- Father: William ORMESBY
- Mother: Agnes DE CALEY
- Birth: 1180, Ormesby, , North Yorkshire, England
- Death: 1288, Ormsby, Caistor Saint Edmunds, Norfolk, England
Ancestors of Berga ORMESBY
/-William ORMESBY
Berga ORMESBY
| /-Hugh CALEY
\-Agnes DE CALEY
- Birth: 1150, Ormesby, , North Yorkshire, England
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
- Partnership with: Agnes DE CALEY
Marriage: 1170, Ormesby, , North Yorkshire, England
Marriage: ABT 1198, Ormesby, Norfolk, England
- Child: Anabell ORMESBY Birth: 1176, Ormesby, , North Yorkshire, England
- Child: Berga ORMESBY Birth: 1180, Ormesby, , North Yorkshire, England
Descendants of William ORMESBY
1 William ORMESBY
=Agnes DE CALEY Marriage: 1170, Ormesby, , North Yorkshire, England Marriage: ABT 1198, Ormesby, Norfolk, England
2 Anabell ORMESBY
=Nicholas CLERE Marriage: 1196, Ormsby, Caistor Saint Edmunds, Norfolk, England
3 William CLERE
=Katherine SNEKE Marriage: 1220, Caistor Saint Edmunds, Norfolk, England, United Kingdom
2 Berga ORMESBY
- Occupation: Prince of Armenia
- Fact: Satrap: a provincial governor in the ancient Persian empire.
- Death: ABT 243 BC, Commagene, Armenia
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Descendants of Samos I ORONTID
1 Samos I ORONTID
=(Unknown)
2 Arsamos I of ARMENIA
=Antiochis II DE SYRIE
3 Mithrenes II BEN ARSAMES I, High Priest
3 Xerxes I of ARMENIA
=Antiochis III SELEUCIDE DE SYRIE-DE PONT EUXIN Marriage: ABT 211 BC
3 Ervand Orontes IV of COMMAGENE
=(Unknown)
Ancestors of Aka II ORONTIDES
/-Samos I ORONTID
/-Arsamos I of ARMENIA
/-Ervand Orontes IV of COMMAGENE
| | /-Phriapites of the PARNI
| | /-Arsaces I of PARTHIA
| \-Antiochis II DE SYRIE
| \-Unknown Spouse of Arsaces of PARTHIA
/-Ptolemy I of COMMAGENE
/-Samos I of COMMAGENE
| \-Apama OF BITHYNIEN
/-Mithridates KALLINIKOS I
| | /-Mithridates V Euregetes af Pontus
| \-Pythodoris of PONTUS
| \-Dronning Laodice V af Pontus
/-Antiochos THÉOS OF COMMAGENE I
| | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | /-Seleucus IV of the SELEUCID
| | | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | /-Demetrius I of MACEDON
| | | | /-Antigonus II Gonatas of MACEDON
| | | | /-Demetrius II Aetolicus of MACEDONIA
| | | | /-Philip V of MACEDONIA
| | | | | | /-Alexander II of EPIRUS
| | | | | \-Phthia of EPIRUS
| | | | | \-Olympias II of EPIRUS
| | | \-Laodice IV of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Polycrates of ARGOS
| | | | /-Mnasiadas of ARGOS
| | | | | \-Zeuxo of CYRENE
| | | \-Polycrateia of ARGOS
| | /-Demetrius II son of Demetrius I of MACEDON
| | | | /-Demetrius I Poliorcetes King of MACEDONIA
| | | | /-Antigonus II Gonatas of MACEDON
| | | | | \-Phila I of MACEDONIA
| | | | /-Demetrius II Aetolicus of MACEDONIA
| | | | /-Philip V of MACEDONIA
| | | | | | /-Pyrrhus I des Eacodes DE THRACE
| | | | | | /-Alexander II of EPIRUS
| | | | | | | \-Lanassa SYRACUSE
| | | | | \-Phthia of EPIRUS
| | | | | | /-Pyrrhus I des Eacodes DE THRACE
| | | | | \-Olympias II of EPIRUS
| | | | | \-Antigone of MACEDONIA
| | | \-Laodice MACEDONIA IV
| | | | /-Polycrates of ARGOS
| | | | /-Mnasiadas of ARGOS
| | | | | \-Zeuxo of CYRENE
| | | \-Laodice III of PONTUS
| | /-Antiochus VIII Grypos of SYRIA
| | | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | | /-Ptolemy IV of EGYPT
| | | | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | | | /-Ptolemy V EPIPHANES
| | | | | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | | | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | | | \-Arsinoe III BAR PTOLEMY III of Egypt
| | | | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | | | /-Ptolemy VI of EGYPT
| | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | | | | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | | | | | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Cleopatra I of Syria
| | | | | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | | | | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Cleopatra Thea EUETERIA
| | | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | | /-Ptolemy IV of EGYPT
| | | | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | | | /-Ptolemy V EPIPHANES
| | | | | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | | | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | | | \-Arsinoe III BAR PTOLEMY III of Egypt
| | | | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | | \-Cleopatra II EPIPHINES
| | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | | | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Cleopatra I of Syria
| | | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| \-Laodice VII Thea Philadelphus of COMMAGENE
| | /-Ptolemy of EGYPT
| | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | \-Berenice I of MACEDONIA
| | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | /-Lysimachus of THRACE
| | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | \-Nikaia DE MACEDOINE
| | /-Ptolemy IV of EGYPT
| | | | /-Philip of Macedonia CYRENE
| | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | | \-Berenice I of MACEDONIA
| | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | /-Ptolemy V EPIPHANES
| | | | /-Ptolemy of EGYPT
| | | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | | | \-Berenice I of MACEDONIA
| | | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | | | /-Lysimachus of THRACE
| | | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | | | \-Nikaia DE MACEDOINE
| | | \-Arsinoe III BAR PTOLEMY III of Egypt
| | | | /-Philip of Macedonia CYRENE
| | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | | \-Berenice I of MACEDONIA
| | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | /-Ptolemy VI of EGYPT
| | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | | | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Achaeus Army of SYRIA
| | | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas de Macedoine DE MACÉDOINE
| | | \-Cleopatra I of Syria
| | | | /-Mithridates I of PONTUS
| | | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | | \-Arrhina of CIOS
| | | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | | /-Achaeus Army of SYRIA
| | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas de Macedoine DE MACÉDOINE
| \-Tryphaena of EGYPT
| | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | /-Ptolemy IV of EGYPT
| | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | /-Ptolemy V EPIPHANES
| | | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | \-Arsinoe III BAR PTOLEMY III of Egypt
| | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | /-Ptolemy VIII PHYSCON
| | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | | | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Cleopatra I of Syria
| | | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| \-Cleopatra III EUERGETES
| | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | /-Ptolemy IV of EGYPT
| | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | /-Ptolemy V EPIPHANES
| | | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | \-Arsinoe III BAR PTOLEMY III of Egypt
| | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| \-Cleopatra II EPIPHINES
| | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| \-Cleopatra I of Syria
| | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
/-Mithridates II of COMMAGENE
| | /-Ariobarzanes I of CAPPADOCIA
| \-Isias PHILOSTORGO OF CAPPADOCIA
| | /-Pharnaces father of Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | \-Nysa spouse of PHARNACES
| | /-Pharnaces I of PONTUS
| | | | /-Seleucus I of SYRIA
| | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Apama I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Demetrius I Poliorcetes King of MACEDONIA
| | | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | | \-Phila I of MACEDONIA
| | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | | /-Achaeus Army of SYRIA
| | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas de Macedoine DE MACÉDOINE
| | /-Mithradates V Euergetes of PONTUS
| | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | | | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Antiochus IV of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | | | | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Nysa of PONTUS
| | | | /-Antigonus II Gonatas of MACEDON
| | | | /-Demetrius II Aetolicus of MACEDONIA
| | | | /-Philip V of MACEDONIA
| | | | | | /-Alexander II of EPIRUS
| | | | | \-Phthia of EPIRUS
| | | | | \-Olympias II of EPIRUS
| | | \-Laodice IV of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Polycrates of ARGOS
| | | | /-Mnasiadas of ARGOS
| | | | | \-Zeuxo of CYRENE
| | | \-Polycrateia of ARGOS
| | /-Mithradates VI of PONTUS
| | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | | | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Achaeus Army of SYRIA
| | | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas de Macedoine DE MACÉDOINE
| | | | /-Antiochus IV of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Mithridates I of PONTUS
| | | | | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | | | | \-Arrhina of CIOS
| | | | | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | | | | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | | | | /-Achaeus Army of SYRIA
| | | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas de Macedoine DE MACÉDOINE
| | | \-Laodice VI of Seleucids
| | | | /-Demetrius I Poliorcetes King of MACEDONIA
| | | | /-Antigonus II Gonatas of MACEDON
| | | | | \-Phila I of MACEDONIA
| | | | /-Demetrius II Aetolicus of MACEDONIA
| | | | /-Philip V of MACEDONIA
| | | | | | /-Pyrrhus I des Eacodes DE THRACE
| | | | | | /-Alexander II of EPIRUS
| | | | | | | \-Lanassa SYRACUSE
| | | | | \-Phthia of EPIRUS
| | | | | | /-Pyrrhus I des Eacodes DE THRACE
| | | | | \-Olympias II of EPIRUS
| | | | | \-Antigone of MACEDONIA
| | | \-Laodice IV tou SYRIA
| | | | /-Polycrates of ARGOS
| | | | /-Mnasiadas of ARGOS
| | | | | \-Zeuxo of CYRENE
| | | \-Polycrateia of ARGOS
| \-Athenais I Philostorgos of CAPPADOCIA
| | /-Seleucus I of SYRIA
| | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Apama I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Demetrius I Poliorcetes King of MACEDONIA
| | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | \-Phila I of MACEDONIA
| | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Seleucus I of SYRIA
| | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Apama I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Demetrius I Poliorcetes King of MACEDONIA
| | | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | | \-Phila I of MACEDONIA
| | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Achaeus Army of SYRIA
| | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas de Macedoine DE MACÉDOINE
| | /-Antiochus IV of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Mithradates I of CIUS
| | | | /-Mithridates I of PONTUS
| | | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | | \-Arrhina of CIOS
| | | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | | /-Seleucus I of SYRIA
| | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Apama I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Demetrius I Poliorcetes King of MACEDONIA
| | | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | | \-Phila I of MACEDONIA
| | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | | /-Achaeus Army of SYRIA
| | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas de Macedoine DE MACÉDOINE
| \-Laodice de Pont EUXIN
| | /-Demetrius I Poliorcetes King of MACEDONIA
| | /-Antigonus II Gonatas of MACEDON
| | | | /-Antipater I of MACEDONIA
| | | \-Phila I of MACEDONIA
| | /-Demetrius II Aetolicus of MACEDONIA
| | /-Philip V of MACEDONIA
| | | | /-Aecides of EPIRUS
| | | | /-Pyrrhus I des Eacodes DE THRACE
| | | | | \-Phthia DE THRACE
| | | | /-Alexander II of EPIRUS
| | | | | | /-Agathocles of SYRACUSE
| | | | | \-Lanassa SYRACUSE
| | | | | \-Alcia of SYRACUSE
| | | \-Phthia of EPIRUS
| | | | /-Aecides of EPIRUS
| | | | /-Pyrrhus I des Eacodes DE THRACE
| | | | | \-Phthia DE THRACE
| | | \-Olympias II of EPIRUS
| | | | /-Philip of Macedonia CYRENE
| | | \-Antigone of MACEDONIA
| | | \-Berenice I of MACEDONIA
| \-Laodice IV tou SYRIA
| | /-Polycrates of ARGOS
| | /-Mnasiadas of ARGOS
| | | \-Zeuxo of CYRENE
| \-Polycrateia of ARGOS
/-Mithridates III of COMMAGENE
| \-sister of Mithridates II COMMAGENE
Aka II ORONTIDES
| /-Ariobarzanes I of Media ATROPATENE
| /-Artavasdes I of Media ATROPATENE
\-Iotapa of COMMAGENE
| /-Samos I ORONTID
| /-Arsamos I of ARMENIA
| /-Ervand Orontes IV of COMMAGENE
| | | /-Phriapites of the PARNI
| | | /-Arsaces I of PARTHIA
| | \-Antiochis II DE SYRIE
| | \-Unknown Spouse of Arsaces of PARTHIA
| /-Ptolemy I of COMMAGENE
| /-Samos I of COMMAGENE
| | \-Apama OF BITHYNIEN
| /-Mithridates KALLINIKOS I
| | | /-Mithridates V Euregetes af Pontus
| | \-Pythodoris of PONTUS
| | \-Dronning Laodice V af Pontus
| /-Antiochos THÉOS OF COMMAGENE I
| | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /-Seleucus IV of the SELEUCID
| | | | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | | | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /-Demetrius I of MACEDON
| | | | | /-Antigonus II Gonatas of MACEDON
| | | | | /-Demetrius II Aetolicus of MACEDONIA
| | | | | /-Philip V of MACEDONIA
| | | | | | | /-Alexander II of EPIRUS
| | | | | | \-Phthia of EPIRUS
| | | | | | \-Olympias II of EPIRUS
| | | | \-Laodice IV of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Polycrates of ARGOS
| | | | | /-Mnasiadas of ARGOS
| | | | | | \-Zeuxo of CYRENE
| | | | \-Polycrateia of ARGOS
| | | /-Demetrius II son of Demetrius I of MACEDON
| | | | | /-Demetrius I Poliorcetes King of MACEDONIA
| | | | | /-Antigonus II Gonatas of MACEDON
| | | | | | \-Phila I of MACEDONIA
| | | | | /-Demetrius II Aetolicus of MACEDONIA
| | | | | /-Philip V of MACEDONIA
| | | | | | | /-Pyrrhus I des Eacodes DE THRACE
| | | | | | | /-Alexander II of EPIRUS
| | | | | | | | \-Lanassa SYRACUSE
| | | | | | \-Phthia of EPIRUS
| | | | | | | /-Pyrrhus I des Eacodes DE THRACE
| | | | | | \-Olympias II of EPIRUS
| | | | | | \-Antigone of MACEDONIA
| | | | \-Laodice MACEDONIA IV
| | | | | /-Polycrates of ARGOS
| | | | | /-Mnasiadas of ARGOS
| | | | | | \-Zeuxo of CYRENE
| | | | \-Laodice III of PONTUS
| | | /-Antiochus VIII Grypos of SYRIA
| | | | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | | | /-Ptolemy IV of EGYPT
| | | | | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | | | | /-Ptolemy V EPIPHANES
| | | | | | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | | | | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | | | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | | | | \-Arsinoe III BAR PTOLEMY III of Egypt
| | | | | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | | | | /-Ptolemy VI of EGYPT
| | | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | | | | | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | | | | | | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | \-Cleopatra I of Syria
| | | | | | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | | | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | | | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | | | | | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Cleopatra Thea EUETERIA
| | | | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | | | /-Ptolemy IV of EGYPT
| | | | | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | | | | /-Ptolemy V EPIPHANES
| | | | | | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | | | | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | | | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | | | | \-Arsinoe III BAR PTOLEMY III of Egypt
| | | | | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | | | \-Cleopatra II EPIPHINES
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | | | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Cleopatra I of Syria
| | | | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | | | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | \-Laodice VII Thea Philadelphus of COMMAGENE
| | | /-Ptolemy of EGYPT
| | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | | \-Berenice I of MACEDONIA
| | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | | /-Lysimachus of THRACE
| | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | | \-Nikaia DE MACEDOINE
| | | /-Ptolemy IV of EGYPT
| | | | | /-Philip of Macedonia CYRENE
| | | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | | | \-Berenice I of MACEDONIA
| | | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | /-Ptolemy V EPIPHANES
| | | | | /-Ptolemy of EGYPT
| | | | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | | | | \-Berenice I of MACEDONIA
| | | | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | | | | /-Lysimachus of THRACE
| | | | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | | | | \-Nikaia DE MACEDOINE
| | | | \-Arsinoe III BAR PTOLEMY III of Egypt
| | | | | /-Philip of Macedonia CYRENE
| | | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | | | \-Berenice I of MACEDONIA
| | | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | /-Ptolemy VI of EGYPT
| | | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | | | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | /-Achaeus Army of SYRIA
| | | | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas de Macedoine DE MACÉDOINE
| | | | \-Cleopatra I of Syria
| | | | | /-Mithridates I of PONTUS
| | | | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | | | \-Arrhina of CIOS
| | | | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | | | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | | | /-Achaeus Army of SYRIA
| | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas de Macedoine DE MACÉDOINE
| | \-Tryphaena of EGYPT
| | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | /-Ptolemy IV of EGYPT
| | | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | | /-Ptolemy V EPIPHANES
| | | | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | | \-Arsinoe III BAR PTOLEMY III of Egypt
| | | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | | /-Ptolemy VIII PHYSCON
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | | | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Cleopatra I of Syria
| | | | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | | | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | \-Cleopatra III EUERGETES
| | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | /-Ptolemy IV of EGYPT
| | | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | | /-Ptolemy V EPIPHANES
| | | | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | | \-Arsinoe III BAR PTOLEMY III of Egypt
| | | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | \-Cleopatra II EPIPHINES
| | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | \-Cleopatra I of Syria
| | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
\-Laodice of the Parthian EMPIRE
| /-Ariobarzanes I of CAPPADOCIA
\-Isias PHILOSTORGO OF CAPPADOCIA
| /-Pharnaces father of Mithridates II of PONTUS
| /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | \-Nysa spouse of PHARNACES
| /-Pharnaces I of PONTUS
| | | /-Seleucus I of SYRIA
| | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Apama I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Demetrius I Poliorcetes King of MACEDONIA
| | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | \-Phila I of MACEDONIA
| | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | /-Achaeus Army of SYRIA
| | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas de Macedoine DE MACÉDOINE
| /-Mithradates V Euergetes of PONTUS
| | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /-Antiochus IV of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | | | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | \-Nysa of PONTUS
| | | /-Antigonus II Gonatas of MACEDON
| | | /-Demetrius II Aetolicus of MACEDONIA
| | | /-Philip V of MACEDONIA
| | | | | /-Alexander II of EPIRUS
| | | | \-Phthia of EPIRUS
| | | | \-Olympias II of EPIRUS
| | \-Laodice IV of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /-Polycrates of ARGOS
| | | /-Mnasiadas of ARGOS
| | | | \-Zeuxo of CYRENE
| | \-Polycrateia of ARGOS
| /-Mithradates VI of PONTUS
| | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Achaeus Army of SYRIA
| | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas de Macedoine DE MACÉDOINE
| | | /-Antiochus IV of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Mithridates I of PONTUS
| | | | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | | | \-Arrhina of CIOS
| | | | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | | | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | | | /-Achaeus Army of SYRIA
| | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas de Macedoine DE MACÉDOINE
| | \-Laodice VI of Seleucids
| | | /-Demetrius I Poliorcetes King of MACEDONIA
| | | /-Antigonus II Gonatas of MACEDON
| | | | \-Phila I of MACEDONIA
| | | /-Demetrius II Aetolicus of MACEDONIA
| | | /-Philip V of MACEDONIA
| | | | | /-Pyrrhus I des Eacodes DE THRACE
| | | | | /-Alexander II of EPIRUS
| | | | | | \-Lanassa SYRACUSE
| | | | \-Phthia of EPIRUS
| | | | | /-Pyrrhus I des Eacodes DE THRACE
| | | | \-Olympias II of EPIRUS
| | | | \-Antigone of MACEDONIA
| | \-Laodice IV tou SYRIA
| | | /-Polycrates of ARGOS
| | | /-Mnasiadas of ARGOS
| | | | \-Zeuxo of CYRENE
| | \-Polycrateia of ARGOS
\-Athenais I Philostorgos of CAPPADOCIA
| /-Seleucus I of SYRIA
| /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | \-Apama I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /-Demetrius I Poliorcetes King of MACEDONIA
| | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | \-Phila I of MACEDONIA
| /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | \-Laodice SYRIA
| /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /-Seleucus I of SYRIA
| | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Apama I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Demetrius I Poliorcetes King of MACEDONIA
| | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | \-Phila I of MACEDONIA
| | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /-Achaeus Army of SYRIA
| | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas de Macedoine DE MACÉDOINE
| /-Antiochus IV of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /-Mithradates I of CIUS
| | | /-Mithridates I of PONTUS
| | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | \-Arrhina of CIOS
| | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | /-Seleucus I of SYRIA
| | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Apama I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Demetrius I Poliorcetes King of MACEDONIA
| | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | \-Phila I of MACEDONIA
| | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | /-Achaeus Army of SYRIA
| | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas de Macedoine DE MACÉDOINE
\-Laodice de Pont EUXIN
| /-Demetrius I Poliorcetes King of MACEDONIA
| /-Antigonus II Gonatas of MACEDON
| | | /-Antipater I of MACEDONIA
| | \-Phila I of MACEDONIA
| /-Demetrius II Aetolicus of MACEDONIA
| /-Philip V of MACEDONIA
| | | /-Aecides of EPIRUS
| | | /-Pyrrhus I des Eacodes DE THRACE
| | | | \-Phthia DE THRACE
| | | /-Alexander II of EPIRUS
| | | | | /-Agathocles of SYRACUSE
| | | | \-Lanassa SYRACUSE
| | | | \-Alcia of SYRACUSE
| | \-Phthia of EPIRUS
| | | /-Aecides of EPIRUS
| | | /-Pyrrhus I des Eacodes DE THRACE
| | | | \-Phthia DE THRACE
| | \-Olympias II of EPIRUS
| | | /-Philip of Macedonia CYRENE
| | \-Antigone of MACEDONIA
| | \-Berenice I of MACEDONIA
\-Laodice IV tou SYRIA
| /-Polycrates of ARGOS
| /-Mnasiadas of ARGOS
| | \-Zeuxo of CYRENE
\-Polycrateia of ARGOS
Ancestors of Antiochos III ORONTIDES
/-Samos I ORONTID
/-Arsamos I of ARMENIA
/-Ervand Orontes IV of COMMAGENE
| | /-Phriapites of the PARNI
| | /-Arsaces I of PARTHIA
| \-Antiochis II DE SYRIE
| \-Unknown Spouse of Arsaces of PARTHIA
/-Ptolemy I of COMMAGENE
/-Samos I of COMMAGENE
| \-Apama OF BITHYNIEN
/-Mithridates KALLINIKOS I
| | /-Mithridates V Euregetes af Pontus
| \-Pythodoris of PONTUS
| \-Dronning Laodice V af Pontus
/-Antiochos THÉOS OF COMMAGENE I
| | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | /-Seleucus IV of the SELEUCID
| | | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | /-Demetrius I of MACEDON
| | | | /-Antigonus II Gonatas of MACEDON
| | | | /-Demetrius II Aetolicus of MACEDONIA
| | | | /-Philip V of MACEDONIA
| | | | | | /-Alexander II of EPIRUS
| | | | | \-Phthia of EPIRUS
| | | | | \-Olympias II of EPIRUS
| | | \-Laodice IV of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Polycrates of ARGOS
| | | | /-Mnasiadas of ARGOS
| | | | | \-Zeuxo of CYRENE
| | | \-Polycrateia of ARGOS
| | /-Demetrius II son of Demetrius I of MACEDON
| | | | /-Demetrius I Poliorcetes King of MACEDONIA
| | | | /-Antigonus II Gonatas of MACEDON
| | | | | \-Phila I of MACEDONIA
| | | | /-Demetrius II Aetolicus of MACEDONIA
| | | | /-Philip V of MACEDONIA
| | | | | | /-Pyrrhus I des Eacodes DE THRACE
| | | | | | /-Alexander II of EPIRUS
| | | | | | | \-Lanassa SYRACUSE
| | | | | \-Phthia of EPIRUS
| | | | | | /-Pyrrhus I des Eacodes DE THRACE
| | | | | \-Olympias II of EPIRUS
| | | | | \-Antigone of MACEDONIA
| | | \-Laodice MACEDONIA IV
| | | | /-Polycrates of ARGOS
| | | | /-Mnasiadas of ARGOS
| | | | | \-Zeuxo of CYRENE
| | | \-Laodice III of PONTUS
| | /-Antiochus VIII Grypos of SYRIA
| | | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | | /-Ptolemy IV of EGYPT
| | | | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | | | /-Ptolemy V EPIPHANES
| | | | | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | | | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | | | \-Arsinoe III BAR PTOLEMY III of Egypt
| | | | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | | | /-Ptolemy VI of EGYPT
| | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | | | | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | | | | | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Cleopatra I of Syria
| | | | | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | | | | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Cleopatra Thea EUETERIA
| | | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | | /-Ptolemy IV of EGYPT
| | | | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | | | /-Ptolemy V EPIPHANES
| | | | | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | | | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | | | \-Arsinoe III BAR PTOLEMY III of Egypt
| | | | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | | \-Cleopatra II EPIPHINES
| | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | | | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Cleopatra I of Syria
| | | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| \-Laodice VII Thea Philadelphus of COMMAGENE
| | /-Ptolemy of EGYPT
| | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | \-Berenice I of MACEDONIA
| | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | /-Lysimachus of THRACE
| | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | \-Nikaia DE MACEDOINE
| | /-Ptolemy IV of EGYPT
| | | | /-Philip of Macedonia CYRENE
| | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | | \-Berenice I of MACEDONIA
| | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | /-Ptolemy V EPIPHANES
| | | | /-Ptolemy of EGYPT
| | | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | | | \-Berenice I of MACEDONIA
| | | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | | | /-Lysimachus of THRACE
| | | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | | | \-Nikaia DE MACEDOINE
| | | \-Arsinoe III BAR PTOLEMY III of Egypt
| | | | /-Philip of Macedonia CYRENE
| | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | | \-Berenice I of MACEDONIA
| | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | /-Ptolemy VI of EGYPT
| | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | | | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Achaeus Army of SYRIA
| | | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas de Macedoine DE MACÉDOINE
| | | \-Cleopatra I of Syria
| | | | /-Mithridates I of PONTUS
| | | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | | \-Arrhina of CIOS
| | | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | | /-Achaeus Army of SYRIA
| | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas de Macedoine DE MACÉDOINE
| \-Tryphaena of EGYPT
| | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | /-Ptolemy IV of EGYPT
| | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | /-Ptolemy V EPIPHANES
| | | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | \-Arsinoe III BAR PTOLEMY III of Egypt
| | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | /-Ptolemy VIII PHYSCON
| | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | | | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Cleopatra I of Syria
| | | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| \-Cleopatra III EUERGETES
| | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | /-Ptolemy IV of EGYPT
| | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | /-Ptolemy V EPIPHANES
| | | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | \-Arsinoe III BAR PTOLEMY III of Egypt
| | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| \-Cleopatra II EPIPHINES
| | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| \-Cleopatra I of Syria
| | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
/-Mithridates II of COMMAGENE
| | /-Ariobarzanes I of CAPPADOCIA
| \-Isias PHILOSTORGO OF CAPPADOCIA
| | /-Pharnaces father of Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | \-Nysa spouse of PHARNACES
| | /-Pharnaces I of PONTUS
| | | | /-Seleucus I of SYRIA
| | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Apama I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Demetrius I Poliorcetes King of MACEDONIA
| | | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | | \-Phila I of MACEDONIA
| | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | | /-Achaeus Army of SYRIA
| | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas de Macedoine DE MACÉDOINE
| | /-Mithradates V Euergetes of PONTUS
| | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | | | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Antiochus IV of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | | | | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Nysa of PONTUS
| | | | /-Antigonus II Gonatas of MACEDON
| | | | /-Demetrius II Aetolicus of MACEDONIA
| | | | /-Philip V of MACEDONIA
| | | | | | /-Alexander II of EPIRUS
| | | | | \-Phthia of EPIRUS
| | | | | \-Olympias II of EPIRUS
| | | \-Laodice IV of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Polycrates of ARGOS
| | | | /-Mnasiadas of ARGOS
| | | | | \-Zeuxo of CYRENE
| | | \-Polycrateia of ARGOS
| | /-Mithradates VI of PONTUS
| | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | | | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Achaeus Army of SYRIA
| | | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas de Macedoine DE MACÉDOINE
| | | | /-Antiochus IV of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Mithridates I of PONTUS
| | | | | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | | | | \-Arrhina of CIOS
| | | | | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | | | | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | | | | /-Achaeus Army of SYRIA
| | | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas de Macedoine DE MACÉDOINE
| | | \-Laodice VI of Seleucids
| | | | /-Demetrius I Poliorcetes King of MACEDONIA
| | | | /-Antigonus II Gonatas of MACEDON
| | | | | \-Phila I of MACEDONIA
| | | | /-Demetrius II Aetolicus of MACEDONIA
| | | | /-Philip V of MACEDONIA
| | | | | | /-Pyrrhus I des Eacodes DE THRACE
| | | | | | /-Alexander II of EPIRUS
| | | | | | | \-Lanassa SYRACUSE
| | | | | \-Phthia of EPIRUS
| | | | | | /-Pyrrhus I des Eacodes DE THRACE
| | | | | \-Olympias II of EPIRUS
| | | | | \-Antigone of MACEDONIA
| | | \-Laodice IV tou SYRIA
| | | | /-Polycrates of ARGOS
| | | | /-Mnasiadas of ARGOS
| | | | | \-Zeuxo of CYRENE
| | | \-Polycrateia of ARGOS
| \-Athenais I Philostorgos of CAPPADOCIA
| | /-Seleucus I of SYRIA
| | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Apama I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Demetrius I Poliorcetes King of MACEDONIA
| | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | \-Phila I of MACEDONIA
| | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Seleucus I of SYRIA
| | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Apama I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Demetrius I Poliorcetes King of MACEDONIA
| | | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | | \-Phila I of MACEDONIA
| | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Achaeus Army of SYRIA
| | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas de Macedoine DE MACÉDOINE
| | /-Antiochus IV of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Mithradates I of CIUS
| | | | /-Mithridates I of PONTUS
| | | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | | \-Arrhina of CIOS
| | | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | | /-Seleucus I of SYRIA
| | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Apama I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Demetrius I Poliorcetes King of MACEDONIA
| | | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | | \-Phila I of MACEDONIA
| | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | | /-Achaeus Army of SYRIA
| | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas de Macedoine DE MACÉDOINE
| \-Laodice de Pont EUXIN
| | /-Demetrius I Poliorcetes King of MACEDONIA
| | /-Antigonus II Gonatas of MACEDON
| | | | /-Antipater I of MACEDONIA
| | | \-Phila I of MACEDONIA
| | /-Demetrius II Aetolicus of MACEDONIA
| | /-Philip V of MACEDONIA
| | | | /-Aecides of EPIRUS
| | | | /-Pyrrhus I des Eacodes DE THRACE
| | | | | \-Phthia DE THRACE
| | | | /-Alexander II of EPIRUS
| | | | | | /-Agathocles of SYRACUSE
| | | | | \-Lanassa SYRACUSE
| | | | | \-Alcia of SYRACUSE
| | | \-Phthia of EPIRUS
| | | | /-Aecides of EPIRUS
| | | | /-Pyrrhus I des Eacodes DE THRACE
| | | | | \-Phthia DE THRACE
| | | \-Olympias II of EPIRUS
| | | | /-Philip of Macedonia CYRENE
| | | \-Antigone of MACEDONIA
| | | \-Berenice I of MACEDONIA
| \-Laodice IV tou SYRIA
| | /-Polycrates of ARGOS
| | /-Mnasiadas of ARGOS
| | | \-Zeuxo of CYRENE
| \-Polycrateia of ARGOS
/-Mithridates III of COMMAGENE
| \-sister of Mithridates II COMMAGENE
Antiochos III ORONTIDES
| /-Ariobarzanes I of Media ATROPATENE
| /-Artavasdes I of Media ATROPATENE
\-Iotapa of COMMAGENE
| /-Samos I ORONTID
| /-Arsamos I of ARMENIA
| /-Ervand Orontes IV of COMMAGENE
| | | /-Phriapites of the PARNI
| | | /-Arsaces I of PARTHIA
| | \-Antiochis II DE SYRIE
| | \-Unknown Spouse of Arsaces of PARTHIA
| /-Ptolemy I of COMMAGENE
| /-Samos I of COMMAGENE
| | \-Apama OF BITHYNIEN
| /-Mithridates KALLINIKOS I
| | | /-Mithridates V Euregetes af Pontus
| | \-Pythodoris of PONTUS
| | \-Dronning Laodice V af Pontus
| /-Antiochos THÉOS OF COMMAGENE I
| | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /-Seleucus IV of the SELEUCID
| | | | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | | | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /-Demetrius I of MACEDON
| | | | | /-Antigonus II Gonatas of MACEDON
| | | | | /-Demetrius II Aetolicus of MACEDONIA
| | | | | /-Philip V of MACEDONIA
| | | | | | | /-Alexander II of EPIRUS
| | | | | | \-Phthia of EPIRUS
| | | | | | \-Olympias II of EPIRUS
| | | | \-Laodice IV of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Polycrates of ARGOS
| | | | | /-Mnasiadas of ARGOS
| | | | | | \-Zeuxo of CYRENE
| | | | \-Polycrateia of ARGOS
| | | /-Demetrius II son of Demetrius I of MACEDON
| | | | | /-Demetrius I Poliorcetes King of MACEDONIA
| | | | | /-Antigonus II Gonatas of MACEDON
| | | | | | \-Phila I of MACEDONIA
| | | | | /-Demetrius II Aetolicus of MACEDONIA
| | | | | /-Philip V of MACEDONIA
| | | | | | | /-Pyrrhus I des Eacodes DE THRACE
| | | | | | | /-Alexander II of EPIRUS
| | | | | | | | \-Lanassa SYRACUSE
| | | | | | \-Phthia of EPIRUS
| | | | | | | /-Pyrrhus I des Eacodes DE THRACE
| | | | | | \-Olympias II of EPIRUS
| | | | | | \-Antigone of MACEDONIA
| | | | \-Laodice MACEDONIA IV
| | | | | /-Polycrates of ARGOS
| | | | | /-Mnasiadas of ARGOS
| | | | | | \-Zeuxo of CYRENE
| | | | \-Laodice III of PONTUS
| | | /-Antiochus VIII Grypos of SYRIA
| | | | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | | | /-Ptolemy IV of EGYPT
| | | | | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | | | | /-Ptolemy V EPIPHANES
| | | | | | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | | | | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | | | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | | | | \-Arsinoe III BAR PTOLEMY III of Egypt
| | | | | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | | | | /-Ptolemy VI of EGYPT
| | | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | | | | | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | | | | | | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | \-Cleopatra I of Syria
| | | | | | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | | | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | | | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | | | | | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Cleopatra Thea EUETERIA
| | | | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | | | /-Ptolemy IV of EGYPT
| | | | | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | | | | /-Ptolemy V EPIPHANES
| | | | | | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | | | | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | | | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | | | | \-Arsinoe III BAR PTOLEMY III of Egypt
| | | | | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | | | \-Cleopatra II EPIPHINES
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | | | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Cleopatra I of Syria
| | | | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | | | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | \-Laodice VII Thea Philadelphus of COMMAGENE
| | | /-Ptolemy of EGYPT
| | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | | \-Berenice I of MACEDONIA
| | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | | /-Lysimachus of THRACE
| | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | | \-Nikaia DE MACEDOINE
| | | /-Ptolemy IV of EGYPT
| | | | | /-Philip of Macedonia CYRENE
| | | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | | | \-Berenice I of MACEDONIA
| | | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | /-Ptolemy V EPIPHANES
| | | | | /-Ptolemy of EGYPT
| | | | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | | | | \-Berenice I of MACEDONIA
| | | | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | | | | /-Lysimachus of THRACE
| | | | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | | | | \-Nikaia DE MACEDOINE
| | | | \-Arsinoe III BAR PTOLEMY III of Egypt
| | | | | /-Philip of Macedonia CYRENE
| | | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | | | \-Berenice I of MACEDONIA
| | | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | /-Ptolemy VI of EGYPT
| | | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | | | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | /-Achaeus Army of SYRIA
| | | | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas de Macedoine DE MACÉDOINE
| | | | \-Cleopatra I of Syria
| | | | | /-Mithridates I of PONTUS
| | | | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | | | \-Arrhina of CIOS
| | | | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | | | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | | | /-Achaeus Army of SYRIA
| | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas de Macedoine DE MACÉDOINE
| | \-Tryphaena of EGYPT
| | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | /-Ptolemy IV of EGYPT
| | | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | | /-Ptolemy V EPIPHANES
| | | | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | | \-Arsinoe III BAR PTOLEMY III of Egypt
| | | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | | /-Ptolemy VIII PHYSCON
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | | | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Cleopatra I of Syria
| | | | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | | | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | \-Cleopatra III EUERGETES
| | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | /-Ptolemy IV of EGYPT
| | | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | | /-Ptolemy V EPIPHANES
| | | | | /-Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS
| | | | | /-Ptolemy III EUERGATES
| | | | | | \-Arsinoe I of GREECE
| | | | \-Arsinoe III BAR PTOLEMY III of Egypt
| | | | | /-Magas I of CYRENE
| | | | \-Berenice EUERGETIS II
| | | | \-Apama II of CYRENAICA
| | \-Cleopatra II EPIPHINES
| | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | \-Cleopatra I of Syria
| | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
\-Laodice of the Parthian EMPIRE
| /-Ariobarzanes I of CAPPADOCIA
\-Isias PHILOSTORGO OF CAPPADOCIA
| /-Pharnaces father of Mithridates II of PONTUS
| /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | \-Nysa spouse of PHARNACES
| /-Pharnaces I of PONTUS
| | | /-Seleucus I of SYRIA
| | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Apama I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Demetrius I Poliorcetes King of MACEDONIA
| | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | \-Phila I of MACEDONIA
| | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | /-Achaeus Army of SYRIA
| | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas de Macedoine DE MACÉDOINE
| /-Mithradates V Euergetes of PONTUS
| | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /-Antiochus IV of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | | | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | \-Nysa of PONTUS
| | | /-Antigonus II Gonatas of MACEDON
| | | /-Demetrius II Aetolicus of MACEDONIA
| | | /-Philip V of MACEDONIA
| | | | | /-Alexander II of EPIRUS
| | | | \-Phthia of EPIRUS
| | | | \-Olympias II of EPIRUS
| | \-Laodice IV of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /-Polycrates of ARGOS
| | | /-Mnasiadas of ARGOS
| | | | \-Zeuxo of CYRENE
| | \-Polycrateia of ARGOS
| /-Mithradates VI of PONTUS
| | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | | | \-Laodice SYRIA
| | | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Achaeus Army of SYRIA
| | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas de Macedoine DE MACÉDOINE
| | | /-Antiochus IV of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Mithridates I of PONTUS
| | | | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | | | \-Arrhina of CIOS
| | | | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | | | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | | | /-Achaeus Army of SYRIA
| | | | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas de Macedoine DE MACÉDOINE
| | \-Laodice VI of Seleucids
| | | /-Demetrius I Poliorcetes King of MACEDONIA
| | | /-Antigonus II Gonatas of MACEDON
| | | | \-Phila I of MACEDONIA
| | | /-Demetrius II Aetolicus of MACEDONIA
| | | /-Philip V of MACEDONIA
| | | | | /-Pyrrhus I des Eacodes DE THRACE
| | | | | /-Alexander II of EPIRUS
| | | | | | \-Lanassa SYRACUSE
| | | | \-Phthia of EPIRUS
| | | | | /-Pyrrhus I des Eacodes DE THRACE
| | | | \-Olympias II of EPIRUS
| | | | \-Antigone of MACEDONIA
| | \-Laodice IV tou SYRIA
| | | /-Polycrates of ARGOS
| | | /-Mnasiadas of ARGOS
| | | | \-Zeuxo of CYRENE
| | \-Polycrateia of ARGOS
\-Athenais I Philostorgos of CAPPADOCIA
| /-Seleucus I of SYRIA
| /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | \-Apama I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /-Demetrius I Poliorcetes King of MACEDONIA
| | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | \-Phila I of MACEDONIA
| /-Seleucus II, Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche Seleúkeia
| | \-Laodice SYRIA
| /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /-Seleucus I of SYRIA
| | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Apama I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Demetrius I Poliorcetes King of MACEDONIA
| | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | \-Phila I of MACEDONIA
| | \-Laodice II of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /-Achaeus Army of SYRIA
| | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas de Macedoine DE MACÉDOINE
| /-Antiochus IV of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /-Mithradates I of CIUS
| | | /-Mithridates I of PONTUS
| | | /-Artiobarzanes of PONTUS
| | | | \-Arrhina of CIOS
| | | /-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | | | \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | \-Laodice III of the SELEUCID
| | | /-Seleucus I of SYRIA
| | | /-Antiochus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | \-Apama I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /-Antiochus III Theos Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Demetrius I Poliorcetes King of MACEDONIA
| | | | \-Stratonice of SYRIA
| | | | \-Phila I of MACEDONIA
| | \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | | /-Achaeus Army of SYRIA
| | \-Laodice I of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas de Macedoine DE MACÉDOINE
\-Laodice de Pont EUXIN
| /-Demetrius I Poliorcetes King of MACEDONIA
| /-Antigonus II Gonatas of MACEDON
| | | /-Antipater I of MACEDONIA
| | \-Phila I of MACEDONIA
| /-Demetrius II Aetolicus of MACEDONIA
| /-Philip V of MACEDONIA
| | | /-Aecides of EPIRUS
| | | /-Pyrrhus I des Eacodes DE THRACE
| | | | \-Phthia DE THRACE
| | | /-Alexander II of EPIRUS
| | | | | /-Agathocles of SYRACUSE
| | | | \-Lanassa SYRACUSE
| | | | \-Alcia of SYRACUSE
| | \-Phthia of EPIRUS
| | | /-Aecides of EPIRUS
| | | /-Pyrrhus I des Eacodes DE THRACE
| | | | \-Phthia DE THRACE
| | \-Olympias II of EPIRUS
| | | /-Philip of Macedonia CYRENE
| | \-Antigone of MACEDONIA
| | \-Berenice I of MACEDONIA
\-Laodice IV tou SYRIA
| /-Polycrates of ARGOS
| /-Mnasiadas of ARGOS
| | \-Zeuxo of CYRENE
\-Polycrateia of ARGOS
- Birth: 1214, Suffolk, England
- Also known as: Beatrix
- Death: 1278
Descendants of Beatrix spouse of Peter Fitz OSBERT
1 Beatrix spouse of Peter Fitz OSBERT
=Peter FITZ OSBERT Marriage: 1234, Suffolk, England
2 Peter FITZ OSBERT
=Catherine FITZ RALPH
3 Roger FITZOSBERT
3 Alice FITZOSBERT
3 Isabelle Fitz OSBERT
=Walter JERNIGAN Marriage: 1285, Somerleyton, Suffolk, England
=Henry WALPOLE
- Father: Peter FITZ OSBERT
- Mother: Catherine FITZ RALPH
- Birth: 1265, Somerleyton, Suffolk, England
- Also known as: Lady Isabella FitzOsbert
- Burial location: Saint Mary's Catholic Church, Somerleyton, Suffolk, England
- Death: 1311, Somerleyton, Suffolk, England
- Burial: 1311, Somerleyton, Suffolk, England
Ancestors of Isabelle Fitz OSBERT
/-Osbert FITZWILLIAM
/-Roger FITZOSBERT
| \-Petronilla CREVEQUER
/-Peter FITZ OSBERT
| \-Maud spouse of Roger FITZOSBERT
/-Peter FITZ OSBERT
| \-Beatrix spouse of Peter Fitz OSBERT
Isabelle Fitz OSBERT
| /-Ralph FITZ RALPH
\-Catherine FITZ RALPH
Descendants of Isabelle Fitz OSBERT
1 Isabelle Fitz OSBERT
=Walter JERNIGAN Marriage: 1285, Somerleyton, Suffolk, England
2 John de Herling JERNIGAN
2 Piers JERNEGAN
=Alice GERMAYNE Marriage: 1303, Somerleyton, Suffolk, England
=Ellen DE HUNTINGFIELD Marriage: 1304, Waveney, Suffolk, England
3 John I JERNEGAN
=(Unknown)
=Matilda DE HERLING Marriage: 1329, City of London, London, Greater London, England, United Kingdom
=Henry WALPOLE
2 Henry DE WALPOLE
- Father: Thomas OSBORNE
- Birth: ABT 1700, Westmoreland, Virginia, British Colonial America
- _PPEXCLUDE: (Date and Place unknown)
- Death: 14 OCT 1790, Loudoun, Virginia, United States of America
- Burial: 21 SEP 1790, All Saints, Sudbury, Suffolk, England
- Partnership with: John KING
Marriage: 1727, Virginia, British Colonial America
- Child: Hannah KING Birth: Sterling, Loudoun, Virginia, British Colonial America
- Child: Ellender KING Birth: 1724, Augusta, Virginia, British Colonial America
- Child: Elizabeth KING Birth: 1732, Fairfax, Fairfax, Virginia, United States
- Child: Penelope KING Birth: 1735, Westmoreland, Virginia, United States
- Child: Eleanor KING Birth: ABT 1737, Westmoreland, Virginia, British Colonial America
- Child: Mary Frances KING Birth: 1739, Prince William, Virginia, British Colonial America
- Child: William KING Birth: 1740, Marshfield, Massachusetts, British Colonial America
- Child: Osborne KING Birth: 1741, Fairfax County, Virginia, British Colonial America
- Child: Smith KING Birth: 10 OCT 1743, Ashburn, Loudon, Virginia,British Colonial America
- Child: Ann KING Birth: 14 DEC 1744
- Child: John KING Jr. Birth: ABT 1747, Fairfax, Virginia, United States
- Child: Winnifred KING Birth: 16 JUL 1758, , Loudoun, Virginia, British Colonial America
- Child: Sarah KING Birth: Bedford, Virginia, British Colonial America
Ancestors of Mary OSBORNE
/-Thomas OSBORNE
Mary OSBORNE
Descendants of Mary OSBORNE
1 Mary OSBORNE
=John KING Marriage: 1727, Virginia, British Colonial America
2 Hannah KING
2 Ellender KING
2 Elizabeth KING
2 Penelope KING
=James WHALEY Jr Marriage: 26 APR 1747, Loundon, Virginia, British Colonial America Marriage: 1750, , Loudoun, Virginia, British Colonial America Marriage: 1756, , Loudoun, Virginia, British Colonial America Marriage: 1757, , Loudoun, Virginia, British Colonial America Marriage: Loudon, Virginia, British Colonial America
3 Elizabeth WHALEY
3 John WHALEY
3 Nancy Ann WHALEY
3 Hannah WHALEY
3 Mary WHALEY
3 William WHALEY
3 Mereman WHALEY
3 Sarah Wilson WHALEY
=George BEATTY Marriage: 5 FEB 1786, Louden County, Virginia
=John M. BEATY Marriage: 16 JUL 1801, Montgomery, Kentucky, United States
3 Penelope WHALEY
3 Amelia WHALEY
3 Vincent WHALEY
3 Winifred WHALEY
3 Levi WHALEY
2 Eleanor KING
2 Mary Frances KING
2 William KING
2 Osborne KING
2 Smith KING
2 Ann KING
2 John KING Jr.
2 Winnifred KING
2 Sarah KING
- Birth: ABT 1589, , , Virginia, United States of America
- _PPEXCLUDE: (Date and Place unknown)
- Death: 1696, , , Virginia, United States of America
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
- Child: Mary OSBORNE Birth: ABT 1700, Westmoreland, Virginia, British Colonial America
Descendants of Thomas OSBORNE
1 Thomas OSBORNE
=(Unknown)
2 Mary OSBORNE
=John KING Marriage: 1727, Virginia, British Colonial America
3 Hannah KING
3 Ellender KING
3 Elizabeth KING
3 Penelope KING
=James WHALEY Jr Marriage: 26 APR 1747, Loundon, Virginia, British Colonial America Marriage: 1750, , Loudoun, Virginia, British Colonial America Marriage: 1756, , Loudoun, Virginia, British Colonial America Marriage: 1757, , Loudoun, Virginia, British Colonial America Marriage: Loudon, Virginia, British Colonial America
3 Eleanor KING
3 Mary Frances KING
3 William KING
3 Osborne KING
3 Smith KING
3 Ann KING
3 John KING Jr.
3 Winnifred KING
3 Sarah KING
- Mother: Sabd of OSSORY
- Birth: 785, Isle of Wight, Wessex
- Also known as: Aslatus
- Also known as: Oslac of the Isle of Wight
- Also known as: Oslac "Pincerna Regis"
- Also known as: Oslac Ealdorman of the Isle of Wight
- Also known as: Oslac the Thane Grand Butler of England
- Also known as: Oslac , Pincerna of King Æthelwulf
- Occupation: Chief Butler of King Æthelwulf of Wessex , Royal Cup Bearer, "Pincerna Regis", Grand Butler of England
- Title Of Nobility: Ealdorman of the Isle of Wight
- Oslac is described as a descendant of King Cerdic's Jutish nephews, Stuf and Wihtgar, who conquered the Isle of Wight and, by this, is also ascribed Geatish/Gothic ancestry.: (Date and Place unknown)
- Ealdorman of the Isle of Wight and Butler of King Æthelwulf: (Date and Place unknown)
- NOT THE SON WIHTGAR: Oslac is described of a descendant of Wihtgar but was not his immediate son, there was at lease 200 years between when Wihtgar lived and when Oslac was born.
- LifeSketch: Oslac was the 'Pincerna' or 'Royal Butler' of King Æthelwulf of Wessex, who reigned 839-858. He was not a servant in the traditional sense, it was a position of high esteem and responsibility within the royal court and household. Oslac's exact parentage is not known, he is described as a descendant of King Cerdic's Jutish nephews, Stuf and Wihtgar, who conquered the Isle of Wight. It is important to note that while Oslac was their DESCENDANT HE WAS NOT THE SON OF EITHER. They lived 300 years before Oslac and both died by 544. While the name of Oslac's wife is not recorded, we know they had at least one child: Osburh (Osberga) who married King Æthelwulf and became Queen Consort of Wessex. Through Osburh, Oslac was the grandfather of: King Æthelstan, King Æthelbald, King Æthelberht, King Æthelred, Queen Æthelswith, and King Alfred the Great. ----------- In "Asser's life of King Alfred" he is identified as "Oslac, the famous cupbearer of King Æthelwulf" father of Æthelwulf's wife Osburh, mother of Alfred the Great. And says "Oslac was a Goth by nation, descended from the Goths and Jutes — of the seed, namely, of Stuf and Wihtgar, two brothers and ealdormen. They, having received possession of the Isle of Wight from their uncle, King Cerdic, and his son Cynric their cousin" This is a very credible source. Asser was Alfred the Greats court biographer, hired by Alfred to write the story of his life. Asser knew Alfred, and his mother Osburh, personally and therefor had direct knowledge straight from Oslac's own family. ----------- The Foundation for Medieval Genealogy identifies Oslac as Ealdorman of the Isle of Wight, a Goth by nation, descended from "the Goths and Jutes…namely of Stuf and Whitgar two brothers…who…received possession of the Isle of Wight from their uncle King Cerdic", "pincerna regis" the famous butler of King Æthelwulf, father of Osburga, wife of King Æthelwulf ----------- Contrary to what some may want to believe, it is not possible for Oslac the father of Osburh and father-in-law of King Æthelwulf to be the same Oslac who was an Ealdorman of York between 966 and 975. Oslac, who was a retainer for King Æthelwulf circa 850, would have been nearing 200 years old in 966. Care needs to be taken not to confuse these very distinct historical figures that lived in different centuries. ----------- https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Unknown-42002 Asser, in his Life of King Alfred, states that Oslac was butler of Æthelwulf, was of Gothic ancestry, and was descended from Stuf and Wihtgar, two brothers who were Jutes and were entrusted with the Isle of Wight by their uncle King Cerdic. Oslac was Ealdorman of the Isle of Wight. Oslac was King Æthelwulf's pincerna (butler), an important figure in the royal court and household. Oslac is described as a descendant of King Cerdic's Jutish nephews, Stuf and Wihtgar, who conquered the Isle of Wight. Children Osburh, first wife of Æthelwulf. Oslac's daughter, Osburh (or Osburga) (born about 810, died before 856), was the first wife of King Æthelwulf of Wessex and mother of Alfred the Great. Property Oslac and Osburh are known to have held Arreton Manor on the Isle of Wight.
- Death: 851, Steyning Church, Steyning, Kingdom of Wessex
Ancestors of Oslac father of OSBURH
Oslac father of OSBURH
| /-Maelaithgen of OSSORY
\-Sabd of OSSORY
Descendants of Oslac father of OSBURH
1 Oslac father of OSBURH
=Unknown Spouse of OSLAC
2 Osburh spouse of Æthelwulf of WESSEX
=Æthelwulf of WESSEX Marriage: ABT 826, Mercia, Wessex Marriage: ABT 830
3 Ethelswith of MERCIA
3 Æthelberht of WESSEX
3 Aethelbald of WESSEX
3 Æthelstan of KENT
3 Æthelred I of WESSEX
=Wulfthryth of WESSEX
3 Alfred of the ANGLO-SAXONS
=Ealhswith of Mercia Marriage: 868, Gainsborough, Lincolnshire, Kingdom of Mercia
- Birth: ABT 790, Isle of Wight, Hampshire, Kingdom of Wessex
- Mother of Osburga, Wife of King Æthelwulf of Wessex: (Date and Place unknown)
- LifeSketch: Oslac was Ealdorman of the Isle of Wight, the 'Pincerna' or 'Royal Butler' of King Æthelwulf of Wessex, and identified as the father of King Æthelwulf's wife Osberga (Osburh) Unfortunately the name of Oslac's wife is not known. It can be assumed she was born about 785 somewhere in England, probably Wessex, but nothing is known for certain. If there are sources that identify her name, then please add them to sources.
- Death: 850, Kingdom of Wessex
Descendants of Unknown Spouse of OSLAC
1 Unknown Spouse of OSLAC
=Oslac father of OSBURH
2 Osburh spouse of Æthelwulf of WESSEX
=Æthelwulf of WESSEX Marriage: ABT 826, Mercia, Wessex Marriage: ABT 830
3 Ethelswith of MERCIA
3 Æthelberht of WESSEX
3 Aethelbald of WESSEX
3 Æthelstan of KENT
3 Æthelred I of WESSEX
=Wulfthryth of WESSEX
3 Alfred of the ANGLO-SAXONS
=Ealhswith of Mercia Marriage: 868, Gainsborough, Lincolnshire, Kingdom of Mercia
Ancestors of Awde of OSRHOENE
/-Manu Saphul D`EDESSE
/-Abgar V D`EDESSE OSRHOENE
/-Mannos VI DE OSRHOENE
| | /-Izates I father of Helena of ADIABENE
| \-Helena OF ADIABENE
Awde of OSRHOENE
| /-Isates II D`ADIABENE
\-Cléopatre D'ADIABENE
\-Kleopatra Drusila DE MAURETANIE
Descendants of Awde of OSRHOENE
1 Awde of OSRHOENE
=Mithridates of ARMENIA
2 Sanatroukes ARSHAKUNI
2 Sanatroukes VON ARMENIEN
2 Sanastroces I Sanatruk DES PARTHES
2 daughter of Meherdates of PARTHIA
=Gaius Julius AVITUS CAPITOLINUS
3 Sohaemus III of EMESA
=daughter of Aurelius Pacorus ARMENIA
- Birth: 720, Kilkenny, Leinster, Ireland
- LifeSketch: Maelaithgen, Abbot of Cluain Eidhneach (Clonenagh); also found as Mal-athgenius or Melathgene. [1] St. Fintan founded the monastery at Clonenagh (Cluainadnach) in Mountrath, County Laois, and became the first Abbot there. St. Fintan was succeeded by St. Columba. [2] Cluain Eidhneach was first sacked by the Danes in 840, rebuilt and plundered several times. [3] "The distinguished superior Maelaithgen, alias Moetlogan, Abbot of Cluain-Eidhneach, died in the year of our Lord 767. His name is Latinized Maelathgenius.
- Death: 767, Clonenagh, Ireland
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Descendants of Maelaithgen of OSSORY
1 Maelaithgen of OSSORY
=(Unknown)
2 Sabd of OSSORY
=(Unknown)
3 Oslac father of OSBURH
=Unknown Spouse of OSLAC
- Father: Maelaithgen of OSSORY
- Birth: 750
- LifeSketch: Sabd is said to have married a descendant of Witgar of the Isle of Wight; Wihtgar died in 544. [1] Osriage, or Ossory as the English called it, was a medieval Irish kingdom located in what are now the counties of Kilkenny and Laois. [2] [3]
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Sabd of OSSORY
/-Maelaithgen of OSSORY
Sabd of OSSORY
Descendants of Sabd of OSSORY
1 Sabd of OSSORY
=(Unknown)
2 Oslac father of OSBURH
=Unknown Spouse of OSLAC
3 Osburh spouse of Æthelwulf of WESSEX
=Æthelwulf of WESSEX Marriage: ABT 826, Mercia, Wessex Marriage: ABT 830
- Father: Clovis I of the FRANKS
- Mother: Concubine of Hlodowig I DER FRANKEN
- Birth: 485, Reims, Frankish Empire
- Also known as: Thierry Ier 3e Roi des Francs d'Orléans
- Title Of Nobility: King of the East Franks
- Clan Name: House of Merovingian
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia Theuderic I King of Metz Reign 511–533/34 Predecessor Clovis I Successor Theudebert I Born c. 485 Died c. 534 (aged 48–49) Spouse Suavegotha Issue Theudebert I Theodechild Dynasty Merovingian Father Clovis I Theuderic I[a] (c. 485 – 533/4) was the Merovingian king of Metz, Rheims, or Austrasia—as it is variously called—from 511 to 533 or 534. He was the son of Clovis I and one of his earlier wives or concubines (possibly a Franco-Rhenish Princess, Evochildis of Cologne).[1] In accordance with Salian tradition, the kingdom was divided between Clovis's four surviving sons: Childebert I in Paris, Chlodomer in Orléans, and Chlothar I in Soissons. Theuderic inherited Metz in 511 at his father's death. Early in his reign, he sent his son Theudebert to kill the Scandinavian King Chlochilaich (Hygelac of Beowulf fame) who had invaded his realm.[2] Division of Gaul on Clovis's death, showing Theuderic's kingdom beside his brothers' (image in original, click link in sources) Theuderic got involved in the war between the Thuringian King Hermanfrid and his brother Baderic. Theuderic was promised half of Thuringia for his help; Baderic was defeated, but the land promised was not given up. In 531, Theuderic invaded Thuringia with the support of Chlothar. Hermanfrid was killed in the invasion and his kingdom was annexed.[1] The four sons of Clovis then all fought the Burgundian kings Sigismund and Godomar; Godomar fled and Sigismund was taken prisoner by Chlodomer. Theuderic married Sigismund's daughter Suavegotha. Godomar rallied the Burgundian army and won back his kingdom. Chlodomer, aided by Theuderic, defeated Godomar, but died in the fighting at Vézeronce. Theuderic then, with his brother Chlothar and his son, attacked Thuringia to revenge himself on Hermanfrid. With the assistance of the Saxons under Duke Hadugato, Thuringia was conquered, and Chlothar received Radegund, daughter of King Berthar (Hermanfrid's late brother). After making a treaty with his brother Childebert, Theuderic died in 534. Upon his death the throne of Metz, passed (without hindrance, unexpectedly) to his son Theudebert. Theuderic also left a daughter Theodechild (by his wife Suavegotha, daughter of the defeated Sigismund of Burgundy). Theodechild founded the Abbey of St-Pierre le Vif at Sens.[3] Less
- Death: 534, Metz, Frankish Empire
- Burial: 534, Metz, Kingdom of Austrasia, Frankish Empire
Ancestors of Theuderic I in OSTFRANKEN
/-Walter VON KOLN
/-Ascaric VON KOLN
| \-No Name av ASGARD
/-Cunebald VON KOLN
| | /-Walter VON KOLN
| \-Regnetrude DES FRANCS
| \-No Name av ASGARD
/-Dagobert DER FRANKEN VON KOLN
| | /-Chlodio III VON KOLN
| | /-Walter VON KOLN
| \-Athildis l`Ancienne DES FRANCS
| \-No Name av ASGARD
/-Chlodio of the Franks at COLOGNE
| | /-Ibor Winnilien DE LOMBARDIE
| | | \-Aalis Gambara DES LONGOBARDS
| | /-Aios VON THURINGEN
| | | \-Gamara WINNILES
| \-Asilia DE LOMBARDIE
/-Marcomir VON KOLN
| | /-Chrocus I D`ALEMANIE
| | /-Wadomaire D`ALEMANIE
| | | \-Blesindre DES ALAMANS
| | /-Guindomar of ALEMANIA
| | | | /-Bermond de BURGONDIE
| | | \-Gibica Maria DE BOURGONDIE
| | | \-Imnichild spouse of Bermond DE BURGONDIE
| | /-Chlodomir I VAN ZWABEN
| | | | /-Genebaud I des Franks RIPUAIRES
| | | | /-Ragaise DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | | \-Unknown DES ALAMANS
| | | \-Ysabeau VAN TOXANDRIE
| | | | /-Chrocus I D`ALEMANIE
| | | \-Blesinde D`ALEMANIE
| | | \-Blesindre DES ALAMANS
| \-Blesinde VON SCHWABEN
| \-Blesinda DE SUEVIE
/-Pharamund Theodemin DE FRANKS
| \-Hatilde DE FRANCIE
/-Chlodio LE CHEVELU
| | /-Chlodio III VON KOLN
| | /-Walter VON KOLN
| | /-Ascaric VON KOLN
| | | \-No Name av ASGARD
| | /-Cunebald VON KOLN
| | | | /-Chlodio III VON KOLN
| | | | /-Walter VON KOLN
| | | \-Regnetrude DES FRANCS
| | | \-No Name av ASGARD
| | /-Dagobert DER FRANKEN VON KOLN
| | | | /-Bartherus VON KOLN
| | | | /-Chlodio III VON KOLN
| | | | | \-Euergaine VERCH LLIEFFER MAWR OF CAMULOD
| | | | /-Walter VON KOLN
| | | \-Athildis l`Ancienne DES FRANCS
| | | \-No Name av ASGARD
| | /-Grenobald DES CIMBRES
| | | | /-Ibor Winnilien DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | | | /-Agio Gungingi DER LONGOBARDEN
| | | | | \-Aalis Gambara DES LONGOBARDS
| | | | /-Aios VON THURINGEN
| | | | | \-Gamara WINNILES
| | | \-Asilia DE LOMBARDIE
| \-Argotta Justin DE VALENTINA
| | /-Genebaud I des Franks RIPUAIRES
| | /-Ragaise DE TOXANDRIE
| | | \-Unknown DES ALAMANS
| | /-Malaric I DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | /-Chrocus I D`ALEMANIE
| | | \-Blesinde D`ALEMANIE
| | | \-Blesindre DES ALAMANS
| | /-Priaros Malaric DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | /-Begon DE THURINGE
| | | | /-Fritigern VAN THÜRINGEN II
| | | | | \-Uxor Begon IGNATOE
| | | \-Ascyla DE BELGIQUË
| | | | /-Artsartos MORINIE
| | | \-Martisianda DE MORINIE
| | /-Sunno DES FRANCS
| | | | /-Martisiandes DE MENAPIE
| | | \-Dulce Douce DE MENAPIE
| | | | /-Ragaise DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | /-Malaric I DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | | \-Blesinde D`ALEMANIE
| | | \-Ascyla BELGAE
| | | | /-Fritigern VAN THÜRINGEN II
| | | \-Ascyla DE BELGIQUË
| | | \-Martisianda DE MORINIE
| \-Unknown Spouse of Grenobald DES CIMBRES
| | /-Fritigern VAN THÜRINGEN II
| | /-Waldomar Hoger DE THURINGE
| | | \-Martisianda DE MORINIE
| | /-Carlowig Chrocus VON THURINGEN
| | | | /-Fritigern VAN THURINGEN
| | | \-Withigula D'ALEMANIE
| | | \-Chroca D'ALEMANIE
| | /-Merwig I VON THURINGEN
| | | \-Uxor VON THURINGEN
| \-Merowna Merovna DE THURINGE
| \-Uxor Mervig IGNOTAE
/-Merovech of the Salian FRANKS
| | /-Chlodio III VON KOLN
| | /-Walter VON KOLN
| | /-Ascaric VON KOLN
| | | \-No Name av ASGARD
| | /-Cunebald VON KOLN
| | | | /-Chlodio III VON KOLN
| | | | /-Walter VON KOLN
| | | \-Regnetrude DES FRANCS
| | | \-No Name av ASGARD
| | /-Dagobert DER FRANKEN VON KOLN
| | | | /-Bartherus VON KOLN
| | | | /-Chlodio III VON KOLN
| | | | | \-Euergaine VERCH LLIEFFER MAWR OF CAMULOD
| | | | /-Walter VON KOLN
| | | \-Athildis l`Ancienne DES FRANCS
| | | \-No Name av ASGARD
| | /-Chlodio of the Franks at COLOGNE
| | | | /-Ibor Winnilien DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | | | /-Agio Gungingi DER LONGOBARDEN
| | | | | \-Aalis Gambara DES LONGOBARDS
| | | | /-Aios VON THURINGEN
| | | | | \-Gamara WINNILES
| | | \-Asilia DE LOMBARDIE
| | /-Marcomir VON KOLN
| | | | /-Marcomir DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | /-Chrocus I D`ALEMANIE
| | | | | \-Asinia Juliana Nicomacha DE ROME
| | | | /-Wadomaire D`ALEMANIE
| | | | | \-Blesindre DES ALAMANS
| | | | /-Guindomar of ALEMANIA
| | | | | | /-Vaimir of the BURGUNDIANS
| | | | | | /-Bermond de BURGONDIE
| | | | | | | \-Clotilde DE REIMS
| | | | | \-Gibica Maria DE BOURGONDIE
| | | | | \-Imnichild spouse of Bermond DE BURGONDIE
| | | | /-Chlodomir I VAN ZWABEN
| | | | | | /-Marcomir DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | | | /-Genebaud I des Franks RIPUAIRES
| | | | | | | \-IIdégonde de Toxandrie
| | | | | | /-Ragaise DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | | | | \-Unknown DES ALAMANS
| | | | | \-Ysabeau VAN TOXANDRIE
| | | | | | /-Marcomir DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | | | /-Chrocus I D`ALEMANIE
| | | | | | | \-Asinia Juliana Nicomacha DE ROME
| | | | | \-Blesinde D`ALEMANIE
| | | | | \-Blesindre DES ALAMANS
| | | \-Blesinde VON SCHWABEN
| | | \-Blesinda DE SUEVIE
| \-Hildegonda DE COLOGNE
| | /-Aldeoch DE LOMBARDIE
| \-Hildegonde DE LOMBARDIE
| \-Eurica DER WESTGOTEN
/-Childeric of the Salian Franks MEROVINGIAN
/-Clovis I of the FRANKS
| | /-Carlowig II VON THURINGEN
| | /-Merwing II VON THURINGEN
| | | \-Basina spouse of Carlowig II VON THURINGEN
| \-Basina von Thüringen
| | /-Ansygius DE MENAPIE
| | /-Weldelphus VON THURINGEN
| | | | /-Fritigern I DE THURINGE
| | | | /-Begon DE THURINGE
| | | | | \-Aelia Euphenia DE ROME
| | | | /-Fritigern VAN THÜRINGEN II
| | | | | \-Uxor Begon IGNATOE
| | | | /-Waldomar Hoger DE THURINGE
| | | | | | /-Vuéric I MORINIE
| | | | | | /-Artsartos MORINIE
| | | | | \-Martisianda DE MORINIE
| | | | /-Carlowig Chrocus VON THURINGEN
| | | | | | /-Fritigern I DE THURINGE
| | | | | | /-Begon DE THURINGE
| | | | | | | \-Aelia Euphenia DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Fritigern VAN THURINGEN
| | | | | | | \-Uxor Begon IGNATOE
| | | | | \-Withigula D'ALEMANIE
| | | | | | /-Marcomir DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | | | /-Chrocus I D`ALEMANIE
| | | | | | | \-Asinia Juliana Nicomacha DE ROME
| | | | | \-Chroca D'ALEMANIE
| | | | | \-Priaros DE TER BEEK
| | | | /-Merwig I VON THURINGEN
| | | | | \-Uxor VON THURINGEN
| | | \-Merowna Merovna DE THURINGE
| | | \-Uxor Mervig IGNOTAE
| \-Basine VON SACHSEN
| | /-Clodius V MAGNUS
| | /-Dagobert III DESPOSYNI King of The East Franks
| | | | /-Chrocus I D`ALEMANIE
| | | | /-Wadomaire D`ALEMANIE
| | | | | \-Blesindre DES ALAMANS
| | | | /-Guindomar of ALEMANIA
| | | | | | /-Bermond de BURGONDIE
| | | | | \-Gibica Maria DE BOURGONDIE
| | | | | \-Imnichild spouse of Bermond DE BURGONDIE
| | | | /-Chlodomir I VAN ZWABEN
| | | | | | /-Genebaud I des Franks RIPUAIRES
| | | | | | /-Ragaise DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | | | | \-Unknown DES ALAMANS
| | | | | \-Ysabeau VAN TOXANDRIE
| | | | | | /-Chrocus I D`ALEMANIE
| | | | | \-Blesinde D`ALEMANIE
| | | | | \-Blesindre DES ALAMANS
| | | \-Blesinde VON SCHWABEN
| | | \-Blesinda DE SUEVIE
| | /-Genebald OF THE WEST FRANKS
| | | | /-Catheloys Castellors ap AMINADAB
| | | | /-Manael Castellors DE BRITON
| | | | | \-Elizabel REINA DEL GRIAL
| | | | /-Titurel DESPOSYNI
| | | | | | /-Catheloys Narpus PECHEUR
| | | | | \-Eurgen BAR AMINADAB
| | | | /-Boaz Enfertez Anfortas DESPOSYNI
| | | | | \-Egre DE BRITON
| | | | | \-Anyn mother of Egre DE BRITON
| | | | /-Boaz Anfortas ENFERTEZ II
| | | | | | /-Catheloys Castellors ap AMINADAB
| | | | | | /-Manael Castellors DE BRITON
| | | | | | | \-Elizabel REINA DEL GRIAL
| | | | | | /-Titurel DESPOSYNI
| | | | | | | | /-Catheloys Narpus PECHEUR
| | | | | | | \-Eurgen BAR AMINADAB
| | | | | \-Richonde ORGELUSE of the Britons
| | | | | \-Egre DE BRITON
| | | | | \-Anyn mother of Egre DE BRITON
| | | \-Frotmund Desposynl DE FRIMUTEL
| | | \-Orgeluse RICHONDE of The Britons
| \-Amalaberge of Thurgia DE OSTROGOTHIE
| \-Athildis DE LORRAINE
Theuderic I in OSTFRANKEN
\-Concubine of Hlodowig I DER FRANKEN
Ancestors of Raoul I OSTREVANT
/-Hucbald Hubert DE OSTREVENT
Raoul I OSTREVANT
\-Berthe DE FRIOUL
- Father: Sunno DES FRANCS
- Mother: Merowna Merovna DE THURINGE
- Birth: 364, Scythia, Ucrania
- Also known as: Maerovaec Merovaeus Merovee Meroveo Franks
- Title Of Nobility: Rey de los Francos hasta el 457
- LifeSketch: Mérovée I de France Birthdate: estimated between 383 and 443 Death: Immediate Family: Son of Pharamond, king of the Franks (Fictitious) and Argotta of the Franks Husband of wife of Mérovée I de France Nn Brother of Fredemundus; Clodius de Cologne, VI; Adalbertus de Cologne; Chararic (Guerric) de Tongres; Sigebert De Soissons, King de Cologne; Weldelphus; Frotmund (Fictional); Erlicia Erelieve de Cologne and Basina de Cologne « less Half brother of Chlodégar, king of the Salian Francs at Cologne and Clovis "the Riparian", King of the Franks https://www.geni.com/people/M%C3%A9rov%C3%A9e-I-de-France/6000000031257322988
- Life Sketch: One of several barbarian warlords and kings that joined forces with the Roman general Aetius against the Huns under Attila on the Catalaunian fields in Gaul
- Clan Name: House of Merovingians
- National Identification: Iniciador de la Dinastía Merovingia
- Title Of Nobility: King of Tournai, BET 447 AND 458, Tournai, Hainaut, Belgium
- Life Sketch: founder of the Merovingian dynasty of the Salian Franks (although Chlodio may in fact be the founder), which later became the dominant Frankish tribe. He allegedly lived in the first half of the fifth century. His name is a Latinization of a form close to
- Life Sketch: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merovech
- Death: 458, Tournai, Hainault, Belgium, Kingdom of the Franks, Roman Empire
Ancestors of Vandalarius de los OSTROGODOS
/-Marcomir DESPONYI DE SICAMBRIE IV
/-Clodimir IV of the FRANKS
| \-Athildis DE COLCHESTER
/-Farabert du West FRANKS
| | /-Nicanur of The RUGIJ
| \-Hasilda of the RUGIJ
| \-Athildis II FRANKS
/-Sunno Huano VAN SICAMBRIE
| | /-Nicanur of The RUGIJ
| | | \-Hafilda of the Rugij
| \-Basilda of RUGIJ
| | /-Colius ap Marius of Bretagne
| \-Athildis II FRANKS
| \-Stradwawl OF SILURIA
/-Childeric I of the FRANKS
| \-Hastila DUWEST FRANCS
/-Marcomir DE TOXANDRIE
| | /-Gaius Asinius Frugi ASINIUS
| | /-Caius Julius ASINIUS QUADRATUS D`ASIE
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Gaius Asinius Frugi ASINIUS
| | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Vibius Varus Laevillus D'ASIE
| | | | /-Aulus Julius Claudius Charax
| | | \-Julia Quadratilla MINOR DE ROME
| | | \-Julia spouse of Aulus Julius Claudius CHARAX
| | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | /-Lucius Sergius Paullus de ROME II
| | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | | /-Aulus Julius Claudius Charax
| | | \-Julia Minor DE ROME
| | | \-Claudia BASILO
| \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | /-Cassius Statilius Severus Hadrianus DE ROME
| | /-Cassius DE ROME
| | | \-Juventia Maxime DE ROME
| | /-Caeionius Primus L'Étrusque DE ROME
| | | | /-Aulus Larcius Lepidus DE ROME
| | | \-Larcia CALIDA
| | | \-Volumnia Calida DE ROME
| \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| \-Rasenna ETRUSCI
/-Genebaud I des Franks RIPUAIRES
| | /-Barbes DE LOMBARDIE
| | /-Germond DE LOMBARDIE
| | /-Haquinus DE LOMBARDIE
| | | \-Gambara DES WINNILES
| | /-Ibor I DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | /-Gaussus DER LONGOBARDEN
| | | | /-Agio Gungingi DER LONGOBARDEN
| | | \-Aalis Gambara DES LONGOBARDS
| \-IIdégonde de Toxandrie
| | /-Gausus of the LANGOBARDS
| | /-Agio Gungingi DES LONGOBARDS
| \-Gambara Aalis DES LONGOBARDS
/-Ragaise DE TOXANDRIE
| \-Unknown DES ALAMANS
/-Malaric I DE TOXANDRIE
| | /-Marcomir DESPONYI DE SICAMBRIE IV
| | /-Clodimir IV of the FRANKS
| | | \-Athildis DE COLCHESTER
| | /-Farabert du West FRANKS
| | | | /-Nicanur of The RUGIJ
| | | \-Hasilda of the RUGIJ
| | | \-Athildis II FRANKS
| | /-Sunno Huano VAN SICAMBRIE
| | | | /-Nicanur of The RUGIJ
| | | | | \-Hafilda of the Rugij
| | | \-Basilda of RUGIJ
| | | | /-Colius ap Marius of Bretagne
| | | \-Athildis II FRANKS
| | | \-Stradwawl OF SILURIA
| | /-Childeric I of the FRANKS
| | | \-Hastila DUWEST FRANCS
| | /-Marcomir DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | /-Gaius Asinius Frugi ASINIUS
| | | | /-Caius Julius ASINIUS QUADRATUS D`ASIE
| | | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Gaius Asinius Frugi ASINIUS
| | | | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Vibius Varus Laevillus D'ASIE
| | | | | | /-Aulus Julius Claudius Charax
| | | | | \-Julia Quadratilla MINOR DE ROME
| | | | | \-Julia spouse of Aulus Julius Claudius CHARAX
| | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | | /-Lucius Sergius Paullus de ROME II
| | | | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Aulus Julius Claudius Charax
| | | | | \-Julia Minor DE ROME
| | | | | \-Claudia BASILO
| | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | | /-Cassius Statilius Severus Hadrianus DE ROME
| | | | /-Cassius DE ROME
| | | | | \-Juventia Maxime DE ROME
| | | | /-Caeionius Primus L'Étrusque DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Aulus Larcius Lepidus DE ROME
| | | | | \-Larcia CALIDA
| | | | | \-Volumnia Calida DE ROME
| | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | \-Rasenna ETRUSCI
| | /-Chrocus I D`ALEMANIE
| | | | /-Quintus Anicius Faustus Abucuu II
| | | | | | /-Aulus Julius Claudius Charax
| | | | | \-Julia Quadratilla Proculla of Rome
| | | | | \-Julia spouse of Aulus Julius Claudius CHARAX
| | | | /-Quintus Anicius Faustus Paulinus DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Claudius CAPITOLINUS II DE ROMA
| | | | | | /-Marcus Claudius MACRINUS VIN
| | | | | | | \-Macrinia DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Sextius Cocceius VIBI
| | | | | | | \-Laberia Pompeiana DE ROME
| | | | | \-Coceeia Vibiana COCCEII
| | | | | | /-Claudius CAPITOLINUS II DE ROMA
| | | | | | /-Marcus Claudius MACRINUS VIN
| | | | | | | \-Macrinia DE ROME
| | | | | \-Vitrasia Fundania DE ROME
| | | | | \-Laberia Pompeiana DE ROME
| | | \-Asinia Juliana Nicomacha DE ROME
| | | | /-Gaius Asinius Frugi ASINIUS
| | | | /-Caius Julius ASINIUS QUADRATUS D`ASIE
| | | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Gaius Asinius Frugi ASINIUS
| | | | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Vibius Varus Laevillus D'ASIE
| | | | | | /-Aulus Julius Claudius Charax
| | | | | \-Julia Quadratilla MINOR DE ROME
| | | | | \-Julia spouse of Aulus Julius Claudius CHARAX
| | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | | /-Lucius Sergius Paullus de ROME II
| | | | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Aulus Julius Claudius Charax
| | | | | \-Julia Minor DE ROME
| | | | | \-Claudia BASILO
| | | \-Asinia Juliana Faustus Paulinus of Rome
| | | | /-Cassius Statilius Severus Hadrianus DE ROME
| | | | /-Cassius DE ROME
| | | | | \-Juventia Maxime DE ROME
| | | | /-Caeionius Primus L'Étrusque DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Aulus Larcius Lepidus DE ROME
| | | | | \-Larcia CALIDA
| | | | | \-Volumnia Calida DE ROME
| | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | \-Rasenna ETRUSCI
| \-Blesinde D`ALEMANIE
| \-Blesindre DES ALAMANS
/-Priaros Malaric DE TOXANDRIE
| | /-Neugio VON THURINGEN
| | /-Thuringus DE THURINGE
| | /-Fritigern I DE THURINGE
| | | | /-Teatwa DE GOTHIE
| | | | /-Ethespamare DE GOTHIE
| | | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Teatwa DE GOTHIE
| | | | /-Hanala DE GOTHIE
| | | | /-Safracht DE GOTHIE
| | | | | \-Hana spouse of Hanala DE GOTHIE
| | | \-Demoiselle DE GOTHIE
| | | \-Safra spouse of Safracht DE GOTHIE
| | /-Begon DE THURINGE
| | | \-Aelia Euphenia DE ROME
| | /-Fritigern VAN THÜRINGEN II
| | | \-Uxor Begon IGNATOE
| \-Ascyla DE BELGIQUË
| | /-Carolus II DE MENAPIE
| | /-Julius DE MENAPIE
| | | \-Athildis DE CAMULOD DE BRETAGNE
| | /-Octavius DE MENAPIE
| | | \-Hastilde von Rugen de Menapie RIGA
| | /-Valardius DE MENAPIE
| | | \-Catheloys Castellors DE TINTAGEL
| | /-Valerius II DE MENAPIE
| | | | /-Caius Julius ASINIUS QUADRATUS D`ASIE
| | | | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Vibius Varus Laevillus D'ASIE
| | | | | \-Julia Quadratilla MINOR DE ROME
| | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | | /-Lucius Sergius Paullus de ROME II
| | | | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | | | \-Julia Minor DE ROME
| | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | | /-Cassius DE ROME
| | | | /-Caeionius Primus L'Étrusque DE ROME
| | | | | \-Larcia CALIDA
| | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | \-Rasenna ETRUSCI
| | /-Vuéric I MORINIE
| | | | /-Barbes DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | /-Germond DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | /-Haquinus DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | | \-Gambara DES WINNILES
| | | | /-Ibor I DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | | | /-Gaussus DER LONGOBARDEN
| | | | | | /-Agio Gungingi DER LONGOBARDEN
| | | | | \-Aalis Gambara DES LONGOBARDS
| | | \-IIdégonde de Toxandrie
| | | | /-Gausus of the LANGOBARDS
| | | | /-Agio Gungingi DES LONGOBARDS
| | | \-Gambara Aalis DES LONGOBARDS
| | /-Artsartos MORINIE
| \-Martisianda DE MORINIE
/-Sunno DES FRANCS
| | /-Martisiandes DE MENAPIE
| \-Dulce Douce DE MENAPIE
| | /-Clodimir IV of the FRANKS
| | /-Farabert du West FRANKS
| | | \-Hasilda of the RUGIJ
| | /-Sunno Huano VAN SICAMBRIE
| | | | /-Nicanur of The RUGIJ
| | | \-Basilda of RUGIJ
| | | \-Athildis II FRANKS
| | /-Childeric I of the FRANKS
| | | \-Hastila DUWEST FRANCS
| | /-Marcomir DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | /-Caius Julius ASINIUS QUADRATUS D`ASIE
| | | | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Vibius Varus Laevillus D'ASIE
| | | | | \-Julia Quadratilla MINOR DE ROME
| | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | | /-Lucius Sergius Paullus de ROME II
| | | | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | | | \-Julia Minor DE ROME
| | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | | /-Cassius DE ROME
| | | | /-Caeionius Primus L'Étrusque DE ROME
| | | | | \-Larcia CALIDA
| | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | \-Rasenna ETRUSCI
| | /-Genebaud I des Franks RIPUAIRES
| | | | /-Barbes DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | /-Germond DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | /-Haquinus DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | | \-Gambara DES WINNILES
| | | | /-Ibor I DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | | | /-Gaussus DER LONGOBARDEN
| | | | | | /-Agio Gungingi DER LONGOBARDEN
| | | | | \-Aalis Gambara DES LONGOBARDS
| | | \-IIdégonde de Toxandrie
| | | | /-Gausus of the LANGOBARDS
| | | | /-Agio Gungingi DES LONGOBARDS
| | | \-Gambara Aalis DES LONGOBARDS
| | /-Ragaise DE TOXANDRIE
| | | \-Unknown DES ALAMANS
| | /-Malaric I DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | /-Clodimir IV of the FRANKS
| | | | /-Farabert du West FRANKS
| | | | | \-Hasilda of the RUGIJ
| | | | /-Sunno Huano VAN SICAMBRIE
| | | | | | /-Nicanur of The RUGIJ
| | | | | \-Basilda of RUGIJ
| | | | | \-Athildis II FRANKS
| | | | /-Childeric I of the FRANKS
| | | | | \-Hastila DUWEST FRANCS
| | | | /-Marcomir DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | | | /-Caius Julius ASINIUS QUADRATUS D`ASIE
| | | | | | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Vibius Varus Laevillus D'ASIE
| | | | | | | \-Julia Quadratilla MINOR DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | | | | /-Lucius Sergius Paullus de ROME II
| | | | | | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | | | | | \-Julia Minor DE ROME
| | | | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Cassius DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Caeionius Primus L'Étrusque DE ROME
| | | | | | | \-Larcia CALIDA
| | | | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | | | \-Rasenna ETRUSCI
| | | | /-Chrocus I D`ALEMANIE
| | | | | | /-Quintus Anicius Faustus Abucuu II
| | | | | | | | /-Aulus Julius Claudius Charax
| | | | | | | \-Julia Quadratilla Proculla of Rome
| | | | | | | \-Julia spouse of Aulus Julius Claudius CHARAX
| | | | | | /-Quintus Anicius Faustus Paulinus DE ROME
| | | | | | | | /-Marcus Claudius MACRINUS VIN
| | | | | | | | /-Sextius Cocceius VIBI
| | | | | | | | | \-Laberia Pompeiana DE ROME
| | | | | | | \-Coceeia Vibiana COCCEII
| | | | | | | | /-Marcus Claudius MACRINUS VIN
| | | | | | | \-Vitrasia Fundania DE ROME
| | | | | | | \-Laberia Pompeiana DE ROME
| | | | | \-Asinia Juliana Nicomacha DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Caius Julius ASINIUS QUADRATUS D`ASIE
| | | | | | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Vibius Varus Laevillus D'ASIE
| | | | | | | \-Julia Quadratilla MINOR DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | | | | /-Lucius Sergius Paullus de ROME II
| | | | | | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | | | | | \-Julia Minor DE ROME
| | | | | \-Asinia Juliana Faustus Paulinus of Rome
| | | | | | /-Cassius DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Caeionius Primus L'Étrusque DE ROME
| | | | | | | \-Larcia CALIDA
| | | | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | | | \-Rasenna ETRUSCI
| | | \-Blesinde D`ALEMANIE
| | | \-Blesindre DES ALAMANS
| \-Ascyla BELGAE
| | /-Neugio VON THURINGEN
| | /-Thuringus DE THURINGE
| | /-Fritigern I DE THURINGE
| | | | /-Ethespamare DE GOTHIE
| | | | /-Hanala DE GOTHIE
| | | | /-Safracht DE GOTHIE
| | | | | \-Hana spouse of Hanala DE GOTHIE
| | | \-Demoiselle DE GOTHIE
| | | \-Safra spouse of Safracht DE GOTHIE
| | /-Begon DE THURINGE
| | | \-Aelia Euphenia DE ROME
| | /-Fritigern VAN THÜRINGEN II
| | | \-Uxor Begon IGNATOE
| \-Ascyla DE BELGIQUË
| | /-Julius DE MENAPIE
| | /-Octavius DE MENAPIE
| | | \-Hastilde von Rugen de Menapie RIGA
| | /-Valardius DE MENAPIE
| | | \-Catheloys Castellors DE TINTAGEL
| | /-Valerius II DE MENAPIE
| | | | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Vibius Varus Laevillus D'ASIE
| | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | | /-Caeionius Primus L'Étrusque DE ROME
| | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | \-Rasenna ETRUSCI
| | /-Vuéric I MORINIE
| | | | /-Germond DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | /-Haquinus DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | | \-Gambara DES WINNILES
| | | | /-Ibor I DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | | | /-Agio Gungingi DER LONGOBARDEN
| | | | | \-Aalis Gambara DES LONGOBARDS
| | | \-IIdégonde de Toxandrie
| | | | /-Gausus of the LANGOBARDS
| | | | /-Agio Gungingi DES LONGOBARDS
| | | \-Gambara Aalis DES LONGOBARDS
| | /-Artsartos MORINIE
| \-Martisianda DE MORINIE
Vandalarius de los OSTROGODOS
| /-Neugio VON THURINGEN
| /-Thuringus DE THURINGE
| /-Fritigern I DE THURINGE
| | | /-Ethespamare DE GOTHIE
| | | /-Hanala DE GOTHIE
| | | /-Safracht DE GOTHIE
| | | | \-Hana spouse of Hanala DE GOTHIE
| | \-Demoiselle DE GOTHIE
| | \-Safra spouse of Safracht DE GOTHIE
| /-Begon DE THURINGE
| | \-Aelia Euphenia DE ROME
| /-Fritigern VAN THÜRINGEN II
| | \-Uxor Begon IGNATOE
| /-Waldomar Hoger DE THURINGE
| | | /-Julius DE MENAPIE
| | | /-Octavius DE MENAPIE
| | | | \-Hastilde von Rugen de Menapie RIGA
| | | /-Valardius DE MENAPIE
| | | | \-Catheloys Castellors DE TINTAGEL
| | | /-Valerius II DE MENAPIE
| | | | | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Vibius Varus Laevillus D'ASIE
| | | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | | | /-Caeionius Primus L'Étrusque DE ROME
| | | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | | \-Rasenna ETRUSCI
| | | /-Vuéric I MORINIE
| | | | | /-Germond DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | | /-Haquinus DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | | | \-Gambara DES WINNILES
| | | | | /-Ibor I DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | | | | /-Agio Gungingi DER LONGOBARDEN
| | | | | | \-Aalis Gambara DES LONGOBARDS
| | | | \-IIdégonde de Toxandrie
| | | | | /-Gausus of the LANGOBARDS
| | | | | /-Agio Gungingi DES LONGOBARDS
| | | | \-Gambara Aalis DES LONGOBARDS
| | | /-Artsartos MORINIE
| | \-Martisianda DE MORINIE
| /-Carlowig Chrocus VON THURINGEN
| | | /-Neugio VON THURINGEN
| | | /-Thuringus DE THURINGE
| | | /-Fritigern I DE THURINGE
| | | | | /-Ethespamare DE GOTHIE
| | | | | /-Hanala DE GOTHIE
| | | | | /-Safracht DE GOTHIE
| | | | | | \-Hana spouse of Hanala DE GOTHIE
| | | | \-Demoiselle DE GOTHIE
| | | | \-Safra spouse of Safracht DE GOTHIE
| | | /-Begon DE THURINGE
| | | | \-Aelia Euphenia DE ROME
| | | /-Fritigern VAN THURINGEN
| | | | \-Uxor Begon IGNATOE
| | \-Withigula D'ALEMANIE
| | | /-Clodimir IV of the FRANKS
| | | /-Farabert du West FRANKS
| | | | \-Hasilda of the RUGIJ
| | | /-Sunno Huano VAN SICAMBRIE
| | | | | /-Nicanur of The RUGIJ
| | | | \-Basilda of RUGIJ
| | | | \-Athildis II FRANKS
| | | /-Childeric I of the FRANKS
| | | | \-Hastila DUWEST FRANCS
| | | /-Marcomir DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | | /-Caius Julius ASINIUS QUADRATUS D`ASIE
| | | | | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Vibius Varus Laevillus D'ASIE
| | | | | | \-Julia Quadratilla MINOR DE ROME
| | | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | | | /-Lucius Sergius Paullus de ROME II
| | | | | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | | | | \-Julia Minor DE ROME
| | | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | | | /-Cassius DE ROME
| | | | | /-Caeionius Primus L'Étrusque DE ROME
| | | | | | \-Larcia CALIDA
| | | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | | \-Rasenna ETRUSCI
| | | /-Chrocus I D`ALEMANIE
| | | | | /-Quintus Anicius Faustus Abucuu II
| | | | | | | /-Aulus Julius Claudius Charax
| | | | | | \-Julia Quadratilla Proculla of Rome
| | | | | | \-Julia spouse of Aulus Julius Claudius CHARAX
| | | | | /-Quintus Anicius Faustus Paulinus DE ROME
| | | | | | | /-Marcus Claudius MACRINUS VIN
| | | | | | | /-Sextius Cocceius VIBI
| | | | | | | | \-Laberia Pompeiana DE ROME
| | | | | | \-Coceeia Vibiana COCCEII
| | | | | | | /-Marcus Claudius MACRINUS VIN
| | | | | | \-Vitrasia Fundania DE ROME
| | | | | | \-Laberia Pompeiana DE ROME
| | | | \-Asinia Juliana Nicomacha DE ROME
| | | | | /-Caius Julius ASINIUS QUADRATUS D`ASIE
| | | | | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Vibius Varus Laevillus D'ASIE
| | | | | | \-Julia Quadratilla MINOR DE ROME
| | | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | | | /-Lucius Sergius Paullus de ROME II
| | | | | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | | | | \-Julia Minor DE ROME
| | | | \-Asinia Juliana Faustus Paulinus of Rome
| | | | | /-Cassius DE ROME
| | | | | /-Caeionius Primus L'Étrusque DE ROME
| | | | | | \-Larcia CALIDA
| | | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | | \-Rasenna ETRUSCI
| | \-Chroca D'ALEMANIE
| | \-Priaros DE TER BEEK
| /-Merwig I VON THURINGEN
| | \-Uxor VON THURINGEN
\-Merowna Merovna DE THURINGE
\-Uxor Mervig IGNOTAE
- Father: Vultwulf of the OSTROGOTHS
- Mother: Unknown DES OSTROGOTHS
- Birth: ABT 330, Scythia, Roman Empire
- Also known as: Walaravans Balthes der Ostrogothen
- Also known as: Waldorans d'Ostrogothie
- Also known as: King of The Ostrogoths
- Also known as: Valaravans
- Also known as: Valaravans De Ostrogothie
- Also known as: Waldorans d'Ostrogothie
- Also known as: King of The Ostrogoths
- Also known as: Valaravans
- Also known as: Valaravans De Ostrogothie
- Also known as: Waldorans d'Ostrogothie
- Also known as: King of The Ostrogoths
- Also known as: Valaravans
- Also known as: Valaravans De Ostrogothie
- Also known as: Waldorans d'Ostrogothie
- Also known as: King of The Ostrogoths
- Also known as: Valaravans
- Also known as: Valaravans De Ostrogothie
- Tribe Name: Greuthengi
- Clan Name: House of Amals
- LifeSketch: Medlands Project c) VULTWULF . Iordanes names "Ansila et Ediulf, Vultuulf et Hermenerig" as the sons of Achiulf[35]. Vultwulf had one child: i) VALARAVANS . Iordanes names "Valaravans" as the son of Vultwulf[36]. Valaravans had one child: (a) VINITHARIUS . Iordanes names "Vinitharius" as the son of Valaravans[37]. Vinitharius had one child: (1) VANDALARIUS . Iordanes names "Vandiliarum" as son of Vinitharius[38]. ************************************** Valaravans Also Known As: "Valarvans", "Waldorarans", "Walderavans", "Walaravans", "Walaranvans", "Walarawans" Birthdate: circa 330 Birthplace: Scythia (Present Ukraine) Death: 409 (74-83) Scythia (Present Ukraine) Immediate Family: Son of Vultwulf, Prince of the Greuthungi and (Generation 10) Husband of (Generation 11) Father of Vinitharius "the Just", Warlord of the Ostrogoths; Amalaberge of the Ostrogoths and Daughter of Valaravans Occupation: 8th King of the Ostrogoths (378-409) Managed by: Private User Last Updated: January 22, 2019 View Complete Profile view all Immediate Family (Generation 11) wife Vinitharius "the Just", Warlord ... son Amalaberge of the Ostrogoths daughter Daughter of Valaravans daughter Vultwulf, Prince of the Greuthungi father (Generation 10) mother About Valaravans From the Foundation for Medieval Genealogy page on Hungary: http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/HUNGARY.htm#Theodemirdied474A VULTWULF (Ostrogoth Generation 10) Iordanes names "Ansila et Ediulf, Vultuulf et Hermenerig" as the sons of Achiulf[35]. VALARAVANS (Ostrogoth Generation 11) Iordanes names "Valaravans" as the son of Vultwulf[36]. VINITHARIUS (Ostrogoth Generation 12) Iordanes names "Vinitharius" as the son of Valaravans[37]. References: [35] Iordanes Getarum, MGH Auct. ant. V.1, p. 77. [36] Iordanes Getarum, MGH Auct. ant. V.1, p. 77. [37] Iordanes Getarum, MGH Auct. ant. V.1, p. 77. From Jordanes' Getica (Iordanes' Getarum): http://people.ucalgary.ca/~vandersp/Courses/texts/jordgeti.html#visi XIV (79) Now the first of these heroes, as they themselves relate in their legends, was Gapt, who begat Hulmul. And Hulmul begat Augis; and Augis begat him who was called Amal, from whom the name of the Amali comes. This Amal begat Hisarnis. Hisarnis moreover begat Ostrogotha, and Ostrogotha begat Hunuil, and Hunuil likewise begat Athal. Athal begat Achiulf and Oduulf. Now Achiulf begat Ansila and Ediulf, Vultuulf and Hermanaric. And Vultuulf begat Valaravans and Valaravans begat Vinitharius. Vinitharius moreover begat Vandalarius; (80) Vandalarius begat Thiudimer and Valamir and Vidimer; and Thiudimer begat Theodoric. Theodoric begat Amalasuentha; Amalasuentha bore Athalaric and Mathesuentha to her husband Eutharic, whose race was thus joined to hers in kinship. (81) For the aforesaid Hermanaric, the son of Achiulf, begat Hunimund, and Hunimund begat Thorismud. Now Thorismud begat Beremud, Beremud begat Veteric, and Veteric likewise begat Eutharic, who married Amalasuentha and begat Athalaric and Mathesuentha. Athalaric died in the years of his childhood, and Mathesuentha married Vitiges, to whom she bore no child. Both of them were taken together by Belisarius to Constantinople. When Vitiges passed from human affairs, Germanus the patrician, a cousin of the Emperor Justinian, took Mathesuentha in marriage and made her a Patrician Ordinary. And of her he begat a son, also called Germanus. But upon the death of Germanus, she determined to remain a widow. Now how and in what wise the kingdom of the Amali was overthrown we shall keep to tell in its proper place, if the Lord help us.
- Death: 409, Marne, Loire-Atlantique, Pays De La Loire, France
- Partnership with: No Name DES HUNS
- Partnership with: Farahild of Neustria
- Partnership with: Claudia Adelphia DE ROME
- Child: Flora or Frilla of the VANDALS Birth: 371, Granada, Granada, Andalucia, Spain
- Child: Wadamerca of OSTROGOTHS Birth: 356, Roma, Lazio, Italy
- Child: Valdamerca D'OSTROGOTHIE Birth: 365, Scythia, Roman Empire
- Child: Amalaberthe D`OSTROGOTHIE Birth: 380, Reino Ostrogodo, Benevento, Campania, Italy
Ancestors of Walaranvans OSTROGOTHIE
/-Gapt of the Greuthengi
/-Hulmul DE BALTHES der Greuthengi
/-Augis DER GREUTHENGI
| \-Unknown Spouse of HULMUL
/-Amal D'OSTROGOTHIE
| | /-Caractacus Gweirdd ap CUNOBELIN
| | /-Marius ap GWEIRYDD
| | | \-Genuissa VENISSA JULIA of Siluria
| | /-Silures Tribe ap Marius de Colchester CAMULOD
| | | \-Julia verch PRASUTAGUS
| \-Eigen ferch MARIUS II
| \-Strada verch Gadeon Catuvellauni TRIBE
/-Hisarna of the GREUTHENGI
| | /-Hwala D'ASGARD
| | /-Berig III of the GOTHS
| | | \-Bodvid HODSDATTER
| | /-Gjúki of the GOTHS
| | | \-Asgard spouse of Berig III of the GOTHS
| | /-Guntharich I of the GOTHS
| | | \-Eigen DE SILURIA of the Goths
| \-Unknown Spouse of Amal of the GOTHS
| | /-Caractacus Gweirdd ap CUNOBELIN
| | /-Marius ap GWEIRYDD
| | | \-Genuissa VENISSA JULIA of Siluria
| | /-Silures Tribe ap Marius de Colchester CAMULOD
| | | \-Julia verch PRASUTAGUS
| \-Eigen Marius DE BALTHES of the Goths
| \-Strada verch Gadeon Catuvellauni TRIBE
/-Ostrogotho of the GREUTHUNGI
/-Hunuil D'OSTROGOTHS
| \-Nascida BENKANT
/-Athal King of the Greuthingi OSTROGOTHS
| \-Vandalar of the Ostrogoths
/-Achiulf of the OSTROGOTHS
| \-Erelicia of The Ostrogoths
/-Vultwulf of the OSTROGOTHS
| \-Withemir of the Ostrogoths
Walaranvans OSTROGOTHIE
\-Unknown DES OSTROGOTHS
Descendants of Walaranvans OSTROGOTHIE
1 Walaranvans OSTROGOTHIE
=No Name DES HUNS
=Farahild of Neustria
=Claudia Adelphia DE ROME
2 Flora or Frilla of the VANDALS
2 Wadamerca of OSTROGOTHS
=Ermenrich spouse of Wadamerca Of OSTROGOTHS
3 Rechila of the SUEVI
=daughter of Walia of the Visigoths
2 Valdamerca D'OSTROGOTHIE
=Wittichius II VON SACHSEN
3 Wichtgiste VON SACHSEN
3 Widelphe VON SACHSEN
=Aelia Galla Placida
=Amalaberthe D`OSTROGOTHIE
2 Amalaberthe D`OSTROGOTHIE
=Theoderic DE WISIGOTHIE
3 Euric I DE WISIGOTHIE
=Widelphe VON SACHSEN
3 Banin Basin Chlodwig VON THURINGIA
3 Bisinus I of the THURINGIANS
3 Wedelphe DE METZ of the Thüringians
=Chlodwig of THÜRINGIA Marriage: ABT 421, Germany
3 Basin of THURINGIA
=Basina SAXON
3 Merwig II of the THURINGIANS
=(Unknown)
3 Basine VON SACHSEN
=Chlodwig I Medelphus DES FRANCS
=Cariaric DES FRANKS
=Chlodwig of THÜRINGIA
=Merwing II VON THURINGEN
=Chlodebald Medelphus VON KOLN Marriage: BEF 435
3 Wedelphia VON SACHSEN
=Chlodebald Medelphus VON KOLN
- Father: Athal King of the Greuthingi OSTROGOTHS
- Mother: Erelicia of The Ostrogoths
- Birth: 270, Scythia, Roman Empire
- Clan Name: House of Amal
- Tribe Name: Greuthingi
- LifeSketch: From Wikipedia Achiulf was a king of the early Ostrogothic Kingdom. He was the successor to Athal. During his reign, the surrounding nations of the Sarmatians, Scythians, and Gepids were subjugated by the Ostrogoths. Achiulf was succeeded in around 350 by Ermanerik (Airmanareiks). ************************* Foundation for Medieval Genealogy DYNASTY of the AMAL GOTHS Iordanes sets out the supposed ancestors of Athal, in order, as follows "Gapt…Hulmul…Augis…Amal a quo et origo Amalorum decurrit…Hisarnis…Ostrogotha…Hunuil…Athal"[31]. Nothing is known about the Amal Goth leaders, supposed descendants of Athal, who are shown below apart from the sparse amount of information which has been extracted from Iordanes. ATHAL . Athal had two children: 1. ACHIULF . Iordanes names "Achiulf et Oduulf" as the sons of Athal[32]. Achiulf had four children: a) ANSILA . Iordanes names "Ansila et Ediulf, Vultuulf et Hermenerig" as the sons of Achiulf[33]. b) EDIULF . Iordanes names "Ansila et Ediulf, Vultuulf et Hermenerig" as the sons of Achiulf[34]. c) VULTWULF . Iordanes names "Ansila et Ediulf, Vultuulf et Hermenerig" as the sons of Achiulf[35]. Vultwulf had one child: i) VALARAVANS . Iordanes names "Valaravans" as the son of Vultwulf[36]. Valaravans had one child: (a) VINITHARIUS . Iordanes names "Vinitharius" as the son of Valaravans[37]. Vinitharius had one child: (1) VANDALARIUS . Iordanes names "Vandiliarum" as son of Vinitharius[38]. - see below. d) HERMENRICH . Iordanes names "Ansila et Ediulf, Vultuulf et Hermenerig" as the sons of Achiulf[39]. Hermenrich had one child: i) HUNIMUND . Iordanes names "Hunimundum" as son of "Hermanaricus"[40]. Hunimund had one child: (a) THORISMUND (-killed in battle [451/55]). Iordanes names "Thorismundo" as son of "Hunimundus"[41]. Iordanes records that "Thorismundo filius eius" succeeded as King of the Goths after the death of "Hunimundus filius quondam regis…Hermanarici" but was killed fighting the Gepids in the second year of his reign[42]. Thorismund had one child: (1) BERIMUD . Iordanes names "Berimud" as son of "Thorismundo"[43]. Iordanes records that "Beremud…cum filio Vitiricho" left the Ostrogoths to join "Vallia rex Gothorum" [King of the Visigoths in Toulouse][44]. The implication of a later passage in Iordanes, which records that "Valamer…ex consobrino eius genitus Vandalario" succeeded as king after "Thorismundo" was killed[45], is that Berimud's departure was triggered after he was passed over in the succession. Berimud had one child: a. VETERICUS . Iordanes names "Vetericum" as son of "Berimud"[46]. Vetericus had one child: (i) EUTHARICH (-[522/23]). Iordanes names "Eutharicum" as son of "Vetericus" and as husband of "Amalasuentham" and father of their two children[47]. Eutharic was adopted by Emperor Justin in recognition of his father-in-law's decision to designate him his successor after his marriage. He was given Roman citizenship and became first consul in 519 as FLAVIUS EUTHARICUS CILLIGA[48]. Wolfram estimates that Eutharich died in [522/23][49]. Jordanes specifies that Eutharich predeceased King Theodoric's nomination of his son Athalaric as his successor. m (515) AMALASUINTHA, daughter of THEODORIC King of the Ostrogoths in Italy & his wife Audofledis of the Franks ([493]-murdered [30 Apr] 535). The Chronicle of Cassiodorus records the marriage in 515 of "Theodericus filiam usam dominam Amalasuintam" and "gloriosi viri dn Eutharici"[50]. 2. ODWULF . Iordanes names "Achiulf et Oduulf" as the sons of Athal[51].
- Death: 340, Scythia, Roman Empire
Ancestors of Achiulf of the OSTROGOTHS
/-Gapt of the Greuthengi
/-Hulmul DE BALTHES der Greuthengi
/-Augis DER GREUTHENGI
| \-Unknown Spouse of HULMUL
/-Amal D'OSTROGOTHIE
| | /-Tasciovanus Tenacius ap LLUD
| | /-Cymbeline of the Silures Tribe of BRITON
| | | \-Guneril verch Llyr SILURIA
| | /-Caractacus Gweirdd ap CUNOBELIN
| | | | /-Servius Sulpicius Rufus DE ROME
| | | \-Genvissa Cartismanda L Brigantes Silures tribe BRITAIN
| | | \-Plautia URGULANILLA
| | /-Marius ap GWEIRYDD
| | | | /-Tiberius Claudius NERO GERMANICUS
| | | \-Genuissa VENISSA JULIA of Siluria
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Tiberius Claudius Nero GERMANICUS
| | /-Silures Tribe ap Marius de Colchester CAMULOD
| | | \-Julia verch PRASUTAGUS
| \-Eigen ferch MARIUS II
| \-Strada verch Gadeon Catuvellauni TRIBE
/-Hisarna of the GREUTHENGI
| | /-Berig I DE GOTHIE
| | /-Hwala D'ASGARD
| | /-Berig III of the GOTHS
| | | | /-Visbur AV UPPSALA
| | | | /-Hod VIBURSSON
| | | \-Bodvid HODSDATTER
| | | | /-Tiberius Julius II COTYS
| | | \-Dana Tiberiusdatter VISBURSSON
| | /-Gjúki of the GOTHS
| | | \-Asgard spouse of Berig III of the GOTHS
| | /-Guntharich I of the GOTHS
| | | \-Eigen DE SILURIA of the Goths
| \-Unknown Spouse of Amal of the GOTHS
| | /-Tasciovanus Tenacius ap LLUD
| | /-Cymbeline of the Silures Tribe of BRITON
| | | \-Guneril verch Llyr SILURIA
| | /-Caractacus Gweirdd ap CUNOBELIN
| | | | /-Servius Sulpicius Rufus DE ROME
| | | \-Genvissa Cartismanda L Brigantes Silures tribe BRITAIN
| | | \-Plautia URGULANILLA
| | /-Marius ap GWEIRYDD
| | | | /-Tiberius Claudius NERO GERMANICUS
| | | \-Genuissa VENISSA JULIA of Siluria
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Tiberius Claudius Nero GERMANICUS
| | /-Silures Tribe ap Marius de Colchester CAMULOD
| | | \-Julia verch PRASUTAGUS
| \-Eigen Marius DE BALTHES of the Goths
| \-Strada verch Gadeon Catuvellauni TRIBE
/-Ostrogotho of the GREUTHUNGI
/-Hunuil D'OSTROGOTHS
| \-Nascida BENKANT
/-Athal King of the Greuthingi OSTROGOTHS
| \-Vandalar of the Ostrogoths
Achiulf of the OSTROGOTHS
\-Erelicia of The Ostrogoths
Descendants of Achiulf of the OSTROGOTHS
1 Achiulf of the OSTROGOTHS
=Withemir of the Ostrogoths Marriage: Verona, Veneto, Italy
2 Ermanaric of the OSTROGOTHS
2 Ediulf of the Ostrogoths
2 Ansila of the OSTROGOTHS
2 Vultwulf of the OSTROGOTHS
=Unknown DES OSTROGOTHS
3 Walaranvans OSTROGOTHIE
=No Name DES HUNS
=Farahild of Neustria
=Claudia Adelphia DE ROME
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Amal of the OSTROGOTHS
/-Giuki of VISIGOTHS
/-Gadaric of the OSTROGOTHS
/-Filimer of The OSTROGOTHS
/-Filogud OF THE OSTROGOTHS
/-Gapt PROGENITOR OF THE AMALS
/-Hulmul PROGENITOR OF THE AMALS
/-Augis OF THE OSTROGOTHS
Amal of the OSTROGOTHS
Descendants of Amal of the OSTROGOTHS
1 Amal of the OSTROGOTHS
=(Unknown)
2 Hisarnis OF THE AMAL CLAN
2 Hisarna of OSTROGOTHS
=(Unknown)
3 Ostrogotha OF THE GOTHS
=(Unknown)
- Father: Theodemir of the OSTROGOTHS
- Mother: Ereleuva of the Huns
- Birth: 468, Pannonia, Roman Empire
- LifeSketch: PLEASE DO NOT DISTURB THIS LINE THERE ARE ADDITIONAL RECORDS ATTACHED TO READ ONLY FILES Wikipedia Amalafrida was the daughter of Theodemir, king of the Ostrogoths, and his wife Erelieva. She was the sister of Theodoric the Great, and mother of Theodahad, both of whom were kings of the Ostrogoths. In 500, to further cement his authority over the Vandals, Theodoric arranged a marriage alliance with Thrasamund, king of the Vandals, who became Amalfrida's second husband. She brought a very large dowry, but also 5,000 Gothic troops.[1] After her husband Thrasamund's death, his successor Hilderic issued orders for the return of all the Catholic bishops from exile, and Boniface, a strenuous asserter of orthodoxy, bishop of the African Church. In response, Amalfrida headed a party of revolt; she called in the assistance of the Moors, and battle was joined at Capsa, about three hundred miles to the south of the capital, on the edge of the Libyan desert.[2] In 523, Amalafrida's party was beaten, and Hilderic had her arrested and imprisoned in a successful bid to overthrow Ostrogothic hegemony; he also had her Gothic troops killed. She died in prison, exact date unknown.[3] Amalafrida and unknown father had two children: 1 Theodahad 2 Amalaberga, who married Hermanfrid, king of the Thuringians. Foundation for Medieval Genealogy AMALAFRIDA (-murdered [523/25]). Iordanes names "Amalfridam germanam suam [Theoderici]" as the mother of "Theodehadi" and wife of "Africa regi Vandalorum…Thrasamundo"[237]. Emperor Zeno used her as ambassador to her half-brother in 487 to thwart his attack on Constantinople[238]. Her second marriage was arranged by her half-brother, Theodoric King of Italy, as part of his efforts to foster the support of the Vandals. Amalafrida's dowry was Lilybæum in western Sicily[239]. After the death of her husband, she unsuccessfully protested his successor's withdrawal of support from her brother, but she was outmanœuvred and killed[240]. Amalafrida married firstly [HUGO ---] (-before 500). The Widukindi Res Gestæ Saxonicæ names "Huga rex Francorum…unicam filiam Amalbergam" who married "Irminfredo regi Thuringorum"[241], but there is no indication to whom "Huga rex Francorum" could refer. Amalafrida married secondly ([500]) THRASAMUND, King of the Vandals, son of [GENTO the Vandal or GELIMER the Vandal] Parents: Father: Theodemir or Thiudimir, Co-King of the Ostrogoths (451-468), King of the Ostrogoths (468-474) Mother: Unknown wife "Erlieva" (not Ereleuva, Theodemir's concubine) Half-Siblings (children of Erlieva): 1 Theoderic I (b. c451), King of the Ostrogoths (474 - 30 August 526) 2 Theodimund (fl. 479) 3.Unknown daughter (d. c479) First Husband: Hugo Rex Francorum (Peter Heather from the English Wikipedia page apparently does not identify this individual, but FMG does). Children: 1 Theodahad, King of Italy (d. December 536, murdered by his own men mid-flight from battle near Rome toward Ravenna, m. Gudeliva and had two children) 2 Amalaberga, Queen of the Thuringians (510-534, m. Hermanafred, King of the Thuringians, died after 534 in Ravenna) Second Husband: Thrasamund (b. before 460), King of the Vandals (496-523) Birth: 455/460 according to Mittelalter Genealogie. The Ostrogoths under her father didn't leave Pannonia until 473, so this is likely her birth location. Baptism: Unknown, but Arian Christian Marriage: 1. Before 500 - Hugo Rex Francorum 2. 500 - Thrasamund, King of the Vandals Death: 525 - imprisoned in Carthago Burial: Unknown Occupation: Before 500, wife of Hugo Rex Francorum 500-523, Queen of the Vandals, or wife of King Thrasamund of the Vandal 523-525, prisoner in Carthago. Alternate Names: Amalafrida, Amalfrida, Amalafréde
- Death: 525, Carthage, Tunisia, Kingdom of the Vandals
Ancestors of Amalafrida of the OSTROGOTHS
/-Wittichius SAXONY
/-Vinitharius Warlord of the OSTROGOTHS
| | /-Thierry DE NEUSTRIE
| | /-Walechise DE NEUSTRIE
| | | \-Dode DE FRANCIE
| | /-Hermanfried DE NEUSTRIE
| | | \-Waldrada spouse of Walechise DE NEUSTRIE
| \-Farahild of Neustria
| | /-Berend DES HUNS
| | /-Fastida DES HUNS
| | /-Nembroth DES HUNS II
| | /-Bendemir DES HUNS
| | /-Balamir DES HUNS
| | /-Donat DES HUNS
| \-Faraild spouse of Hermanfried DE NEUSTRIE
| | /-Far RAMA
| \-Fur Ana of The HUNS
/-Wandalarius of SCYTHIA
| \-Erelicia of the Ostrogoths
/-Theodemir of the OSTROGOTHS
Amalafrida of the OSTROGOTHS
| /-Kadcha DES HUNS
| /-Oposch Prince of the HUNS
| /-Ethei of the HUNS
| /-Szemen of The HUNS
| /-Kama Tarkhan of The HUNS
| /-Avitochola OPOSH
| | \-Wadamerca DES OSTROGOTHIE
| /-Donaton of the HUNS
| /-Uldin of the HUNS
| | | /-Far RAMA
| | \-Fur Ana of The HUNS
| /-Kurdiak Turda of the HUNS
| | | /-Quiangqu father of YUFULUO
| | | /-Yufuluo son of QUIANGQU
| | | /-Bao son of YUFULUO
| | | /-Liu Yuan
| | | /-Liu-Yan-Shi
| | | /-Liu father of ADISHIR
| | | /-Adishir Babigan Xerxes
| | \-Car Zama
| | \-Tashiti Arta Ducta
| /-Mundzuk Benderuz of the HUNS
| | \-Wadamerca DES HUNS
\-Ereleuva of the Huns
| /-Manolis EROTIKOS I COMNENA
\-Hethela DES HUNS-AGATHYESI
Descendants of Amalafrida of the OSTROGOTHS
1 Amalafrida of the OSTROGOTHS
=Hugo Marriage: ABT 475
2 Amalaberga of the Ostrogoths
2 Theodahad of the OSTROGOTHS
=Thrasamund of the VANDALS Marriage: ABT 500
2 Amfleda the YOUNGER
=Hilderic of the VANDALS
3 Hildis HILDERICSDOTTIR
=Frodi FRIDLEIFSSON Marriage: 500, Lejre, Roskilde, Denmark
=Valdar HROARSSON Marriage: 567, Jelling, Jelling, Tørrild, Vejle, Denmark Marriage: 567, Jelling, Vejle, Denmark
- Father: Theodemir of the OSTROGOTHS
- Mother: Ereleuva of the Huns
- Birth: 460, Ravenna, Italy, Roman Empire
- Also known as: Amalafrida the Elder
- Also known as: Amalafriede, Amalafrida
- Also known as: Amalfrida", "Amalfreda of Ostrogoths", "Amalafrida "the Elder""
- LifeSketch: PLEASE DO NOT DISTURB THIS LINE THERE ARE ADDITIONAL RECORDS ATTACHED TO READ ONLY FILES From Wikipedia- Amalafrida was the daughter of Theodemir, king of the Ostrogoths, and his wife Erelieva. She was the sister of Theodoric the Great, and mother of Theodahad, both of whom were kings of the Ostrogoths. In 500, to further cement his authority over the Vandals, Theodoric arranged a marriage alliance with Thrasamund, king of the Vandals, who became Amalfrida's second husband. She brought a very large dowry, but also 5,000 Gothic troops.[1] After her husband Thrasamund's death, his successor Hilderic issued orders for the return of all the Catholic bishops from exile, and Boniface, a strenuous asserter of orthodoxy, bishop of the African Church. In response, Amalfrida headed a party of revolt; she called in the assistance of the Moors, and battle was joined at Capsa, about three hundred miles to the south of the capital, on the edge of the Libyan desert.[2] In 523, Amalafrida's party was beaten, and Hilderic had her arrested and imprisoned in a successful bid to overthrow Ostrogothic hegemony; he also had her Gothic troops killed. She died in prison, exact date unknown.[3] Amalafrida had two children, the aforementioned Theodahad and Amalaberga, who married Hermanfrid, king of the Thuringii. It is not known who the father of these children was. ******************** Foundation for Medieval Genealogy AMALAFRIDA (-murdered [523/25]). Iordanes names "Amalfridam germanam suam [Theoderici]" as the mother of "Theodehadi" and wife of "Africa regi Vandalorum…Thrasamundo"[237]. Emperor Zeno used her as ambassador to her half-brother in 487 to thwart his attack on Constantinople[238]. Her second marriage was arranged by her half-brother, Theodoric King of Italy, as part of his efforts to foster the support of the Vandals. Amalafrida's dowry was Lilybæum in western Sicily[239]. After the death of her husband, she unsuccessfully protested his successor's withdrawal of support from her brother, but she was outmanœuvred and killed[240]. m firstly [HUGO ---] (-before 500). The Widukindi Res Gestæ Saxonicæ names "Huga rex Francorum…unicam filiam Amalbergam" who married "Irminfredo regi Thuringorum"[241], but there is no indication to whom "Huga rex Francorum" could refer. m secondly ([500]) THRASAMUND, King of the Vandals, son of [GENTO the Vandal or GELIMER the Vandal] Summary Relationships Parents: Father: Theodemir or Thiudimir, Co-King of the Ostrogoths (451-468), King of the Ostrogoths (468-474) Mother: Unknown wife (not Ereleuva, Theodemir's concubine) Half-Siblings (children of Ereleuva): 1. Theoderic I (b. c451), King of the Ostrogoths (474 - 30 August 526) 2. Theodimund (fl. 479) 3. Unknown daughter (d. c479) Spouses and children: First Husband: Hugo Rex Francorum (Peter Heather from the English Wikipedia page apparently does not identify this individual, but FMG does) 1. Theodahad, King of Italy (d. December 536, murdered by his own men mid-flight from battle near Rome toward Ravenna, m. Gudeliva and had two children) 2. Amalaberga, Queen of the Thuringians (510-534, m. Hermanafred, King of the Thuringians, died after 534 in Ravenna) Second Husband: Thrasamund (b. before 460), King of the Vandals (496-523) Basic information: Birth: 455/460 according to Mittelalter Genealogie. The Ostrogoths under her father didn't leave Pannonia until 473, so this is likely her birth location. Baptism: Unknown, but Arian Christian Marriage: 1. Before 500 - Hugo Rex Francorum 2. 500 - Thrasamund, King of the Vandals Death: 525 - imprisoned in Carthago Burial: Unknown Occupation: Before 500, wife of Hugo Rex Francorum 500-523, Queen of the Vandals, or wife of King Thrasamund of the Vandal 523-525, prisoner in Carthago. Alternate Names: Amalafrida, Amalfrida, Amalafréde
- Title Of Nobility: Princess of the Ostrogoths
- Life Sketch: Amalafrida or Amalfrède, was Queen of the Vandals and African Alans. She was the sister of Theodoric the Great, King of the Ostrogoths of Italy, and the wife of Thrasamund, King of the Vandals from 496 to 523.
- Marriage to Thrasamund: To further cement his authority over the Vandals, Theodoric arranged a marriage alliance with Thrasamund, king of the Vandals, who became Amalfrida's second husband
- Event: After her husband Thrasamund's death, his successor Hilderic issued orders for the return of all the Catholic bishops from exile, and Boniface, a strenuous asserter of orthodoxy, bishop of the African Church. In response, Amalfrida headed a party of revolt; she called in the assistance of the Moors, and battle was joined at Capsa, about three hundred miles to the south of the capital, on the edge of the Libyan desert. party was beaten, and Hilderic had her arrested and imprisoned in a successful bid to overthrow Ostrogothic hegemony.
- Title Of Nobility: Queen of the Vandals, BET 500 AND 523, Carthage, Tunis, Africa
- LifeSketch: PLEASE DO NOT DISTURB THIS LINE THERE ARE ADDITIONAL RECORDS ATTACHED TO READ ONLY FILES Wikipedia Amalafrida was the daughter of Theodemir, king of the Ostrogoths, and his wife Erelieva. She was the sister of Theodoric the Great, and mother of Theodahad, both of whom were kings of the Ostrogoths. In 500, to further cement his authority over the Vandals, Theodoric arranged a marriage alliance with Thrasamund, king of the Vandals, who became Amalfrida's second husband. She brought a very large dowry, but also 5,000 Gothic troops.[1] After her husband Thrasamund's death, his successor Hilderic issued orders for the return of all the Catholic bishops from exile, and Boniface, a strenuous asserter of orthodoxy, bishop of the African Church. In response, Amalfrida headed a party of revolt; she called in the assistance of the Moors, and battle was joined at Capsa, about three hundred miles to the south of the capital, on the edge of the Libyan desert.[2] In 523, Amalafrida's party was beaten, and Hilderic had her arrested and imprisoned in a successful bid to overthrow Ostrogothic hegemony; he also had her Gothic troops killed. She died in prison, exact date unknown.[3] Amalafrida and unknown father had two children: 1 Theodahad 2 Amalaberga, who married Hermanfrid, king of the Thuringians. Foundation for Medieval Genealogy AMALAFRIDA (-murdered [523/25]). Iordanes names "Amalfridam germanam suam [Theoderici]" as the mother of "Theodehadi" and wife of "Africa regi Vandalorum…Thrasamundo"[237]. Emperor Zeno used her as ambassador to her half-brother in 487 to thwart his attack on Constantinople[238]. Her second marriage was arranged by her half-brother, Theodoric King of Italy, as part of his efforts to foster the support of the Vandals. Amalafrida's dowry was Lilybæum in western Sicily[239]. After the death of her husband, she unsuccessfully protested his successor's withdrawal of support from her brother, but she was outmanœuvred and killed[240]. Amalafrida married firstly [HUGO ---] (-before 500). The Widukindi Res Gestæ Saxonicæ names "Huga rex Francorum…unicam filiam Amalbergam" who married "Irminfredo regi Thuringorum"[241], but there is no indication to whom "Huga rex Francorum" could refer. Amalafrida married secondly ([500]) THRASAMUND, King of the Vandals, son of [GENTO the Vandal or GELIMER the Vandal] Parents: Father: Theodemir or Thiudimir, Co-King of the Ostrogoths (451-468), King of the Ostrogoths (468-474) Mother: Unknown wife "Erlieva" (not Ereleuva, Theodemir's concubine) Half-Siblings (children of Erlieva): 1 Theoderic I (b. c451), King of the Ostrogoths (474 - 30 August 526) 2 Theodimund (fl. 479) 3.Unknown daughter (d. c479) First Husband: Hugo Rex Francorum (Peter Heather from the English Wikipedia page apparently does not identify this individual, but FMG does). Children: 1 Theodahad, King of Italy (d. December 536, murdered by his own men mid-flight from battle near Rome toward Ravenna, m. Gudeliva and had two children) 2 Amalaberga, Queen of the Thuringians (510-534, m. Hermanafred, King of the Thuringians, died after 534 in Ravenna) Second Husband: Thrasamund (b. before 460), King of the Vandals (496-523) Birth: 455/460 according to Mittelalter Genealogie. The Ostrogoths under her father didn't leave Pannonia until 473, so this is likely her birth location. Baptism: Unknown, but Arian Christian Marriage: 1. Before 500 - Hugo Rex Francorum 2. 500 - Thrasamund, King of the Vandals Death: 525 - imprisoned in Carthago Burial: Unknown Occupation: Before 500, wife of Hugo Rex Francorum 500-523, Queen of the Vandals, or wife of King Thrasamund of the Vandal 523-525, prisoner in Carthago. Alternate Names: Amalafrida, Amalfrida, Amalafréde
- Death: 527
- Burial: 525, Tunis, Africa
- Partnership with: Thrasimund of the VANDALS
Marriage: ABT 500, Carthage, Tunis, Africa
- Child: Amalaberga of the Ostrogoths Birth: 475, Ravenna, Emilia-Romagna, Italy
- Child: Amegonde of SAXONY Birth: ABT 485, Reims, Marne, Grand Est, França
- Child: Theodahad of the OSTROGOTHS Birth: ABT 480, Tauresium, North Macedonia, Byzantine Empire
- Partnership with: Hermenfried VON THURINGEN
Ancestors of Amalfrida of the OSTROGOTHS
/-Wittichius SAXONY
/-Vinitharius Warlord of the OSTROGOTHS
| | /-Thierry DE NEUSTRIE
| | /-Walechise DE NEUSTRIE
| | | \-Dode DE FRANCIE
| | /-Hermanfried DE NEUSTRIE
| | | \-Waldrada spouse of Walechise DE NEUSTRIE
| \-Farahild of Neustria
| | /-Berend DES HUNS
| | /-Fastida DES HUNS
| | /-Nembroth DES HUNS II
| | /-Bendemir DES HUNS
| | /-Balamir DES HUNS
| | /-Donat DES HUNS
| \-Faraild spouse of Hermanfried DE NEUSTRIE
| | /-Far RAMA
| \-Fur Ana of The HUNS
/-Wandalarius of SCYTHIA
| \-Erelicia of the Ostrogoths
/-Theodemir of the OSTROGOTHS
Amalfrida of the OSTROGOTHS
| /-Kadcha DES HUNS
| /-Oposch Prince of the HUNS
| /-Ethei of the HUNS
| /-Szemen of The HUNS
| /-Kama Tarkhan of The HUNS
| /-Avitochola OPOSH
| | \-Wadamerca DES OSTROGOTHIE
| /-Donaton of the HUNS
| /-Uldin of the HUNS
| | | /-Far RAMA
| | \-Fur Ana of The HUNS
| /-Kurdiak Turda of the HUNS
| | | /-Quiangqu father of YUFULUO
| | | /-Yufuluo son of QUIANGQU
| | | /-Bao son of YUFULUO
| | | /-Liu Yuan
| | | /-Liu-Yan-Shi
| | | /-Liu father of ADISHIR
| | | /-Adishir Babigan Xerxes
| | \-Car Zama
| | \-Tashiti Arta Ducta
| /-Mundzuk Benderuz of the HUNS
| | \-Wadamerca DES HUNS
\-Ereleuva of the Huns
| /-Manolis EROTIKOS I COMNENA
\-Hethela DES HUNS-AGATHYESI
Descendants of Amalfrida of the OSTROGOTHS
1 Amalfrida of the OSTROGOTHS
=Thrasimund of the VANDALS Marriage: ABT 500, Carthage, Tunis, Africa
2 Amalaberga of the Ostrogoths
2 Amegonde of SAXONY
2 Theodahad of the OSTROGOTHS
=Hermenfried VON THURINGEN
2 Rolande VON THURINGEN
2 Amalaberge VON THURINGEN
2 Rolande VON THURINGEN
2 Basin II VON THURINGEN
=Menia VON KOLN
3 Radegonde VON THÜRINGEN
=Clothaire of the Franks of NEUSTRIA Marriage: 540
3 Gerberga VON THURINGEN
3 Redegonde VON THURINGEN
3 Agnes VON THURINGEN
3 Berthaire II VON THURINGEN
=Menia DE BURGONDIE
Ancestors of Ansila of the OSTROGOTHS
/-Gapt of the Greuthengi
/-Hulmul DE BALTHES der Greuthengi
/-Augis DER GREUTHENGI
| \-Unknown Spouse of HULMUL
/-Amal D'OSTROGOTHIE
| | /-Cymbeline of the Silures Tribe of BRITON
| | /-Caractacus Gweirdd ap CUNOBELIN
| | | \-Genvissa Cartismanda L Brigantes Silures tribe BRITAIN
| | /-Marius ap GWEIRYDD
| | | | /-Tiberius Claudius NERO GERMANICUS
| | | \-Genuissa VENISSA JULIA of Siluria
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Tiberius Claudius Nero GERMANICUS
| | /-Silures Tribe ap Marius de Colchester CAMULOD
| | | \-Julia verch PRASUTAGUS
| \-Eigen ferch MARIUS II
| \-Strada verch Gadeon Catuvellauni TRIBE
/-Hisarna of the GREUTHENGI
| | /-Berig I DE GOTHIE
| | /-Hwala D'ASGARD
| | /-Berig III of the GOTHS
| | | | /-Hod VIBURSSON
| | | \-Bodvid HODSDATTER
| | | \-Dana Tiberiusdatter VISBURSSON
| | /-Gjúki of the GOTHS
| | | \-Asgard spouse of Berig III of the GOTHS
| | /-Guntharich I of the GOTHS
| | | \-Eigen DE SILURIA of the Goths
| \-Unknown Spouse of Amal of the GOTHS
| | /-Cymbeline of the Silures Tribe of BRITON
| | /-Caractacus Gweirdd ap CUNOBELIN
| | | \-Genvissa Cartismanda L Brigantes Silures tribe BRITAIN
| | /-Marius ap GWEIRYDD
| | | | /-Tiberius Claudius NERO GERMANICUS
| | | \-Genuissa VENISSA JULIA of Siluria
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Tiberius Claudius Nero GERMANICUS
| | /-Silures Tribe ap Marius de Colchester CAMULOD
| | | \-Julia verch PRASUTAGUS
| \-Eigen Marius DE BALTHES of the Goths
| \-Strada verch Gadeon Catuvellauni TRIBE
/-Ostrogotho of the GREUTHUNGI
/-Hunuil D'OSTROGOTHS
| \-Nascida BENKANT
/-Athal King of the Greuthingi OSTROGOTHS
| \-Vandalar of the Ostrogoths
/-Achiulf of the OSTROGOTHS
| \-Erelicia of The Ostrogoths
Ansila of the OSTROGOTHS
\-Withemir of the Ostrogoths
- Father: Theodemir of the OSTROGOTHS
- Mother: Ereleuva of the Huns
- Birth: 460, Hun Empire (Ostrogoths, Eastern Goths), Ukraine
- Also known as: Arotta of Verona
- Alt. Birth: ABT 430
- NFS ID: 26LN-FT4
- Title (Nobility): Princess of The Ostrogoths
- Title Of Nobility: Duchess Salis
- Title (Nobility): Duchess of Salis
- Death: 516, Vouillé-les-Marais, Vendée, Pays de la Loire, France
Ancestors of Argotta de Verona OSTROGOTHS
/-Wittichius SAXONY
/-Vinitharius Warlord of the OSTROGOTHS
| | /-Thierry DE NEUSTRIE
| | /-Walechise DE NEUSTRIE
| | | \-Dode DE FRANCIE
| | /-Hermanfried DE NEUSTRIE
| | | \-Waldrada spouse of Walechise DE NEUSTRIE
| \-Farahild of Neustria
| | /-Berend DES HUNS
| | /-Fastida DES HUNS
| | /-Nembroth DES HUNS II
| | /-Bendemir DES HUNS
| | /-Balamir DES HUNS
| | /-Donat DES HUNS
| \-Faraild spouse of Hermanfried DE NEUSTRIE
| | /-Far RAMA
| \-Fur Ana of The HUNS
/-Wandalarius of SCYTHIA
| \-Erelicia of the Ostrogoths
/-Theodemir of the OSTROGOTHS
Argotta de Verona OSTROGOTHS
| /-Kadcha DES HUNS
| /-Oposch Prince of the HUNS
| /-Ethei of the HUNS
| /-Szemen of The HUNS
| /-Kama Tarkhan of The HUNS
| /-Avitochola OPOSH
| | \-Wadamerca DES OSTROGOTHIE
| /-Donaton of the HUNS
| /-Uldin of the HUNS
| | | /-Far RAMA
| | \-Fur Ana of The HUNS
| /-Kurdiak Turda of the HUNS
| | | /-Quiangqu father of YUFULUO
| | | /-Yufuluo son of QUIANGQU
| | | /-Bao son of YUFULUO
| | | /-Liu Yuan
| | | /-Liu-Yan-Shi
| | | /-Liu father of ADISHIR
| | | /-Adishir Babigan Xerxes
| | \-Car Zama
| | \-Tashiti Arta Ducta
| /-Mundzuk Benderuz of the HUNS
| | \-Wadamerca DES HUNS
\-Ereleuva of the Huns
| /-Manolis EROTIKOS I COMNENA
\-Hethela DES HUNS-AGATHYESI
- Father: Hunuil D'OSTROGOTHS
- Mother: Vandalar of the Ostrogoths
- Birth: ABT 230, Scythia, Roman Empire
- Also known as: Athal Balthes der Ostrogothen
- Also known as: Mansuetudo
- Also known as: Athel le Noble
- Occupation: 3rd King of the Ostrogoths (280-310), koning der Oostgoten, koning der Goten, 280
- Title Of Nobility: King of the Ostrogoths
- Clan Name: House of Amal
- Tribe Name: Greuthingi
- LifeSketch: It was at about this time that the Greuthengi and related tribes living in the East became know as Ostragoths. The Visigoths had split off and crossed the Danube, becoming a more or less separate, people.
- Death: ABT 310, Scythia, Roman Empire
Ancestors of Athal King of the Greuthingi OSTROGOTHS
/-Gapt of the Greuthengi
/-Hulmul DE BALTHES der Greuthengi
/-Augis DER GREUTHENGI
| \-Unknown Spouse of HULMUL
/-Amal D'OSTROGOTHIE
| | /-Tasciovanus Tenacius ap LLUD
| | /-Cymbeline of the Silures Tribe of BRITON
| | | | /-Llyr Lleddiarth of Wales
| | | \-Guneril verch Llyr SILURIA
| | | \-Lweriwadd of CAMBRIA
| | /-Caractacus Gweirdd ap CUNOBELIN
| | | | /-Servius Sulpicius Rufus DE ROME
| | | \-Genvissa Cartismanda L Brigantes Silures tribe BRITAIN
| | | | /-Marcus Plautius SILVANUS
| | | \-Plautia URGULANILLA
| | | \-Aelia Silvanus LAMIA
| | /-Marius ap GWEIRYDD
| | | | /-Tiberius Claudius NERO GERMANICUS
| | | \-Genuissa VENISSA JULIA of Siluria
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Tiberius Claudius Nero GERMANICUS
| | /-Silures Tribe ap Marius de Colchester CAMULOD
| | | \-Julia verch PRASUTAGUS
| \-Eigen ferch MARIUS II
| \-Strada verch Gadeon Catuvellauni TRIBE
/-Hisarna of the GREUTHENGI
| | /-Berig I DE GOTHIE
| | /-Hwala D'ASGARD
| | /-Berig III of the GOTHS
| | | | /-Vanlande AV UPPSALA
| | | | /-Visbur AV UPPSALA
| | | | | \-Vana VAN RUSLAND
| | | | /-Hod VIBURSSON
| | | \-Bodvid HODSDATTER
| | | | /-Tiberius Julius ASPURGAS
| | | | /-Tiberius Julius II COTYS
| | | | | \-Gepaepyrus daughter of Cotys VIII of THRACE
| | | \-Dana Tiberiusdatter VISBURSSON
| | /-Gjúki of the GOTHS
| | | \-Asgard spouse of Berig III of the GOTHS
| | /-Guntharich I of the GOTHS
| | | \-Eigen DE SILURIA of the Goths
| \-Unknown Spouse of Amal of the GOTHS
| | /-Tasciovanus Tenacius ap LLUD
| | /-Cymbeline of the Silures Tribe of BRITON
| | | | /-Llyr Lleddiarth of Wales
| | | \-Guneril verch Llyr SILURIA
| | | \-Lweriwadd of CAMBRIA
| | /-Caractacus Gweirdd ap CUNOBELIN
| | | | /-Servius Sulpicius Rufus DE ROME
| | | \-Genvissa Cartismanda L Brigantes Silures tribe BRITAIN
| | | | /-Marcus Plautius SILVANUS
| | | \-Plautia URGULANILLA
| | | \-Aelia Silvanus LAMIA
| | /-Marius ap GWEIRYDD
| | | | /-Tiberius Claudius NERO GERMANICUS
| | | \-Genuissa VENISSA JULIA of Siluria
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Tiberius Claudius Nero GERMANICUS
| | /-Silures Tribe ap Marius de Colchester CAMULOD
| | | \-Julia verch PRASUTAGUS
| \-Eigen Marius DE BALTHES of the Goths
| \-Strada verch Gadeon Catuvellauni TRIBE
/-Ostrogotho of the GREUTHUNGI
/-Hunuil D'OSTROGOTHS
| \-Nascida BENKANT
Athal King of the Greuthingi OSTROGOTHS
\-Vandalar of the Ostrogoths
Descendants of Athal King of the Greuthingi OSTROGOTHS
1 Athal King of the Greuthingi OSTROGOTHS
=Erelicia of The Ostrogoths Marriage: ABT 269, The Hun Empire
2 Oldulf BALTHES DER OSTROGOTHEN
2 Achiulf of the OSTROGOTHS
=Withemir of the Ostrogoths Marriage: Verona, Veneto, Italy
3 Ermanaric of the OSTROGOTHS
3 Ediulf of the Ostrogoths
3 Ansila of the OSTROGOTHS
3 Vultwulf of the OSTROGOTHS
=Unknown DES OSTROGOTHS
- Father: Achiulf of the OSTROGOTHS
- Mother: Withemir of the Ostrogoths
- Birth: 298, Oium, Scythia, Roman Empire
- Also known as: Ermanarich of Amali
- Also known as: Ermanaric, Ermanaricus, Eormanrīc, Hermanrich, Hermanaricus
- Title Of Nobility: King of the Ostrogoths
- Tribe Name: Greuthingi
- Clan Name: House of Amals
- LifeSketch: Ermanaric King of the Goths Reign circa 296-376 Successor Vithimiris Born circa 291 Died 376 House Amali dynasty Ermanaric (Gothic: *Aírmanareiks; Latin: Ermanaricus or Hermanaricus; Old English: Eormanrīc [ˈeorˠmɑnriːtʃ]; Old Norse: Jörmunrekr [ˈjɔrmunrekr], Middle High German: Ermenrîch; died 376) was a Greuthungian Gothic King who before the Hunnic invasion evidently ruled a sizable portion of Oium, the part of Scythia inhabited by the Goths at the time. He is mentioned in two Roman sources; the contemporary writings of Ammianus Marcellinus and in Getica by the 6th-century historian Jordanes. Modern historians disagree on the size of Ermanaric's realm. Herwig Wolfram postulates that he at one point ruled a realm stretching from the Baltic Sea to the Black Sea as far eastwards as the Ural Mountains.[1] Peter Heather is skeptical of the claim that Ermanaric ruled all Goths except the Tervingi, and furthermore points to the fact that such an enormous empire would have been larger than any known Gothic political unit, that it would have left bigger traces in the sources and that the sources on which the claim is based are not nearly reliable enough to be taken at face value.[2] Etymology The first element of the name Ermanaric appears to be based on the Proto-Germanic root *ermena-, meaning 'universal'.[3] The second element is from the element *-rīks, Gothic reiks, meaning 'ruler'; this is found frequently in Gothic royal names.[4] In Roman sources According to Ammianus, Ermanaric was "a most warlike king" who eventually committed suicide, faced with the aggression of the Alani and of the Huns, who invaded his territories in the 370s. Ammianus says he "ruled over extensively wide and fertile regions".[5][6] Ammianus also says that after Ermanaric's death, a certain Vithimiris was elected as the new king. According to Jordanes' Getica, Ermanaric ruled the realm of Oium. He describes him as a "Gothic Alexander" who "ruled all the nations of Scythia and Germania as they were his own". Jordanes also states that the king put to death a young woman named Sunilda (Svanhildr) with the use of horses, because of her infidelity. Thereupon her two brothers, Sarus and Ammius, severely wounded Ermanaric leaving him unfit to defend his kingdom from Hunnic incursions. Variations of this legend had a profound effect on medieval Germanic literature, including that of England and Scandinavia (see Jonakr's sons). Jordanes claims that he successfully ruled the Goths until his death at the age of 110. Gibbon gives the version of Ammianus and Jordanes as historical, reporting that Ermanaric successively conquered, during a reign of about 30 years from 337 to 367 A.D., the west-goths, the Heruli, the Venedi and the Aestii, establishing a kingdom which ranged from the Baltic to the Black Sea;[7] and died at the age of 110 of a wound inflicted by the brothers of a woman whom he had cruelly executed for her husband's revolt, being succeeded by his brother Vithimiris.[8] In Germanic sources and legends Iormunrek (Jörmunrekkr) is the Norse form of the name.[9] Ermanaric appears in Anglo-Saxon and Scandinavian legend. In the former, the poem Beowulf focused on the image of "Eormenric's wiles and hatred".[10] According to Tolkien, he is described in the 10th century poem Deor as a powerful but perilous king: "We have heard of the wolfish mind of Eormanric: far and wide he ruled the people of the realm of the Goths: he was a cruel king".[9] Ermanaric also appears in the Norse sources, such as Thidreks Saga, in which he is ill-advised by his counsellors to put his own wife to death for supposed adultery with his son, for which revenge is taken by his brothers-in-law.[11][12] Main article: Svanhildr The death of Swanhild (Svanhildr Sigurðardóttir) and Ermanaric's (Jörmunrek) subsequent death at the hands of Jonakr's sons occupies an important place in the world of Germanic legend. The tale is retold in many northern European stories, including the Icelandic Poetic Edda (Hamðismál and Guðrúnarhvöt), Prose Edda and the Volsunga Saga; the Norwegian Ragnarsdrápa; the Danish Gesta Danorum; and the German Nibelungenlied[13] and Annals of Quedlinburg. In the Norse Thidreks Saga, Ermanaric is ill-advised by his treacherous counsellor Bicke, Bikka, Sifka, or Seveke (who wants revenge for the rape of his wife by Ermanaric),[14] with the result that the king puts his own wife to death for supposed adultery with his son;[11] he is thereafter crippled by his brothers-in-law in revenge.[12] In the Middle High German poems Dietrichs Flucht, the Rabenschlacht, and Alpharts Tod about Dietrich of Bern, Ermanaric is Dietrich's uncle who has driven his nephew into exile.[15] The early modern Low German poem Ermenrichs Tod recounts a garbled version of Ermanaric's death reminiscent of the scene told in Jordanes and Scandinavian legend.[16] Name Ermanaric's Gothic name is reconstructed as *Airmanareiks. It is recorded in the various Latinized forms: in Jordanes' Getica, he is called Ermanaricus or Hermanaricus, but some of the manuscripts even have Armanaricus, Hermericus, Hermanericus etc. in Ammianus' Res gestae, he is Ermenrichus (his name occurs only once). In medieval Germanic epics, the name appears as: Old English Eormenric in Beowulf; the alternative spelling Eormanric occurs in the poems Deor and Widsith, Old Norse Jọrmunrekr or Ermenrekur; Old Swedish Ermenrik or Ermentrik in the Swedish Didrik Saga, Middle High German Ermenrîch. Since the name Heiðrekr may have been confused with Ermanaric[citation needed] through folk etymology he is possibly identical to Heiðrekr Ulfhamr of the Hervarar saga
- Death: ABT 376, committed suicide, Scythia, Hunnic Empire
- Burial: 376, Scythia, Kingdom of the Huns
Ancestors of Ermanaric of the OSTROGOTHS
/-Gapt of the Greuthengi
/-Hulmul DE BALTHES der Greuthengi
/-Augis DER GREUTHENGI
| \-Unknown Spouse of HULMUL
/-Amal D'OSTROGOTHIE
| | /-Cymbeline of the Silures Tribe of BRITON
| | /-Caractacus Gweirdd ap CUNOBELIN
| | | \-Genvissa Cartismanda L Brigantes Silures tribe BRITAIN
| | /-Marius ap GWEIRYDD
| | | | /-Tiberius Claudius NERO GERMANICUS
| | | \-Genuissa VENISSA JULIA of Siluria
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Tiberius Claudius Nero GERMANICUS
| | /-Silures Tribe ap Marius de Colchester CAMULOD
| | | \-Julia verch PRASUTAGUS
| \-Eigen ferch MARIUS II
| \-Strada verch Gadeon Catuvellauni TRIBE
/-Hisarna of the GREUTHENGI
| | /-Berig I DE GOTHIE
| | /-Hwala D'ASGARD
| | /-Berig III of the GOTHS
| | | | /-Hod VIBURSSON
| | | \-Bodvid HODSDATTER
| | | \-Dana Tiberiusdatter VISBURSSON
| | /-Gjúki of the GOTHS
| | | \-Asgard spouse of Berig III of the GOTHS
| | /-Guntharich I of the GOTHS
| | | \-Eigen DE SILURIA of the Goths
| \-Unknown Spouse of Amal of the GOTHS
| | /-Cymbeline of the Silures Tribe of BRITON
| | /-Caractacus Gweirdd ap CUNOBELIN
| | | \-Genvissa Cartismanda L Brigantes Silures tribe BRITAIN
| | /-Marius ap GWEIRYDD
| | | | /-Tiberius Claudius NERO GERMANICUS
| | | \-Genuissa VENISSA JULIA of Siluria
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Tiberius Claudius Nero GERMANICUS
| | /-Silures Tribe ap Marius de Colchester CAMULOD
| | | \-Julia verch PRASUTAGUS
| \-Eigen Marius DE BALTHES of the Goths
| \-Strada verch Gadeon Catuvellauni TRIBE
/-Ostrogotho of the GREUTHUNGI
/-Hunuil D'OSTROGOTHS
| \-Nascida BENKANT
/-Athal King of the Greuthingi OSTROGOTHS
| \-Vandalar of the Ostrogoths
/-Achiulf of the OSTROGOTHS
| \-Erelicia of The Ostrogoths
Ermanaric of the OSTROGOTHS
\-Withemir of the Ostrogoths
- Birth: 380, Castile, Spain
- Death: Y, Somme, Picardie, France
Descendants of Ermengaire Nascien of the OSTROGOTHS
1 Ermengaire Nascien of the OSTROGOTHS
=Fredemundus DE NARBONNE
2 Agrippin DE LA NARBONNAISE
=Carateen of BURGANDY
3 Caretena Aggripine DE NARBONNE
=Chilperic DE BURGONDIE
Descendants of Ermenrich spouse of Wadamerca Of OSTROGOTHS
1 Ermenrich spouse of Wadamerca Of OSTROGOTHS
=Wadamerca of OSTROGOTHS
2 Rechila of the SUEVI
=daughter of Walia of the Visigoths
3 Ricimer of the Suevi
3 Caratene DES SUEVES
=Flavius DE SEPTIMANIE
=Gondioc DE BURGONDIE
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Filimer of The OSTROGOTHS
/-Giuki of VISIGOTHS
/-Gadaric of the OSTROGOTHS
Filimer of The OSTROGOTHS
Descendants of Filimer of The OSTROGOTHS
1 Filimer of The OSTROGOTHS
=(Unknown)
2 Filogud OF THE OSTROGOTHS
=(Unknown)
3 Gapt PROGENITOR OF THE AMALS
=(Unknown)
- Father: Giuki of VISIGOTHS
- Birth: 70 BC, Rügen, Sachsen, Westfalia, Germany
- Also known as: Beaw
- Death: Romania
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Gadaric of the OSTROGOTHS
/-Giuki of VISIGOTHS
Gadaric of the OSTROGOTHS
Descendants of Gadaric of the OSTROGOTHS
1 Gadaric of the OSTROGOTHS
=(Unknown)
2 Filimer of The OSTROGOTHS
=(Unknown)
3 Filogud OF THE OSTROGOTHS
=(Unknown)
- Father: Amal of the OSTROGOTHS
- Birth: 140, Pannonia, Roman Empire
- Also known as: Hisarnis
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Hisarna of OSTROGOTHS
/-Giuki of VISIGOTHS
/-Gadaric of the OSTROGOTHS
/-Filimer of The OSTROGOTHS
/-Filogud OF THE OSTROGOTHS
/-Gapt PROGENITOR OF THE AMALS
/-Hulmul PROGENITOR OF THE AMALS
/-Augis OF THE OSTROGOTHS
/-Amal of the OSTROGOTHS
Hisarna of OSTROGOTHS
Descendants of Hisarna of OSTROGOTHS
1 Hisarna of OSTROGOTHS
=(Unknown)
2 Ostrogotha OF THE GOTHS
=(Unknown)
3 Berik OF THE OSTROGOTHS
=(Unknown)
- Father: Thrasimund of the VANDALS
- Mother: Amalfrida of the OSTROGOTHS
- Father: Hugo
- Mother: Amalafrida of the OSTROGOTHS
- Birth: ABT 480, Tauresium, North Macedonia, Byzantine Empire
- Recalled by his cousin Amalasuintha to act as co-regent for her in Italy: He had her arrested and transported to an island in Lake Bolsena, proclaiming himself King of Italy and murdering Athalaric his cousin's appointee
- Title Of Nobility: King of Italy
- LifeSketch: Theodahad, also known as Thiudahad (Latin: Flavius Theodahatus Rex, Theodahadus, Theodatus; born c. 480 AD in Tauresium[4] – December 536) was king of the Ostrogoths from 534 to 536. Early life Theodahad was a nephew of Theodoric the Great through his mother Amalafrida.[5] He is probably the son of Amalafrida's first husband because her second marriage was about 500 AD. His sister was Amalaberga. He may have arrived in Italy with Theodoric and was elderly at the time of his accession. Massimiliano Vitiello states the name "Theodahad" is a compound of 'people' and 'conflict'.[6] Before becoming king, his kinswoman Amalaswintha ruled.[7] During her rule, potential enemies were murdered or humiliated.[7] Theodahad was accused of land grabbing and forced to return land he had supposedly stolen.[7] King He arrested his first cousin Amalaswintha, former regent of the Ostrogoths from 526 to October 534, while they co-ruled as queen and king. He imprisoned her in the spring of 535 on an island in Lake Bolsena.[8] When Amalaswintha was assassinated while in custody, his enemies claimed he acquiesced to her murder. Since her assassination would likely separate him from her power base, this was unlikely. Political instability within the kingdom served as a pretext for Byzantine general Belisarius to intervene in Sicily and Italy, in the service of Emperor Justinian, causing the Gothic Wars. When his ineffectiveness in the war caused Theodahad to lose control, Witiges sent Optaris to retrieve him dead or alive, and Witigis became king.[9] He was notable for his adoration for Neoplatonic philosophy and poetry over martial prowess. His focus on erudition instead of bellicosity, in a time when Italy was consumed by turmoil, is claimed to be a reason for his downfall.[10][2] Wikipedia ******************************* From Medlands Project a) THEODAHAD (-murdered Dec 536). Iordanes names "Amalfridam germanam suam [Theoderici]" as the mother of "Theodehadi qui postea rex fuit" but does not name his father[242]. Disappointed in not succeeding his uncle King Theodoric, Theodahad acquired considerable private estates in Tuscany "where he led a retired life at home" according to Jordanes[243]. He was planning to sell this "kingdom" to the emperor, in return for retirement in Constantinople and an annual pension, when his cousin Queen Amalasuintha recalled him and appointed him co-regent in 534[244]. Procopius records that “Theodatus, filius Amalafridas sororis Theoderici” possessed "agrorum Tusciæ" and planned to deliver "Tusciam in Iustiniani Augusti potestatem"[245]. In a later passage, Procopius records that “Theodatus” was appointed regent by "Amalasuntha"[246]. He arrested the Queen end-534 and imprisoned her on an island in Lake Bolsena[247], assuming the title THEODAHAD King of Italy. Iordanes records that "Theodahadum consobrinum suum" succeeded Athalric, appointed by the latter's mother whom Theodahad killed soon after his accession[248]. After the Queen's murder, Emperor Justinian ordered a two-pronged attack against Sicily and Dalmatia in revenge. Theodahad repelled the initial threat in Dalmatia in 536, but an imperial fleet occupied Split and Dubrovnik. The forces in Sicily, under Belisarius, moved into mainland Italy, occupied Naples. Theodahad marched as far as Rome to meet the invaders, but was murdered while trying to escape back to Ravenna[249]. m GUDELIVA, daughter of ---. The primary source which names the wife of Theodahad has not so far been identified. Theodahad & his wife had two children: i) THEODEGISKLOS (-536 or after). Procopius records that “Theodati…filium Theodegisclum” was captured by "Vitigis" (in 536)[250]. ii) THEODENANDA . Procopius records that “Theodati…filiam Theodenantham” married "Ebrimuth" who surrendered to Belisarius "cum omni suo comitatu" and was awarded "patricii dignitatem"[251]. m EBRIMUD [Evermud], son of ---. Iordanes names "Evermud Theodahadi Gothorum regis gener"[252]. He was the military commander of the Ostrogoth forces in Reggio Calabria and surrendered to Belisarius in 536[253]. (a) [son (-[536]). The primary source which records the existence of this possible son has not yet been identified.]
- Title Of Nobility: King of the Ostrogoths, BET 534 AND 536, Captured by Vitigis, agent of Emperor Justinian
- Death: NOV 536, Roma, Lazio, Italy
Ancestors of Theodahad of the OSTROGOTHS
/-Thrasimund of the VANDALS
Theodahad of the OSTROGOTHS
| /-Wittichius SAXONY
| /-Vinitharius Warlord of the OSTROGOTHS
| | | /-Thierry DE NEUSTRIE
| | | /-Walechise DE NEUSTRIE
| | | | \-Dode DE FRANCIE
| | | /-Hermanfried DE NEUSTRIE
| | | | \-Waldrada spouse of Walechise DE NEUSTRIE
| | \-Farahild of Neustria
| | | /-Fastida DES HUNS
| | | /-Nembroth DES HUNS II
| | | /-Bendemir DES HUNS
| | | /-Balamir DES HUNS
| | | /-Donat DES HUNS
| | \-Faraild spouse of Hermanfried DE NEUSTRIE
| | | /-Far RAMA
| | \-Fur Ana of The HUNS
| /-Wandalarius of SCYTHIA
| | \-Erelicia of the Ostrogoths
| /-Theodemir of the OSTROGOTHS
\-Amalfrida of the OSTROGOTHS
| /-Oposch Prince of the HUNS
| /-Ethei of the HUNS
| /-Szemen of The HUNS
| /-Kama Tarkhan of The HUNS
| /-Avitochola OPOSH
| | \-Wadamerca DES OSTROGOTHIE
| /-Donaton of the HUNS
| /-Uldin of the HUNS
| | | /-Far RAMA
| | \-Fur Ana of The HUNS
| /-Kurdiak Turda of the HUNS
| | | /-Yufuluo son of QUIANGQU
| | | /-Bao son of YUFULUO
| | | /-Liu Yuan
| | | /-Liu-Yan-Shi
| | | /-Liu father of ADISHIR
| | | /-Adishir Babigan Xerxes
| | \-Car Zama
| | \-Tashiti Arta Ducta
| /-Mundzuk Benderuz of the HUNS
| | \-Wadamerca DES HUNS
\-Ereleuva of the Huns
| /-Manolis EROTIKOS I COMNENA
\-Hethela DES HUNS-AGATHYESI
- Father: Wandalarius of SCYTHIA
- Birth: 425, Scythia, Roman Empire
- Also known as: Théodemir of the Ostrogoths
- Also known as: Théodemir d'Ostrogothie
- Also known as: Théodemir of the Ostrogoths
- Title Of Nobility: King of all the Pannonian Ostrogoths
- The Ostrogoths regained their independence from the Huns under the Amali Theodemir.: 453
- Tribe Name: Greuthengi
- Clan Name: House of Amal
- LifeSketch: Theodoric (or Theoderic) the Great (454 – 30 August 526), also called Theodoric the Amal (Latin: Flāvius Theoderīcus, Greek: Θευδέριχος, Theuderichos), was king of the Ostrogoths (471–526), and ruler of the independent Ostrogothic Kingdom of Italy between 493–526,[3] regent of the Visigoths (511–526), and a patrician of the East Roman Empire. As ruler of the combined Gothic realms, Theodoric controlled an empire stretching from the Atlantic Ocean to the Adriatic Sea. Though Theodoric himself only ever used the title 'king' (rex), some scholars characterize him as a Western Roman Emperor in all but name,[b] since he ruled large parts of the former Western Roman Empire, had received the former Western imperial regalia from Constantinople in 497, and was referred to by the title augustus by some of his subjects. As a young child of an Ostrogothic nobleman, Theodoric was taken as a hostage in Constantinople, where he spent his formative years and received an east Roman education. Theodoric returned to Pannonia around 470, and throughout the 470s he campaigned against the Sarmatians and competed for influence among the Goths of the Roman Balkans. The emperor Zeno made him a commander of the Eastern Roman forces in AD 483, and in AD 484 he was named consul. Nevertheless, Theodoric remained in constant hostilities with the emperor and frequently raided East Roman lands. At the behest of Zeno, in 489 Theodoric attacked Odoacer, the king of Italy, emerging victorious in 493. As the new ruler of Italy, he upheld a Roman legal administration and scholarly culture and promoted a major building program across Italy.[4] In 505 he expanded into the Balkans, and by 511 he had brought the Visigothic Kingdom of Spain under his direct control and established hegemony over the Burgundian and Vandal kingdoms. Theodoric died in 526 and was buried in a grand mausoleum in Ravenna. He lived on as the figure Dietrich von Bern in Germanic heroic legend. Theodoric was born in AD 454 in Pannonia on the banks of the Neusiedler See near Carnuntum, the son of king Theodemir, a Germanic Amali nobleman, and his concubine Ereleuva. This was just a year after the Ostrogoths had thrown off nearly a century of domination by the Huns. His Gothic name, which is reconstructed by linguists as *Þiudareiks, translates into "people-king" or "ruler of the people".[5] In 461, when Theodoric was but seven or eight years of age, he was taken as a hostage in Constantinople to secure the Ostrogoths' compliance with a treaty Theodemir had concluded with the augustus Leo I (ruled 457–474). The treaty secured a payment to Constantinople of some 300 pounds' worth of gold each year.[6] Theodoric was well educated by Constantinople's best teachers.[7] His status made him valuable, since the Amal family from which he came (as told by Theodoric),[8] allegedly ruled half of all Goths since the third-century AD. Historian Peter Heather argues that Theodoric's claims were likely self-aggrandizing propaganda and that the Amal dynasty was more limited than modern commentators presume.[9] Until 469, Theodoric remained in Constantinople where he spent formative years "catching up on all the Romanitas" it had taken generations of Visigothic Balthi to acquire.[10] Theodoric was treated with favor by the emperor Leo I.[11] He learned to read, write, and perform arithmetic while in captivity in the Eastern Empire.[3] When Leo heard that his imperial army was retreating from the Goths near Pannonia, he sent Theodoric home with gifts and no promises of any commitments.[12][c] On his return in 469/470, Theodoric assumed leadership over the Gothic regions previously ruled by his uncle, Valamir, while his father became king. Not long afterwards near Singidunum (modern Belgrade) in upper Moesia, the Tisza Sarmatian king Babai had extended his authority at Constantinople's expense. Legitimizing his position as a warrior, Theodoric crossed the Danube with six thousand warriors, defeated the Sarmatians and killed Babai; this moment likely crystallized his position and marked the beginning of his kingship, despite not actually having yet assumed the throne.[14] Perhaps to assert his authority as an Amali prince, Theodoric kept the conquered area of Singidunum for himself.[15] Throughout the 470s, sometimes in the name of the empire itself, Theodoric launched campaigns against potential Gothic rivals and other enemies of the Eastern Empire, which made him an important military and political figure. One of his chief rivals was the chieftain of the Thracian Goths Theodoric Strabo (Strabo means "the Squinter"), who had led a major revolt against the emperor Zeno. Finding common ground with the emperor, Theodoric was rewarded by Zeno and made commander of East Roman forces, while his people became foederati or federates of the Roman army.[16] Zeno attempted to play one Germanic chieftain against another and take advantage of an opportunity sometime in 476/477 when—after hearing demands from Theodoric for new lands since his people were facing a famine—he offered Theodoric Strabo the command once belonging to Theodoric. Enraged by this betrayal, Theodoric sought his wrath against the communities in the Rhodope Mountains, where his forces commandeered livestock and slaughtered peasants, sacked and burned Stobi in Macedonia and requisitioned supplies from the archbishop at Heraclea.[17] Gothic plundering finally elicited a settlement from Zeno, but Theodoric initially refused any compromise. Theodoric sent one of his confidants, Sidimund, forward to Epidaurum for negotiations with Zeno.[18] While the Roman envoy and Theodoric were negotiating, Zeno sent troops against some of Theodoric's wagons, which were under the protection of his able general Theodimund. Unaware of this treachery, Theodoric's Goths lost around 2,000 wagons and 5,000 of his people were taken captive.[19] He settled his people in Epirus in 479 with the help of his relative Sidimund. In 482, he raided Greece and sacked Larissa. Bad luck, rebellions, and poor decisions left Zeno in an unfortunate position,[d] which subsequently led him to seek another agreement with Theodoric. In 483, Zeno made Theodoric magister militum praesentalis[21] and consul designate in 484, whereby he commanded the Danubian provinces of Dacia Ripensis and Moesia Inferior as well as the adjacent regions.[22] Theodoric was married once. He had a concubine in Moesia, name unknown, with whom he had two daughters: Theodegotha (ca. 473 – ?). In 494, she was married to Alaric II as a part of her father's alliance with the Visigoths. Ostrogotho (ca. 475 – ?).[57] In 494 or 496, she was married to the king Sigismund of Burgundy as a part of her father's alliance with the Burgundians. By his marriage to Audofleda in 493 he had one daughter: Amalasuintha, Queen of the Goths. She was married to Eutharic and had two children: Athalaric and Matasuntha (the latter being married to Witiges first, then, after Witiges' death, married to Germanus Justinus; neither had children). Any hope for a reconciliation between the Goths and the Romans in the person of a Gotho-Roman Emperor from this family lineage was shattered. After his death in Ravenna in 526, Theodoric was succeeded by his grandson Athalaric. Athalaric was at first represented by his mother Amalasuintha, who served as regent from 526 until 534. The kingdom of the Ostrogoths, however, began to wane and was conquered by Justinian I in 553 after the Battle of Mons Lactarius. Seeking further gains, Theodoric frequently ravaged the provinces of the Eastern Roman Empire, eventually threatening Constantinople itself. By 486, there was little disputing the open hostilities between Theodoric and Zeno. The emperor sought the assistance of the Bulgarians, who were likewise defeated by Theodoric.[23] In 487, Theodoric began his aggressive campaign against Constantinople, blockading the city, occupying strategically important suburbs, and cutting off its water supply; although it seems Theodoric never intended to occupy the city but instead, to use the assault as a means of gaining power and prestige from the Eastern Empire.[24] The Ostrogoths needed a place to live, and Zeno was having serious problems with Odoacer, the Germanic foederatus and King of Italy, who although ostensibly viceroy for Zeno, was menacing Byzantine territory and not respecting the rights of Roman citizens in Italy. In 488, Zeno ordered Theodoric to overthrow Odoacer. For this task, he received support from Rugian king Frideric, the son of Theodoric's cousin Giso. Theodoric moved with his people towards Italy in the autumn of 488.[25] On the way he was opposed by the Gepids, whom he defeated at Sirmium in August 489.[25] Arriving in Italy, Theodoric won the battles of Isonzo and Verona in 489.[26] Once again, Theodoric was pressed by Zeno in 490 to attack Odoacer.[27] Theodoric's army was defeated by Odoacer's forces at Faenza in 490, but regained the upper hand after securing victory in the Battle of the Adda River on 11 August 490.[28] For several years, the armies of Odoacer and Theodoric vied for supremacy across the Italian peninsula.[29] In 493, Theodoric took Ravenna. On 2 February 493, Theodoric and Odoacer signed a treaty that assured both parties would rule over Italy.[28] Then on 5 March 493, Theodoric entered the city of Ravenna.[30] A banquet was organised on 15 March 493 in order to celebrate this treaty.[28] At this feast, Theodoric, after making a toast, killed Odoacer. Theodoric drew his sword and struck him on the collarbone.[28] Along with Odoacer, Theodoric had the betrayed king's most loyal followers slaughtered as well, an event which left him as the master of Italy.[31] With Odoacer dead and his forces dispersed, Theodoric now faced the problem of settlement for his people.[32] Concerned about thinning out the Amal line too much, Theodoric believed he could not afford to spread some 40,000 of his tribesmen across
- Death: 475, Pannonia, Roman Empire
- Partnership with: Ereleuva of the Huns
- Child: Argotta de Verona OSTROGOTHS Birth: 460, Hun Empire (Ostrogoths, Eastern Goths), Ukraine
- Child: Theodimund of the Ostrogoths Birth: ABT 450, Pannonia, Roman Empire
- Child: Amalfrida of the OSTROGOTHS Birth: 460, Ravenna, Italy, Roman Empire
- Child: Theodoric I of the OSTROGOTHS Birth: 12 MAY 454, Pannonia, Roman Empire
- Child: Amalafrida of the OSTROGOTHS Birth: 468, Pannonia, Roman Empire
Ancestors of Theodemir of the OSTROGOTHS
/-Wittichius SAXONY
/-Vinitharius Warlord of the OSTROGOTHS
| | /-Thierry DE NEUSTRIE
| | /-Walechise DE NEUSTRIE
| | | \-Dode DE FRANCIE
| | /-Hermanfried DE NEUSTRIE
| | | \-Waldrada spouse of Walechise DE NEUSTRIE
| \-Farahild of Neustria
| | /-Berend DES HUNS
| | /-Fastida DES HUNS
| | /-Nembroth DES HUNS II
| | /-Bendemir DES HUNS
| | /-Balamir DES HUNS
| | /-Donat DES HUNS
| \-Faraild spouse of Hermanfried DE NEUSTRIE
| | /-Far RAMA
| \-Fur Ana of The HUNS
/-Wandalarius of SCYTHIA
| \-Erelicia of the Ostrogoths
Theodemir of the OSTROGOTHS
Descendants of Theodemir of the OSTROGOTHS
1 Theodemir of the OSTROGOTHS
=Ereleuva of the Huns
2 Argotta de Verona OSTROGOTHS
2 Theodimund of the Ostrogoths
2 Amalfrida of the OSTROGOTHS
=Thrasimund of the VANDALS Marriage: ABT 500, Carthage, Tunis, Africa
3 Amalaberga of the Ostrogoths
3 Amegonde of SAXONY
3 Theodahad of the OSTROGOTHS
=Hermenfried VON THURINGEN
3 Rolande VON THURINGEN
3 Amalaberge VON THURINGEN
3 Rolande VON THURINGEN
3 Basin II VON THURINGEN
=Menia VON KOLN
2 Theodoric I of the OSTROGOTHS
=Concubine OF MOESIA
3 Theodora de AMALES
3 Theodegotha of the VISIGOTHS
3 Ostrogotha of the Ostrogoths
=Sigismund DE BOURGOGNE Marriage: 494, Kingdom of Bourgogne, Gaul Frankish Empire
=Audofleda the GOTHS Marriage: ABT 492
3 Unnamed daughter
3 Theodimund OF THE OSTROGOTHS
3 Amalafrede D`OSTROGOTHIE
3 Amalasunthe D`OSTROGOTHIE
3 Theudicote d"Ostrogothie DES OSTROGOTHS
=(Unknown)
2 Amalafrida of the OSTROGOTHS
=Hugo Marriage: ABT 475
3 Amalaberga of the Ostrogoths
3 Theodahad of the OSTROGOTHS
=Thrasamund of the VANDALS Marriage: ABT 500
3 Amfleda the YOUNGER
=Hilderic of the VANDALS
- Father: Theodemir of the OSTROGOTHS
- Mother: Ereleuva of the Huns
- Birth: 12 MAY 454, Pannonia, Roman Empire
- Christening: ABT 510, Ravenna, Ostrogothic Italy
- Also known as: King Theudemer off the Ostrogoths
- Also known as: Thiudimir, Teodomino
- Also known as: Theodoric des Ostrogoths
- Also known as: Flavius Amalus Theodoricus
- Also known as: Theodoric I of the Ostrogoths
- Also known as: Theuderico
- Also known as: Theodorik
- Also known as: Theuderic
- Also known as: Theodorich
- Also known as: Theuderich I, King of Austrasia
- Title Of Nobility: King of all the Pannonian Ostrogoths
- The Ostrogoths regained their independence from the Huns under the Amali Theodemir.: 453
- Clan Name: House of Amal
- Tribe Name: Greuthengi
- LifeSketch: Theodoric (or Theoderic) the Great (454 – 30 August 526), also called Theodoric the Amal (Latin: Flāvius Theoderīcus, Greek: Θευδέριχος, Theuderichos), was king of the Ostrogoths (471–526), and ruler of the independent Ostrogothic Kingdom of Italy between 493–526,[3] regent of the Visigoths (511–526), and a patrician of the East Roman Empire. As ruler of the combined Gothic realms, Theodoric controlled an empire stretching from the Atlantic Ocean to the Adriatic Sea. Though Theodoric himself only ever used the title 'king' (rex), some scholars characterize him as a Western Roman Emperor in all but name,[b] since he ruled large parts of the former Western Roman Empire, had received the former Western imperial regalia from Constantinople in 497, and was referred to by the title augustus by some of his subjects. As a young child of an Ostrogothic nobleman, Theodoric was taken as a hostage in Constantinople, where he spent his formative years and received an east Roman education. Theodoric returned to Pannonia around 470, and throughout the 470s he campaigned against the Sarmatians and competed for influence among the Goths of the Roman Balkans. The emperor Zeno made him a commander of the Eastern Roman forces in AD 483, and in AD 484 he was named consul. Nevertheless, Theodoric remained in constant hostilities with the emperor and frequently raided East Roman lands. At the behest of Zeno, in 489 Theodoric attacked Odoacer, the king of Italy, emerging victorious in 493. As the new ruler of Italy, he upheld a Roman legal administration and scholarly culture and promoted a major building program across Italy.[4] In 505 he expanded into the Balkans, and by 511 he had brought the Visigothic Kingdom of Spain under his direct control and established hegemony over the Burgundian and Vandal kingdoms. Theodoric died in 526 and was buried in a grand mausoleum in Ravenna. He lived on as the figure Dietrich von Bern in Germanic heroic legend. Theodoric was born in AD 454 in Pannonia on the banks of the Neusiedler See near Carnuntum, the son of king Theodemir, a Germanic Amali nobleman, and his concubine Ereleuva. This was just a year after the Ostrogoths had thrown off nearly a century of domination by the Huns. His Gothic name, which is reconstructed by linguists as *Þiudareiks, translates into "people-king" or "ruler of the people".[5] In 461, when Theodoric was but seven or eight years of age, he was taken as a hostage in Constantinople to secure the Ostrogoths' compliance with a treaty Theodemir had concluded with the augustus Leo I (ruled 457–474). The treaty secured a payment to Constantinople of some 300 pounds' worth of gold each year.[6] Theodoric was well educated by Constantinople's best teachers.[7] His status made him valuable, since the Amal family from which he came (as told by Theodoric),[8] allegedly ruled half of all Goths since the third-century AD. Historian Peter Heather argues that Theodoric's claims were likely self-aggrandizing propaganda and that the Amal dynasty was more limited than modern commentators presume.[9] Until 469, Theodoric remained in Constantinople where he spent formative years "catching up on all the Romanitas" it had taken generations of Visigothic Balthi to acquire.[10] Theodoric was treated with favor by the emperor Leo I.[11] He learned to read, write, and perform arithmetic while in captivity in the Eastern Empire.[3] When Leo heard that his imperial army was retreating from the Goths near Pannonia, he sent Theodoric home with gifts and no promises of any commitments.[12][c] On his return in 469/470, Theodoric assumed leadership over the Gothic regions previously ruled by his uncle, Valamir, while his father became king. Not long afterwards near Singidunum (modern Belgrade) in upper Moesia, the Tisza Sarmatian king Babai had extended his authority at Constantinople's expense. Legitimizing his position as a warrior, Theodoric crossed the Danube with six thousand warriors, defeated the Sarmatians and killed Babai; this moment likely crystallized his position and marked the beginning of his kingship, despite not actually having yet assumed the throne.[14] Perhaps to assert his authority as an Amali prince, Theodoric kept the conquered area of Singidunum for himself.[15] Throughout the 470s, sometimes in the name of the empire itself, Theodoric launched campaigns against potential Gothic rivals and other enemies of the Eastern Empire, which made him an important military and political figure. One of his chief rivals was the chieftain of the Thracian Goths Theodoric Strabo (Strabo means "the Squinter"), who had led a major revolt against the emperor Zeno. Finding common ground with the emperor, Theodoric was rewarded by Zeno and made commander of East Roman forces, while his people became foederati or federates of the Roman army.[16] Zeno attempted to play one Germanic chieftain against another and take advantage of an opportunity sometime in 476/477 when—after hearing demands from Theodoric for new lands since his people were facing a famine—he offered Theodoric Strabo the command once belonging to Theodoric. Enraged by this betrayal, Theodoric sought his wrath against the communities in the Rhodope Mountains, where his forces commandeered livestock and slaughtered peasants, sacked and burned Stobi in Macedonia and requisitioned supplies from the archbishop at Heraclea.[17] Gothic plundering finally elicited a settlement from Zeno, but Theodoric initially refused any compromise. Theodoric sent one of his confidants, Sidimund, forward to Epidaurum for negotiations with Zeno.[18] While the Roman envoy and Theodoric were negotiating, Zeno sent troops against some of Theodoric's wagons, which were under the protection of his able general Theodimund. Unaware of this treachery, Theodoric's Goths lost around 2,000 wagons and 5,000 of his people were taken captive.[19] He settled his people in Epirus in 479 with the help of his relative Sidimund. In 482, he raided Greece and sacked Larissa. Bad luck, rebellions, and poor decisions left Zeno in an unfortunate position,[d] which subsequently led him to seek another agreement with Theodoric. In 483, Zeno made Theodoric magister militum praesentalis[21] and consul designate in 484, whereby he commanded the Danubian provinces of Dacia Ripensis and Moesia Inferior as well as the adjacent regions.[22] Theodoric was married once. He had a concubine in Moesia, name unknown, with whom he had two daughters: Theodegotha (ca. 473 – ?). In 494, she was married to Alaric II as a part of her father's alliance with the Visigoths. Ostrogotho (ca. 475 – ?).[57] In 494 or 496, she was married to the king Sigismund of Burgundy as a part of her father's alliance with the Burgundians. By his marriage to Audofleda in 493 he had one daughter: Amalasuintha, Queen of the Goths. She was married to Eutharic and had two children: Athalaric and Matasuntha (the latter being married to Witiges first, then, after Witiges' death, married to Germanus Justinus; neither had children). Any hope for a reconciliation between the Goths and the Romans in the person of a Gotho-Roman Emperor from this family lineage was shattered. After his death in Ravenna in 526, Theodoric was succeeded by his grandson Athalaric. Athalaric was at first represented by his mother Amalasuintha, who served as regent from 526 until 534. The kingdom of the Ostrogoths, however, began to wane and was conquered by Justinian I in 553 after the Battle of Mons Lactarius. Seeking further gains, Theodoric frequently ravaged the provinces of the Eastern Roman Empire, eventually threatening Constantinople itself. By 486, there was little disputing the open hostilities between Theodoric and Zeno. The emperor sought the assistance of the Bulgarians, who were likewise defeated by Theodoric.[23] In 487, Theodoric began his aggressive campaign against Constantinople, blockading the city, occupying strategically important suburbs, and cutting off its water supply; although it seems Theodoric never intended to occupy the city but instead, to use the assault as a means of gaining power and prestige from the Eastern Empire.[24] The Ostrogoths needed a place to live, and Zeno was having serious problems with Odoacer, the Germanic foederatus and King of Italy, who although ostensibly viceroy for Zeno, was menacing Byzantine territory and not respecting the rights of Roman citizens in Italy. In 488, Zeno ordered Theodoric to overthrow Odoacer. For this task, he received support from Rugian king Frideric, the son of Theodoric's cousin Giso. Theodoric moved with his people towards Italy in the autumn of 488.[25] On the way he was opposed by the Gepids, whom he defeated at Sirmium in August 489.[25] Arriving in Italy, Theodoric won the battles of Isonzo and Verona in 489.[26] Once again, Theodoric was pressed by Zeno in 490 to attack Odoacer.[27] Theodoric's army was defeated by Odoacer's forces at Faenza in 490, but regained the upper hand after securing victory in the Battle of the Adda River on 11 August 490.[28] For several years, the armies of Odoacer and Theodoric vied for supremacy across the Italian peninsula.[29] In 493, Theodoric took Ravenna. On 2 February 493, Theodoric and Odoacer signed a treaty that assured both parties would rule over Italy.[28] Then on 5 March 493, Theodoric entered the city of Ravenna.[30] A banquet was organised on 15 March 493 in order to celebrate this treaty.[28] At this feast, Theodoric, after making a toast, killed Odoacer. Theodoric drew his sword and struck him on the collarbone.[28] Along with Odoacer, Theodoric had the betrayed king's most loyal followers slaughtered as well, an event which left him as the master of Italy.[31] With Odoacer dead and his forces dispersed, Theodoric now faced the problem of settlement for his people.[32] Concerned about thinning out the Amal line too much, Theodoric believed he could not afford to spread some 40,000 of his tribesmen across
- He was taken hostage as a child, at the age of 7, by the Emperor Leo I in Constantinople as a guarantee of performance by the Ostrogoths under a treaty with the Emperor.: He was raised as a Roman and became somewhat "romanized"
- He was taken hostage as a child by the Emperor in Constantinople as a guarantee of performance by the Ostrogoths under a treaty with the Emperor.: He was raised as a Roman and became somewhat "romanized"
- Title Of Nobility: King of the Ostrogoths in Pannonia under his brother Valamir; he ruled over the western part of their domain, which covered the county of Somogy and northeastern Croatia., BET 468 AND 479, Pannonia, Roman Empire
- LifeSketch: From Wikipedia Theodoric (or Theoderic) the Great (454 – 30 August 526), also called Theodoric the Amal (Latin: Flāvius Theoderīcus, Greek: Θευδέριχος, Theuderichos), was king of the Ostrogoths (471–526), and ruler of the independent Ostrogothic Kingdom of Italy between 493–526,[3] regent of the Visigoths (511–526), and a patrician of the East Roman Empire. As ruler of the combined Gothic realms, Theodoric controlled an empire stretching from the Atlantic Ocean to the Adriatic Sea. Though Theodoric himself only ever used the title 'king' (rex), some scholars characterize him as a Western Roman Emperor in all but name,[b] since he ruled large parts of the former Western Roman Empire, had received the former Western imperial regalia from Constantinople in 497, and was referred to by the title augustus by some of his subjects. As a young child of an Ostrogothic nobleman, Theodoric was taken as a hostage in Constantinople, where he spent his formative years and received an east Roman education. Theodoric returned to Pannonia around 470, and throughout the 470s he campaigned against the Sarmatians and competed for influence among the Goths of the Roman Balkans. The emperor Zeno made him a commander of the Eastern Roman forces in AD 483, and in AD 484 he was named consul. Nevertheless, Theodoric remained in constant hostilities with the emperor and frequently raided East Roman lands. At the behest of Zeno, in 489 Theodoric attacked Odoacer, the king of Italy, emerging victorious in 493. As the new ruler of Italy, he upheld a Roman legal administration and scholarly culture and promoted a major building program across Italy.[4] In 505 he expanded into the Balkans, and by 511 he had brought the Visigothic Kingdom of Spain under his direct control and established hegemony over the Burgundian and Vandal kingdoms. Theodoric died in 526 and was buried in a grand mausoleum in Ravenna. He lived on as the figure Dietrich von Bern in Germanic heroic legend. Theodoric was born in AD 454 in Pannonia on the banks of the Neusiedler See near Carnuntum, the son of king Theodemir, a Germanic Amali nobleman, and his concubine Ereleuva. This was just a year after the Ostrogoths had thrown off nearly a century of domination by the Huns. His Gothic name, which is reconstructed by linguists as *Þiudareiks, translates into "people-king" or "ruler of the people".[5] In 461, when Theodoric was but seven or eight years of age, he was taken as a hostage in Constantinople to secure the Ostrogoths' compliance with a treaty Theodemir had concluded with the Augustus Leo I (ruled 457–474). The treaty secured a payment to Constantinople of some 300 pounds' worth of gold each year.[6] Theodoric was well educated by Constantinople's best teachers.[7] His status made him valuable, since the Amal family from which he came (as told by Theodoric),[8] allegedly ruled half of all Goths since the third-century AD. Historian Peter Heather argues that Theodoric's claims were likely self-aggrandizing propaganda and that the Amal dynasty was more limited than modern commentators presume.[9] Until 469, Theodoric remained in Constantinople where he spent formative years "catching up on all the Romanitas" it had taken generations of Visigothic Balthi to acquire.[10] Theodoric was treated with favor by the emperor Leo I.[11] He learned to read, write, and perform arithmetic while in captivity in the Eastern Empire.[3] When Leo heard that his imperial army was retreating from the Goths near Pannonia, he sent Theodoric home with gifts and no promises of any commitments.[12][c] On his return in 469/470, Theodoric assumed leadership over the Gothic regions previously ruled by his uncle, Valamir, while his father became king. Not long afterwards near Singidunum (modern Belgrade) in upper Moesia, the Tisza Sarmatian king Babai had extended his authority at Constantinople's expense. Legitimizing his position as a warrior, Theodoric crossed the Danube with six thousand warriors, defeated the Sarmatians and killed Babai; this moment likely crystallized his position and marked the beginning of his kingship, despite not actually having yet assumed the throne.[14] Perhaps to assert his authority as an Amali prince, Theodoric kept the conquered area of Singidunum for himself.[15] Throughout the 470s, sometimes in the name of the empire itself, Theodoric launched campaigns against potential Gothic rivals and other enemies of the Eastern Empire, which made him an important military and political figure. One of his chief rivals was the chieftain of the Thracian Goths Theodoric Strabo (Strabo means "the Squinter"), who had led a major revolt against the emperor Zeno. Finding common ground with the emperor, Theodoric was rewarded by Zeno and made commander of East Roman forces, while his people became foederati or federates of the Roman army.[16] Zeno attempted to play one Germanic chieftain against another and take advantage of an opportunity sometime in 476/477 when—after hearing demands from Theodoric for new lands since his people were facing a famine—he offered Theodoric Strabo the command once belonging to Theodoric. Enraged by this betrayal, Theodoric sought his wrath against the communities in the Rhodope Mountains, where his forces commandeered livestock and slaughtered peasants, sacked and burned Stobi in Macedonia and requisitioned supplies from the archbishop at Heraclea.[17] Gothic plundering finally elicited a settlement from Zeno, but Theodoric initially refused any compromise. Theodoric sent one of his confidants, Sidimund, forward to Epidaurum for negotiations with Zeno.[18] While the Roman envoy and Theodoric were negotiating, Zeno sent troops against some of Theodoric's wagons, which were under the protection of his able general Theodimund. Unaware of this treachery, Theodoric's Goths lost around 2,000 wagons and 5,000 of his people were taken captive.[19] He settled his people in Epirus in 479 with the help of his relative Sidimund. In 482, he raided Greece and sacked Larissa. Bad luck, rebellions, and poor decisions left Zeno in an unfortunate position,[d] which subsequently led him to seek another agreement with Theodoric. In 483, Zeno made Theodoric magister militum praesentalis[21] and consul designate in 484, whereby he commanded the Danubian provinces of Dacia Ripensis and Moesia Inferior as well as the adjacent regions.[22] He had a concubine in Moesia, name unknown, with whom he had two daughters: Theodegotha (ca. 473 – ?). In 494, she was married to Alaric II as a part of her father's alliance with the Visigoths. Ostrogotho (ca. 475 – ?).[57] In 494 or 496, she was married to the king Sigismund of Burgundy as a part of her father's alliance with the Burgundians. Theodoric was married once. By his marriage to Audofleda in 493 he had one daughter: Amalasuintha, Queen of the Goths. She was married to Eutharic and had two children: Athalaric and Matasuntha (the latter being married to Witiges first, then, after Witiges' death, married to Germanus Justinus; neither had children). Any hope for a reconciliation between the Goths and the Romans in the person of a Gotho-Roman Emperor from this family lineage was shattered. After his death in Ravenna in 526, Theodoric was succeeded by his grandson Athalaric. Athalaric was at first represented by his mother Amalasuintha, who served as regent from 526 until 534. The kingdom of the Ostrogoths, however, began to wane and was conquered by Justinian I in 553 after the Battle of Mons Lactarius. Seeking further gains, Theodoric frequently ravaged the provinces of the Eastern Roman Empire, eventually threatening Constantinople itself. By 486, there was little disputing the open hostilities between Theodoric and Zeno. The emperor sought the assistance of the Bulgarians, who were likewise defeated by Theodoric.[23] In 487, Theodoric began his aggressive campaign against Constantinople, blockading the city, occupying strategically important suburbs, and cutting off its water supply; although it seems Theodoric never intended to occupy the city but instead, to use the assault as a means of gaining power and prestige from the Eastern Empire.[24] The Ostrogoths needed a place to live, and Zeno was having serious problems with Odoacer, the Germanic foederatus and King of Italy, who although ostensibly viceroy for Zeno, was menacing Byzantine territory and not respecting the rights of Roman citizens in Italy. In 488, Zeno ordered Theodoric to overthrow Odoacer. For this task, he received support from Rugian king Frideric, the son of Theodoric's cousin Giso. Theodoric moved with his people towards Italy in the autumn of 488.[25] On the way he was opposed by the Gepids, whom he defeated at Sirmium in August 489.[25] Arriving in Italy, Theodoric won the battles of Isonzo and Verona in 489.[26] Once again, Theodoric was pressed by Zeno in 490 to attack Odoacer.[27] Theodoric's army was defeated by Odoacer's forces at Faenza in 490, but regained the upper hand after securing victory in the Battle of the Adda River on 11 August 490.[28] For several years, the armies of Odoacer and Theodoric vied for supremacy across the Italian peninsula.[29] In 493, Theodoric took Ravenna. On 2 February 493, Theodoric and Odoacer signed a treaty that assured both parties would rule over Italy.[28] Then on 5 March 493, Theodoric entered the city of Ravenna.[30] A banquet was organised on 15 March 493 in order to celebrate this treaty.[28] At this feast, Theodoric, after making a toast, killed Odoacer. Theodoric drew his sword and struck him on the collarbone.[28] Along with Odoacer, Theodoric had the betrayed king's most loyal followers slaughtered as well, an event which left him as the master of Italy.[31] ...article continues in Collaborate, notes....
- Title Of Nobility: He was proclaimed Theodoric "the Great," King of Italy, by the Gothic army, with his capital at Ravenna.
- Title Of Nobility: King of the Visigoths
- Title Of Nobility: Ostrogothic King of Italy
- LifeSketch: PLEASE DO NOT DISTURB THIS PROFILE IT HAS BEEN THOROUGHLY RESEARCHED AND IS HISTORICALLY ACCURATE HE HAD NO OTHER CHILDREN. From Wikipedia - Theodoric the Great (454 – 30 August 526), also spelled Theoderic or called Theodoric the Amal (/θiˈɒdərɪk/; Latin: Flāvius Theodoricus, Greek: Θευδέριχος, Theuderikhos), was king of the Ostrogoths (471–526), and ruler of the independent Ostrogothic Kingdom of Italy between 493–526,[3] regent of the Visigoths (511–526), and a patrician of the Roman Empire. As ruler of the combined Gothic realms, Theodoric controlled an empire stretching from the Atlantic Ocean to the Adriatic Sea. As a young child of an Ostrogothic nobleman, Theodoric was taken as a hostage in Constantinople, where he spent his formative years and received Byzantine education. Theodoric returned to Pannonia around 470, and throughout the 470s he campaigned against the Sarmatians and the Thervingi. Byzantine Emperor Zeno made him a commander of the Eastern Roman forces in 483, and in 484 he was named consul. Nevertheless, Theodoric remained in constant hostilities with the emperor and frequently raided Byzantine lands. At the behest of Zeno, Theodoric attacked Odoacer in 489, emerging victorious in 493. As the new ruler of Italy, he kept good relations between Ostrogoths and Romans, maintained a Roman legal administration and oversaw a flourishing scholarly culture as well as overseeing a significant building program across Italy.[4] In 505 he expanded into the Balkans, and by 511 he had brought the Visigothic Kingdom under his direct control and established hegemony over the Burgundian and Vandal kingdoms. Theodoric died in 526 and was buried in a grand mausoleum in Ravenna. Youth and early exploits Theodoric was born in AD 454 in Pannonia on the banks of the Neusiedler See near Carnuntum, the son of king Theodemir, a Germanic Amali nobleman, and his concubine Ereleuva. This was just a year after the Ostrogoths had thrown off nearly a century of domination by the Huns. His Gothic name, which is reconstructed by linguists as *Þiudareiks, translates into "people-king" or "ruler of the people".[5] In 461, when Theodoric was but seven or eight years of age, he was taken as a hostage in Constantinople to secure the Ostrogoths' compliance with a treaty Theodemir had concluded with the Byzantine Emperor Leo the Thracian (ruled 457–474). The treaty secured a payment to Constantinople of some 300 pounds' worth of gold each year.[6] Theodoric was well educated by Constantinople's best teachers.[7] His status made him valuable, since the Amal family from which he came (as told by Theodoric),[8] allegedly ruled half of all Goths since the third-century AD. Historian Peter Heather argues that Theodoric's claims were likely self-aggrandizing propaganda and that the Amal dynasty was more limited than modern commentators presume.[9] Until 469, Theodoric remained in Constantinople where he spent formative years "catching up on all the Romanitas" it had taken generations of Visigothic Balthi to acquire.[10] Theodoric was treated with favor by the Emperor Leo I.[11] He learned to read, write, and perform arithmetic while in captivity in the Eastern Empire.[3] When Leo heard that his imperial army was returning from having been turned back by the Goths near Pannonia, he sent Theodoric home with gifts and no promises of any commitments.[12][b] On his return in 469/470, Theodoric assumed leadership over the Gothic regions previously ruled by his uncle, Valamir, while his father became king. Not long afterwards near Singidunum (modern Belgrade) in upper Moesia, the Tisza Sarmatian king Babai had extended his authority at Constantinople's expense. Legitimizing his position as a warrior, Theodoric crossed the Danube with six thousand warriors, defeated the Sarmatians and killed Babai; this moment likely crystallized his position and marked the beginning of his kingship, despite not actually having yet assumed the throne.[14] Perhaps to assert his authority as an Amali prince, Theodoric kept the conquered area of Singidunum for himself.[15] Throughout the 470s, sometimes in the name of the empire itself, Theodoric launched campaigns against potential Gothic rivals and other enemies of the Eastern Empire, which made him an important military and political figure. One of his chief rivals was the Thervingi chieftain Theodoric Strabo (also known as "the Squinter"), who had led a major revolt against Emperor Zeno. Finding common ground with the Byzantine emperor, Theodoric was rewarded by Zeno and made commander of East Roman forces, while his people became foederati or federates of the Roman army.[16] Zeno attempted to play one Germanic chieftain against another and take advantage of an opportunity sometime in 476/477 when—after hearing demands from Theodoric for new lands since his people were facing a famine—he offered Theodoric Strabo the command once belonging to Theodoric. Enraged by this betrayal, Theodoric sought his wrath against the communities in the Rhodope Mountains, where his forces commandeered livestock and slaughtered peasants, sacked and burned Stobi in Macedonia and requisitioned supplies from the archbishop at Heraclea.[17] Gothic plundering finally elicited a settlement from Zeno, but Theodoric initially refused any compromise. Theodoric sent one of his confidants, Sidimund, forward to Epidaurum for negotiations with Zeno.[18] While the Byzantine envoy and Theodoric were negotiating, Zeno sent troops against some of Theodoric's wagons, which were under the protection of his able general Theodimund. Unaware of this treachery, Theodoric's Goths lost around 2,000 wagons and 5,000 of his people were taken captive.[19] He settled his people in Epirus in 479 with the help of his relative Sidimund. In 482, he raided Greece and sacked Larissa. Bad luck, rebellions, and poor decisions left Zeno in an unfortunate position,[c] which subsequently led him to seek another agreement with Theodoric. In 483, Zeno made Theodoric magister militum praesentalis[21] and consul designate in 484, whereby he commanded the Danubian provinces of Dacia Ripensis and Moesia Inferior as well as the adjacent regions. Family and progeny Theodoric was married once. He had a concubine in Moesia, name unknown, with whom he had two daughters: Theodegotha (ca. 473 – ?). In 494, she was married to Alaric II as a part of her father's alliance with the Visigoths. Ostrogotho (ca. 475 – ?).[57] In 494 or 496, she was married to the king Sigismund of Burgundy as a part of her father's alliance with the Burgundians. By his marriage to Audofleda in 493 he had one daughter: Amalasuntha, Queen of the Goths. She was married to Eutharic and had two children: Athalaric and Matasuntha (the latter being married to Witiges first, then, after Witiges' death, married to Germanus Justinus; neither had children). Any hope for a reconciliation between the Goths and the Romans in the person of a Gotho-Roman Emperor from this family lineage was shattered. After his death in Ravenna in 526, Theodoric was succeeded by his grandson Athalaric. Athalaric was at first represented by his mother Amalasuntha, who served as regent from 526 until 534. The kingdom of the Ostrogoths, however, began to wane and was conquered by Justinian I in 553 after the Battle of Mons Lactarius.
- Title Of Nobility: King of Italy
- LifeSketch: Theodorich, King of Austrasia is a different person than Theodoric "the Great" Ostrogothic King of Italy. Please do not confuse the two... From Wikipedia Theodoric (or Theoderic) the Great (454 – 30 August 526), also called Theodoric the Amal (Latin: Flāvius Theoderīcus, Greek: Θευδέριχος, Theuderichos), was king of the Ostrogoths (471–526), and ruler of the independent Ostrogothic Kingdom of Italy between 493–526,[3] regent of the Visigoths (511–526), and a patrician of the East Roman Empire. As ruler of the combined Gothic realms, Theodoric controlled an empire stretching from the Atlantic Ocean to the Adriatic Sea. Though Theodoric himself only ever used the title 'king' (rex), some scholars characterize him as a Western Roman Emperor in all but name,[b] since he ruled large parts of the former Western Roman Empire, had received the former Western imperial regalia from Constantinople in 497, and was referred to by the title augustus by some of his subjects. As a young child of an Ostrogothic nobleman, Theodoric was taken as a hostage in Constantinople, where he spent his formative years and received an east Roman education. Theodoric returned to Pannonia around 470, and throughout the 470s he campaigned against the Sarmatians and competed for influence among the Goths of the Roman Balkans. The emperor Zeno made him a commander of the Eastern Roman forces in AD 483, and in AD 484 he was named consul. Nevertheless, Theodoric remained in constant hostilities with the emperor and frequently raided East Roman lands. At the behest of Zeno, in 489 Theodoric attacked Odoacer, the king of Italy, emerging victorious in 493. As the new ruler of Italy, he upheld a Roman legal administration and scholarly culture and promoted a major building program across Italy.[4] In 505 he expanded into the Balkans, and by 511 he had brought the Visigothic Kingdom of Spain under his direct control and established hegemony over the Burgundian and Vandal kingdoms. Theodoric died in 526 and was buried in a grand mausoleum in Ravenna. He lived on as the figure Dietrich von Bern in Germanic heroic legend. Theodoric was born in AD 454 in Pannonia on the banks of the Neusiedler See near Carnuntum, the son of king Theodemir, a Germanic Amali nobleman, and his concubine Ereleuva. This was just a year after the Ostrogoths had thrown off nearly a century of domination by the Huns. His Gothic name, which is reconstructed by linguists as *Þiudareiks, translates into "people-king" or "ruler of the people".[5] In 461, when Theodoric was but seven or eight years of age, he was taken as a hostage in Constantinople to secure the Ostrogoths' compliance with a treaty Theodemir had concluded with the Augustus Leo I (ruled 457–474). The treaty secured a payment to Constantinople of some 300 pounds' worth of gold each year.[6] Theodoric was well educated by Constantinople's best teachers.[7] His status made him valuable, since the Amal family from which he came (as told by Theodoric),[8] allegedly ruled half of all Goths since the third-century AD. Historian Peter Heather argues that Theodoric's claims were likely self-aggrandizing propaganda and that the Amal dynasty was more limited than modern commentators presume.[9] Until 469, Theodoric remained in Constantinople where he spent formative years "catching up on all the Romanitas" it had taken generations of Visigothic Balthi to acquire.[10] Theodoric was treated with favor by the emperor Leo I.[11] He learned to read, write, and perform arithmetic while in captivity in the Eastern Empire.[3] When Leo heard that his imperial army was retreating from the Goths near Pannonia, he sent Theodoric home with gifts and no promises of any commitments.[12][c] On his return in 469/470, Theodoric assumed leadership over the Gothic regions previously ruled by his uncle, Valamir, while his father became king. Not long afterwards near Singidunum (modern Belgrade) in upper Moesia, the Tisza Sarmatian king Babai had extended his authority at Constantinople's expense. Legitimizing his position as a warrior, Theodoric crossed the Danube with six thousand warriors, defeated the Sarmatians and killed Babai; this moment likely crystallized his position and marked the beginning of his kingship, despite not actually having yet assumed the throne.[14] Perhaps to assert his authority as an Amali prince, Theodoric kept the conquered area of Singidunum for himself.[15] Throughout the 470s, sometimes in the name of the empire itself, Theodoric launched campaigns against potential Gothic rivals and other enemies of the Eastern Empire, which made him an important military and political figure. One of his chief rivals was the chieftain of the Thracian Goths Theodoric Strabo (Strabo means "the Squinter"), who had led a major revolt against the emperor Zeno. Finding common ground with the emperor, Theodoric was rewarded by Zeno and made commander of East Roman forces, while his people became foederati or federates of the Roman army.[16] Zeno attempted to play one Germanic chieftain against another and take advantage of an opportunity sometime in 476/477 when—after hearing demands from Theodoric for new lands since his people were facing a famine—he offered Theodoric Strabo the command once belonging to Theodoric. Enraged by this betrayal, Theodoric sought his wrath against the communities in the Rhodope Mountains, where his forces commandeered livestock and slaughtered peasants, sacked and burned Stobi in Macedonia and requisitioned supplies from the archbishop at Heraclea.[17] Gothic plundering finally elicited a settlement from Zeno, but Theodoric initially refused any compromise. Theodoric sent one of his confidants, Sidimund, forward to Epidaurum for negotiations with Zeno.[18] While the Roman envoy and Theodoric were negotiating, Zeno sent troops against some of Theodoric's wagons, which were under the protection of his able general Theodimund. Unaware of this treachery, Theodoric's Goths lost around 2,000 wagons and 5,000 of his people were taken captive.[19] He settled his people in Epirus in 479 with the help of his relative Sidimund. In 482, he raided Greece and sacked Larissa. Bad luck, rebellions, and poor decisions left Zeno in an unfortunate position,[d] which subsequently led him to seek another agreement with Theodoric. In 483, Zeno made Theodoric magister militum praesentalis[21] and consul designate in 484, whereby he commanded the Danubian provinces of Dacia Ripensis and Moesia Inferior as well as the adjacent regions.[22] He had a concubine in Moesia, name unknown, with whom he had two daughters: Theodegotha (ca. 473 – ?). In 494, she was married to Alaric II as a part of her father's alliance with the Visigoths. Ostrogotho (ca. 475 – ?).[57] In 494 or 496, she was married to the king Sigismund of Burgundy as a part of her father's alliance with the Burgundians. Theodoric was married once. By his marriage to Audofleda in 493 he had one daughter: Amalasuintha, Queen of the Goths. She was married to Eutharic and had two children: Athalaric and Matasuntha (the latter being married to Witiges first, then, after Witiges' death, married to Germanus Justinus; neither had children). Any hope for a reconciliation between the Goths and the Romans in the person of a Gotho-Roman Emperor from this family lineage was shattered. After his death in Ravenna in 526, Theodoric was succeeded by his grandson Athalaric. Athalaric was at first represented by his mother Amalasuintha, who served as regent from 526 until 534. The kingdom of the Ostrogoths, however, began to wane and was conquered by Justinian I in 553 after the Battle of Mons Lactarius. Seeking further gains, Theodoric frequently ravaged the provinces of the Eastern Roman Empire, eventually threatening Constantinople itself. By 486, there was little disputing the open hostilities between Theodoric and Zeno. The emperor sought the assistance of the Bulgarians, who were likewise defeated by Theodoric.[23] In 487, Theodoric began his aggressive campaign against Constantinople, blockading the city, occupying strategically important suburbs, and cutting off its water supply; although it seems Theodoric never intended to occupy the city but instead, to use the assault as a means of gaining power and prestige from the Eastern Empire.[24] The Ostrogoths needed a place to live, and Zeno was having serious problems with Odoacer, the Germanic foederatus and King of Italy, who although ostensibly viceroy for Zeno, was menacing Byzantine territory and not respecting the rights of Roman citizens in Italy. In 488, Zeno ordered Theodoric to overthrow Odoacer. For this task, he received support from Rugian king Frideric, the son of Theodoric's cousin Giso. Theodoric moved with his people towards Italy in the autumn of 488.[25] On the way he was opposed by the Gepids, whom he defeated at Sirmium in August 489.[25] Arriving in Italy, Theodoric won the battles of Isonzo and Verona in 489.[26] Once again, Theodoric was pressed by Zeno in 490 to attack Odoacer.[27] Theodoric's army was defeated by Odoacer's forces at Faenza in 490, but regained the upper hand after securing victory in the Battle of the Adda River on 11 August 490.[28] For several years, the armies of Odoacer and Theodoric vied for supremacy across the Italian peninsula.[29] In 493, Theodoric took Ravenna. On 2 February 493, Theodoric and Odoacer signed a treaty that assured both parties would rule over Italy.[28] Then on 5 March 493, Theodoric entered the city of Ravenna.[30] A banquet was organised on 15 March 493 in order to celebrate this treaty.[28] At this feast, Theodoric, after making a toast, killed Odoacer. Theodoric drew his sword and struck him on the collarbone.[28] Along with Odoacer, Theodoric had the betrayed king's most loyal followers slaughtered as well, an event which left him as the master of Italy.[31] ...article continues in Collaborate, notes....
- Clan Name: Amales
- Title Of Nobility: Famille des Balthes, Dynastie des Goths-Amales, Les Greuthunges (Ukraine-Russie), Roi des Ostrogoths, Roi d'Italie, Régent d'Espagne, Régent de l'Empire Romain
- Title Of Nobility: King of the Ostrogoths
- Death: 26 AUG 526, Ravenna Palace, Ravenna, Emilia-Romagna, Italy
- Burial: 30 AUG 526, Ravenna, Ostrogothic Italy
Ancestors of Theodoric I of the OSTROGOTHS
/-Wittichius SAXONY
/-Vinitharius Warlord of the OSTROGOTHS
| | /-Thierry DE NEUSTRIE
| | /-Walechise DE NEUSTRIE
| | | \-Dode DE FRANCIE
| | /-Hermanfried DE NEUSTRIE
| | | \-Waldrada spouse of Walechise DE NEUSTRIE
| \-Farahild of Neustria
| | /-Berend DES HUNS
| | /-Fastida DES HUNS
| | /-Nembroth DES HUNS II
| | /-Bendemir DES HUNS
| | /-Balamir DES HUNS
| | /-Donat DES HUNS
| \-Faraild spouse of Hermanfried DE NEUSTRIE
| | /-Far RAMA
| \-Fur Ana of The HUNS
/-Wandalarius of SCYTHIA
| \-Erelicia of the Ostrogoths
/-Theodemir of the OSTROGOTHS
Theodoric I of the OSTROGOTHS
| /-Kadcha DES HUNS
| /-Oposch Prince of the HUNS
| /-Ethei of the HUNS
| /-Szemen of The HUNS
| /-Kama Tarkhan of The HUNS
| /-Avitochola OPOSH
| | \-Wadamerca DES OSTROGOTHIE
| /-Donaton of the HUNS
| /-Uldin of the HUNS
| | | /-Far RAMA
| | \-Fur Ana of The HUNS
| /-Kurdiak Turda of the HUNS
| | | /-Quiangqu father of YUFULUO
| | | /-Yufuluo son of QUIANGQU
| | | /-Bao son of YUFULUO
| | | /-Liu Yuan
| | | /-Liu-Yan-Shi
| | | /-Liu father of ADISHIR
| | | /-Adishir Babigan Xerxes
| | \-Car Zama
| | \-Tashiti Arta Ducta
| /-Mundzuk Benderuz of the HUNS
| | \-Wadamerca DES HUNS
\-Ereleuva of the Huns
| /-Manolis EROTIKOS I COMNENA
\-Hethela DES HUNS-AGATHYESI
Descendants of Theodoric I of the OSTROGOTHS
1 Theodoric I of the OSTROGOTHS
=Concubine OF MOESIA
2 Theodora de AMALES
2 Theodegotha of the VISIGOTHS
2 Ostrogotha of the Ostrogoths
=Sigismund DE BOURGOGNE Marriage: 494, Kingdom of Bourgogne, Gaul Frankish Empire
3 Sigeric of Burgundy
3 Suavégothe of Burgundy and Austrasia
=Theuderic I of the FRANKEN Marriage: ABT 515, Kingdom of Austrasia, Frankish Empire
=Audofleda the GOTHS Marriage: ABT 492
2 Unnamed daughter
2 Theodimund OF THE OSTROGOTHS
2 Amalafrede D`OSTROGOTHIE
2 Amalasunthe D`OSTROGOTHIE
2 Theudicote d"Ostrogothie DES OSTROGOTHS
=(Unknown)
3 Gossana DE WISIGOTHIE
3 Amalric II DES OSTROGOTHS
=(Unknown)
- Birth: 240, Rome, Lazio, Italy
- Death: Y, Somme, Picardie, France
Descendants of Thiudigotho Theodogotho Lady OSTROGOTHS
1 Thiudigotho Theodogotho Lady OSTROGOTHS
=Alaric of the VISIGOTHS
2 Ariaric of VISIGOTHS
2 Hrothisteus Ariaric of VISIGOTHS
=Clotilda DEMEROVING
3 Ragnahild spouse of Aoric of the Tervingi GOTHS
=Aoric of the Tervingi GOTHS Marriage: 315
- Father: Wittichius SAXONY
- Mother: Farahild of Neustria
- Birth: ABT 354, Scythia, Roman Empire
- Also known as: Vinitharius "the Just" of the Ostrogoths
- Title Of Nobility: King of the Greuthungi
- Killed in battle at the "River Erac.": (Date and Place unknown)
- Clan Name: House of Amali Goths
- LifeSketch: Foundation for Medieval Genealogy - Descendantsof Athal, Amali Goth ATHAL . Athal had two children: 1. ACHIULF . Iordanes names "Achiulf et Oduulf" as the sons of Athal[32]. 2. ODWULF . Iordanes names "Achiulf et Oduulf" as the sons of Athal[51]. (no known children) ************ ACHIULF had four children: 1. ANSILA 2. EDIULF 3. VULTWULF 4. HERMENRICH ***************** VULTWULF had one child: 1. VALARAVANS ***************** VALARAVANS had one child: 1.VINITHARIUS ***************** VINITHARIUS had one child: 1. VANDALARIUS ***************** VANDALARIUS, son of VINITHARIUS . Iordanes names "Vandiliarum" as son of "Vinitharius" and father of "Thiudemer et Valamir et Vidimir"[52]. Relative of Thorismund[53]. 1. VALAMIR (-killed in battle [468/69]). Iordanes names "Thiudemer et Valamir et Vidimir" as the sons of Vandilarius[54]. He and his brothers followed Attila the Hun into Gaul in 451[55]. Valamir commanded the Ostrogoth contingent in Attila's army which was defeated at the battle of the Catalaunian fields[56]. He was considered king of all Ostrogoths in Pannonia. Iordanes records that "Valamer…ex consobrino eius genitus Vandalario" succeeded as king after "Thorismundo" was killed fighting the Gepids in the second year of his reign[57]. He shared the land with his two brothers, retaining for himself the eastern part of the territory covering lower Slavonia. In 456, he defeated an attack by the Huns, who are said to have retreated to the River Dnieper[58]. He defeated another Hun attack on Bassianae, near Belgrade, in 467/68, but was killed in battle during a similar attack the following year. 2. THEODEMIR [Thiudimir] (-Kyrrhos 474). Iordanes names "Thiudemer et Valamir et Vidimir" as the sons of Vandilarius[59]. King of the Ostrogoths in Pannonia, subordinate to his brother Valamir, he ruled over the western part of their domain which covered the county of Somogy and north-eastern Croatia. He succeeded his brother in [468/49] as King of all the Pannonian Ostrogoths. Iordanes names "Theodemir" when recording that he succeeded his brother "Valamero rege Gothorum" together with "Vidimero fratre et filio Theodorico"[60]. When the Ostrogoths left Pannonia in [473], Theodemir and his contingent went towards Constantinople. They settled in Macedonia, based in the city of Kyrrhos[61]. - KINGS of ITALY. 3. VIDIMIR (-473). Iordanes names "Thiudemer et Valamir et Vidimir" as the sons of Vandilarius[62]. King of the Ostrogoths in Pannonia, subordinate to his brother Valamir, he ruled over the central part of their domain which covered upper Slavonia. Iordanes names "Theodemir" when recording that he succeeded his brother "Valamero rege Gothorum" together with "Vidimero fratre et filio Theodorico"[63]. When the Ostrogoths left Pannonia in [473], Vidimir went into Italy where he suffered several defeats. a) VIDIMIR. Iordanes records that "Vidimero cum Vidimero filio" were sent to "partes Hesperias" by Theodemir[64]. After his father's death, Emperor Glycerius sent Vidimir and his contingent of Pannonian Ostrogoths to Gaul, where he settled in the Limousin[65].
- Title Of Nobility: King of Ostrogoths
- Death: 400, Scythia, The Hunnic Empire
Ancestors of Vinitharius Warlord of the OSTROGOTHS
/-Wittichius SAXONY
Vinitharius Warlord of the OSTROGOTHS
| /-Thierry DE NEUSTRIE
| /-Walechise DE NEUSTRIE
| | \-Dode DE FRANCIE
| /-Hermanfried DE NEUSTRIE
| | \-Waldrada spouse of Walechise DE NEUSTRIE
\-Farahild of Neustria
| /-Berend DES HUNS
| /-Fastida DES HUNS
| /-Nembroth DES HUNS II
| /-Bendemir DES HUNS
| /-Balamir DES HUNS
| /-Donat DES HUNS
\-Faraild spouse of Hermanfried DE NEUSTRIE
| /-Far RAMA
\-Fur Ana of The HUNS
Descendants of Vinitharius Warlord of the OSTROGOTHS
1 Vinitharius Warlord of the OSTROGOTHS
=Erelicia of the Ostrogoths
2 Wandalarius of SCYTHIA
=(Unknown)
3 Theodemir of the OSTROGOTHS
=Ereleuva of the Huns
2 Amalaberthe D`OSTROGOTHIE
=Theoderic DE WISIGOTHIE
3 Euric I DE WISIGOTHIE
=Widelphe VON SACHSEN
3 Banin Basin Chlodwig VON THURINGIA
3 Bisinus I of the THURINGIANS
3 Wedelphe DE METZ of the Thüringians
=Chlodwig of THÜRINGIA Marriage: ABT 421, Germany
3 Basin of THURINGIA
=Basina SAXON
3 Merwig II of the THURINGIANS
=(Unknown)
3 Basine VON SACHSEN
=Chlodwig I Medelphus DES FRANCS
=Cariaric DES FRANKS
=Chlodwig of THÜRINGIA
=Merwing II VON THURINGEN
=Chlodebald Medelphus VON KOLN Marriage: BEF 435
3 Wedelphia VON SACHSEN
=Chlodebald Medelphus VON KOLN
- Father: Achiulf of the OSTROGOTHS
- Mother: Withemir of the Ostrogoths
- Birth: 300, Scythia, Roman Empire
- Also known as: Wudulf Balthes of the Ostrogoths
- Also known as: Wultwulf, Vulthulf, Vuldulf, Wuldulf Vultwulf d'Ostrogothie
- Occupation: Prince of the Amali Goths, 7th King of the Ostrogoths (360-378), Vultwulf, Prince of the Amali, 360
- Title Of Nobility: 7th King of the Ostrogoths
- LifeSketch: Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (Medlands Project) Iordanes sets out the supposed ancestors of Athal, in order, as follows "Gapt…Hulmul…Augis…Amal a quo et origo Amalorum decurrit…Hisarnis…Ostrogotha…Hunuil…Athal"[31]. Nothing is known about the Amal Goth leaders, supposed descendants of Athal, who are shown below apart from the sparse amount of information which has been extracted from Iordanes. ATHAL . Athal had two children: 1. ACHIULF . Iordanes names "Achiulf et Oduulf" as the sons of Athal[32]. Achiulf had four children: a) ANSILA . Iordanes names "Ansila et Ediulf, Vultuulf et Hermenerig" as the sons of Achiulf[33]. b) EDIULF . Iordanes names "Ansila et Ediulf, Vultuulf et Hermenerig" as the sons of Achiulf[34]. c) VULTWULF . Iordanes names "Ansila et Ediulf, Vultuulf et Hermenerig" as the sons of Achiulf[35]. Vultwulf had one child: i) VALARAVANS . Iordanes names "Valaravans" as the son of Vultwulf[36]. Valaravans had one child: (a) VINITHARIUS . Iordanes names "Vinitharius" as the son of Valaravans[37]. Vinitharius had one child: (1) VANDALARIUS . Iordanes names "Vandiliarum" as son of Vinitharius[38]. - see below. d) HERMENRICH . Iordanes names "Ansila et Ediulf, Vultuulf et Hermenerig" as the sons of Achiulf[39]. Hermenrich had one child: i) HUNIMUND . Iordanes names "Hunimundum" as son of "Hermanaricus"[40]. Hunimund had one child: (a) THORISMUND (-killed in battle [451/55]). Iordanes names "Thorismundo" as son of "Hunimundus"[41]. Iordanes records that "Thorismundo filius eius" succeeded as King of the Goths after the death of "Hunimundus filius quondam regis…Hermanarici" but was killed fighting the Gepids in the second year of his reign[42]. Thorismund had one child: (1) BERIMUD . Iordanes names "Berimud" as son of "Thorismundo"[43]. Iordanes records that "Beremud…cum filio Vitiricho" left the Ostrogoths to join "Vallia rex Gothorum" [King of the Visigoths in Toulouse][44]. The implication of a later passage in Iordanes, which records that "Valamer…ex consobrino eius genitus Vandalario" succeeded as king after "Thorismundo" was killed[45], is that Berimud's departure was triggered after he was passed over in the succession. Berimud had one child: a. VETERICUS . Iordanes names "Vetericum" as son of "Berimud"[46]. Vetericus had one child: (i) EUTHARICH (-[522/23]). Iordanes names "Eutharicum" as son of "Vetericus" and as husband of "Amalasuentham" and father of their two children[47]. Eutharic was adopted by Emperor Justin in recognition of his father-in-law's decision to designate him his successor after his marriage. He was given Roman citizenship and became first consul in 519 as FLAVIUS EUTHARICUS CILLIGA[48]. Wolfram estimates that Eutharich died in [522/23][49]. Jordanes specifies that Eutharich predeceased King Theodoric's nomination of his son Athalaric as his successor. m (515) AMALASUINTHA, daughter of THEODORIC King of the Ostrogoths in Italy & his wife Audofledis of the Franks ([493]-murdered [30 Apr] 535). The Chronicle of Cassiodorus records the marriage in 515 of "Theodericus filiam usam dominam Amalasuintam" and "gloriosi viri dn Eutharici"[50]. 2. ODWULF . Iordanes names "Achiulf et Oduulf" as the sons of Athal[51]. VANDALARIUS, son of VINITHARIUS . Iordanes names "Vandiliarum" as son of "Vinitharius" and father of "Thiudemer et Valamir et Vidimir"[52]. Relative of Thorismund[53]. 1. VALAMIR (-killed in battle [468/69]). Iordanes names "Thiudemer et Valamir et Vidimir" as the sons of Vandilarius[54]. He and his brothers followed Attila the Hun into Gaul in 451[55]. Valamir commanded the Ostrogoth contingent in Attila's army which was defeated at the battle of the Catalaunian fields[56]. He was considered king of all Ostrogoths in Pannonia. Iordanes records that "Valamer…ex consobrino eius genitus Vandalario" succeeded as king after "Thorismundo" was killed fighting the Gepids in the second year of his reign[57]. He shared the land with his two brothers, retaining for himself the eastern part of the territory covering lower Slavonia. In 456, he defeated an attack by the Huns, who are said to have retreated to the River Dnieper[58]. He defeated another Hun attack on Bassianae, near Belgrade, in 467/68, but was killed in battle during a similar attack the following year. 2. THEODEMIR [Thiudimir] (-Kyrrhos 474). Iordanes names "Thiudemer et Valamir et Vidimir" as the sons of Vandilarius[59]. King of the Ostrogoths in Pannonia, subordinate to his brother Valamir, he ruled over the western part of their domain which covered the county of Somogy and north-eastern Croatia. He succeeded his brother in [468/49] as King of all the Pannonian Ostrogoths. Iordanes names "Theodemir" when recording that he succeeded his brother "Valamero rege Gothorum" together with "Vidimero fratre et filio Theodorico"[60]. When the Ostrogoths left Pannonia in [473], Theodemir and his contingent went towards Constantinople. They settled in Macedonia, based in the city of Kyrrhos[61]. - KINGS of ITALY. 3. VIDIMIR (-473). Iordanes names "Thiudemer et Valamir et Vidimir" as the sons of Vandilarius[62]. King of the Ostrogoths in Pannonia, subordinate to his brother Valamir, he ruled over the central part of their domain which covered upper Slavonia. Iordanes names "Theodemir" when recording that he succeeded his brother "Valamero rege Gothorum" together with "Vidimero fratre et filio Theodorico"[63]. When the Ostrogoths left Pannonia in [473], Vidimir went into Italy where he suffered several defeats. a) VIDIMIR. Iordanes records that "Vidimero cum Vidimero filio" were sent to "partes Hesperias" by Theodemir[64]. After his father's death, Emperor Glycerius sent Vidimir and his contingent of Pannonian Ostrogoths to Gaul, where he settled in the Limousin[65].
- Clan Name: House of Amali Goths
- Tribe Name: Greuthengi
- Title Of Nobility: Prince of the Greuthengi Ostrogoths
- Clan Name: Amal Of The Ostrogoths
- Death: 378, Scythia, Roman Empire, Ukraine
Ancestors of Vultwulf of the OSTROGOTHS
/-Gapt of the Greuthengi
/-Hulmul DE BALTHES der Greuthengi
/-Augis DER GREUTHENGI
| \-Unknown Spouse of HULMUL
/-Amal D'OSTROGOTHIE
| | /-Cymbeline of the Silures Tribe of BRITON
| | /-Caractacus Gweirdd ap CUNOBELIN
| | | \-Genvissa Cartismanda L Brigantes Silures tribe BRITAIN
| | /-Marius ap GWEIRYDD
| | | | /-Tiberius Claudius NERO GERMANICUS
| | | \-Genuissa VENISSA JULIA of Siluria
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Tiberius Claudius Nero GERMANICUS
| | /-Silures Tribe ap Marius de Colchester CAMULOD
| | | \-Julia verch PRASUTAGUS
| \-Eigen ferch MARIUS II
| \-Strada verch Gadeon Catuvellauni TRIBE
/-Hisarna of the GREUTHENGI
| | /-Berig I DE GOTHIE
| | /-Hwala D'ASGARD
| | /-Berig III of the GOTHS
| | | | /-Hod VIBURSSON
| | | \-Bodvid HODSDATTER
| | | \-Dana Tiberiusdatter VISBURSSON
| | /-Gjúki of the GOTHS
| | | \-Asgard spouse of Berig III of the GOTHS
| | /-Guntharich I of the GOTHS
| | | \-Eigen DE SILURIA of the Goths
| \-Unknown Spouse of Amal of the GOTHS
| | /-Cymbeline of the Silures Tribe of BRITON
| | /-Caractacus Gweirdd ap CUNOBELIN
| | | \-Genvissa Cartismanda L Brigantes Silures tribe BRITAIN
| | /-Marius ap GWEIRYDD
| | | | /-Tiberius Claudius NERO GERMANICUS
| | | \-Genuissa VENISSA JULIA of Siluria
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Tiberius Claudius Nero GERMANICUS
| | /-Silures Tribe ap Marius de Colchester CAMULOD
| | | \-Julia verch PRASUTAGUS
| \-Eigen Marius DE BALTHES of the Goths
| \-Strada verch Gadeon Catuvellauni TRIBE
/-Ostrogotho of the GREUTHUNGI
/-Hunuil D'OSTROGOTHS
| \-Nascida BENKANT
/-Athal King of the Greuthingi OSTROGOTHS
| \-Vandalar of the Ostrogoths
/-Achiulf of the OSTROGOTHS
| \-Erelicia of The Ostrogoths
Vultwulf of the OSTROGOTHS
\-Withemir of the Ostrogoths
Descendants of Vultwulf of the OSTROGOTHS
1 Vultwulf of the OSTROGOTHS
=Unknown DES OSTROGOTHS
2 Walaranvans OSTROGOTHIE
=No Name DES HUNS
=Farahild of Neustria
=Claudia Adelphia DE ROME
3 Flora or Frilla of the VANDALS
3 Wadamerca of OSTROGOTHS
=Ermenrich spouse of Wadamerca Of OSTROGOTHS
3 Valdamerca D'OSTROGOTHIE
=Wittichius II VON SACHSEN
3 Amalaberthe D`OSTROGOTHIE
=Theoderic DE WISIGOTHIE
=Widelphe VON SACHSEN
Ancestors of Wadamerca of OSTROGOTHS
/-Gapt of the Greuthengi
/-Hulmul DE BALTHES der Greuthengi
/-Augis DER GREUTHENGI
| \-Unknown Spouse of HULMUL
/-Amal D'OSTROGOTHIE
| | /-Marius ap GWEIRYDD
| | /-Silures Tribe ap Marius de Colchester CAMULOD
| | | \-Julia verch PRASUTAGUS
| \-Eigen ferch MARIUS II
| \-Strada verch Gadeon Catuvellauni TRIBE
/-Hisarna of the GREUTHENGI
| | /-Berig III of the GOTHS
| | /-Gjúki of the GOTHS
| | | \-Asgard spouse of Berig III of the GOTHS
| | /-Guntharich I of the GOTHS
| | | \-Eigen DE SILURIA of the Goths
| \-Unknown Spouse of Amal of the GOTHS
| | /-Marius ap GWEIRYDD
| | /-Silures Tribe ap Marius de Colchester CAMULOD
| | | \-Julia verch PRASUTAGUS
| \-Eigen Marius DE BALTHES of the Goths
| \-Strada verch Gadeon Catuvellauni TRIBE
/-Ostrogotho of the GREUTHUNGI
/-Hunuil D'OSTROGOTHS
| \-Nascida BENKANT
/-Athal King of the Greuthingi OSTROGOTHS
| \-Vandalar of the Ostrogoths
/-Achiulf of the OSTROGOTHS
| \-Erelicia of The Ostrogoths
/-Vultwulf of the OSTROGOTHS
| \-Withemir of the Ostrogoths
/-Walaranvans OSTROGOTHIE
| \-Unknown DES OSTROGOTHS
Wadamerca of OSTROGOTHS
| /-Quirinus Fabius Clodius Aggrippianus CELSINUS
| /-Quintus Fabius Claudius Aggripianus Celsinus DE ROME
| | | /-Quintus Fabius DE ROME
| | \-Fabia Fuscinella
| | | /-Publius Seius Fuscianus DE ROME
| | \-Fuscinella DE ROME
| /-Claudius Celcinus DE ROME
| /-Clodius Celsinus ADELPHIUS
\-Claudia Adelphia DE ROME
| /-Petronius SABINUS
| /-Pontius PAULINUS
| /-Petronius PROBIANUS
| | \-De Pontius Paulinus SRA.
\-Faltonia Betitia PROBA
| /-Servius Cornelius SALVIDIENUS
| /-Cornelius Scipio Salvidienus Orfitus Major of ROME
| | \-Calpurina LEPIDA
| /-Sextius Cocceius Serverianus
| | | /-Licinus Crassus Frugi OF ROME
| | \-Calpurina Lepida
| | \-Cornelia Lepida OF ROME
| /-Sextus Anicius Saturninus
| | | /-Claudius Capitolinus I DE ROME
| | | /-Cassius Statilius Severus Hadrianus DE ROME
| | | | \-Macrinia DE ROME
| | \-Caesonia de Rome
| | | /-Juventius Celsus Aufidius Hoenius Severus DE ROME
| | \-Juventia Maxime DE ROME
| /-Quintus Anicius Faustus of Tunisia
| | | /-Aulus Iunius Rufin DE ROME
| | | /-Sergius Octavius HAENAS PAULINUS DE ROME
| | | | \-Egrilla DE ROME
| | | /-Lucius Sergius PAULLUS
| | | | | /-Lucius Sergius PAULLUS III
| | | | \-Paulla DE ROME
| | | | \-Julia Claudia DE ROME
| | \-Seia MAXIMA
| | | /-Aulus Egrillius Rufius DE ROME
| | | /-Aulus Julius PROCULUS DE ROME
| | | | \-Plavis Vera DE ROME
| | \-Julia Minor IV VIPSANIA
| | \-Claudia BASILO
| /-Quintus Faustus ANICIUS
| | | /-Ascyllius of The Eastern FRANKS
| | \-Juliana Asinia V of The Roman EMPIRE
| /-Ancius Faustus PAULINIANUS
| | | /-Gaius Asinius Frugi ASINIUS
| | | /-Caius Julius ASINIUS QUADRATUS D`ASIE
| | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Gaius Asinius Frugi ASINIUS
| | | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Vibius Varus Laevillus D'ASIE
| | | | | /-Aulus Julius Claudius Charax
| | | | \-Julia Quadratilla MINOR DE ROME
| | | | \-Julia spouse of Aulus Julius Claudius CHARAX
| | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | /-Lucius Sergius Paullus de ROME II
| | | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | | | /-Aulus Julius Claudius Charax
| | | | \-Julia Minor DE ROME
| | | | \-Claudia BASILO
| | \-Asinia Juliana Faustus Paulinus of Rome
| | | /-Claudius Capitolinus I DE ROME
| | | /-Cassius Statilius Severus Hadrianus DE ROME
| | | | \-Macrinia DE ROME
| | | /-Cassius DE ROME
| | | | | /-Juventius Celsus Aufidius Hoenius Severus DE ROME
| | | | \-Juventia Maxime DE ROME
| | | /-Caeionius Primus L'Étrusque DE ROME
| | | | | /-Aulius Larcius Quirinus Priscus DE ROME
| | | | | /-Aulus Larcius Lepidus DE ROME
| | | | | | \-Egrilla DE ROME
| | | | \-Larcia CALIDA
| | | | | /-Aulius Larcius Quirinus Priscus DE ROME
| | | | \-Volumnia Calida DE ROME
| | | | \-Egrilla DE ROME
| | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | \-Rasenna ETRUSCI
| /-Amnius Anicius Julianus DI ANICII, Roman Consul 322
| | | /-Tiberius Claudius Frontonianus
| | | /-Tiberius Claudius Themistocles Marathonius
| | | | | /-Leonides VII Meliteus Dadoukos
| | | | | /-Tiberios Klaudios Lysiades Meliteus Archon of Athens
| | | | | | \-Unknown Hagnousios Daughter of THEMISTOKLES IV
| | | | | /-Tiberios Klaudios Sospis Meliteus DADOUCHOS
| | | | | | | /-Antonius Sopsis VON KORINTH
| | | | | | \-Antonia DE CORINTHE
| | | | \-Themistoclea of Melite CLAUDIUS
| | | | | /-Tiberios Klaudios NEIKOTELES SOUNIEUS
| | | | | /-Tiberius Klaudios DEMOSTRATOS SOUNIEUS
| | | | | | \-Philippea spouse of TIBERIOS
| | | | \-Klaudia Philippea II CLAUDIUS
| | | /-Tiberius Claudius MARATHONIUS of Athens
| | | | | /-Titius Claudius Dryantianus CLAUDII
| | | | | /-Titius Claudius Agrippinus CLAUDII
| | | | | | | /-Caius Lulius Antoninus LULII
| | | | | | \-Lulia Lysimache LULII
| | | | | | \-Licinia Maxima LUCINII
| | | | | /-Titius Claudius Dryantianus Antoninus CLAUDII
| | | | | | \-Aelia Platonis Matidia AELII
| | | | \-Claudia Vettia Agrippina CLAUDII
| | | | \-Avidia Alexandria AVIDII
| | \-Amnia DEMETRIAS
| | | /-Stasikes VON THERA
| | | /-Kleitosthenes VON THERA
| | | /-Flavius Clitosthénès Clausianus DE THERA
| | | /-Titus Flavius Clitosthenes Julianus DE THERA
| | | /-Flavius Stasicies DE THERA METROPHANES
| | | | | /-Tiberius Claudius Frontonianus
| | | | \-Claudia Frontoniana CLAUDIUS
| | | | | /-Tiberios Klaudios Lysiades Meliteus Archon of Athens
| | | | | /-Tiberios Klaudios Sospis Meliteus DADOUCHOS
| | | | | | \-Antonia DE CORINTHE
| | | | \-Themistoclea of Melite CLAUDIUS
| | | | | /-Tiberius Klaudios DEMOSTRATOS SOUNIEUS
| | | | \-Klaudia Philippea II CLAUDIUS
| | \-Flavia Claudia Demetria Aeliana de Thera
| | | /-Claudius Capitolinus I DE ROME
| | | /-Claudius CAPITOLINUS II DE ROMA
| | | | \-Macrinia DE ROME
| | | /-Titus Tiberius Claudius NERO
| | | | \-Iulia Polla DE ROME
| | | /-Titus Claudius Bassus Capitolinus DE ROME
| | | | \-Vulcanania DE ROME
| | \-Claudia Capitolina of Rome
| | | /-Neratius Iunius Falvunus DE ROME
| | | | | /-Lucius Minicius Natalis
| | | | \-Aemilia Pudentilla DE ROME
| | | | \-Quadronia spouse of Lucius Minicius NATALIS
| | \-Numeria Marcella DE ROME
| | \-Vulcania spouse of Neratius Iunius Falvunus DE ROME
\-Anicia DEMETRIAS
\-Caesonia Manilia CAESONII
Descendants of Wadamerca of OSTROGOTHS
1 Wadamerca of OSTROGOTHS
=Ermenrich spouse of Wadamerca Of OSTROGOTHS
2 Rechila of the SUEVI
=daughter of Walia of the Visigoths
3 Ricimer of the Suevi
3 Caratene DES SUEVES
=Flavius DE SEPTIMANIE
=Gondioc DE BURGONDIE
- Father: Egbert in SACHSEN
- Birth: ABT 890, Lüneburg, Lower Saxony, Germany
- Christening: Lüneburg, Niedersachsen, Germany
- Also known as: Billung von Sachsen
- Also known as: Billung von Stubenskorn
- Also known as: Bennit
- Also known as: Billung IV Graf in Ostsachsen
- LifeSketch: Original text from the Wikipedia article on Billung: "Billung ist der legendäre Stammvater des sächsischen Adelsgeschlechtes der Billunger. Zum 26. Mai findet sich im Nekrolog der Kirche St. Michael in Lüneburg der Gedenkeintrag für einen an diesem Tag verstorbenen Grafen Billing. Weitere Nachrichten über ihn sind nicht überliefert. Erstmals in der zwischen 1229 und 1233 entstandenen Hauschronik des Klosters St. Michael in Lüneburg heißt es dann, ein Graf Billing sei der Vater Hermann Billungs gewesen. Der angebliche Stammvater der Billunger ist nicht zu verwechseln mit dem in der Zeit von 937–966 bezeugten sächsischen Grafen Billing." English translation from Google: "Billung is the legendary progenitor of the Saxon noble family of the Billunger. On May 26, the memorial entry for Count Billing, who died that day, can be found in the necrology of the St. Michael Church in Lüneburg. NO further messages about him have survived. For the first time in the house chronicle of the St. Michael monastery in Lüneburg, which was made between 1229 and 1233, it is said that Count Billung was the father of Hermann Billung. The alleged progenitor of the Billunger is NOT to be confused with the Saxon Count Billing, who was attested from 937–966." https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Billung [NB: Information sourced from Wikipedia is subject to change by third-parties. Follow the URL(s) noted above to review the latest content.]
- Temple Ordinances: Baptism, 18 JUN 1993, Idaho Falls Idaho Temple
- Endowment: 3 AUG 1993, Idaho Falls, Bonneville, Idaho, United States
- Sealing to Spouse: Completed
- Sealing to Parents: 10 JUL 2001, Jordan River Utah Temple, South Jordan, Salt Lake, Utah, United States
- Death: 26 MAY 967
- Partnership with: Ermengarde DE NANTES
Marriage: 899, Lüneburg, Niedersachsen, Germany
- Child: Wichmann I DER ÄLTERE Birth: ABT 902, Hzgt Sachsen, Holy Roman Empire
- Child: Amelung VON VERDEN Birth: ABT 902, of,Paderborn,Saxony,Germany
- Child: Hermann I BILLUNG VON SACHSEN Birth: 912, Westerburg, Halberstadt, Sachsen, Deutschland
Ancestors of Billung in OSTSACHSEN
/-Wichmann II VON HAMALANT
/-Egbert in SACHSEN
Billung in OSTSACHSEN
Descendants of Billung in OSTSACHSEN
1 Billung in OSTSACHSEN
=Ermengarde DE NANTES Marriage: 899, Lüneburg, Niedersachsen, Germany
2 Wichmann I DER ÄLTERE
2 Amelung VON VERDEN
2 Hermann I BILLUNG VON SACHSEN
=Hildegard von WESTERBURG Marriage: 940, Germany
3 Mathilde BILLUNG VON SACHSEN
=Godefroy le Vieux D'ARDENNES Marriage: ABT 963
=Baldwin III VAN VLAANDEREN Marriage: ABT 960, flanders france
=Gottfried I DE VERDUN Marriage: ABT 963 Marriage: 964, Verdun, Meuse, Lorraine, France
3 Swanehilde VON SACHSEN
3 Bernhard I VON SACHSEN
3 Liudger VON SACHSEN
3 Imma VON SACHSEN
Ancestors of Adèle OSULE
/-Osulf father of Adèle OSULE
Adèle OSULE
Descendants of Adèle OSULE
1 Adèle OSULE
=Robert I DE TOSNY of Belvoir
2 Robert de Toeni of BELVOIR
=Adelisa DI SAVONA Marriage: 1069, England
3 Albreda DE TODENI
3 Adeliza DE TOENI
3 Berenger DE TOSNY
3 Geoffrey de TODENI
3 Agnes DE TODENI
=Hubert II RYE Castellan of Norwich Marriage: 1095, Leiceister, Leiceistershire, England
=Ralph DE BEAUFOU
3 William DE TODENI
- Birth: England
- Death: England
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Descendants of Osulf father of Adèle OSULE
1 Osulf father of Adèle OSULE
=(Unknown)
2 Adèle OSULE
=Robert I DE TOSNY of Belvoir
3 Robert de Toeni of BELVOIR
=Adelisa DI SAVONA Marriage: 1069, England
Ancestors of Otanes son of OTANES
/-Achaimenes HAKHAMANI Konge Av Persia
/-Teispes of PERSIA
/-Cyrus I of PERSIA
/-Cambyses I of PERSIA
| \-Female OF PARSUMAŠ
/-Cyrus II Magnus of PERSIA
| | /-Cyaxares of MEDES
| | /-Astyages of MEDIA
| | | | /-Belshazzar father of VASHTI
| | | \-Vashti spouse of Cyaxares of MEDES
| \-Mandane of MEDIA
| | /-Dascylus of LYDIA
| | /-Dascylus Mermnadae of LYDIA
| | /-Gyges of LYDIA
| | /-Ardys of LYDIA
| | | \-Tudo of MYSIA
| | /-Sadyattes MERMNADAE
| | /-Alyattes Mermnadae of LYDIA
| \-Aryenis Mermnadae of LYCIA
/-Cambyses II of the Achaemenid EMPIRE
| \-Cassandane of PERSIA
/-Otanes son of Cambyses II of the Achaemenid EMPIRE
| | /-Achaimenes HAKHAMANI Konge Av Persia
| | /-Teispes of PERSIA
| | /-Cyrus I of PERSIA
| | /-Cambyses I of PERSIA
| | | \-Female OF PARSUMAŠ
| | /-Cyrus II Magnus of PERSIA
| | | | /-Cyaxares of MEDES
| | | | /-Astyages of MEDIA
| | | | | | /-Belshazzar father of VASHTI
| | | | | \-Vashti spouse of Cyaxares of MEDES
| | | \-Mandane of MEDIA
| | | | /-Dascylus of LYDIA
| | | | /-Dascylus Mermnadae of LYDIA
| | | | /-Gyges of LYDIA
| | | | /-Ardys of LYDIA
| | | | | \-Tudo of MYSIA
| | | | /-Sadyattes MERMNADAE
| | | | /-Alyattes Mermnadae of LYDIA
| | | \-Aryenis Mermnadae of LYCIA
| \-Atossa of PERSIA
| \-Cassandane of PERSIA
Otanes son of OTANES
\-Unknown VON PERSIEN
- Also known as: Phaedyma
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Descendants of Phaidyme daughter of OTANES
1 Phaidyme daughter of OTANES
=Cambyses II of the Achaemenid EMPIRE Marriage: siblings, possible marriage per Herodotus, no children
- Father: Ottar EGILSSON
- Mother: Helgi EYSTEINSDATTER
- Birth: ABT 572, Uppsala, Uppsala, Sweden
- Also known as: "Adhel", "Athislus", "Athisl", "Aðísl at Uppsölum", "Adillus", "Aðils", "Adils", "Eadgils", "Athils", "Adil", "Eadils", "Vysheslav", "Вышеслав"
- Also known as: Ottar Egilsson,
- Also known as: Eadgils
- Also known as: Adils "The Great"
- Also known as: "Ottar Vendelkråka",
- Also known as: Ohthere
- Also known as: Adils Athils
- LdsBaptism: 28 MAY 1923
- LdsEndowment: 2 MAY 1928
- LdsSealingToParents: 18 DEC 1953
- LifeSketch: + durch einen Sturz vom Pferd; Kg v. Schweden. Eadgils, Adils, Aðils or Adhel was a semi-legendary king of Sweden, who is estimated to have lived during the 6th century. Beowulf and Old Norse sources present him as the son of Ohthere and as belonging to the ruling Yngling (Scylfing) dynasty. These sources also deal with his war against Onela, which he won with foreign assistance: in Beowulf he gained the throne of Sweden by defeating his uncle Onela with Geatish help, and in two Scandinavian sources (Skáldskaparmál and Skjöldunga saga), he is also helped to defeat Onela in the Battle on the Ice of Lake Vänern, but with Danish help. However, Scandinavian sources mostly deal with his interaction with the legendary Danish king Hrólfr Kraki (Hroðulf), and Eadgils is mostly presented in a negative light as a rich and greedy king. Snorri Sturluson, who documented many of the Scandinavian traditions, reported that the Swedes called him a "great king".
- Death: ABT 663, Uppsala, Uppsala County, Uppland, Sweden
Cause: Fell from his horse at Disa Hall
- Burial: Kings Mound, Old Uppsala, Sweden
- Burial: Uppsala, Uppsala, Sweden
Ancestors of Adils Eadgils OTTARSSON
/-Domaldi VISBURSSON
/-Domar DOMALDASSON
| \-Himileig HODBRODDSDOTTER
/-Dyggvi DOMARSSON
| | /-Danp RIGSSON
| \-Drótt Danpsdottir
/-Dag DYGGVASSON
| \-Arsson VALESDATTER
/-Agna DAGSSON
| \-Alfrug EYMUNDSDOTTER
/-Alrek AGNASSON
| | /-Frosti Ynglingesoga o'f FINLAND
| \-Skjalf FROSTASDOTTIR
| \-Unknown Spouse of Frosti YNGLINGESOGA
/-Yngve Alreksson of UPPSALA
| \-Dagreid DAGSDOTTER
/-Jörund YNGVASSON OF UPPSALA
/-Aun JORUNDSSON
/-Egil AUNSSON
/-Ottar EGILSSON
| \-Helvor HELGESDOTTER
Adils Eadgils OTTARSSON
| /-Dnap RIGGSON DA DINAMARCA
| /-Dan Magnífico DA DINAMARCA
| | \-Unknown Spouse of Dnap RIGGSON
| /-Frothi Dansson DA DINAMARCA III
| | \-Unknown Spouse of Dan MAGNIFICO
| /-Eystein FROTHISSON AV DENMARK
| | \-Unknown Spouse of Frothi DANSSON III
\-Helgi EYSTEINSDATTER
\-Unknown Spouse of Eystein FROTHISSON
Descendants of Adils Eadgils OTTARSSON
1 Adils Eadgils OTTARSSON
=Yrsa HELGISDATTER Marriage: ABT 593, Sweden
2 Yngvar HARRA
2 Eystein ADILSSON
=Unknown Spouse of Eystein ADILSSON
3 Yngvar HARRA
3 Ingvar EYSTEINSSON King of Sweden
=Freva AV HOLMGARD
=Gautrek GAUTDOTTIR
=Gauthild GAUTSDOTTIR
Ancestors of Liu Pand OU GAO ZU DE HAN DE CHINE
/-Liu Taigong DE CHINE DES HAN
/-Liu Zhijia DE HAN DE CHINE
| | /-Ngai des Han DE CHINE
| | /-Tchoang des Han DE CHINE
| | /-Tchao MARQUIS DE HAN DE CHINE
| | /-Siuen-hoei des Han DE CHINE
| | /-Siang-ngai des Han DE CHINE
| | /-Hi des Han DE CHINE
| | /-Hoan-hoei des Han DE CHINE
| | /-Fei des Han DE CHINE
| | /-Ngan des Han DE CHINE
| \-Liu AO DE CHINE DES HAN
Liu Pand OU GAO ZU DE HAN DE CHINE
\-Wang HANSHI
- Birth: 1145, High Legh, Cheshire, England
- Death: AFT 1191
- Partnership with: William II DE LEGH
- Child: Richard III DE LEGH Birth: 1160, High Legh (Leigh), Cheshire, England
- Child: Agnes DE LEGH Birth: 1164, High Legh, Cheshire, England
- Child: Hugh DE VENABLES Birth: 1191, Kinderton Cum Hulme, Northwich, Cheshire, England
Descendants of Margery OUGHRINGTON
1 Margery OUGHRINGTON
=William II DE LEGH
2 Richard III DE LEGH
=Agnes DE LEGH
3 Thomas DE LEGH
3 Richard IV DE LEGH
=Margery DE HOLGRAVE
2 Agnes DE LEGH
=Richard III DE LEGH
3 Thomas DE LEGH
3 Richard IV DE LEGH
=Margery DE HOLGRAVE
2 Hugh DE VENABLES
Ancestors of Ardden ferch OWAIN
/-Gweir GWYAR AP DOUC
/-Tegid ap GWAIR
| \-Anna MAWGAWSE
/-Alcwn ap Tegid
| \-Anna Mawgawse PENDRAGON
/-Sandde ap ALCWN
| \-Perweur verch Rhys
/-Elidir ap SANDDE
/-Gwriad AP ELIDYR
| | /-Cynfyn ap ANLLECH
| | /-Merfyn Mawr ap CYNFYN
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Cynfyn ap ANLLECH
| | /-Anarawd Gwalch-crwn ap MERFYN
| | | \-Unknown Spoue of Merfyn Mawr ap CYNFYN
| | /-Tudwal AP ANARAWD BRENIN YNYS MANAU
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Anarawd Gwalch-crwn ap MERFYN
| \-Celemion VERCH TUDWAL of the Isle of Man
| \-Unknown Spouse of Tudwal ap Anarawd Brenin Ynys MANAU
/-Merfyn Frych AP GWRIAD of Gwynedd and Powys
| | /-Cadell father of NEST
| \-Nest VERCH CADELL
/-Rhodri AP MERFYN
| | /-Eiludd AP MANWGAN of Powys
| | /-Beli AP EILUDD
| | /-Gwylog AP BELI
| | /-Elisedd AP GWYLOG
| | | | /-Arthwyr ap Pedr of DYFED
| | | | /-Nowy I ap ARTHWYR
| | | \-Sanant verch NOWY
| | /-Brochfael AP ELISEDD
| | | | /-Guilac ap GWYLOP
| | | \-Elise verch GUILAC AP GWYLOP
| | /-Cadell AP BROCHWEL
| | | \-Ardun verch PABO
| \-Nest ferch CADELL
| \-Arddyn ap BENASDALL
/-Cadell AP RHODRI
| | /-Arnothen AP ARTHFODDW
| | /-Arthlwys ap ARNOTHEN
| | /-Clydog ap ARTHLWYS
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Arthlwys ap ARTHFODDW
| | /-Seisyll AP CLYDOG
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Clydog ap ARTHLWYS
| | /-Arthen AP SEISYLL
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Seisyll ap CLYDOG
| | /-Dyfnwallon AP ARTHEN
| | | | /-Cadifor father of MORFYL
| | | \-Morfyl VERCH CADIFOR
| | /-Meurig AP DYFNWALLON of Seisyllwg
| | | | /-Teudos father of MAREDUDD
| | | | /-Maredudd ap TEUDOS
| | | \-Unknown ferch MAREDUIDD
| \-Angharad ferch MEURIG
| \-Unknown Spouse of Meurig ap DYFNWALLON
/-Hywel Dda ap CADELL
| | /-Bleiddig ap DYFNWALLON of Dyfed
| | /-Hyfaidd ap BLEDDRI
| | | | /-Cathen AP GWLYDDIEN
| | | | /-Cadwgon Trydelig AP CATHEN
| | | | /-Rhain AP CADWGON
| | | | /-Tewdwr ap RHAIN
| | | | /-Maredudd AP TEWDWR
| | | | /-Owain AP MAREDYDD
| | | \-Tangwystl FERCH OWAIN
| | | \-Margaret MAELGON
| \-Rheingar verch HYFAIDD
| | /-Einion ap MAREDUDD
| | /-Gruffudd ap EINION
| | /-Maredudd ap GRUFFUDD
| | | \-Efa ferch RHYS
| \-Maud VERCH MAREDUDD
/-Owain ap HYWEL
| | /-Bleiddig ap DYFNWALLON of Dyfed
| | /-Hyfaidd ap BLEDDRI
| | | | /-Cathen AP GWLYDDIEN
| | | | /-Cadwgon Trydelig AP CATHEN
| | | | /-Rhain AP CADWGON
| | | | /-Tewdwr ap RHAIN
| | | | /-Maredudd AP TEWDWR
| | | | /-Owain AP MAREDYDD
| | | \-Tangwystl FERCH OWAIN
| | | \-Margaret MAELGON
| | /-Llywarch DYFED
| | | | /-Einion ap MAREDUDD
| | | | /-Gruffudd ap EINION
| | | | /-Maredudd ap GRUFFUDD
| | | | | \-Efa ferch RHYS
| | | \-Maud VERCH MAREDUDD
| \-Elen ferch LLYWARCH
| | /-Sitric mac ÍMAIR
| \-Angharead FERCH SITRIC
Ardden ferch OWAIN
| /-Gweir GWYAR AP DOUC
| /-Tegid ap GWAIR
| | \-Anna MAWGAWSE
| /-Alcwn ap Tegid
| | \-Anna Mawgawse PENDRAGON
| /-Sandde ap ALCWN
| | \-Perweur verch Rhys
| /-Elidir ap SANDDE
| /-Gwriad AP ELIDYR
| | | /-Cynfyn ap ANLLECH
| | | /-Merfyn Mawr ap CYNFYN
| | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Cynfyn ap ANLLECH
| | | /-Anarawd Gwalch-crwn ap MERFYN
| | | | \-Unknown Spoue of Merfyn Mawr ap CYNFYN
| | | /-Tudwal AP ANARAWD BRENIN YNYS MANAU
| | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Anarawd Gwalch-crwn ap MERFYN
| | \-Celemion VERCH TUDWAL of the Isle of Man
| | \-Unknown Spouse of Tudwal ap Anarawd Brenin Ynys MANAU
| /-Merfyn Frych AP GWRIAD of Gwynedd and Powys
| | | /-Cadell father of NEST
| | \-Nest VERCH CADELL
| /-Rhodri AP MERFYN
| | | /-Eiludd AP MANWGAN of Powys
| | | /-Beli AP EILUDD
| | | /-Gwylog AP BELI
| | | /-Elisedd AP GWYLOG
| | | | | /-Arthwyr ap Pedr of DYFED
| | | | | /-Nowy I ap ARTHWYR
| | | | \-Sanant verch NOWY
| | | /-Brochfael AP ELISEDD
| | | | | /-Guilac ap GWYLOP
| | | | \-Elise verch GUILAC AP GWYLOP
| | | /-Cadell AP BROCHWEL
| | | | \-Ardun verch PABO
| | \-Nest ferch CADELL
| | \-Arddyn ap BENASDALL
| /-Merfyn Manaw ap RHODRI
| | | /-Arnothen AP ARTHFODDW
| | | /-Arthlwys ap ARNOTHEN
| | | /-Clydog ap ARTHLWYS
| | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Arthlwys ap ARTHFODDW
| | | /-Seisyll AP CLYDOG
| | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Clydog ap ARTHLWYS
| | | /-Arthen AP SEISYLL
| | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Seisyll ap CLYDOG
| | | /-Dyfnwallon AP ARTHEN
| | | | | /-Cadifor father of MORFYL
| | | | \-Morfyl VERCH CADIFOR
| | | /-Meurig AP DYFNWALLON of Seisyllwg
| | | | | /-Teudos father of MAREDUDD
| | | | | /-Maredudd ap TEUDOS
| | | | \-Unknown ferch MAREDUIDD
| | \-Angharad ferch MEURIG
| | \-Unknown Spouse of Meurig ap DYFNWALLON
| /-Llywelyn AP MERFYN
| | \-Rhain verch RHEINY
\-Angharad ferch LLYWELYN
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Descendants of Bryddgwyn ab OWAIN
1 Bryddgwyn ab OWAIN
=(Unknown)
2 Dubun ap BRYDDGWYN
=Anguerit spouse of Dubun ap BRYDDGWYN
3 Onwedd ap DUBUN
=(Unknown)
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Descendants of Edempwem ap OWAIN
1 Edempwem ap OWAIN
=(Unknown)
2 Wladysus verch EDENOWEN
=Deheuvraint ap TUDBWYLL
3 Tegfan DEHEUWAINT
=(Unknown)
- Father: Owain ap HYWEL
- Mother: Angharad ferch LLYWELYN
- Birth: 940, Llandyfeisant, Carmarthenshire, Wales
- Also known as: Saint Einion ap Owain
- Other: 970, Brecon, Breconshire, Wales
- LifeSketch: Einion ab Owain (died c. 982) was a medieval Welsh prince of the House of Dinefwr. He was the eldest son and probable edling of King Owain of Dyfed, son of Hywel Dda. The Chronicle of the Princes records Einion assisting King Iago of Gwynedd in driving the Irish and their Danish allies from Wales in 966. Einion then raided Gower again the next year, "on the pretense" of opposing the pagan Vikings and their supporters. This prompted a retaliatory raid by King Owain of Morgannwg, who brought Gower back under his control, and an invasion by King Edgar of England, who forced Einion's father Owain to swear fealty to him at Caerleon upon Usk. A third raid in 976 went little better: Einion is recorded devastating the area so thoroughly it provoked famine but Owain ap Morgan's brother Ithel defeated him and restored the plunder to its owners. At some point, he seems to have annexed Brycheiniog for Deheubarth and King Hywel of Gwynedd with the support of Ælfhere of Mercia then invaded in 980 and 981. Einion defeated them at Llanwenog and in Brycheiniog but the country was heavily despoiled by the northerners and the English and by a Viking raid against St. David's in 980 or 982. Einion predeceased his father, being slain at Pencoed Colwynn by the men of Glywysing and Gwent in AD 982 or 984. His offices were taken by his brother Maredudd, rather than by either of his sons. His line recovered the throne under his grandson Hywel around 1035. He is sometimes credited with being the namesake of Port Eynon or Einon on the Gower peninsula. Children 1.) Gronwy Ap Einion 2.) Edwin (slain 993) 3.) Tewdwr (slain 993) 4.) Cadell, whose grandson was Rhys ap Tewdwr 5.) Gwladys 6.) Gwenllian, typically but probably erroneously credited with marrying Elystan Glodrydd 7.) Marredudd *************************** Biography Einion ab Owain ap Hywel Dda ap Cadell Parents and Siblings Einion's father Owain ab Hywel Dda by his first consort had: 1.) Einion, died 982, in battle at Pencoed Colwyn, in Gwent. 2.) Cadwallawn, died 961 Marriage He married Nest 966 Fought Irish The Gwentian Chronicle records that "Einion son of Owain son of Hywel the Good" fought the Irish in 966. 967 Tribute In 967 Einion had tribute from Gower. 981 Repulsed Danes In 981 he checked the invasion of Danes in Pembroke after they had laid the church of St. David in ruin. 982 Saxons and Death In 982 the Saxons laid waste to his lands, and then the men of Gwentsland rebelled and killed him. Einion was killed in battle at Pencoed Colwynn, Gorwennydd about 983-984. 982 Saxons The Chronicle of the Princes of Wales records that "Brecheinog and all the territory of Einon, son of Owain, were devastated by the Saxons, Alvryd being their leader, and Howel son of Ieuav and Einon killed many of the host" in 982. The Annales Cambriæ record that "Eynan filius Owini" was killed, undated but apparently in 984 from the context. The Chronicle of the Princes of Wales records that "Einon son of Owain was killed through treachery by the nobles of Gwent" in 983. The Gwentian Chronicle records that "Einion son of Owain was slain" in 982 in "Gorwennydd where the action of Pencoed Colwynn took place" Issue Children, listed by Bartrum; (Tewdwr, Cadell and Edwin mentioned by Giraldus) 1.) Tewdwr ab Einion born 970. One of five children named by Boyer. Died in the battle at Llangwin in 993-994. One of three sons are listed by Lloyd in The History of the Princes: died 993, Battle of Llangwm. One of three children named by Cawley. Tewdwr was killed in battle Llangwm 993. The Chronicle of the Princes of Wales records that "a battle took place between the sons of Meurug and Maredudd near Llangwm, and the sons of Meurug conquered, and there Tewdwr son of Einon was slain" in 993. 2.) Cadell ab Einion born Dynevor 953. One of five children named by Boyer. Married Elinor ferch Gwerystan. One of three sons listed by Lloyd in The History of the Princes. 3.) Etwin ab Einion Edwin or Edwyn. One of five children named by Boyer. Living 992; he got help from the Saxons and Danes in the war against Maredudd, laid waste the territories of Cardigan, Dyfed, Menevia, Lower Gower and Kidwelly, and was killed in the battle of Clunog. One of three sons are listed by Lloyd in The History of the Princes. One of three children named by Cawley. Edwin died after 991. The Gwentian Chronicle records that "Edwin son of Einion…accompanied by Adelf a Saxon prince…and they ravaged all the lands of Meredydd, that is Ceredigion, Dyved, Menevia, Lower Gower and Cydweli" in 991. 4.) Gwenlian ferch Einion One of five children named by Boyer. Married Elystan Glodrydd. Gwenllian Ferch Einion ab Owain ap Hywel Dda ap Cadell ap Rhodri Mawr. She married Elystan Glodrydd ap Cuhelyn ap Cadwr ab Idnerth ab Iorwerth Hirflawdd ap Tegonwy ap Teon ap Gwineu Deufreudd-Wyd ap Bywyr Lew ap Bywdeg ap Rhun Rhudd Baladr ap Llary ap Casnar Wledig. 5.) Gronwy. One of five children named by Boyer. Alleded by Edwin of tegeingl to be his father. One of three children named by Cawley. Gronw. The primary source which confirms the existence of Gronw has not been identified.
- Death: 984, Gwent, Wales (killed by the allied forces of Hywel ab Ieuaf and Aelfhere of Mercia)
Cause: killed by the allied forces of Hywel ab Ieuaf and Aelfhere of Mercia
- Burial: Dynevor, Carmarthenshire, Wales
Ancestors of Einion ap OWAIN
/-Gweir GWYAR AP DOUC
/-Tegid ap GWAIR
| \-Anna MAWGAWSE
/-Alcwn ap Tegid
| \-Anna Mawgawse PENDRAGON
/-Sandde ap ALCWN
| \-Perweur verch Rhys
/-Elidir ap SANDDE
/-Gwriad AP ELIDYR
| | /-Cynfyn ap ANLLECH
| | /-Merfyn Mawr ap CYNFYN
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Cynfyn ap ANLLECH
| | /-Anarawd Gwalch-crwn ap MERFYN
| | | \-Unknown Spoue of Merfyn Mawr ap CYNFYN
| | /-Tudwal AP ANARAWD BRENIN YNYS MANAU
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Anarawd Gwalch-crwn ap MERFYN
| \-Celemion VERCH TUDWAL of the Isle of Man
| \-Unknown Spouse of Tudwal ap Anarawd Brenin Ynys MANAU
/-Merfyn Frych AP GWRIAD of Gwynedd and Powys
| | /-Cadell father of NEST
| \-Nest VERCH CADELL
/-Rhodri AP MERFYN
| | /-Eiludd AP MANWGAN of Powys
| | /-Beli AP EILUDD
| | /-Gwylog AP BELI
| | /-Elisedd AP GWYLOG
| | | | /-Arthwyr ap Pedr of DYFED
| | | | /-Nowy I ap ARTHWYR
| | | \-Sanant verch NOWY
| | /-Brochfael AP ELISEDD
| | | | /-Guilac ap GWYLOP
| | | \-Elise verch GUILAC AP GWYLOP
| | /-Cadell AP BROCHWEL
| | | \-Ardun verch PABO
| \-Nest ferch CADELL
| \-Arddyn ap BENASDALL
/-Cadell AP RHODRI
| | /-Arnothen AP ARTHFODDW
| | /-Arthlwys ap ARNOTHEN
| | /-Clydog ap ARTHLWYS
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Arthlwys ap ARTHFODDW
| | /-Seisyll AP CLYDOG
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Clydog ap ARTHLWYS
| | /-Arthen AP SEISYLL
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Seisyll ap CLYDOG
| | /-Dyfnwallon AP ARTHEN
| | | | /-Cadifor father of MORFYL
| | | \-Morfyl VERCH CADIFOR
| | /-Meurig AP DYFNWALLON of Seisyllwg
| | | | /-Teudos father of MAREDUDD
| | | | /-Maredudd ap TEUDOS
| | | \-Unknown ferch MAREDUIDD
| \-Angharad ferch MEURIG
| \-Unknown Spouse of Meurig ap DYFNWALLON
/-Hywel Dda ap CADELL
| | /-Bleiddig ap DYFNWALLON of Dyfed
| | /-Hyfaidd ap BLEDDRI
| | | | /-Cathen AP GWLYDDIEN
| | | | /-Cadwgon Trydelig AP CATHEN
| | | | /-Rhain AP CADWGON
| | | | /-Tewdwr ap RHAIN
| | | | /-Maredudd AP TEWDWR
| | | | /-Owain AP MAREDYDD
| | | \-Tangwystl FERCH OWAIN
| | | \-Margaret MAELGON
| \-Rheingar verch HYFAIDD
| | /-Einion ap MAREDUDD
| | /-Gruffudd ap EINION
| | /-Maredudd ap GRUFFUDD
| | | \-Efa ferch RHYS
| \-Maud VERCH MAREDUDD
/-Owain ap HYWEL
| | /-Bleiddig ap DYFNWALLON of Dyfed
| | /-Hyfaidd ap BLEDDRI
| | | | /-Cathen AP GWLYDDIEN
| | | | /-Cadwgon Trydelig AP CATHEN
| | | | /-Rhain AP CADWGON
| | | | /-Tewdwr ap RHAIN
| | | | /-Maredudd AP TEWDWR
| | | | /-Owain AP MAREDYDD
| | | \-Tangwystl FERCH OWAIN
| | | \-Margaret MAELGON
| | /-Llywarch DYFED
| | | | /-Einion ap MAREDUDD
| | | | /-Gruffudd ap EINION
| | | | /-Maredudd ap GRUFFUDD
| | | | | \-Efa ferch RHYS
| | | \-Maud VERCH MAREDUDD
| \-Elen ferch LLYWARCH
| | /-Sitric mac ÍMAIR
| \-Angharead FERCH SITRIC
Einion ap OWAIN
| /-Gweir GWYAR AP DOUC
| /-Tegid ap GWAIR
| | \-Anna MAWGAWSE
| /-Alcwn ap Tegid
| | \-Anna Mawgawse PENDRAGON
| /-Sandde ap ALCWN
| | \-Perweur verch Rhys
| /-Elidir ap SANDDE
| /-Gwriad AP ELIDYR
| | | /-Cynfyn ap ANLLECH
| | | /-Merfyn Mawr ap CYNFYN
| | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Cynfyn ap ANLLECH
| | | /-Anarawd Gwalch-crwn ap MERFYN
| | | | \-Unknown Spoue of Merfyn Mawr ap CYNFYN
| | | /-Tudwal AP ANARAWD BRENIN YNYS MANAU
| | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Anarawd Gwalch-crwn ap MERFYN
| | \-Celemion VERCH TUDWAL of the Isle of Man
| | \-Unknown Spouse of Tudwal ap Anarawd Brenin Ynys MANAU
| /-Merfyn Frych AP GWRIAD of Gwynedd and Powys
| | | /-Cadell father of NEST
| | \-Nest VERCH CADELL
| /-Rhodri AP MERFYN
| | | /-Eiludd AP MANWGAN of Powys
| | | /-Beli AP EILUDD
| | | /-Gwylog AP BELI
| | | /-Elisedd AP GWYLOG
| | | | | /-Arthwyr ap Pedr of DYFED
| | | | | /-Nowy I ap ARTHWYR
| | | | \-Sanant verch NOWY
| | | /-Brochfael AP ELISEDD
| | | | | /-Guilac ap GWYLOP
| | | | \-Elise verch GUILAC AP GWYLOP
| | | /-Cadell AP BROCHWEL
| | | | \-Ardun verch PABO
| | \-Nest ferch CADELL
| | \-Arddyn ap BENASDALL
| /-Merfyn Manaw ap RHODRI
| | | /-Arnothen AP ARTHFODDW
| | | /-Arthlwys ap ARNOTHEN
| | | /-Clydog ap ARTHLWYS
| | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Arthlwys ap ARTHFODDW
| | | /-Seisyll AP CLYDOG
| | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Clydog ap ARTHLWYS
| | | /-Arthen AP SEISYLL
| | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Seisyll ap CLYDOG
| | | /-Dyfnwallon AP ARTHEN
| | | | | /-Cadifor father of MORFYL
| | | | \-Morfyl VERCH CADIFOR
| | | /-Meurig AP DYFNWALLON of Seisyllwg
| | | | | /-Teudos father of MAREDUDD
| | | | | /-Maredudd ap TEUDOS
| | | | \-Unknown ferch MAREDUIDD
| | \-Angharad ferch MEURIG
| | \-Unknown Spouse of Meurig ap DYFNWALLON
| /-Llywelyn AP MERFYN
| | \-Rhain verch RHEINY
\-Angharad ferch LLYWELYN