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  1. The genetic needle that threaded his DNA to an Indian ancestor is more or less lost in the haystack of history. But if he takes a stroll around the old city, perhaps among the oldest cosmopolitan pre-British urban centres in India, he might pick up a few old threads to spin a yarn about his multi-cultural genealogy.

  2. 14 de jun. de 2013 · British scientists have used DNA to reveal Princess Diana's Indian roots. By ABC News. June 14, 2013, 7:38 AM. LONDON, June 14, 2013 -- Once upon a time, a woman from India named Eliza Kewark was ...

  3. 13 de jan. de 2016 · Eliza Kevork formerly Kewark. Born 1790 in Surat, Gujarat, India. Daughter of Hakob Kevork and [mother unknown] [sibling (s) unknown] Wife of Theodore Forbes — married [date unknown] [location unknown] Descendants. Mother of Katherine Scott (Forbes) Crombie. Died [date unknown] in Surat, Gujarat, India.

    • Female
    • Theodore Forbes
  4. Speculation, fuelled by ignorance, claimed that she was a 'dark-skinned native of Bombay' called Eliza Kewark who was not married to Theodore, thus making her daughter illegitimate. own research into his family's background and suggested to the author that she might write a novel based on the story of Theodore Forbes and Eliza Kewark.

  5. Lady Fermoy's great-grandmother, Kitty Forbes, was the daughter of Eliza Kewark. Eliza's father, Hakob Kevork or Kevorkian, was Armenian; her Indian mother was probably Muslim. She is variously described in contemporary documents as "a dark-skinned native woman" and "an Armenian woman from Bombay". Popular culture

  6. 14 de jun. de 2013 · Eliza Kewark was housekeeper to his fifth great grandfather Theodore Forbes (1788-1820), a Scottish merchant who worked for the East India Company in Surat, a busy port north of Bombay. The...

  7. 14 de jun. de 2013 · Those tests reveal that the prince’s fourth great-grandmother was the daughter of Eliza Kewark and Theodore Forbes (1788-1820), a Scottish merchant who worked in Surat, north of what is now Mumbai.