Rebecca Bishop

Brief Life History of Rebecca

When Rebecca Bishop was born on 12 February 1773, in Redmile, Leicestershire, England, United Kingdom, her father, George Bishop III, was 38 and her mother, Mary Adcock, was 29. She married Robert Newcomb on 9 January 1797, in Redmile, Leicestershire, England, United Kingdom. They were the parents of at least 1 son and 2 daughters.

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Family Time Line

Robert Newcomb
1769–
Rebecca Bishop
1773–
Marriage: 9 January 1797
Mary Newcomb
1796–
Thomas Newcomb
1800–1860
Rebecca Newcomb
1805–1805

Sources (10)

  • Rebecca Bishop, "England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975"
  • Rebecca in entry for Mary Newcomb, "England, Leicestershire Parish Registers, 1533-1991"
  • Rebecca in entry for Thomas Newcomb, "England, Leicestershire Parish Registers, 1533-1991"

Spouse and Children

World Events (7)

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: from Middle English bissop, biscop, Old English bisc(e)op ‘bishop’, which comes via Latin from Greek episkopos ‘overseer’. The Greek word was adopted early in the Christian era as a title for an overseer of a local community of Christians, and has yielded cognates in every European language: French évêque, Italian vescovo, Spanish obispo, Russian yepiskop, German Bischof, etc. The word came to be applied as a surname for a variety of reasons, among them a supposed resemblance in bearing or appearance to a bishop, and selection as the ‘boy bishop’ on Saint Nicholas's Feast Day. In some instances the surname is from the rare Middle English (Old English) personal name Biscop ‘bishop’. As an Irish surname it is adopted for Mac Giolla Easpaig, meaning ‘servant of the bishop’ (see Gillespie ). In North America, this surname has absorbed, by assimilation and translation, at least some of continental European cognates, e.g. German Bischoff , Polish, Rusyn, Czech, and Slovak Biskup , Slovenian Škof (see Skoff ).

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

Possible Related Names

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