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Mark Anthony

Posted in Family Biographies/Histories

The further back one traces a family, the murkier the waters become. If it isn’t poor record-keeping, it’s a courthouse fire. And that’s if it isn’t wishful thinking on the part of another family researcher. Still most legends have some basis in fact. What then, is the basis of the fantastic legend surrounding the emigration of Mark Anthony?

The most traditional version of the narrative is that Mark Anthony was born in about 1670 to a merchant of the same or a similar name in Genoa, Italy. The elder Mark Anthony (or Marcus Antony, as he is sometimes known to researchers, most likely to distinguish him from his son) relocated to the Netherlands for reasons that aren’t clear. He desired his son to be educated in Genoa — an idea that didn’t appeal to the younger Mark Anthony’s adventurous spirit at all. Instead, the young man ran away to sea. He was waylaid by Barbary pirates and enslaved in Algiers. Different versions vary in the details, but most agree that once in Algiers, Mark Anthony either escaped by killing his captor or simply by slipping away. This story was retold for generations, and it seemed especially strong in the Georgia Anthony branch of the family.

Arlene Anthony, a researcher associated with Linda Starr’s Colonial Virginia Connections group, does not believe this wild tale, and I have to admit I don’t either. Her research tends to suggest that the Anthony family were from England, possibly by way of the Iberian peninsula, and that they were either Jewish or Roma. I think it more likely that they were Jewish. Their movements mirror those of Marranos, though without historical documents, it is impossible to know exactly when the family migrated from Italy or the Iberian Peninsula to the Netherlands.

The Georgia account of Mark Anthony’s arrival indicates that he arrived in Virginia after his harrowing adventure before October 3, 1690 and was indentured (possibly to Charles Fleming) for three years in order to pay for his passage. He is one of twenty people listed in an application for a land patent of 1000 acres in New Kent County in 1690. In 1700, he applied for a land grant of 1000 acres — some researchers speculate he returned to Europe and brought back 20 applicants in order to apply for this land grant. The 1704 book of Quit Rents indicates he had 190 acres of land in New Kent County. He appears in the records of St. Paul’s Vestry in 1709.

Mark Anthony married Isabella Hart in about 1703 and become a prosperous landowner. Some family researchers believe that the Anthonys and allied families were Crypto-Jews because they continued to practice Sephardic naming traditions. I have not found this to be true. Strict Sephardic naming practices call for the first son to be named for his paternal grandfather and the first daughter for her paternal grandfather. The second son and daughter should be named for the maternal grandfather and grandmother, respectively. The third son/daughter should be named for a paternal uncle or aunt, and the fourth son/daughter for a maternal uncle or aunt. The Clarks and Anthonys did commonly “recycle” names across generations in a somewhat Sephardic fashion, but it is not exact. For example, Mark Anthony’s son Joseph Anthony and his wife Elizabeth Clark Anthony did not name their firstborn son Mark — rather, he was named Christopher for his wife’s father. Likewise, their first daughter was named Sarah, seemingly for a maternal aunt. Not until their sixth son was born would they name him for his paternal grandfather, Mark Anthony. It is possible that the family were indeed Sephardic in origin, but I don’t think one can use their naming practices as evidence.

The Anthony family married into the Quaker families of Colonial Virginia. While Quakers would probably have been more tolerant of Jews, and thus, might have married Jews, it appears that if the Anthonys were Jewish, they eventually adopted various forms of Quaker or Protestant faith. For example, Anselm Anthony, a great-grandson of Mark Anthony, was a renowned Baptist minister in Georgia. Mark Anthony’s daughter-in-law, Elizabeth Clark Anthony, was known to have made multiple missionary trips between Georgia and Virginia; her family were said to be devoted Quakers. A funny and almost certainly apocryphal story has been passed down in the Anthony family that suggests that Joseph Anthony, son of Mark, actually possessed a written genealogy of his descent from Mark Antony, the famous Roman general and politician. His pious in-laws supposedly burned the document because it bespoke vanity. (I wonder what they would make of their numerous genealogist descendants!)

Speculation about who Mark Anthony might have been is more abundant than actual evidence. Certainly, he was the progenitor of a family of colorful characters with a love for a good yarn. You can read more about my own speculations (a post which also recounts my ancestry traced back to Mark Anthony) as to his background and you can read those of Arlene Anthony at Colonial Virginia Connections.

This post is third in a series about my known immigrant ancestors.

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107 Comments

  1. Jacob Carpenter
    Jacob Carpenter

    Mark Anthony II of Va. wasn’t a Hebrew, nor was his wife, Isabella Hart. I am a descendant of theirs via Anthony -> Clark -> Candler -> Waller -> Caldwell -> Carroll -> Pierce -> Carpenter. Perhaps they just had tanned complexions and dark hair. Individuals slapping a Jewish label upon them haven’t proven their respective agendas. Some actually believe that the Harts immigrated from Scotland. I don’t think the suggestion is yet proven, but I find it more plausible than Glenn Hill’s view.

    Mark Anthony I = —–
    Mark Anthony II = Isabella Hart
    Joseph Anthony, Sr. = Elizabeth Clark
    Elizabeth Anthony = Col. William Candler, Sr.
    Emily “Millie” Candler = (2nd hus.) Charles Rhodes Waller
    Harriet Louise Waller = Richard Hornbuckle Caldwell
    Pvt. Charles Mitchell “Mitt” Caldwell = (1st wf.) Amanda Hutchinson
    William Alexander Caldwell = Elizabeth Mary “Lizzie” Gates
    Benjamin Franklin “Ben” Caldwell = Martha Ruth “Minnie” Baker
    Bessie Mae Caldwell = (his 1st wf.) Frederick David “Fred” Carroll, Sr.
    Mattie Lou Carroll = Pvt. Roger Lee Pierce
    (liv.) Pierce = (his 2nd wf.) (liv.) Carpenter
    Jacob Kyle Carpenter

    February 26, 2019
    |Reply
    • Quintina S. Anthony
      Quintina S. Anthony

      I have taken the 23 and me, and it indicates the Anthony family is Jewish genetically. Can’t really argue with science.

      May 5, 2021
      |Reply
      • Quintina S. Anthony
        Quintina S. Anthony

        The genetics and historical records indicate the Anthony family was from the Iberian peninsula. The Iberian Peninsula prior to the Spanish Inquisition was inhabited by the Celts, the Greeks and the Phoenicians, which are a Semitic group of people (prior to all Abrahamic religions, Jewish people were not always Hebrew). From historical and scientific articles on genetics and mutations, our family carries a specific genetic mutation, which is highly rare and very few families have this gene mutation throughout the world. I was diagnosed with it when I was pregnant with my first child at the age of 25. Many people don’t even know they have it until they need to have a medical procedure done, in which blood clotting and severe bleeding can be an issue. I have acquired large amounts of medical information on the rare genetic blood disorder, the Anthony family was in fact from the Iberian Peninsula.
        Here is a video for you on the settling of the historical Iberian Peninsula:
        https://youtu.be/i2azTHF8wBI
        I, also, in addition have a small amount of Greek, which would make sense of the settling of the Iberian Peninsula. Many of the Jewish people whom were ousted during the Spanish Inquisition (about 200,000) did settle in the British Isles, the Netherlands, Ireland, France and Germany. All of this in my DNA and hard to argue with. Obviously, because of the moving around of Jewish people throughout history, this has created an admixture of various countries. Mine specifically indicates British, Irish, Scandinavian, French, German, and Greek and Balkan.

        May 5, 2021
        |Reply
        • Quintina S. Anthony
          Quintina S. Anthony

          Further historical information of the dispensation of the Jewish people from Spain during the Spanish Inquisition:
          https://youtu.be/FrLAGWqdflw

          May 5, 2021
          |Reply
  2. Ellen B. Anthony
    Ellen B. Anthony

    My name is Dr. Ellen B. Anthony. I was wondering if there was anyone on here related to Dr. Samuel Wesley Anthony– of Georgia and then later, Dumas, Texas. He was a doctor in the Civil War. I am going to take the DNA test soon to find out if there is Italian or Iberian Pen connection. Wondered if anyone had done so already? Thanks, Ellen

    What I know about my “line”– Ellen B. Anthony (TEXAS)– Jack M. Anthony (father TEXAS)– Jack Malcolm Anthony (g-father TEXAS)– Melvin Anthony (TEXAS) – Dr. Samuel Wesley Anthony (GEORGIA then TEXAS)– Rev Samuel Wesley Anthony (GEORGIA). I can’t figure it out further back but I do believe we connect to Mark Anthony of Virginia.

    July 14, 2019
    |Reply
    • Jackie Anthony-Lopez
      Jackie Anthony-Lopez

      Hi Ellen. I am descended from the Georgia Anthony line. It is my understanding that the 1st Samuel Wesley Anthony was born in August 1808 in the Pendleton District of South Carolina. He was the 6th child of Lewis Anthony (Sr) and Elizabeth Anthony. I am descended from Lewis and Elizabeth through their 7th son, Lewis Jr.

      Several other family members also believe we are descended from Mark Anthony from Virginia. We have had problems finding a concrete path back to him also. I have some documentation that indicates a path, but the timeframes don’t seem to match up.

      February 6, 2022
      |Reply
    • R. Clay Anthony
      R. Clay Anthony

      My name is Robert Clay Anthony, and Rev. Samuel Wesley Anthony Sr. was my great-great-great-great grandfather. I live in Lubbock Texas where I was born. My grandfather was Wesley Anthony, from the line through Dr. Samuel Wesley Anthony [Dumas]. It wouldn’t surprise me if we aren’t from Mark Anthony’s lineage, as my uncle was named Mark Anthony and his name, I believe, was given in reference to an ancestor.

      February 21, 2023
      |Reply

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