History of the families Millingas and Millanges of Saxony and Normandy, comprising genealogies and biographies of their posterity surnamed Milliken, Millikin, Millikan, Millican, Milligan, Mulliken and Mullikin, AD800-AD1907; containing names of thirty thousand persons, with copious notes on intermarried and collateral families, and abstracts of early land grants, wills, and other documents .. . 69, and the other of date 27th Jan., sisters Frances Milingas and Anabel Milingas, were associatedwith them in subsequent proceedings, both suits being based on transactionin 1643. In the sa


History of the families Millingas and Millanges of Saxony and Normandy, comprising genealogies and biographies of their posterity surnamed Milliken, Millikin, Millikan, Millican, Milligan, Mulliken and Mullikin, AD800-AD1907; containing names of thirty thousand persons, with copious notes on intermarried and collateral families, and abstracts of early land grants, wills, and other documents .. . 69, and the other of date 27th Jan., sisters Frances Milingas and Anabel Milingas, were associatedwith them in subsequent proceedings, both suits being based on transactionin 1643. In the same great repository of valuable documents was discovered thereference to a coat-of-arms assigned to John de Milligen and Caesar deMilligen who lived in the time of William the Conqueror, but from a districtof a foreign country, the name in the record being quite allegible, and aclause in the reference seems to have been in ridicule of the pretentioustitle of Caesar. At the time of the Norman Conquest, members of the Millanges andMilligen families crossed the sea and established themselves on the Englishand Scottish Border—in Cumberland, Northumberland, Ayrshire, Dumfrie-shire, and Gallowshire, where they have ever since lived and multiplied. In writing the history of this family after their settlement in GreatBritain, we are confronted by a problem difficult to solve, and the result of. PRINTERS MARQUE OF SIMON MILLANGES, 1540 COMPENDIUM OF FAMILY HISTORY. XXVII an extended investigation has diffused no additional light upon the sub-ject. We have stated that the family was represented in the border Shiresof England and Scotland soon after the Conquest; this fact is abundantlyproven by the frequent occurrence of the name in the early land we have found record in the documents deposited at the Lyon Office inEdinburg, of a James Mileyken, designated a Florentine, who was appointedby King David II. in 1360, Monetavious (coin maker and royal Banker)for life; and


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Keywords: ., bookauthorridlongtgideontibbett, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900