 It's Saturday. It is Saturday all day of the day. Did you know it's all day Saturday? All day to day. We're all just reading the comments now. Let's see what's here. Tommy is actually still here. Sometimes Tommy will come in and say he can't be here. That's right. I would say like others like it here, but I don't need to. Lisa already did. Yeah, that's right. If Kathy, Chris, my mom, Hilary, hi Hilary, June, Betsy. I heard Betsy had a Q&A a couple weeks ago. I saw that. Video Q&A. I have contacts. I've been wearing contacts more recently. So I have contacts in so I can see without glasses. That's right. This all takes me a while to get used to it. Like I have my face getting to seeing my face without glasses. It's weird. Yes, I was right the first time I said it. The trifecta of bifocals is weird. Yes, we used to be all I don't know if everyone had bifocals. Okay, that progresses. Yeah, and these are these are just my computer glasses. Computer and organ playing glasses. An organ playing that piano? Well, well, a piano too. Yeah, but on the organ because they're so far back and I have to be able to go so far across. When I try that with progressives, when I first thought progressives, I could only see one band of the music and all the rest of the notes were all blurry. And how is the foot pedal with those glasses? Can you see that? Well, the foot pedal, you just do it. You don't even look down at your feet. On the organ. On the organ, yeah. If you're doing it right, you don't look down at your feet on the pedals. You just feel, you just know where they go. It's like playing the trombone. You just sort of know where the position is. We had this huge organ at college and one of the professors was the organ professor and he was like a hobbit size professor and watching him, he literally like ran around that organ playing. It was crazy cool to watch. Oh, yeah. I mean, if he was that short, he'd hardly be able to sit on the bench. He did. He literally would skittle his bum back and forth all the way. It was crazy to watch. I always thought about the punchback. Oh, yeah. The name when I watched him play. How are you? What did you do when you were off? Did you do alligator wrangling again? No alligator wrangling. No, no alligator wrangling. Oh, wow. Not this time. So much for that rumor that we started. Yeah. I forgot what rumor we started last time. Yeah. It was, it was, it was llamas or alligators or something. Well, at least we know. I'll tell you what she was doing. She was gallivanting. Gallivanting. Gallivanting. Gallivanting. All over the place. Yep. Definitely was doing that. All over the place. My eyes hurt turn red and pop out of my face if anybody even mentions me wearing contact. So I, no, I can't wear contact. It was the glasses. You wouldn't be able to recognize me. It was a, it was a mission. My right eye. That was like gum. That was like gum. Valentino. Rudolph Valentino. Oh, yes. That's what you did, Greg. Oh, it wasn't. Am I, it was a mission trying to get the right, the right prescription in my right eye because my stigmatism is so weird that instead of going stronger with the, like the glasses, he says I actually need less astigmatism because contact sometimes. Yeah. I don't know. I hate the weird curve. Yeah. So I needed less prescription when usually I need more. So it was, it was a mission trying to get the right. Well, your mama's not hugging you, but she certainly has a smiley face for you. Yes. I love your mama. There's an interesting math and physics there, I think, Sarah, but I learned a little bit. Math and physics there? A lot of math. Well, in the difference between the glasses and the contacts and, you know, all the points. Oh my. That'd be fun, but no, we won't explore that now. Maybe a difference in a different segment. Were any of our ancestors opticians? Opticians. I got a number who were shoemakers, apparently. Shoemakers. What about you, Sarah? Opticians? No. No, I doubt it. What is, when I say, what is the family job? What jumps to mind? What is the... Well, a lot of, like, all of my dad's side were oystermen in Matthews County, Virginia. Yeah. A lot of, there was a few of those. Couple generations, that's what they did. I can say, I can say without a doubt that of the 55,000 million answers we had to the question of the week this week, not one of them was an oysterman. Well, I should have, I should have, adding that, I should have added that to the list. Yeah, so I'm going to share my screen and bounce over here. Let's get that going. Does that lead into the question of the week, Mags? Was that a segue? That was a segue. Wow. I thought it was quite the good thing. You didn't even realize that. You didn't realize it at all. Wow. How good are we? I'm having troubles here. Okay. Lisa says her stigmatism rotated during her second pregnancy. Oh, wow. Rotated? She rotated around the child? Is that what happened? Your eyes were just like, I'm just going to turn this way. Yeah, really. So here's our question of the week. Obviously, I already started asking people about opticians. I was trying to say, well, I thought I did a good job. You did a great job. That was a great job. Bang on. Lynette has oystermen too. Oh, wow. Lynette, a question of the week. Is there an occupation that was in your family for generations? Not what, what, but for generations? And there are 85 answers, literally five pages of answers. And I didn't pick, I didn't pick one as a favorite, but I think that my favorite is Way over here on page four, five. Let me, I don't know if I can find it. It should be easy to find. This one is my favorite one. Sorry. It's just because it was written in German. I loved it. So here I'm going to, I'm going to favorite this one. Make sure that you go through and upvote these great answers. What does, what does it say though? What does it say? Jimmy Sweep. Oh, yeah. Yeah. So I'm going to go through and we're going to go back to the first page, hopefully. Now I'm going to make everybody sick by scrolling too fast. There we go. I'm going to go to the very first page and it doesn't look as good when it gets formatted for best answer. It just looks so pretty and fine. My family were Jimmy Sweeps. Oil field workers got that one in there. Let's see. Printing business. Tommy Buck. Tommy, where are you? Oh, he's here. I haven't seen him answer again. No, Tommy's in here though, but Tommy Buck printers and he carries on the business. Oh. So if you need anything printed, let's give Tommy Buck a call. They probably don't print for just low down people like us. You never know. That's my current job printing. Let's see. Civil servants. Farmer, farmer. Marty Frank. Pip Shepard says he's a let head. I actually put that in. In a minute you'll see it. Hopefully Pip. Virginia Fields says farmers. Fisherman. Matthew Sullivan. Gardner. Shoemakers. Agricultural laborers. For a split second I thought in the trees I'm like, okay, what agriculture do you have to climb a tree for? But no, that wasn't it. That was Hillary Gadsby. I would love to see Hillary climbing trees. I bet she did a lot as a kid. Let's see. Lawyering. Being a lawyer. Lawyering. We had a lot of tanners come up. Farmers, farmers, farmers, farmers, coal miners. Teaching. Anonymous Mara Hoof. Teaching was one. Make sure we get through and up vote these great answers. Sheriffs. Law enforcement. People. And she goes back to the Plantagenet. That's anonymous pulling in. Let's see. Carpenters. Got that a lot. Thomas says the family business for a few generation was an ice company. I did not have that in the list. You should have answered that Thomas Colonel. Ice company. Ice makers. Well you know up here that was people would bank their ice. They would build these crazy little sub earth level so it would be below the frost level and they would build these ice houses sunken in the ground. They'd go out into the lakes in the wintertime and they would actually go out with a whole bunch of people from the village and they would cut up ice so that in the summertime they had ice to carry them over winter or if they had a crop that they had to protect they would do that. No taste no smell. That's fun. Colonel on ice. Wow. Artificial. How do you make artificial ice? Is that one that's made in ice cube trade? Yeah. Everybody knows that. Maritime occupations. Navy. Tobacco farmers. Can I have some of those? Yeah I know it's spelled with an O but we pronounce it tobacco. Ice pronounced tobacco too. Yeah farmers farmers farmers. So we've got so many great oh and here's one. My son is the fifth prosthesis. Prosthetic. Prosthesis. Prosthesis. I'm going to rename that one is the best. There were so many answers so many good answers that I did something special this time. I can actually move it over here. I created one of those word bubbles. Yeah word cloud. Word clouds yeah. And every time I saw an answer I put it in the list so what this word cloud does is it takes the words that appear the most and makes them biggest the most. The most biggest. The most biggest. Well we can see which one the farmer. Oh yeah. I had a baking challenge. There was a line of about seven town musicians that's cool. Yeah I don't think anybody in my family ever played for professionally until we get down to my level. My siblings and I have all played professionally but you hear my grandfather saying that the only thing they ever could do was sit on the porch and play music. The TV or radio up in the Appalachian so that's what they grew up with. So here's the list basically based on all of our answers the biggest words are the most common. So farmer wins. So it's the most common repeating occupation in people's families. Farmer, coal miners are big. Ministers big. Let's see worker. Worker probably has another word connected to it like master carpenter should be master shipbuilders coachbuilders coachbuilders John Kynars family. Gover Smith wagon maker. Textiles was big. Fireman wasn't but that was in there. We have firemen in my inlaw family. Is that one German one at the bottom the yeah the Schornstein Fegermeister. Military workers drapers weavers tanners teacher was another big one which is also nice to see minister was big. Yeah coal miner was big. Just workers just workers. Yeah worker and that's probably metal worker could be metal. I use that was metal workers so there were lots of metal workers. It looks like wagon cloth maker but no we don't have any wagon cloths. Blacksmith didn't come up as much as I thought it would but it did come up. Fishermen didn't come up as much as I thought it would. Will Wright, Grocer, Farrier interesting how it threw them in the middle. Yeah that's kind of neat. Yeah so there's oil. There's like inside the M there. I see oil and rail. Yeah so those are probably gun makers. Yeah bell makers soda makers soda. Yeah somebody had and they work for their family owned a bottling company so they made soda. There's the chimney sweep. I did it in English as well. Engineer I don't see my dad oh yeah here he is my dad architect but my dad's father was a master carpenter. It's kind of related. Yeah so yeah but my dad you know what my dad didn't want to be an architect when he went to school. You know what he wanted to do? He's quite the artist. He is very good at drawing and in painting and he wanted to be a comic extra maker. I was going to guess that. He wanted to do comics so he could have done the next Charlie Brown. You know he got into school and they didn't have that as an option. So he said okay I'll be an architect. Still drawing. Yeah still drawing yeah and still on the same big easel or whatever right? Mindy is here. Hi Mindy. Hi Mindy. So yeah so this is really cool. Very neat. If you want to check this all out you can look back through and freeze frame on the video. Dad was a banker his dad was a draftsman. Wow. I worked for my dad when I was young. They're drafting for him. I mean really young like I grew up under his. You were this big? Right. Yeah and his my dad's company he created a company with his best friend from Clemson and that company is still going quite strong now even though all the primary people that started it are out. So Craig Gould and Davis Architects if anybody. We have offices in Maryland and South Carolina yeah so it's going strong. But yeah the Schrodinger Meister was my favorite because just because of that word that's law enforcement. Some of the words didn't when I put them in together like law enforcement it didn't um didn't keep them together so maybe next time I do one of these there were just so many answers I needed to do something fun so I thought that would be fun. That is neat. We're coming. Lisa says civil engineer got to see drawings that my grandfather did yeah yeah um so Lisa when they did the bridge were you like I was like because I did the same job in the States I was like glued to the TV set the whole weekend watching the bridge because that's what I did I worked for the DOT. Betsy Coase says she loves word clouds thank you. Aaron says my father was a firefighter. What was your father's father a firefighter? That's a good question. I also had an engineer and my uncle was an engineer as well. Mechanics Jack of all trades dentist I didn't see dentist in any of the lists. Oh yeah. Was your was was your was your mom a vampire? Chris? Oh yeah I know. Oh he was a hematologist. Yeah probably yeah. G Stutt she says she's a second generation banker can I borrow some money? Anyway so that was that's the question of the week kind of did it different this week because there were so many answers so there you go. Very neat. And I'll stop my share. Okay. Ooh that was fun. That was cool. Farmers all. Farmers all lots of farmers yeah. I think everybody has farmers. You go back far enough yeah that's the what else yeah we're all farmers at some point. We're all farmers. Four hundred gatherers. Unless you unless you're we're like royalty you're like honest people yes yeah. Chris Ferriolo I did have tinkers in in the list my grandfather in law was a tinker. A tinker. Yeah so he did you know let's see Karen Lowe says steelworker. I see stairs on the smokestacks to maintain the gas cleaners. My my spouse's great grandfather was the man who went up into the Victoria tower to manually ring the bell in the Victoria tower and there's a newspaper article about how he was physically adept at the job because he was big and bulky but in a small package. He had to be able to get up these weird places so. So he was dense. Yeah. Bookshop. ArchEVO was his name. Bookshops. Librarians yeah. A literature professor Thomas Carnelline. So it's arriving in books. Locksmith. Yeah I didn't see any writers. Hmm interesting. Yeah great interesting question of the week. Very neat yeah. Over to you Greg because I know you're over to me. I guess it is another a generational occupation. What's writers. What Greg is about to talk about again. Oh that is so true. In a way yeah so the theme of the the profiles of the week I mean very timely. Does anyone put these together. It's like she has second sense but so the the question is you know which Elizabethan are you most closely connected to and the primary person was Elizabeth the first and the reason for selecting this topic for this week was because Elizabeth the first her birthday was September 7th which was this week but how timely because the very next day September the 8th is also the day that we lost Elizabeth the second so the two Elizabeths the first and the second are all connected by one day apart huge life events so so now Elizabeth the first was she the longest reigning Monarch in England. After Elizabeth the first I think Victoria was Victoria was the longest I got to look that up. Yeah I'm pretty sure Victoria was was the longest until Elizabeth the second pastor lapped her. Yeah that's what I just said was Elizabeth the second the longest. Oh Elizabeth the second yeah you said first no Elizabeth the second is the longest. I probably did say first. Yeah um so uh yeah anyways Elizabeth the first also known as Elizabeth Tudor was born in 1533 from in Greenwich in Kent England she's the daughter of Henry the 8th and Anne Boleyn and she passed away in 1603 at age 69 so she was she was Queen of England from 1558 to 1603 so she had a pretty good reign there are 45 years she was preceded by her half sister Mary Mary the first who was also a daughter of King Henry the 8th and between Henry the 8th and Mary the first there was also a son I think Edward the 6th who had a fairly short reign because he passed away as a teenager he had ill health but of course everyone connected with Henry the 8th there was a lot of politics a lot of whys of Henry the 8th many who didn't you know didn't go quietly into that dark night Anne Boleyn being one of them Anne of course was famously beheaded because she was accused of being a traitor or treasonous because she wouldn't give him a son and then she was beheaded so she kept on going until he he he did have a son who was sickly and as I said became King briefly so the Queen who was before Elizabeth the first Mary was the daughter of his first wife Catherine of Aragon and anyways there's a whole pile of history there and you can read up on that it's well described in this profile of Elizabeth the first but also in the profiles of Henry the 8th and all the other people connected with that so she was Elizabeth the first known as Gloriana remembered as one of England's most influential monarchs she was a direct descendant of the Tudor line through Henry the 8th and her 45 reign was colourised by great successes and a jubilant Elizabethan Elizabethan age unlike previous sovereigns the receipt of the crown would not come as a simple birthright for Elizabeth which which is code for saying there was a lot of politics and a lot of nasty things went on before she became Queen but once she got the position she held it and and it was good for the the kingdom one would suppose but you'll notice from her profile there is no husband and there are no children so our current Monarch Charles III and his his mother before Elizabeth the 2nd are not direct descendants of this Elizabeth they are in fact first cousins multiple times first cousins removed because they share Elizabeth the first grandfather is the direct Henry the 7th is the direct grand direct great great great of the current line of monarchs in case you're interested and so let's talk about Elizabeth the 2nd who just passed away this past Thursday Her Majesty Elizabeth Alexandra Mary Windsor Queen Elizabeth the 2nd born in 1926 21st of April 1926 in Mayfair London and passed away of course this past Thursday 8th of September in Balmoral Castle peacefully as of this Queen died peacefully at Balmoral this afternoon and the King and the Queen concert concert will remain at Balmoral this and really return to London tomorrow which they did yesterday yes so I have a quick a quick family fact for you the royal family and my family are very closely connected in that the Queen mother Elizabeth the 2nd's mother was born in the year 1900 and my grandmother was born the year 1900 Queen Elizabeth was born 1926 as was my mother and I was born in the same year as her youngest son Prince Edward so we all we all and in fact Queen Elizabeth passed away on the September 8th at age of 96 and my mother if she had lived would have celebrated her 96th birthday two days earlier on the 6th of September so we've always had a close affinity to the royal family because of the years and how that matches up if we ever needed to remember how old the the monarch was we just had to think back to our own family and figure out your closest on the connection finder is Francis quarrels yes seems like everybody's closest to Francis quarrels it looks like oh really Sarah your closest is uh Francis Drake oh and my closest is where are you well either Mary Stuart or wait no Francis quarrels or George Bose hmm oh no Francis Walsingham is my closest interesting a lot of Francis's there's a lot of Francis there was a popular name back then and that goes through my Kimball's back yeah cool and we were talking before this the thing do you have a direct connection to Elizabeth the second as it turns out I do in fact I do if you're not familiar with this um when you're on someone's page you just have to go under their this menu item here with their their ID and go down to relationship to me and when you click on that it'll tell you I am 16th cousins five times removed with Queen Elizabeth the second we're cousins I'm 11 million in line for the throne very a lot of people have to die for you what's that a lot of people are gonna have to die if you're gonna I know I forgot I was muted I think I've been talking and oh no sorry so um you can go through all that so it goes back to for me goes back to 1330 to find our common ancestor I have 12 ancestors in common with Lake Queen but some of you have many more ancestors in common right next yeah yeah I'm oh you mag just muted herself I have like uh let me look at that real quick um because I went away from it I have Windsor 1 right yeah I was 11th once removed from 11th once removed and I have like 3000 connections or I forgot what it was it's some huge numbers it was it was over 100 yeah I'm a million no I don't want to research oh here we go I've got um where is it that it's 130 common ancestors wow and you can find that down at the bottom of that page yeah yeah go down or it says explore more so you have 12 more common ancestors I've got 12 yeah and then you can choose that just means that more people have worked on those lines and connected my family I got through the Kimbells and the Kimbells and the Galdons and all of that or somehow we're all closely connected so that's that's fine I don't usually knock on Liz's George door when I'm there so no not usually but now I'd have to knock on Charlie's door so Charlie Charlie oh he's Charlie already yes so this is one of the things they've changed recently with the relationship finder it used to always keep your when it finds your relationship it it says what the closest one is right because that and a default to that in this drop-down list right and mine was about 16 cousin five times removed um and when you pick the different option down here it used to keep the one that was closest up top but now what it does is it it names the relationship based on the the description or the um the descendants that you've chosen or the ancestry of chosen here so this with this common um Bernard Bernard then do is with him as the common ancestor the relationship is is renamed his 22nd cousin five times removed so that's kind of cool so then you can see all the different types of cousinship um so I just thought that was a neat neat little Francis quarrels is almost a straight line she yeah well I actually um yeah for me there's only one marriage in between there I'm going to show that yeah me too yeah oh you too eh yeah wow so the next one in the Elizabethan group um is Mary Queen of Scots Mary Stuart Queen of Scots which is my closest connection on the connection finder Mary was closest for you mm-hmm oh neat so she was born in Lilith Gal Palace in West Lothian Scotland daughter of James Stuart and Marie guys uh was married three times one of them to Henry Stuart um and her third husband was the one that sort of got her in trouble um anyway she was uh she was the daughter of James the fifth of Scotland and Mary of guys uh two of the brothers died in infancy and that's why she was uh became Queen of Scotland uh her mother acted as a regent until she became uh of age and she was also the queen consort of France currently uh because she was and she was sent to France grew up in luxurious French court and so that that's also part of where I the Scots in the French I've always had a long-standing alliance um so the goes through the details here of um of her of her life she when she married her she made her second husband Henry Stuart who was a grandson of Margaret Tudor and so that united the Tudor family um unfortunately her second husband died mysteriously and then she was when she married her third husband he was sort of the prime suspect in her in the second husband's murder and Mary it was suspicious whether Mary was uh implicit in that or not they married like a few months after his her previous husband died so yes and in fact she gave birth to a son but the son was conceived by the second husband oh maybe so well well hopefully hopefully because that son um then became um he actually became the James the first of England because the first husband or the second husband was a Tudor so that's how the connection was made um so but be she's a great she was the great granddaughter of Henry the seventh this Mary Queen of Scots um so that's made made her a cousin to Elizabeth the first um and so that's why there was sort of that rivalry between Elizabeth the first and Mary Queen of Scots and um because Elizabeth brought back the Protestant religion as the official religion Catholics in England didn't like that and they wanted um they wanted a Catholic queen which was Mary Queen of Scots um and there was a plot and in fact that um there was a plot to assassinate or get rid of Elizabeth the first um and eventually Mary Queen of Scots was uh was brought on trial for that treason and that's why she was killed in the tower sadly it was so much so much drama so much drama so much drama anyways there we go that's why they made a show out of it yeah that's right multiple shows those royals are just drama queens drama queens yeah so Anthony Babington I moved his uh he was one of Babington yeah so that's not a name I didn't actually know before he was one of the he was the chief mastermind of the English Catholics who were plotting to assassinate Elizabeth the first uh and replace her with uh Mary Queen of Scots but uh he was executed for treason along with his co-conspirators and and Mary so that's his claim to think fame or fame or infamy maybe more like it yeah that's where he got in and then um another famous Elizabethan mithin Francis Drake world that's the one I'm closest to ah cool so now he's a world world famous explorer and you do like to go off and explore places Sarah so there we go that's make sense yes you've traveled from coast to coast in the states right you were you were up in Washington state weren't you no I was just in um I was in um this Tampa Florida I just drove four hours oh okay but no not not recently but before like you had a a business Oregon Oregon Oregon that's almost kitty close very close yeah have you seen the Pacific Ocean yes I went I kind of swam when I went to California but it was too cold Pacific Ocean there you go you're going all lots of travels traveling lots of traveling uh so he's born about 1545 I'm guessing that means that we don't actually have birth records that go that far back um and died on the 20th of January 1596 at about 51 that's pretty young but maybe that's not so young on a ship the Defiance Portobello Panama um yeah famous Elizabethan sailor navigator first Englishman to circumnavigate the globe um and a celebrated admiral and Queen Elizabeth's reign son of Edmund Drake was a vicar and his pedigree may be found and there's a reference right there so all of these profiles because they're so far back and um and very famous people are quite well done I'm not going to go through and read them all and you'll you can you're welcome to do so because they're really well done and very informative I love the uh these types of old paintings or illustrations they're very cool looks like this was taken from a book probably right and then of course another famous Elizabethan uh William Shakespeare uh and of course because the Elizabethans are full of drama it's not it's no surprise that one of the best dramas of all time takes their profit on their drama would profit on their drama there you go that's a good good answer excellent yes the bar of Avon uh born about 23rd of April 1564 in Stratford upon Avon Warwickshire England and died the same day uh just 52 years later on 1616 oh not a cool number um again Stratford upon Avon so it doesn't look like he moved very much uh or at least he came back to where he started if he had widely considered to be the best English language writer and dramatist of all time prolific writer enduring contributions including 154 sonnets that's a lot of son and popular plays such as Romeo Juliet Merchant of Venice was the first one I studied in school um uh the Scottish play of course I don't know if we're allowed to say the name of it on uh on live on wiki tree or not first uh Shakespearean play that you guys studied um I think everybody always does Romeo and Juliet first I feel like really at least I was not studied but at least like red oh yeah we're like my favorite is love's labor's loss because it has my favorite quote oh what's what's that that have been at a great feast of languages and stolen the scraps that's great I think one of my school had me study was King Lear yeah I think Hamlet may have been my first or the one I remember the best English yeah and bao I remember starting at bao or wolf and working our way up oh wow bao wolf I like that one I know it's not Shakespeare but you know yeah yeah so we started in uh grade 10 was the merchant of Venice for us and then we did do Hamlet and then Macbeth um Judy says that Hamlet was her first yeah and that um wow so what and uh people in the comments that are putting down Hamlet's what else have you guys in the we're watching what was your first Shakespearean we wonder hey David Dodd who was your what was your first Shakespeare my I was the merchant of Venice the quality of mercy is not strained it falls like a gentle rain from heaven oh yeah but that's how I did the Shakespeare plays too in AP English uh Lisa didn't like Shakespeare well anybody want M&M's yeah yes please so we didn't I didn't study Romeo and Juliet in school but um when I was teaching um it was in the curriculum for grade 11 I think and they did it alongside West Side Story so the parallels between the two oh that's interesting yeah so it was very cool because one was obviously based on the other so that was neat moving on to the other Francis the most well connected Francis apparently in the Elizabethan age born the 8th of May 1592 in Romford Essex England um son of James Quarrell and Joan Dalton died before the 8th of September 1644 at about the age of 52 so that seems to be about the general age of these people who was a well known poet of the Elizabethan era educated at Christ College Cambridge where he received a B.A. degree he was he was appointed as a cupbearer on the mission to escort Elizabeth the daughter of James I to Heidelberg to marry the elector right over the 5th they returned to England after the situation on the continent soured his first important work was a feast for worms I'm sure that was a big seller but it's a paraphrase of the book of Jonah and that's interesting well I guess if you're swallowed by a of a dish then maybe you become a feast for worms I don't know um they've been uncovering some monks that the monks were supposed to or or the people that lived in those uh uh the the monasteries usually had high level of living right because they were given lots of great food and stuff and they've done an archaeological dig recently at one of these great monasteries in England and they found that the monks were all riddled with worms oh really from bad food so oh no not interesting that is interesting wow determine royalism political writings um uh oh but then he was his house was searched for subversive writings and his manuscripts were burned but he still died of natural causes so he wasn't beheaded or or anything like that was buried in the church St. Olaf that's a lot of children yeah nine children first wife and eight by a second that's a lot of children 17 yeah I think one of our last we two of our profiles last week had 17 children um wow crazy um but anyways he's the one who's most connected to a lot of people so here is he's 18 degrees from me just only one jump yeah that's only one jump you see the color only changes once from the green to the yellow so that means there's only one marriage in between so you're an in-law of course yeah so there I always love to go and hit the alternative view um and when you look at that then you can see that Francis's great-grandfather's wife's aunt okay here we go into an AJ Jacob's family relationship is my 10 times my grandmother my his great-grandfather's wife's aunt was my 10 times great-grandmother so that is a lot of time I'm going to put Aaron's favorite you didn't say favorite comment on my relationship is to to Francis I don't think he said it was his favorite I think it was the first one he studied unless it is his favorite so so there you have it so Elizabeth here she's the linchpin so she is actually directly connected to me so she would be my uh what would she be she would be a first cousin nine times removed of mine and she would also be the great-grand the great-grand great-grand great-grandmother of Francis the greatest grandmother the greatest grandmother oh okay I'm just gonna keep putting Aaron's answer up that comment it can be used about a lot okay hey hey Jory okay I'm going to um speed through these other ones so we have time for pictures hold on a second hold on a second okay another Mindy Mindy actually commented on how she loved how they dressed in the Elizabethan era look at that oh yeah yeah look at that collar my goodness that cannot be comfortable and this is my really my closest he was the secretary to Elizabeth I guess oh wow a third Francis a third Francis really yeah I wonder is it just used to catch crumbs so like when you're eating yeah and then you can grab some later for snacks yeah that's right uh so this Francis was born about 1532 in the Scadbury Park Chiselhurst Kent England um son of William uh Walsham and Joyce Denny uh and he died at the age of 58 oh a little bit older um uh 6th of April 1590 in the city of London seething Lane I love that that the name of that yeah the other place in seething Lane oh my wow right next to Scowling Street yeah oh my goodness um so he was a paternal he was a maternal cousin to Princess Elizabeth isn't that nice raised by a stepfather um and he spent most of it of Queen Mary's reign abroad and then he became a close advisor to the young queen um and did you made another widow he was the principal secretary to Queen Elizabeth the first from 1573 until his death and his popular remember this her spy master so have you done any spying mags she did it very like I don't believe her the not yeah that's right yeah oh no he was buried in St Paul's with each one oh and then you can actually look on his will so that's pretty cool apparently it's still in the city uh Chris Ferriero asked if that address still exists seething Lane and it just it brings me a bunch of hotels near the tower oh interesting Matthew Hutton is our next one born 1529 in Priest Hutton Wharton Lancashire England owner that's that place was named after his family ah oh because of the Hutton yeah I wonder so was one of his four bears a priest even I don't know interesting he was thought to have been born in 1529 uh the son of Matthew Hutton he had two brothers um doesn't don't know where he had his early education but there's his titles novice pre-bendery uh rector uh dean of york pre-bendery so what's a pre-bendery that is a good question what is it what pre-bendery look up pre-bendery is that a canon or of a cathedral or a collegiate church whose income originally came came from a pre-bend huh so a can so an honorary can a canon is like a dean right so he's like a dean of a church then became a bishop or an archbishop because he started he was started off originally as appointed as chaplain and obviously moved up to bishop and then he was the dean of york the dean of york and it was all very political then too yes yeah bishop archbishop of york um this must be Anglican because he's married in children yes children married with children that sounds like a good name for a teacher yeah it does this time it's going to be with elizabeth elizabeth and garb yeah that's right it was said it was easier to change the color of the collar than it was to change the clothes so they would have lots of collars and they would switch their collars oh isn't that interesting that's smart hillary oh they wouldn't change their clothes of course not they just just never bathe those people wow that's why they had all the powder mm-hmm and that's why they died from the bleach in there they wanted to be as white as possible how opposite we are now yeah wow so Helena uh Helena gorgeous um snacking board um the markiness of northampton was born about 1549 in Östergutland Sverga in sweden um and she passed away at the ripe old age of 86 back then on the 10th of april 1635 in summer set in england um she was a maid of honor true princess cecilia of sweden and she traveled with a mistress at the request of queen elizabeth um and then became enamored uh that william enamored um was and wanted to marry him but wouldn't uh couldn't until his first wife passed away couldn't marry her um still young and now rich entitled Helena had many admirers for choice being thomas gorgeous of longford and the queen apparently approved the match at first and then changed her mind but they secretly married uh unfortunately unfortunately the husband got imprisoned because of that because it went against the uh the queen's wishes um she was the chief mourner at elizabeth the first funeral i bet she was but i was in jail that's a that's a title you can be the chief mourner like the most morning yeah but she was uh she she may have been imprisoned but she her she was back in favor and when thomas was released so i guess i guess they made up look at that that's pretty uh pretty impressive garb for a mourner i guess next next uh chat you do online i want we want to see you in some elizabeth and garb not me st george the sheriff yorkshire um burges of gneresboro and morpeth and constable of barnard castle born in 1527 england somewhere um died about the 20th august 1580 at the age of 53 in stritlum durham england and he was the share uh his cream of fame as the sheriff of yorkshire and uh mary twice um oh there's a nice little family tree there that we could go into we wanted to and uh so it was a night provost uh he escorted mary quino scott's from carlough to bolton in his harsh treatment of the captor rebels gave him an unsavory reputation i wonder if he was the model for the sheriff of nottingham you know the of the character from robin hood tales if he was treated um and then the last one is lettuce lettuce lettuce lettuce lettuce let's go lettuce lettuce sound better than lettuce i like some lettuce on lettuce pray lettuce play ball lettuce the countess of essex and lycester um was born in henley on tames uh oxfordshire england in uh november 1543 passed away on christmas day 1634 at the age of 91 okay so i think she well except for elizabeth second who died at 96 i think she wins the race for the oldest surviving person that looks like lettuce around her her oh yeah that's right put lettuce leaves along her collar okay her father was um her father had to go into pro uh exile because he was a protestant during the reign of mary the first because she was a catholic queen and had reinstored restored catholicism as the official religion briefly apparently had an affair but wasn't dudley the elizabeth it wasn't dudley elizabeth's favorite i i thought so too or wait a second elizabeth uh no mary queen of scots was had a connection with dudley no okay i think didn't she have a dudley here oh no maybe not oh well that we had seen dudley before somewhere here yeah um but she did so apparently she married robert dudley and they had one son uh oh and she was someone else that elizabeth of course was displeased with this is becoming a theme um she had a third husband um yes it was robert dudley and queen elizabeth had an affair uh first deal at earl of leester sorry okay her well was uh her possessions were valued at six thousand six hundred and fifty pounds showing her a very wealthy woman at the time of her death that's probably a lot of money back then i would think so it's nothing to sneeze at now even so anyways there we have it a long protracted elizabethan tour so you have six minutes to do photos that's okay there weren't that many but it's a good one okay are there animal facial hair we saw some good elizabethan men with some facial hair let's see let's share that screen okay just have seven images to look at so we can do that in five minutes so if luke gates he also wins for best a hat from he's from london he's from england oh nice okay great james harley Bartlett from new brinswick canada yay you had to have a big facial beard to stay warm mm who better us women would be crowned upon to the full beard to keep us warm luvious luvious luvious yeah i guess morris and his actual first name he goes by evangel evangel luvious morris huh so that's the male version of evangeline i guess it's a scruffy one scruffy this guy i saw this one earlier santa santa beard he has a santa beard i don't say where when but let's look at his profile tennessee and illinois mm-hmm that's great that that pop-up now has so much information in it a when you hover over yeah yeah i do like that so let's see i don't think everybody in this photo has facial hair no just the most just the middle guy just the top row the three on the top i'll have some yeah the guy on the right on the bottom house i think the bottoms both have little beards white white beards may oh yeah maybe a little bit yeah this guy has a full side but that yeah oh yeah oh yeah up and around the ears too like that beard is just he needs to grow at the top of his head to kind of even out i wonder if his beard went down and then he just hooked it around his ears mm-hmm or did the did it come over yeah that's right so this one says the five johnson brothers were with their parents with their parents came down from vermingham england 1833 and became vermingham is in alabama maybe because i'm so i'm closer to alabama than i am you are mm-hmm they were manufacturers in trodden new york where their factory burned down and then they went into new jersey where the where james worked for the colt factory in the and then they were also silversmiths yep very close right back into the question of the week uh huh yeah it all together it's all related all connected look at this one oh neat okay say his name quick web joran whip joran son nice i guess he was named after his dad too because his another web joran son web joran yep that's his dad web joran and is his dad's dad's name web joran as well no no vet bedborn bed joran pretty close he has a cool beard though good beard is that in ritam son and monaco oh yeah look at the little palm tree in the back there yeah yeah i wonder if he lived there he was just but oh no he was born in india eight died in bc and came into canada cool well married in england canadian northwest mounted police during the real rebellion oh and he was the superintendent of the berma police that's cool that's cool guy oh my he somebody should work on his profile i feel like you'd have a nice oh yeah because look at he was born in india married in england died in canada but somewhere at some point lived in monaco too so i love the source his grandson john that's it yeah that was the last one guys that was the last picoto that's just a teaser that i'm gonna steal your uh i'm gonna steal your screen real quick do sorry i just i'm sorry i was trying to sorry here we go you have the whipped free challenge coming up uh for week eight or challenge 18 to register register to research alivia newton john you can find this in the gdg feed um then the sourceathon is coming up if you're interested in the sourceathon you can still register what date is that what date is the source that is the october first weekend where i have 50 000 things going on that weekend you always have something going on i know i gotta stop i've got i just need to sit still for a while you see the i think i have a wedding i want to donate a prize to the sourceathon there's also a feed for that so uh you can get into that but uh that's the the latest and greatest from the gdg feed um there were no animals in any of the pictures except for humans well because facial hair i guess i think we might have a little billy goat with a billy goat yeah a little bit right why cat she likes to lay on my lay on my neck just looks like she's giving me a beard where you go that works that works your mama's gotta run okay bye maybe says i've already got prizes totaling close to four thousand dollars wow that's great yeah what teams have you guys signed up for you know what i wanted to sign up for an appalachian team but the right team is connected to the virginia team and i'm gonna stick with my corn bread catchers until if there's an appalachian team i'll probably jump over to it because well i'm appalachian you're appalachian yeah yeah this is a team canada uh i i go back and forth from team canada to team italy so i was team italy the last one i'm going to be team canada this time so can you see virginia there of course mendi but maybe if maybe if the appalachian team starts i think she's gonna go over to the appalachian team italy minus greg that's right who are you going with who great no team me greg you no greg we're talking about you greg oh i'm going with team canada i said that right oh team canada gotcha i just i go back and forth this is a team canada event hey steven steven just showed up to mess with watch it we're done we're done yeah well dragon yeah let me get the branding up here uh and we'll say goodbye have a good week