Note: info on Fuller family http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/fuller html:
'He [John] left a well dated 4 Feb 1558-9, proved 12 May 1559, 'Gives to son John Fuller all lands and tenements both bound and free, in Redenhall, Wortwell, as elleswyer,' he paying to my son Robert Fuller 10p. To Ales my daughter 6p, 8s, 4d... Son John executor; witness, Thomas Fuller, Thomas Warde, John Barne, William Norton."
Child of JOHN FULLER and ANN COLLINGE is:
5. i. ROBERT5 FULLER, b. Abt. 1548, Redenhall, Norfolk, England; d. May 1614, Redenhall, Norfolk, England.
Also a daughter Ales and son John (as noted in will);
Cemetery notes and/or description:
'St. Mary's [church parish] Redenhall is an elongated Parish bounding the River Waveney in the South and extending some 3 miles to the North, to include Clintergates and other scattered farms. The orginal settlement was probably by the river, where Anglo-Saxon and Danish invaders would have made their entry-hence the name Redenhall, the place in the reeds. ...the Church was built upon a commanding knoll. Excavations in 1858 revealed evidence of an older building on the same site with a round tower, a characteristic feature of Waveney Valley churches of the Saxon and Norman periods. The present building was begun about 1460 and finished in about 1520.'
Transcribed to FIND A GRAVE by Patrina Hill Gotcher Perkins.
Note: info on Fuller family http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/fuller html:
'He [John] left a well dated 4 Feb 1558-9, proved 12 May 1559, 'Gives to son John Fuller all lands and tenements both bound and free, in Redenhall, Wortwell, as elleswyer,' he paying to my son Robert Fuller 10p. To Ales my daughter 6p, 8s, 4d... Son John executor; witness, Thomas Fuller, Thomas Warde, John Barne, William Norton."
Child of JOHN FULLER and ANN COLLINGE is:
5. i. ROBERT5 FULLER, b. Abt. 1548, Redenhall, Norfolk, England; d. May 1614, Redenhall, Norfolk, England.
Also a daughter Ales and son John (as noted in will);
Cemetery notes and/or description:
'St. Mary's [church parish] Redenhall is an elongated Parish bounding the River Waveney in the South and extending some 3 miles to the North, to include Clintergates and other scattered farms. The orginal settlement was probably by the river, where Anglo-Saxon and Danish invaders would have made their entry-hence the name Redenhall, the place in the reeds. ...the Church was built upon a commanding knoll. Excavations in 1858 revealed evidence of an older building on the same site with a round tower, a characteristic feature of Waveney Valley churches of the Saxon and Norman periods. The present building was begun about 1460 and finished in about 1520.'
Transcribed to FIND A GRAVE by Patrina Hill Gotcher Perkins.
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