Andreas born 1775 and died in 1815
Andreas Schilly and Anna Maria Hugle Danner
Schilly
Danner
Eleven Generations from Germany/France/Germany to the U.S.A. -

DE1. Lawrence Schilli, (b. 1710 in ?; d. 2-4-1745 in ?)
Married: (?)
TO: (?)
Father of
Mathias Schilly.

DE2/FR1. Mathias Schilly (Schilli), (b. 1735 in Rieshof, Passau in Niederbayern (Lower Bavaria); d. 3-30-1806 it
appears in
Paris Region).
Married: (?)
Anna Maria Armbruster, (b. ? in Fessenbach, Middle Baden; d. ? it appears in Paris Region)
Parents of  
Andreas Schilly (Schilli) but not certain how many other children.

FR2. Andreas Schilly (Schilli) (b. 11-27-1775 in Paris Region; d. 1815 in ?)
Married 1-9-1797.
Anna Maria Hugle Danner, (b. ?; d ?.)
They had five children,
Ferdinand Schilly was their third child.
Paris   Île-de-France
We do know that Mathias Schilly (Schilli),  was a Vintner, who d. 3-30-1806 it appears in Paris Region), as did his wife, Anna Maria Armbruster, (b. ? in Fessenbach,
Middle Baden; d. ? it appears in Paris Region )

Their son  Andreas Schilly (Schilli)  was b. 11-27-1775 in Paris Region, was also a Vintner, ( d. 1815 in ?); who married Anna Maria Hugle Danner, (b. ?; d ?.). They
had five children, Ferdinand Schilly was their third child.  Ferdinand Schilly was the father of Lorenz Schilly.
1715 Philippe d'Orléans becomes regent on the death of Louis XIV
14 Jul 1789 The Bastille falls to the mob; Louis XVI is forced to leave
Versailles for Paris (in Oct)
22 Sep 1792 Declaration of the Republic
1793 The Louvre museum opens. Louis XVI and Marie-Antoinette are
executed
1794 Start of the Terror; the Jacobins are overthrown (Jul)
Nov 1799 Napoléon becomes First Consul following a successful coup
1804 Napoléon declares himself Emperor

French Empire or the Napoleonic Empire, was the regime of Napoleon
I in France, through which he dominated much of continental Europe.
The Empire lasted from
1804 to 1814
Paris France and Region of
Île-de-France
is made up of eight Départements:

Ville-de-Paris,
Seine-et-Marne,
Yvelines,
Essonne,  
Haute-de-Seine,
Seine-Saint-Denis
Val-  de-Marne,
Val-d'Oise.
Ile-de-France wine region

In the 17th Century, Ile-de-France’s vineyards
were, at 42,000 ha, the largest in France.
They disappeared for several reasons: the
phylloxera pest, urbanization and the arrival
of wines from the south with the railways.

“The Paris climate and terrain are just as
good as Bordeaux or Champagne. There
was no comparison in terms of number of
customers and their wealth. So it’s crystal
clear that the vineyards of Goutte-d'Or, Auteuil
or Meudon, which we now make fun of, were
at least worthy rivals to the best vineyards
outside of the capital. These wines were
adulterated as a rise in the standard of living
lead to new inns opening. While the fight for
survival was getting harder, they tried to solve
the problem of harvest variation by seeking
out increasingly crude plant material. On the
eve of the Revolution, Paris was still
surrounded by vines but the wine no longer
resembled, according to Philippe-Auguste,
what used to be favourably compared to
Cypriot wine.”

(Raymond Dumay – La mort du vin (death of
wine) – La Table Ronde – La petite vermillon)
Editors Note: Hopefully the tailor trade goes
back to Mathias, as the wine produced in
Paris was not of high quality.
Danner
German: topographic name for someone who lived in or by a forest, from Middle Low German dan, Middle High German tan
‘pine’, ‘forest’ + the suffix -er denoting an inhabitant, or a habitational name from any of various places called Thann, named with
this word, notably in Bavaria,and also in Mecklenburg and Switzerland.

Frau Andreas Schilly, nee Anna Maria Hugle Danner
Danner

Spelling variations of this family name include:
Denner, Denne, Danne, Dane, Denn, Danner and
others.

First found in Wuerttemberg, where the name was
closely identified in early mediaeval times with the
feudal society which would become prominent
throughout European history.

Some of the first settlers of this family name or some
of its variants were: Christian Denner, who settled in
Philadelphia in 1752; Francis Denner settled in
Philadelphia in 1858; Henricus Denner settled in
Philadelphia in 1775.
With Napoleon defeated, the British were looking forward to peace after nearly 28
years of war with France. However, Napoleon escaped from Elba on 26th February,
1815, and was soon back in Paris as Emperor with the support of most of the French
population.  The Allies (Britain, Prussia, Russia and 1815  Wymer Print Austria)
began assembling an army to deal with him, but it was a slow process.

His defeat at Waterloo finally marked the end of Napoleon.  He was exiled to the
island of St Helena where he remained until his death many years later.

As with other wars which involved great internal strife, the French Revolutionary and
Napoleonic Wars left a rancorous legacy of conflict. After 1815, the Allied victors
continued to paint Napoleon as "The Monster" even though the wars had already
been in full swing when he came on the scene, and despite their own attacks on
countries large and small. Napoleon and his indomitable ego certainly lengthened
the wars, and like most other leaders of that era, his actions caused the unnecessary
deaths of thousands. In the end though, it is difficult to separate his actions from
other leaders of his time. People of that era tended to share romantic views of war
which were not abandoned until a hundred years later with the consecutive
slaughters of World War One and World War Two, and all can share some of the
blame for the years of war which began in 1792 because of the overthrow of a French
Monarch.
The French Revolution began in 1789 with the meeting of the States General in May. On July 14 of that same year, the Bastille was stormed: in October, Louis XVI and the
Royal Family were removed from Versailles to Paris. The King attempted, unsuccessfully, to flee Paris for Varennes in June 1791. A Legislative Assembly sat from October
1791 until September 1792, when, in the face of the advance of the allied armies of Austria, Holland, Prussia, and Sardinia, it was replaced by the National Convention,
which proclaimed the Republic. The King was brought to trial in December of 1792, and executed on January 21, 1793. In January of 1793 the revolutionary government
declared war on Britain, a war for world dominion which had been carried on, with short intermissions, since the beginning of the reign of William and Mary, and which
would continue for another twenty-two years.

The French Revolution (1789–1799) was a period of political and social upheaval in the political history of France and Europe as a whole, during which the French
governmental structure, previously an absolute monarchy with feudal privileges for the aristocracy and Catholic clergy, underwent radical change to forms based on
Enlightenment principles of republic, citizenship, and inalienable rights.

These changes were accompanied by violent turmoil, including executions and repression during the Reign of Terror, and warfare involving every other major European
power. Subsequent events caused by the revolution include the Napoleonic wars, the restoration of the monarchy, and two additional revolutions as modern France took
shape.
Features of the ancien régime as being among the causes of the
Revolution.

Among the economic factors were:

* The social and psychological burdens of the many wars of the 18th century, which in
the era before the dawn of nationalism were exclusively the province of the monarchy.
The social burdens caused by war included the huge war debt, made worse by the
monarchy's military failures and ineptitude, and the lack of social services for war
veterans.
* A poor economic situation and an unmanageable national debt, both caused and
exacerbated by the burden of a grossly inequitable system of taxation.
* The Roman Catholic Church, the largest landowner in the country, which levied a
harsh tax on crops known as the dîme. While the dîme lessened the severity of the
monarchy's tax increases, it nonetheless served to worsen the plight of the poorest
who faced a daily struggle with malnutrition.
* The continued conspicuous consumption of the noble class, especially the court of
Louis XVI and Marie-Antoinette at Versailles, despite the financial burden on the
populace.
* High unemployment and high bread prices, causing more money to be spent on food
and less in other areas of the economy;
* Widespread famine and malnutrition, which increased the likelihood of disease and
death, and intentional starvation in the most destitute segments of the population
during the months immediately before the Revolution. The famine extended even to
other parts of Europe, and was not helped by a poor transportation infrastructure for
bulk foods. (Some researchers have also attributed the widespread famine to an El
Niño effect.).

In addition to economic factors, there were social and political factors, many of
them involving resentments and aspirations given focus by the rise of
Enlightenment ideals:

* Resentment of royal absolutism;
* Resentment by the ambitious professional and mercantile classes towards noble
privileges and dominance in public life (with a clear picture of the lives of their peers in
The Netherlands, Germany, and Great Britain etc.);
* Resentment of manorialism (seigneurialism) by peasants, wage-earners, and, to a
lesser extent, the bourgeoisie;
* Resentment of clerical privilege (anti-clericalism) and aspirations for freedom of
religion;
* Continued hatred for (perceived) "Papist" controlled and influenced institutions of all
kinds, by the large Protestant minorities;
* Aspirations for liberty and (especially as the Revolution progressed) republicanism;
* Hatred toward the King for firing Jacques Necker and Anne Robert Jacques Turgot,
Baron de Laune (among other financial advisors) who represented and fought for the
people.
Île-de-France is one of the twenty-six administrative regions of France.
90% of its territory is covered by the Paris aire urbaine (or "metropolitan
area") which extends beyond its borders in places. Created as the
"District of the Paris Region" in 1961, it was renamed as the
"Île-de-France" région in 1976 to bring it into line with the rest of France's
administrative regions created in 1972. Despite the name change,
Île-de-France is still popularly referred to by French people as the Région
Parisienne ("Paris Region") or RP.

Île-de-France is the most populated region of France. It has more
residents than Belgium, Greece, Austria, Portugal or Sweden, and a
comparable population to the U.S. state of Ohio and the Canadian
province of Ontario. It is the fourth most populous country subdivision in
the European Union after England, North Rhine-Westphalia and Bavaria.
From the French Revolution to the defeat of Napoleon at Waterloo