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Bef 1659 - 1693 (~ 34 years)
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Name |
John COPPING |
Born |
Bef 1659 |
Gender |
Male |
Buried |
20 Mar 1692/1693 |
Borden, Kent, England |
Person ID |
I13268 |
Young Kent Ancestors |
Last Modified |
13 Aug 2021 |
Family |
Elizabeth KISBY, c. 6 Feb 1655, Borden, Kent, England , bur. 9 May 1714, Borden, Kent, England (Age ~ 59 years) |
Married |
22 Aug 1679 |
Borden, Kent, England |
Children |
| 1. Edward ^ COPPING, c. 25 Dec 1679, Borden, Kent, England , bur. 22 Jan 1679/1680, Borden, Kent, England (Age ~ 0 years) |
| 2. Susanna ^ COPPING, c. 18 Dec 1680, Borden, Kent, England , bur. 25 Dec 1680, Borden, Kent, England (Age ~ 0 years) |
| 3. Elizabeth COPPING, c. 12 Mar 1682, Borden, Kent, England  |
| 4. Thomas COPPING, c. 20 Jul 1684, Borden, Kent, England , bur. 17 Dec 1749, Borden, Kent, England (Age ~ 65 years) |
| 5. Susanna COPPING, c. 14 Feb 1685, Borden, Kent, England  |
| 6. Anne ^ COPPING, c. 2 Jan 1688, Borden, Kent, England , bur. 5 Oct 1690, Borden, Kent, England (Age ~ 2 years) |
| 7. John COPPING, c. 26 Jan 1690, Borden, Kent, England  |
| 8. Anne COPPING, c. 21 Jan 1693, Borden, Kent, England  |
| 9. Mary ^ COPPING, b. Abt 1695, Borden, Kent, England , bur. 12 Sep 1701, Borden, Kent, England (Age ~ 6 years) |
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Last Modified |
20 Mar 2022 |
Family ID |
F3958 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
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Notes |
- Buried as "John Coppin householder"
Borden Extracts
C 25 Dec 1679 COPPING Edward John/Elizabeth
c 13 Dec 1680 Coppin Susanna John/Elizabeth, child dbl 25 Dec 1680
c 12 Mar 1682 Coppin Elizabeth John/Elizabeth
c 20 Jul 1684 Coppin Thomas John/Elizabeth
c 14 Feb 1685 Coppin Susanna John/Elizabeth
c 1 Jan 1688 Coppin Anne John/Elizabeth, child dbl 5 Oct 1690
c 26 Jan 1690 Coppin John John/Elizabeth
dbl 12 Sep 1701 Coppin Mary d/o Elizabeth Coppin, widow
Bredgar done - no Coppin entries
Patronymica Britannia a dictionary of family names by Mark Antony Lower, M.A., F.S.A. London, 1860.
Coppen. Coppin. Means "Elevated" as "Coppin in hevin," is Elevated to Heaven. Jamieson is the authority in his "Origin of the Scottish Language."
The root appears to be Anglo-Saxon. Cop means the summit. Probably from the lofty residence of the first bearer of the name.
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