PLEASE NOTE: If you do not see a GRAPHIC IMAGE of a family tree here but are seeing this text
instead then it is most probably because the web server is not correctly configured to serve svg
pages correctly.
see http://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/SVG:Server_Configuration for information on how to
correctly configure a web server for svg files.
?
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Parent
Parent
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
Biological Child
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(two children)
(a child)
(three children)
(a child)
(three children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(three children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
Marriage (two children)
Marriage (three children)
Marriage (eight children)
Marriage (two children)
Marriage (a child)
Marriage (a child)
Marriage (two children)
Marriage (two children)
Marriage (two children)
Marriage (a child)
Marriage (a child)
Marriage (three children)
Marriage (a child)
Marriage (a child)
Marriage (a child)
Marriage (a child)
Marriage (four children)
Marriage (four children)
Marriage (a child)
Marriage (a child)
Marriage (a child)
Marriage (a child)
Marriage (a child)
Marriage (two children)
Marriage (two children)
Marriage (a child)
Marriage (three children)
Marriage (a child)
Marriage (a child)
Marriage (a child)
Marriage (a child)
Marriage (a child)
Marriage (a child)
Marriage (a child)
Marriage (a child)
Marriage (a child)
Marriage (a child)
Marriage (a child)
Marriage (three children)
(a child)
(two children)
(two children)
(four children)
(two children)
(a child)
(two children)
(five children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(three children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(three children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(two children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(three children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(three children)
(four children)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(a child)
(three children)
1110 - 1162
Isabelle
de
Vitre
52
52
0497 - 0531
Clotilda
Franks
34
34
0478
Theodogotho
Rome
0914
Roscille
of
Anjou
0953 - 0975
Alberic
de
Macon
22
22
Title: The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968 Page: 6 Text: no date, 1st husb. Title: Newsgroup: soc.genealogy.medieval, at groups - google.com Page: Settipani, 5 Dec 1998 Text: no date, 2nd wife (no name given, but Ermentrude had to be his last wife because she survived him) Title: Leo's Genealogics Website (Leo van de Pas), www.genealogics.org Page: Aubry II Count of Macon & Salins Text: 970, 1st husband
0972 - 1018
Ermengarde
de
Macon
46
46
Note: AR has Herbert III de Vermandois as her 2nd husband, but the noted French genealogist Settipani has Herbert as her 1st husband and Milo IV as her 2nd. The sourced dates seem to work better following AR (which is why I am leaving them alone); however, if Settipani is correct (and he is an expert), then Herbert III would have died before 992 (Settipani has Ermengarde's son by Milo, Renaud b. abt 993), and Herbert & Ermengarde's son Otto would have been born before 992/3 instead of about 1000. --------------------- This is an excerpt from a post to SGM (full post is in notes under Ermengarde de Tonnerre), 5 Dec 1998, by Settipani, the noted French genealogist: The Ascendancy of Ermengarde of Tonnerre : Part II The family of Ermengardis (no 5), widow of Herbert, not the reverse, is not « Bar-sur-Seine » (one misunderstanding hypothesis of E. Petit: such a dynasty does not exist at this time). She was, I think, the daughter of Alberic II of Macon and his second wife. Title: Newsgroup: soc.genealogy.medieval, at groups - google.com Page: Ed Mann, 15 Jun 1998 Text: following Stuart's "Royalty for Commoners" (according to Settipani, a mistake) Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999 Page: 50-20 Text: no date, 2nd husb ,Ermengarde of Bar (according to Settipani, a mistake) Title: Newsgroup: soc.genealogy.medieval, at groups - google.com Page: Settipani, 5 Dec 1998 Text: 1st husband
1122 - 1181
Agnes
de
Montford
59
59
Title: The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968 Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999 Page: 50-25
0799 - 0827
Amadeus
de
Bourgogne
28
28
0818
de
Bourgogne
0790 - 0880
Thierry
d'Autun
90
90
0785
Donna
von
Riparia
Nibelong
Carolingian
0760 - 0824
Velasco of
Pamplona
and Narvarre
64
64
0880 - 0945
Alberic
de
Narbonne
65
65
# Note: Title: Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition, Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, 1999 # Note: Page: 226 # Note: Text: Aubrey, Count of Macon # Note: # Note: Title: The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968 # Note: Page: 6
0892
Etolane
de
Macon
# Note: Title: The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968 # Note: Page: 6
0922
Richilde
Burgundy
0910 - 0965
Letalde
Macon
55
55
0845 - 0911
Mayeul
de
Narbonne
66
66
# Note: Title: The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968 # Note: Page: 6
0850 - 0911
Raimodis
de
Limoges
61
61
0867
Adelaide
Auvergne
0875
Guillaume
d'
Auvergne
0954
Robert
de
Croyes
1145 - 1196
Maurice
de
Craon
51
51
1148 - 1220
Isabel
de
Beaumont
72
72
1180
Amaury
de
Craon
1100 - 1140
Hugh
de
Craon
40
40
1088
Maurice
de
Craon
1090
Etiennette
Denise de
Chantoce
1050
Hughes
de
Chantoce
1052
Enneguen
de
Vitre
1070
William
de
Nevers
0990 - 1040
Renaud
de
Nevers
50
50
# Note: Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999 # Note: Page: 107-20
1030 - 1100
William
de
Nevers
70
70
# Note: Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999 # Note: Page: 107-21
1032 - ~1098
Robert
de
Nevers
66
66
1030
Ermengarde
de
Tonnerre
Copied below is a two-part post to SGM, 5 Dec 1998, by the noted French genealogist Settipani: From: SETTIPANI (inapit@club-internet.fr) Subject: De NEVERS Newsgroups: soc.genealogy.medieval Date: 1998/12/05 The Ascendancy of Ermengarde of Tonnerre : Part I The question about Nevers has raised up three answers, all of three erroneous. As many - if not the most - answers about Early Middle Ages. I will speak thereafter of Constantia of Provence (not Toulouse !). Briefly, the problem is that nowhere a medieval source or a modern scientific work is invoqued (and I don’t take in consideration the triumphant ‘et voilà !’ of my french countryman or his pleasant ‘many nights on internet’ or the Stuart, Weiss and so). So, the same mistakes are conscenciously repeated. Most of dates are at best conjectural, names are confusing, and genealogies dubious or false. The genealogy of the counts of Tonnerre was much debatted, notably by E. Petit, M. Chaume, J. Laurent, C. Bouchard, J.-N. Mathieu. I give the simplest -and the best- presentation : 1 Ermengardis (Ermengarde), m. Wilhelm (Guillaume, William) of Nevers. 2 Renhard II (Renard), count of Tonnerre ...1002-1039... (b. c. 993, d. c. 1040). 3 Helvisa (Heilwig, Helvise, Heloise), fl. 1018. 4 Milo (Milon) IV, count of Tonnerre ...993..., d. bef. 1002. 5 Ermengardis (Ermengarde), widow of Herbert IV of Vermandois, d. aft. 1018. 8 Milo III, count of Tonnerre ...975-980..., d. c. 987. 9 Engeltrudis (Engeltrude), fl. 980. 16 Wido I (Guy), count of Tonnerre, d.bef. 975 (958 ?). 17 Adela (Adele), widow 975. 32 ? Renhard I, count of Tonnerre ...890-896... 64 Milo II, count of Langres & Tonnerre ...887... 65 Adela, widow 902. Sources : many nights on Cartularies and ... no 1 (Gesta Pontif., p. 398-402) ; no 2 (cart. Yonne, no 94 ; E. Petit, Hist. ducs Bourg., II, p. 428-9) ; no 3 (E. Petit, II, p. 428-9) ; no 4 (cart. Yonne, no 80, 81, 94) ; no 5 (cart. Yonne, no 81) ; no 8 (cart. Yonne, no 76, cart. St-Benoit, no 61) ; no 9 (cart. Yonne, no 76) ; no 16 (cart. Yonne, no 94, cart. Cluny, II, no 1044 ?) ; no 17 (cart. St-Benoit, no 61, cart. Cluny, no 625 ?) ; no 32 (Cart. Montieramey, n° 12) ; no 64 (cart. Yonne, no 94, dipl. Charles III, 887, cart. St-Benigne, no 154) ; no 65 (cart. St-Benigne, no 154). Cartulaire general de l’Yonne, ed. M. Quantin, vol. I, Auxerre, 1854. Chartes et documents de Saint-Benigne de Dijon, t. II (1943), éd. G. Chevrier & M. Chaume, t. I (1986), éd. R. Folz & J. Marilier. Arthur Giry, Documents carolingiens de l’abbaye de Montieramey, Etudes d’histoire du moyen age dediees a G. Monod, Paris, 1896, p. 107-136. Gesta Pontificum Autissiodorensium, ed. M. Duru, Auxerre, 1850. Recueil des actes de Charles III le Simple, roi de France (893-923), 2 vol., ed. P. Lauer, Paris 1940-9. Recueil des chartes de l’abbaye de de Cluny (802-1300), Paris, 6 vol., 1876-1903, éd. A. Bernard et A. Bruel. Recueil des chartes de l'abbaye de Saint-Benoit-sur-Loire, ed. M. Prou et A. Vidier, vol. I, Paris, 1900. The Ascendancy of Ermengarde of Tonnerre : Part II The ancestry of Helvisa (no 3) is unknown, but I suppose her a niece of Hardoin, bishop of Noyon (1015-1027) (M. Chaume believed she was a sister of his). Hardoin is brother of Garnier and son of Robert of Croyes. Probably they are issued of Waltharius (Gauthier, Walter), count of Valois, Amiens and Vexin (d. c. 992/8), grandson of the caroligian Helvisa. The family of Ermengardis (no 5), widow of Herbert, not the reverse, is not « Bar-sur-Seine » (one misunderstanding hypothesis of E. Petit: such a dynasty does not exist at this time). She was, I think, the daughter of Alberic II of Macon and his second wife. Engeltrudis (no 9) is certainly, as showed by E. Petit, of Brienne family. She was more probably the sister (not daughter) of Engelbert I and Gau(s)bert. May be they are the nephews of Engeltrudis, viscountess of Chalon and the posterity of Gausbert of Nevers, grandson of an Engeltrudis. The family of Adela (no 17) is not identified. Her name and her granddaughter’s, Liedgardis, point to Vermandois. But the name Liedgardis come perhaps via Engeltrudis : Engeltrudis of Chalon was probably mother of Liedgardis of Dijon. So, the best solution was that of M. Chaume, the countess Adela is the same that Adela, sister Leotald of Macon, who make an important donation in 958 for the soul of a Wido, may be the count of Tonnerre. Renard (no 32) is not attested as member of the family. He is named as a count in a trial about Tonnerrois and fit at the good place for the missing generation in the family (to justify Renard II’s name, wich was no more inherited from a pseudo ‘Bar-sur-Seine’ dynasty, and because Milo II’s daughter was a Ren-trude). Last, Adela (no 65) : if her son was really a Renhard, she was undoubtly the sister of Renhard and Manasses I of Auxerre. The family’s origin is Lotharingian. Bibliography : C. Bouchard, Sword, Miter, and Cloister. Nobility and the church in Burgundy, 980-1198, Londres 1987. M. Chaume, Les origines du duche de Bourgogne, vol. I, Dijon, 1925. M. Chaume, Recherches d’Histoire Chretienne et medievale, 1947, p.260-277. J. Laurent, L’origine du comté de bar-sur-Seine, Annales de Bourgogne, (1951), p. 172-180. J.-N. Mathieu, Recherches sur les premiers comtes de Tonnerre et de Bar-sur-Seine, Bulletin de la société d’archéologie et d’histoire du Tonnerois , 47 (1994), p. 21-29. E. Petit, Histoire des ducs de Bourgogne de la race capétienne, 6 vol., Paris, 1885-1898. C. Settipani, Les origines maternelles du comte de Bourgogne Otte-Guillaume, Annales de Bourgogne, 66 (1994), p. 5-63. C. Settipani, Les comtes d’Anjou et leurs alliances aux Xe et XIe siècles, dans K.S.B. Keats-Rohan (ed.), Family trees and the Roots of Politics, Woodbridge, 1997, p. 211-267. C. Settipani, Les Widonides : le destin d’une famille aristocratique franque du VIe au Xe siècle, memoire de D.E.A., Paris Sorbonne, 1998. Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999 Page: 107-21 Title: Newsgroup: soc.genealogy.medieval, at groups - google.com Page: Settipani, 5 Dec 1998 Title: Leo's Genealogics Website (Leo van de Pas), www.genealogics.org Page: Ermengarde, Comtesse de Tonnerre
1050
William
de
Nevers
1051
Ermengarde
de
Nevers
0967 - 1028
Landry
de
Nevers
61
61
0990
Maud
de
Burgundy
0915 - 1015
Bovin
Maers
100
100
0847 - 0922
Landry
de
Maers
75
75
0854
Hildesinde
0990 - 1039
Renaud
de
Tonnerre
49
49
Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999 Page: 107-21 Text: father of Ermengarde Title: Newsgroup: soc.genealogy.medieval, at groups - google.com Page: Settipani, 5 Dec 1998 Text: Renhard II Title: Newsgroup: soc.genealogy.medieval, at groups - google.com Page: Settipani, 5 Dec 1998 Title: Newsgroup: soc.genealogy.medieval, at groups - google.com Page: Ed Mann, 3 Dec 1998
0994
Hawise
de
Noyon
This is an excerpt from a post to SGM (full post is in notes under Ermengarde de Tonnerre), 5 Dec 1998, by Settipani, the noted French genealogist: The Ascendancy of Ermengarde of Tonnerre : Part II The ancestry of Helvisa (no 3) is unknown, but I suppose her a niece of Hardoin, bishop of Noyon (1015-1027) (M. Chaume believed she was a sister of his). Hardoin is brother of Garnier and son of Robert of Croyes. Probably they are issued of Waltharius (Gauthier, Walter), count of Valois, Amiens and Vexin (d. c. 992/8), grandson of the caroligian Helvisa. Title: Newsgroup: soc.genealogy.medieval, at groups - google.com Page: Ed Mann, 3 Dec 1998 Title: Newsgroup: soc.genealogy.medieval, at groups - google.com Page: Settipani, 5 Dec 1998 Text: fl. 1018 (could be much later)
0966 - 1000
Milo
de
Tonnerre
34
34
0968
Garnier
de
Noyon
Settipani does not explicitly state that Garnier was Hevlisa's father, but he was her supposed uncle's (Hardoin bishop of Noyon's) brother, and is the only one of that generation noted by Settipani. Title: Newsgroup: soc.genealogy.medieval, at groups - google.com Page: Settipani, 5 Dec 1998
1142 - 1207
Robert
de
Beaumont
65
65
He was the son of Waleran IV de Beaumont and Agnes de Montfort. He married Maud de Dunstanville, daughter of Reginald de Dunstanville, 1st Earl of Cornwall and Beatrice FitzRichard, circa 1165. (From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)
0445 - 0509
Sigbert
I
Cologne
64
64
# Note: Sigebert The Lame [son of Childebert], King of Cologne, murdered 509, by his own son at the instigation of Clovis I, King of the Salic Franks, 481-511. [Ancestral Roots] # Note: Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999 # Note: Page: 190-3
0470
Berthar
Thuringia
0440
Basin
Thuringia
0520 - 0570
Charibert
I Paris
50
50
0500
Radegonde
(Ingunde) Thuringian
de Ingonde
0497 - 0561
Chlotar
I
Franks
64
64
# Note: King of Franks (558-561) # Note: King of Soissons (511), King of Orleans, King of France # Note: SOURCES: # Note: "Rulers of the World" by R.F.Tapsell # Note: Clotaire = Clothar I, King de Soissons (Paul, Nouveau Larousse Universel.) (Rosamond, Frankish kingdom under Carolingians.) # Note: (Stuart, Royalty for Commoners, Page 216, Line 303-50.) (Andre Castelot, Histoire de La France, Tome 1, Pages 200 - 208, 214). # Note: AKA: Clotaire I, King d'Orleans. AKA: Clotaire I, King d'Austrasie. Born: in 497, son of Clovis I, King des Francs and Sainte Clotilde de Bourgogne. Married between 510 and 515: Ingonthe who was Clotaire I's first wife. She gave him a daughter and five sons, three of whom survived. Married circa 516: Aregonde); Radegonde was Clotaire I's second legitimate wife. Note - between 523 and 560: In accordance with Salic Law, upon Clovis I's death, his four sons [Thierry, the eldest and born from an unknown concubine before Clovis was married, and the other three, Clodomir, Childebert and Clotaire, divided the kingdom not unlike a cake, but with unequal parts. Clotaire, the youngest, received the most primitive lands, extending from the charbonniere forest [the North of Gaule] to the Somme River and beyond to include Noyon, Soissons and Laon. Soissons was its capital. The brothers constantly engaged in bloody fights in order to augment their holdings. In 523, three of Clovis I's sons, Clotaire, Childebert and Clodomir, launch their first campaign against the Burgundians. They catch Sigismond=Zygmund, out of the Monastery of Agaune, as well as his wife and his children. They are given to the custody of Clodomir. He has the entire family murdered by throwing them into a well at Saint-Peravy-la-Coulombe [near Patay] . Clotaire I became King of Orleans in 526 and King of Austrasie in 555. He was known for his cruelty and plotted and implemented the murder of his brother's (Clodomir) sons with Childebert, his other brother. In July through December 524, two of Clodomir's sons thus are murdered. Clodomir himself had died at the Battle of Vezeronce [in Isere] on 25 June 524. Clotaire gets Tours and Poitiers. In 531 Thierry and Clotaire I are occupied in battle against the Thuringians. Their King, Hermanefried died in combat by falling from a rempart in Tolbiac [with a little push] . His mother, Radegonde, who is among the captives, becomes Clotaire's third wife. In 532, Clotaire and Childebert begin their third campaign against the Burgundians. This time, they take Autun. Upon Thierry;s death in 534, his lands are divided, and Clotaire gets the entire southern portion of Thierry's holdings including Grenoble, Die and neighboring cities.: In 536, Clotaire obtains the northern part of Provence encompassing Orange, Carpentras and Gap from Vitiges, King of the Ostrogoths. When Theobald dies in 555, Clotaire gives the Auvergne to his son, Chramne. The next year, Clotaire would fail in his campaign against the Saxons, but they will continue to pay him an annual tribute of 500 cows. Chramne rebels and fights against his father. Upon Childebert's death 23 December 558, he reunited all parts of the Frankish kingdom, and Clotaire becomes sole King of the Francs. The following year, his son, Chramne again rebels, but has to seek refuge with the Count of Brittany, Conober who is established in Vannes. In 560, they lose to Clotaire and Chramne, his wife and their children are burnt alive on the orders of Clotaire. Married circa 547: Radegonde, Princess de Turinge , daughter of Hermanefried, King de Turinge (8164) and N? ; The Thuringians had been submitted to the Francs. Clotaire and his half-brother Thierry had led a brutal campaign against them and had crushed them on the banks of the Saale in 531. Among Clotaire's share of the bounty was a beautiful young girl, the Christian Princess Radegonde. Radegonde was Clotaire I's third legitimate wife, and fifth mate. Clotaire I was about 50 years old. # Note: Title: Encyclopedia Britannica, Treatise on # Note: Page: Chlotar I # Note: Text: late 561
0523 - 0584
Chilperic I
Soissons
Franks
61
61
# Note: d. 584, Frankish king of Neustria (561–84), son of Clotaire I. He feuded bitterly with his brother Sigebert I, who had inherited the E Frankish kingdom that came to be known as Austrasia. Their struggle became savage after Chilperic and his mistress and future wife, Fredegunde, murdered (567) Chilperic’s second wife, Galswintha; she was the sister of Sigebert’s wife, Brunhilda. In the wars between the two brothers, Sigebert overran Neustria before his death (575). Later, Chilperic was murdered, probably at the instigation of Brunhilda. The feud was inherited by Chilperic’s son and successor, Clotaire II. # Note: # Note: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001. http://wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=tamer&id=I17622
0535 - 0577
Sigbert
I
Franks
42
42
Sources: 1. Abbrev: University of Hull Royal Database (England) Title: Brian Tompsett, Dept of Computer Science, University of Hull Royal Database (England) (copyright 1994, 1995, 1996)base (England)base (England). copyright 1994, 1995, 1996. Note: Call number: usually reliable but sometimes includes hypothetical lines, mythological figures, etc WWW, University of Hull, Hull, UK HU6 7RX bct@tardis.ed.ac.uk Text: s of Chlothar I the Old of the Franks King of Franks 2. Abbrev: Ancestry of Richard Plantagenet & Cecily de Nevill Title: Ernst-Friedrich Kraentzler, Ancestry of Richard Plantagenet & Cecily de Neville (published by author 1978)evilleeville. published by author 1978. Note: Call number: J.H. Garner Page: chart 1780 Text: s of Chlodomer of the Franks King of Orléans, no title 3. Abbrev: Pullen010502.FTW Title: Pullen010502.FTW Note: Call number: Text: Date of Import: Jan 5, 2002
0398 - 0447
Clodio
Franks
49
49
0352 - 0413
Ascyla
des
Francs
61
61
0350 - 0384
Richimir
de
Lombardy
34
34
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Flavius Richomeres (Richomer) was a Frank who lived in the late 4th century. He took service in the Roman army and made a career as comes, magister militum, and consul. He was married with Ascyla and they had a son Theudemeres, who became king of the Franks. He was uncle of the general Arbogastes. Around the years 377/378, Richomeres was Comes domesticorum of Emperor Gratian and was transferred from Gaul to Thracia, where he was involved in the Gothic wars of Emperor Valens. At Adrianopole he tried to persuade Valens to wait on Gratian for support. When the Gothic leader Fritigern demanded hostages to secure peace from the Romans he volunteered and departed the Roman camp to bring the other hostages safely to Fritigern, but before he arrived some divisions of the two armies got out of control and engaged, starting the famous Battle of Adrianople. Richomeres ended up at a battlefield in complete chaos but he saved himself by withdrawing and survived. However the Roman army of Valens was largely destroyed and many officers fell including emperor Valens. Around 383 he was general in the east (magister militum per orientum) and became consul in 384 In 388 Theodosius I sent him together with his nephew Arbogastes and Promotus and Timasius against Magnus Maximus, who was defeated. From the year 388 he served as supreme commander in the Eastern Empire (comes et magister utriusque militiae) until his death in 393. Richomeres was interested in literature and was acquainted with rhetoricians as Libanius and Augustinus. He introduced the rhetorician Eugenius to his nephew Arbogastes. A few years later Arbogastes seized power in the West Roman Empire. After the death of Valentinian II Arbogastes promoted Eugenius to be his Emperor, while he himself remained the leader and generalissimo. In 393 Theodosius I organised a campaign against Arbogastes and Richomeres was asked to lead the cavalry against his nephew. On the way from the East to the West he died before the battle took place. Arbogastes lost the battle and committed suicide with his own sword. References * Ammianus Marcellinus, History, Loeb Classical Library, translated by John C. Rolfe. * Jones, Martindale, and Morris. Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire. (PLRE I)
0320 - 0376
Mellobaude
Franks
56
56
0330 - 0417
Ascyllius
des
Francs
87
87
0300
Gallic
Belgica of
the Franks
0295 - 0360
Malaric
Lombardy
65
65
0475 - 0548
Clotilde
de
Bourgogne
73
73
# Note: d. 545, Frankish queen. She converted her husband, Clovis I, to Christianity and built with him in Paris the Church of the Apostles Peter and Paul, later renamed (10th cent.) Sainte-Geneviève. After her husband’s death she spent her life caring for the poor. Feast: June 3. # Note: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001.
0467 - 0511
Clovis
I
Franks
44
44
# Note: King of the Salic Franks (481-511), King of France. (Came to throne at about age 15. # Note: SOURCES: # Note: Founder of the Empire of the Franks # Note: "Rulers of the World" by R.F.Tapsell Born: circa 466, son of Childeric I, King des Francs and Basine Andovera de Turinge , Clovis I became King between the Summer of 481 and Autumn of 482. According to Gregoire de Tours, he was only about 15 years of age at the time. In any case he was quite young as he was called "juvenis". Timelines here are bound to be fraught with error since the custom of counting years from the time of Jesus Christ was not established until the 8th Century. Thus, both the Larousse and the History of France assert a birth date circa 466 whereas Stuart's "Royalty for Commoners" claims Clovis I was alive in the year 420! That date is necessary to claim that Sigebert I is the son of Childebert, son of Clovis, since Stuart claims Sigebert I was King of the Salic Francs from 481 to 511. Significant-Other: Evochilde before 486 - Evochilde was a concubine. Note - between 486 and 507: King of the Franks, Clovis I vanquished the Romans at Soissons in 486. Syagrius, the "Roman King" takes refuge in Toulouse under the protection of the King of the Wisigoths, Alaric [who had just become King in 484]. By the end of the year, Clovis I forced Alaric to give up Syagrius, and Clovis I secretly has Syagrius put to death. From 487 to 490, Clovis I extended his kingdom all the way to the Loire River, however, he respects the border of the Wisigoths to the South and of the Burgundians to the South-West, as well as that of the riparian Francs to the East. From 490 to 495, Clovis is occupied with the liquidation of the Salic Franc dynasty North of Gaule. King Chararic of Tongres is decapitated, and King Ragnacaire of Cambrai is executed. Upon the request for aid from the Riparian Francs, Clovis I defeats the Alamans (Germans) at the Battle of Tolbiac in 496 thus bringing Champagne under his jurisdiction. In 500, he wages war against Gondebaud, King of Burgundy defeating him near Dijon. Gondebaud retreats to Avignon. In 502, on the Cure and the Cousin, Clovis I and Gondebaud seal an alliance. From April to June 507, the French Army attack the Wisigoths, whose Kingdom extends from the Mediterranean to the ocean, and cross the Loire, going up the Valley of Calin toward Poitiers and encounter the Visigoth Army in the plain of Vouille, 15 km West of Clain. Alaric II, King of the Visigoths is killed and the Wisigoths thus are defeated. By 507, thanks to the efforts of his son, Thierry, the entire Meridional Gaule falls into Clovis I's control. In 508, the Franc Army lays siege on Arles in order to secure Provence. Theodoric, King of the Ostrogoths, occupies Provence, and his general, Ibbas, crosses the Alps to deliver Arles from Clovis I's clutch. Theodoric conquers the Burgundians at Avignon and Orange and makes Amalaric, his grandson and son of Alaric II, King of the Wisigoths. Clovis I loses the Bas-Languedoc, then called Septimania. Around 510, Clovis has Cloderic, King of the Riparian tribes who had fought in his support at Vouille, assassinated, and proclaims himself King of the Riparians. Thus, the Kingdom extends from the Pyrenees, to the ocean to beyond the Rhine. Upon his death, according to Frankish custom, his kingdom was divided among his four sons: Thierry, Clodomir, Childebert and Clotaire. Married circa 493: Sainte Clotilde de Bourgogne , daughter of Chilperic, King de Bourgogne and N?; Clotilde was a Merovingien. By the time Clovis I married her, he already had a son through his concubine. Clotilde contributed to the conversion of Clovis to Christianity. After his death, she retired to the monastery of Saint-Martin in Tours (France). Her Feast Day is 3 June. Baptized: on 25 December 496; When the Queen, Clotilde, convinced Clovis I to have their son Ingomer baptized, he relented. Shortly afterwards, the son died. # Note: Title: Encyclopedia Britannica, Treatise on # Note: Page: Clovis I
0439 - 0470
Basina
Thuringia
31
31
0436 - 0481
Childeric
I
Franks
45
45
# Note: SOURCES: # Note: Page 212 in Dawn of European civilization has Merovingian chart. It differs a little from some others. # Note: Cloderic is same as Childeric # Note: "Rulers of the World" by R.F.Tapsell 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. # Note: 1 Childeric I, King des Francs (Paul, Nouveau Larousse Universel.) (Stuart, Royalty for Commoners, Page 216, Line 303-52.) # Note: (Andre Castelot, Histoire de La France, Pages, 176, 200). Born: before 433, son of Merovee=Merovech, Prince des Francs and N?, Childeric I is presumed to have been at least 15 years of age by the time he succeeded his father in 448. # Note: 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. # Note: Title: Encyclopedia Britannica, Treatise on Childeric I 481/482 year only
0450
Andelfieda
Audeflede
Meroving Franks
0419
Chlodeswinthe
Franks
Agrippine
de
Bourgogne
0445 - 0474
Chilperic
II
Burgundy
29
29
~0425 - 0506
Caratene
de
Bourgogne
81
81
There is some confusion around the names and ancestries of Chilperic's two wives. His first wife is said to have been Catarene, daughter of Gundicar and mother of St. Clothilda. His second is said to be a sister of Ricimer, not a daughter. FMG says: The name of Chilperich´s wife is not known. Gregory of Tours records that Chilperich's wife was drowned by her brother-in-law King Gundobad, after he tied a stone around her neck. The Liber Historiæ Francorum records the same event.
~0410 - ~0473
Gundioc
de of the
Burgundians
63
63
Note: Title: The Lost Kingdom of Burgundy, by Christopher Cope, Constable & Co, London, 1986 --- Gondioc (Latin: *Candiaco;[citation needed] also called Gundioc, Condiaco, Candiacus and Gundowech, died 473) was king of Burgundy following the destruction of Worms by the Huns in 436, succeeding Gundahar. Gondioc married the sister of Ricimer, the Gothic general at the time ruling the Western Roman Empire. Gundobad, the son of Gondioc, succeeded Ricimer in 472, but abdicated after the death of his father in the following year as Gondioc was succeeded by his brother Chilperic I. After the death of Chilperic, Burgundy was divided among the sons of Gondioc, Gundobad, Chilperic II of Burgundy, Godomar and Godegisel. -------------------- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gundioch --- The Lost Kingdom of Burgundy, by Christopher Cope, Constable & Co, London, -------------------- The Burgundians were a Scandinavian people whose original homeland lay on the southern shores of the Baltic Sea, where the island of Bornholm (Burgundarholm in the Middle Ages) still bears their name. About the 1st century AD they moved into the lower valley of the Vistula River, but, unable to defend themselves there against the Gepidae, they migrated westward to the borders of the Roman Empire. There, serving as foederati, or auxiliaries, in the Roman army, they established a powerful kingdom, which by the early 5th century extended to the west bank of the Rhine River and later centred on Sapaudia (Savoy) near Lake Geneva. As Rome's hold over its Western Empire declined in the second half of the 5th century, the Burgundians gradually spread their control over areas to the north and west of Savoy and then throughout the Rhône and Saône river valleys. This second Burgundian kingdom reached its zenith under the lawgiver and Christian king Gundobad (474-516), who promulgated a written code of laws, the Lex Gundobada, for the Burgundians and a separate code, the Lex Romana Burgundionum, for his Gallo-Roman subjects. This Burgundy remained independent until 534, when the Franks occupied the kingdom, extinguishing the royal dynasty. See: Encyclopædia Britannica Online, "Clotilda, Saint". ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FMG: According to Gregory of Tours, Gundioc King of the Burgunds was "of the family of King Athanaric [of the Goths]? [Gregory of Tours II.28, p. 141]. On the other hand, Gondebaud King of Burgundy, in the Lex Gundobada, names "Gebicam, Godomarem, Gislaharium, Gundaharium, patrem quoque nostrum et patruum? [Burgundionum Leges, Lex Gundobada, III, MGH LL III, p. 533]. Sécretan suggests that the two reports can be reconciled if Gundioc married the sister of Ricimer [Sécretan, E. ´Les premier royaume de Bourgogne´, Mémoires et documents publiés par la société d´histoire de la Suisse Romande, Tome XXIV (Lausanne, 1868), p. 51.]. He succeeded his father in 436 as Gundioc King of the Burgundians. The Romans installed the Burgundians in Sapaudia, north of Lake Geneva, in 443 or 447 [Chronicle of 452, 128, cited in Wood (1994), p. 9.]. The Burgundians were expelled from land around Lyon in 458 by Emperor Majorian, but Gundioc became magister militum in Gaul during the reign of Emperor Severus 461-465 [Wood (1994), pp. 14-15.]. Burgundian troops helped the Romans to defend Clermont against the Visigoths in 471 and 472 [Wood (1994), p. 17.]. King Gundioc divided his territories between his four sons. --- He was related to the Visigothic kings and shared their Arian Christian faith. At his death, his kingdom was divided between his four sons, Gundobad, Godegesil, Chilperic, and Gundomar. Later, Gundobad murdered brother Chilperic and his consort/wife, forcing their two daughters to take refuge in Geneva with uncle Godegesil. Clovis, hearing good reports of the one daughter, Clotilda, obtained permission for marriage from Gundobad, a marriage yielding 4 sons, 3 to become future kings.
0385 - 0436
Gunther
de
Burgundy
51
51
Note: Title: The Lost Kingdom of Burgundy, by Christopher Cope, Constable & Co, London, 1986
0360
Giolahaire
Bebicca de
Burgundy
0335
Godomar
de
Burgandy
0310
Gibica
de
Burgundy
0374 - 0414
Theodemir
Franks
40
40
0648 - 0688
Valtrude
Orleans
40
40
0646 - 0735
Eudes
Odo
Aquitaine
89
89
0665
Hatton
d'
Aquitaine
0664
Hunuld
Aquitaine
0666
Aznar
Aragon
0619
Oda
Ou
Aude
0626 - 0688
Boggis
Aquitaine
62
62
0602
Gisele
Gascony
0595
Brynhild
0584 - 0628
Clothaire
Meroving
44
44
Clotaire II was not yet born when his father, King Chilperic I died in 584. His mother, Queen Fredegonde, administered his kingdom until her death in 597. At age 13, Clotaire II began to rule for himself. In 613 Clotaire II became the first king of all the Franks since his grandfather Clotaire I died in 561 by ordering the murder of Sigebert II who had ascended to the thrones of Austrasia and Burgundia. In 615, Clotaire II promulgated the Edict of Paris, a sort of Frankish Magna Carta that reserved many rights to the Frankish nobles while it excluded Jews from all civil employment for the Crown, a ban which placed all the literacy available to the Merovingian monarchy squarely under ecclesiastical control and also greatly pleased the nobles, from whose ranks the bishops were ordinarily exclusively drawn. Then, in 623 he gave the kingdom of Austrasia to his young son Dagobert I. This was a political move as repayment for the support of Bishop Arnulf of Metz and Pepin I, Mayor of the Palace of Austrasia, the two leading Austrasian nobles, who were effectively granted semi-autonomy. Clotaire II died in 629. --- King of Soissons 584-613 King of the Franks 613-629 When his father, King Chilperic I of Soissons died in 584, Chlotar wasnot yet even born. Until 597, his kingdom was administered by his mother,Queen Fredegund, but when she died that year he bagan to rule for himself, now 13 years old. In 613, the Austrasian and Burgundian kings,Theudebert II and Theuderic II respectively, had died, and Queen Brunhild had placed the young Sigebert II on the throne of those two kingdoms.That year, the 29 year old Chlotar had Sigebert and Brunhild killed, and became the first king of all the Franks since his grandfather Chlotar Idied in 561. In 615, Chlotar passed the Edict of Paris, a sort of French Magna Carta that greatly pleased the nobles across the kingdom. In 623, he gave the kingdom of Austrasia to his young son Dagobert I, which was a political move giving Pepin I, Mayor of the Palace of Austrasia, and Bishop Arnulfof Metz, the two leading Austrasian nobles, semi-autonomy for their loyalty to Chlotar. In 629, Chlotar died and Dagobert became sole king, moving his capital from Austrasia to Paris. Clotaire II From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Clotaire II (584-629), King of Neustria, and from 613-629 King of all the Franks, was not yet born when his father, King Chilperic I died in 584. His mother, Queen Fredegonde, was regent until her death in 597, at which time the thirteen year old Clotaire II began to rule for himself. As King, he continued his mother's feud with Queen Brunhilda of Austrasia with equal viciousness and bloodshed. In 613 Clotaire II became the first king of all the Franks since his grandfather Clotaire I died in 561 by ordering the murder of the infant Sigebert II, whom the aging Brunhilda had attempted to set on the thrones of Austrasia and Burgundia, causing a rebellion among the nobility. This led to the delivery of Brunhilda into Clotaire's hands, his thirst for vengeance leading to his formidable old aunt enduring the agony of the rack for three whole days, before suffering a horrific death, chained between four horses that were goaded in separate directions, eventually tearing her apart. In 615, Clotaire II promulgated the Edict of Paris, a sort of Frankish Magna Carta that reserved many rights to the Frankish nobles while it excluded Jews from all civil employment for the Crown. The ban effectively placed all literacy in the Merovingian monarchy squarely under ecclesiastical control and also greatly pleased the nobles, from whose ranks the bishops were ordinarily exclusively drawn. In 623 he gave the kingdom of Austrasia to his young son Dagobert I. This was a political move as repayment for the support of Bishop Arnulf of Metz and Pepin I, Mayor of the Palace of Austrasia, the two leading Austrasian nobles, who were effectively granted semi-autonomy. Clotaire II died in 629.
0545 - 0597
Fredegunde
Franks
52
52
# Note: c.545–597, Frankish queen. The mistress of King Chilperic I of Neustria, she became his wife after inducing him to murder his wife Galswintha (567). Fredegunde and Brunhilda, Galswintha’s sister and wife of King Sigebert I of Austrasia, were among the leading figures in the long war (561–613) between the Frankish kingdoms of Neustria and Austrasia. Fredegunde procured the deaths of Sigebert I and of her own stepchildren. After Chilperic’s murder (584) she acted as regent for her son Clotaire II. # Note: # Note: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001. http://wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=tamer&id=I17623
0500
Crotechilde
de
Ostrogoths
0517
Brunulphe
Earlin
0454 - 0526
Theodoric
Ostrogoths
72
72
# Note: Thanks to Wayne R Davy [wrdavy@megavision.com], for providing the following interesting historical piece from 'Archeaology Odyssey': # Note: # Note: Thought you might be interested in this which I've taken from the Odyssey magazine which I received last week, and might want to add it to your notes for Theodoric. If you have access to this magazine, I think its a very interesting piece. # Note: # Note: According to 6th century Gothic historian Jordanes, Goths originated in Scandinavia. In 4th cent, B.C.E. they were living along the shores of the Black Sea, and by the end of the 2nd cent C.E. they had migrated to the Danube. About 375 C.E. the Huns destroyed the Gothic settlements along the Black Sea and many of the Goths fled to territories controlled by the Romans. In 378 C.E. Goths killed the Roman Emperor Valens in a battle near the city of Adrianople, Turkey. At about 400 C.E. Alaric united the Goths in a group called the Visigoths. They marched west and established kingdoms in Spain and Gaul. In 507 the Franks conquered the Goths in Gaul. Visigoths rule in Spain lasted until 711. # Note: # Note: After the death of Attila, the leader of the Huns, in 453, the eastern Goths united and were called the Ostragoths. They settled in the area south of Vienna, Austria and coexisted with the Roman Byzantine empire. Theodoric was sent to Constantinople where he received a Roman education and became a favorite at court. He became king of the Ostragoths in 471 and decided to carve out a kingdom in Italy which was then ruled by the barbarian, Odoacer. He led about 100,000 (including 75,000 non-combatants) into Italy and fought Odoacer's forces from 488 to 493. He convinced Odoacer to accept joint rule and then murdered him at the celebratory banquet. Thus he became sole ruler with his capitol at Ravenna. His 33 year reign was characterized by peace, prosperity and tolerance. He maintained most of the old Roman laws and appointed Romans to civil offices. He recognized the authority of the Emperor in Constantinople. He left an architectural legacy, constructing public buildings and repairing roads. Several of his structures remain standing in Ravenna today, including the church of Sant' Apollinare Nuova, an Arian baptistry, and his mausoleum. # Note: # Note: Built to withstand eternity, his mausoleum resembles no other building in the Roman-Byzantine world. The tomb's domed roof is 36 feet in diameter, weighs about 300 tons and is carved from a single block of marble that was carved on the Istria peninsula in modern Croatia. They do not know how the roof was cut, transported and hoisted into place. The purpose was apparently to discourage vandalism. The roof locks the Lower blocks into place so that would-be vandals would bring the structure down on their head if they tampered with it. To increase the stony security, Theodoric included another protective feature which was a system of interlocking masonry joints. The tomb's walls seem to consist of regular ashlars of squared masonry blocks but in fact many of them are not of standard size and therefore are not interchangeable. The ashlars have joints or protrusions that neatly interlock with the adjacent stones. These irregular, interlocking joints make it extremely difficult, if not impossible to dismantle the structure. This fitted stonework makes the building like a Chinese puzzle. One particular piece must be removed before the subsequent pieces are chosen and unless the correct piece is chosen, the whole structure remains intact , a solid interlocked mass. # Note: (Excerpts from "The Mystery of Theodoric's Tomb Solved" by Harry Rand, # Note: Archaeology Odyssey, Nov-Dec 2003, p 47-53, 57-58) # Note: # Note: # Note: Title: Encyclopedia Britannica, Treatise on # Note: Page: Theodoric http://wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=tamer&id=I20371
0430
Erelicia
Erelieve
Ostrogoths
0400 - 0474
Theodemir
Ostragoths
74
74
0375 - 0459
Wandalar
Ostrogoths
84
84
0345 - 0400
Winithar
Ostrogoths
55
55
0300
Walaravans
des
Ostrogothie
0260
Vultwulf
des
Ostrogothie
0240
Achiulf
0220
Athal
# Note: According to the Encyclopaedia Britannica, the Goths which formed the two tribes of the Visigoths & the Ostrogoths, came (legend says by boat) from Southern Scandinavia south to what is now the Ukraine in the latter half of the 2nd century (150-200 AD). http://wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=tamer&id=I20383
0200
Hunuil
0180
Ostrogotha
0160
Hisarna
0140
Amal
0115
Augis
0580
Arnaud
Gascony
0777
Bertha
de
Toulouse
Balderic
von
Thuringia
0785 - 0820
Rotlinde
de
Gellone
35
35
1003 - 1079
Adelais
Capet of
France
76
76
0755 - 0818
Lupus
of
Gascony
63
63
0755
Numabela
of
Cantabria
0772 - 0816
Sancho
Lupus of
Gascony
44
44
0785
Toda
Aznarez
of Aragon
0841 - 0886
Bernard
Plantevelue
d' Auvergne
45
45
# Note: Bernard was Count of Aquitaine and the Auvergne, Marquis of Gothie, Count of Autun, Count of Rodez. # Note: # Note: Title: The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968 # Note: Page: 6 # Note: # Note: Title: Newsgroup: soc.genealogy.medieval, at groups - google.com # Note: Page: Alan B Wilson, 12 Jun 1998
0843 - 0881
Ermengarde
de Chalons
d' Auvergne
38
38
# Note: Turton has Bernard's parents as Bernard d' Auvergne & Luitgard, who are actually parents of his wife Ermengarde. # Note: # Note: Title: The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968 # Note: Page: 6 # Note: Text: Ermengarde de Chalons # Note: # Note: Title: Newsgroup: soc.genealogy.medieval, at groups - google.com # Note: Page: Alan B Wilson, 12 Jun 1998
0811 - 0843
Dhouda
de
Gascogne
32
32
0735
Loup
Gascony
0735
Toda
Aragon
0715 - 0778
Loup
Gascony
63
63
0700 - 0762
Guifre
Aquitaine
62
62
0700
Adele
Gascony
0683 - 0774
Loup
Gascony
91
91
0710
Aznar
Galindez
Aragon
0685
Galindo
Aznarez
Aragon
1104 - 1166
Waleran
de
Beaumont
62
62
Title: The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968 Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999 Page: 50-25
1150 - 1205
Guy
de
Craon
55
55
0925
Humbert
de
Salins
# Note: Title: Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition, Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, 1999 # Note: Page: 226
0085
Hulmul
0679
Gerlinde
von
Austrasia
0415 - 0457
Maerovaee
Franks
42
42
# Note: Governed the Salic Franks # Note: Defeated "Attila the Hun" in 451 # Note: Was son or son-in-law of Clodion # Note: # Note: Before 430, the Salic Francs traverse the Escaut, and settle north of Gand [Gant] and also into Courtrai. Their chief, Clodion, takes Cambrai in 430. When Clodion died in 448, Merovee would succeed him as chief. Merovee was a Frankish Prince who ruled over the Saliennes [thus, this Merovee is King of the Salic Francs] from 452-458. He was the commander of the Francs in the great Battle of the Catalonic Fields, where he defeated Attila the Hun in 451. It is from his name that the kings of the First Race derived their name. The Huns had steadily increased their domination from humble beginnings off the Caspian sea from Caucase to the Elbe, from Muldavia to Hungary in the later part of the Fourth Century. # Note: # Note: SOURCES: # Note: Merovee=Merovech, Prince des Francs (Rosamond McKitterick, The Frankish kingdom under the Carolingians: 751-987 (Singapore: Longman Singapore Publishers Pte Ltd, (c) 1983).) # Note: (Paul, Nouveau Larousse Universel.) # Note: # Note: (Roderick W. Stuart, Royalty for Commoners in ISBN: 0-8063-1344-7 (1001 North Calvert Street, Baltimore, MD 21202, USA: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 1992), Page 216, Line 303-53.) # Note: # Note: (Andre Castelot, Histoire de La France, Pages, 176, 200). Born: before 390, son of Arcadios Claudius Claudianus and Eudoxie, Merovee is presumed to have been at least 15 years of age by the time his son Childeric I was born. Married before 405: She was a concubine. Note - between 451 and 458: # Note: # Note: Before 430, the Salic Francs traverse the Escaut, and settle north of Gand [Gant] and also into Courtrai. Their chief, Clodion, takes Cambrai in 430. When Clodion died in 448, Merovee would succeed him as chief. Merovee was a Frankish Prince who ruled over the Saliennes [thus, this Merovee is King of the Salic Francs] from 452-458. He was the commander of the Francs in the great Battle of the Catalonic Fields, where he defeated Attila the Hun in 451. It is from his name that the kings of the First Race derived their name. The Huns had steadily increased their domination from humble beginnings off the Caspian sea from Caucase to the Elbe, from Muldavia to Hungary in the later part of the Fourth Century. # Note: # Note: During his reign the Empress of the Roman Empire, Galla Placidia, in 423 governed in the name of her 4-year old son, Valentinius III. She put the Gallo-Roman Aetius [who really came from Bulgaria [originally Silistria] in charge of maintaining the Roman authority over Gaule. # Note: # Note: Although he was unsuccessful against the Wisigoths, he pushed the Riparian Francs beyond the Rhine. In 440, the Riparians would return and take over Cologne and Treves. In the meantime, the Burgundians settle in what would become Bourgogne and in Savoie. In 443, they are camped around Worms and Mayence under the command of their King, Gonthier. Died: in 458. # Note: # Note: Title: Encyclopedia Britannica, Treatise on # Note: Page: Early Frankish Period page 454 of Macropedia # Note: Text: traditional belief of close ancestry http://wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=tamer&id=I14828
0355
Ildegonde
de
Lombardie
0399 - 0450
Ildegonde
Koeln
51
51
0608 - 0631
Charibert
II
Aquitaine
23
23
0467 - 0511
Clovis
I
Franks
44
44
# Note: King of the Salic Franks (481-511), King of France. (Came to throne at about age 15. # Note: SOURCES: # Note: Founder of the Empire of the Franks # Note: "Rulers of the World" by R.F.Tapsell Born: circa 466, son of Childeric I, King des Francs and Basine Andovera de Turinge , Clovis I became King between the Summer of 481 and Autumn of 482. According to Gregoire de Tours, he was only about 15 years of age at the time. In any case he was quite young as he was called "juvenis". Timelines here are bound to be fraught with error since the custom of counting years from the time of Jesus Christ was not established until the 8th Century. Thus, both the Larousse and the History of France assert a birth date circa 466 whereas Stuart's "Royalty for Commoners" claims Clovis I was alive in the year 420! That date is necessary to claim that Sigebert I is the son of Childebert, son of Clovis, since Stuart claims Sigebert I was King of the Salic Francs from 481 to 511. Significant-Other: Evochilde before 486 - Evochilde was a concubine. Note - between 486 and 507: King of the Franks, Clovis I vanquished the Romans at Soissons in 486. Syagrius, the "Roman King" takes refuge in Toulouse under the protection of the King of the Wisigoths, Alaric [who had just become King in 484]. By the end of the year, Clovis I forced Alaric to give up Syagrius, and Clovis I secretly has Syagrius put to death. From 487 to 490, Clovis I extended his kingdom all the way to the Loire River, however, he respects the border of the Wisigoths to the South and of the Burgundians to the South-West, as well as that of the riparian Francs to the East. From 490 to 495, Clovis is occupied with the liquidation of the Salic Franc dynasty North of Gaule. King Chararic of Tongres is decapitated, and King Ragnacaire of Cambrai is executed. Upon the request for aid from the Riparian Francs, Clovis I defeats the Alamans (Germans) at the Battle of Tolbiac in 496 thus bringing Champagne under his jurisdiction. In 500, he wages war against Gondebaud, King of Burgundy defeating him near Dijon. Gondebaud retreats to Avignon. In 502, on the Cure and the Cousin, Clovis I and Gondebaud seal an alliance. From April to June 507, the French Army attack the Wisigoths, whose Kingdom extends from the Mediterranean to the ocean, and cross the Loire, going up the Valley of Calin toward Poitiers and encounter the Visigoth Army in the plain of Vouille, 15 km West of Clain. Alaric II, King of the Visigoths is killed and the Wisigoths thus are defeated. By 507, thanks to the efforts of his son, Thierry, the entire Meridional Gaule falls into Clovis I's control. In 508, the Franc Army lays siege on Arles in order to secure Provence. Theodoric, King of the Ostrogoths, occupies Provence, and his general, Ibbas, crosses the Alps to deliver Arles from Clovis I's clutch. Theodoric conquers the Burgundians at Avignon and Orange and makes Amalaric, his grandson and son of Alaric II, King of the Wisigoths. Clovis I loses the Bas-Languedoc, then called Septimania. Around 510, Clovis has Cloderic, King of the Riparian tribes who had fought in his support at Vouille, assassinated, and proclaims himself King of the Riparians. Thus, the Kingdom extends from the Pyrenees, to the ocean to beyond the Rhine. Upon his death, according to Frankish custom, his kingdom was divided among his four sons: Thierry, Clodomir, Childebert and Clotaire. Married circa 493: Sainte Clotilde de Bourgogne , daughter of Chilperic, King de Bourgogne and N?; Clotilde was a Merovingien. By the time Clovis I married her, he already had a son through his concubine. Clotilde contributed to the conversion of Clovis to Christianity. After his death, she retired to the monastery of Saint-Martin in Tours (France). Her Feast Day is 3 June. Baptized: on 25 December 496; When the Queen, Clotilde, convinced Clovis I to have their son Ingomer baptized, he relented. Shortly afterwards, the son died. # Note: Title: Encyclopedia Britannica, Treatise on # Note: Page: Clovis I
0751 - 0812
William
Autun
61
61
# Occupation: Septimania & Autum # Note: Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999 # Note: Page: 48-16 # Note: Text: father of Wialdruth
0725 - 0778
Nibelung
de
Perrecey
53
53
0775 - 0804
Guitberge
Hornbach
29
29
0764 - 0826
Childebrand
de
Perrecey
62
62
0795 - 0844
Bernard
Toulouse
49
49
# Occupation: Sepitimanae # Note: Count of Autun, Margrave of Septimania, Chamberlain of Louis "the Pious".
0870 - 0920
Raculfe
de
Macon
50
50
# Note: Title: The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968 # Note: Page: 6
0665
Hatton
d'
Aquitaine
0666
Aznar
Aragon
0963 - 1005
Ermentrude
Adelaide
de Roucy
42
42
0975
Beatrice
Macon
1175
Havoise
de
Craon
1027
Josceline
de
Chantoce
1030 - 1072
Robert
de
Vitre
42
42
1030
Genergan
de la
Vicaire
1015 - 1056
Tristan
de
Vitre
41
41
1010
Inogen
de
Fougeres
Rhiwallon
de
Vitre
0970
Guenegaude
d'
Auray
Martin
de
Vitre
0980 - 1048
Alfred
de
Fougeres
68
68
Rennes
d'
Auray
0960 - 1020
Meen
de
Fougeres
60
60
0700
Ximeno
of
Bigore
0672
Memorana
of the
Franks
0681
Loup
of
Gascony
0731
Waifer
of
Aquitaine
0756
Atalgaire
of
Bigorre
0614
Walchigise
de
Verdun
0628
Waldrada
de
Neustria
0430 - 0483
Chlodebaud
von
Koln
53
53
0422
Chlodwig
von
Koln
0425 - 0459
Landbert
de
Therouanne
34
34
0425
Chlodemir
von
Worms
0434 - 0467
Ragnacaire
de
Cambrai
33
33
0401 - 0478
Clodoweg
des
Francs
77
77
0402
Blesinde
von
Koln
0375
Blesinde
Koeln
0379 - 0408
Wedelphus
von
Saxe
29
29
0380
Walia
av
Westgoten
0460 - 0518
Argotta
des
Ostrogothie
58
58
1035 - 1096
Denise
de
Fougeres
61
61
0324 - 0396
Priarios
Frank of
Toxandrie
72
72
0270 - 0307
Ragaise de
Toxandrie
Franks
37
37
0245 - 0289
Gonobaud
de Toxandrie
de Franks
44
44
0227 - 0281
Marcomir de
Toxandrie
de Franks
54
54
Ildergonde
of
Lombardy
0815 - 0868
Bernard
d'Auvergne
53
53
Sources: Title: Pedigree Resource File CD 99 Publication: (Salt Lake City, UT: Intellectual Reserve, Inc., 2004) Title: carey.FTW Repository: Media: Other Text: Date of Import: 21 Jul 2005
0818 - 0849
Liutgarde
Lieugardis
31
31
0780
Alba
of
Autun
0745 - 0804
Theodoen
of
Autun
59
59
D. 0812
Adelrico
of
Gascony
0789
Sancho
of
Gascony
0920
Milo
de
Tonnerre
0920 - ~0980
Ingeltrude
de
Brienne
60
60
<0897 - <0975
Gui de
Tonnerre
78
78
~0912 - >0975
Adela
de
Salins
63
63
0875
Francon
de
Narbonne
0820 - 0878
Lievin
de
Narbonne
58
58
Sources: 1. Page: Ancestry Family Trees Note: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=3997&pid=-1241196303
0800
Francon
de
Narbonne
Sources: 1. Page: Ancestry Family Trees Note: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=3997&pid=-1241189044
0752
Milo
de
Narbonne
Sources: 1. Page: Ancestry Family Trees Note: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=3997&pid=-1137347484
0720 - 0772
Guerin
du
Thurgovie
52
52
0730
Adelindis
de
Hesbaye
0750
Bouchard
de
Corsica
0700 - 0750
Robert
de
Hesbaye
50
50
Sources: 1. Page: 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 Note: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=3997&pid=-1346307787
0700 - 0750
Willis
Winlliswinda
50
50
0657 - 0727
Lambert
Burgundy
70
70
0670
Alleaume
0886
Odda
de
Macon
1000
Chana
de
Saumur
1015 - 1074
Meen
de
Fougeres
59
59
0975 - 1040
Gelduin
de
Saumur
65
65
0940 - 0994
Gelduin
de
Saumur
54
54
0945
Aenor
de
Doue
0965
Adelaise
de
Saumur
0971 - 1034
Marsire
de
Doue
63
63
Basin
of
Thuringe
0399 - 0448
Clovis the
Riparian
Cologne
49
49
# Note: Clovis The Riparian, Frankish King of Cologne, living 420, kinsman of Clovis I. [Ancestral Roots] # Note: # Note: Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999 # Note: Page: 190-1 http://wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=tamer&id=I21348
0777 - 0853
Warin of
Chalons
& Macon
76
76
Sources: Title: Pedigree Resource File CD 99 Publication: (Salt Lake City, UT: Intellectual Reserve, Inc., 2004) Title: carey.FTW Repository: Media: Other Text: Date of Import: 21 Jul 2005
0570
Sevenus
0550
Auriol
Manse
1047 - 1089
Renaud
Nevers
42
42
# Note: died: 1098 [Ref: ES III:687] nach (after) 1098 [Ref: ES III:716] # Note: # Note: The flwg is caveat emptor: # Note: # Note: Book Description: # Note: This book examines the history of a prominent castle lord of eleventh-century Anjou, a man who has been referred to in numerous works but has never been carefully studied. Robert the Burgundian was an Angevin knight whom the counts of Anjou allowed to amass enormous power on the northwestern march of Anjou. Until he departed for the First Crusade in 1098 Robert was the central figure in Count Fulk Rechin’s court. In contrast with many studies of the period, this work finds that Robert spent a long career as a major supporter of the counts of Anjou, rather than as someone undermining their authority. The author calls into question what is known about “feudal anarchy” in the eleventh century and finds that Robert and his descendants were indeed loyal to the count and were able to maintain Angevin power. # Note: Remarkably, records of more than one hundred legal acts involving Robert, some based on his actual words, survive today. They reveal a richly textured life, establishing family connections, political alliances, and relations with the Church as Robert struggled to maintain his lands and position through invasion, civil war, and episcopal interdict. Of special interest is Robert’s participation in the First Crusade after a personal visit by Pope Urban II, and his interaction with the counts and the effect this had on the development of the Angevin state. [Ref: http://www.amazon.fr/exec/obidos/ASIN/0813209730/402-8914116-7854569] # Note: # Note: The first R(obert) de B(Burgundian) I'm concerned with, went to the Holy Land and died, 1098. His son, Robert le B de Sable, died by 1110. A surviving son, Rainald le B, swapped Sable for Craon. Rainald's son, R le B of Craon (Palestine 1138/48) was Grand Master of the Order of Knights Templar, (founded just before David became King of Scotland, and later replaced by the Knights Hospitallers of St John of Jerusalem). [Ref: http://home.freeuk.com/billmarshall/dunnettqa5.htm]
0865 - 0893
Ava d'
Auvergne
28
28
0777
Bertha
de
Toulouse
0885 - 0940
Landry
de
Maers
55
55
0940
Guy
de
Tonnerre
~0930
Humbert
of
Salins
0910
Windesmode
de
Tonnere
~0872 - >0896
Renhard
de
Tonnerre
24
24
~0845 - <0890
Milo
de
Tonnerre
45
45
~0856 - >0902
Adela
de
Auxerre
46
46
0838 - 0880
Thierry
in the
Chamois
42
42
0840
Buvinus
de
Metz
Manasses
de
Gainfroi
~0855
Renaud de
Bar-sur-
Seine
0822 - 0864
Bouin
de
Lommois
42
42
~0820 - 0883
Richildis
de
Turin
63
63
0840
Boso
de
Bourgogne
0845
Richildis
0860
Richard
de
Burgundy
0755 - 0825
Richard
de
Metz
70
70
0725 - 0762
Waudbert
de
Lommois
37
37
0695 - 0735
Waudbert
de
Lommois
40
40
0700
Aldegonde
de
Bavaria
~0665 - 0704
Waudbert
de
Lommois
39
39
<0670
Adeltrude
de
Hainault
~0635
Waudbert
de
Lommois
~0640
Berthilde
of
Thuringia
D. 0623
Waudbert
de
Lommois
0513 - 0575
Waudbert
de
Lommois
62
62
Amalberge
Thuringia
D. 0608
Waudbert
de
Lommois
Clothide
of the
Ostragoths
~0635 - 0670
Vincent
Madelgaire le
Saint de Hainault
35
35
0670 - 0722
Theudbert
de
Bavaria
52
52
0630 - 0713
Theodon
de
Bavaria
83
83
1049
Agnes
de
Beaugency
~0443 - ~0501
Godegisel
of the
Burgundians
58
58
Succeeded with his brother Gundobad as sole rulers of the Burgundians. In 500, Clovis I, King of the Franks, defeated Gundobad with the help of Godigisel. This battle was followed by more between the two brothers. Gundobad killed Godigisel while in an Arian church.
~0460
Gundobad
of the
Burgundians
~0410 - ~0448
Rechila
of the
Suevi
38
38
~0416
de
Wallia
~0790 - <0855
Boso
de
Turin
65
65
Herbert
de
Arles
0835
Theutberga
de
Valois
0830
Aton
Trencavel
Generated by GenoPro®. Click here for details.
A 'genogram' depicting a family tree should appear here
If no diagram is shown then either of the following could be the cause:
The diagram has been produced as a PDF and either no PDF viewer has been installed or the diagram has been opened in another window.
The diagram has been produced in SVG format (Scaleable Vector Graphic) and either you are using Internet Explorer version 8 or below, in this case you should install the 'Adobe SVG Viewer', or you are using another browser that does not support SVG
You are using Google Chrome browser but are viewing the report locally on a PC directly from the generated files (i.e. via the 'File' protocol) rather than via a web/HTTP server