, Raedburh
Families
  |   | Family of , Egbert and , Raedburh [F4134] | ||||||
Unknown | Partner | , Egbert [I7142] ( * 775 + after 838-11-19 ) | ||||||
Children |
Name | Birth Date | Death Date |
---|---|---|
, Aethelwulf [I7139] | 857/8-01-13 (Julian) |
Name | Birth Date | Death Date |
---|---|---|
King Of England, Ethelwolf [I21880] | about 795 | 857/8-01-13 (Julian) |
Narrative
[MARSHALL.FTW]
SOURCE NOTES:
Bennett, Chris, Ancient Saxon Lineage, posting to GEN-MEDIEVAL, Feb 15 1997,
cbennett@@adnc.com.
Holloway, Naomi D, The Genealogy of Mary Wentworth, Who Became the Wife of
William Brewster, Revised Edition, October 1969. LDS Film#1738313 item#5
Moriarty, George Andrews, Plantagenet Ancestry of King Edward III And Queen
Philippa. Salt Lake: Mormon Pioneer Genealogical Society, 1985. LDS
Film#0441438. nypl#ARF-86-2555.
Paget, Gerald, The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of
Wales. London: Charles Skilton Ltd, 1977. Nypl ARF+ 78-835.
Wagner, Anthony, Pedigree and Progress, Essays in the Genealogical
Interpretation of History, London, Philmore, 1975. Rutgers Alex CS4.W33.
Watney, Vernon James, The Wallop Family and their Ancestry, Oxford:John
Johnson, 1928. LDS Film#1696491 items 6-9.
Weir, Alison, Britain's Royal Families, The Complete Genealogy, London: Bodley
Head, 1989. Nypl ARF 89-26908
Weis, Frederick Lewis, Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, 6th Edition,
Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co, 1988.
RESEARCH NOTES:
sister of the Frankish King [Ref: Moriarty p16]
said to have been the sister of the King of the Franks, who at that time
was Charlemagne, but her identity is uncertain [Ref: Weir RoyalFam p4]
'regis Francorum sororia' [Ref: Wagner #29]
There is no contempory source for Egbert's wife. The name 'Raedburh' comes
from a medieval mauscript quoted by W. G. Searle (Anglo-Saxon Bishops, Kings,
and Nobles, London 1899, 343) as "MS Trin Coll Oxf x". She is described there
as "regis Francorun sororia" which can only be a reference to Charlemagne;
however there is no such sister known. Since Egbert was certainly in exile at
Charlemagne's court, it is perfectly plausible that he married his wife there.
If the tradition has any value, then the best guess is that she was probably a
sister-in-law, but she could just as well have been a lady of the Court.
Settipani (La prehistoire des Capetiens, 308 n791) is willing to accept the
name. [Ref: Bennett 2/15/97]
Narrative
Records not imported into INDI (individual) Gramps ID I7451:
Line ignored as not understood Line 157582: 2 SOUR @S159427@
Skipped subordinate line Line 157583: 3 DATA
Skipped subordinate line Line 157584: 4 TEXT Date of Import: Sep 24, 2000
Attributes
Type | Value | Notes | Sources |
---|---|---|---|
AFN | AR:1-13s, G70H-77 |
Pedigree
Source References
- TITLE [S142115]
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charlemegne.FTW
[S159427]
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Date of Import: Sep 24, 2000
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MARSHALL.FTW
[S346124]
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Date of Import: Oct 30, 2000
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Source text:
Date of Import: Oct 31, 2000
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