Matches 4,001 to 4,200 of 11,213
| # |
Notes |
Linked to |
| 4001 |
Cathrine original name was Katrina Harle, Louis's original name was Ludwig Harle. Age 84 years. | Harle Catharine (I49881)
|
| 4002 |
Cause of death - Metastatic breast cancer. Burial at Forest hills Cemetery. | CHRISTENSEN Amelia Marie (I34520)
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| 4003 |
Cause of death is listed as sudden death-heart disease.
Burial at Montello Cemetery. Inscription reads: Juliana Brustmann geb. 10 dec 1841 and gest. 21 Dec 1903 | (Sagert) Julianne SAGER (I34481)
|
| 4004 |
Cause of death was a stroke after being in a nursing home for few months. Burial: Burlington Cem. | BRUSTMAN Adolph Ferdinand (I34581)
|
| 4005 |
Cause of death was acute bronchitus and asthma. Secondary cause was myocarditus. | Source (S1497)
|
| 4006 |
Cause of death: Anemia, arterial sclerosis, nephritis. | HART James Patrick (I3827)
|
| 4007 |
Cause of Death: Apoplexy.
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/157578724/elbridge-c.-colby | COLBY Elbridge C. (I28198)
|
| 4008 |
Cause of death: Arteriosclerotic Heart Disease. Cremation. | BRUSTMAN Minnie Mathilde (I34517)
|
| 4009 |
Cause of death: Cardiac arrest, Secondary to surgery for testicular cancer. | OLSSON Elliott Raymond "Duke" (I6084)
|
| 4010 |
Cause of death: convulsions. Burial in Montello City Cemetery with parents and 3 siblings. | BRUSTMAN Ernest Albert (I34516)
|
| 4011 |
Cause of death: coronary occlusion, sudden death. Burial: Green Ridge Cemetery. | BRUSTMAN Gustav Robert (I34563)
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| 4012 |
Cause of Death: from wounds received during captivity by the Hurons | CHARLOT Madeleine (I1948)
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| 4013 |
Cause of death: heart attack. Buried in Forest Hills Cemetery | BRUSTMAN Walter William (I34519)
|
| 4014 |
Cause of death: Lobar pneumonia for 2 weeks, aslo paralytic ileum and senility. | UNKE Louise Ida Matilda (I34479)
|
| 4015 |
Cause of death: Multiple Schlerosis. Other antecedent causes are arteriosclerosis and localized gangrenous area on limb and hypertrophied prostate. Resided at Bethesda Invalid Home.
Burial: Elmhurst Cemetery. | BRUSTMAN Karl A. (I34501)
|
| 4016 |
Caution
This is the biography for one of the wives of William of Gellone. It is very possible, however, that the biography reflects data about two people, which have therefore been kept separate.
Biography of Guitberge of Hornbach
Name
Guitberge Hornbach[1]
Guibour von Hornbach[2] [3]
Guibour von Hornbach [4]
Name: GUIBOUR /Autun Toulouse [VONHORNBACK]/
Given Name: GUIBOUR
Surname: Autun Toulouse [VONHORNBACK]
770 Birth
Guibour was born about 770 in Hornbach, now Rhineland Palatinate, Germany. [5]
She was born in 770 in Bergstraßener Kreis, Hessen, Germany [4]
Gilbour of Hornbach was born about 760 in Hornbach, PrussiaGilbour of Hornbach [5]
785 Birth in Hessen
She was born about 785 in Hornbach, Bergstrasse, Hessen, Germany[2]
She was born between 765 and 785 in Hornbach. [3]
Parents
Her parents were Lambert de Treves von Hornbach and Gerberge de Laon[4]
She was the daughter of Gerbage de Laon, Countess of Hornbach. [5]
Her father was Lambert I Count of Hornbach b: ABT 720 in Hornbach, PrussiaGilbour of Hornbach [5]
Siblings
Gui de Nantes**[4]
Guibour von Hornbach[4]
Marriage
She married as his first wife, William I Count of Toulouse, Saint b: ABT 751 in Toulouse, Haute-Garonne, Midi-Pyrenees, France [5]
She married St. William of Gellone, Count of Toulouse.[5]
She married St William the Great of Gellone[4]
Alternatively, she married Theodorick I / Thierry IV born 720
William married secondly Kunigunde (Auberge) , Born: ABT 775 in France and they were the parents of Bernard I Count of Autun, Margrave Septimania b: BEF 804 in Autun, Saone-et-Loire, Bourgogne, France [5]
Death
She died in 804 in France[4]
She died about 804 in France and was buried there.[5]
She died: BEF 803 [5]
She died about 804 in France. [2][3]
Issue
She was the mother of
Bertha of Toulouse[5] Berthe Ingeltrude de Toulouse of Gellone of Italy*[4] Bertha of Toulouse b: 777 in Toulouse, Haute-Garonne, Midi-Pyrenees, France [5]
Rotlinde de Toulouse[5] Rotlinde de Toulouse of Gellone de Bobbio*[4]
Bernard I, duc de Septimanie[5]
Gaucelme, comte du Roussilon[5]
Theodoric IV, comte d'Autun[5]
Waldrada de Toulouse of Gellone d'Orleans*[4] Wialdruth of Toulouse b: ABT 793 in Orleans, Loiret, Orleanais/Centre, France [5]
Biography of Guitberg Orable
Name
Wiburgis [6]
Guitbergi [7]
Guitburgi's name before her baptism was Orable. [8]
First Marriage to Wali of Orange
His wife Guitburgi is said to have been the widow of the Moorish wali of Orange taken by William in his battles against the Umayyad army of Hisham I in and around the county of Narbona about 793-796. [7]
Second Marriage to William of Gellone
After being taken in battle, she married William of Gellone. It is not clear if she married William or was held in concubinage, although he calls her his wife in his will.[7]
Children
Taylor shows William married to Cunigunde and Wiburgis, with no indication of which are the mothers of his children. [6]
His son Barnardo is said to have been by Guitburgi. [7]
Sources
↑ Ancestry.com user submitted tree. https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/13078823/person/542693571/facts
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Ancestry.com Record for
Bernard I Count Barcelona, Duke Septimania
↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 Ancestry.com Record for
Guiboar Von Hornbach
Bernard DeSeptimania Toulouse
Guibor De Hornbach
Bernard De Septimania Count Of Toulouse
↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 4.8 4.9 Guibour von Hornbach. Find A Grave Memorial# 144267776. Created by: Memerizion. Record added: Mar 28, 2015. https://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=144267776. Accessed April 1, 2017. jhd
↑ 5.00 5.01 5.02 5.03 5.04 5.05 5.06 5.07 5.08 5.09 5.10 5.11 5.12 5.13 5.14 5.15 Guibour. Geni. Added by: Bill Maselunas on August 5, 2007. Managed by: Margaret (C) and 122 others. Curated by: Anne Brannen. https://www.geni.com/people/Guibour/6000000002006413825. Accessed April 1, 2017 jhd
↑ 6.0 6.1 Nathaniel L. Taylor. Saint William, King David, and Makhir: A Controversial Medieval Descent. Published in The American Genealogist 72 (1997) 203-21. https://web.archive.org/web/20040621062507/http://home.earthlink.net/~nathanieltaylor/pdfs/Makhir.pdf. Accessed March 20, 2017. jhd
↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 Wikipedia. William of Gellone. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_of_Gellone. Accessed March 28, 2017. Note: the sources used in the wikipedia article do not appear to be the most up to date. Since Wikipedia is constantly being improved, it may be worthwhile to refer directly to the page cited. jhd
↑ http://www.midi-france.info/060600_guilhem.html. Cited by Wikipedia. William of Gellone. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_of_Gellone. Accessed March 28, 2017. jhd
See also:
Newsgroup: soc.genealogy.medieval, at groups - google.com
Page: Alan B Wilson, 12 Jun 1998. Text: Kunigunde
The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968, Page: 10, Text: Auberge
Source: S4 Record ID Number: MH:S4 Title: Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. Repository: #R1 Note: This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created. Page: Ancestry Family Trees Data: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=22373421&pid=1295006585
Repository: R1 Record ID Number: MH:R1 Name: Ancestry.com Address: http://www.Ancestry.com | Von HORNBACH Guibour (I58836)
|
| 4017 |
Cawleys lists her parents as Unknown. [1]
Salazar y Acha suggests that she was the daughter of a Nuño. [2]
Marriage
Munia married Ordoño, king of Asturias. [1].
Children
Alfonso, King of Asturias.
Fruela.
Nuño.
Vermudo.
Odoario.
Leodegundis (uncertain).
Research Notes
She has been disconnected as the daughter of Agatón Ramírez, Gaton Conde de Vierzo.
There is a hypothesis that she is the sister of Agatón Ramírez[3], although she could also be his brother-in-law. [4]
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2023, Kings of Asturias.
↑ Jaime de Salazar y Acha. Las dinastías reales de España en la Edad Media (Real Academia de la Historia, Madrid, 2021) p. 53.
↑ Sáez, Emilio. Los ascendientes de San Rosendo : notas para el estudio de la monarquía astur-leonesa durante los siglos IX y X. (CSIC, Instituto Jerónimo Zurita, Madrid, 1948). Biblioteca Digital de Castilla y León
↑ Wikipedia:ES:Nuña. | UNKNOWN Mumadomna (I59910)
|
| 4018 |
Cáelbad (Cáelbhadh, Caolbhadh, Caolbhaidh), son of Cronn Badhraoi, a descendant of Mal mac Rochride, was, according to Lebor Gabála Érenn, a High King of Ireland and King of Ulster.
The chronology of Geoffrey Keating's Foras Feasa ar Éirinn dates his reign to 343–344, that of the Annals of the Four Masters to 356–357.
Sources
Bart Jaski Genealogical tables of medieval Irish royal dynasties Table-3 Early Irish Kingship Succession by Jaski Bart, Published by Four Courts Press, 2013, ISBN 1846824265 ISBN 9781846824265
Feasa ar Éirinn, Section 47, page 365, UCC CELT link; by Geoffrey Keating.
Lebor Gabála Érenn, Part V, pages 345, 357; by Robert Macalister.
Annals of the Four Masters, M356.1 After Muireadhach Tireach had been thirty years in the sovereignty of Ireland, he was slain by Caelbhadh, son of Crunn, King of Uladh, at Portrigh, over Dabhall.
M357.1 After Caelbhadh, son of Crunn Badhrai, had been one year in the sovereignty of Ireland, he was slain by Eochaidh Muighmheadhoin. (Eochaidh Muinremur (abt.0370-abt.0439) ?)
Wikipedia: Cáelbad
The History of Ireland, Volume 8, By Geoffrey Keating
Publications, Volume 8 - https://books.google.com/books?id=8y1EAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA365&lpg=PA365&dq=Caolbhaidh+son+of+Cronn+Badhraoi&source=bl&ots=CNXWBYU_0a&sig=ACfU3U1Aef1Whii-su-RsjoULaWI1bEm4Q&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiZ4rGOnOLhAhVTnJ4KHeuMCBUQ6AEwAnoECAoQAQ#v=onepage&q=Caolbhaidh%20son%20of%20Cronn%20Badhraoi&f=false
Irish Texts Society, Volume 8 - https://books.google.com/books?id=X-4Sbi0_HJ0C&pg=PA365&lpg=PA365&dq=Caolbhaidh+son+of+Cronn+Badhraoi&source=bl&ots=yMbE5BU1Fn&sig=ACfU3U3QZ4R3YuhJZTkyChMVlxnEcQxaFg&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiZ4rGOnOLhAhVTnJ4KHeuMCBUQ6AEwA3oECAkQAQ#v=onepage&q=Caolbhaidh%20son%20of%20Cronn%20Badhraoi&f=false
The Three Collas - http://www.cartin.com/the-three-collas
The History of Ireland (Author: Geoffrey Keating) Section 47, XLVII - https://celt.ucc.ie/published/T100054/text057.html
The History of Ireland - XLVII. - Ex-Classics - https://www.exclassics.com/ceitinn/for50.htm
History Of Ireland Part 4 of 6 - https://christogenea.org/references/history-ireland-part-4-6
Cruthin - Howling Pixel "The history of Ireland" - Internet Archive, page 334 - https://archive.org/details/historyofireland15keat/page/334
O'Hart #91 | mac COLUMB Cóelbad (I58541)
|
| 4019 |
Cein ap Doli, born about the year 205 of the Common Era, is known only through the genealogies passed down by Welsh bards and ultimately recorded by Bartrum and harmonized by Wolcott. The line of descent of which this person is a part appears below:[1]
Beli Mawr (130 BCE) [2]
Afleth (100 BCE) ap Beli Mawr
Afallach (70 BCE) ap Affleth [3]
Owain (40 BCE) ap Afallach
Bryddgwyn (10BCE) ap Owain
Dubun (20) ap Bryddgwyn
Onwedd (50) ap Durbun
Anwerydd (80) ap Onwedd
Amgolydd (110) ap Anwerydd
Dwfyn (140) ap Amgolydd
Doli (170) ap Dwfyn
Cein (205) ap Doli
Gwyndog (235) ap Cein
Iago (265) ap Gwyndog
Tegid (295) ap Iago)
Padern Beisrudd (325) ap Tegid
Edern (355) ap Padern Beisrudd
Cunedda Wledig (385) ap Edern
Einion Yrth (415) ap Cunedda Wledig
Cadwallon Lawhir (450) ap Einion Yrth
Maelgwyn Gwynedd (480) ap Cadwallon Lawhir
Rhun (505) ap Maelgwyn Gwynedd
Beli (540) ap Rhun
Wolcott notes that "it would appear the purpose of this pedigree was to show that Owain ap Hywel, at whose direction the entire manuscript was drafted, was descended from the ancient Royal Family of Gwynedd.
Research Notes
Work in Progress
Note: Work in progress. All duplicates are unmerged matches pending discussion about this family; the unmerged matches of this person can all be found on Gwrgan ap Doli (abt.0235-) Østenstad-1 17:39, 5 April 2021 (UTC)
Pedigree of Pugh by of Mathavarn
He appears in a pedigree of Pughe, of Mathavarn, in Cyveilog, reaching back to biblical Adam, presented by Lewys Dwnn. The pedigree illustrates the fondness of the Welsh for pedigrees as well as the difficulty of determining at what point the pedigree moves from history to legend. [4]
The pedigree also appears in a work by the Powys-land Club.[5]
The complete pedigree is presented and discussed at Space: John Pughe's Descent from Adam
Harleian MS 3859
Darrel Wolcott has analyzed Harleian Manuscript 3859, which contains over 30 pedigrees or parts of pedigrees, in his Ancient Wales Studies. [1] The first pedigree, for Gwynedd, contains the pedigree from Beli Mawr to Owain ap Hywel Dda. Wolcott's review indicates that (1) some connecting words in the list have been interpreted by later writers as persons, and (2) even with these persons removed, a chronology in which each generation is 30 years before the succeeding one indicates that two different Beli's in the 6th century have been confused. The portion of the pedigree from Beli ap Rhun to Beli Mawr, reflecting Wolcott's analysis, is presented below. While in the manuscript the pedigree is presented in ascending order, it is shown here in descending order, with the most ancient person first.
Beli Mawr (130 BCE) (BCE, No profile on WikiTree) See Space:Beli_Mawr
Affleth (100 BCE) ap Beli Mawr (BCE, No profile on WikiTree) See Space:Beli_Mawr
Afallach (70BCE) ap Affleth (BCE, No profile on WikiTree) See Space:Beli_Mawr However, see Avallach ben Lud
Owain (40 BCE) ap Afallach (BCE, No profile on WikiTree) However, see Owain Avallach, b. 50. Pending merges with Eugein Aballac (abt 122) (Aballac-1) and Eugein Aballac (abt 122 (Aballac-1).
Bryddgrwyn (10 BCE) ap Owain (BCE, No profile on WikiTree) However, see Brydchain Owain, b. 75. Merge with Eugein-2.
Dufbun (20) ap Bryddrwyn Dubwyn ap Prydein (ap Prydein-1) b 20. Duwg Brychwain born about 100., Also [[ap Brychwain-1|Dubun ap Brychvain, b. 100.
Onwedds (50) ap Dubun
Anwerydd (80) ap Onwedd
[[ap Angueritt-1|Amgolydd (110) ap Anwerydd Also +3
Dwfn (140) ap Amgolydd +2 See ap Gurdumn-3
Doli (170) ap Dwfn +2.
See Gwrddyfn. b. abt 1085. Contains other unmerged matches.
See [ap Dwfn-1|Gwrddoli ap Dwfn]] born 195. contains other unmerged matches.
See Doli ap Gwrddoli born abt 210, and other unmerged matches.
See Gwergan ap Doli, born 235. and other unmerged matches
Cein (205) ap Doli (ap Doli-4) +2. See ap Guorcewin-1|Cein ap Guorcein, born 260.
Gwyndog or Genedog ap Cein (ap Cein-4), born 235 (Wolcott) or 225. +2. Duplicates: + ap Doli-4, + Doli-1, + ap gwrddofn-1; + unknown-130440, + ap Doli-2, + ap Doli-3. + Unmerged matches.
Iago (265) ap Gwyndog
Tegid (295) ap Iago ap Gwyndog +Ceino-1 (314) m. Uther Constantinus (Constantinus-4) from Yugoslavia...See Tacitus ap Cein b. 314
Padern Beisrudd (325) ap Tegid +Tegid-9 (350)
Edern (355) ap Padern Beisrudd +Padern-1 (364)_ Aetern, b. 364
Cunedda Wledig (385) ap Edern. Real Person ap Edern-1 + Edyrn-1
Cadwallon Lawhir (450) ap Einion Urdd
(Added person, not in pedigree: Einion Yth Cunella, b. 417)
Maelgwn Gwynedd (480) ap Cadwallon Lawhir. Maelgwn ap Hir Cadwallon, b. 475
Rhun (505) ap Maelgwn Gwynedd; Rhun Hir Maelgwn. 492-586 Gwynedds
Beli (540) ap Rhun (Rhun-24). born 517
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 Darrell Wolcott. Ancient Wales Studies. accessed 4 Apr 2021Harleian MS 3859 Bartrum has recorded these genealogies with a stated purpose of reporting them intact, and not attempting to harmonize them. Darrell Wolcott in his report on Harleian MS 3859 has attempted a harmonization of these genealogies which not only corrects inconsistencies in names, but assigns an estimated birth year. While Wolcott's work is not adequate for establishing the existence of these ancient rulers as real people, it is superior to anything that might be found on popular genealogies. Accessed 25 February 2023 jhd
↑ Wolcott notes, "We did not include the final part of the pedigree which claims the wife of Beli Mawr was Anna, mother of the Virgin Mary. While such a claim may have been a part of tenth century lore and served to show the ancient ancestors were "civilized Christians", the chronology is wrong by at least a century. It is further unlikely a lady of Palestine, born c. 35 BC, would have married anyone on the Isle of Britain. Most likely, however, is that the statement was a copyist's gloss added long after the pedigree was first composed.
↑ Wolcott notes, "both the chronology and the name "Afflewth" (the spelling is Amalech in other manuswcripts) suggest this was Lludd, the brother of Cassivellaunus and father of Tasclovanus mentioned by Roman historians in Julius Caesar's invasrion of Britain in 55 BCE.
↑ Lewys Dwnn. "Montgomeryshire Pedigrees: Heraldic Visitations of Wales and part of the Marches Pughe, of Mathavarn, in Cyveilog, to Adam page 205. Accessed 25 March 2020 jhd
↑ John Rhydderch. Pedigreees of Montgomeryshire Families selected about the yeare 1711-12 from Lewis Dwnn's Original Visitation. London: Powysland Club, 1888. The Pedigree of Phghe of Mathavarn, in Cyveilog, to Adam. Pages 68-74. Archive.org. Accessed 27 March 2020 jhd | ap DOLI Cein (I59302)
|
| 4020 |
Cellach Cualann Mac Gerthide, King of Leinster, was born about 630, in Leinster, Ireland, son of Gerthide mac Dicuill Danae (~0620–~0680).
Research Notes
This profile is based on Jaski's table 38
Clann Name: Uí Máil
Annals
The Annals of Ulster[1]
AU715.1 Cellach of Cualu, king of Laigin, Flann Febla son of Scannlán of the Uí Méith, abbot of Ard Macha, and bishop Cilléne, abbot of Ferna, died.
Rawlinson B 502[2]
¶355] Fiachra m. Tuathail m. Crimthaind m. Cellaig Cualann a quo Úi Chellaig m. Gerthide m. Dícolla Dánae m. Rónáin Craich m. Áeda Díbchíne m. Senaich Díbich m. Cárthind Muaich m. Eterscéla m. Óengusa Ailche m. Fergusa Forcraid m. Tuathail Tigich m. Maine &rl.
In the seventh century, a King of Uí Bairrche was Suibne mac Domnaill (grandson of Cormac mac Diarmata). In the Life of Munnu of Taghmon ( 635 AD), it would appear that he controlled the area of Leighlin at the time of the synod over the ordering of Easter (630 AD). It is stated that Munnu, as a result of being insulted by Suibne, prophesised that his head would be cut off by his brother’s son (Cind Faílad?) and would be thrown into the Barrow, near the Blathach stream (Madlin River?). His brother Faílbe married Eithne daughter of Crundmael mac Rónáin ( 656 AD) king of Uí Cheinnselaig and Lagen Desgabair (South Leinster) and Mugain, the daughter of Faílbe, married Cellaig Cualand, King of Leinster ( 715 AD) from whom are the Uí Cellaig Cualand. There is an entry in the Annals of Ulster recording the death in 766 AD Cernach son of Flann who is also thought to be of this line.[3]
Sources
↑ The Annals of Ulster - CELT
↑ MS - Rawlinson B502 - CELT
↑ Uí Bairrche, traceyclann.com, retrieved 2014-06-23, amb
T. M. Charles-Edwards, Early Christian Ireland. Edition illustrated, reprint. Publisher Cambridge University Press, 2000
Uí Bairrche, traceyclann.com, taken from Rawlinson B502, Book of Leinster, Book of Lecan, Book of Ballymote, hagiography and the Annals.
Wikipedia : Cellach Cualann
Wikidata: Item Q5058216, en:Wikipedia help.gif
Jaski, Bart Genealogical tables of medieval Irish royal dynasties Table-38 Early Irish Kingship Succession by Jaski Bart, Published by Four Courts Press, 2013, ISBN 1846824265 ISBN 9781846824265
CGH - Corpus Genealogies iHiberniae Vol 1 ed. M.A. O'Brien (Dublin 1962) pg, 42-5, 50-7, 348, 356.
MS - Rawlinson B502 - CELT
Ancestry private tree Cellaig Cualann /mac Gerthide/:Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Name: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.
DICTIONARY OF IRISH BIOGRAPHY - Cellach Cualann Contributed by Mac Shamhráin, Ailbhe | mac GERTHIDE Cellach Cualann (I58466)
|
| 4021 |
Cemetery: Arlington National Cemetery
Cemetery Address: C/O Director Arlington, VA 22211
Buried At: Site 805 | DUCKRELL William Jones (I37999)
|
| 4022 |
Census - 1900 Naturalized 1870 | Lynn William James (I49969)
|
| 4023 |
Census US Population, 1800 Herbert was listed as 6 years old and in School.
Census in File.
1900 Mass Census lists Herbert as 25 Years old and an Insurance Clerk.
Census in File.
1920 Census has the Herbert Ames Family living at 477 Willow St.
He was employed as a counter clerk at an Insurance Agency in this census.
1930 Census the family was living at 1509 #2. Turnpike St. North Stoughton, Massachusetts. | AMES Herbert William (I40189)
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| 4024 |
Census: 1910 Dana, Massachusetts
Census: 1930 Wales, Androscoggin County, ME
Census: 1940 Wales, Androscroggin, Maine
Title: 1930 United States Census, Wales, Androscogin County
Repository:
Media: Book
Page: ED 1-46, Page 5A
Text: Oak Hill Road, Line 19 Doubleday, Earl | DOUBLEDAY Earl H. (I54636)
|
| 4025 |
Census: 1910 Greenwich, Hampshire County, MA
Census: 1920 Hardwick, MA
Census: 1930 Wales, Androscoggin County, ME
Census: 1940 Wales, Androscroggin, Maine
Title: 1920 United States Census, Hardwick, Worcester County, MA
Repository:
Media: Book
Page: Ed 84, Sheet 12A
Text: Lyman, Edna age 13 | LYMAN Edna Grace (I54635)
|
| 4026 |
Census: 1910 Greenwich, Hampshire County, MA
Census: 1920 Hardwick, MA 2
Census: 9 APR 1930 Dana, Worcester County, MA 3
Census: 1940 Bowdoinham, Sagahadoc. Maine
Title: 1920 United States Census, Hardwick, Worcester County, MA
Repository:
Media: Book
Page: ED 84, Sheet 12A
Text: Lyman, Edson, age 13
Title: 1930 United States Census, Dana, Worcester County, MA
Publication: April 9, 1930
Repository:
Note: Ancestry.com
Media: Electronic
Page: Ed 14-153 Sheet 6A
Text: In household of Wilfred H. Lyman, Edson D., brother, age 23, single, laborer- road | LYMAN Edson Douglass (I54638)
|
| 4027 |
Census: 1910 Greenwich, Hampshire County, MA
Census: 9 APR 1930 Douglas, Worcester County, MA 3
Residence: JUN 1917 Hartford, CT
Title: 1930 United States Census, Dana, Worcester County, MA
Publication: April 9, 1930
Repository:
Note: Ancestry.com
Media: Electronic
Page: Ed 14-153 Sheet 6A
Text: Line 31,Lyman, Wilfred H. , age 35, b. MA, Retail Ice | LYMAN Wilfred Henry (I54619)
|
| 4028 |
Census: 1920 Athol, MA
Census: 1940 Athol, MA
Title: 1920 United States Census, Athol, Worcester County, MA
Publication: 10 Jan 1920
Note: Ancestry Image #724
Repository:
Note: National Archives, East Point, GA
Media: Microfilm
Page: ED 2, Sheet 17B | STONE Iva (I54631)
|
| 4029 |
Census: 1930 Dana, Worcester County, Massachusetts
Title: 1930 United States Census, Dana, Worcester County, MA
Publication: April 9, 1930
Repository:
Note: Ancestry.com
Media: Electronic
Page: Sheet 6A
Text: Line 30, Snyder, Glenn M., son, age 1 | SNYDER Glenn Melvin (I54634)
|
| 4030 |
Census: 1930 Dana, Worcester County, Massachusetts
Census: 1940 Litchfield, Kennebec, Maine
Title: 1930 United States Census, Dana, Worcester County, MA
Publication: April 9, 1930
Repository:
Note: Ancestry.com
Media: Electronic
Page: Sheet 6A
Text: Line 25, Snyder, Guy, Head, age 29, b. Iowa, both parents b. Iowa, Laborer - Highway | SNYDER Guy (I54633)
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| 4031 |
Census: 1930 Greenwich, Hampshire County, MA
Title: 1930 United States Census, Greenwich, Hampshire County, MA
Repository:
Media: Book
Page: ED 18, Sheet 1B
Text: Lyman, E. Florence, age 39, first married at age 24, b. MA | SMITH Florence (Young) (I54628)
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| 4032 |
Census: 1930 Lee, Berkshire County, MA | JOHNSON Lorraine Gertrude (I54617)
|
| 4033 |
Census: 1930 Ludlow, Hampden County, MA | ROBERTS Helen Yvonne (I54615)
|
| 4034 |
Census: 1930 Princeton, Worcester County, MA
Census: 1920 Worcester, Worcester, MA | BLACK Florence Irene (I54629)
|
| 4035 |
Census: 1930 Wales, Androscoggin County, ME
Census: 1940 Bowdoinham, Sagahadoc. Maine | SHERMAN Helen Ruth (I54639)
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| 4036 |
Census: 1930 Wales, Androscoggin, ME
Title: 1930 United States Census, Wales, Androscogin County
Repository:
Media: Book
Page: ED 46, Sheet 5A
Text: Sherman, Ruth H. age 5, had a brother Ralph W. same age, and many other siblings. Lived next to Earl and Edna Doubleday. | SHERMAN Ruth A. (I54785)
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| 4037 |
Census: 1930 Wales, Maine
Title: WWI Civilian Draft Registration Cards 1917-1918
Author: Ancestry.com
Publication: Provo, UT: Ancestry.com, 2002
Note: National Archives and Records Administration. World War I Selective Service System Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918. M1509, 20,243 rolls. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration.
Repository:
Note: Online database
Media: Official Document
Text: Name: Chas Otis Robert Sherman
City: Not Stated
County: Androscoggin
State: Maine
Birth Date: 23 Aug 1880
Race: White
Roll: 1653899
DraftBoard: 1
Title: Social Security Death Index
Author: Social Security Administration
Repository:
Media: Ancestry.com | SHERMAN Charles Otis Robert (I54783)
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| 4038 |
Census: 1930 Winchendon, MA | DUNCHUS Vitaus (I54602)
|
| 4039 |
Census: 1930 Winchendon, Worcester, MA
Title: Social Security Death Index
Author: Social Security Administration
Repository:
Media: Ancestry.com | EDSON Raymond Fallon (I54642)
|
| 4040 |
Census: 1930 Winchendon, Worcester, MA | EDSON Edwin Gerald (I54608)
|
| 4041 |
Census: 1930 Winchendon, Worcester, MA | EDSON Earnest Clifford (I54640)
|
| 4042 |
Census: 1930 Winchendon, Worcester, MA | FALLON Kathrine Helen (I54641)
|
| 4043 |
Census: 2 JUN 1880 Greenwich, Hampshire County, MA
Census: 1910 Greenwich, Hampshire County, MA
Census: 1920 Hardwick, MA
Census: 21 APR 1930 Greenwich, Hampshire County, MA
Census: 1940 Athol, MA
Residence: 1919 Hardwick, MA
Residence: 1935 Litchfield, Maine
Residence: 1935 Litchfield, Maine
Title: 1880 United States Census, Greenwich, Hampshire County, MA
Publication: June 1880
Repository:
Note: National Archives, East Point, GA
Media: Microfilm
Page: ED 328, p. 3, Stamped page 75C
Title: 1920 United States Census, Hardwick, Worcester County, MA
Repository:
Media: Book
Page: ED 84, sheet 12 A
Text: Lyman, Annie, age 46, b. MA
Title: 1930 United States Census, Greenwich, Hampshire County, MA
Repository:
Media: Book
Page: ED 18, sheet 5A
Text: Lyman E. Anna, age 56, Married at 18
Title: Certificate of Death for Annie E. Lyman
Author: State of Maine
Note: Copy in possession of author.
Repository:
Media: Official Document
Text: Died in Litchfield. Kennebec County, Maine on Sept. 24, 1963 at age 90. She was Widow of Henry L. Born Jan. 11, 1873 in Greenwich, MA to Clarence P. Edson and Carrie B. Douglass. Informant was Mrs. Guy Snyder [daughter Eva]. Cause of death was Coronary occlusion.
Title: Massachusetts Vital Records, 1841-1910
Publication: Copyright 2001-2005, New England Historic Genealogical Society
Note: This source is now located at http://www.americanancestors.org
Repository:
Note: http://www.newenglandancestors.org
Media: Internet
Text: Prescott, MA 1891 vol 416 p. 47 | EDSON Ann Luella (I54610)
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| 4044 |
Census: 25 APR 1910 Dana, Massachusetts | DOUBLEDAY Frank Allen (I54781)
|
| 4045 |
Census: 30 APR 1930 Hardwick, Worcester County, MA 3
Census: 1940 West Brookfield, Worcester, MA
Residence: 1935 Hardwick, Worcester, MA
Medical Information: Angina
Married to unknown spouse: 13 JAN 1951 in Spencer, Massachusetts | LYMAN Gordon Porter (I54618)
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| 4046 |
Census: 9 APR 1930 Dana, Worcester County, MA | LYMAN Raymond Wilfred (I54625)
|
| 4047 |
Central Avenue
• c1890
• Oscar F. Davisson House
• Colonial Revival
The Philadelphia Centennial of 1876 is generally recognized as the event which created an interest in our Colonial architectural heritage generally referred to by the umbrella term Colonial Revival. The Georgian and Adam or Federal styles dominated the Revival. The earliest Colonial Revival houses were rarely historically correct copies of original prototypes but were instead much enlarged free interpretations, with only the details inspired by colonial precedents.
The Davisson House is typical of the style. Essentially rectangular in form, the facade is symmetrically balanced with a large, slightly extended second story pavilion topped with a pediment gable dormer rising above a flat-roofed porch. The porch is supported by slender, paired columns (usually a dead giveaway for Colonial Revival houses as original prototypes would have had single columns), and enclosed with a balustrade supported by square posts.
A somewhat unique feature of the house is the two story porte-cochere, from which one can imagine guests disembarking from buggies and carriages. A large carriagehouse, later converted to a garage, repeats the roof line of the house.
http://www.preservationdayton.com/Pages/GH_tour.html | DAVISSON Oscar Fulton (I36534)
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| 4048 |
Centule (d. 812).[1]
Parents
(unproven) Father: Adalric (d. ante 814)CAUTION: There's a few reconstructions for Aldaric. At least one of them states his parents, spouse and children are UNKNOWN.[2] See Aldaric's profile for more.
Mother: UNKNOWN
(unproven) Father: Loup, Duke of Gascony[1]
Marriage
m. UNKNOWN. Issue:[2]
Loup (d. after 819) -- father of Donat Loup, d. ante 865 (ancestor of Comtes de Bigorre) and (unproven) Centule Loup, d. 844.[1]
m. UNKNOWN.
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 Cawley, Charles, http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/GASCONY.htm#_ftnref21
↑ http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/GASCONY.htm#_ftnref31
see Cawley, 2006 - http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/GASCONY.htm#Loupdied775B | GASCOÑA Centule (I59554)
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| 4049 |
Ceremony performed by Rev H. C. Rowald of Lutheran Church at 6 PM. Witnesses were Herman Zabel, Julius Dreger, J. Polfuss, Emma Guederjahn, Cora Boeker and Emma Weckwerth. | Family: BRUSTMAN Johann Emil / WECKWERTH Minna Valeria (F17946)
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| 4050 |
Ceremony took place at Jackson Drive Luth Church parsonage with Rev Harold Keinhaus officating. Witnesses were Irvin Meyer and Germaine Meyer. | Family: Sr. Edward Edwin Brustman / MEYER Ruth Janet (F17910)
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| 4051 |
Ceremony took place at St. Johns Rectory with Rev W.P. Mortell officiating. Witnesses were Victor M. Leib and Edith Steinhilber. | Family: BRUSTMAN Walter William / CHRISTENSEN Amelia Marie (F17924)
|
| 4052 |
Ceretic Guletic was king of Alt Clud (Dumbarton) in the 5th Century AD.
Profiles need birth years, whether actual or estimated. Birth years for this line of descent are estimated with each generation born 20 years after the preceding generation.
Sources
The little known Kingdom of Alt Clut
Wikipedia : Ceretic Guletic
Listed as Ceredig Wledig (Coroticus) in a discussion by by Tim Clarkson, University of Manchester, Figure 1 in - Rhydderch Hael The Heroic Age, Issue 2, Autumn/Winter 1999
WikiTree profile UNKNOWN-130456 created through the import of Spencer Family Tree 4 2002.GED on Nov 28, 2011 by Chet Spencer. | UNKNOWN Ceretic Guletic of Alt Clud (I59315)
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| 4053 |
Cert #1994 - MN 031873 | ZIEGLER Ernistine Cecilia (I8927)
|
| 4054 |
certificate # 6683 | Family: ROBINSON Dewey A. / PULSIFER Sonia D. (F8214)
|
| 4055 |
Changed name to Albert Thompson | TONNESSEN Svend Albert (I9501)
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| 4056 |
Changed name to Paul Kenneth Pulsifer | PULSIFER Isaac Paul (I7394)
|
| 4057 |
Charibert (also spelled Caribert and Heribert), Count of Laon, was the maternal grandfather of Charlemagne. [1]
Charibert, Count of Laon[2]
Parents
Charibert's father is unknown. [3]
Some genealogies list, fancifully, Martin as father.
Charibert's mother was Bertrada. [3] Only his mother is known from contemporary records. [1]
721 Foundation of Abbey of Prüm
In 721, Charibert signed, with his mother Bertrada of Prüm the foundation act of the Abbey of Prüm. [4]
The same year, also with his mother, he made a donation to the Abbey of Echternach.[4]
Marriage
m. UNKNOWN. Issue: 1
762 Death
He died before 762, as stated in an act of his daughter and son-in-law.
Charibert "Heribert", Count of Laon (d. after 23 Jun 720) [citation needed]
Issue
He was the father of Charles's mother, Bertrada of Laon. [4]
Bertrade, daughter of Charibert, Count of Laon, married Pepin le Bref, King of the Franks. Bertrade and Pepin, in turn, were parents of Charlemagne. [2]
Bertrada (Berta) "au grand pied" (720 - 12 Jun 783)
m. (743/4) Pepin III "le bref"
By 744, his daughter Bertrada of Laon had married Pippin the Younger, mayor of the palace of Neustria and Burgundy and later king of the Franks.
Charibert & his wife had one child:
BERTRADA [Berta] "au Grand Pied" ([720]-Choisy-au-Bac, near Compiègne 12 Jun 783[605], bur église de l'abbaye royale de Saint Denis). The Annales Laurissenses record the marriage in 749 of "Bertradem cognomine Bertam, Cariberti Laudunensis comitis filiam" and "Pippinus"[606]. "Pippinus rex Francorum" donated property to found Kloster Prüm by charter dated 13 Aug 762 which names "coniux mea Bertrada…genitor suus Heribertus"[607]. Pépin planned to divorce his wife, but was convinced otherwise by Pope Paul I in 762. After the death of her husband, Bertrada assumed a prominent role in government. She tried unsuccessfully to reconcile her two sons, meeting with Carloman at Seltz and also travelling to Italy in 770[608]. The necrology of Argenteuil Priory records the death "IV Id Jul" of "Bertrada regina"[609]. m ([743/44]) PEPIN maior domus, son of CHARLES "Martel" maior domus of Austrasia and Neustria [Carolingian] & his first wife Chrothrudis (715-Saint-Denis 24 Sep 768, bur église de l'abbaye royale de Saint Denis). He succeeded in 751 as PEPIN “le Bref” King of the Franks. [3]
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 Wikipedia. Charibert of Laon. Wikipedia: Caribert of Laon Article cites the following sources:
Settipani, Christian, Les Ancêtres de Charlemagne, Paris, 1989
Settipani, Christian, Addendum to the Ancestors of Charlemagne, 1990 (PDF)
Cawley, Charles (7 February 2011), Franks, Merovingian nobility Pepin [II]"le Gros" or "d'Herstal", Medieval Lands database, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy,Medieval Lands Project on the son of Bertrada of Prüm]
↑ 2.0 2.1 Douglas Richardson, Royal Ancestry. Vol 5, page 483.
↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 Charles Cawley. Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Medieval Lands Database. http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FRANKSMaiordomi.htm#_Toc359686227. Accessed April 1, 2017. jhd
↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 Charles Cawley, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Cited by Wikipedia, Charibert of Laon. Wikipedia: Caribert of Laon
Cawley, Charles. "Medieval Lands": A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families © by Charles Cawley, hosted by Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG). See also WikiTree's source page for MedLands. | LAON Charibert (I58155)
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| 4058 |
Charibert or Charibertus, a nobleman (nobilis) in Neustria (Neustrie or Neustrien) is listed in some sources[1] as the oldest ancestor of the Capetian dynasty of France. However there appears to be no primary sources that confirm his existence.[2]
Dates
Although all the sources agree on a date of about 636 (sometimes before this date, sometimes after) when he died, there is little agreement about when he possibly was born; dates ranging from 555 to 600. Given that the life expectancy of an adult male during this period was about 40-50 years,[3] a date towards the upper end of this range would be expected, hence the selection of 590 for his birth date.
Name
Charibert is often referred to as from Hesbaye or Haspengau, but although his 3 X great grandson would be Dux im Haspengau, Charibert himself seems to have nothing to do with this territrory as he is only known as being from Neustria (the North Western area of France, whereas Hesbaye was in Austrasia (the North East of France, and part of modern Belgium).
Charibert is sometimes confused with Charibert, Count of Laon, the father of Bertrada or Berta, the mother of Charlemagne, but he would have been born about a 100 years later.
He is also at times confused with Charibert I, and Charibert II, Kings of the Franks from the Merovingian dynasty, see below under the Supposed Parents section for more details.
Family
The wife of Charibert is unknown (see below) but he is possibly the father of the following children:[4]
Chrodbert or Chrodbertus or Robert (I), also nobilis in Neustria;
Haltbert or Albert;
Erlebert, had issue
Lambert, Abbot of Fontanelle, Bishop of Lyon;
Daughter unnamed.
Supposed wife
Charibert supposedly married his cousin, Wulfgurd (also Wulfgard or Wulgrud) of Paris,[5] but just as there appears to be no sources for Charibert, there are also no primary sources for Wulfgurd. Her existence is doubtful.
Supposed parents
As mentioned above, Charibert if he existed is the end of the line ancestor of the Capetian dynasty. However this hasn't prevented many online genealogies from proposing a father or parents, none of which have any valid sources and all are highly unlikely.
Some of the most frequently seen include;
Tassilo I (Tassilon) of Bavaria
Clothar I (also Chlothachar or Clotaire), King of the Franks, and his wife/mistress Ingundis (Ingonde). Although they did have a son Charibert I, King of the Franks (born circa 517, died 567),[6] there is no record of another son with the same name, and Charibert I is obviously from a slightly earlier time period.
Clothar II, King of the Franks, is also sometimes mentioned as his father, probably because he also had a son Charibert, who succeeded as Charibert II, KIng of the Franks in Aquitaine from 629 but died in 631 or 632 probably still in his early teens.[7] Although he is in the right time period, apart from the name there is nothing else to connect him with Charibert, nobilis de Neustrie.
Research Note
Other References: There is an interesting discussion on the supposed genetic analysis of Louis XVI and how that might link back to his ancestors, but there are no conclusions see here [1]
Sources
↑ Schwennicke; Stuart, line 169, p. 126; many online genealogies
↑ Cawley, Charles, 'Franks, Merovingian Nobility: Chapter 4G Merovingian Counts, 7th Century' version 3.0, 30 May 2014, in Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families (http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FRANKSMaiordomi.htm#_Toc359686226 : accessed 19 April 2015)
↑ Gilleard, p. 1067; he is actually discussing the slightly later Carolingian period but he does mention the Merovingian rulers whose mean age at death was 34 years
↑ Schwennicke, names all 4 children; Cawley, only names the first 3, and only indicates they are brothers, not the sons of Charibert
↑ Stuart, lIne 169, p. 126; also on many online genealogies
↑ Settipani & Kerrebrouck, p. 73-74
↑ Settipani & Kerrrebrouck, p. 99
Cawley, Charles, 'Franks, Merovingian Nobility: Chapter 4G Merovingian Counts, 7th Century' version 3.0, 30 May 2014, in Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families (http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FRANKSMaiordomi.htm#_Toc359686226 : accessed 19 April 2015) .
Gilleard, Chris, 'Old age in the Dark Ages: the status of old age during the early Middle Ages, Ageing and Society, vol 29, pp. 1065-1084, 2009. doi:10.1017/S0144686X09008630
Schwennicke, Detlev, Europäische Stammtafeln: Stammtafeln zur Geschichte der europäischen Staaten. Band II: Die außerdeutschen Staaten, 1976, Tafel 10.
Settipani, Christian & Van Kerrebrouck, Patrick, Nouvelle histoire genealogique de l'auguste Maison de France: La préhistoire des Capétiens 481-987; Villeneuve d'Ascq, 1993.
Stuart, Roderick W., Royalty for Commoners: The complete known lineage of John of Gaunt, son of Edward III, King of England and Queen Philippa, 2nd ed.; Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Company, 1992. | NEUSTRIA Charibert (I58233)
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| 4059 |
Charled Henry Paddock married Minnie Warren and had four children. Upon her death, he deserted the family and the family was scattered. | Paddock Charles Henry (I52818)
|
| 4060 |
Charlemagne expanded the Frankish kingdom to include much of Western and Central Europe. His rule is also associated with the Carolingian Renaissance, and his foreign conquests and internal reforms, shaped Western Europe and the European Middle Ages. He is numbered as Charles I in the regnal lists of Germany, the Holy Roman Empire, and France.
Charlemagne (742/7 – 28 Jan 814) had children with two wives and six mistresses. As his two eldest sons died before him, he was succeeded by his third son Hludowic (Louis the Pious).
Name and Titles
Commonly known as: Charlemagne, King of the Franks, Emperor of the Romans
This name is commonly used in both English and French does not appear until the 12th century.
Also known as: Charles the Great, Karolus Magnus, Carolus, Karl, Karlo, etc.
English: Charles the Great, King of the Franks, Emperor of the Romans
French: Charlemagne, Roi des Francs, Empereur d'Occident
German: Karl der Grosse, König des Fränkischen Reichs
Dutch: Karel de Grote,
Latin: Karolus (Carolus) Magnus, Rex Francorum, imperatori Romanorum
Old Low Franconian: Karl thie Mikili, Frankana Kunink
Old Gallo-Romance: Karlus li Magnus, Regis de les Frankes
Old French: Charles li Magne, Rei des Francs
Middle French: Charlemagne, Roi des Francs
"On that very and most holy day of Christmas ... Leo the pope put [a/the] crown on his head, and acclamation was made by all the people of the Romans: ‘To Charles Augustus, crowned by God, great and pacific emperor of the Romans, Life and Victory!’"[1]
Charlemagne titled himself: 'Carolus serenissimus augustus a Deo coranatos magnus pacificus imperator, Romanum gubernans imperium, qui et per misericordiam Dei rex Francorum atque Langobardorum'[2]
Birth
Born: Probably 2 April 748
The day of his birth as April 2nd comes from Lorsch Calendar ("IIII. Non. Apr. Nativitatis domni et gloriosissimi Karoli imperatoris et semper Augusti.") It is the year of his birth which is uncertain. The contemporary historian Einhard wrote that Charlemagne was about age 71 at his death in 814. For this reason, the year of his birth is frequently given as 742. However, there are problems with this date and it does not match other records. He was certainly not born before the marriage of his parents which occurred in 744. The year is given as 747 in Annales Petaviani; however, there are reasons to think this is also wrong. The entry immediately before the birth of Charlemagne discusses the departure of his uncle, King Carloman, for Rome which could not have been before 15 August 747. Also, 2 April 747 was Easter Sunday, and it is unthinkable that Charlemagne could have been born on Easter without it being a widely known and celebrated fact. Bercher points out that if Easter was being used as the beginning of the New Year, then 2 April 748 would still have been 747 in that calendar system. For these reasons, the most probable date of birth for Charlemagne is 2 April 748.[3]
Place of birth: Unknown.
The place of birth of Charlemagne is not given in any contemporary document. He is often assumed to have to have been born in Aachen ( in present day North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany) which was the center of Charlemagne's Frankish empire, but this not actually known. The royal court of the Franks frequently traveled from place to place, so Charlemagne could have been born in any of several cities. The best that can be said is that he was born in Francia (Kingdom of the Franks), most likely in the territory known as Austrasia (though many places in Neustria have also been suggested).
Marriages and Legitimate Children[3]
Married: 1st - Unknown (sometimes called Desiderata), daughter of Desiderius, king of the Lombards in 770. Charlemagne's mother brought a daughter Desiderius and married her to Charlemagne in 770 to forge an alliance with Lombard kingdom. That her name was "Desiderata" is known from a single source, however, it is now thought to be very unlikely. In 770 or 771, Charlemagne repudiated this marriage to marry Hildegard. They had no children.
Married: 2nd - Hildegard, daughter of Gerold, count of Alemannia, between 770 and 772. The date of this marriage is difficult to determine due to conflicts in the records; it most likely occurred in 771. They had 9 children. She died 30 April 783 in Saxony,
Children of Charlemagne and Hildegard:
1. Charles the Younger (772/773 - 811), King of the Franks
2. Adelais (Adelaid/Adeleidis) (773/774 - 774)
3. Hrotrudis (Rotrud/Hruodrud, Erythro in Greek) (775 - 810), mistress of Rorico I, Comte de Rennes et du Maine.
4. Carloman, renamed "Pepin" (777-810), King of the Lombards (Italy) [4]
5. Louis (778 – 840, twin of Hlothar, Holy Roman Emperor
6. Hlothar (Lothar) (778 – 779/780. twin of Louis)
7. Bertrada (Berta) (779/780 - 823/4), mistress to Angilbert "the Saint"
8. Gisela (Gisle) (781 - 800/814)
9. Hildegard (783) lived 40 days
Married: 3rd - Fastrada, daughter of count Radulf, in 783. They had two children. She died 10 August 794.
Children of Charlemagne and Fastrada:
1. Theodrada (785-844/853), Abbess of Notre-Dame d'Argenteuil near Paris, Abbess of (some convent in) Zurich
2. Hiltrud (787 - 800/814), mistress of Richwin, Count of Padua, mother of Richbod (800/805 – 844)
Married: 4th - Liutgard, an Alamannian of unknown parentage. They had no children.
Mistresses and Illegitimate Children
Mistress: Hilmiltrude. Issue: 1
Pepin "le Bossu" (the Hunchback) (770 – 811), rebelled, imprisoned at Abbey of St-Gallen and Prum.
Unknown mistress:
Daughter Rotaïd (Hruodhaid), b. ca. 784, d. after 800, prob. after 814.
Mistress: Madelgard. Issue:
Daughter Rothilde, d. 22 or 24 March 852, abbess of Faremoutiers.
Mistress: Gersvind. (Gerswinda). Issue:
Daughter Adaltrude (about 790)
Mistress: Regina. Issue: 2
Drogo (Dreux) (801 - 855), Abbot of Luxeuil, Bishop of Metz, Vicar to Pope Sergius II, Leo IV, and Benedict III in France
Hugo (Hugues) "l'Abbé/the Abbot" (802/806 - 844), Abbot at St-Quentin, Lobbes, St-Bertin, and Noaille, Arch-Chancellor, first for Louis, then for Charles II "le Chauve"
Mistress: Adelindis (Ethelind). Issue: 1
Theoderic (Thierry) (807 - after 818), a cleric
Death
Died: 28 Jan 814 in Aachen, Austrasia, Francia (now in present day North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany). Austrasia probably ceased to be a separate administrative territory within Charlemagne’s Frankish kingdom by 814, but was still a recognizable region of the Kingdom of the Franks.
"He died January twenty-eighth, the seventh day from the time that he took to his bed, at nine o'clock in the morning, after partaking of the Holy Communion, in the seventy-second year of his age and the forty-seventh of his reign" (Einhard).[5]
Buried: "The same day" in Aachen Cathedral (Cathedral of Aix-la-Chapelle).[6]
"From the lands where the sun rises to western shores, People are crying and wailing...the Franks, the Romans, all Christians, are stung with mourning and great worry...the young and old, glorious nobles, all lament the loss of their Caesar...the world laments the death of Charles...O Christ, you who govern the heavenly host, grant a peaceful place to Charles in your kingdom. Alas for miserable me." ~ anonymous monk of Bobbio[7]
1165: Frederick I put Charlemagne in a sarcophagus beneath the cathedral floor.
1215: He was re-interred by Frederick II in a casket of gold and silver.
Notes
Physical Character
His appearance as described by Einhard's Vita Karoli Magni in his twenty-second chapter:
"He was heavily built, sturdy, and of considerable stature .... round head, large and lively eyes, a slightly larger nose than usual, white but still attractive hair, a bright and cheerful expression, a short and fat neck, and a slightly protruding stomach. His voice was clear, but a little higher than one would have expected for a man of his build. He enjoyed good health, except for the fevers that affected him in the last few years of his life. Toward the end he dragged one leg. Even then, he stubbornly did what he wanted and refused to listen to doctors, indeed he detested them, because they wanted to persuade him to stop eating roast meat, as was his wont, and to be content with boiled meat." [8]
1861: Charlemagne's tomb was opened by scientists who reconstructed his skeleton and found it measured 74.9 inches (6' 2-3/4") (192 centimeters).[9]
Charlemagne wore the traditional, non-aristocratic costume of the Frankish people (Einhard).[10]
Religion
Maintained father's policy towards papacy and became its protector.
778: Defeated by the Basques, at the Battle of Roncesvalles.
Christianized Saxons by force.
Sources
↑ Davis, RHC: A History of Medieval Europe, Longman 1977 p149-50
↑ Davis, A History of Medieval Europe, p155
↑ 3.0 3.1 Baldwin, Stewart, 'Charlemagne (Karolus Magnus, Charles the Great, Karl der Große)' revised 16 Aug 2012, in The Henry Project: The Ancestors of King Henry II of England. Online American Society of Genealogists https://fasg.org/projects/henryproject : accessed 23 May 2023).
↑ Einhard, Life of Charlemagne translated by Samuel Epes Turner Page 48. (New York: American Book Company, 1880); digital image: (https://www.google.com/books/edition/Life_of_Charlemagne/qCseAAAAMAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=0):
↑ Einhard, page 70.
↑ earliest surviving planctus, the Planctus de obitu Karoli, was composed by a monk of Bobbio, which he had patronised.
↑ John Julius Norwich, Byzantium: The Early Centuries, pg. 378 (?)
↑ Einhard, page 56.
↑ Barbero, Alessandro (2004). Charlemagne: Father of a Continent. Translated by Allan Cameron. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-23943-2., pg. 91 Available on the Internet Archive. (https://archive.org/details/charlemagnefathe0000barb/page/118/mode/2up?q=opened : accessed 6 April 2024)
↑ Einhard, page 58-59.
See also:
Settipani, Christian. La préhistoire des Capétiens 481-987 (Première partie - Mérovingiens, Carolingiens et Robertiens). (Villeneuve d'Ascq, 1993).
Richardson, Douglas. Royal Ancestry: A Study In Colonial And Medieval Families, in 5 vols. (Salt Lake City, Utah, 2013): vol. V pages 481-504, Appendix: Lines from Charlemagne to William the Conqueror.
Pagden, Percy. World's at War: The 2,500-Year Struggle Between East and West, First ed. (2008): p. 147.
Bryce, James. The Holy Roman Empire. (London, 1875, 1968). Books.google.com LINK
L. Orlandini, Manuel Abranches de Soveral, Reynaud de Paysac, F.L. J P de Palmas (Aurejac et Tournemire; Frankish line;
La Galissonniere: Elections d'Arques et Rouen), Jean de Villoutreys (ref: Georges Poull), E. Wilkerson-Theaux (Laura Little), O. Auffray, A. Brabant (Genealogy of Chauvigny of Blot from "Chanoine Prevost Archiviste du Diocese de Troyes Union Typographique Domois Cote-d'Or 1925), Emmanuel Arminjon (E Levi-Provencal Histoire de l'Espagne Andalouse), Y. Gazagnes-Gazanhe, R. Sekulovich and J.P. de
Urkundenbuch für die Geschichte des Niederrheins oder des Erzstifts Cöln, der Fürstenthümer Jülich und Berg, Geldern, Meurs, Kleve und Mark, und der Reichsstifte Elten, Essen und Werden : aus den Quellen in dem Königlichen Provinzial-Archiv zu Düsseldorf und in den Kirchen- und Stadt-Archiven der Provinz, vollständig und erläutert / hrsg. von Theod. Jos. Lacomblet Editor: Lacomblet, Theodor Joseph DNB Wikipedia Published Düsseldorf : Wolf, 1840 - Annotation Später mit Verlagsangabe Schönian, Elbersfeld und Schaub, Düsseldorf. Karl der Große and Pippin mentioned date May 3, 779 Karl der Große April 26, 802 | CAROLINGIAN Charles (I58146)
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| 4061 |
Charles and Hester lived in Townshend, VT until about 1825 when they returned to Bernardston and he built a house which still stands on Route 10, the Northfields Road. Rufus Guillou undoubtedly worked for Charles Phelps, a large landowner in Townshend, and thus gave his second son his employer's name.
Fred Murphy | GUILLOW Charles Phelps (I19344)
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| 4062 |
Charles Carolignian (b. summer 953 Laon - 12 Jun 991 Orléans).[1][2]
bur. 1001 Maastricht, St Servatius[1]
Charles is the son of Louis IV d'Outremer and Gerberga of Germany. His twin brother Henry, died young. His wife was Adelais, daughter of Robert, Comte de Troyes and Adelais de Bourgogne.[1]
Titles
May 977 Diedenhofen: Duke of Lower Lotharingia[1]
Marriage
m. (970) Adelais de Troyes.[4] Issue: 6.[5]
Otto (b. 970 - d. 13 Jun 1013/4), Duke of Lower Lotharingia
Ermengarde (b. 970/5 - d. after 1013)
Gerberga (b. abt. 975 - d. 27 Jan after 1018)
Adelais (d. after 1012)
Louis (c. 991 or later - d. after 993)
Charles (b. abt., 991 or later - d. after 991)
Timeline
975: War with Godefride [1]
977: Banished from Court [1]
978 Capture of Laon
986: claimed French throne... and his nephew's a year later. [1]
988 captured Laon in 988
989 captured Reim[1]
991 captured with family; died incarcerated at Orleans (prisoner of Hugues Capet of France) a[1]
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 Cawley (2006).[1]
↑ see also: The Royal Line Albert F Schmuhl 1929 NYC, NY; Tab. Gen. Souv. France 22 Tab. IV; Die Nechkommen Karls des Grossen Germ Pub Bt v. 11 p1 10; Ahnen zu Karl der Grossen, Germ. PH 694 p. 103; Plantagenet Ancestry Eng. 116, p. 19, 105, 171;Royal Gen Eng. 132, p. 451, 596; Gens Nostra .1968 249;[2] Kwartieren Greidanus-Jaeger in Stamreeksen, 1994, 's-Gravenhage, Wimersma Greidanus, Mr. G. J. J. van. 756 [3]
Cawley, C. (2006). Medieval Lands v.4. Fmg.ac. Web.[6]
Wikipedia: Charles, Duke of Lower Lorraine; Wikipedia:fr: Charles de Basse-Lotharingie
Wikidata: Item Q469603 help.gif | CAROLINGIAN Charles (I58943)
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| 4063 |
Charles Cawley notes that the historical existence of Boggis is uncertain. [1]
Research Notes
Birth Year Estimation
His birth year estimation has been calculated from the dates of his presumed son Eudes.
845 Charter
Grant of Aquitaine from Dagobert
Cawley notes that the charter of Charles II "le Chauve" King of the West Franks dated 30 Jan 845 (possibly spurious, as explained in the Introduction) states that "Dagobertus rex" granted Aquitaine to "Boggiso Duci" after the death of "fratris sui Ilderici Aquitainie regis"[9]. The death of Charibert, brother of King Dagobert I, is dated to 631 from other sources (see MEROVINGIAN KINGS). This appears chronologically inconsistent with this alleged grant of Aquitaine to Boggis, assuming that the estimated date of death of his supposed son Duke Eudes is accurate as shown below. [1]
Parents
Cawley notes that the same 845 charter states that "Haribertus rex" married "Amandus Dux in Vasconia…filia suæ Giselæ" and that they were parents of "Boggiso Duci et suo fratri Bertrando", which is clearly incorrect considering that King Charibert is shown in other sources to have been no more than fourteen years old when he died. [1]
Wife
He is reported to have married Oda. Cawley notes that " The Vita Landiberto episcopi Traiectensis of Nicolas names "Oda…Bohggis Aquitanorum ducis recens defuncti vidua" as "amita" of Lambert. [1]
Children
The same 845 charter reports two children for Boggis. "The charter of Charles II "le Chauve" King of the West Franks dated 30 Jan 845 (possibly spurious, as explained in the Introduction) names "Eudonis Aquitanie ducis et fratris sui Imitarii et eorum genitori Boggiso duci"" [1].
Eudes, who died in 735. Duke of Aquitaine.
Imitarius
Wikidata
Wikidata claims his date of death as 700, apparently from Itialian Wikipedia.
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A Prosopography of Medieval European Noble and Royal Families, Online at Foundation for Medieval Genealogy Website. Aquitaine: Entry for Boggis Accessed 3 July 2020 jhd | AQUITAINE Boggis (I59571)
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| 4064 |
Charles Cawley states that "according to the West Saxon Genealogical Regnal List, Cynric was the son of Creoda, son of Cerdic. Creoda is not mentioned in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle." [1]
Creoda of Wessex is said to have died in 534. [2]
Research Notes
Euroaristo Project Note, 2013
Roger is currently (2013-07-26) identifying Creoda's father (or perhaps not) Cerdic as the upper limit of Wessex management. Filiations which are probably legendary will be treated as real, with notes to that effect in the biographies of Cerdic's "descendants."
No mother, spouses, or nor children are reliably attested for Creoda, who himself is probably not a real person. Any linking of a mother or a spouse or a child without the express agreement of the EuroAristo project in the G2G forum will be disconnected.
Wikipedia: A Shadowy Figure
Wikipedia refers to Creoda as "a shadowy figure in early Wessex history whose existence is disputed. [2]
Creoda is mentioned only in the Genealogical Regnal List that serves as preface to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. There he is stated to have been the son of Cerdic and father to Cynric. However, the body of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle omits any mention of Creoda and describes Cynric as the son of Cerdic. [2]
Creoda may have ruled Wessex for a short period of time immediately after Cerdic's death, but is usually dismissed as an interpolation into the authentic royal line. [2]
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, Winchester Manuscript
son of Cerdic.
Abingdon and Worcester Manuscripts
son of Cerdic and father of Cynric. Creola is included here to allow the possibility he was the son of Cerdic
Charles Cawley
"The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, and a West Saxon genealogical Regnal List produced in the late 9th century, are therefore the only sources which provide information on the family relationships of the early kings of Wessex. Both sources link all the kings into one family, with long descents traced through different parallel junior lines which include no information on the individuals concerned except their names, although the Chronicle and the Regnal List differ in some points of detail which cannot be reconciled into one definitive version" [1]
the information in the extended lines of descent has been noted but has, for the most part, not been considered reliable enough to show precise relationships in this chapter.
Reno
Reno provides extensive analysis of the original sources, and proposes changing Cerdic to read Creoda in some instances to resolve the conflicts. [3]
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 Charles Cawley, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, Medieval Lands Database FMG's Medieval Lands entry for Cerdic and his sons
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Wikipedia: Creoda_of_Wessex Accessed 9/15/2019 jhd
↑ Reno, Frank D. (1996). The Historic King Arthur: Authenticating the Celtic Hero of Post-Roman Britain, (pp.62-65). McFarland. Google Books. | WESSEX Crioda (I58632)
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| 4065 |
Charles Cawley, Medieval Lands database doesn't have an Adelaide (or variations) who married Nocher II de Bar-sur-Aube and his wife appears to be Unknown
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ANJOU,%20MAINE.htm
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CHAMPAGNE%20NOBILITY.htm#_Toc435166047
Source: S-1965762195 Repository: #R-1965763166 Title: Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. Note: This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created. Page: Ancestry Family Trees Note: Data: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=25804043&pid=1813
Repository: R-1965763166 Name: Ancestry.com Address: http://www.Ancestry.com Note: | ANJOU Adelaid (I59070)
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| 4066 |
Charles de Longueval, dit des Ormes, était seigneur de Sivry et de Walicourt en partie.[1]
Charles de Longueval était marié à Louise de Joyeuse, dont il a eu deux filles:
Antoinette de Longueval, femme de Guillaume Couvent[2]
Anne de Longueval, femme de Clément Bourdon.[1]
Il vivait encore en 1609, car il a signé des reconnaissances de dettes datées du 28 août et du 28 octobre 1609.[1] Il est mort avant le 29 février 1616, date à laquelle sa femme "veuve de Charles de Longueval" est mentionnée.[1]
Les parents de Charles de Longueval ne sont pas connus.[1] Dans leur article Les origines de Philippe Amiot (Hameau), de son épouse Anne Couvent et de leur neveu Toussaint Ledran, Gagné et Kokanosky le qualifient de "nobliau sans fief et de peu de biens". Son surnom "des Ormes" vient d'une maison qu'il possédait à Epieds (Aisne actuelle), "qui n'avait qu'une trentaine d'arpents (...) dont il devait tirer l'essentiel de ses revenus". Il était seigneur "en partie" de Sivry, un fief qui appartenait à la famille de sa femme, et de Walicourt (fief qui reste non identifié).[1]
Biography
(Version française ci-dessus)
Charles de Longueval des Ormes was lord "in part" of Sivry and Walicourt.[1]
He was married to Louise de Joyeuse. They had two daughters:
Antoinette de Longueval, married Guillaume Couvent.[1]
Anne, married Clément Bourdon.[1]
He was still alive in 1609 as he is mentioned as "present" in two acknowledgments of debt date 28 August and 18 October 1609.[1] He died before 29 February 1616, as at this date his wife is mentioned as "widow of Charles de Longueval"[1]
Charles de Longueval's parents are not known.[1] In their research, Gagné and Kokanosky call him a "nobliau sans fief et de peu de biens" (a petty nobleman, with few assets and no fief). His nickname "des Ormes" refers to a house he owned in Epieds (near Soissons, currently Aisne department) "with only 30 arpents of land ... which provided most of his income". He was lord, in part of Sivry (a fief which was in the Joyeuse family; his brother-in-law Jean de Joyeuse and the descendants of his sister-in-law Elisabeth de Joyeuse also called themselves "sieur de Sivry"), and of Walicourt (still unidentified).[1]
Sources
↑ 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 Roland-Yves Gagné and Laurent Kokanosky, Les origines de Philippe Amiot (Hameau), de son épouse Anne Couvent et de leur neveu Toussaint Ledran, (Montréal: MSGCF), vol. 58, no. 1, p. 17-58, English translation provided by the French-Canadian Heritage Society of Michigan, vol. 42, nos. 1-4, 2021.
↑ Fichier origine Couvent, Anne, petite-fille de Charles de Longueval.
Francogene Longueval (de) Charles.
- Charles de Longueval, Sieur des Ormes.
Charles de Longueval (site de François Marchi) | De LONGUEVAL Charles (I60356)
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| 4067 |
Charles died at age 21 of tuberculosis. He was a single man.
After he died, a note was found that Charles had written, saying "that no one cared whether he lived or died." He must have been feeling neglected and feeling sorry for himself as he lay in bed for weeks before he died. | O'Connel Charles Walter (I52866)
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| 4068 |
Charles died at home, on Genesee Street in Geddes, NY. | Annable Charles W. (I53788)
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| 4069 |
Charles died at the age of two years. His father's obituary says he was born near Bath, NY...The family owned a farm in Cameron, Steuben Co. near Bath. | Brown Charles L. (I52981)
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| 4070 |
Charles died at the home of his daughter, Addie Louise.
He is buried in the Collamer Cemetery, Collamer, Onondaga County, NY. | Annable Charles Jerome (I53187)
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| 4071 |
Charles died of a head injury, while trying to commit suicide according to the historian's office in Stillwater, Saratoga County, NY. | Caldwell Charles H. (I53339)
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| 4072 |
Charles graduated in 1953 from St. John's University in St. Cloud,
MN. He served in the US Army from 1953 to 1956 as a food inspector in
France. Charles was a Polymer Chemical Engineer in research and
development for 3M 28 years, subsequently for Unisys and Varitronics.
He is a pantentee in rubber tape, film adhesive, pressure sensitive
tape, plated wire memory and high strength adhesives.
Charles best know passion was for photography. He had very large
collection of cameras and was an accomplished photographer with
experience shooting a variety of subjects within the US and abroad.
Charles enjoyed owning a large variety of sports cars over his life,
and had many collections including his cameras, watches, and other
items. Charles spoke fluent German and had the opportunity to travel
abroad many times. | FREEMAN Charles Robert (I3042)
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| 4073 |
Charles III "le Simple" (17 Sep 879 posthumously - 07 Oct 929 Péronne).[4]
bur. monastère de Saint-Fursy, Péronne.[5]
Biography
Charles "the Straightforward," of Carolingian dynasty was,"the third and posthumous son of Louis the Stammerer by his second wife, Adelaide of Paris," (Wikipedia, 2011).
He styled himself, "rex francorum" and later "rex franciæ." ... But his reign was not successful. According to Floddard, he was captured and imprisoned in 923. Thietmar of Merseburg, claims that Heinrich I King of Germany secured his release from prison at the end of his life.[6]
Charles had 11 children with two wives and other unidentified mistress(es), (Cawley, 2006).
His second wife Eadgifu of Wessex, fled to England in 923 but returned to France in 936, where she was the Abbess of Notre Dame de Laon until 951, when she married Heribert III "le vieux" de Vermandois, Comte d'Omois.(Cawley, 2006).[7][1]
Titles
28 Jan 893 Reims: King of the West Franks (coronation).[8]
01 Nov 911: King of Lotharingia.[9]
Parents
Father: Louis II "le Begue", King of the West Franks
Mother: Adelais
Marriage
m.1 (01/08 Apr 907) Frederuna. Issue:[10]
1. ERMENTRUDE ([908/16]-). [m (before [934]) GOTTFRIED Graf im Jülichgau, son of Graf GERHARD [Matfride] & his wife Oda [Ottonen] (-26 Mar after 949).]
2. FREDERUNA ([908/16]-).
3. ADELAIS ([908/16]-). [m [920/24]) RAOUL [I] Comte de Gouy, son of HUCBERT Comte [d'Ostrevant] & his wife Heilwig [of Friulia] (-926).]
4. GISELA ([908/16]-). m ([912]) as his third wife, ROLLO of Normandy, later known as ROBERT I Comte [de Normandie], son of [RAGNVALD "the Wise" Jarl of Möre in Norway & his wife Ragnhild] ([846]-[928]).
5. ROTRUDE ([908/16]-).
6. HILDEGARDE ([908/16]-).
m.2 Eadgifu of Wessex (902/5 -26 Sep after 951; bur. Abbaye de Saint-Médard de Soissons), Abbess of Notre Dame de Laon.[11][1] Issue: 1.[12]
7. Louis (10 Sep 920/10 Sep 921 - 10 Sep 954 Reims; bur Reims, Abbaye de Saint-Rémi), succeeded in 936 as Louis IV "d’Outremer," King of the Franks.
Mistress(es)
Mistress(es) UNKNOWN. Issue:[13]
8. ARNULF.
9. DROGO.
10. RORICO (-20 Dec 976, bur Laon Saint-Vincent). Elected Bishop of Laon 949.
11. ALPAIS . m ERLEBOLD Comte de Castres, son of --- (-killed in battle 921).
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 William of Malmsbury calls her "Edgiva."[1]
According to Floddard, Eadgifu remarried to Heribert III "le Vieux" de Vermandois, Comte d'Omois in 951.[2][3];
See also: Wikipedia: Eadgifu of Wessex citing Dunbabin, (1999).
Flodoard of Reims. Flodoardi Chronicon (Reims : Regnier, 1855) Recorded death in 929 at Peronne.
Settipani, Christian. La Préhistoire des Capétiens 481-987. Villeneuve d’Ascq, 1993. Page 321 for Charles III; page 229 for Heribert III of Vermandois.
Thietmar of Merseburg
Cawley, C. (2006). Medieval Lands v.4. fmg.ac.[14]
Wikipedia: Charles the Simple | CAROLINGIAN Charles (I58134)
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| 4074 |
Charles is shown living with his brother, William Henry in the 1855 Saratoga Census. Also living with him is his father. | Annable Charles M. (I53138)
|
| 4075 |
Charles Loghry served in the Civil War from 1863 to 1865 as a private from Bath, Steuben County, NY.
After Charles and Juliette Brown married in a double wedding with his sister and her brother, Mary Loghry and Robert Emmett Brown, they settled near the Oregon School house on the road to Brown's Crossing where John Hedges had formerly resided.
Charles, a big man in stature and weighed over 250 pounds, was a farmer all his life. He died at home in Cameron of heart trouble and is buried at Coss' Corners burying ground, Bath Township. He was 70 years of age.
In a letter written by Charles's granddaughter, Mary Loghry, 21 May, 1943,
she says,"My grandfather, Charles Loghry, was a strong Christian; God-fearing and tried to live right by the letter of the Bible. I never saw him. He always spelled his name, L-o-g-h-r-y." It is said to have been formerly pronounced Lawrey.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Letters written by Charles Loghry to his son, William Henry Harrison Loghry
Alens Station, N. Y. August 30, 68
Well henry it has bin some time sinse I have rote to you.
We had A leter from you A short time a goe and was glad to hear that you and your family was well and was doing well.
We are as usual working and tuging through this world and triing to git something to live on when we Cant work any more. We have had it very dry this sumer. Spring crops is very poor this year hear and as been as I can hear. Corn aint more than half a crop.
When you git this you must tell us how times is with you. We had A good crop of hay and winter wheat but Barley and oats was lite this year potatoes is A lite crop I have a good croop of buckwheat.
I am going to rite to franklin Loghry*. I begin to think that he has forgotten us it has ben A long time sinse he has rote to us. tell him to rite and let us noe what he is doing.
We have had the hotest weather that was ever none in this country. it was so hot it was all most imposibel to work.
I have sowed one peis of wheat and am redy to sow five acors more this week. I have had the falow ready two weeks.
We are well to day and nobody but us two hear. Ada* is to sunday school while I am riting.
You must come and make us a visit as soon as you can. You must rite as soon as you git this and let us noe how you git along.
You must doe what you can for Seymour and Blain the Democrats will carie this state by A big majority as was ever nown.
Give my respects to unkel Dar* and Lety* and all their fokes.
Good by for this time
to Henry Loghry and wife (signed
Charles Loghry
*1. Franklin Loghry is his son.
2. Ada was a girl they had taken in to raise.
3. Unkel Dar is Erasmus Darwin Brown, brother of Juliette Brown Loghry, and brother-in-law to Charles.
4. Lety is Lettice Loghry Brown, a sister; one of the three Loghry Children to marry three Brown children.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cameron, N.Y. Dec 26, 1869
Well Henry it is some time sinse I have rote to you. I thout this morning I woud rite to you and let you noe that we are in the land of the living and as well as usual. I have in qite lame this fall and winter I have got A bad nee that is very lame and pains me very bad so that I cant sleep good nites. it was taken lame last summer and is giting worse. I have got most discourage of its ever giting any beter I haint ploud any this fall help is hard to git and wages is high hear.
Comon labor is one dollar A day and bord and wheat is worth $1.00 for that is good
You rote that you wanted me to send you some money that is out of the question this winter for money is hard to git and very scarce there is nothing that will fetch money hear.
we have had some cold wether and good slaying But this warm today and raining there aint mutch going on this winter hear Sam Brown* has got home from the Asilum and seams to bee all rite he Chops wood evry day Brown's foxes* is well and doing well they are in the hoop pole business this winter
Henry you must keep good Courage your young yet and you mustent git the horers for that dont doe any good if I was of your age and had my health I could live any where I think that I can doe as much as I ever could But when I goe to work I soon git tierd and soon think difernt I have worked this fall that when I got in the house and sot down I had all that I could doe to git up I have the rheumatism most all the time
My nee pains me so that I can hardley rite while I am now riting
We got a leter from your wife on Chrismuss for A Chrismuss present and was glad to hear that you was well and all the friends
I wish that you was hear today to hellp us eat some Big Aples we have the Bigest Aples that you ever seen David Williamson was hear last sunday and he meshered one that was 14 inches round we have got 20 bushels of grafted aples in the seler
Good By for this time rite soon as you git this
We like to hear from you often as we can
Direct to Alens Station
(signed)
C. Loghry
* 1. folks
2. Sam Brown is Samuel Right Brown, Jr.; a brother of Charles's first wife, Juliette.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cameron, March 15, 1880
Well Henry Loghry it has bin A long time since we have heard from you you dont rite very often and today I thaut that I woud rite you a few lines to let you noe that we are in the land of the living but not very smart this winter I have bin qite poorley this winter and lame not abel to doe my chores nor to cut my wood I am giting old and will soon be out of this world and it wont mater how qick if I am prepard for that day that day will surly come prepared or not Ada and her man is with us this winter and will stay with us this year or that is the talk now if nothing hapens. We have had A very warm winter and noe snow it has bin rather unheathy this winter. A grate many old fokes has dropt off this winter some without one moments warning there are several that has dropt dead seting their chair and it stands us in hand to be ready to meet to meet it if we never meet on this earth less try to meet in heaven your unkel Em Brown* is very poorley this winter he lais A bed the most of the time he haint bin from home in nine years he is nothing but skin and bones.
the rest of the family is well but hard up this winter they had their barn burnd and all their hay and grain and it is touf for them this winter I hurd form you unkel Henry Brown* the other day he is bad off he dont noe hardly any thing and the man told me that they had lost ther property he thout it was all used up they sold out but dident saave mutch
that is bad to loes his senses and property to
times is beter this spring that it has bin for sevel years past money is plenty and proptery is chang hands and things looks beter now than they have for some time
Wheat is 140 rie 90 corn 65 oats 50 potatoes 40 Apels from 50 to 65
hay is from $10 to $12 tone
give my best Respects to all the frends and tell them that I would (like) to see them very much I would like to see you and your wife today and have you hear
tell Juliaette* to rite to us I will rite to her before long now Henry rite soon as you git this and till us how you are giting A long
from your father
(signed)
Charles Loghry
* 1. unkel Henry Brown is William Henry Harrison Brown, brother to Juliette, Charles's first wife.
2. Juliaette is Charles'granddaughter by William Henry Harrison Loghry and Elizabeth Williams.
After Charles and Juliette Brown married in a double wedding with his sister and her brother, Mary Loghry and Robert Emmett Brown, they settled near the Oregon School house on the road to Brown's Crossing where John Hedges had formerly resided.
Charles, a big man in stature and weighed over 250 pounds, was a farmer all his life. He died at home in Cameron of heart trouble and is buried at Coss' Corners burying ground, Bath Township. He was 70 years of age.
In a letter written by Charles's granddaughter, Mary Loghry, 21 May, 1943,
she says,"My grandfather, Charles Loghry, was a strong Christian; God-fearing and tried to live right by the letter of the Bible. I never saw him. He always spelled his name, L-o-g-h-r-y." It is said to have been formerly pronounced Lawrey.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Letters written by Charles Loghry to his son, William Henry Harrison Loghry
Alens Station, N. Y. August 30, 68
Well henry it has bin some time sinse I have rote to you.
We had A leter from you A short time a goe and was glad to hear that you and your family was well and was doing well.
We are as usual working and tuging through this world and triing to git something to live on when we Cant work any more. We have had it very dry this sumer. Spring crops is very poor this year hear and as been as I can hear. Corn aint more than half a crop.
When you git this you must tell us how times is with you. We had A good crop of hay and winter wheat but Barley and oats was lite this year potatoes is A lite crop I have a good croop of buckwheat.
I am going to rite to franklin Loghry*. I begin to think that he has forgotten us it has ben A long time sinse he has rote to us. tell him to rite and let us noe what he is doing.
We have had the hotest weather that was ever none in this country. it was so hot it was all most imposibel to work.
I have sowed one peis of wheat and am redy to sow five acors more this week. I have had the falow ready two weeks.
We are well to day and nobody but us two hear. Ada* is to sunday school while I am riting.
You must come and make us a visit as soon as you can. You must rite as soon as you git this and let us noe how you git along.
You must doe what you can for Seymour and Blain the Democrats will carie this state by A big majority as was ever nown.
Give my respects to unkel Dar* and Lety* and all their fokes.
Good by for this time
to Henry Loghry and wife (signed
Charles Loghry
*1. Franklin Loghry is his son.
2. Ada was a girl they had taken in to raise.
3. Unkel Dar is Erasmus Darwin Brown, brother of Juliette Brown Loghry, and brother-in-law to Charles.
4. Lety is Lettice Loghry Brown, a sister; one of the three Loghry Children to marry three Brown children.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cameron, N.Y. Dec 26, 1869
Well Henry it is some time sinse I have rote to you. I thout this morning I woud rite to you and let you noe that we are in the land of the living and as well as usual. I have in qite lame this fall and winter I have got A bad nee that is very lame and pains me very bad so that I cant sleep good nites. it was taken lame last summer and is giting worse. I have got most discourage of its ever giting any beter I haint ploud any this fall help is hard to git and wages is high hear.
Comon labor is one dollar A day and bord and wheat is worth $1.00 for that is good
You rote that you wanted me to send you some money that is out of the question this winter for money is hard to git and very scarce there is nothing that will fetch money hear.
we have had some cold wether and good slaying But this warm today and raining there aint mutch going on this winter hear Sam Brown* has got home from the Asilum and seams to bee all rite he Chops wood evry day Brown's foxes* is well and doing well they are in the hoop pole business this winter
Henry you must keep good Courage your young yet and you mustent git the horers for that dont doe any good if I was of your age and had my health I could live any where I think that I can doe as much as I ever could But when I goe to work I soon git tierd and soon think difernt I have worked this fall that when I got in the house and sot down I had all that I could doe to git up I have the rheumatism most all the time
My nee pains me so that I can hardley rite while I am now riting
We got a leter from your wife on Chrismuss for A Chrismuss present and was glad to hear that you was well and all the friends
I wish that you was hear today to hellp us eat some Big Aples we have the Bigest Aples that you ever seen David Williamson was hear last sunday and he meshered one that was 14 inches round we have got 20 bushels of grafted aples in the seler
Good By for this time rite soon as you git this
We like to hear from you often as we can
Direct to Alens Station
(signed)
C. Loghry
* 1. folks
2. Sam Brown is Samuel Right Brown, Jr.; a brother of Charles's first wife, Juliette.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cameron, March 15, 1880
Well Henry Loghry it has bin A long time since we have heard from you you dont rite very often and today I thaut that I woud rite you a few lines to let you noe that we are in the land of the living but not very smart this winter I have bin qite poorley this winter and lame not abel to doe my chores nor to cut my wood I am giting old and will soon be out of this world and it wont mater how qick if I am prepard for that day that day will surly come prepared or not Ada and her man is with us this winter and will stay with us this year or that is the talk now if nothing hapens. We have had A very warm winter and noe snow it has bin rather unheathy this winter. A grate many old fokes has dropt off this winter some without one moments warning there are several that has dropt dead seting their chair and it stands us in hand to be ready to meet to meet it if we never meet on this earth less try to meet in heaven your unkel Em Brown* is very poorley this winter he lais A bed the most of the time he haint bin from home in nine years he is nothing but skin and bones.
the rest of the family is well but hard up this winter they had their barn burnd and all their hay and grain and it is touf for them this winter I hurd form you unkel Henry Brown* the other day he is bad off he dont noe hardly any thing and the man told me that they had lost ther property he thout it was all used up they sold out but dident saave mutch
that is bad to loes his senses and property to
times is beter this spring that it has bin for sevel years past money is plenty and proptery is chang hands and things looks beter now than they have for some time
Wheat is 140 rie 90 corn 65 oats 50 potatoes 40 Apels from 50 to 65
hay is from $10 to $12 tone
give my best Respects to all the frends and tell them that I would (like) to see them very much I would like to see you and your wife today and have you hear
tell Juliaette* to rite to us I will rite to her before long now Henry rite soon as you git this and till us how you are giting A long
from your father
(signed)
Charles Loghry
* 1. unkel Henry Brown is William Henry Harrison Brown, brother to Juliette, Charles's first wife.
2. Juliaette is Charles'granddaughter by William Henry Harrison Loghry and Elizabeth Williams. | Loghry Charles L. (I53069)
|
| 4076 |
Charles Volney died without children. He was known by the name, Volney. He is buried in the W. H. Brown plot in City Hill Cemetery. He was 74 years old.
In the1830 census, he was living in Cameron, Steuben County as head of the household of his mother's household since her husband and his father had been dead 13 years (Sept. 1817). By this time, Achilles was no longer living at home but was married. Eunice, the mother is not living with the family either. Perhaps she was living with Achilles or possibly taking care of her father who was also a widower.
He lived next door to his uncle Cornelius, his mother's brother in Cameron.
In the 1860 census he was living in Italy, Yates County. NY.
In the 1870 Census for Torrey, he is shown living with his brother, William Henry Harrison Brown and his family. His mother, Eunice Annable Brown also lived with the family. | Brown Charles Volney (I52960)
|
| 4077 |
Charles Volney went by the name of Volney, according to the 1870 Census report for Torrey, Yates Co. NY. | Brown Charles Volney II (I52920)
|
| 4078 |
Charles was a Civil War veteran, according to Helen Smith.
Charles was a Civil War veteran, according to Helen Smith. | Warren Charles W. (I52943)
|
| 4079 |
Charles was living with his uncle, Richard K. Brown in Torrey in 1880 according to the census.
In the same cemetery plot in Evergreen Cemetery is Doris H. Beard, born 1905 and died 1911. Is she a child of Charles and Francis Beard? | Beard Charles King (I52709)
|
| 4080 |
Charles' godmother was Marie Gachet, a fellow fille à marier to Charles' mother Anne. | Normand Charles [III] (I39588)
|
| 4081 |
Charles, the eldest of the surviving Chandonnet sons, baptized on 4
April 1718, went to earn his living in Acadia. About 1739, he married
Cecile Godin dit Bellefeuille,
daughter of Jacques and of Anne Bergeron, folks from the village of
Sainte-Anne du Pays-Bas, todays Fredericton. We do know that about
1758 Corporal Moncton
took charge of expelling from this region all the peaceful colonists
who were found there; the Godins, the Bergerons, the Saindons, and
the Chandonnets etc. In 1759,
McCurdy and Hazen carried out this dirty task. Thus it was in 1759
the Chandonnets, who were now Acadians, went to seek refuge in the
region of
Saint-Pierre-les-Becquets. We know of at least nine Godin-Chandonnet
children. Their descendants are numerous.
Charles was born in 1714. He is the son of Charles Chandonnet and Élisabeth Isabelle Bourget.
Sources
Actes d'état civil et registres d'église du Québec (Collection Drouin), 1621 à 1997 - Gabriel Drouin, comp. Drouin Collection: Institut Généalogique Drouin IGD (membership) https://www.genealogiequebec.com
IGD images d1p_31420233.jpg | Chandonne' Charles II. (I1897)
|
| 4082 |
Charlette was a daughter of a member of an old Northwest Fur Company
of Saskatchewan who died in Canada in 1812. She was educated in a
convent school. Rose Parker spoke of her "as mixed blood culture and
refinement," at whose home she enjoyed visiting. Such notables as
Bishop Ireland visted there. She was known as the hostess of Crow
Wing." | (Chaboullier) Charlotte Louisa Chabrille (I222)
|
| 4083 |
Charley Brown moved to Indiana near Hebron or Lowell. | Brown Charles Darwin (I53062)
|
| 4084 |
Charlotte A. Hart, age 81, of Glasgow, passed away on Saturday, August 5, 2000 at the Valley View Nursing Home.
Char was born September 14, 1918 in Minneapolis, Minnesota, the daughter of Harry & Anna Gamer Wood. She was raised and attended schools in St. Paul, Minnesota. Char married Don S. Hart on November 2, 1945 in St. Paul. They moved to Wolf Point in 1954 and then to Glasgow in 1955 where she has resided since. Char worked at Ben Franklin's and later at Torks Drug and Valley Drug Store for many years. She enjoyed reading, cross word puzzles, and latch hook sewing. She was a member of the St. Matthew's Episcopal Church. Char was preceded in death by her husband in June of 1966 and a son Pat in March of 1967.
Survivors include a daughter Linda Carter of Missoula, a son Mike Hart of Casper, Wyoming, sisters Gerry Knutson of Evan, Minnesota and Betty Chambers of North St. Paul, Minnesota, 5 grandchildren including Bret Carter of Seattle, Angie Carter of Tucson, Arizona, Kari Yeaman of Douglas, Wyoming, Michelle Valant of Montrose, Colorado, and Erin Bennick of Fairbanks, Alaska; 3 great grandchildren, Gaige, Kaden, and Michael Jeffrey. | WOOD Charlotte A. (I10205)
|
| 4085 |
Chastelain of Virty. Took his mothers last name.
Odo (Eudes) of Vitry received the county of Rethel, on the death of his brother-in-law, Gervase. [1]
Sources
↑ Wikipedia:Odo_of_Vitry.
https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/chamchalons.htm#EudesVitrydied1158 | de VITRÉ Eudes (I60085)
|
| 4086 |
child Etain Ingen Mongain was created through the import of David Rentschler Family Tree_2010-09-30.ged on 01 October 2010 - and follows the genealogy listed in http://fabpedigree.com/s045/f029821.htm
Morgán mac Fiachna Lurgán (abt.0599-0625) Possible same person
Birth
Birth:
Date: 580
Place: Ireland
Sources
Author: Ancestry.com
Title: Public Member Trees | MONGAIN Unknown (I58501)
|
| 4087 |
Child: Árpád, Grand Prince of the Magyars (c. 845 - c. 907)
Occupation
Occupation: King of Hungary
Note: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_Prince_%C3%81lmos
Sources
Wikidata: Item Q250708 help.gif
Wikipedia at http://hu.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%81lmos_vez%C3%A9r | ARPADHAZI Álmos (I58670)
|
| 4088 |
Childebrand III (d. 827/36).[1]
Parents
UNKNOWN
Marriage
m. Dunna UNKNOWN.[2]
Tracking Notes
Ancestry.com Public Member Trees : Childebrand II; Childebrand De Perracy. Birth: 750 765 Perrancey, Death: 826 Peracy; 831 Champagne. Title: Lord of Perracy
Sources
Contributeurs de Wikipédia, "Childebrand II," Wikipédia, l'encyclopédie libre, https://fr.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Childebrand_II&oldid=127813367 (Page consultée le juillet 13, 2016).
Bouchard, Constance Brittain. "Those of my blood": Constructing noble families in medieval Francia, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2001.
Settipani, Christian & Van Kerrebrouck, Patrick, La préhistoire des Capétiens 481-987: Premiere parte Mérovingiens, Carolingiens et Robertiens, Volume 1, of Nouvelle histoire généalogique de l'auguste maison de France, Villaneuve d'Ascq, 1993.
Cawley, Charles. "Medieval Lands": A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families © by Charles Cawley, hosted by Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG). See also WikiTree's source page for MedLands. | AUTUN Childebrand (I58349)
|
| 4089 |
Children
According to Cawley, two siblings, Parents not known: [1]
Hodierne.
Guillaume.
Sources
↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2022, Seigneurs de Gometz-la-Ferte.
WikiTree profile Gometz-5 created through the import of heinakuu2011-6.ged on Jul 5, 2011 by Johanna Amnelin.
WikiTree profile De Gometz-18 created through the import of My Family_2011-08-21.ged on Aug 21, 2011 by Kate G.
WikiTree profile Gometz-6 created through the import of mike_walton_2011.ged on Aug 20, 2011 by Mike Walton.
This person was created through the import of Acrossthepond.ged on 21 February 2011.
This person was created on 21 March 2011 through the import of LJ Pellman Consolidated Family_2011-03-21.ged. | GOMETZ Unknown (I60091)
|
| 4090 |
Children
Henry (died between 972 and 978)
Adalberon II (958–1005), bishop of Verdun and Metz
Thierry I (965–1026), count of Bar and duke of Upper Lorraine
Ida aka Ida de Haute-Lorraine (970-1026), married in 1010 Radbot, Count of Habsburg (970-1027), who built the castle of Habichtsburg and is thus an ancestor of the great Habsburg family which dominated Europe in the sixteenth century.[1][2][3]
Sources
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_I,_Duke_of_Upper_Lorraine
http://genealogiequebec.info/testphp/info.php?no=169381
SEE: The Foundation for Medieval Genealogy's Medieval Lands Index
↑ WikiPedia
↑ http://genealogiequebec.info/testphp/info.php?no=170043
↑ Not included in FMG which cites " Duke Frederic I & his wife had three children: 1. HENRI "Hezelin" (-[972/978]). 2. ADALBERO (-Metz 14 Dec 1005, bur Metz Cathedral, transferred to l'église de l'Abbaye Saint-Symphorien). 3. THIERRY ([962/72]-11 Apr 1027). He succeeded his father in 978 as THIERRY I Duke of Upper Lotharia | LOTHARINGIA Friedrich (I58268)
|
| 4091 |
Children
Roricon had six known children: [1]
Five children by his wife Bilichild: (birth order is approximate)
Roricon
Geoffroy
daughter (Bichildis?)
daughter (possibly same as Bichildis)
Gauslin
One child by his mistress Rotrud:
Louis
Sources
↑ Medieval Lands. http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/MAINE.htm (updated 20 June 2012)
Charles Cawley: Medieval Lands, Maine: Rorico Comte du Maine | MAINE Roricon (I58876)
|
| 4092 |
Children from Sargent Geneology (1895 Aaron Sargent).
From scrapbook in Oregon Historical Society; S B 36, page 37:
"Charles Chester Sargent, a pioneer who died in the Dalles on Jan 1, wasborn at Mineral Point, Wis., in 1848, and came to Oregon in 1862,remaining two years in Eastern Oregon, then settling in the Dalles, wherehe lived several years. He then left The Dalles until 1900, when hereturned and lived there until his death.
Mr. Sargent Began teaching school when he was 17 years old, teaching inKlickitat, Wash., and in Grant and Union Counties in Oregon. His earlycareer was filled with great hardships which his fortitude enabled him toovercome. His teaching, directed by his early religious training, madehim a beloved and useful citizen, and there are many men and women inOregon and elsewhere who will hear of his demise with deep regret,knowing that they owe him a debt of gratitude which only their givingassistance to others can repay.
Mr. Sargent was married in Powder River Valley in 1876. His wife and sonC N Sargent, live in The Dalles. Myrtle Waltenburger lives in Heppner,Ivie Redmond lives in New York and Katie Luciel lives in Seattle."
1880 Census Ore vol 4 ED 118 sheet 2 line 29
Union Co, North Powder Jct Prct
Sargent C C 31 Vermont Ver Unkn
Jennie 19 NW Terr Ill MO
Chester L 2 Ore
Myrtle B 1 Ore
1900 Census OR Wasco CO East Dalles Precinct
Sargent, Charles head W M b. June 1857 age 42 married 1 year b.WI/NY/NY Hotelkeeper
Annie wife W F b. June 1863 married 1 year 1 living child b.Ill/OH/Ill
Chester son W M b. Dec 1877 age 22 single b. OR/WI/Idaho laborerodd jobs
Marriage records, The Dalles, Wasco CO
Feb 12, 1871 - C C Sargent to Emma Hall, this city
From the "Humboldt Register" of Winnemucca Nev.
1/16/1874
"C.C. Sargent, formerly of the Humboldt Restaurant, has fitted up the
building formerly occupied by W.V. Stevens as a drug store and has openeda
first class restaurant and lodging house."
1/16/1874 - Advertisement
"Cornucopia Restaurant. West side of Bridge Street a few doors above
Reinhart & Company's store. Winnemucca, Nevada. C.C. Sargent Proprietor.
Board furnished by the meal, day, week, or month. Meals served at all
hours."
1/23/1874
"C Sargent of the Cornucopia Restaurant has been awarded the contract to
board the County prisoners at eight five cents a head per day."
2/29/1874
"In Winnemucca, February 14, 1974 to the wife of C.C. Sargent [EmmaHald], a son. Mrs
Sargent gave birth and in an hour both mother and child [Bert MalcolmSargent] broke out with the
measles."
Children from Sargent Geneology (1895 Aaron Sargent).
From scrapbook in Oregon Historical Society; S B 36, page 37:
"Charles Chester Sargent, a pioneer who died in the Dalles on Jan 1, wasborn at Mineral Point, Wis., in 1848, and came to Oregon in 1862,remaining two years in Eastern Oregon, then settling in the Dalles, wherehe lived several years. He then left The Dalles until 1900, when hereturned and lived there until his death.
Mr. Sargent Began teaching school when he was 17 years old, teaching inKlickitat, Wash., and in Grant and Union Counties in Oregon. His earlycareer was filled with great hardships which his fortitude enabled him toovercome. His teaching, directed by his early religious training, madehim a beloved and useful citizen, and there are many men and women inOregon and elsewhere who will hear of his demise with deep regret,knowing that they owe him a debt of gratitude which only their givingassistance to others can repay.
Mr. Sargent was married in Powder River Valley in 1876. His wife and sonC N Sargent, live in The Dalles. Myrtle Waltenburger lives in Heppner,Ivie Redmond lives in New York and Katie Luciel lives in Seattle."
1880 Census Ore vol 4 ED 118 sheet 2 line 29
Union Co, North Powder Jct Prct
Sargent C C 31 Vermont Ver Unkn
Jennie 19 NW Terr Ill MO
Chester L 2 Ore
Myrtle B 1 Ore
1900 Census OR Wasco CO East Dalles Precinct
Sargent, Charles head W M b. June 1857 age 42 married 1 year b.WI/NY/NY Hotelkeeper
Annie wife W F b. June 1863 married 1 year 1 living child b.Ill/OH/Ill
Chester son W M b. Dec 1877 age 22 single b. OR/WI/Idaho laborerodd jobs
Marriage records, The Dalles, Wasco CO
Feb 12, 1871 - C C Sargent to Emma Hall, this city
From the "Humboldt Register" of Winnemucca Nev.
1/16/1874
"C.C. Sargent, formerly of the Humboldt Restaurant, has fitted up the
building formerly occupied by W.V. Stevens as a drug store and has openeda
first class restaurant and lodging house."
1/16/1874 - Advertisement
"Cornucopia Restaurant. West side of Bridge Street a few doors above
Reinhart & Company's store. Winnemucca, Nevada. C.C. Sargent Proprietor.
Board furnished by the meal, day, week, or month. Meals served at all
hours."
1/23/1874
"C Sargent of the Cornucopia Restaurant has been awarded the contract to
board the County prisoners at eight five cents a head per day."
2/29/1874
"In Winnemucca, February 14, 1974 to the wife of C.C. Sargent [EmmaHald], a son. Mrs
Sargent gave birth and in an hour both mother and child [Bert MalcolmSargent] broke out with the
measles." | Sargent Charles Chester (I51301)
|
| 4093 |
Children from Sargent Geneology (1895 Aaron Sargent).
From Vt. Guardianship records for Windsor Co.
11/20/1843 Jeremiah Atwood, 2nd of Chester in said district is appointedguardian of Isaac N. Sargent of said Chester, a minor above 14 years ofage, son of Isaac Sargent of Chester aforesaid who accepts such trust agives Bond agreeably to Law.
1850 Wisc census Iowa Co. Waldwick p 342
550 George Brown 66 M no occupation b. N.H.
Ann Brown 64 F Vt.
551 I N Sargant 32 M Farmer $500 Vt.
Hannah 33 F Vt.
F.A. 10 M Maine
H.E. 8 F Mass
C.H. 2 M Wisc
552 E. Sargant 34 M Farmer Vt.
L.M. 28 F Mass
Isabell 8 F Mass
O.F. 7 M Mass
1860 Wisc census Iowa Co. Waldwick p. 971
26 Isaac N. Seargent 43 M Farmer $1200/500 Vt.
Hannah H. 43 F Vt.
Frederick A. 20 M Maine
Harriet E. 18 F Mass
Chester C. 12 M Wisc
Francis E. 4 F Wisc
1870 Census OR Wasco Co
Isaac N Sargent 52 VT
Hannah H 52 VT
Charles H 22 WI
Fannie F 14 WI
Frank M 9 WI
1900 Oregon Census V17 e.d. 143 Sheet 5 Line 34 Wasco Co. TrevittPct. The Dalles
Isaac N. Sargent Head M b. Sept 1816 age 83 married 62 years
b. Vt. Vt. Vt. Capatalist Reads/writes
Hannah H. Wife F b. Aug 1816 age 83 married 62 years
6 children 4 living b. Vt. Vt. Vt. Rd/Wrt
Katie M. Dau b. Setp 1879 age 20
b. Ore Wisc Wisc Rd/Wrt
From "Book of Oregon Pioneers" c. 1904:
"Isaac N. Sargent, a retired farmer and merchant, living in a beautifulone story cottage on Liberty Street, is one of the venerable pioneers ofthe northwest and stands today high in the admiration and esteem of everyperson who knows him. He was born in 1817, on Sept. 25, at Chester,Vermont. His father, Isaac Sargent, was also a native of Vermont, andmarried Miss Sallie Pratt, who came from a prominent colonial family andwas a native of Vermont. She dien in Wisconsin about ten years after herhusband who passed away in Vermont, on June 12, 1834 at the oldhomestead. William Sargent sailed from Northampton, England with hisfamily to Charlestown, MA, in 1638 and since then, the Sargent family hasbeen prominent in business, at the bench and bar, and in professionallife. They are well known throughout New England and elsewhere and areamongst the oldest families in the United States. ...
Isaac N. Sargent was educated in the private schools of his native placeand the academy and upon his father's death went to work in the store,continuing the same until he was of age. In 1838, he went to Wisconsinand there taught school and did farming until 1862, when he came toOregon with horse teams. Being pleased with The Dalles and the outlookof this country, he settled here, and in the Dalles and eastern Oregonmhas been ever since. After farming for some time in this vicinity, hemoved to Grant---------and engaged in the merchantile business for eightyears, then sold out and moved to The Dalles, since which time he hasbeen largely retired, living upon the income his industry and wisdomprovided. In addition to the home place, he owns other residenceproperty in the Dalles and is obe of the substantial men of the country.
On August 4, 1838, at Lowell, MA, Mr Sargent married Miss Hannah H. Brownwho was b. in Springfield, VT on August 19, 1817, the daughter of Georgeand Anna (Bemis) Brown, natives of VT. Both are old colonial familiesand are well known in New England circles. Mr. Sargent has no livingbrother or sisters, but his wife has one sister, Martha, widow of WilliamHoney in Omaha, Nebraska. Five children have been b. to Mr and MrsSargent; Frederick A., a farmer on Five Mile creek near The Dalles;Chester C., a farmer in the vacinity of The Dalles; Frank, a mining manat Baker City; Fanny, wife of Frank Hunsaker, now deceased; and Hattie,the wife of Edward Wilson, of Portland. They also have raised on adopteddaughter, Katherine, who was their grand daughter.
Mrs Sargent is a member of the Methodist Church. Mr Sargent is a stanchRepublican, and held these principles long before the Republican partywas organized. Mr & Mrs Sargent have traveled together in their weddedlife for 66 years, a most remarkable and pleasant fact. Although bothare nearly four score and ten years, still they are active and hearty,with all their facilities unimpaired and are excellent citizens of TheDalles....
Since the above was written, the reaper, death, visited Mr Sargent's homeand took his beloved and faithful wife. Like the ripened grain, she wasready for the sickle, and having completed life's duties well, she hasstepped forward to the rewards awaiting the faithful. The day ofdeparture was December 8, 1904."
From "History Central Oregon" modernized by Judge Fred W Wilson and RayPerarcy:
"Isaac N. Sargent, old homesteader, freighter and store operator was bornin Chester, VT (1817) son of Isaac and Sallie (Pratt) Sargent of Chester,VT where he was educated and first worked in an old country store; thenin 1838 he taught school in Wisconsin and came to The Dalles by coveredwagon in 1862 where he farmed in 5 Mile and freighted to the mines atCanyon City. Soon as the military authorities made it safe from Indianmolestation Mr. Sargent homesteaded in Grant County and operated a storein Mitchell, one of the toughest western towns in Oregon, for 8 years. In1838 he had married Hanna Brown of VT, daughter of George and Anna(Bemis) Brown and had been wedded 66 years in 1904. Children:
1. Frederick A Sargent, farmer on the old 5 Mile home place, afterwardswent to Portland.
2. Chester C. Sargent was best remembered as owner of the old IXLRestaurant which "sold the best meals in The Dalles for 15 cents in 1900"and many a "horse trade was made over his 30 cent porterhouse steaks",according to Ray Pearcy, local taxi driver who liked Sargent's 15 centmeals. In 1953 most restaurants post a sign, "no service less than 25cents for coffee and sinkers."
3. Frank Sargent was a miner at Baker and in eastern Oregon.
4. Fannie (Mrs Frank Hunsaker) died here in The Dalles.
5. Hattie (Mrs Ed Wilson) went to Portland where Chester went after heleft The Dalles."
Children from Sargent Geneology (1895 Aaron Sargent).
From Vt. Guardianship records for Windsor Co.
11/20/1843 Jeremiah Atwood, 2nd of Chester in said district is appointedguardian of Isaac N. Sargent of said Chester, a minor above 14 years ofage, son of Isaac Sargent of Chester aforesaid who accepts such trust agives Bond agreeably to Law.
1850 Wisc census Iowa Co. Waldwick p 342
550 George Brown 66 M no occupation b. N.H.
Ann Brown 64 F Vt.
551 I N Sargant 32 M Farmer $500 Vt.
Hannah 33 F Vt.
F.A. 10 M Maine
H.E. 8 F Mass
C.H. 2 M Wisc
552 E. Sargant 34 M Farmer Vt.
L.M. 28 F Mass
Isabell 8 F Mass
O.F. 7 M Mass
1860 Wisc census Iowa Co. Waldwick p. 971
26 Isaac N. Seargent 43 M Farmer $1200/500 Vt.
Hannah H. 43 F Vt.
Frederick A. 20 M Maine
Harriet E. 18 F Mass
Chester C. 12 M Wisc
Francis E. 4 F Wisc
1870 Census OR Wasco Co
Isaac N Sargent 52 VT
Hannah H 52 VT
Charles H 22 WI
Fannie F 14 WI
Frank M 9 WI
1900 Oregon Census V17 e.d. 143 Sheet 5 Line 34 Wasco Co. TrevittPct. The Dalles
Isaac N. Sargent Head M b. Sept 1816 age 83 married 62 years
b. Vt. Vt. Vt. Capatalist Reads/writes
Hannah H. Wife F b. Aug 1816 age 83 married 62 years
6 children 4 living b. Vt. Vt. Vt. Rd/Wrt
Katie M. Dau b. Setp 1879 age 20
b. Ore Wisc Wisc Rd/Wrt
From "Book of Oregon Pioneers" c. 1904:
"Isaac N. Sargent, a retired farmer and merchant, living in a beautifulone story cottage on Liberty Street, is one of the venerable pioneers ofthe northwest and stands today high in the admiration and esteem of everyperson who knows him. He was born in 1817, on Sept. 25, at Chester,Vermont. His father, Isaac Sargent, was also a native of Vermont, andmarried Miss Sallie Pratt, who came from a prominent colonial family andwas a native of Vermont. She dien in Wisconsin about ten years after herhusband who passed away in Vermont, on June 12, 1834 at the oldhomestead. William Sargent sailed from Northampton, England with hisfamily to Charlestown, MA, in 1638 and since then, the Sargent family hasbeen prominent in business, at the bench and bar, and in professionallife. They are well known throughout New England and elsewhere and areamongst the oldest families in the United States. ...
Isaac N. Sargent was educated in the private schools of his native placeand the academy and upon his father's death went to work in the store,continuing the same until he was of age. In 1838, he went to Wisconsinand there taught school and did farming until 1862, when he came toOregon with horse teams. Being pleased with The Dalles and the outlookof this country, he settled here, and in the Dalles and eastern Oregonmhas been ever since. After farming for some time in this vicinity, hemoved to Grant---------and engaged in the merchantile business for eightyears, then sold out and moved to The Dalles, since which time he hasbeen largely retired, living upon the income his industry and wisdomprovided. In addition to the home place, he owns other residenceproperty in the Dalles and is obe of the substantial men of the country.
On August 4, 1838, at Lowell, MA, Mr Sargent married Miss Hannah H. Brownwho was b. in Springfield, VT on August 19, 1817, the daughter of Georgeand Anna (Bemis) Brown, natives of VT. Both are old colonial familiesand are well known in New England circles. Mr. Sargent has no livingbrother or sisters, but his wife has one sister, Martha, widow of WilliamHoney in Omaha, Nebraska. Five children have been b. to Mr and MrsSargent; Frederick A., a farmer on Five Mile creek near The Dalles;Chester C., a farmer in the vacinity of The Dalles; Frank, a mining manat Baker City; Fanny, wife of Frank Hunsaker, now deceased; and Hattie,the wife of Edward Wilson, of Portland. They also have raised on adopteddaughter, Katherine, who was their grand daughter.
Mrs Sargent is a member of the Methodist Church. Mr Sargent is a stanchRepublican, and held these principles long before the Republican partywas organized. Mr & Mrs Sargent have traveled together in their weddedlife for 66 years, a most remarkable and pleasant fact. Although bothare nearly four score and ten years, still they are active and hearty,with all their facilities unimpaired and are excellent citizens of TheDalles....
Since the above was written, the reaper, death, visited Mr Sargent's homeand took his beloved and faithful wife. Like the ripened grain, she wasready for the sickle, and having completed life's duties well, she hasstepped forward to the rewards awaiting the faithful. The day ofdeparture was December 8, 1904."
From "History Central Oregon" modernized by Judge Fred W Wilson and RayPerarcy:
"Isaac N. Sargent, old homesteader, freighter and store operator was bornin Chester, VT (1817) son of Isaac and Sallie (Pratt) Sargent of Chester,VT where he was educated and first worked in an old country store; thenin 1838 he taught school in Wisconsin and came to The Dalles by coveredwagon in 1862 where he farmed in 5 Mile and freighted to the mines atCanyon City. Soon as the military authorities made it safe from Indianmolestation Mr. Sargent homesteaded in Grant County and operated a storein Mitchell, one of the toughest western towns in Oregon, for 8 years. In1838 he had married Hanna Brown of VT, daughter of George and Anna(Bemis) Brown and had been wedded 66 years in 1904. Children:
1. Frederick A Sargent, farmer on the old 5 Mile home place, afterwardswent to Portland.
2. Chester C. Sargent was best remembered as owner of the old IXLRestaurant which "sold the best meals in The Dalles for 15 cents in 1900"and many a "horse trade was made over his 30 cent porterhouse steaks",according to Ray Pearcy, local taxi driver who liked Sargent's 15 centmeals. In 1953 most restaurants post a sign, "no service less than 25cents for coffee and sinkers."
3. Frank Sargent was a miner at Baker and in eastern Oregon.
4. Fannie (Mrs Frank Hunsaker) died here in The Dalles.
5. Hattie (Mrs Ed Wilson) went to Portland where Chester went after heleft The Dalles." | Sargent Isaac Newton (I51191)
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| 4094 |
Children of Oddo I of Savoy and Adelaide of Turin:
Peter I, who m. Agnes, had issue in daughter Agnes, who m. Frederick of Montbeliard
Amadeus II, who m. N.N., had issue in son Oddo II, son Humbert II, and daughter Adelaide, who m. Manasse of Coligny
Oddo
Bertha, who m. Henry IV, Emperor
Adelaide, who m. Rudolf of Rheinfelden Duke of Swabia.
Research notes
As shown in the biographical notes Amédée was the second son, therefore a birth year circa 1048 is more realistic and in fact was formerly shown on a previously merged away profile for him. The 1032 date was unsourced.
Sources
C. W. Previté-Orton, The Early History of the House of Savoy (1000–1233) (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1912), Pages 242–43 On page 205 is a sketch tree of Oddo I of Savoy and Adelaide of Turin showing their children. | SAVOIE Amédée (I58436)
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| 4095 |
Chilperic I, King of the Franks: Soissons [1][2]
Birth and Parents
Chilperich was the son of Clotaire 1 (Chlothachar), KIng of the Franks, and his fourth wife Arnegundis. Chilperich was born before 535. [1]
Many internet resources list him as the son of Ingund Thuringen, but Gregory of Tours gives his mother as Ingund's sister Arnegundis/Aregonde. [1]
549 First Marriage to Audovere
Chilperich married firstly, in 549, Audovere, who was murdered in 580. Gregory of Tours names Audovera as one of the earlier consorts of King Chilperich and Herimannus records that "Audoveram reginam commatrem suam [=Geislundam]" was strangled by her husband's concubine "Fridegundis". Cawley adds that Gregory of Tours records that the mother of Clovis was "murdered in the most cruel fashion", dated to late 580 from the context. [1]
561 Reign
Chilperich succeeded his father in 561 as Chilperich I King of the Franks. His territories covered those previously held by his father, with Soissons as his capital. Cawley notes that "The Marii Episcopi Aventicensis Chronica records that "filii ipsius Charibertus, Guntegramnus, Hilpericus et Sigibertus" divided the kingdom between them on the death of their father in 561" and that "Gregory of Tours records that King Chilperich was forced to flee by his half-brother King Sigebert who conquered his territories. He captured Neustria on the death of his brother King Charibert. [1]
564 Second Marriage to Galswintha
In 564 Chilperich married secondly Galswintha of the Visigoths, daughter of Atanagildo, KIng of the Visigoths, and his wife Gosvinta. [1]
Galswintha was murdered in 567. [1]
Cawley notes that Gregory of Tours records the marriage of King Chilperich and Galswintha, older daughter of King Atanagildo, after the marriage of King Sigebert to her younger sister, specifying that she converted from Arianism to Catholicism and came to France with a large dowry, but never stopped complaining to the king about the insults she had to endure, her husband eventually having her garrotted by one of his servants. Herimannus names "Geisluindam, sororem Brunæ [filiam Athanagildi regis Gothorum]" as wife of "Hilpericus frater Sigibertus rex", recording that she was strangled by her husband's concubine "Fridegundis". [1]
568 Third Marriage to Fredegonde
Chilperich married, thirdly, Fredegonde. [1]
Fredegone died in 597 and was buried in Paris at Saint-Germain-des-Prés). Gregory of Tours records that King Chilperich married Frédégonde before his marriage to Galswintha, specifying that a great quarrel ensued between the two of them. It is assumed that this indicates that Frédégonde was the king's mistress before his second marriage. Fredegode plotted actively in favour of her sons at the expense of her husband's children by his first marriage. It is likely that she ordered the murder of her brother-in-law King Sigebert I. [1]
According to the 8th century source, Liber Historiae Francorum, she murdered her husband after he discovered that she was having an affair. [1]
She was regent for her son King Clotaire II after his succession in 584. Fredegar records that Frédégonde died "in the second year of the reign of Theodebert". [1]
Fredegonde had six children with Chilperich. [1]
584 Death
Chilperich was murdered in Chelles between 27 September and 9 October 584 and buried at Saint-Germain-des-Prés, Paris. [1] Gregory of Tours records the murder of King Chilperich at Chelles but his burial in the church of St Vincent in Paris. [1]
Issue
Children of King Chilperich and his first wife:
Theodebert (Thibert) (548/51-573) Killed
Merovech (murdered 577)
Chlodovech, (murdered 580)
Basina, daughter, tricked by Fredegund's servants into entering nunnery, died after 590
Childeswindis, born about 567.
Children of King Chilperich and his third wife
Rigunthis (Merovingian) Soissons Rigundis, born 569
Chlodebert (Merovingian) Franken Chlodebert, died 580 Soissons St Médard
Samson or Samon (573-late 577)
Dagobert (Merovingian) Soissons Dagobert (579/80-580)
Theoderich (582/3, Parish - early 584)
Chlothachar (Merovingian) Franken Chlothachar or Clotaire (Spring 584-18 October 629)
Research Notes
Move to Children's Profiles
King Chilperich I & his first wife had five children:
1. THEODEBERT [Thibert] ([548/51]-killed 573, bur Angoulême). Gregory of Tours names (in order) Theudebert, Merovech and Clovis as the sons of King Chilperich and Audovera[327]. Gregory records that Theodebert was captured at Soissons by his uncle King Sigebert I and imprisoned for a year at Ponthion before being sent back to his father[328]. He led his father's troops against his uncle in 573, devastated Touraine, but was killed by Duke Godogisel and Boso[329].
2. MEROVECH (-murdered Thérouanne 577, bur 584 Paris, Saint-Germain-des-Prés). Gregory of Tours names (in order) Theudebert, Merovech and Clovis as the sons of King Chilperich and Audovera[330]. Merovech was held in custody following his marriage, tonsured and sent to the monastery of Anille at Le Mans, but sought refuge in the church of St Martin at Tours before being murdered after he went into hiding in the area of Reims[331]. The Marii Episcopi Aventicensis Chronica records that "Meroveus filius Hilperici" was killed in 578[332]. m (Rouen after Easter 576) as her second husband, BRUNECHILDIS [Brunequilda/Brunechilde] of the Visigoths, widow of SIGEBERT I King of the Franks, daughter of ATANAGILDO King of the Visigoths & his wife Gosvinta --- ([545/50]-Renève-sur-Vingeanne Autumn 613, bur Autun, abbaye de Saint-Martin). Gregory records that Merovech married his uncle's widow in Rouen soon after Easter in the year following her first husband's murder[333].
3. CHLODOVECH [Clovis] (-murdered Noisy-le-Grand end 580, bur Noisy-le-Grand, transferred 584 to Paris, Saint-Germain-des-Prés). Gregory of Tours names (in order) Theudebert, Merovech and Clovis as the sons of King Chilperich and Audovera[334]. Gregory records that he was driven out of Tours and fled to Bordeaux before succeeding in returning to his father[335]. He also records that Clovis's father, at the suggestion of Frédégonde, sent Clovis to Berny in the hope that he would die of the same disease as his younger half-brothers, and that Clovis was later murdered on the orders of Frédégonde[336]. Gregory of Tours records that his body was found and reburied in Paris St Vincent by King Gontran[337].
4. BASINA (-after 590). Gregory of Tours records that the sister of Clovis was "tricked by Fredegund's servants and persuaded into entering a nunnery…where she remains to this day"[338], dated to late 580 from the context, although it is not certain that this relates to Basina. Gregory names Basina as the daughter of King Chilperich and Audovera whom her father confined in a nunnery in Poitiers, when recording that in 584 her father considered sending her to Spain as the bride for Recared, in place of her half-sister[339]. Gregory also records that she became a nun at the convent of Sainte-Croix in Poitiers, but was involved in the revolt against abbess Leubovera[340].
5. CHILDESWINDIS [Childesinde] ([567]-). The Liber Historiæ Francorum names "Childesinda" as the daughter of King Chilperich & his first wife[341].
King Chilperich II & his third wife had six children:
6. RIGUNDIS ([569]-). Gregory of Tours names "Princess Rigunth" when recounting that she sympathised when Gregory was accused of treachery by her mother[342]. Gregory names Rigunth as daughter of King Chilperich when recording her betrothal to Recared, son of King Leuvigild, and her voyage to Spain with a large retinue[343]. On learning of the death of her father, she was abandoned before returning to her mother's palace where she led a life of debauchery[344]. Betrothed (early 584) to RECAREDO of the Visigoths, son of LEOVIGILDO King of the Visigoths & his first wife Theodosia --- (-Toledo mid-Jun or Dec 601). He was elected to succeed his father in 586 as RECAREDO King of the Visigoths.
7. CHLODEBERT (-Soissons St Médard 580, bur Soissons St Crispin and St Crispinian). Gregory of Tours names Chlodebert as the son of Chilperich & Frédégonde when recording his death in the church of St Médard, Soissons and his burial "in the church of the holy martyrs Crispin and Crispinian"[345], the context of the passage dating the event to 580.
8. SAMSON (573-late 577). Gregory of Tours names Samson as the younger son of Chilperich & Fredegund when recording his death after having a high temperature and diarrhoea "before completing his fifth year"[346], the context of the passage dating the event to late 577.
9. DAGOBERT ([579/80]-580, bur Saint-Denis). Gregory of Tours refers to (but does not name) a younger son of Chilperich & Fredegund when recording his hurried baptism while dying and his burial in Paris Saint-Denis[347], the context of the passage dating the event to 580. Fortunatus, dated to the late 6th century, wrote an epitaph to “Dagoberto…puerilis obis”, naming "Chlodovechi…proavi…Chilpericque patris, vel Fredegunde genus"[348].
10. THEODERICH ([582/83], chr Paris 18 Apr 583-early 584, bur Paris). Gregory of Tours records the birth of a son to King Chilperich and his baptism at Easter with the name Theoderich by Ragnemod Bishop of Paris[349], dated from the context to [582/83]. Gregory records his death from dysentery a year after his baptism and his burial in Paris[350].
11. CHLOTHACHAR [Clotaire] (Spring 584-[18] Oct 629, bur Paris, Saint-Germain-des-Prés). Gregory of Tours records the birth of a son to King Chilperich[351], dated to early 584 from the context, although in a later passage in which he names him Clotaire he records that he was four months old when his father died[352]. He succeeded his father in 584 as CLOTAIRE II King of the Franks, under the regency of his mother Queen Frédégonde.
Sources
↑ 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 Charles Cawley. Medieval Lands: A Prosopography of Medieval European Noble and Royal Families. Chilperich. Online at Foundation for Medieval Genealogy Website (accessed 7 January 2022) jhd | MEROVINGIAN Chilperic (I58166)
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Chilson, Cem. | ELLIOTT David Judson (I2657)
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chir Cirre Mac Eochaid the son of Eochaidh MacFiachrach, or Achircir (as he is named in the Skene's Pedigree of the Scottish Kings) was a king of Dalriada. [1]
Achir-cir is listed in the Antiquitates Celto-Normannicae [2]
Dauvit Broun lists Cruitluide; filii Find Fece; filii Achir Cir; filii Achach Antoit in his discussion of The genealogy of the king of Scots as charter and panegyric a research paper for the University of Glasgow. ://eprints.gla.ac.uk/128834/1/128834.pdf The genealogy of the king of Scots as charter and panegyric] Broun, D. (2016) The genealogy of the king of Scots as charter and panegyric. In: Davies, J. R. and Bhattacharya, S. (eds.) Copper, Parchment, and Stone: Studies in the Sources for Landholding and Lordship in Early Medieval Bengal and Medieval Scotland. Centre for Scottish and Celtic Studies, University of Glasgow: Glasgow. ISBN 9780852619506. DOES not go into the site
Sources
↑ A Brief History of Clan MacKay : The Irish Kings of Dalriada quoting Pedigree of the Scottish Kings, appended to version E of the Chronicle of the Kings of Scotland in Skene's Picts and Scots, pp. 133-134.
↑ Antiquitates Celto-Normannicae: Containing the "Chronicle of Man and the isles" appendix p: 145 by Stein pub: 1786 | MACECHACH Achir Cirre (I59367)
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Chistened September 1, 1861 | SMITH Jeremiah or Jemini (I36046)
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Chlodio Merovingian was a member of aristocracy in ancient Europe.
Join: Medieval Project
Discuss: MEDIEVAL
According to Gregory of Tours, he lived in the castle of "Dispargum" (a place now unknown, though there are many proposals), in Thoringia". Unlike Thuringia in Germany this place is described as being on the Roman side of the Rhine. This is often interpreted as a misunderstanding of the Roman Civitas Tungrorum, the predecessor of the medieval diocese of Liège, where Franks had been allowed to settle, at least in the north of the region in Toxandria, since the 4th century, in the time of emperor Julian the apostate.
From his base in Dispargum, Chlodio attacked Romanized populations in the so-called Silva Carbonarum, a region south of Brussels, and then seized Tournai and later Cambrai. His kingdom apparently eventually reached the Somme river.
Gregory of Tours has only a short passage concerning Chlodio in his book. (Perhaps the fact that it comes immediately after a comment about Theudemer led to the connection made by later authors.):
This is the evidence that the historians who have been named have left us about the Franks, and they have not mentioned kings. Many relate that they came from Pannonia and all dwelt at first on the bank of the Rhine, and then crossing the Rhine they passed into Thuringia, and there among the villages and cities appointed longhaired kings over them from their first or, so to speak, noblest family. This title Clovis' victories afterwards made a lasting one, as we shall see later on. We read in the Fasti Consulares that Theodomer, king of the Franks, son of Richimer, and Ascyla his mother, were once on a time slain by the sword. They say also that Chlogio, a man of ability and high rank among his people, was king of the Franks then, and he dwelt at the stronghold of Dispargum which is within the borders of the Thuringians. And these parts, that is, towards the south, the Romans dwelt as far as the Loire. But beyond the Loire the Goths were in control; the Burgundians also, who belonged to the sect of the Arians, dwelt across the Rhone in the district which is adjacent to the city of Lyons. And Chlogio sent spies to the city of Cambrai, and : they went everywhere, and he himself followed and overcame the : Romans and seized the city, in which he dwelt for a short time, and he seized the land as far as the river Somme. Certain authorities assert that king Merovech, whose son was Childeric, was of the family of Chlogio.[1]
Chlodio apparently had a mixed relationship with the famous Roman military commander, Flavius Ætius, sometimes fighting on his side (for example possibly in the fight against Attila the Hun) and sometimes in conflict (for example when Ætius, accompanied by the future emperor Marjorian, attacked a Frankish wedding party in Artois, as celebrated by Sidonius Apollinarius.[2]
a little later ye fought together where Cloio the Frank had overrun the helpless lands of the Atrebates [Artois]. There was a narrow passage at the junction of two ways, and a road crossed both the village of Helena, which was within bow-shot, and the river, where that long but narrow path was supported by girders. Thou wert posted at the cross-roads, while Majorian warred as a mounted man close to the bridge itself. As chance would have it, the echoing sound of a barbarian marriage-song rang forth from a hill near the river- bank, for amid Scythian dance and chorus a yellow- haired bridegroom was wedding a young bride of like colour. Well, these revellers, they say, he laid low. Time after time his helmet rang with blows, and his hauberk with its protecting scales kept off the thrust of spears, until the enemy was forced to turn and flee. Then might be seen the jumbled adornments of the barbarian nuptials gleaming red in the waggons, and captured salvers and viands flung together pell-mell, and servants crowned with perfumed garlands carrying wine-bowls on their oily top-knots. Straightway the spirit of Mars waxes fiercer and the nuptial torches are snapped asunder by the more fiery goddess of war; the victor snatches their chariots and carries off the bride in the hour of her bridal.
He died about 450.
Research Notes
Note about uncertain parentage
The 7th century Chronicle of Fredegar described him as son of Theudemer, a Frank who really existed, whereas the anonymous Liber Historiæ Francorum, an anonymous History of the Franks, which is sometimes more reliable than Fredegar, calls Chlodio's father Faramund, who it describes in turn as a son of Marcomer, another Frank who had really existed.
There are also other genealogical manuscripts which mention Faramund as Chlodio's father. Faramund is only known from texts describing him as Chlodio's father.[3]
Note about uncertain relationship to Childeric
Old sources like Gregory of Tours name Chlodio as a relative of Childeric, but not as father. The genealogies explained by Renard name him as grandfather.
Mythical sea beast
It's the Chronicle of Fredegar (c. 660s), that first reports the tall tale about Chlodio's wife getting impregnated by a creature from the sea, and by implication being the supposed father of Merovech.
Sources
↑ Gregory of Tours [1]
↑ Sidonius Poems and Letters
↑ Étienne Renard, Le sang de Mérovée. “Préhistoire” de la dynastie et du royaume mérovingiens Revue belge de Philologie et d'Histoire Année 2014 92-4 pp. 999-1039 [2]
Chlodio on Wikipedia [3]
Marcomer on Wikipedia [4]
Cawley, C. (2006). "Early Frankish leaders in Gaul." Medieval Lands v.3. fmg.ac[5]
Reimitz, H. (2015). History, Frankish Identity and the Framing of Western Ethnicity, 550-850, (pp.169). Cambridge University Press. eBook.[6]
Kurth, G. (1909). The Franks. In The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Retrieved September 21, 2015 from New Advent. Web.[7]
R. P. Anselme, Histoire de la maison royale de France et des grands officiers de la Couronne, Paris: Estienne Loyson, 1674; Gregory of Tours, History of the Franks, Book 2, chapter 9; Image: A medal by Jean Dassier (Medaille Histoire chronologique des rois de France: en 70 jetons).
Geni. Considerable discussion and sources listed here. | MEROVINGIAN Chlodion (I58174)
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Chlodovech (Clovis II), was born about 633 to Dagobert I and Nantechildis. The Gesta Dagoberti and Fredegar both record his birth in the "12th year of his father's reign," which began in 1623.[1]
King of the Franks: Neustria (633 - Oct/Nov 657)
Mother: Nantechildis UNKNOWN (d. 645; p. unknown; sister: Landegisel -- Limousin landowner)[2][2]
Marriage
He marriedin 648 Bathildes, with which they had three children together:
Chlothachar "Clotaire III," King of the Franks: Neustria and Burgundy (650 - 10 Mar or 9 May 673)
Theoderich III, King of the Franks (651 - 02 Sep 690 or12 Apr 691)[3]
Childerich (d. 18 Oct / 10 Nov 675 Lognes forest (near Chelles)
Occupation
657 - 664: Regent of Neustria [4]
Sources
↑ Gesta Dagoberti I Regis Francorum 32, MGH SS rer. Merov. II, p. 412, and Fredegar, IV, 76, MGH SS rer Merov II, p. 159. Link
↑ Parents chosen by principles of the European Aristocracts project, using primary sources, especially collected by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy’s, Medieval Lands project.[1]
Cawley, Charles. "Medieval Lands": A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families © by Charles Cawley, hosted by Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG). See also WikiTree's source page for MedLands.
See also:
Wikipedia: Clovis II
Wikidata: Item Q309919, en:Wikipedia help.gif | MEROVINGIAN Chlodovech (I58160)
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Chlodulf (605 – 08 May 697), was Bishop of Metz from 657 - 697 or 652 - 693.[3] Wikipedia FR says that he was born at least two years before his father's appointment as Bishop of Metz.
Vitals
Chlodulf (610 - 08 May 697 or Jun 8, 696/7 Metz)[4][5][1]
alias: Clodulphe; Clodould; Saint Cloud
bur. Basilique de Saint-Arnoul, Metz[6]
Parents
Father: Arnulf, Bishop of Metz
Mother: Doda UNKNOWN[2]
Siblings
643-647: He and his brother Ansegisel, were styled "vir inluster" (famous men), in a letter from Bishop Desire of Cahors (Wikipedia FR). After Ansegisel married, the two were cited in an act by Sigebert III and the Mayor of the Palace of Austrasia, Grimoald - Ansegisel's new brother-in-law. He was in close contact with his sister-in-law Saint Gertrude of Nivelles.
Marriage
(unproven) m. UNKNOWN or Childa "Hilda" _____.[3] Issue: 2[7]
Aunulf (d. ante 16 Dec 714)[8]
(unproven) Martin[9][4]
Wikipedia FR: "His wife's name is not given in contemporary documents. But the tradition of Looz indicates that the body of St. Amour was transferred to the church by a Hilda, wife of the noble Clodolfus.[3]
Whatever the wife's name, her son Aunulf, is known from a 714 AD donation deed to Pepin de Herstal, naming him as his cousin Aunulf, son of Clodulf. The act says Aunulf died between 697 and 714, and he had no heirs closer than his cousin Pepin.[1] Sometimes another son is attributed to him - a comte named Martin, who fought against the Mayor of the Palace of Austrasia Ebroin, alongside Pepin de Herstal, and was killed in 690. However, incorporation of Martin to the Arnulfians came later, onomastics does not explain his name, and other sources label Martin as a son of the Mayor of the Palace Wulfoald.")
Occupation
657 - 697: bishop of Metz[10]
During this time, he decorated the cathedral St. Stephen. Wikipedia FR, says he sponsored Trudo, a noble from the Hesbaye clan, as a priest at Metz, and bequeathed property to the cathedral.[1] Trudo's brother later murdered Ansegisel, and Childebert "the adopted," killed Grimoald.
Chlodulf remained untouched in all this - possibly involved in a conspiracy against his other family members, which possibly serves as a reason why later Carolingian historians attributed unflattering stories to him, and did not pursue the names of his family in building their genealogy.
Religion
In Nivelles he was locally venerated as Saint Clou, because of his connection to Saint Gertrude. His Feast Day is June 8 (possibly a burial date, as some regard him as having died on May 8).
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 He is named only in a charter of Emperor Otto I dated 30 Apr 948, which confirms the donation to the church of Metz of property “in villas Hrectio et Littemala”... which previously belonged to "Clodulfus major domus", and which “filio suo Aunulfo” had bequeathed to his first cousin Pépin II, on his deathbed ... which suggests that he died without direct heirs (Cawley, 2006)
↑ Notice of resolution of ambiguous parentage: This profile has been edited with regard to parents in accordance with principles established by the European Aristocracy user-group. Medieval genealogy is not an exact science, and digital collaborative genealogy must therefore occasionally make choices where old-fashioned print-scholarship did not have to. The parents (or lack of parents) of the person described in this profile were decided upon in consultation with primary sources especially as collected in the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy’s Medieval Lands project.[1]
↑ 3.0 3.1 "Settipani states that, according to “la tradition de Los”, the body of St Amour was transferred to the church by "Hilda, femme du noble Clodolfus". It has not yet been possible to trace the source on which this statement is based. No other reference to the name of Chlodulf's wife has been found" (Cawley, 2006[2]
↑ based on a 9th century genealogy
Wikipedia: Chlodulf of Metz; Wikipedia:fr: Clodulf de Metz | ARNULFING Chlodulf (I58847)
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Chlothachar (501/2 - 30 Nov/31 Dec 561 Soissons)[1]
alias: Clotaire; Lothar[2]
bur. Basilique Saint-Médard, Soissons[3]
Titles
511 Soissons: King of the Franks at Soissons, Laon, Noyon, Arras, Cambrai, Tournai and lower Meuse -- (area later known as Neustria)[4]
558: sole King of the Franks[5]
Parents
Father: Chlodovech, King of the Franks
Mother: Chrotechildis of Burgundy[1]
Marriage
m.1 (524) Guntheuca "Gondioque" (father: unknown king of Burgundy; widow of Chlodomer, King of the Franks)[6]
m.2 (531, repudiated) Radegund of Thuringia (father: Bertechar, King of the Thuringians)[7]
m.3 (532) Ingundis "Ingonde" (sister: Arnegundis; p. unknown; initially concubine in 517). Issue: 6 known; 1 fabricated.[8]
Gunthar (517 - after 532)[9]
Childerich (d. ante 561)[10]
Charibert (520 - 567 Paris)[11]
Guntchramn "Gontran" (532/4 -28 Mar 592)[12]
Sigebert (535 - Nov/Dec 575 Vitry)[13]
Chlodesindis (d. ante 567)[14]
(fictional) Bilichildis[15]
m.4 (polygamy) Arnegundis "Aregonde" (sister: Ingundis "Ingonde").[16] Issue: 1
Chilperic[17]
(disputed) m.5 (555) Waldrada of Lombardia (p. Waccho and Ostrogotha)[18]
Mistress
mistress 1: Chunsina "Gunsinam" (p. unknown).[19] Issue: 1
Chramin[20]
mistress 2: Unknown.[21] Issue: 0 - 1
(unproven) Gundobald "Ballomer" (d. Mar 585).[22]
Sources
↑ Notice of resolution of ambiguous parentage: The parents (or lack of parents) were decided upon by the European Aristocrats project in consultation with primary sources, especially as collected in the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy’s Medieval Lands project. Also see Space: Famiy: Clovis of Merovingians by Gregory of Tours; Space: History of Merovingian Dynasty.
See also:
Gregory of Tours
Marii Episcopi Aventicensis Chronica
Wikipedia: Clotaire I
Cawley, Charles. "Medieval Lands": A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families © by Charles Cawley, hosted by Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG). See also WikiTree's source page for MedLands. | MEROVINGIAN Chlothacher (I58168)
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| 4103 |
Chlothachar (Clotaire) II[1]
b. Spring 584[2]
b. 18 Oct 629[3]
bur. Church of St Vincent. Paris[4]
Titles
King of the Franks[5]
King of Austrasia[6]
Parents
Unverified Parents
It is not proven that he is the son of Chilpéric I but he is a descendant in that line.
Gregory of Tours, said Clotaire's father was Chilperic I.[7]
The "'Liber Historiæ Francorum," calls him the younger brother of Theoderic.[8]
Father: Chilperich I, King of the Franks[9]
Mother: Frédégonde UNKNOWN[10][1]
Marriage
(disputed) mistress or wife (ante 604) Aldatrudis (Haltrudis; Waldrada) UNKNOWN[11]
(disputed) Merovech
(disputed) Emma
m.1 or m.2 Bertrudis (Betrada; Bertha). UNKNOWN[12] Issue:
Dagobert [13]
son (died Infant)[14]
m.2 or m.3 Sichildis UNKNOWN (sister: Gomatrudis)[15]
Chairbert [16]
TO DO: EDIT TEXT BELOW
Ben M. Angel notes: Someone placed this person as having died at the "Abbaye de St. Vincent" in Paris, and buried in the Cathedral by the same name. First, no such cathedral. There is a church and abbey by the name of St. Vincent, but it's St Vincent de Paul, who lived a millennium after Clothar. The Franks can be argued as being forward looking, but probably not clairvoyant (certainly not to that degree). Death location has been left to Paris. Burial location has been left as unknown.
Clotaire II, d. 629, Frankish king, son of Chilperic I[citation needed] and Fredegunde. He succeeded (584) his father as king of Neustria, but his mother ruled for him until her death (597). In 613, after the death of his cousin Theodoric II, king of Austrasia, he was called in by Austrasian nobles to assume rule. He thus became king of all the Franks. He put Brunhilda to death, restored peace with the help of the nobility, and was compelled to grant (614) a charter giving far-reaching privileges to nobles and clergy. He was also forced to agree that each of the component parts of the Frankish lands, Austrasia, Neustria, and Burgundy, was to have its own mayor of the palace; the mayors of the palace were the chief royal administrators. In 623 he sent his son Dagobert I to be king of Austrasia. Dagobert later succeeded to all the Frankish lands.[2]
Titles: King of the Franks (Roi des Francs),King of Paris (Reign 595 – 613 )
Reign: Sep/Oct 584 - 628 or Oct 18, 629
Regent: Sep/Oct 584 - late 590s [minority]
Frédegonde (b. c. 545 - d. 596/597), mother of Clotaire II
End of reign: 628 or October 18, 629, died
Name/byname: Clotaire (in English: Chlotar) the Young or the Great/French: le Jeune, le Grand
The son of Frédegonde, young Clotaire succeeded to the throne of his paternal ancestors' kingdom when his was assassinated in 584. Queen Frédegonde became regent and tutor of the four-month old king.
Though Clotaire's cousin Childebert II tried to conquer the kingdom of Chilpéric's heir and approached Paris with his army, their uncle, king Gontran of Burgundy, supported the young king and his mother, whose extradition was demanded by Childebert. Gontran assured Clotaire's accession and became the guardian of his kingdom.
After Gontran's death, in 593 or 594, Clotaire again fought against Childebert II near Soissons. When Childebert died in 595, Clotaire's armies conquered part of the territory of the kingdom of Austrasia, but in 599 or 600 the new lands and other territories were lost to the Austrasia-Burgundy alliance. However, the discontent among the Austrasian nobility with the Queen Brunehaut (Brunhild), who tried to install the son of Thierry II as king of Austrasia in 613/614, allowed Clotaire to annex Austrasia.
Clotaire enjoyed peace in his kingdom after 613/614 and established his son, Dagobert I, as king of Austrasia in 623. As the elder son of Clotaire, Mérovée was taken prisoner by the Burgundians and killed in 603/604, Dagobert succeeded to the thrones of Neustria and Austrasia after Clotaire's death in 628/629.
He was born shortly after his father's death in 584 and immediately became King of Soissons. His mother ruled on his behalf until he turned 13, when they took possession of Paris in 597. He was attacked by his cousins Theudebert of Metz and Theuderic of Orléans, but defeated them. His cousins attacked again in 600, and were successful. Chlothar fled, and ultimately retained only 12 districts of his former kingdom, the area between the Oise, the Seine and the Atlantic. In 604, he sent an invasion force under his son Mérovic against Theuderic, but the army was defeated, Theudbert occupied Paris, and Mérovic was captured.
Eventually his cousins turned to fighting each other. In 611, he made a pact with Theuderic that he would not give aid to Theudebert. Under the agreement, if Theuderic were to be successful, he would give the duchy of Dentelin to Chlothar. Theuderic defeated Theudebert in 612, and Chlothar occupied the duchy, while Theuderic captured and imprisoned Theudebert, taking his kingdom. The following year, Theuderic died, leaving the two kingdoms to his young son Siegbert II. Later that year, Chlothar had Siegbert II murdered. He annexed the kingdoms of Metz and Orléans, becoming King of the Franks and uniting them for the first time since the death of his grandfather Chlothar I in 561.
In 614/15 Chlothar signed the Perpetual Constitution, also called the Edict of Paris, an early Magna Carta. The charter preserved the rights of Frankish nobles and excluded Jews from civil employment. In 617 he canceled the annual tribute paid by the Lombards.
In 622 he turned over the government of Metz (Austrasia) to his son Dagobert I, whose councillors Arnulf, Bishop of Metz, and Pépin I, Mayor of the Palace of Austrasia thereby gained a degree of autonomy. Chlothar died in 629 and was succeeded by his son Dagobert.
Sources
↑ This profile has been edited with regard to parents in accordance with principles established by the European Aristocracy user-group. Medieval genealogy is not an exact science, and digital collaborative genealogy must therefore occasionally make choices where old-fashioned print-scholarship did not have to. The parents (or lack of parents) of the person described in this profile were decided upon in consultation with primary sources especially as collected in the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy’s Medieval Lands project.
↑ From http://www.deloriahurst.com/deloriahurst%20page/1797.html
Cawley, Charles. "Medieval Lands": A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families © by Charles Cawley, hosted by Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG). See also WikiTree's source page for MedLands. | MEROVINGIAN Chlothachar (I58164)
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| 4104 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I55462)
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| 4105 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I55391)
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| 4106 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I55420)
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| 4107 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I55419)
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| 4108 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I55421)
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| 4109 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I55464)
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| 4110 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I55436)
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| 4111 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I55435)
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| 4112 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I55406)
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| 4113 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I55403)
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| 4114 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I55402)
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| 4115 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I55379)
|
| 4116 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I55437)
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| 4117 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I55405)
|
| 4118 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I55394)
|
| 4119 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I55465)
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| 4120 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I55467)
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| 4121 |
Christen: June 6, 1960 in St. Cecelia's, Nashwauk, MN | GANGL Tina Marie (I55404)
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| 4122 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I55496)
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| 4123 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I55466)
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| 4124 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I55463)
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| 4125 |
Christened 1840 - 1846
Church affiliation: Anglican Church of Scotland | MONTGOMERY Frances (I36015)
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| 4126 |
Christened 26 Dec 1825 in a Lutheran church at Lienen, Westfalen,
Germany (Prussia). | STROTHEIDE Frederick Rudolph (I9338)
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| 4127 |
Christened 9 Feb. 1734 in Linlithgo, Columbia, N.Y. | KNICKERBOCKER Echie (I4655)
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| 4128 |
Christened Apr. 27, 1832 in Ramshyttan, Kil, Orebro, Sweden | HOFFMAN Clementine Theresia Beata (I49346)
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| 4129 |
Christened April 8, 1856, Glucester Co., (Tetagouche) Canada | SMITH Ellen (I36042)
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| 4130 |
Christened December 20, 1863 | SMITH Robert Alfred (I36047)
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| 4131 |
Christened in Litchfield, Meeker Co., MN | HOFFMAN Grace Emma (I4056)
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| 4132 |
Christened Jan. 6, 1829 in Ramshyttan, Kil, Orebro, Sweden | HOFFMAN Aurora Elisabeth (I49345)
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| 4133 |
Christened Mar 30, 1854 by R.A. Temple | SMITH William Henry (James) (I9095)
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| 4134 |
Christened March 21, 1865 | HORNIBROOK William JAMES (I36052)
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| 4135 |
Christened March 27, 1732 | DUBÉ Marie-Madeleine (I54569)
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| 4136 |
Christened May 21, 1826 in Ramshyttan, Kil, Orebro, Sweden | HOFFMAN Emelie Louisa (I49344)
|
| 4137 |
Christened Oct. 5, 1818 in Ramshyttan, Kil, Orebro, Sweden | HOFFMAN Johan Detlof (I49339)
|
| 4138 |
Christened Oct. 9, 1797 in Nora, Nora, Orebro Län, Sweden | FISCHIER Sofia Carolina (I49334)
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| 4139 |
Christened: Jan 14, 1866 | SMITH James Herbert (I36017)
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| 4140 |
Christened: May 24, 1867
Church affiliation: Weslyn Methodist | HORNIBROOK Margaret Elizabeth (I9013)
|
| 4141 |
Christened: May 24, 1867 | HORNIBROOK Margaret Elizabeth (I9013)
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| 4142 |
Christening: 11 November 1738 | BEAULIEU Joseph-Marie Hudon (I54578)
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| 4143 |
Christening: 19 May 1734 | BEAULIEU Josephte Hudon (I54574)
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| 4144 |
Christening: 22 May 1736 | BEAULIEU Angelique Hudon (I54576)
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| 4145 |
Christening: 10 Jan 1746 Swanzey, Cheshire County, NH | BROWN Timothy (I1627)
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| 4146 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I34521)
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| 4147 |
Christening: July 15, 1722 | PERRAULT Pierre-Joseph (I54571)
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| 4148 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I34529)
|
| 4149 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I34523)
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| 4150 |
Christening: St. Johns Luth Church. Sponsors Gus Unke & Ernestine Brustman
Occupation: Employed by Wolf, Kubly and Hirsig of Madison, WI. | BRUSTMAN Walter William (I34519)
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| 4151 |
Christening; St. Johns Luth Church, Montello, WI records. Per letter of 20 Oct. 1994 to Lois Heidner from Mrs. Paul Kolander, wife of pastor, sponsors are fan Emil Tagatz and August Radke, Jr.
Occuptation: Obituary in Fond du Lac newspaper 08 Oct, 1975. Employed at QuicFrez for 21 yrs and was a paint sprayer at Mercury Marine for 10 years. | BRUSTMAN Clarence Ervin (I34549)
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| 4152 |
Christian Coach was in the Civil war as a Private from August 20, 1862 to June 12, 1865. He was born in Waldix Germany | Coach Christian Jr. (I49892)
|
| 4153 |
Christian Harley was in the Civil War he was part of the Wisc. Infantry, he later attempted to embessle money from his father. | Harley Christian (I49864)
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| 4154 |
Christian was born in 0872 in Nordthüringgau, Saxony, Deutschland. His name was Christian von Serimunt ... He passed away in 0950. [1]
"The Saxon count Christian, probably a scion of the Billung dynasty, was mentioned in the Nordthüringgau about 937. He also ruled in the adjacent Schwabengau and upon the implementation of the marca Geronis in from 945 also over the adjacent Serimunt region beyond the Elbe River, being the brother-in-law of Margrave Gero. Upon his death in 950 he was succeeded by his son Count Thietmar (d. 979), who after the exile of Gunther of Merseburg was appointed Margrave of Meissen in 976. Count Christian' s grandson Gero II (d. 1015) was not able to retain Meissen, but in 993 succeeded his uncle Odo as margrave of the Saxon Eastern March."[2]
Sources
↑ Entered by Sherri Harder, Mar 21, 2013
↑ Nordthüringgau article on Wikipedia | von SERIMUNT Christian (I59410)
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| 4155 |
Chrodrobert II (d. ante 12 Sep 677). [1]Chrodbert was mentioned as Count palatine (comes palatinus) on 2 October 678.
Merovingian count.[2]
No known spouse. Issue:[3]
Lambert II (d. ante 741
" No reference has been found to "Lambert I" in any of the primary sources so far consulted and it has been decided to omit him , remove him as a father until a positive identification can be made"[4]
Occupation: Chancellor
Suffix: Count of Haspengau
Chrodobertus II, Count of Haspengau
Title
Count of Bourgogne
Count of Paris
Alias
Alias: Warinus
Alias: Robert de Neustria
Name
Name: Count of Haspengau /Chrodobertus/ II[5]
Name: Guerin Warin /de Poitiers/[6][7]
Name: Chrodobertus II
Name: Chrodobertus /Chancellor/[8]
Name: /Chrodobertus/ II[9][10]
Name: Chrodobertus /(ancient)/ II
Name: Chrodobertus
Birth
Date: 640
Place: Autun, Saône-et-Loire, Bourgogne, France[11][12][13][14][15]
Date: 633
Place: Tréves, Gard, Languedoc-Roussillon, France[16][17][18]
Birth: 650
Death
Date: 677
Place: Trier, Rheinland-Pfalz, Germany[19][20][21][22][23]
Date: 02 OCT 678
Place: Neustria, Normandy, France[24][25][26]
Note N4650From: http://www.red1st.com/axholme/getperson.php?personID=I1748568425&tree=Axholme
Father: Lambert I de Haspengau, b. 620, d. 650
Children: >1. Lambert II, Count of Haspengau, b. Bef 682, d. 741
Sources
↑ http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FRANKSMaiordomi.htm#_ftnref512
↑ http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FRANKSMaiordomi.htm#_ftnref512
↑ http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FRANKSMaiordomi.htm#_ftnref512
↑ http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FRANKSMaiordomi.htm#_Toc284005997
↑ Source: #S345 http://www.red1st.com/axholme/getperson.php?personID=I1748568425&tree=Axholme
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Leutwinus Liutprand I Bishop Treves DeLombardie
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Guerin Warin Warinus DePoitiers
↑ Source: #S004444 Ancestry Family Trees https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/13078823/person/673468821/facts
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Lambert Von Haspengau
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Robert Chrodobertus de Neustria
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Leutwinus Liutprand I Bishop Treves DeLombardie
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Guerin Warin Warinus DePoitiers
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Bodilon de Bourgogne
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Lambert De Hesbaye
↑ Source: #S6 Record for lambert Winlliswinda
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Lambert Von Haspengau
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Robert Chrodobertus de Neustria
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Count Lambert I De Neustria
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Leutwinus Liutprand I Bishop Treves DeLombardie
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Guerin Warin Warinus DePoitiers
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Bodilon de Bourgogne
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Lambert De Hesbaye
↑ Source: #S6 Record for lambert Winlliswinda
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Lambert Von Haspengau
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Robert Chrodobertus de Neustria
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Count Lambert I De Neustria
See also:
Settipani, Christian, Les Ancêtres de Charlemagne, Paris, 1989
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chrodbert_(count_palatine_of_Chlothar_III) | NEUSTRIA Chrodobertus (I58229)
|
| 4156 |
Chrotechildis of Burgundy, is also known as "Rotilde,"[4] or "Clotilde."[1] (b. 474/5 or 480 Lyon).[5][6][7] Her father was Chilperich, King of Burgundy at Lyon (d. 486), son of Gondioc (d. 473).[8][2][3] Her mother is unknown.[9][4][3]
Marriage
m. (492 as second wife) Clovis I.[10] Issue: 6[11]
children
Ingomer (b./d. 493)[1]
Chlodomer (494/5 - 21 Jun 524 Vézeronce)[1]
m. (514 or 521) Guntheuca "Gondioque" (Father: _____ King of Burgundy)[1]
Childebert (497 -23 Dec 558 Paris)[1][5]
m Ultrogotha (d. aft. 561)[1]
Chlothachar "Clotaire / Lothar" (501/2 - 30 Dec 561 Soisson; bur. Soissons, basilique Saint-Médard[1]
(dau.) Theodechildis (492/501 - 576). [6]
Chrothieldis "Clotilde" (502/11 - 531)
m. Amalric, King of the Visigoths
(disputed dau) ______[7]
Death
d. 544 or 548 monastery of Saint-Martin, Tours[12][8]
bur. Basilique des Saints-Apôtres (Sainte-Geneviève), Paris[13]
Sainthood
venerated by the Catholic Church[14]
Feast: 03 Jun[15]
Sources
Cawley, Charles. "Medieval Lands": A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families © by Charles Cawley, hosted by Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG). See also WikiTree's source page for MedLands.
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 Gregory of Tours
↑ Chilperich brothers: Gundobad; Godegisel
↑ 3.0 3.1 Parents edited in accordance with European Aristocrats project. They were decided upon by consulting primary sources, especially collected by FMG's Medieval Lands project.[1]
↑ alias: Caretene; Agrippina (Hodgkin, 1875)[2]
↑ Marii Episcopi Aventicensis Chronica
↑ possibly a nun or patron of St. Peter, Sens; May have married an unknown king (Cawley, 2006).
↑ Gesta Episcoporum Mettensis
↑ d. 03 Jun 545 (New Advent)[3]
Cawley, C. (2006). "Chlodovech." Medieval Lands v.3. fmg.ac
Kurth, G. (1908). St. Clotilda. In The Catholic Encyclopedia. NY: Robert Appleton Co. Retrieved November 6, 2015. Web.[16]
"Saint Clotilda: Queen of the Franks." Encyclopædia Britannica. Web.[17]
Wikipedia: Clotilde; Wikipedia:es: Clotilde da Borgonha | BURGUNDEN Chrotechildis (I58169)
|
| 4157 |
Chrothechildis (Rotilde) UNKNOWN (living 30 Oct 688; d. 692 or after)[1]
Origins
The parents of Chrothechildis (Rotilde), are UNKNOWN. [2]
Marriage
m. Theoderic III, King of the Franks: Neustria (651 - 02 Sep 690/12 Apr 691; bur. Basilique Saint-Vaast, Arras). Issue: 3[3]
Choldovech "Clovis" III, King of the Franks (678 - 695)[4]
Childebert III, King of the Franks (d. 14 Apr 711)[5]
m. Ermenechildis (p. unknown)
Bertrada "Berta", Abbess of Prüm[6]
m. _____ (unknown)
Sources
Cawley, Charles. "Medieval Lands": A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families © by Charles Cawley, hosted by Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG). See also WikiTree's source page for MedLands. | UNKNOWN Chrotheshildis (I58157)
|
| 4158 |
Chrothrudis, more commonly named Rotrude or Chrotrud is accepted as the first wife of Charles 'Martel,' Duc des Francs, Mayor of the Palace[1] even though there are no sources that directly confirm her marriage.
However there are several sources that are used as some proof of it taking place.
The Liber confraternitatum Augiensis has a list of the names of eight Pippinid/Carolingian men starting with Karolus maior domus (Charles Martel), followed by the names of nine women who are their wives, and the first in that list is Ruadtrud (or Rotrude).[1]
Marriage
Chrothrudis married Charles Martel. [2]
Children
Carloman
Pepin III, King of the Franks
Chiltrudis (Hiltrude)
Research Notes
Possible daughter of Leudwinus de Trèves or Lambert II. [3]
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 Settipani, Christian & Van Kerrebrouck, Patrick, La préhistoire des Capétiens 481-987: Premiere parte Mérovingiens, Carolingiens et Robertiens, Volume 1, of Nouvelle histoire généalogique de l'auguste maison de France (Villaneuve d'Ascq, 1993). pp. 167-172.
↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2023, Family of Arnulf.
↑ Wikipedia:Rotrude_of_Hesbaye.
Royalty for Commoners, Roderick Stuart, Revised 2d Edition, 1995. | UNKNOWN Chrothrudis (I58175)
|
| 4159 |
Chrotlind is named as the daughter of the Merovingian Theuderic III, King of the Franks and his wife St Amalberga, daughter of Wandregisi and Farahild, and wife of Lambert (sometimes called the II) a possible ancestor of the French Capetian dynasty, whom she married in circa 695. This is in Royalty for Commoners, 2nd edition by Roderick W. Stuart[1] but it's not clear what source is being cited, though it might be Szabolcs de Vajay, "A Propos de l'Ascendance Carolingienne", in Revista de Historia Heraldica, Genealogia e de Artes, vol 7, pp. 288-94, 1966.
However Chrotlind is not named as a daughter of Theuderic III in any primary sources or even reliable secondary sources, such as Charles Cawley's, Medieval Lands,[2] Christian Settipani's La préhistoire des Capétiens, [3] or in Europäische Stammtafeln, vol. 1(1)[4]
Nor is she mentioned as the wife of Lambert (II) in reliable secondary sources such as Europäische Stammtafeln vol. 2[5] or Bouchard's Rewriting Saints and Ancestors[6] Charles Cawley also doesn't give any wife for Lambert.[7]
Consequently it appears that Chrotlind never existed either as a daughter of Theoderich III, or as a wife of Lambert.
Sources
↑ Roderick W. Stuart. Royalty for Commoners: The complete known lineage of John of Gaunt, so of Edward III, King of England, and Queen Philippa, 2nd ed (Baltimore, MD : Genealogical Publishing, 1992). Line 123, p. 90.
↑ Charles Cawley, 'Theoderich III King of the Franks' version 4.0, updated 8 June 2018 in Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Online Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm : accessed 24 February 2024).
↑ Christian Settipani & Patrick Van Kerrebrouck. La préhistoire des Capétiens 481-987: Premiere parte Mérovingiens, Carolingiens et Robertiens, vol.1, of Nouvelle histoire généalogique de l'auguste maison de France (Villaneuve d'Ascq, 1993). pp. 115-8.
↑ Detlev Schwennicke. Europäische Stammtafeln, neue folge, Band I.1. Die fränkischen Könige und die Könige und Kaiser, Stammesherzoge, Kurfürsten, Markgrafen und Herzoge des Heiligen Römischen Reiches Deutscher Nation (Frankfurt Am Main: Vittorio Klostermann, 1998). Tafel 2.
↑ Detlev Schwennicke, (ed.). Europäische Stammtafeln, Neue folge. Band II - Die ausserdeutschen Staaten: Die regierenden Häuser der übrigen Staaten Europas (Marburg : J.A. Stargardt, 1984). Tafel 10.
↑ Constance Brittain Bouchard. Rewriting Saints and Ancestors: Memory and forgetting in France 500-1200 (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania, 2014). p. 189.
↑ Charles Cawley. 'Robert (I), Graf im Wormsgau' version 4.7, updated 26 July 2022 in Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Online Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm : accessed 24 February 2024). | UNKNOWN Chrotlind (I58283)
|
| 4160 |
Church affiliation: Weslyn Methodist
Owned lot 20 in Bay Chaleur, New Brunswich, Canada in 1842 | SMITH William (I36012)
|
| 4161 |
Church affiliation: Weslyn Methodist | BUTTIMER Sarah Ann (I36013)
|
| 4162 |
Church affiliation: Weslyn Methodist | HORNIBROOK Thomas (I36014)
|
| 4163 |
Church of Holy Cross Wikwenikong; bap. 3 Dec. 1888; sponcers Charles
Lamondin and Virginia Massicotte | BOUCHER Mary Louise (I1313)
|
| 4164 |
Church records of St. Johns Luth Church, Montello, WI. Letter of 20 Oct. 1994 from Mrs. Paul Loander, wife of pastor, gave full name and date of death. Gravestone is in Montello Cemetery with date of 1915. | BRUSTMAN Adeline Elfroeda (I34548)
|
| 4165 |
Church records of St. Johns Luth Church, Montello, WI; 1943; letter of 20 Oct, 1994, to Lois Heidner from Mrs. Paul Kolander, wife of pastor. | Family: ARNDT Ruby LaVerne / BRUSTMAN Fredrich Reinhold (F17932)
|
| 4166 |
Church St.
Buried in Cental Cemetery, Erving, MA | BLACKMER Jacob Spooner (I40111)
|
| 4167 |
Church: Episcopal | CHILDS Mary Gertrude (I34492)
|
| 4168 |
Church: Epscopal | RICHARDSON Margaret Ethel (I34475)
|
| 4169 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I56180)
|
| 4170 |
City of Badby: anciently called Baddebi, is two and one half miles from Daventry. The Village stands on the side of a sandy ascent called Badby-Down, and there are numerous springs of water and quarries of hard blue rag-stone in the neighborhood. The name of the place may be derived from the Saxon bad or bade, a pledge in security, and bye, a dwelling or habitation in allusion, possibly two circumstances now forgotten, connected to its original foundation. In Badby, the Root family owned an Inn in the early 1800s. | ROOTE Thomas (I12752)
|
| 4171 |
Civ. War Priv. Co. G. 96th N.Y. Vol. | ELLIOTT David Judson (I2657)
|
| 4172 |
Civil War | TAPLEY George Stevens (I37994)
|
| 4173 |
Civil war veteran | TAPLEY Frederick Chillis (I38003)
|
| 4174 |
Claire Françoise Thibaut was baptized on 29 Oct 1655 in Notre-Dame de Québec, Canada, Nouvelle-France. Her parents were Guillaume Tibault and Marie Madeleine Lefrançois. Godparents at the infant's baptism were Guillaume Couillart Deschesnes and Mme. Dauteuil. The officiating priest was Paul Ragueneau. [Act states: Baptized by M. Ragueneau "In his father's home"][1]
Marriage
Claire Françoise Thibault married Félix Aubér, son of Claude Aubért and Jacqueline Lucas, on 15 Apr 1670 in La-Visitation-de-Notre-Dame parish of Château-Richer. In the presence of known witnesses François Bélanger, Simon Guion and Gabriel Balestaquain. The celebrant priest was Fillon.[2][3] Félix passed away on 19 Feb 1690, the record giving him around 48 years of age. His burial was the following day in Château-Richer.[4]
2nd Marriage
Claire Thibaut, widow of Félix Aubért, married Jean Rivière, son of the late Jean Rivière and Jeanne Vissière, on 4 Sep 1691 in La-Visitation-de-Notre-Dame parish of Château-Richer. In the presence of known witnesses Jean Guyon Dubuisson, Guillaume Thibaud, Guillaume Boucher, and Joseph Suare. The celebrant priest was Charles Amador Martin. [Act states: A dispense of two bans has been granted by Monseigneur of Québec][5]
Death and Burial
Claire Tibaut, widow des Rivières, passed away on 11 Apr 1728 and was buried the 13th in L'Ange-Gardien. In the presence of known witnesses Louis Gariepy and René Huot. The officiating priest was Dufournel. Her age is not mentioned in the burial record.[6]
Biographie
Claire Françoise, fille de Guillaume THIBAULT et de Marie Madeleine LEFRANÇOIS (PPP), est née le 29 octobre 1655 et baptisée le 3 novembre suivant à Québec.[1]
Elle n'a pas encore 15 ans lorsque, le 15 avril 1670 à Château-Richer, elle épouse Félix AUBERT, fils de Claude AUBERT et de Madeleine LUCAS.[2] Leurs enfants connus sont (Source: IGD):
François, 1678 - ........................................... m. 1699 à François TESTU
Catherine, 1681 - ................................... m. 1699 à François MARETTE
Marie Charlotte, 1683 - ......................... m. 1701 à François LÉVÊQUE
Charles, 1685 - ................................... m. 1710 à Marie Anne GARIÉPY
Anne, 1688 - ..............................................................................................
Félix, 1690 - .................................. m. 1709 à Marie Madeleine MENIÉ
En seconde noce, le 4 septembre 1691, toujours à Château-Richer, elle épouse Jean RIVIÈRE, originaire de la Paroisse de Beguey, Évêché de Bordeaux, et fils de défunt Jean RIVIÈRE et de Jeanne VISSIÈRE.[5]Avec lui, elle aura au moins 2 autres enfants (Source: IGD):
Claire, 1692 - 1704 ...................................................................................
Marguerite, 1693 - ............................. m. 1712 à François TRÉPAGNY
Elle décède le 11 avril 1728 et est inhumée le surlendemain à L'Ange-Gardien.[6] | THIBAULT Claire Francoise (Thibaut) (I57754)
|
| 4175 |
Claire was born in 1771. She passed away in 1848.
Sources
Institut généalogique Drouin, LAFRANCE, Acte 477426, Baptême Deschaillons 1771-05-12
See also
Genealogy of Canada
Jutras Genealogical Data Site; Claire Maillot in entry for family of Nicolas Maillot and Marie Clothilde Brisson: http://cjutras.org/CJ_MAILLOT-N.html#F090332 | MAILLOT Marie-Claire (I5329)
|
| 4176 |
Clarence Edward was known by the nickname, Buster. He was born in Lake Zurich, Lake County, IL and only attended school to the fourth grade. During his life, he worked as a truck driver and horse trainer. He moved to Tucson, Arizona where he died. He was survived by his wife, Laua Ella, by five years. | Brown Clarence Edward (I52805)
|
| 4177 |
Clarion, Wright County, IA | Brown Alice Maude (I53054)
|
| 4178 |
Claude DAMISE who was listed aa a "Fille de Roi" was married10 Dec
1668 to Pierre PERTHUIS dit Montreal, PQ LALIME (soldier of the
Carignan-Salières Regiment of 17th century French Canada) while
married, she had an illegitimate son, Andre, bap. 3 Mar 1676 at Pte-
aux-Trembles,
Montreal, PQ. Father was Jean PARADIS. | PARADIS Jean Baptiste (I6183)
|
| 4179 |
Claude de Marle was born about 1525 to Waast de Marle and Jacqueline Dupuis [1]
He was the seigneur de Vaugien and Sargis, fiefs located in the parish of St-Rémy, near Chevreuse. [2]
He was a elected in the election of Paris, 1549 [2] [1]
He married Antoinette Lhuillier (contract July 20, 1545). She was the daughter of the deceased nobleman Jehan, Sieur de la Motte-Desgry, a counselor in the Parliament of Paris, and of Demoiselle Louise Lemaistre. The marriage contract was drawn up by Michel Vindras, a sworn notarial clerk established in the provostship and royal castleward of Eparnay-sur-Marne . This contract was made in the presence of nobleman Louis Escuier, Sieur de Courances, husband of Demoiselle Michelle Lhuillier, guardian of the future bride, and of Cardinal de Meudon. In this contract, Waast de Marle gives the fief of Vaugien to Claude.[2][3]
The children of Claude and Antoinette were:
Waast de Marle
Michelle de Marle
Charles de Marle, who married a niece of the Cardinal de Gondi [2]
Claude had a lawsuit against the Cardinal of Lorraine, duke of Chevreuse to denote the boundaries of the fief of Vaugien. A last judgement was obtained on May 12, 1564, ordering the boundaries besides the Yvette river including from Courcelles going up to the bridge of Saint-Rem and crossing the path from Chevreuse to Montlhéry, as far as Molières [4]
Research Notes
He married N. Le Picart and had a son Charles Marle who married the niece of the Cardinal de Gondi. [1]
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Héraldique & Généalogie, 1996, pg. 338; Read Nov. 2017
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Gail F. Moreau, trans., and John P. DuLong, ed. "Archange Godbout's Baillon, de Marle, and Le Sueur Families of France." Michigan's Habitant Heritage 13, no. 22 (April 1992): 40-51
↑ Inventaire des registres des insinuations du Châtelet de Paris, règnes de François ler et de Henri II, 1906, pg. 206; Read Dec. 2017
↑ Sociéte archéologique de Rambouillet, Mémoires et documents publiés par la Sociéte archéologique de Rambouillet, 1873, pg. 307; Read Dec. 2017
see also:
http:/genealogiequebec.info/testphp/.jnfo..php?no=22469 | de MARLE Claude (I57817)
|
| 4180 |
Claude Lavigne #8293
ORIGINS: From St-Wulfram, Picardie (France). Theories about his
father are that he came from the village of Soucy in Soissons, Aines,
Picardie, France. That was at the time, in 1539, when Francois 1er
ordered all commoners to take a last name along with their usual
name. People chose often their place of origin or their craft as
their last name.32 | SOUCY Claude Lavigne "Dit Soucy" (I9118)
|
| 4181 |
Clemence was the Countess of Dammartin. [1]
Birth
Clemence de Bar was born about 1104.
Marriages
Comte de Dammartin, (Cawley suggests that he was Hugues II, the son of Pierre de Dammartin, Comte de Dammartin). [2]
Renaud III, Comte de Clermont.
Thibaut III de Crépy, Seigneur de Nanteuil-le-Haudouin.
Death
Clemence died after 20 JAN 1183. [3]
Sources
↑ Genealogiæ Scriptoris Fusniacensis 15, MGH SS XIII, p. 255.
↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2022, Comtes de Dammartin.
↑ Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2022, Comtes de Bar.
Richardson, Douglas. Royal Ancestry, Vol. V. p. 268. | Bar-le-Duc Clemence (I60021)
|
| 4182 |
Clement A. Beaulieu came to White Earth in the fall of 1873, and took
charge of George A. Morison's trading post, but two years afterwards
moved to the new agency and established a store of his own where he
was in trade for several years. He took his land on Fish Lake in
Norman County, but always had a renter there working his farm, while
he and his family resided at the agency in Becker County until the
time of his death in 1893. Mr. Beaulieu was a prominent man here, and
had great influence with the Indians and chiefs. He took an active
part in the treaty made in 1889. He was a close friend of Hon. H. M.
Rice. | BEAULIEU Clement A. (I704)
|
| 4183 |
Clementia (later Comtesse de Luxembourg) was the second wife of Conrad I Comte de Luxembourg. Her husband, sometimes referred to as Conrad de Salm, was the son of Giselbert, Graf von Salm, Comte de Luxembourg and his wife whose name remains unknown but who is considered to have been connected to the family of Emperor Konrad of Lotharingia. Conrad was previously married to Ermesinde de Poitou who presumably died prior to his marriage to Clementia, the date of which is unknown. [1]
Conrad had succeeded his father as Comte de Luxembourg in about 1057 (1056-59). He was later excommunicated in connection with the capture of Eberhardus, the Archbishop of Trier, who died in 1066. The excommunication was to be lifted following a pilgrimage to the Holy Land on which Conrad himself died on 8 Aug 1086, on his return from Palestine (never reaching Italy). [1] [2]
Clementia later married Gerhard I Graaf van Gelre - and may also have been married to Graf von Gleiberg. [1] [3]
Family
Ermesinde de Poitou, Conrad's first wife, is considered to have been a granddaughter of Guillaume V "le Grand" Duc d'Aquitaine (Guillaume III Comte de Poitou (see Research Notes regarding wives of Conrad). [1]
Conrad's second marriage, presumably after the death of Ermesinde de Poitou, was to a woman named Clementia whose surname is not certain but who is considered lilely to have been a member of the Braunschweig family. [1]
Conrad had as many as eight reported children - of which three sons and two daughters are considered certain: [1]
Henri de Luxembourg - who in 1086 succeeded his father as Henri II Comte de Luxembourg
Guillaume / William de Luxembourg - who married Liutgard von Beichlingen; succeeded his brother in about 1096 as Guillaume I Comte de Luxembourg and was succeeded by his son in about 1130 who became Conrad II Comte de Luxembourg
Adalbero de Luxembourg - who was killed at Antioch in early 1098
Ermesinde de Luxembourg - who first married Albert II Graf von Dagsburg and secondly (in 1109) Godefroi Comte de Namur; who became the heiress to Luxembourg after the death of her nephew Conrad, following which Luxembourg passed into the Namur family though her son Henri IV Comte de Luxembourg [4] [5]
Mathilde de Luxembourg - who married Gottfried von Metz, Graf im Bliesgau
Other children have been reported but are considered less certain or uncertain: [1]
Conrad
Rudolph
Odilia
Research Notes
Note regarding wives of Conrad
Conrad's first wife, Ermesinde de Poitou, is considered to have been a granddaughter of Guillaume V "le Grand" Duc d'Aquitaine (Guillaume III Comte de Poitou and also heiress to Longwy. While the Longwy connection was questioned by Cawley FMG,[1] the apparent misinterpretation may come from a secondary source and not the primary.
Specifically, Cawley FMG tracks certain secondary sources as indicating that the connection between Conrad's first wife Ermesinde de Poitou and the estate of Longwy "appears to have been based on a misinterpretation of the primary sources" (namely the Chronicle of Alberic (Alberic of Trois-Fontaines (French: Aubri or Aubry de Trois-Fontaines; Latin: Albericus Trium Fontium) from 1232, reflecting in this case records from 1168). It is suggested that: "The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines names comitissa de Longui et de Castris Ermensendis as wife of Conrado comiti de Luscelenburch [citing the Chronicle of Alberic]. "Castris" is normally the Latin name for Bliescastel… No connection has been found between between Ermensende and the Bliescastel family, although her daughter’s husband was Graf von Bliescastel." [1]
The indication that Ermesinde was noted as being the countess of both Longui and of Castris (Bliescastel) appears to have come from a secondary source suggesting that she was referred to by Albaric as being comitissa de Longui et de Castris Ermensendis. However, the Chronicle of Alberic as transcribed in 1698 does not indicate that Ermesendis was associated with Castris - but rather that she was associated with the estate of Longwy - and that her daughter Mathilde was later associated not only with Longwy but also with Castris (i.e. Bliescastel): [6]
Quadeam autem nobilis Comitissa de Longuy Ermonsendis nomine peperit Comitem Guillelmum de Lucemburc patrem Conrardi, & Ermensendem Comitissam Namurcensem uxorem Comitis Godefredi, & Mathildam Comitissam de Longuy & de Homberc, & de Castris.
Regarding Castris / Bliescastel then, it was Ermesinde's daughter Mathilde de Luxembourg as reflected in the Chronicle (i.e. not Ermesinde herself) who became connected with Castris / Bliescastel - and Mathilde in fact married Gottfried de Metz - who was indeed Graf von Bliescastel (as recognized by Cawley FMG). [1]
Regarding Longwy, the further suggestion in Cawley FMG that Conrad's wife Ermesinde de Poitou might not have been the Comtesse de Longwy (going through potential acquisitions of Longwy by Conrad's father that are not supported by any primary sources) is also inconsistent with the closest source - which clearly indicates that the mother of Conrad's relevant inheriting children was "Ermonsendis" and that she had been "Comitissa de Longuy." [6]
Ermesinde de Poitou was also apparently connected to the house of Poitou, and was likely a granddaughter of Guillaume V "le Grand" Duc d'Aquitaine (Guillaume III Comte de Poitou based on texts and reasons laid out in Cawley FMG. As Cawley FMG further notes: This suggestion appears confirmed by Albert of Aix who names one of her sons "...Adelberonem…juvenem nobilissimum de regio sanguine et proximum Henrici tertii Romanorum Augusti", the wife of King Heinrich III being Agnès de Poitou, daughter of Guillaume V." (Citing RHC, Historiens occidentaux, Tome IV (Paris, 1879), Alberti Aquensis Historia Hierosolymitana ("Albert of Aix (RHC)"), Liber III, Cap. XLVI, p. 370). [1]
The question then, as Cawley notes, is through which child of Guillaume V of Aquitaine was Ermesinde de Poitou descended - also taking into account (as Cawley thought was not necessarily the case), that she was in fact reported by early sources as being the Countess of Longwy (and his basis for potentially "correcting" that was based on a misreading of the record, as noted above). While there have been some suggestions that her father might have been Gui Geoffroi de Poitou, Guillaume VIII duc d'Aquitaine,[1] that appears to be incorrect. Guillaume VIII had several wives, but none of them appear to have been associated with Ermesinde. However, Guillaume's elder brother Pierre de Poitou, Guillaume VII duc d'Aquitaine also took the name of Guillaume upon becoming Guillaume VII duc d'Aquitaine - and his wife was Ermesinde. Consistent with the Longwy inheritance, the German history of the nobility and associated families known as the Europäische Stammtafeln has been cited as indicating that this person Ermesinde of Longwy was a daughter of Adalbert de Metz and his wife. [7]
While these relationships of Ermesinde de Poitou are consistent with the principal records - and also the indications from early sources that both she and her daughter were associated with the inheritance of Longwy - they are not considered to be proven on the basis of a primary source. As in many cases of the time, the relationships can only be considered as likely based on a combination of associated records - including the co-occurrence of names and apparent family relationships - and in this case also with consistency of the inheritance of associated estates.
Conrad's second wife was reflected in records as "Clementia". She may have been a member of the Braunschweig family although her parentage is not considered certain. [1]
Some secondary sources effectively blend the earlier references to Ermesinde and the later referencs to Clementia into a single person, often then referred to as Clemence de Poitou or Clementia of Aquitaine - but there is no clear evidence to show that these were the same person. [1]
Note regarding children of Conrad
Regarding several of Conrad's reported children, certain of the references that have influenced genealogies are considered suspect, as reviewed in Cawley FMG. Conrad, Rudolph and Odilia are characterized accordingly. [1]
The five children referenced in the top list above are reflected in records - but their order as reflected in Cawley FMG is not entirely consistent. A principal source related to Guillaume and Ermesinde (both of whom were later heirs), apparently indicates that both they and their sister Mathilde were children of Count Conrad of Luxembourg and his wife first wife Ermesinde. Cawley's basis for potentially "correcting" their parentage is a later charter in which Conrad's second wife Clementia, as countess, makes reference to the consent of Ermesinde and Guillaume, but her step-children might well have been referenced as her children. Furthermore, Cawley's chronology is difficult with respect to Clementia being the mother of Mathilde (leading to his conclusion that she must instead have been a daughter of the first marriage).
There is also the actual inheritance of the estate reflected in Conrad's succession - which went from Conrad's eldest son Henri to his son Guillaume, and then from Guillaume to Guillaume's son Conrad, and finally from Conrad to his aunt Ermesinde - in connection with which Luxembourg passed into the Namur family.[5] If as the cited reference apparently reflected, both Guillaume and Ermesinde were children of the first marriage, and the later reference was simply referencing their consent in their capacity as step-children of the then-current countess Clementia (particularly since they were in fact in a position to become Conrad's heirs and did in fact become his heirs), then none of these would be inconsistencies requiring a proposed "correction" or suggestions of unusual inheritance patterns (as posited by Cawley).
Finally, while the children may have been referenced in association with their step-mother in connection with subsequent consents, the opposite is not true. That is, if they were actually the biological children of Conrad's second wife and not his first, then they would not be referenced in connection with his first wife Ermesinde. In fact, the primary reference from 1232 reflecting an account regarding the year 1168 not only associates them with Ermesinde but it uses the more distinctive term of peperit (third person singular perfect of pario: she gave birth to): [6]
Quadeam autem nobilis Comitissa de Longuy Ermonsendis nomine peperit Comitem Guillelmum de Lucemburc patrem Conrardi, & Ermensendem Comitissam Namurcensem uxorem Comitis Godefredi, & Mathildam Comitissam de Longuy & de Homberc, & de Castris.
Regarding the passage of Luxembourg through Ermesinde as heir to the Namur family, it is reflected in both the original Chronicle by Alberic quoted above (Ermensendem Comitissam Namurcensem uxorem Comitis Godefredi being the daughter and "progeny" of Comitissa de Longuy Ermonsendis) [6] - and also in the subsequent records reflected in Cawley FMG related to the house of Luxembourg - Namur. [5]
Sources
↑ 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 1.14 Comtes de Luxembourg 963-1136 by Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Published by Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG) 2006-2021, including source citations and relevant texts; hosted online by FMG, accessed 2024; see also WikiTree's source page for MedLands)
↑ Gades, John A. (Brill Archive, 1951) Luxemburg in the Middle Ages. Cf. pp. 55-58. Available via Google Books: Luxemburg in the Middle Ages
↑ Sloet, L.A.J.W. (1872) Oorkondenboek der Graafschappen Gelre en Zutfen Deel I, No. 255 June 17, 1129 AD, p. 249 (Martinus Nijhoff 's-Gravenhage. Oorkondenboek der Graafschappen Gelre en Zutfen Deel I
↑ Comtes de Namur 907-1190 - Godefroi de Namur by Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Published by Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG) 2006-2021, including source citations and relevant texts; hosted online by FMG, accessed 2024; see also WikiTree's source page for MedLands)
↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 Comtes de Luxembourg 1136-1247 (Namur) by Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Published by Charles Cawley and the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG) 2006-2021, including source citations and relevant texts; hosted online by FMG, accessed 2024; see also WikiTree's source page for MedLands)
↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 Alberici monachi Trium fontium Chronicon, è manuscriptis nunc primum editum à Godofredo Guilielmo Leibnitio; available online via Internet Archive, Alberici monachi Trium fontium Chronicon (cf. page 350, image 644 of 884)
↑ Europäische Stammtafeln, Band II, Frank Baron Freytag von Loringhoven, 1975, Isenburg, W. K. Prinz von. p 28 | UNKNOWN Clementia (I59517)
|
| 4184 |
Cloderic is same as Childeric [1]
Birth
Childeric was born before 433[2]
Childeric I is presumed to have been at least 15 years of age by the time he succeeded his father in 448. [2]
Parents
Childeric's parents are UNKNOWN.
However, Andre Castelot states that Childerick was the son of Merovee=Merovech, Prince des Francs and N?. [2]
Cawley states that his father was Merovech, but this was a legend.[3]
Cawley [3] also states that Childeric's mother is unknown.
458 Reign as third King of the Franks
"Childeric I became the third King of the Franks in 458. He fought with the Roman Aegidius against the Wisigoths. When Aegidius died in 464, he was succeeded by Count Paul. [4] Childeric I's army helped Count Paul push back a Saxon advance from Angers around 466. Count Paul died in 470. They had to repeat this feat around 475, since Count Paul had died and the Saxons once again had attempted to expand into Angers. [5]
Childeric I (c. 440– c. 481) was the Merovingian king of the Salian Franks from 457 until his death, and the father of Clovis.
Childeric I, Roi des Francs [4]
He administered the province of Belgica Secunda[6]
Between 458 and 480: Childeric I became the third King of the Franks in 458. He fought with the Roman Aegidius against the Wisigoths. When Agidius died in 464, he was succeeded by Count Paul. Childeric I's army helped Count Paul push back a Saxon advance from Angers around 466. Count Paul would die in 470. They had to repeat this feat around 475, after Count Paul had died and the Saxons once again had attempted to expand into Angers. [7]
King of the Salian Franks 456-481, of northern Gaul in 456, during Roman times. He became infatuated with the daughters of his subjects, who were so incensed about this that they forced him to give up the throne. He discovered that they intended to assassinate him, and he fled to Thuringia, leaving a close friend and telling him to send him a message when Childeric could return to his kingdom.[8]
After a battle with Odoacer, King of the Saxons (and conquerer of the Western Roman Empire, 476), at Orleans, Childeric and the Saxon king made a peace treaty and together subdued the Alamanni, who had invaded a part of Italy. In 481 Childeric died and was succeeded by Clovis, his son by Basina.
Childeric I began his rule in 458. He was deposed in 459 and restored in 463. He continued to rule until 481.[8]
He succeeded his father Merovech (Latinised as Meroveus or Merovius) as king, traditionally in 457 or 458. With his Frankish warband he was established with his capital at Tournai, on lands which he had received as a foederatus of the Romans, and for some time he kept the peace with his allies.[8]
463 Battle of Orleans
In about 463 in Orléans, in conjunction with the Roman General Aegidius, who was based in Soissons, he defeated the Visigoths, who hoped to extend their dominion along the banks of the Loire River. After the death of Aegidius, he first assisted Comes ("count") Paul of Angers, together with a mixed band of Gallo-Romans and Franks, in defeating the Goths and taking booty. Odoacer reached Angers but Childeric arrived the next day and a battle ensued. Count Paul was killed and Childeric took the city. Childeric, having delivered Angers, followed a Saxon warband to the islands on the Atlantic mouth of the Loire, and massacred them there. In a change of alliances, he also joined forces with Odoacer, according to Gregory of Tours, to stop a band of the Alamanni who wished to invade Italy.[8]
These are all the facts known about him, and they are not secure. The stories of his expulsion by the Franks, whose women he was taking; of his eight-year stay in Thuringia with King Basin and his wife Basina; of his return when a faithful servant advised him that he could safely do so by sending to him half of a piece of gold which he had broken with him; and of the arrival in Tournai of Queen Basine, whom he married, are entirely legendary and come from Gregory of Tours' Libri Historiarum (Book ii.12).[8]
Marriage
He married Basina of Thuringia [9]
He married Basina Andovera of Thuringia. Their children included Andelfieda of Merovinga Franks, King Clovis I "the Great" "the Riparian" of Franks
Childeric took refuge with Bisinus, King of the Thuringian Franks, and his wife Basina. The king elected by the Franks was cruel, and soon after Childeric was re-called to his kingdom by his friend, and was restored to the throne. Once Bisinus and Childeric were both kings, Basina deserted her husband and went to live with Childeric, who married her and had a son Clovis.[8]
481 Death and Tomb
Childeric is generally considered to have died in 481 or 482 based on Gregory's reports that his son Clovis died in 511 and ruled 30 years. [8]
Childeric died about 481/2[10] and was buried in Tournei (tomb discovered 1653)[10]
Childeric's grave contained his signet ring, enabling his identification.[10]
Between 480 and 481 Childeric I's tomb in Tournai was discovered in 1653 and contained magnificent weapons. Buried: circa 481 in Tournai, Bigorre, France.
Children Chlodovich CLOVIS I "THE RIPARIAN" b: 467 in in Rheims, Marne, Loire-Atlantique, France Andelfieda AUDEFLEDE DE FRANCIE b: Abt 469 in Rheims, Marne, Loire-Atlantique, France Auberdon b: 460
Between 480 and 481 Childeric I's tomb in Tournai was discovered in 1653 and contained magnificent weapons. Buried: circa 481 in Tournai, Bigorre, France. [11]
He died in 481 and was buried in Tournai, leaving a son Clovis, afterwards king of the Franks.[8]
Childeric's tomb was discovered in 1653 by a mason doing repairs in the church of Saint-Brice in Tournai where numerous precious objects were found, including a richly ornamented sword, a torse-like bracelet, jewels of gold and cloisonné enamel with garnets, gold coins, a gold bull's head and a ring with the inscription CHILDERICI REGIS ("of Childeric the king"), which identified the tomb. Some 300 golden bees were also found. Archduke Leopold William, Spanish governor of the Netherlands, had the find published in Latin, and the treasure went first to the Habsburgs in Vienna, then as a gift to Louis XIV, who was not impressed with them and stored them in the royal library, which became the Bibliothèque Nationale de France during the Revolution. Napoleon was more impressed with Childeric's bees when he was looking for a heraldic symbol to trump the Bourbon fleur-de-lys. He settled on Childeric's bees as symbols of the French Empire.[8]
On the night of November 5-6, 1831, the treasure of Childeric was among 80 kilos of treasure stolen from the Library and melted down for the gold. A few pieces were retrieved where they had been hidden in the Seine, including two of the bees. The record of the treasure, however, now exists only in the fine engravings made at the time of its discovery, and in some reproductions made for the Habsburgs. [8]
Children
Gregory of Tours, in his History of the Franks, mentions several siblings of Clovis within his narrative, meaning that the following list of children of Childeric is known. [8]
Clovis I (died 511), whose mother was Basina.
Audofleda, Queen of the Ostrogoths, wife of Theodoric the Great. Gregory III.31 also mentions their daughter Amalasuntha.
Lanthechild. Gregory II.31 mentions she had been an Arian but converted to Catholicism with Clovis.
Albofleda (died approximately 500). Gregory II.31 mentions that she died soon after being baptized with Clovis.
Research Notes
Chloderius is also shown as a son in some genealogies.
Sources
↑ Page 212 in "Dawn of European Civilization" has Merovingian chart. It differs a little from some others
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Andre Castelot, Histoire de La France, Pages, 176, 200
↑ 3.0 3.1 Charles Cawley. Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Medieval Lands Database. Merovingians. Merovech
↑ 4.0 4.1 Paul, Nouveau Larousse Universel. and Stuart, Royalty for Commoners, Page 216, Line 303-52.
↑ From "Rulers of the World" by R. F. Tapsell:
↑ Bishop Regimus
↑ "Rulers of the World" by R.F.Tapsell
↑ 8.00 8.01 8.02 8.03 8.04 8.05 8.06 8.07 8.08 8.09 8.10 Wikipedia: Childeric I
↑ Charles Cawley. Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. Medieval Lands Database. Merovingians. Basina
↑ 10.0 10.1 10.2 Fletcher, 1997, p. 101
↑ (Andre Castelot, Histoire de La France, Pages, 176, 200).
See also:
Bishop Remigius. letter.
Fletcher, R. (1997). The Barbarian Conversion, (pp. 101). NY: Henry Holt and Co. Print.
Wikipedia: Childeric I; NL; ES | MEROVINGIAN Childeric (I58172)
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| 4185 |
Clovis I, King of the Franks
Chlodovech (Clovis)
alias: Chlodovechus (Latin), Chlodwig (Frankish)
b. 464/7
d. 27 Nov 511 Paris[1]
bur. Basilique des Saints-Apôtres (later Sainte-Geneviève), Paris[2]
Clovis I (c.466 - 27 Nov 511), was King of the Salian Franks. As founder of the Merovingian dynasty, he was the first to rule all Franks and most of Gaul, from 481 until he died in 511.[3][4][3][4][5]
Although pagan, Clovis became the first Catholic ruler of the Franks, and also created the state's first written Salic laws. His dynasty lasted for 200 years.
Parents
Childerich I, King of the Franks (d. 481/1)[6][7]
Basina ______[6]
Concubine
UNKNOWN (Father: _____ of the Franks of the Rhine).[8] Issue: 1[6]
Theoderich I (485 - 533; bur. Metz)[6]
m.1 UNKNOWN or Suavegotta (d. by 566)[9]
m.2 (507/16) Suavegotha of Burgundy (b. 495 or later - d. after 549).
(p. Sigismond, King of Burgundy m.1 Ostrogotha of the Ostrogoths)
Marriage
m. (492) Chrotechildis "Clotilde[6] or Rotilde" of Burgundy (480 - 548 or 548). Issue: 6
(Father: Chilperich, King of Burgundy)
Ingomer (b./d. 493)[6]
Chlodomer (494/5 - 21 Jun 524 Vézeronce)[6][7]
m. (514 or 521) Guntheuca "Gondioque" (Father: _____ King of Burgundy)[6][7]
Childebert (497 -23 Dec 558 Paris)[6][10]
m Ultrogotha (d. after 561; p. unknown)[6]
Chlothachar "Clotaire / Lothar" (501/2 - 30 Dec 561 Soisson; bur. Soissons, basilique Saint-Médard[6]
(dau.) Theodechildis (492/501 - 576). [11]
Chrothieldis "Clotilde" (502/11 - 531)
m. Amalric, King of the Visigoths
(disputed dau) ______[12] | MEROVINGIAN Clovis Hlodowig (I58170)
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| 4186 |
Coachman and houseowner | EKSTROM Petter Jansson (I47348)
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| 4187 |
Col. Beard was born in the Soldiers and Sailors Hospital in Penn Yan, Yates County, NY. After his death, he was buried with full Military honors and buried in Arlington National Cemetery. | Beard Col. Daryl Adelbert (I52740)
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| 4188 |
Col. John Vassall, son of Leonard Vassall, married twice. First to Elizabeth Phips on 10 Oct. 1734 in Boston, MA. Elizabeth died 22 Sept 1739 in Cambridge. He remarried to Lucy Barran and had one daughter, Lucy by this marriage. he died prematurely on 27 November, 1747 in Cambridge, Middlesex County, MA. He died preceding the Revolution, but his family remained Loyalists and most suffered forfeiture of their lands, many returned to England but it was their properties that housed George Washington during the seige on Boston and the patriot army hospital. | Vassall John (I50395)
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| 4189 |
Colae, Colla da Crioch was the son of Eochu Cairpre, or Eochaidh Doimhlen as his father is sometimes recorded. [1]
Colla Fochrich (variously known as Colae Forchrith; Colla Dá Crich; Colla Fo Chrí; or simply Fochrich - with his brothers Cairell Colla Uais and Áed Colla Menn were the Three Collas; the three sons of Eochaid Doimlén, grandsons of Cairbre Lifechair and great-grandsons of Cormac mac Airt of the Kingdom of Airgíalla.
The three sons of Eochaid Doimlén (Eochu Cairpre), the three Collas (Coola Uais; Colla Meann & Colla do Chrioch) murdered their uncle, the High King Fiachu (Fiacha Strabhteine) at the Battle of Dubchomar. [2] [3]
Colla da Chrioch, son of Eochaidh Dublin had three sons - [4]
- Rochadh
- Imchadh
- Fiachra Cassan (Fiachra Cassan MacColla Fochrith) who gave his name to the the kingdom of Orgiall (Oriel)
Colla da Chrioch (otherwise known as Colla Fochrich) was the ancestor of many families in Ulster and Hy-Maine. [5] [6]
The Book of Clanranald p.152-153 - CELTColla Uais, son of Eochaid Dublein, assumed the sovereignty of Ireland in the year of the age of Christ 322; and he was four years in the sovereignty of Ireland when Muredach Tirech opposed him with a powerful army, and gave battle to the three Collas, and expelled them to Scotland, where they obtained extensive lands, for Oilech, daughter of the king of Scotland, was their mother. In the time when Cormac Finn was in the sovereignty over Scotland, 362 (326), they spent some time in Scotland, until a war broke out between Muredach Tirech, king of Ireland, and the Ultonians, viz., the Clanna Rughruidhe; and he invited the sons of his father's brother, that is, the three Collas, to Ireland to assist him against the Clann Rughruidhe and the adjoining districts.
Sources
↑ Eoin MacNeill, Ériu: Founded as the Journal of the School of Irish Learning Devoted to Irish Philology and Literature 11, (1932): 30-31; digital images, Google Books, The Vita Triparta of St. Patrick
↑ Carbry Liffechar, Ard-righ .. had two sons Eochaidh Doimhlein (or Dubhlein) & Fiacha Strabhteine Ulster Journal of Archaeology (Google eBook). Ulster Archaeological Society, 1897 - Ulster, Ireland.
↑ Wikipedia, (http:www.wikipedia.com: accessed 6 June 2015), "Fíacha Sroiptine," http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F%C3%ADacha_Sroiptine.
↑ John O'Hart in page: 188 of Irish Pedigrees, Or, The Origin and Stem of the Irish Nation part Vll Stem of the O'Hart Family
↑ Colla da Crioch; Roacadh his son; Deach Dorn his son; Fiach (or Feig) his son; Crimthann Liath his son; from Irish Pedigrees vol:2 Appendix no:1 page: 719 by John O'Hart
↑ families descended from Colla da Crrioch are listed by John O'Hart in page: 188 of Irish Pedigrees, Or, The Origin and Stem of the Irish Nation part Vll Stem of the O'Hart Family
In the Annuls of Ulster of 514 we read of his descendants - "Cairpre Daim Airgit son of Eochu son of Crimthann son of Fiach son of Daig Duirn son of Reochad son of Colla Dá Crích, king of Airgialla Celt : Annuls of Ulster U514.1 (author unknown) Corpus of Electronic Texts Edition
Jaski, Bart Genealogical tables of medieval Irish royal dynasties Table-24 Early Irish Kingship Succession by Jaski Bart, Published by Four Courts Press, 2013, ISBN 1846824265 ISBN 9781846824265 | FORCHRITH Colla da Crioch (I58515)
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| 4190 |
Colmán mac Cormaicc of the Sil Chormaic; was a son of Cormac Mac Nath [1]
The Sil Chormaic (or Clann Cormaic ) of the Uí Ceinnselaig; descendants of Énnai Ceinselaig, were located in county Wexford [2]
Research Notes
This profile is based on Jaski's table 42
Clann Name: Sil Chormaic
Annals
The Annals of Ulster[3]
AU - No entries found
Sources
↑ Wikipedia : Rónán Mac Colmáin (his son)
↑ Wikipedia : List of Irish clans
↑ The Annals of Ulster - CELT
Jaski, Bart Genealogical tables of medieval Irish royal dynasties Table-42 Early Irish Kingship Succession by Jaski Bart, Published by Four Courts Press, 2013, ISBN 1846824265 ISBN 9781846824265
CGH - Corpus Genealogies iHiberniae Vol 1 ed. M.A. O'Brien (Dublin 1962) pg, 10, 14-15, 341, 343-345. 429-431
OClery The O Clery Book of Genealogies ed. S,Pender, Analecto Hibernica, 18 (Dublin 1951) - 1778
O'Corrain, D, Irish regnal succession - a reappraisal, Studia Hibernica 11 (1971) 7-39 | Mac CORMAIC Colmán (I58471)
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| 4191 |
Colmán Már Mac Coirpri, of the the Uí Dúnlainge branch of the Laigin of Leinster, was a King of the Uí Dúnlainge from c. 0546 until his death in 0576. [1][2]
His son was Fáelán mac Colmáin [3]
Sources
↑ Wikipedia : List of Kings of Leinster 2:1 Laigin; classical antiquity
↑ Francis J.Byrne, Irish Kings and High-Kings, Table 9
↑ Wikipedia : Fáelán mac Colmáin
Wikiwand : Kings of Leinster
Jaski, Bart Genealogical tables of medieval Irish royal dynasties Table-38 Early Irish Kingship Succession by Jaski Bart, Published by Four Courts Press, 2013, ISBN 1846824265 ISBN 9781846824265
CGH - Corpus Genealogies iHiberniae Vol 1 ed. M.A. O'Brien (Dublin 1962) pg, 42-5, 50-7, 348, 356.
MS - Rawlinson B502 - CELT | LEINSTER Colman Mor (I58535)
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| 4192 |
Colonel of Ninth U.S. Infantry. | Col Truman Bishop RANSOM (I40448)
|
| 4193 |
Comitissa Jutta was the mother of Ludwig II von Arnstein.[1]
Sources
↑ Heinzelmann. Joseph. (2001) Ludwig von Arnstein und seine Verwandtschaft. | ZUTPHEN Gutta (I59507)
|
| 4194 |
Company A Mormon Battalion; Settled in Ogden in 1849. President 33rd quorum seventies at Nauvoo, 1846. Assisted in bringing immigrants to Utah 1857. Presided over the little settlement, Genoa about 100 miles west of Florence, a supply depot and assembing station for mountain-bound immigrants and future Utah pioneers. | ALLEN Albern (I19923)
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| 4195 |
Comte de Bigorre (succeeded his brother Dato Donat) [1]
Children
Dato II Loup, Comte de Bigorre. [2]
Mansion Loup, Vicomte de Lavedan. [2]
Sources
↑ Monlezun (1846), Tome I, p. 350, citing Manuscrit. Essai historique sur le Bigorre.
↑ 2.0 2.1 Cawley, Charles. Medieval Lands: A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families. Hosted online by the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG), accessed 2022, Comtes de Bigorre. | BIGORRE Loup (I59579)
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| 4196 |
Conaire Cóem (Conaire Mór) was, according to medieval Irish legend and historical tradition, the 111th High King of Ireland [1] [2]
Father: Mogha-Lamha, son of Lughaid Allathach (Allathain) [3] [4]
Mother: Eithne, sister to Mac Niad of the race of Ith [5]
Spouse: "Conaire married the second daughter of the deceased Con" ... "He had by his Queen Seraid, daughter to Con, three sons, princes of great valour and abilities." [6]
On the death of Con, the estates proceeded to the election of a successor, the majority of suffrages were announced to be in favour of Connaire the son of Mogha-Lamha, a lineal descendant of Connaire the Grand. [7]
Conaire Mor (Conaire MacMogdha Laine) began his reign as a king of Ireland in the year 157; listed as 111th monarch, descended in the line of Heremon, by John O'Hart in his Roll of the Monarchs of Ireland Since the Milesian Conquest [8] [9]
He died, killed by Neimhidh. [10]
The three sons of Conaire Cóem ("the beautiful") and Saraid were - [11]
1. Cairpre Músc, ancestor of the Corcu Duibne (Carbrey aka Muscry - county Cork)
2. Cairpre Baschaín, ancestor of the Corcu Baiscind (Carbrey Bascon - county Clare)
3. Cairpre Riata, (county Kerry) ancestor of the Dál Riata; & of the Síl Conairi (Carbrey alias Eochaid Riada, a quo Dal Riada in Scotland)
Bart Jaski in his book, states that there was a 4th son
4. Cairpre Findmóir ancestor of the Múscraige
Conaire Cóem, the son of Mog Lama and the kinsman of Conn Cétchathach Ceadcatha by marriage, succeeded Conn and ruled as High King for eight years, before Conn's own son, Art Óenfher succeeded Conaire Cóem and became Ard Ri, the High King.
Wikipedia records this succession as --
Preceded by Conn Cétchathach
Conaire High King of Ireland (showing alt. dates)
LGE 2nd century AD
FFE AD 136–143
AFM AD 157–165
Succeeded by: Art mac Cuinn
Sources
↑ Conaire Cóem ("the beautiful") was, according to medieval Irish legend and historical tradition, the 111th High King of Ireland. He came to power on the death of his father-in-law Conn Cétchathach, and ruled for seven or eight years, at the end of which he was killed by Nemed, son of Sroibcenn, in the battle of Gruitine and was succeeded by Conn's son Art. Wikipedia : Conaire Cóem
↑ His life story is recounted in The General History of Ireland ch: 8; by Sylvester O'Halloran
↑ Mocha Lamha was the father of Conaire ll (quoting Annuls Four Masters AD 158) Tóruigheacht Dhiarmuda Agus Gráinne, p. 89, Volume 2, By Society for the Preservation of the Irish Language, added 2014-07-25, amb
↑ An ceid-bhliadhain do Conaire, mac Modha Lamha, h-i righe uas Erinn.Celt : Annuls of the Four Masters M158.1 page 106
↑ O'Halloran, "Eithne, sister to Mac Niad of the race of Ith" p: 241 "Mac Neid the son of Lugha of the race of Ith & Conaire the son of Mocha Lamha" (re reinforcements from Spain) p: 234
↑ three sons, princes of great valour and abilities; Carbre Muse (Cork), Carbre Baifean (Clare) and Carbre Riada (Kerry) from the different principalities assigned them [A general history of Ireland] O'Halloran vol: 1 p: 242
↑ O'Halloran, p: 241
↑ listed as 111th monarch, descended in the line of Heremon, in Roll of the Monarchs of Ireland Since the Milesian Conquest Irish pedigrees; or, The origin and stem of the Irish nation part ll page: 56 by John O'Hart; pub: J. Duffy and Co; Dublin 1892
↑ The Lebor Gabála Érenn synchronises his reign with that of the Roman emperor Commodus (180–192).[2] The chronology of Geoffrey Keating's Foras Feasa ar Éirinn dates his reign to 136–143,[3] that of the Annals of the Four Masters to 157–165.
↑ Iar m-beith ocht m-bliadhna h-i righe n-Ereann do Chonaire, mac Modha Lamha, torcair la Neimhidh mac Sruibhginn.Tri meic lais an c-Conaire h-isin, Coirbre Muscc, ó raiter Musccraighe, Cairpre Bascain, o t-tádh Baiscnigh h-i c-Corca Baisccinn, & Cairpre Riata, o b-fuilit Dál Riata. Saraid inghion Cuinn Cedcathaigh mathair na mac-sa Conaire, mic Modha Lamha. Celt : Annuls of the Four Masters M165.1] page 106
↑ Wikipedia : Conaire Cóem
Bart Jaski Genealogical tables of medieval Irish royal dynasties Table-1 Early Irish Kingship Succession by Jaski Bart, Published by Four Courts Press, 2013, ISBN 1846824265 ISBN 9781846824265
Wikipedia: Conaire Coem
John O'Hart, Irish pedigrees; or, The origin and stem of the Irish nation:Heremon (Volume 1) online.
Sylvester O'Halloran, A general history of Ireland: from the earliet accounts to the close of the twelfth century, collected from the most authentic records. In which new and interesting lights are thrown on the remote histories of other nations as well as of both Britains, Volume 1 (Google eBook). Printed for the author, by A. Hamilton, 1778 - Ireland
Dictionary of the Irish Language, Compact Edition, Royal Irish Academy, 1990, pp. 93-94 ---R. A. Stewart Macalister (ed. & trans.)
Lebor Gabála Érenn: The Book of the Taking of Ireland Part V, Irish Texts Society, 1956, p. 335
Geoffrey Keating, Foras Feasa ar Éirinn 1.40
Annals of the Four Masters M157-165
Alan O. Anderson, Scottish annals from English chroniclers A.D. 500 to 1286 . Published 1908 by D.N. Nutt in London .
Scottish annals from English chroniclers A.D. 500 to 1286 | MOGHA Conaire Cóem (I59372)
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| 4197 |
Conall Mac Fáelán and Conandil ingen Crundmáel of the Ui Dunlainge, were the parents of Bran Mut mac Conail
Conall mac Fáelán,and Conandil ingen Crundmáel of the Ui Dunlainge, were the parents of of Bran Mut mac Conaill (died 693) a king of Leinster. [1]
Sources
↑ Wikipedia : Fáelán mac Colmáin
Wikipedia : Fáelán mac Colmáin | CRUNDMAEL Condadil (I58503)
|
| 4198 |
Conall macFáelán O'Dúnlainge
Conall Mac Fáelán and Conandil ingen Crundmáel of the Ui Dunlainge, were the parents of Bran Mut mac Conail
Sources
Wikipedia : Fáelán mac Colmáin | mac FÁELÁN Conall (I58531)
|
| 4199 |
Conan Meriadoc, who first appears in writings in the early 12th century, exists only in legend, though he may in fact have existed as a real person. No documentation has been found to confirm the actual existance of Conan, and there are no documentable facts about his life.
Development of the Legend
Conan Meriadoc (/ˈkoʊnən/) is a legendary British leader credited with founding Brittany. [1]
Versions of his story circulated in both Brittany and Great Britain from at least the early 12th century, and supplanted earlier legends of Brittany's foundation. [1]
His story is known in two major versions, which appear in the Welsh text known as The Dream of Macsen Wledig, and in Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia Regum Britanniae. Both texts associate him with Magnus Maximus (Macsen Wledic, reigned 383-388), a Roman usurper against the Valentinianic dynasty who was widely regarded as having deprived Britain of its defences when he took its legions to claim the imperial throne. Conan's cousin or sister, Saint Elen, is said to have been Macsen Wledic's wife. [1]
Life of Saint Gurthiern
The earliest undisputed evidence connecting Conan to the foundation of Brittany appears in the Life of Saint Gurthiern, included in the Kemperle Cartulary compiled between 1118 and 1127.[2]
This text traces the descent of Gurthiern back to the ancestor figure Beli Mawr, given as a son of Outham Senis (Outham the Old), the figure known in later sources as Eudaf Hen and Octavius. Outham is given another son, Kenan (an Old Welsh spelling of Conan), who is said to have been the founder of Brittany. [2][3]
This reference shows that the Conan story was known in Brittany from a comparatively early date, but certain evidence suggests that it was imported from Wales. The text's compiler, Gurheden, says that his source for the information was one "Iuthael son of Aidan"; while the name Iuthael is a Brittonic name known in both Wales and Brittany, the Gaelic Aidan is not attested in early Brittany but is known in Wales. Additionally, Gurthiern's genealogy corresponds strongly with the descent elsewhere attributed to the Welsh saint Cadoc, further suggesting a Welsh origin. [2]
Life of Saint Goeznovius
Conan Meriadoc also appears in the prologue to the Latin Life of Saint Goeznovius, though the date of this text is disputed. The prologue, the only part of the work still extant, survives in a copy by the French historian Pierre Le Baud (died 1505), but contains a passage claiming it was originally written in 1019 by a certain Guillaume, a servant of Bishop Eudo. This date has been defended by Gwenaël Leduc and Léon Fleuriot. However, Hubert Guillotel has argued that the text dates instead to the mid-12th century. [4]
Armes Prydein
There is evidence that Conan Meriadoc figured into the Brittonic prophetic tradition as a messianic saviour who would return to lead his people in a time of need. A Cynan appears in several prophetic poems, most notably the Armes Prydein, where he is named alongside Cadwaladr as a figure whose return is promised. [1]
Geoffrey of Monmouth, whose knowledge of this tradition is evinced in both the Historia Regum Britanniae and the Vita Merlini, specifically identified this Cynan with Conan Meriadoc. Rachel Bromwich suggests that Geoffrey was relying on an older tradition identifying the founder of Brittany with the prophetic Cynan, and argues that this identification is made already in Armes Prydein. At the time Armes Prydein was composed, the Breton nobility under Alan II, Duke of Brittany had forged an alliance with Æthelstan, king of England, in the face of Viking attacks on their territory. Hywel Dda, then ruler of most of Wales, had also formed a similar relationship with Æthelstan at that time. In spite of this, the poet repeatedly refers to the men of Llydaw (Brittany) as part of his prophesied pan-Celtic union which will oust the English from Britain for good. Bromwich reads the line "A chymot Cynan gan y gilyd" ("there will be concord between Cynan and his fellow") as a reference to the reunion of the Bretons and their leader Conan Meriadoc with their fellow Britons.[5]
Geoffrey of Monmouth
Geoffrey of Monmouth, writing in about 1163, offers a detailed narrative of the life of "Conanus Meridiadocus"" which includes:
nephew of King Octavius [6]
called on to face arriving forces of Maximianus [7]
rejected as suitor for Octavius' daughter in favor of Mauricius, son of Maximianus and nephew of King Coel [8]
failed to best Maximianus, who sought to conquer Gaul as well as Britain, but accepted Maximianus' offer to become king of Armorica in Gaul, renamed Brittany after it was populated with migrants from Britain and became a "second Britain". [9]
Maximianus' rule is in the time period 306-337. [10]
The story of Conan is attested in several medieval sources, the most substantial versions being those included in Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia Regum Britanniae and the Welsh tale known as The Dream of Macsen Wledig. Both of these tie Conan and the founding of Brittany to the story of the Roman usurper Magnus Maximus, though in both cases this is heavily embellished. [1]
In Geoffrey, Conan is the nephew of Octavius, King of the Britons (Welsh Eudaf Hen), and a potential heir to the throne. When the throne is offered instead to "Maximianus", Geoffrey's version of Magnus Maximus, Conan at first opposes him, but the two are reconciled after Maximianus' marriage to Octavius' daughter. Later Maximianus leads the armies of Britain to march on Rome, and he quickly conquers Armorica, where he establishes Conan as the king with instructions to found "another Britain". He does so, and repels numerous attacks from the Gauls and Aquitanians, and asks for British wives for his men from Maximianus' regent Dionotus, with whose daughter, Saint Ursula, he was said to be "most passionately in love", as reflected in her legends. Later, when Maximianus has been killed in Rome, his fleeing troops return to Armorica and join Conan's settlement.[11]
The version of the story given in The Dream of Macsen Wledig differs from the Historia account on a number of points. Though the text postdates Geoffrey, it contains material older than either version. In The Dream, Conan is the son, rather than nephew, of Eudaf Hen (Geoffrey's Octavius), and the brother of Saint Elen. Maxen Wledig (Magnus Maximus), here portrayed as the rightful Roman Emperor rather than a usurper, sees Elen and her kingdom in a dream vision, and seeks her out and marries her. In this version Conan and his brother Afaon immediately become Maxen's loyal associates, later helping him reclaim the throne of Rome. For this service the grateful Macsen gives Conan dispensation to lead his army to conquer whatever realm he wants. Conan chooses Armorica, where he kills all the men and replaces them with his own soldiers. He then orders the tongues of all the women cut out, lest their speech corrupt that of the Britons; a fanciful etymology connects this event with Welsh name of Brittany, Llydaw, supposedly from the Welsh lled-taw or "half-silent".[12][13]
Later developments
The Conan story became a dominant founding myth for the Bretons for hundreds of years. [2]Earlier traditions of the foundation of the Brittonic settlement in Armorica are recorded in Gildas' De Excidio et Conquestu Britanniae and in the hagiographies of various saints. [5] Especially important in this regard are the stories of the so-called Seven Founder Saints of Brittany, which were largely forgotten or overlooked after the spread of the Conan legend. [1]
In the wake of Geoffrey and The Dream of Macsen, Conan subsequently appears as a founder-figure in several genealogies of Breton aristocratic families. He is venerated as the ancestor of the Rohans, according to the Life of Saint Meriadoc, the protagonist of which is said to have been descended from him.[14]
Meriadoc appears in one of the genealogies from Jesus College MS 20, which traces the descent of Geraint mab Erbin, king of Dumnonia in the West Country, back to "Cynan map Eudaf Hen". [3]
In the Cornish miracle play Beunans Meriasek, Conan is a kinsman of Saint Meriasek who tries (unsuccessfully) to dissuade Meriasek from pursuing a religious life. [2]
In the 15th century the Bretons used the Conan story as it appears in the Life of Saint Meriadoc to establish precedence for the Breton aristocracy over the kings of France.[15]
The story's political impact declined with the Union of Brittany and France in 1532, and it thereafter declined in popularity. However, in the 17th century the Rohans used their supposed descent from Conan Meriadoc to seek status as "foreign princes" at the French court; King Louis XIV recognised their pedigree, but denied their foreign status. [14] Beginning in the mid-18th century Breton historians attempted to establish the historical existence of Conan, though he is now regarded as a mythical figure. [14]
Research Notes
Epic Hero: Legendary Founder of Brittany
Conan Meriadoc, legendary founder of Brittany, is an epic hero whose story has been traced to Wales as far back as the early 12th century. [16]
The story of Conan Meriadoc is told in two major versions: in the Welsh text known as The Dream of Macsen Wledig, [17] and in Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia Regum Britanniae. [18]
Dates
Wikipedia gives no birth or death dates since "he is now regarded as a mythical figure." [16][19]
The Conan story became a dominant founding myth for the Bretons for hundreds of years.... Beginning in the mid-18th century Breton historians attempted to establish the historical existence of Conan, though he is now regarded as a mythical figure.[20]
Name
Alternate spellings: Welsh-Cynan, Latin-Conanus, English-Conan.
Relatives
Conan was the son of Octavius the Old's brother, Gerontius, (or Octavius himself according to the "Dream of Macsen Wledig") and had expected to inherit his uncle's kingdom. Originally, he was considerably put out by the rise to power of his cousin's husband, Magnus Maximus, and he organised a rebellion against him, aided by Picts & Scots. However, being defeated, Conan became great friends with his rival and travelled with Maximus to the continent to help him become Emperor of the West. [1]
Conan was given Brittany as a reward for killing the previous holder of the title. His new Kingdom, was well settled by his men-at-arms, however they lacked wives. Therefore, in order to populate the area, he sent to his uncle's old ally, King Donaut of Dumnonia for numerous Cornish ladies. Conan proposed to cement the alliance of their two peoples by marrying Donaut's daughter, Ursula. Though Dunaut was delighted at the match, Ursula had her heart set on a life devoted only to God. She agreed to the marriage, on the condition that she first be allowed to go on a pilgrimage throughout Europe. Conan appears to have joined her in Rome, where the two must have been married, probably by Pope Cyriacus himself. He apparently did not travel to Cologne where Ursula died. [1][21]
In later years, Conan inherited Dumnonia from his father-in-law. Brittany & Dumnonia were united for only a short time, for, as his second wife, Conan married St.Patrick's sister, Dareca of Ireland, and he left one each of his Kingdoms to the sons of his two marriages. He probably died about 395. [21]
Cynan was Prince of Albaine and Powys. He is a legendary figure and is reported to have married Dareara, sister of Saint Patrick and daughter of Calphurnius (Calpinn), and Cynan's cousin. Cynan is supposed to have left Britain to form a colony in Armorica, France, in 384 A.D. [22][23] He r. Nantes in Brittany.
Conan Meriadoc (modern Breton Konan Meriadeg, Latin Conanus Meridiadocus; died ca. 426) was the legendary 4th century founder of the house of Rohan and legendary leader of the earliest British settlement in Armorica.
According to medieval Welsh sources (including Geoffrey of Monmouth), Conan Meriadoc was the cousin (by marriage) of Macsen Wledig (Magnus Maximus) and nephew of Octavius. After he rebelled against Octavius, Macsen summoned him before departing to establish himself as Roman emperor, and gave Conan Armorica to rule as his own kingdom. Conan then led the settlement of Armorica by Welsh mercenaries and gave it the name of Brittany, or "Little Britain".
In the Cornish miracle play Beunans Meriasek, Conan is a kinsman of St Meriasek who tries (unsuccessfully) to dissuade Meriasek from pursuing a religious life.
Literature
J.R.R. Tolkien alludes to the historical Meriadoc in his Lord of the Rings trilogy, where the hobbit Meriadoc ("Merry") becomes the adjutant of the king of the fictional kingdom Rohan.
Related Internet sites
Robert B. Stewart, "My Theories", Except Siricius was not Pope until 384-399. History Files, EBK, online
Emma Ryan Vol. 1, Myriam Priour Vol. 2 & 3 and Floortje Hondelink Vol. 4, A4M, M447.2.
[2]
[3]
[4]
[5]
[6]
[7]
[8][24]
Conan Meriadoc ap /Gereint/[25][26][27]
Birth
Birth: 305 in Dumonian, now Cornwall, England [28] [29] [30]
Birth Year Estimation
IF he existed beyond the realm of myth, Conan would have been born c.305 CE. He is said to have been the father of Gradlon Mawr the Great, King of Brittany, (c.330-434).[31] Considering that Gradlon Mawr is said to have been the first child of Conan's second wife, his birth c.330 would put Conan's birth at no later than c.310. Yet the same source lists 421 CE as the year of Conan's death.
Parents
Conan was the son of Octavius the Old's brother, Gerontius, (or Octavius himself according to the Dream of Macsen Wledig). He had expected to inherit his uncle's position of influence in what is now Wales, until his cousin, Helena, married the Roman citizen, Magnus Maximus. Originally, Conan was considerably put out by this man's rise to power and he organised a rebellion against him, aided by Picts & Scots. However, being defeated, Conan became great friends with his rival and traveled with Maximus to the continent to help him become Emperor of the West. He was given control over Armorica (modern Brittany) as a reward for killing the previous holder of the title. His new province was well settled by his men-at-arms; however, they lacked wives. Therefore, in order to populate the area, he sent to his uncle's old ally, Donaut of Dumnonia for numerous Cornish ladies. Conan proposed to cement the alliance of their two peoples by marrying Donaut's daughter, Ursula. Though Donaut was delighted at the match, Ursula had her heart set on a life devoted only to God. She agreed to the marriage, on the condition that she first be allowed to go on a pilgrimage throughout Europe. Conan appears to have joined her in Rome, where the two must have been married, probably by Pope Cyriacus himself. He apparently did not travel to Cologne where Ursula died. In later years, he gained considerable influence in Dumnonia after the death of his father-in-law. The Governorship of Armorica & Dumnonia was united for only a short time. As his second wife, Conan married Dareca of Ireland, a supposed, though unlikely, sister of St. Patrick. Upon Conan's death, around AD 395, control of each region fell to the sons of his two marriages, Gadeon and Gradlon.[31]
Death
Death: 367 in Nantes, Loire-Atlantique, Pays de la Loire, France [32] [33] [34]
Marriages
Conan is said to have married twice. First he married Ursula of Dumnonia (c.305), who would become Saint Ursula, "from whom descend the Kings of Dumnonia" and second married Dareca of Ireland (c.310), sister of Saint Patrick, "from whom descend the Kings of Brittany."[31]
Issue
Child of the 1st marriage:
Gadeon[31]
Children of the 2nd marriage:[31]
Gradlon Mawr the Great, AKA Urban, King of Brittany (c.330-434)
St. Echea
St. Lalloca
St. Mel-Noch
St. Rioch
St. Munis
Cruman
Midgma
St. Loman
St. Loarn
Cieran
Carantog
Magalle
Columb
Brychan
Brychad
St. Branwaladr
Fine
Melchu
St. Bolcan
Line of Descent by Brian Starr
Brian Starr provides the following line of descent:
Bran Fendigaid King of Siluria (38th in Descent from biblical Abraham) + Anna Arimathea. [35]
Caradog ap Bran King of Siluria born in Trevan, llanilid, Glamorganshire, Britain [35]
Saint Cyllinus (Coellyn) (Linus) Lleyn), born in Trevan, Llanilid, Glamorganshire, Wales.[35]
Stradwawl (Baine) + Coel (Coilus) (Beli) ap Cyllin (High King of, born 104 in Colchester, Boudicca or Essex, England, d. 170. [35]
Llewfer Mawr (Lucius) ap Coellyn, King of xx, b. 115 in Ewyas (now Monmouth), Mid-Glamorgan, Wales, d. 181, + Gwladys, b. 117 in Siluria, Southern Wales. [35]
Eurgen verch Llewfer, b. 140 in Ewyas now Monmouth, Wales. + Ammadab (aminabad) (Alphanye) de jure King, b. 125 in Edyas now Monmouth, Wales [35]
daughter of Ammadab, b. 168 Monmouth, Wales, m. Meirchion Fawdfilwr ap Owain (King of Ewyas), b. 140 in Ewyas (now Monmouth) mid-Glamorgan, Wales [35]
Cwrrig Goric Fawr ('the Great') ap Meirchion, b. 180 in E#wyas, Wales.[35]
Gwrddwfn ap Cwrrig (King of Ewyas), b. 250 in Ewyas, now Monmouth, Wales. [35]
Gerontius (Caradoc) (Gerant) ap Einydd, b. 285 [35]
Conan (Cynan) Meriadoc (King of Dumnonia, b. 305, d. 367. m. Saint Ursula ferch Dynod b. 305 [35]
Cadfan (Gadeon) ap Conan (Cynan) King of, b. 325 in Dumonia now Cornwall, Britain, d. 405 + Gladys verch Llewfer, b. 327 in Britain [35]
Gwfawr (Guoremor) ap Cadfan, King of, b. 3258, d. 415. [35]
Tudwal ap Gwrfawr (King of Dumnonia), b. 375 in Wales, d. 425 + Gratianna verch Macsen, b. 370 in Gwent now Monmouth, Wales [35]
Prawst verch Tudwal, b. 419 in Dumonia now Cornwall, Britain. + Saint Brychan King of Brycheiniog, b. 419 in Brycheniog now Breconshire, Wales. [35]
Saint Sefin Verch Brychan Brycheiniog + Cynyr Ceinfariog The Fair [35]
Early British Kingdoms
Conan Meriadoc, 'King' of Dumnonia & Brittany (Born c.AD 305) (Welsh: Cynan; Latin: Conanus; English: Conan)
Conan was the son of Octavius the Old's brother, Gerontius, (or Octavius himself according to the Dream of Macsen Wledig). He had expected to inherit his uncle's position of influence in what is now Wales, until his cousin, Helena, married the Roman citizen, Magnus Maximus. Originally, Conan was considerably put out by this man's rise to power and he organised a rebellion against him, aided by Picts & Scots. However, being defeated, Conan became great friends with his rival and travelled with Maximus to the continent to help him become Emperor of the West. He was given control over Armorica (modern Brittany) as a reward for killing the previous holder of the title. His new province, was well settled by his men-at-arms, however they lacked wives. Therefore, in order to populate the area, he sent to his uncle's old ally, Donaut of Dumnonia for numerous Cornish ladies. Conan proposed to cement the alliance of their two peoples by marrying Donaut's daughter, Ursula. Though Donaut was delighted at the match, Ursula had her heart set on a life devoted only to God. She agreed to the marriage, on the condition that she first be allowed to go on a pilgrimage throughout Europe. Conan appears to have joined her in Rome, where the two must have been married, probably by Pope Cyriacus himself. He apparently did not travel to Cologne where Ursula died. In later years, he gained considerable influence in Dumnonia after the death of his father-in-law. The Governorship of Armorica & Dumnonia was united for only a short time. As his second wife, Conan married Dareca of Ireland, a supposed, though unlikely, sister of St. Patrick. Upon Conan's death, around AD 395, control of each region fell to the sons of his two marriages, Gadeon and Gradlon. [36]
Sources
↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 Wikipedia article
↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Koch, John T. (2006). Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 1-85109-440-7. page 474. Cited by Wikipedia.
↑ 3.0 3.1 Bromwich, Rachel (2006). Trioedd Ynys Prydein: The Triads of the Island of Britain. University of Wales Press. ISBN 0-7083-1386-8. page 320. cited by Wikipedia.
↑ Koch, p. 473.
↑ 5.0 5.1 Bromwich, p. 321
↑ Monmouth, 134
↑ Monmouth, 137
↑ Monmouth, 138
↑ Monmouth, 140
↑ Monmouth, 288, time Chart
↑ History of the Kings of Britain, Book 5, ch. 9–16. Cited by Wikipedia.
↑ Koch, pp. 1231–1232.
↑ The Dream of Maxen Wledig. Cited by Wikipedia.
↑ 14.0 14.1 14.2 Koch, p. 475.
↑ Koch, pp. 474–475.
↑ 16.0 16.1 Wikipedia contributors, "Conan Meriadoc," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, Conan Meriadoc (accessed August 29, 2018).
↑ The Dream of Macsen Wledig, referenced by Wikipedia contributors, "Conan Meriadoc," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, Conan Meriadoc (accessed August 29, 2018).
↑ Geoffrey of Monmouth. Historia Regum Britanniae, referenced by Wikipedia contributors, "Conan Meriadoc," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, Conan Meriadoc (accessed August 29, 2018).
↑ Wikipedia cites Koch, John T. Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia (Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, 2006).
↑ Wikipedia, citing Koch, John T. (2006). Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 1-85109-440-7. [1]
↑ 21.0 21.1 Encyclopedia Britannia.
↑ Carr P. Collins, Jr., "Royal Ancestors of Magna Charta Barons," Dallas, 1959, p. 137 - the legend has Cynan's ancestors back to Japhet, Noah's son (23 generations
↑ John Morris, "The Age of Arthur," Scribner's, 1973, pp.250, 256-7
↑ Entered by Stephen Bridges.
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Gradlon Mawr DeBretagne
↑ Source: #S6 Record for King of Bretagne Conan Meriadoc ap Gereint de Bretagne
↑ Source: #S6 Record for King of Bretagne Conan Meriadoc ap Gereint de Bretagne
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Gradlon Mawr DeBretagne
↑ Source: #S6 Record for King of Bretagne Conan Meriadoc ap Gereint de Bretagne
↑ Source: #S6 Record for King of Bretagne Conan Meriadoc ap Gereint de Bretagne
↑ 31.0 31.1 31.2 31.3 31.4 David Nash Ford's Early British Kingdoms, website at http://www.earlybritishkingdoms.com/gene/bretonped.html, © Nash Ford Publishing 2001. All Rights Reserved. [Text:]
BRETON ROYAL PEDIGREE:
Kings of Brittany, Princes of Cornouaille & Domnonée
Conan Meriadog (d.421), King of Brittany & Dumnonia, married, as his second wife, Dareca, the unlikely sister of St. Patrick of Ireland. They had some twenty children who all became saints or Bishops, mostly in Ireland: St. Echea, St. Lalloca, St. Mel-Noch, St. Rioch, St. Munis, Cruman, Midgma, St. Loman, St. Loarn, Cieran, Carantog, Magalle, Columb, Brychan, Brychad, St. Branwaladr, Fine, Melchu, St. Bolcan & their eldest son:
1 Gradlon Mawr (the Great), King of Brittany, Abt 330 - 434"
↑ Source: #S6 Record for Gradlon Mawr DeBretagne
↑ Source: #S6 Record for King of Bretagne Conan Meriadoc ap Gereint de Bretagne
↑ Source: #S6 Record for King of Bretagne Conan Meriadoc ap Gereint de Bretagne
↑ 35.00 35.01 35.02 35.03 35.04 35.05 35.06 35.07 35.08 35.09 35.10 35.11 35.12 35.13 35.14 35.15 Brian Starr. The Life of Saint Brychan. By the author, 2008. Page 152 Accessed 4/28/2019 jhd
↑ David Nash Ford. Early British Kingdoms Wokingham: Nash Ford Publishing, 2005. Profile for Conan Meriadoc 'King' of Dumnonia & Brittany. Accessed 23 Feb 2021 jhd
Bibliography
Monmouth, Geoffrey of, Bishop of St. Asaph. History of the Kings of Britain First written in Latin and finished in 1136 as Historia Regum Britanniae. Translated by Lewis Thorpe 1966. Published by Penguin Classics. Available for loan at Archive.org. Accessed 24 Feb 2021. jhd
See Also:
David Nash Ford's Early British Kingdoms website, "Conan Meriadoc,'King' of Dumnonia & Brittany" page, at URL http://www.earlybritishkingdoms.com/bios/conanmdm.html
Ancestry Family Trees (Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com., 2006). ($) Text: Record for Cadfan Ap Conan Meriadog, http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=37526012&pid=2026 | ap GEREINT Conan (I59270)
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Conchenn ingen Cellaig of the Máil Uí Máil, was the spouse of Murchad mac Brain Mut and mother of Fáelán Murchad and Muredac mac Murchad; kings of Leinster. [1]
Conchenn ingen Cellaig died 743
Sources
↑ Wikipedia : Murchad mac Brain Mut
This person was created through the import of David Rentschler Family Tree_2010-09-30.ged on 01 October 2010.
This person was created through the import of LJ Pellman Consolidated Family_2011-03-21.ged on 21 March 2011. | CUALAIN Conchenn Ingen (I58463)
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