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  1. He has a number of drawings of Roma/Gypsy people he observed in Bedford, Cuyahoga County, Ohio in 1928 and 1929. This includes drawings of (only first names are listed): Old Sybella, Vanita, Mudro, and the camp.

  2. The Gypsy Countess Verona, [13] was one of the most famous of these Hungarian-Slovak Roma. She married the Count Dean Szechy de Szechy Favla, of Budapest. She was one of the greatest cimbalom players in the world; she toured the world, made records and wrote music.

  3. Dec 12, 2020 · It was in Weirton in November 1931 the chief, or “King,” of the Marks clan of Gypsies died at their camp on Kings Creek, setting off a chain of events that made such an impression on our community that it has been passed down in local lore for nearly 90 years.

  4. Levi and Matilda Stanley - Wikipedia. Stanley Family Plot, Woodland Cemetery. Levi Stanley (1818? – 3 December 1908) and Matilda Jowles Stanley (1821? – 15 January 1878) were members of the Stanley family, of Romani heritage. They immigrated from England to Montgomery County, Ohio.

  5. May 16, 2023 · In the early 1980s, Frank Miller was considered king of the Cleveland Roma. The exotic stereotype of the "nomadic Gypsy" has often disguised the fact that fewer and fewer Romani remained migratory by the beginning of the 21st century.

  6. William Faa II. [] Will Faa, "King of the Gypsies", died in Kirk Yetholm on 9 October 1847, aged 96. He was the son of William Faa I. William Faa was an innkeeper (owned "The Queen") and footballer who lived at "The Gypsy Palace" off the Green, and entertained visitors there.

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  8. Jul 24, 2020 · The heads of these extended families are often given the title of king or queen, although it is primarily in name only. Owen Stanley was the first “king” of this immigrant group and died in 1860, his wife Harriet having passed away three years earlier in 1857.

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