« Reply #20 on: Friday 15 February 19 02:40 GMT (UK) »
In a lot of the 17th and 18th century London PR's I have seen "uknown man" or "unknown woman ", or even "stranger " in burial entries. The sad ones for me are the foundlings, and the notes on where and how they were found; so often named after the street in which they were found, or the first name of the person that found them.
On the side note of the two kings, yes Charles II did count his reign from the execution of his father. And if the priest did write "the First", then he would have most definitely have been a Royalist, knowing that there was an heir of the same name.
I am Australian, from all the lands I come (my ancestors, at least!)
Pine/Pyne, Dowdeswell, Kempster, Sando/Sandoe/Sandow, Nancarrow, Hounslow, Youatt, Richardson, Jarmyn, Oxlade, Coad, Kelsey, Crampton, Lindner, Pittaway, and too many others to name.
Devon, Dorset, Gloucs, Cornwall, Warwickshire, Bucks, Oxfordshire, Wilts, Germany, Sweden, and of course London, to name a few.