1689, and William Flintoff of Great Ayton, who married Dinah Carter, on May 18th 1740. The first recorded spelling of the family name is shown to be that of Thomas Flintoffe, which was dated August 20th 1630, a witness at the christening of his daughter (name unknown), at Kirby in Cleveland, Yorkshire, during the reign of King Charles 1, known as "The Martyr", 1625 - 1649.'
    It takes all of 2 minutes to find this out on a basic Google search. And it would have been a nice, thoughtful angle to add. Furthermore flint is a product of chalk/limestone reactions, which is found in the county especially at the Eppleworth Flint Band of coastal Yorkshire, although the mineral itself is more widely found in the south of England.

  • @raheemabdul1066
    @raheemabdul1066 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    j