Monday, May 26

Ann JORDAN - b. 1765


Ann JORDAN1,2 was born2,3,4,5 in Dec 1765 in Lubenham, Leicester, England. She was christened2,5 on 13 Dec 1765 in Lubenham, Leicester, England. She died on 7 Oct 1845. She was buried5 in All Saints Churchyard, Lubenham, Leicestershire, England.
Thomas Knight b. 1765

Title: International Genealogy Index_Abbrev: IGI_Author: Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints Title: 1841 English Census_Abbrev: 1841 English Census_Page: Ann Knight, 75, Shopkeeper, resides with son, Thomas. Lubenham, pg. 20
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Email from Jeff Knight:
I have found evidence of Thomas Knight’s wife Ann and she is Ann JORDAN as I thought, (99% sure but at these dates in the UK there is little concrete evidence). She was born in December 1765 in Lubenham and was christened on 13 December 1765 at Lubenham Church. Her parents were William and Elizabeth JORDAN of Lubenham, (not John of Papillon Hall, Lubenham, as I had suspected ....probably his brother). The fact that Thomas and Ann’s eldest daughter was called Elizabeth also supports the mother’s name as this is very common in the family at the time.

Ann married (MRIN:125) Thomas KNIGHT1 about 1787. Thomas was born6 about 1761 in Of Portsea Island, Hampshire, England. He died6 on 23 Jul 1829 in Lubenham, Leicestershire, England. He was buried6 in All Saints Churchyard, Lubenham, Leicester, England.
Thomas worked2 as Baker.
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Email from Jeff Knight:

I have also discovered that Thomas was the local baker and Ann looked after the shop. The sons worked in the bakery as adolescent/young men before leaving to follow their own lives. After Thomas’ death, the “baker” role was taken by their son Thomas Nelson Knight (1799) and Ann lived with her son Thomas Nelson and his wife Elizabeth. They actually lived in a village called LAUGHTON which is a few miles north of Lubenham but still in Lubenham Parish, (despite it having its own church). Laughton is literally next door to Gumley, (a couple of miles), where the Jordan family originated. Thomas Nelson disappears in the 1840’s and William Jordan, previously a Silk Weaver ....(which tended to be a cottage industry undertaken on the basis of being paid for what you produce at home), becomes the baker, I assume taking over the baker aspect of the family concern previously undertaken by his brother. I did not find Thomas Nelson’s grave at Lubenham but, living at Laughton, he may be buried in Laughton churchyard?
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Thomas and Ann Knight attended the church in Lubenham. Thomas was one of the first members to rent a pew for his family when the new pews were added beteen 1810 and 1812. He and Ann and several of their children are buried in the churchyard there. 1810 All Saints Church, Lubenham, Leicestershire, England

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This is a medieval status name from the Olde English pre 7th Century "criht", meaning boy, youth or serving lad, later extended to mean a tenant bound to serve his lord as a mounted soldier and therefore a man of some importance and substance. Later still, with the changes in the social structure of medieval England, the term "knight", (Middle English "knyghte") meant an honourable estate conferred by the king on men of noble birth who had served him well. The "Knights" of today, however, are far more likely to be descended from a servant in a knight's household or from someone who played the part of a knight in a medieval pageant or won the title in some contest of skill. Early recordings of the surname from this source include: Walter le Knit (1200, Oxfordshire), William Knight (1221, Worcestershire), and John Knyght (1275, Suffolk). Over fifty Coats of Arms have been granted to this illustrious family, one of the earliest being that granted to Thomas Knight of Hol, Northampton, in 1546. The Arms are on a silver shield, on a fesse between three bulls' heads erased black, armed and ringed at the nose, gold, a fret between two doves of the field. The Crest is a dexter arm embowed, vested bendy wavy sinister of four gold and red supporting with the hand a sword in pale, the point resting on the wreath, the pommel surmounting a pair of spurs, all proper. The first recorded spelling of the family name is shown to be that of Godefridus Niht, which was dated 1166, in the "Norfolk Pipe Rolls", during the reign of King Henry 11, known as "The Builder of Churches", 1154 - 1189. Surnames became necessary when governments introduced personal taxation. In England this was known as Poll Tax. Throughout the centuries, surnames in every country have continued to "develop" often leading to astonishing variants of the original spelling.

Read more: <http://www.surnamedb.com/Surname/knight#ixzz2onxtZBPB>



1The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, International Genealogical Index (R), Copyright (c) 1980, 2002, data as of February 25, 2006.
2Jeff Knight, Jeff Knight (<jeff.knight@sfr.fr> Email and written coorespondance.).
31841 English Census, Ann Knight, 75, Shopkeeper, resides with son, Thomas.  Lubenham, pg. 20.
4Compiled by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, England, Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 (FamilySearch; (http://familysearch.org)), Family History Library, 35 North West Temple Street, Salt Lake City, UT 84150-3440.
5Compiled by: Find A Grave, Find A Grave (http://www.findagrave.com/), Find A Grave, PO Box 522107, Salt Lake City, UT 84152-2107.
6Compiled by: Find A Grave, Find A Grave.