Post by Zenobia on Jun 4, 2007 15:38:17 GMT -5
Just a few fast observations:
Reynold Trengove, s/o Reynold, seems to be conspicuously absent, altho' we know from his father's will that he had two children by 1693.
Anne Trengove marrying Richard Nicklas in 1670 must be Reynold's daughter, and she apparently perdeceased her father.
The 1682 marriage of Ruth, d/o of Samuel - I am wondering if the original read Nathaniel and the water damage obscured the"Na" leaving the 'thaniel' looking like Samuel....?
Since we know tha the father of Reynold and Nathaniel was James, then I will postulate that the James Trengove buried at Perranarworthal in 1686 is the son of Reynold and is a young adult, unmarried.
Your other James is almost certainly going to be the son of Nathaniel.
John marrying Anne Brode in 1665 is going to be the son of Nathaniel, and is probably the father of the later Nathaniel who married in 1692.
Now, after looking this over, I think it highly unlikely that James and Jacob are the same man. It would have to be based on the late baptism theory of Charles. I have seen a few cases of late baptisms in the 1800s, but so far in over 20 years research in Cornish records, I have only seen one case of late baptisms in the 1600s, involving 2 brothers in Gwithian, who between them had 5 children baptised as young adults. The one brother did not have his children baptised in infancy, and the other had only their births (not baptisms) recorded. In this particular case two sons of the one brother and one son of the other were all baptised together as 'adult persons' and just one year earlier the two young adult daughters of the one brother were baptised together (both ahd births recorded in the parish earlier). Perhaps Ian can supply us with some more examples of this occuring in the 1600s, but for the moment I think it rare.
So just based on what we have in front of us, I am going to place both Jacob and James as sons of Nathaniel.
Reynold Trengove, s/o Reynold, seems to be conspicuously absent, altho' we know from his father's will that he had two children by 1693.
Anne Trengove marrying Richard Nicklas in 1670 must be Reynold's daughter, and she apparently perdeceased her father.
The 1682 marriage of Ruth, d/o of Samuel - I am wondering if the original read Nathaniel and the water damage obscured the"Na" leaving the 'thaniel' looking like Samuel....?
Since we know tha the father of Reynold and Nathaniel was James, then I will postulate that the James Trengove buried at Perranarworthal in 1686 is the son of Reynold and is a young adult, unmarried.
Your other James is almost certainly going to be the son of Nathaniel.
John marrying Anne Brode in 1665 is going to be the son of Nathaniel, and is probably the father of the later Nathaniel who married in 1692.
Now, after looking this over, I think it highly unlikely that James and Jacob are the same man. It would have to be based on the late baptism theory of Charles. I have seen a few cases of late baptisms in the 1800s, but so far in over 20 years research in Cornish records, I have only seen one case of late baptisms in the 1600s, involving 2 brothers in Gwithian, who between them had 5 children baptised as young adults. The one brother did not have his children baptised in infancy, and the other had only their births (not baptisms) recorded. In this particular case two sons of the one brother and one son of the other were all baptised together as 'adult persons' and just one year earlier the two young adult daughters of the one brother were baptised together (both ahd births recorded in the parish earlier). Perhaps Ian can supply us with some more examples of this occuring in the 1600s, but for the moment I think it rare.
So just based on what we have in front of us, I am going to place both Jacob and James as sons of Nathaniel.