Noah Giles

Brief Life History of Noah

When Noah Giles was born in 1795, in Wield, Hampshire, England, United Kingdom, his father, William Giles, was 37 and his mother, Ann Gardiner, was 32. He married Charlotte Morgan in 1816, in Wield, Hampshire, England, United Kingdom. They were the parents of at least 5 sons and 3 daughters. He lived in Hampshire, England, United Kingdom in 1851. He died on 29 June 1869, in Newton Valence, Hampshire, England, United Kingdom, at the age of 74, and was buried in Wield, Hampshire, England, United Kingdom.

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Family Time Line

Noah Giles
1795–1869
Charlotte Morgan
1800–1876
Marriage: 1816
Harriet Giles
1816–
George Giles
1818–1901
Stephen Giles
1820–1893
William Giles
1824–1909
Mary Ann Giles
1827–1915
Edward Giles
1829–
Louisa Giles
1833–1916
Gilbert Giles
1841–1928

Sources (49)

  • Noah Jiles, "England and Wales Census, 1861"
  • Noah Giles, "England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975"
  • Noah Giles, "England Deaths and Burials, 1538-1991"

Spouse and Children

Parents and Siblings

World Events (6)

1801 · The Act of Union

The Act of Union was a legislative agreement which united England, Scotland, Wales, and Ireland under the name of the United Kingdom on January 1, 1801.

1808 · The British West Africa Squadron

The British West Africa Squadron was formed in 1808 to suppress illegal slave trading on the African coastline. The British West Africa Squadron had freed approximately 150,000 people by 1865.

1815

The defeat of Napoleon Bonaparte at Waterloo marks the end of the Napoleonic Wars. Napoleon defeated and exiled to St. Helena.

Name Meaning

English (of Norman origin): from a medieval personal name, Middle English Giles or Gile, a borrowing from Old French Gil(l)e(s). This is from Latin Aegidius and this presumably from Greek aigidion ‘kid, young goat’ (alternatively, it could be a Late Latin formation from the Latin personal name Eggius + the suffix -idius). The personal name was widely used in France and the Low Countries, partly through veneration of Saint Gilles de Provence, supposedly a hermit of the 7th century near Arles; he was patron saint of cripples, hence the dedication of Saint Giles Cripplegate in London, though the personal name itself was less common in England than elsewhere in Europe. See also Gilles .

Irish: adopted as an Anglicized equivalent of Gaelic Ó Glaisne, a County Louth name based on glas ‘green, blue, gray’.

French: variant of Gilles , a cognate of 1 above.

Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006.

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