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Family Subtree Diagram : ..Robert de Vere (1110)

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. ? 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 Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Biological Child 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 Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Biological Child Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Biological Child Parent Parent 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 Biological Child Biological Child 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 Biological Child Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child 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 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 Parent Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Parent Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child 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 Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Biological Child Parent Parent Biological Child Marriage (a child) (a child) (nine children) (seven children) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) Marriage (three children) Marriage (seven children) Marriage (three children) Marriage (six children) Marriage (three children) (three children) (four children) (nine children) (two children) (two children) (two children) (a child) (a child) (three children) (three children) (a child) (three children) (a child) (three children) (a child) (a child) (a child) (three children) (three children) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (two children) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (three children) (two children) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (a child) (two children) (a child) (two children) (a child) 0969 - 1012 Jean de Conteville 43 43 Occupation: of Comwyn & Tonsburgh
Title: The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968
Page: 100

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Note:
[Lasceline de clinton.ged]

General of the French King's forces & governor of his chief towns.

Descendants include Baldwin, 2nd King of Jerusalem.[Hamon III de Massey.ged]

General of the French King's forces & governor of his chief towns.

Descendants include Baldwin, 2nd King of Jerusalem.
0987 Bertha de Flanders 0954 Bernard I (Benno) Billung Saxony 0937 Egbert de Flanders 0893 - 0933 Adaloff de Boulogne 40 40 0750 Bertbelle Martel 0740 Milo de Vere 0790 Milo de Vere 1080 - 1163 Adeliza de Clare 83 83 1006 Katherine of Flanders 1030 - 1094 Judith of Flanders 64 64 0855 - 0915 Adalberto of Tuscany 60 60 0879 - 0948 Teutberga d'Arles 69 69 0847 Bertrane de Metz Alda 0924 Alda of Arles 0956 - 1014 Swanhilde of Saxony 58 58 1062 - 1141 Aubrey de Vere 79 79 ALBERIC DE VERE, Junior, was successor to his father; appointed Chamberlain of England by King Henry I; Justice of England during Henry I's reign; about 5 Stephen was killed in a tumult in London; married Adeliza, daughter of Gilbert de Clare (ped. 79) and Adeliza de Clermont

---

[Pullen010502.FTW]

Subject: DE VERE (1140-1327)
From: Dave Utzinger <UTZ@AOL.COM>
Date: Wed, 4 Dec 1996 23:04:49 -0500
Message-Idaho: <961204230446_906388193@emout06.mail.aol.com>

CORRECTIONS, COMMENT, FLAMES, WHATEVER!! WELCOME

Descendants of Aubrey de VERE II


Generation No. 1

1. Aubrey de VERE II1 died 15-May-1141 in slain. He married Alice
de
CLARE, daughter of Gilbert RICHARD and Adelaide.

Child of Aubrey and Alice is:
+ 2 i. Aubrey de VERE2, died 26-Dec-1194.

Generation No. 2

2. Aubrey de VERE2 (Aubrey de VERE II1) died 26-Dec-1194. He




married
Agnes de ESSEX 1162, daughter of Henry.

Child of Aubrey and Agnes is:
+ 3 i. Robert de VERE3, born Abt 1164 in (see notes); died
Bef
25-Oct-1221.

Generation No. 3

3. Robert de VERE3 (Aubrey de VERE2, Aubrey de VERE II1) was born
Abt
1164
in (see notes), and died Bef 25-Oct-1221. He married Isabel de BOLBEC,




daughter of Hugh de BOLBEC.

Notes
Supplement to Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists by Frederick lewis Weis

M.C. b. prob. before 1164, d. before 25 Oct 1221, Magna Charta Surety, 1215;
m. Isabel, d. 3 Feb 1245, dau of Hugh II de Bolbec (son of Walter I). and
widow of Henry de Nonant. (CP X 210-216, cf. 213 note b; Philip Morant, Hist
of Essex, 1768, II 159, 179-182).

Child of Robert and Isabel de BOLBEC is:
+ 4 i. Eleanor de VERE4, born Abt 1235 in Bakewell, Derby,
ENG;
died in (see
notes).

Generation No. 4

4. Eleanor de VERE4 (Robert de VERE3, Aubrey de VERE2, Aubrey de
VERE
II1)
was born Abt 1235 in Bakewell, Derby, ENG, and died in (see notes). She
married Sir Ralph GERNON, son of Sir GERNON and Beatrix de THEYDON.

Child of Eleanor and Sir GERNON is:
5 i. Sir William5 GERNON, born in (see notes); died 1327.
He
married Hawise
TREGOZE.

---

Sources:

   1. Abbrev: Garner, Lorraine Ann "Lori"
      Title: Garner, Lorraine Ann "Lori" (P.O. Box 577, Bayview, Idaho 83803)
      Note:
      Call number:

      Her sources included, but may not be limited to: Burke's Landed Gentry, Burke's Dormant & Extinct Peerage, Burke's Peerage of American Presidents, Debrett's Peerage, Oxford histories & "numerous othe r reference works"

      very good to excellent, although she has a tendency to follow Burke's

      Hardcopy notes of Lori Garner Elmore.
      Text: son or grandson of Aubrey (d 1088, a monk) & Beatrice Cts of Ghisnes
   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 1139
   3. Abbrev: Pullen010502.FTW
      Title: Pullen010502.FTW
      Note:
      Call number:
      Text: Date of Import: Jan 5, 2002
   4. Abbrev: Garner, Lorraine Ann "Lori"
      Title: Garner, Lorraine Ann "Lori" (P.O. Box 577, Bayview, Idaho 83803)
      Note:
      Call number:

      Her sources included, but may not be limited to: Burke's Landed Gentry, Burke's Dormant & Extinct Peerage, Burke's Peerage of American Presidents, Debrett's Peerage, Oxford histories & "numerous othe r reference works"

      very good to excellent, although she has a tendency to follow Burke's

      Hardcopy notes of Lori Garner Elmore.
      Text: d 1141
   5. Abbrev: Garner, Lorraine Ann "Lori"
      Title: Garner, Lorraine Ann "Lori" (P.O. Box 577, Bayview, Idaho 83803)
      Note:
      Call number:

      Her sources included, but may not be limited to: Burke's Landed Gentry, Burke's Dormant & Extinct Peerage, Burke's Peerage of American Presidents, Debrett's Peerage, Oxford histories & "numerous othe r reference works"

      very good to excellent, although she has a tendency to follow Burke's

      Hardcopy notes of Lori Garner Elmore.
      Page: Vere
   6. 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 1139
      Text: no date
   7. Abbrev: Ahnentafel for Margery Arundell
      Title: Marlyn Lewis, Ahnentafel for Margery Arundell (08 Oct 1997)
      Note:
      Call number: 
William de Vere Geoffrey de Vere 1106 Adeliza Eleanor de Vere 1120 - 1194 Aubrey de Vere 74 74 Sir Aubrey or Alberic III, eldest son, was born before 1140, 3rd Baron by tenure of Kensington, Count of Ghines. For his fidelity to the Empress Maud (daughter of Henry I and mother of Henry II), he was confirmed by her in his inheritance of the Lord Chamberlainship and all his father's possessions. He was also given choice of several earldoms and selected that of Oxford. He died 1194. He married Lucia, daughter of William, 3rd Baron d'Abrancis.
(Kin of Mellcene Thurman Smith, page 994)

Aubrey de Vere III (c. 1115-Dec. 1194) was created Earl of Oxford by the empress Matilda in July 1141. He inherited the barony of Hedingham on the death of his father Aubrey de Vere II in May 1141, when he was already Count of Guines by right of his wife Beatrice. He lost the latter title on the annulment of their marriage 1144-46. Earl Aubrey was little involved in national political affairs after this period. His attempt to divorce his third wife, Agnes of Essex, was a celebrated marriage case that Agnes appealed successfully to Pope Alexander III.
(Wikipedia)
1126 Cecilia de Vere 1033 - 1088 Alberic de Vere 55 55 Sources:

   1. Abbrev: Garner, Lorraine Ann "Lori"
      Title: Garner, Lorraine Ann "Lori" (P.O. Box 577, Bayview, Idaho 83803)
      Note:
      Call number:

      Her sources included, but may not be limited to: Burke's Landed Gentry, Burke's Dormant & Extinct Peerage, Burke's Peerage of American Presidents, Debrett's Peerage, Oxford histories & "numerous othe r reference works"

      very good to excellent, although she has a tendency to follow Burke's

      Hardcopy notes of Lori Garner Elmore.
      Text: Aubrey de Vere, a monk, no parents
   2. Abbrev: Pullen010502.FTW
      Title: Pullen010502.FTW
      Note:
      Call number:
      Text: Date of Import: Jan 5, 2002
   3. Abbrev: Garner, Lorraine Ann "Lori"
      Title: Garner, Lorraine Ann "Lori" (P.O. Box 577, Bayview, Idaho 83803)
      Note:
      Call number:

      Her sources included, but may not be limited to: Burke's Landed Gentry, Burke's Dormant & Extinct Peerage, Burke's Peerage of American Presidents, Debrett's Peerage, Oxford histories & "numerous othe r reference works"

      very good to excellent, although she has a tendency to follow Burke's

      Hardcopy notes of Lori Garner Elmore.
   4. Abbrev: Garner, Lorraine Ann "Lori"
      Title: Garner, Lorraine Ann "Lori" (P.O. Box 577, Bayview, Idaho 83803)
      Note:
      Call number:

      Her sources included, but may not be limited to: Burke's Landed Gentry, Burke's Dormant & Extinct Peerage, Burke's Peerage of American Presidents, Debrett's Peerage, Oxford histories & "numerous othe r reference works"

      very good to excellent, although she has a tendency to follow Burke's

      Hardcopy notes of Lori Garner Elmore.
      Text: m of Aubrey de Vere the Monk & Beatrice Cts of Ghisnes
   5. 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 1139
      Text: m of Alberic & Beatrix (Unknown) 
1040 - 1089 Beatrice de Gand 49 49 Robert de Vere William de Vere Roger de Vere Geoffrey de Vere 1000 Alphonso de Vere Sources:

   1. Abbrev: Pullen010502.FTW
      Title: Pullen010502.FTW
      Note:
      Call number:
      Text: Date of Import: Jan 5, 2002 
0965 - 1039 Manussus de Vere 74 74 0970 Petronella of Boulogne 0930 Gallus de Vere 0935 Gertrude of Clermont Aurelius de Vere Helen de Blois 0860 Otto de Vere Constance de Monthlhery Nicasius de Vere Agatha de Champaigne 0795 Avelina de Nantes 1005 - 1052 Henry de Gand 47 47     * Note:

          [Pullen010502.FTW]

          May have been married in England.

---

Sources:

   1. Abbrev: Pullen010502.FTW
      Title: Pullen010502.FTW
      Note:
      Call number:
      Text: Date of Import: Jan 5, 2002 
1005 Sibilla Manasses 0783 - 0852 Lambert de Nantes 69 69 0933 - 0962 Baudouin of Flanders 29 29 0918 Hildegardis von Westerburg 0910 - 0973 Hermann Billung Saxony 63 63 The Christianizing of the Wends
Henry the Fowler, we must remember, was a Saxon. Therefore the Saxon tribe of Germans which Charlemagne had subjugated and forced to accept Christianity, had now become the chief tribe of the German kingdom, stronger even then the Franks. These Saxons in their turn took up the vigorous work of spreading Christianity by force. While King Henry held his people back from attacking the Huns, he kept them practiced in arms by directing them against the Sclavic races which we now hear of for the first time as beginning to press upon the Germans from the east. The first of these Sclavs to encounter the heavy handed conversion of the Saxons were a people called the Wends, dwelling in what is now eastern Prussia.
The Saxons marched against the Wends in several expeditions, the most noted being led by a fierce old chieftain called Herman Billung. Herman gave each captured Wend the choice of Christianity or death, and having no strong devotion to their own gods, they accepted a nominal Christianity. So completely was the power of the Wends broken that they continued to exist only as slaves of the Saxons. Indeed it was here that the word `sclav' began naturally to be used in its German and English sense as indicating a slave.

CIAS Virtual Illustrated Chronology Tour of World History
0878 Frederunda Hildeburg 0874 - 0967 Billung von Saxony 93 93 0961 - 0987 Arnold Flanders 25 25 0890 - 0964 Arnoul I Flanders 73 73 http://www.geneajourney.com/flndrs.html
Counts of Flanders and Hainault

Arnold I, Count of Flanders and Artois, "the Old", b abt 898, d 27 Mar 964. He md Alix de Vermandois abt 926, daughter of Herbert II, Count of Vermandois and Troyes, and Liegarde/Hildebrante.

Arnulf I, Count of Flanders
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Arnulf of Flanders (c. 890 - March 28, 965), called the Great, was the third Count of Flanders, who ruled the County of Flanders, an area that is now northwestern Belgium and southwestern Holland.

Arnulf was the son of count Baldwin II of Flanders and Ælfthryth of Wessex, daughter of Alfred the Great. He was named after his distant ancestor, Saint Arnulf of Metz; this was intended to emphasize his family's descent from the Carolingian dynasty.

[edit] History

Arnulf I greatly expanded Flemish rule to the south, taking all or part of Artois, Ponthieu, Amiens, and Ostravent. He exploited the conflicts between Charles the Simple and Robert I of France, and later those between Louis IV and his barons.

In his southern expansion Arnulf inevitably had conflict with the Normans, who were trying to secure their northern frontier. This led to the 943 murder of the Duke of Normandy, William Longsword, at the hands of Arnulf's men.

The Viking threat was receding during the later years of Arnulf's life, and he turned his attentions to the reform of the Flemish government.

[edit] Family

In 934 he married Adele of Vermandois, daughter of Herbert II of Vermandois. Their children were:
Liutgard, married Wichmann IV, Count of Hamaland
Egbert, died 953
Baldwin III of Flanders
Elftrude, married Siegfried, Count of Guînes
Hildegarde (d.990); married Dirk II, Count of Holland

He also had a previous daughter, Hildegard.

Arnulf made his eldest son and heir Baldwin III of Flanders co-ruler in 958, but Baldwin died untimely in 962, so Arnulf was succeeded by Baldwin's infant son, Arnulf II of Flanders.

[edit] Sources
Flodoard
Folcwine
Lambert of Ardres
Platts, Beryl. The Scottish Hazard: Flemish Nobility and their Impact on Scotland, 1985

http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~hwbradley/aqwg1356.h tm#35979
Selected Families and Individuals

Arnulf I "The Old" of FLANDERS Count of Flanders [Parents] 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 was born 890 in , Flanders, Belgium. He died 27 Mar 964 in , Flanders, Belgium. Arnulf married Alix de VERMANDOIS on 934 in , Flanders, Belgium.

Alix de VERMANDOIS [Parents] 1, 2, 3 was born 918 in Vermandois, Normandie, France. She died 10 Oct 960 in Brugge, West Flanders, Belgium. Alix married Arnulf I "The Old" of FLANDERS Count of Flanders on 934 in , Flanders, Belgium.

They had the following children:

M i Baldwin III of FLANDERS Count of Flanders was born 935 and died 1 Jan 962.
F ii Liutgard of FLANDERS was born 937 and died 29 Sep 964.
F iii Hildegarde of FLANDERS was born 939 and died 10 Apr 990.
M iv Heribert of FLANDERS 1 was born 941 in , Flanders, Belgium.
F v Elftrude of FLANDERS was born 943.

Arnulf I "The Old" of FLANDERS Count of Flanders

1Weis, Frederick Lewis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700 (7th ed., Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1992.), 48-20, 162-18, Los Angeles Public Library, Gen 974 W426 1992.

2Farmerie, Todd A., Counts of Boulogne, Flanders, Ghent, Guines.

3Du Chesne, Andr, Histoire Généalogique des Maisons de Guines, d'Ardres, de Gand, et de Coucy (Paris: Sebastien Cramoisy, 1631.), p. 10.

4Boyer, Carl, Ancestral Lines: 206 Families (Santa Clarita, California: Boyer, 1998. [3rd Edition]), p. 720, Los Angeles Public Library, 929.2 B791-2 1998.

5Tanner, Heather J., Families, Friends and Allies: Boulogne and Politics in Northern France and England, c. 879-1160 (Boston: Brill, 2004.), p. 290, Family History Library, 940.1 T157f.
0805 Bertha 0980 Baldwin of Flanders 1012 Baldwin of Flanders 0936 - 0971 Adelbert of Ivrea 35 35 0900 - 0966 Berengar of Italy 66 66 Duke in Spoleto, Margrave in Ivrea

Berengar of Ivrea
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Berengar of Ivrea (?-966), sometimes also referred to as Berengar II of Italy was marquess of Ivrea, and later King of Italy. He was later deposed by the Emperor Otto I, and Italy came under direct control of the Holy Roman Empire.

At the death of king Lothaire II of Italy in 950, Berengar seized the opportunity and declared himself King. He tried to legitimize his rule by forcing Adelaide, the respective daughter, daughter-in-law, and widow of the last three kings of Italy, into marriage with his son Adalbert. Adelaide's requests for intervention resulted in Otto I's invasion in 951, where Berengar was forced to pay homage to the Emperor. Otto, a widower, subsequently married Adelaide.

Berengar continued in his position as a vassal of the Empire. He intrigued with Pope John XII against Otto, and was eventually captured and imprisoned in 963.
0924 - 0936 Willa of Tuscany 12 12 0952 - 1002 Rozela of Italy 50 50 0901 - 0932 Ermengarda of Tuscany 31 31 0865 - 0894 Boniface of Tuscany 29 29 0835 - 0889 Adalbert of Tuscany 54 54 0832 Rothilde de Spolete 0775 - 0823 Bonifacio de Lucca 48 48 0804 - 0858 Guy de Spoleto 54 54 0807 Adelaide Carolingian of Italy 0765 - 0836 Lambert de Hornbach 71 71 # Note: Went with Emperor Lothar to Italy in 834
# Note:
# Note: Title: Royalty for Commoners, by Stuart
0881 - 0936 Boso Medici of Tuscany 55 55 0860 - 0887 Theobald d'Arles 27 27 0830 - 0864 Hubert d'Arles 34 34 0800 - 0855 Boso d'Arles 55 55 0800 - 0883 Richilde of Amiens 83 83 0770 - 0825 Robert of Amiens 55 55 0778 - 0826 Boso of Italy 48 48 0720 - 0750 Boso of Turin 30 30 1116 - 1199 Juliana de Vere 83 83 # Note:

    Juliana de Vere (daughter of Alice and Aubrey de Vere II), living 1185; m. (1) as his (2) wife, Hugh Bigod, 1st Earl of Norfolk, b. c 1095, Lord of Framlingham 1120, Royal Steward 1123 (son of Roger Bigod, d. Sep 1107, and his wife Alice, living 1130, daughter of Robert de Toeni, Lord of Belvoir). The marriage of Juliana and Hugh was annulled. Juliana m. (2) Walkelin Maminot, d. 1182 and (3) Roger de Glanville, dead 7 Richard I. Hugh m. (2) Gundred, d. 1200/8, apparently daughter of Roger, Earl of Warwick, by Gundred, daughter of William de Warenne, Earl of Surrey. [Magna Charta Sureties]

# Note:

Title: Magna Charta Sureties 1215, Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr, 5th Edition, 1999
Page: 155-1
0937 - 0990 Hildegarde Flanders 53 53 # Note:

    I Originally had Hildegarde de Flanders m. Wichman, Count de Gand, and their daughter Hildegarde de Gand m. Dietrich. According to sources quoted by Curt, below, Hildegarde de Gand & Hildegarde de Flanders are one and the same person. I left the marriage to Wichman as a 1st husband; her marriage to Dietrich seems somewhat late, and possibly she had a 1st husband.

# Note:
# Note: Curt Hofemann, curt_hofemann@yahoo.com, writes in a post-em:
# Note:
# Note: Hi Jim,
# Note: ES II:5 lists b. ca 934.
# Note: ES II:2, 5 lists d. 10 Apr 990 & Moriarty lists 990.
# Note:
# Note: ES II:2 makes her the daughter of Arnold I Count of Flanders (not granddaughter).
# Note: Moriarty p55 "perhaps dau of Arnulf I Count of Flanders"
# Note: Todd A. Farmerie in a message to Gen-Medieval 13 Mar 2001: mother unk, not Adele of Vermandois
# Note:
# Note: A somewhat new, very worthwhile website by Stewart Baldwin is the Henry Project at:
# Note: http://sbaldw.home.mindspring.com/hproject/henry.htm
# Note: which states:
# Note:

    No direct evidence is known for the suggestion that Hildegard was Arnulf's daughter. However, the onomastic evidence for such an affiliation is strong, given that Hildegard had sons named Arnulf and Egbert, the latter of which is an Anglo-Saxon name that had only been recently introduced into the family of Flemish counts through Arnulf's mother. However, chronological considerations make it highly unlikely that Hildegard was born late enough to be a daughter of Adele of Vermandois. Since the chronology leaves plenty of room for an earlier marriage of Arnulf (who was probably in his 40's when he married Adele), it is most likely that Hildegard was born to an earlier marriage. [Ref: Erich Brandenburg, Die Nachkommen Karls des Großen, Frankfurt, 1964, 91-2; = Karl Ferdinand Werner, 'Die Nachkommen Karls des Großen bis um das Jahr 1000 (1.-8. Generation)', Karl der Große 4 (1967), 69-70

http://wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=tamer&id=I10123
1109 - 1166 Rohese de Vere 57 57 1083 Alice de Vere 0872 - 0929 Aelfthryth of England 57 57 Title: Encyclopedia Britannica, Treatise on
Page: Baldwin II

Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999
Page: 44-16 ,162-17

Title: The Plantagenet Ancestry, by William Henry Turton, 1968
Page: 19
Text: Elfrida of England ,929
0912 - 0960 Alix de Vermandois 48 48 # Note: Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999
# Note: Page: 48-20
0863 - 0918 Baudouin Flanders 55 55 byname BALDWIN THE BALD, French BAUDOUIN LE CHAUVE, Dutch BOUDEWIJN DE KALE, second ruler of Flanders, who, from his stronghold at Bruges, maintained, as his father Baldwin I before him, a vigorous defense of his lands against the incursions ofthe Norsemen. On his mother's side a descendant of Charlemagne, he strengthened the dynastic importance of his family by marrying Aelfthryth, daughter of Alfred the Great, of Wessex, Eng.

---

Sources:
Title: AFN:
Abbrev: AFN:
Title: Brewer's British Royalty
Abbrev: Brewer's British Royalty
Author: David Williamson
Publication: Cassell, 1998
Title: The Frankish Kingdoms Under the Carolingians
Abbrev: The Frankish Kingdoms Under the Carolingians
Author: Rosamond McKitterick
Publication: Longman Group Ltd., 1983
Title: Charles the Bald
Abbrev: Charles the Bald
Author: Janet L Nelson
Publication: Longman, 1992
Title: Royal Families of Medieval Scandinavia, Flanders, and Kiev
Abbrev: Royal Families of Medieval Scandinavia, Flanders,
Author: Rupert Alen and Anna Marie Dahlquist
Publication: King River Publications, 1997
Title: The Fighting Kings of Wessex
Abbrev: The Fighting Kings of Wessex
Author: G.P. Baker
Publication: G. Bell and Sons, Ltd., 1931
Title: Royal Genealogy
Abbrev: Royal Genealogy
Author: Brian Tompsett
Publication: 1994-1999
Title: Genealogy of Kings
Abbrev: Genealogy of Kings
Author: UK Royal Government
Title: Dynasties of the World
Abbrev: Dynasties of the World
Author: John E. Morby
Publication: Oxford University Press, 1989
Title: Medieval Flanders
Abbrev: Medieval Flanders
Author: David Nicholas
Publication: Longman, 1992
Title: Paul B. McBride's Genealogy
Abbrev: Paul B. McBride's Genealogy
Author: Paul B. McBride
Title: Descendants of Kong Grom den Gamle
Abbrev: Descendants of Kong Grom den Gamle
Author: Herbert Stoyan
Publication: Aug. 2000
Title: A Lineage to Caesar
Abbrev: A Lineage to Caesar
Author: Scott
Publication: Aug 2000
Title: The Mammoth Book of British Kings and Queens
Abbrev: The Mammoth Book of British Kings and Queens
Author: Mike Ashley
Publication: Carroll & Graf Pubishers, 1998
Title: Kingdoms of Europe
Abbrev: Kingdoms of Europe
Author: Gene Gurney
Publication: Crown Publishers, Inc., 1982
Title: Imperium
Abbrev: Imperium
Author: Joe Shetler
Title: Families with Multiple Connections
Abbrev: Families with Multiple Connections
Author: Richard W. Field
Publication: Sept 2001
Title: Britannica Encylopedia
Abbrev: Britannica Encylopedia
Title: Royal Ancestors of the Magna Charta Barons
Abbrev: Royal Ancestors of the Magna Charta Barons
Author: Carr P. Collins, Jr.
Title: Horrocks, Philips, Winget, Keeler, Clark, Watson, Lockwood, Strong, Gates and ancestors
Abbrev: Horrocks, Philips, Winget, Keeler, Clark, Watson,
Author: Lloyd A. Horocks
Title: France in the Middle Ages 987-1460
Abbrev: France in the Middle Ages 987-1460
Author: Georges Duby
Publication: Blackwell, 1991
Title: The Phillips, Weber, Kirk and Staggs Family
Abbrev: The Phillips, Weber, Kirk and Staggs Family
Author: Jim Weber
Title: Royalty for Commoners
Abbrev: Royalty for Commoners
Author: Roderick W. Stuart
Publication: Genealogical Publishing Co. Inc, 4th Edition 2002
Title: Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists Who Came to New England between 1623 and 1650
Abbrev: Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists Who Came to New
Author: Frederick Lewis Weis
Publication: Genealogical Publishing, Inc. Sixth Edition, 1988

Title: Encyclopedia Britannica, Treatise on
Page: Baldwin II

Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999
Page: 44-16 ,162-17
0745 Gui Hornbach 0773 - 0810 Paepin Italy 37 37 Name Prefix: King
Name Suffix: Of Italy
[totalburley.FTW]

Pepin, king of Italy (781-810) and second son of the Frankish emperor Charlemagne.

Given the title of king of Italy in 781, Pepin took part in campaigns against Duke Tassilo III of Bavaria from 787 and led an army against the Avars in 796. His Venetian campaign (809-810) enabled Charlemagne later to come to favourable terms with the Byzantine Empire. As early as 806 Charlemagne, in planning the division of his lands, had decided that on his death Pepin should inherit Italy, Bavaria, and the territory of the Alemanni, but Pepin predeceased his father by four years.

---

    Pepin, baptized at Rome, 12 Apr 781 by Pope Adrian I, d. Milan, 8 July 810, King of Italy 781-810, consecrated King of Lombardy 15 Apr 781. Apparently by a daughter of Duke Bernard, younger brother of Pepin the Short, he had Bernard a natural son. [Ancestral Roots, line 50-14]

Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999
Page: 50-14
Text: baptized in Rome by Pope Adrian I

Title: Encyclopedia Britannica, Treatise on
Page: Pepin
0937 - 1008 Mathilde Saxony 71 71 0826 - 0883 Richilde Of Arles 57 57 0906 - 0936 Willa of Bourgogne 30 30 0995 - 1030 Ogive de Ardennes 35 35 0804 - 0858 Guy de Spoleto 54 54 1110 Robert de Vere 0964 Urraca di Ivrea 0948 Luitger von Sachsen 0950 Wichman von Saxony 0952 Imma of Hereford 0896 Wichmann Billung 0899 Amelung of Verden 0840 Poppo of Thuringia 0870 Poppo von Thuringen 0872 Wiltrud von Thuringen 0804 Poppo of Thuringia 0940 Willa Medici di Ivrea 0942 Urracus of Italy 0945 Gerberga di Ivrea 0949 Gisela di Ivrea 0952 Wido of Ivrea 0965 - 1001 Conrad de Ventimiglia 36 36 0880 - 0932 Adalbert of Turin 52 52 0890 Bonifacio of Tuscany 0819 Herbert of Transjurane Burgundy 0825 Herbert of St. Maurice 0932 Elstrude de Flanders 1118 - 1185 Alice de Vere 67 67 0884 - 0947 Hugh of Arles 63 63 1000 Ermengarde of Flanders 0985 Manasses Robert de Guisnes 0985 Emma of Tancarville 0720 Raymond de Vere 1st Count of Anjou Raymond de Vere

Vere Princedom


Although Merovingian culture was both temperate surprisingly modern, the monarchs who presided over it were another matter. They (The Sorcerer Kings) were not typical even of rulers of their own age, for the atmosphere of mystery legend, magic and the supernatural, surrounded them, even during their lifetimes. If the customs and economy of the Merovingian world did not differ markedly from others of the period, the aura about the throne and royal bloodline was quite unique.


Sons of the Merovingian blood were not ’created’ kings. On the contrary they were automatically regarded as such on the advent of their twelfth birthday. There was no public ceremony of anointment, no coronation of any sort. Power was simply assumed, as by sacred right.

But while the king was supreme authority in the realm, he was not obliged - or even expected - to sully his hands with the mundane business of governing. He was essentially a ritualised figure, a priest-king, and his role was not necessarily to do anything, simply to be. The king ruled in short, but did not govern.

Even after their conversion to Christianity the Merovingian rulers, like the Patriarchs of the Old Testament, were polygamous. On occasion they enjoyed harems of oriental proportions. Even when the aristocracy, under pressure from the Church, became rigorously monogamous, the monarchy remained exempt. And the Church, curiously enough, seems to have accepted this prerogative without any inordinate protest. According to one modern commentator: Why was it [polygamy] tacitly approved by the Franks themselves?


We may here be in the presence of ancient usage of polygamy in a royal family - a family of such rank that its blood could not be ennobled by any match, however advantageous, nor degraded by the blood of slaves ... It was a matter of indifference whether a queen were taken from a royal dynasty or from among courtesans...

The fortune of the dynasty rested in its blood and was shared by all who were of that blood.

And again,

’it is Just possible that, in the Merovingians, we may have a dynasty of Germanic Heerkonige* derived from an ancient kingly family of the migration period’.

Extracted and expanded upon by Henry Lincoln, from ’The Long Haired Kings’

by J. M. Wallace-Hadrill; Fellow of Merton College Oxford.
* Fritz Kern, Gottesgnadentum und Widerstandrecht (1954).

The House of Vere are descended in various lines from the dynasty of Meroveus and consequently share this Germanic Royal Blood Tradition. Prince Milo de Vere - married to Charlemagne’s sister - and as Head of the Imperial House and Chief of the Imperial Army, was himself an Imperial Prince.




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Vero Nihil Verius (nothing truer than truth) is the family motto.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

The Falling Star of Vere
A legend lingers round the acquisition of the de Vere (star) badge. In the version as told by Leland, Aubrey was ’at the Conquest of the Cities of Nicque, of Antioch, and of Hierusalem’ and:

"In the year of our lord 1098, Corborant, Admiral to the Soudan of Persia was fought with at Antioch, and discomforted the Christians. The Night coming on in the Chace of this Bataile, and waxing dark, the Christianes being four miles from Antioche, God, willing the saufte of the Christianes shewed a white Starre or Molette of fyve Pointes, which to every Manne’s Sighte did lighte and arrest upon the standard of Albrey, then shining excessively".

The mystic star from this miracle became the de Veres’ badge, which they wore on their shields from then onwards - quarterly gules and or, in the first quarter a mullet argent. Later heralds argued that it was merely ’a mullet with a difference’ as always used to distinguish a younger son from an elder. Others said that it was not a star at all, but the rowl spur, from the French word mollet, which could have been held up as a pre~arranged sign to muster supporters and was caught in a ray of sunlight. "But for the de Veres the badge was simply God pointing out the family’s near~deity".

From Verily Anderson,

’The Veres of Castle Hedingham’.




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The House of Vere

"The noblest subject in England, and Indeed, as Englishmen loved to say, the noblest subject in Europe, was Aubrey de Vere........who derived his title through an uninterrupted male descent, from a time when the families of Howard and Seymour were still obscure, when the Nevills and Percys enjoyed only a provincial celebrity, and when even the great name of Plantagenet had not yet been heard in England. One chief of the house of de Vere had held high command at Hastings; another had marched, with Godfrey and Tancred, over heaps of slaughtered Moslems, to the sepulchre of Christ. The first Earl of Oxford had been minister of Henry Beauclerc, The third earl had been conspicuous among the lords who extorted the great Charter from JOHN. The seventh earl had fought bravely at Cressy and Poictiers. The thirteenth earl had, through many vicissitudes of fortune, been the chief of the party of the Red Rose, and had led the van on the decisive day of Bosworth. The seventeenth earl had shone at the court of Elizabeth I, and had won for himself an honourable place among the early masters of English poetry.........".

Baron Thomas Babbington Macaulay, Lord Macaulay of Rothley Temple (1857).

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Vere Princedom


Although Merovingian culture was both temperate surprisingly modern, the monarchs who presided over it were another matter. They (The Sorcerer Kings) were not typical even of rulers of their own age, for the atmosphere of mystery legend, magic and the supernatural, surrounded them, even during their lifetimes. If the customs and economy of the Merovingian world did not differ markedly from others of the period, the aura about the throne and royal bloodline was quite unique.


Sons of the Merovingian blood were not ’created’ kings. On the contrary they were automatically regarded as such on the advent of their twelfth birthday. There was no public ceremony of anointment, no coronation of any sort. Power was simply assumed, as by sacred right.

But while the king was supreme authority in the realm, he was not obliged - or even expected - to sully his hands with the mundane business of governing. He was essentially a ritualised figure, a priest-king, and his role was not necessarily to do anything, simply to be. The king ruled in short, but did not govern.

Even after their conversion to Christianity the Merovingian rulers, like the Patriarchs of the Old Testament, were polygamous. On occasion they enjoyed harems of oriental proportions. Even when the aristocracy, under pressure from the Church, became rigorously monogamous, the monarchy remained exempt. And the Church, curiously enough, seems to have accepted this prerogative without any inordinate protest. According to one modern commentator: Why was it [polygamy] tacitly approved by the Franks themselves?


We may here be in the presence of ancient usage of polygamy in a royal family - a family of such rank that its blood could not be ennobled by any match, however advantageous, nor degraded by the blood of slaves ... It was a matter of indifference whether a queen were taken from a royal dynasty or from among courtesans...

The fortune of the dynasty rested in its blood and was shared by all who were of that blood.

And again,

’it is Just possible that, in the Merovingians, we may have a dynasty of Germanic Heerkonige* derived from an ancient kingly family of the migration period’.

Extracted and expanded upon by Henry Lincoln, from ’The Long Haired Kings’

by J. M. Wallace-Hadrill; Fellow of Merton College Oxford.
* Fritz Kern, Gottesgnadentum und Widerstandrecht (1954).

Roland de Vere’s sword was called Durandel. An earlier spelling of this curious name, from the Oxford Dictionary of English Literature, is Durindana.
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http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=fcmitche11&id=I67069
0722 Melusin de Lusina 0695 Elinas of Albha 0699 Bruithina of Strathclyde 0646 Brude MacBeli of Strathclyde 0610 - 0641 Beli of Strathclyde 31 31 0615 - 0654 Waelgush ingen Eanfirth 39 39 0586 Nechtan of Strathclyde 0560 Gwyddno Garuntur of Strathclyde 0563 of Drust 0529 Cawrdar of Strathclyde 0495 Garwynwyn Gerinion of Strathclyde 1070 de Vere 0970 Petronella of Boulogne 0963 - 1005 Liutgard Luxembourg 42 42 0969 Baldwin de Gand 0789 - 0818 Bernhard of Italy 29 29 0937 - 0964 Ledgarde de Flanders 27 27 0982 Eudes of Flanders 0940 - 1011 Bernhard Billung of Saxony 71 71 D. 0940 Anskar of Camerino & Spoleto # Sources:

   1. Title: GEDCOM File : mwballard.ged
      Author: Mark Willis Ballard
      Abbrev: GEDCOM File : mwballard.ged
      Note:
      6928 N. Lakewood Avenue
      773-743-6663
      mwballard52@yahoo.com
   2. Title: GEDCOM File : !!June-2004-Sanders-Weaver-Lay.ged
      Author: David William Weaver
      Abbrev: GEDCOM File : !!June-2004-Sanders-Weaver-Lay.ged
      Note:
      812-689-5624
      dave@satcover.com
   3. Title: GEDCOM File : ALLREL~1.ged
      Abbrev: GEDCOM File : ALLREL~1.ged

    
0720 - 0811 Bonifacius Wolfard d'Este 91 91 see also Cosmo della Rena, Series of the Dukes and Marquesses of Tuscany, and other origional documents printed by Scheidius Orig. Guelfic. tom., I, lib. ii. from Muratori.

---

Sources:

   1. Title: Annals of the House of Hannover
      Author: Sir Andrew Halliday, M.D., F. R. S. E.
      Publication: William Sams, Royal Library, St. James Street, London 1826

      Author is listed as Fellow of the Royal Society of Gottingen, knight of the Order of Guelph, Licentiate of the College of Physicians, and Domestic Physician to H.B.H. the Duke of Clarence.
      Note: ABBR Annals of the House of Hannover
      Page: 68
      Text: QUAY 3
   2. Title: Annals of the House of Hannover
      Author: Sir Andrew Halliday, M.D., F. R. S. E.
      Publication: William Sams, Royal Library, St. James Street, London 1826

      Author is listed as Fellow of the Royal Society of Gottingen, knight of the Order of Guelph, Licentiate of the College of Physicians, and Domestic Physician to H.B.H. the Duke of Clarence.
      Note: ABBR Annals of the House of Hannover
      Page: 437
      Text: QUAY 3
   3. Title: Human Family Project
      Author: Mary Slawson, Chair
      Publication: Copyright January 2006
      Note: ABBR Human Family Project 
0700 Adelbert di Friuli Sources:

   1. Title: Annals of the House of Hannover
      Author: Sir Andrew Halliday, M.D., F. R. S. E.
      Publication: William Sams, Royal Library, St. James Street, London 1826

      Author is listed as Fellow of the Royal Society of Gottingen, knight of the Order of Guelph, Licentiate of the College of Physicians, and Domestic Physician to H.B.H. the Duke of Clarence.
      Note: ABBR Annals of the House of Hannover
      Page: 67
      Text: QUAY 3
   2. Title: Human Family Project
      Author: Mary Slawson, Chair
      Publication: Copyright January 2006
      Note: ABBR Human Family Project 
0680 - 0761 Adelbert Richbald of Guelph 81 81 0680 Ermengarde de Friuli Otkarius de Breisgau 0715 Ruthard de Altdorf 0630 - 0673 Guelph Marin av Altdorf 43 43 Welfo av Altdorf D. 0670 Cathicus Boniface of Guelph "During the reign of Childeric, Cathicus held the office of mayor of the palace, in his kingdoms of Neustria and Austrasia, but he being a passionate and cruel Prince, was not permitted to reign long. He [Childeric] was suprised and assinated while engages in the chace, by a noble Parisian, whom he had insulted in one of his fits of anger. His death proved favorable to the cause of the legitimate heir, who being joined by the Guelph, was without difficulty placed on his father's throne, and unanimously acknowledged king of Austrasia, where Cathicus, or as the French writers call him, Wulfoade, was continued in his charge as mayor of the palace. After a peaceable reign of eight years, he fell with his master, who was also murdered while hunting in the forest of Vaivres." Annals of Hanover, pages 36-37.

See also chronicle of Bobolenus, chapter 23.

---

Sources:

   1. Title: Annals of the House of Hannover
      Author: Sir Andrew Halliday, M.D., F. R. S. E.
      Publication: William Sams, Royal Library, St. James Street, London 1826

      Author is listed as Fellow of the Royal Society of Gottingen, knight of the Order of Guelph, Licentiate of the College of Physicians, and Domestic Physician to H.B.H. the Duke of Clarence.
      Note: ABBR Annals of the House of Hannover
      Page: 437
      Text: QUAY 3
   2. Title: Human Family Project
      Author: Mary Slawson, Chair
      Publication: Copyright January 2006
      Note: ABBR Human Family Project
   3. Title: Annals of the House of Hannover
      Author: Sir Andrew Halliday, M.D., F. R. S. E.
      Publication: William Sams, Royal Library, St. James Street, London 1826

      Author is listed as Fellow of the Royal Society of Gottingen, knight of the Order of Guelph, Licentiate of the College of Physicians, and Domestic Physician to H.B.H. the Duke of Clarence.
      Note: ABBR Annals of the House of Hannover
      Page: 35
      Text: QUAY 3 
0613 - 0640 Caduinus the Welf 27 27 appointed by queen Brumhilda. He subdued a great part of the kingdom of Burgandy, and these provinces were erected into a duchy, and conferred upon Caduin in the year 613. In his later years this prince was employed in collecting and digesting the laws of the Bavarian and other German nations dependant upon France, a duty which he performed with so much zeal and success, that it tended not a little to establish the dominion of that power throughout the neighbouring provinces. This charge was confided to him by Clothaire II., who had arrived at the height of his ambition, and was the acknowledged sovereign of Austrasis, Burgundy, and Neustria. The title which Caduin assumed was that of ambassador of the king Missius Regius, a title which was inherited by his son Cathicus, or as he is otherwise styled in the chronicles of the time, Boniface."
The cronicle of Fredegarius, A. D. 635, chapters 10-78, The chronicle of Bobolenus the monk, in the Aeta Sacra Antver., chapter 8.

---

Sources:

   1. Title: Annals of the House of Hannover
      Author: Sir Andrew Halliday, M.D., F. R. S. E.
      Publication: William Sams, Royal Library, St. James Street, London 1826

      Author is listed as Fellow of the Royal Society of Gottingen, knight of the Order of Guelph, Licentiate of the College of Physicians, and Domestic Physician to H.B.H. the Duke of Clarence.
      Note: ABBR Annals of the House of Hannover
      Page: 30
      Text: QUAY 3
   2. Title: Annals of the House of Hannover
      Author: Sir Andrew Halliday, M.D., F. R. S. E.
      Publication: William Sams, Royal Library, St. James Street, London 1826

      Author is listed as Fellow of the Royal Society of Gottingen, knight of the Order of Guelph, Licentiate of the College of Physicians, and Domestic Physician to H.B.H. the Duke of Clarence.
      Note: ABBR Annals of the House of Hannover
      Page: 31
      Text: QUAY 3
   3. Title: Annals of the House of Hannover
      Author: Sir Andrew Halliday, M.D., F. R. S. E.
      Publication: William Sams, Royal Library, St. James Street, London 1826

      Author is listed as Fellow of the Royal Society of Gottingen, knight of the Order of Guelph, Licentiate of the College of Physicians, and Domestic Physician to H.B.H. the Duke of Clarence.
      Note: ABBR Annals of the House of Hannover
      Page: 437
      Text: QUAY 3
   4. Title: Human Family Project
      Author: Mary Slawson, Chair
      Publication: Copyright January 2006
      Note: ABBR Human Family Project 
D. 0590 Uligagus the Welf See Quercitanus Script. Fransic. tom. 1, p. 871; Rumiastus in his Appendix to the history of Gregory of Tours

---

Sources:

   1. Title: Annals of the House of Hannover
      Author: Sir Andrew Halliday, M.D., F. R. S. E.
      Publication: William Sams, Royal Library, St. James Street, London 1826

      Author is listed as Fellow of the Royal Society of Gottingen, knight of the Order of Guelph, Licentiate of the College of Physicians, and Domestic Physician to H.B.H. the Duke of Clarence.
      Note: ABBR Annals of the House of Hannover
      Page: 26
      Text: QUAY 3
   2. Title: Annals of the House of Hannover
      Author: Sir Andrew Halliday, M.D., F. R. S. E.
      Publication: William Sams, Royal Library, St. James Street, London 1826

      Author is listed as Fellow of the Royal Society of Gottingen, knight of the Order of Guelph, Licentiate of the College of Physicians, and Domestic Physician to H.B.H. the Duke of Clarence.
      Note: ABBR Annals of the House of Hannover
      Page: 437
      Text: QUAY 3
   3. Title: Human Family Project
      Author: Mary Slawson, Chair
      Publication: Copyright January 2006
      Note: ABBR Human Family Project 
D. 0560 Olfigandus the Welf see also Procopius of Gaza Annals of the Gothic War, b. iii. iv. Anglo-Saxon Chronicle A. D. 547

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Sources:

   1. Title: Annals of the House of Hannover
      Author: Sir Andrew Halliday, M.D., F. R. S. E.
      Publication: William Sams, Royal Library, St. James Street, London 1826

      Author is listed as Fellow of the Royal Society of Gottingen, knight of the Order of Guelph, Licentiate of the College of Physicians, and Domestic Physician to H.B.H. the Duke of Clarence.
      Note: ABBR Annals of the House of Hannover
      Page: 437
      Text: QUAY 3
   2. Title: Human Family Project
      Author: Mary Slawson, Chair
      Publication: Copyright January 2006
      Note: ABBR Human Family Project 
D. 0489 Anulphus the Welf Sources:

   1. Title: Human Family Project
      Author: Mary Slawson, Chair
      Publication: Copyright January 2006
      Note: ABBR Human Family Project 
D. 0456 Edecon of the Skirians Odoacer of the Skirians 0233 Winta Odinsson of Asgard Sources:

   1. Title: Human Family Project
      Author: Mary Slawson, Chair
      Publication: Copyright January 2006
      Note: ABBR Human Family Project 
Judith 0249 Seaxneat Odinsson of Asgard Gesecg 0809 Genna 0638 ingen Beli 0887 - 0965 Arnolph of Flanders 78 78 0937 - 0970 Elisende de Flanders 33 33 0863 - 0924 Bertha of Lorraine 61 61 Vere D' Anjou Dragon
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