- LivedTogether: ABT 535
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Descendants of Chunsina
1 Chunsina
=Chlothar I DER FRANKEN Marriage: 518, 5th wife - France
- Father: Gundeoch DER LANGOBARDEN
- Mother: Theodelinde Caratène SUEBEN
- Birth: ABT 450, Mährischen Pforte
- Also known as: "Claffon" "Claffo" "Clef" "Clefi" "Cleph" , "Clepho" , "Clephon" , "Klaffo" , "Klapho" , "Kleph"
- Also known as: "Claffon" "Claffo" "Clef" "Clefi" "Cleph" , "Clepho" , "Clephon" , "Klaffo" , "Klapho" , "Kleph"
- Title Of Nobility: King of the Lombards
- Klef I. folgte seinem Vater und trat selbst auch zum arianischen Glauben über. Er stand ständig gegen die Nachbarn, besonders gegen die Heruler und mußte zeitweise Tribute an diese zahlen.: (Date and Place unknown)
- LifeSketch: Foundation for Medieval Genealogy KLEPH, son of [GODEOC] . A later manuscript of the Origo Gentis Langobardorum names "Claffo filius Godeoc" as sixth king of the Lombards[122]. The Istoria Longobardorum assigns a reign of 28 years to "Graffo filius Geldeoth"[123]. Kleph had two children: 1. TATO . A later manuscript of the Origo Gentis Langobardorum names "Tato filius Cleffoni" as seventh king of the Lombards[124]. Tato had one child: a) HILDECHIS . Paulus Diaconus records that Wacho defeated "Hildechis filius Tatonis"[125]. 2. ZUCHILO [Unichis] . Paulus Diaconus names "germani sui [Tatonis] Zuchilonis" when recording the accession of his son Wacho[126]. Zuchilo had one child: a) WACHO (-540). From the Lething clan. The Origo Gentis Langobardorum names "Wacho filius Unichis", specifying in a later passage that they were "Lethinges"[127]. A later manuscript of the Origo names him "Wacho, filius Unichis, nepos Tatoni"[128]. He deposed King Tato in [510], defeated his son Hildechis, and installed himself as WACHO King of the Lombards. Paulus Diaconus names "Wacho filius germani sui [Tatonis] Zuchilonis", recording that he fought "Hildechis filius Tatonis"[129]. The Historia Langobardorum records that Wacho killed "Tattone rege barbane suo cum Vinsilane" and succeeded as king, defeating "Heldechis filio Tattoni" who fled "ad Gibidos" and died[130]. He consolidated his position, and the integration of his tribe as they moved into Pannonia, by his three marriages with daughters of three competing chiefs. m firstly RANIGUNDA [Raicunda], daughter of FISUD [Pisen] King of Thuringia. The Origo Gentis Langobardorum names "Raicundam filia Fisud regis Turingorum" as King Wacho's first wife[131]. The Historia Langobardorum names "Ranigunda filia Pisen regi Turingorum" as Wacho's first wife[132]. Paulus Diaconus names the three wives of Wacho "primam Ranicundam, filiam Regis Turingorum…Austrigosam, filiam regis Gepidorum…tertiam…Herulorum regis filiam…Salingam"[133]. m secondly OSTROGOTHA [Austreusa/Austrigosa], daughter of --- King of the Gepides. The Origo Gentis Langobardorum names "Austrigusa filiam Gippidorum" as King Wacho's second wife[134]. The Historia Langobardorum names "Austreusa filia Gibedorum" as Wacho's second wife[135]. Paulus Diaconus names the three wives of Wacho "primam Ranicundam, filiam Regis Turingorum…Austrigosam, filiam regis Gepidorum…tertiam…Herulorum regis filiam…Salingam"[136]. m thirdly SILENGA [Salinga], daughter of --- King of the Heruls. The Origo Gentis Langobardorum names "filia regis Herulorum…Silinga" as King Wacho's third wife[137]. Paulus Diaconus names the three wives of Wacho "primam Ranicundam, filiam Regis Turingorum…Austrigosam, filiam regis Gepidorum…
- Death: ABT 500, Rugiland
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Claffo König der Langobarden
/-Gundeoch DER LANGOBARDEN
Claffo König der Langobarden
\-Theodelinde Caratène SUEBEN
Descendants of Claffo König der Langobarden
1 Claffo König der Langobarden
=(Unknown)
2 Zuchilo Herzog und Feldherr
=(Unknown)
3 Wacho König der Langobarden
=Austrigusa Königin der Langobarden Marriage: 513
=Silinga Königin der Langobarden Marriage: ABT 530
=Radegunde VON THÜRINGEN Königin der Langobarden Marriage: 510
2 Tato König der Langobarden
Ancestors of Claudia Vestal Virgin
/-Appius Claudius SABINUS REGILLENSIS OR Inregillensis
/-Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus INREGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
/-Publius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Gaius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
Claudia Vestal Virgin
\-Antistia VETORUM
Ancestors of Claudia Minor
/-Appius Claudius SABINUS REGILLENSIS OR Inregillensis
/-Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus INREGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
/-Publius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Gaius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
Claudia Minor
\-Antistia VETORUM
Ancestors of Claudia Tertia
/-Appius Claudius SABINUS REGILLENSIS OR Inregillensis
/-Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus INREGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
/-Publius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Gaius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
Claudia Tertia
\-Antistia VETORUM
Ancestors of Cleolla of Mycenae
/-Tantalos of Lydia KING
/-Pelops of Pisa, Lydia and Mycenae
/-Dias of Mycenae
| | /-Alxion DI PISA
| | /-Oenomaus DE KRETA King of Pisa
| | | \-Harpina DI PISA
| \-Hippodamia of PISA
| | /-Abas OF ARGOS
| | /-Acrisios D'ARGOS
| \-Evarete DE ARGOS
| | /-Lynceus OF ARGOS
| | /-Lacédémon eme
| \-Eurydice spouse of Acrisios D'ARGOS
| | /-Lelex KÖNIG VON SPARTA
| | /-Myles KING OF LACONIA
| | | \-Queen Cleocharia of LACONIA
| | /-Eurotas OF LACONIA
| \-Sparta DE GRECE
| \-Cleocharia NAIAD NYMPH
Cleolla of Mycenae
\-Archippe
Descendants of Cleolla of Mycenae
1 Cleolla of Mycenae
=Plisthenes of Mycenae
2 Menelaus KING of Sparta
=Pieris a SLAVE
3 Megapenthes of Sparta
=Iphiloche of SPARTA
=Helen of TROY
2 Agamemnon of Mycenae KING
- Father: Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
- Mother: Laodice III, Queen Consort of the Seleucid Empire
- Birth: 210 BC, Alexandria, Eygpt
- Also known as: Cleopatra, Princess of Syria I
- Also known as: Cleopatra I Syra of Syria
- Title Of Nobility: Princess Of Syria
- LifeSketch: While Cleopatra was born in Egypt, she traced her family origins to Macedonian Greece and Ptolemy I Soter, one of Alexander the Great’s generals. Ptolemy took the reigns of Egypt after Alexander’s death in 323 B.C., and he launched a dynasty of Greek-speaking rulers that lasted for nearly three centuries. Despite not being ethnically Egyptian, Cleopatra embraced many of her country’s ancient customs and was the first member of the Ptolemaic line to learn the Egyptian language. Like many royal houses, members of the Ptolemaic dynasty often married within the family to preserve the purity of their bloodline. More than a dozen of Cleopatra’s ancestors tied the knot with cousins or siblings, and it’s likely that her own parents were brother and sister. In keeping with this custom, Cleopatra eventually married both of her adolescent brothers, each of whom served as her ceremonial spouse and co-regent at different times during her reign. Roman propaganda painted Cleopatra as a debauched temptress who used her sex appeal as a political weapon, but she may have been more renowned for her intellect than her appearance. She spoke as many as a dozen languages and was educated in mathematics, philosophy, oratory and astronomy, and Egyptian sources later described her as a ruler “who elevated the ranks of scholars and enjoyed their company.” There’s also evidence that Cleopatra wasn’t as physically striking as once believed. Coins with her portrait show her with manly features and a large, hooked nose, though some historians contend that she intentionally portrayed herself as masculine as a display of strength. For his part, the ancient writer Plutarch claimed that Cleopatra’s beauty was “not altogether incomparable,” and that it was instead her mellifluous speaking voice and “irresistible charm” that made her so desirable. Power grabs and murder plots were as much a Ptolemaic tradition as family marriage, and Cleopatra and her brothers and sisters were no different. Her first sibling-husband, Ptolemy XIII, ran her out of Egypt after she tried to take sole possession of the throne, and the pair later faced off in a civil war. Cleopatra regained the upper hand by teaming with Julius Caesar, and Ptolemy drowned in the Nile River after being defeated in battle. Following the war, Cleopatra remarried to her younger brother Ptolemy XIV, but she is believed to have had him murdered in a bid to make her son her co-ruler. In 41 B.C., she also engineered the execution of her sister, Arsinoe, who she considered a rival to throne. Cleopatra believed herself to be a living goddess, and she often used clever stagecraft to woo potential allies and reinforce her divine status. A famous example of her flair for the dramatic came in 48 B.C., when Julius Caesar arrived in Alexandria during her feud with her brother Ptolemy XIII. Knowing Ptolemy’s forces would thwart her attempts to meet with the Roman general, Cleopatra had herself wrapped in a carpet—some sources say it was a linen sack—and smuggled into his personal quarters. Caesar was dazzled by the sight of the young queen in her royal garb, and the two soon became allies and lovers. Cleopatra later employed a similar bit of theater in her 41 B.C. encounter with Mark Antony. When summoned to meet the Roman Triumvir in Tarsus, she is said to have arrived on a golden barge adorned with purple sails and rowed by oars made of silver. Cleopatra had been made up to look like the goddess Aphrodite, and she sat beneath a gilded canopy while attendants dressed as cupids fanned her and burned sweet-smelling incense. Antony—who considered himself the embodiment of the Greek god Dionysus—was instantly enchanted. Cleopatra joined Julius Caesar in Rome beginning in 46 B.C., and her presence seems to have caused quite a stir. Caesar didn’t hide that she was his mistress—she even came to the city with their lovechild, Caesarion, in tow—and many Romans were scandalized when he erected a gilded statue of her in the temple of Venus Genetrix. Cleopatra was forced to flee Rome after Caesar was stabbed to death in the Roman senate in 44 B.C., but by then she had made her mark on the city. Her exotic hairstyle and pearl jewelry became a fashion trend, and according to the historian Joann Fletcher, “so many Roman women adopted the ‘Cleopatra look’ that their statuary has often been mistaken for Cleopatra herself.” Cleopatra first began her legendary love affair with the Roman general Mark Antony in 41 B.C. Their relationship had a political component—Cleopatra needed Antony to protect her crown and maintain Egypt’s independence, while Antony needed access to Egypt’s riches and resources—but they were also famously fond of each other’s company. According to ancient sources, they spent the winter of 41-40 B.C. living a life of leisure and excess in Egypt, and even formed their own drinking society known as the “Inimitable Livers.” The group engaged in nightly feasts and wine-binges, and its members occasionally took part in elaborate games and contests. One of Antony and Cleopatra’s favorite activities supposedly involved wandering the streets of Alexandria in disguise and playing pranks on its residents. Cleopatra eventually married Mark Antony and had three children with him, but their relationship also spawned a massive scandal in Rome. Antony’s rival Octavian used propaganda to portray him as a traitor under the sway of a scheming seductress, and in 32 B.C., the Roman Senate declared war on Cleopatra. The conflict reached its climax the following year in a famous naval battle at Actium. Cleopatra personally led several dozen Egyptian warships into the fray alongside Antony’s fleet, but they were no match for Octavian’s navy. The battle soon devolved into a rout, and Cleopatra and Antony were forced to break through the Roman line and flee to Egypt. Cleopatra and Antony famously took their own lives in 30 B.C., after Octavian’s forces pursued them to Alexandria. While Antony is said to have fatally stabbed himself in the stomach, Cleopatra’s method of suicide is less certain. Legend has it that she died by enticing an “asp”—most likely a viper or Egyptian cobra—to bite her arm, but the ancient chronicler Plutarch admits that “what really took place is known to no one.” He says Cleopatra was also known to conceal a deadly poison in one of her hair combs, and the historian Strabo notes that she may have applied a fatal “ointment.” With this in mind, many scholars now suspect she used a pin dipped in some form of potent toxin—snake venom or otherwise. The Queen of the Nile has been portrayed on the silver screen by the likes of Claudette Colbert and Sophia Loren, but she was most famously played by Elizabeth Taylor in the 1963 sword-and-sandal epic “Cleopatra.” The film was plagued by production problems and script issues, and its budget eventually soared from $2 million to $44 million—including some $200,000 just to cover the cost of Taylor’s costumes. It was the most expensive movie ever made at the time of its release, and nearly bankrupted its studio despite raking in a fortune at the box office. If inflation is taken into account, “Cleopatra” remains one of the priciest movies in history even today.
- Alternate Birth Date: 210 BC, Alexandria, Egypt
- Title Of Nobility: Queen of Ptolemaic Egypt
- LifeSketch: Cleopatra I was the daughter of Antiochus III the Great, King of the Seleucid Empire, and Queen Laodice III. Queen In 197 BC, Antiochus III had captured a number of cities in Asia Minor previously under the control of the Ptolemaic kingdom of Egypt. The Romans supported the Egyptian interests, when they negotiated with the Seleucid king in Lysimachia in 196 BC. In response, Antiochus III indicated his willingness to make peace with Ptolemy V and to have his daughter Cleopatra I marry Ptolemy V. They were betrothed in 195 BC and their marriage took place in 193 BC in Raphia.[4] At that time Ptolemy V was about 16 years and Cleopatra I about 10 years old. Later on, Egypt's Ptolemaic kings were to argue that Cleopatra I had received Coele-Syria as her dowry and, therefore, this territory again belonged to Egypt. It is not clear if this was the case. However, in practice, Coele-Syria remained a Seleucid possession after the Battle of Panium in 198 BC.[5] In Alexandria, Cleopatra I was called the Syrian.[6] As part of the Ptolemaic cult she was honoured with her husband as Theoi Epiphaneis. In line with ancient Egyptian tradition, she was also named adelphe (= sister) of Ptolemy V. A synod of priests held at Memphis in 185 BC transferred all honours that Ptolemy V had received in 196 BC (written on the Rosetta stone) to his wife. In 187 BC, Cleopatra I was appointed vizier. Queen Regent Upon her husband's death in 180 BC, she ruled on behalf of her young son, Ptolemy VI. She was the first Ptolemaic queen to rule without her husband. This can be concluded from date formulas on the papyri written in the years from 179 BC to 176 BC, where Cleopatra I is called Thea Epiphanes and her name is written before that of her son. She also minted her own coins, which also bear her name before that of her son. On June 22, 2010, archaeologists uncovered a gold coin bearing her image at Tel Kedesh in Israel near the Lebanon border. It was reported to be the heaviest and most valuable gold coin ever found in Israel.[7] Just before his death, Ptolemy V had planned to conduct a war against the Seleucid kingdom but when Cleopatra I became sole ruler, she immediately ended the war preparations directed against her brother Seleucus IV Philopator. Cleopatra I died around 176 BC. The year after her death, her son Ptolemy VI and her daughter Cleopatra II married.
- Title Of Nobility: Princess of the Seleucid Empire
- Death: 176 BC, Al Iskandariyah, Egypt
Ancestors of Cleopatra I Syra Queen of Egypt
/-Antiochus III Theos, Basileus of the Seleucid Empire
/-Seleucus II Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche SELEÚKEIA
| | /-Antiochus of Orestis General of MACEDONIA
| | /-Seleucus of SYRIA I
| | | \-Laodice I, of Macedonia
| | /-Achaeus KING General of the Seleucid Army, of Syria
| | | | /- SPITAMENES
| | | \-Apama Queen Consort of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Daskyleion of Bactria
| | | | /-Pharnaces Arshamid Daskyleion I
| | | | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | | | /-Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | | | | /-Darius II Ochus ACHAEMENID
| | | | | | /-Artaxerxes II Memnon DE PERSE
| | | | | | | \-Parysatis Queen Consort of PERSIA
| | | | | \-Apama of PERSIA
| | | | | | /-Hydarnes III SATRAPE of Armenia
| | | | | \-Stateira Hydarnid D'ARMÉNIE
| | | | | \-Parysatis Queen Consort of PERSIA
| | | | /-Spitamenes Satrap of BAKTRIA
| | | | | | /-Pharnavaz father of DASKALYTIS
| | | | | \-Daskalytis spouse of Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | \-Apama I of BACTRIA
| | | | /-Artabazus I Persian NOBLEMAN
| | | | /-Daskyleion of Bactria
| | | | /-Pharnaces Arshamid Daskyleion I
| | | | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | | \-Apame Amastris DASCYLIUM
| | | | /-Artaxerxes I of Persia, King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire
| | | | /-Darius II Ochus ACHAEMENID
| | | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | /-Artaxerxes II Memnon DE PERSE
| | | | | | /-Artaxerxes I of Persia, King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire
| | | | | \-Parysatis Queen Consort of PERSIA
| | | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | \-Apama of PERSIA
| | | | /-Hydarnes III SATRAPE of Armenia
| | | \-Stateira Hydarnid D'ARMÉNIE
| | | | /-Artaxerxes I of Persia, King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire
| | | \-Parysatis Queen Consort of PERSIA
| | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| \-Laodice Queen I Consort of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas DE MACÉDOINE
/-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | /-Antiochus of Orestis General of MACEDONIA
| | /-Seleucus of SYRIA I
| | | \-Laodice I, of Macedonia
| | /-Achaeus KING General of the Seleucid Army, of Syria
| | | | /- SPITAMENES
| | | \-Apama Queen Consort of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Daskyleion of Bactria
| | | | /-Pharnaces Arshamid Daskyleion I
| | | | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | | | /-Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | | | | /-Darius II Ochus ACHAEMENID
| | | | | | /-Artaxerxes II Memnon DE PERSE
| | | | | | | \-Parysatis Queen Consort of PERSIA
| | | | | \-Apama of PERSIA
| | | | | | /-Hydarnes III SATRAPE of Armenia
| | | | | \-Stateira Hydarnid D'ARMÉNIE
| | | | | \-Parysatis Queen Consort of PERSIA
| | | | /-Spitamenes Satrap of BAKTRIA
| | | | | | /-Pharnavaz father of DASKALYTIS
| | | | | \-Daskalytis spouse of Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | \-Apama I of BACTRIA
| | | | /-Artabazus I Persian NOBLEMAN
| | | | /-Daskyleion of Bactria
| | | | /-Pharnaces Arshamid Daskyleion I
| | | | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | | \-Apame Amastris DASCYLIUM
| | | | /-Artaxerxes I of Persia, King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire
| | | | /-Darius II Ochus ACHAEMENID
| | | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | /-Artaxerxes II Memnon DE PERSE
| | | | | | /-Artaxerxes I of Persia, King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire
| | | | | \-Parysatis Queen Consort of PERSIA
| | | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | \-Apama of PERSIA
| | | | /-Hydarnes III SATRAPE of Armenia
| | | \-Stateira Hydarnid D'ARMÉNIE
| | | | /-Artaxerxes I of Persia, King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire
| | | \-Parysatis Queen Consort of PERSIA
| | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | /-Andromachos SELEUKID
| | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas DE MACÉDOINE
| \-Laodice II of SYRIA
| | /-Cleombrotus REGENT OF SPARTA
| | /-Pausanias OF SPARTA
| | /-Pleistoanax Agiadai de SPARTA I
| | /-Pausanias Agiadai de SPARTA
| | /-Kleombrotos I Agadai OF SPARTA
| | /-Kleomenes AGIADAI of Sparta
| | /-Kleonymos AGIADAI of Sparta
| | /-Leonidas II Agiadai of SPARTA
| | | | /-Zeuxidamus of Sparta
| | | | /-Archidamus II of SPARTA
| | | | | \-Lathria of CLEONE
| | | | /-Agesilaus II of SPARTA
| | | | | | /-Melesippidas father of EUPOLIA
| | | | | \-Eupolia bint MELESIPPIDAS
| | | | /-Archidamus III of SPARTA
| | | | | | /-Aristomenidas of SPARTA
| | | | | \-Cleora of SPARTA
| | | | /-Eudamidas I of SPARTA
| | | | | \-Deinicha spouse of Archidamus III of SPARTA
| | | | /-Archidamus IV of SPARTA
| | | | | \-Archidamia of SPARTA
| | | \-Chilonis of SPARTA
| \-Proaga de Sparte ,Princesse Agiade, De Sparte
| | /-Antiochus of Orestis General of MACEDONIA
| | /-Seleucus of SYRIA I
| | | \-Laodice I, of Macedonia
| \-Laodice PRINCESS OF SYRIA
| \-Apama OF BACTRIA
Cleopatra I Syra Queen of Egypt
| /-Mithridates KING II, of Pontus
\-Laodice III, Queen Consort of the Seleucid Empire
\-Laodike VON SYRIEN
- Birth: BET 29 DEC 162 BC AND 28 DEC 161 BC, Ash Shatibi, Al Iskandariyah, Egypt
- Also known as: Kleopatra III Philometor Soteira (Kleopatra III LAGIDES)
- Title Of Nobility: Queen of Egypt
- LifeSketch: Cleopatra III (160 BC –101 BC) was a queen of Egypt. She ruled at first with her mother Cleopatra II and husband Ptolemy VIII from 142 to 131 BC and again from 127 to 116 BC. She then ruled with her sons Ptolemy IX and Ptolemy X from 116 to 101 BC. Cleopatra III was also known as Cleopatra Euergetis while associated with her husband Ptolemy VIII or her son Ptolemy X. She is attested as Cleopatra Philometor Soteira while associated with her eldest son Ptolemy IX. Cleopatra III's uncle Ptolemy VIII ruled together with her parents from 170 BC to 164 BC, at which point he expelled Cleopatra II and Ptolemy VI. However, he was soon forced to abdicate in 163 BC. Cleopatra III's parents retook the throne and remained in power for almost 20 years until 145 BC. Cleopatra III was born between 160 and 155 BC. She was a sister to Ptolemy Eupator, Cleopatra Thea, Ptolemy VII Neos Philopator, and possibly Berenice. Ptolemy VI died in 145 BC from injuries sustained when falling from his horse during the battle of Oinoparas against Alexander Balas. Cleopatra III’s uncle Ptolemy VIII became the King of Egypt again. Ptolemy VIII first married Cleopatra III’s mother Cleopatra II in 145 BC, and then married Cleopatra III in 139 BC. Cleopatra II rebelled against Ptolemy VIII in 132 BC and Cleopatra III fled to Cyprus in 130 BC with her husband, but was able to return to Alexandria in 127 BC. In 124 BC Cleopatra III and her husband were joined again by her mother Cleopatra II as a joint ruler. After the death of Ptolemy VIII in 116 BC, Cleopatra III ruled jointly with her mother Cleopatra II and her son Ptolemy IX. Her mother died late into the same year or early into the next year (115 BC). Cleopatra III expelled Ptolemy IX from Alexandria in 107 BC and replaced him as co-regent with her second son Ptolemy X. After 6 years of joint rule, Ptolemy X had his mother Cleopatra III murdered in 101 BC. Cleopatra III was succeeded by Ptolemy X, possibly in joint rule with his wife Berenice III, who was Cleopatra III's granddaughter. Cleopatra III and Ptolemy VIII married in 142 or 141 BC and had five children : 1. Ptolemy IX Soter 142 BC December 81 BC Co-ruler of Egypt alongside his mother and grandmother from 116–107 BC, when he was exiled to Cyprus, then co-ruler with his mother once more from 88–81 BC. 2. Ptolemy X Alexander I 140 BC 88–87 BC King of Cyprus from 114–107 BC, when he became co-ruler of Egypt alongside his mother, until expelled in 88 BC. 3. Tryphaena c. 140 BC 110/09 BC Married the Seleucid king Antiochus VIII Grypus in 124 BC. 4. Cleopatra IV 138–135 BC? 112 BC Married to Ptolemy IX and co-ruler with him from 116–115 BC, when she was divorced from him and remarried to the Seleucid king Antiochus IX Cyzicenus. 5. Cleopatra Selene 135–130 BC 69 BC Married to Ptolemy IX from 115 BC until probably 107 BC, when she was possibly remarried to Ptolemy X. Then married in succession to the Seleucid kings Antiochus VIII, Antiochus IX, and Antiochus X.
- Death: 101 BC, Ptolemy X had Cleopatra III murdered, Egypt
Descendants of Cleopatra III Euergetis Faraó gynaíka tou Aígyptos
1 Cleopatra III Euergetis Faraó gynaíka tou Aígyptos
=Ptolemy VI Philometor Pharaoh of Egypt
2 Cleopatra Tryphaena PRINCESS of Egypt
=Antiochus VIII Grypos, KING Philometor of Syria
3 Laodice QUEEN VII, Thea Philadelphus of Commagene
=Mithridates I Callinikos King of COMMAGENE
3 Antiochus XII
3 Demetrius III
3 Philip I
3 Seleucus VI Epiphanes SYRIA
- Birth: BET 135 BC AND 130 BC
- Title Of Nobility: Queen consort of Egypt
- Clan Name: Ptolemaic Dynasty (by birth)
- LifeSketch: Born : c. 135–130 BC Died : 69 BC, Seleucia at the Zeugma Spouses : . Ptolemy IX (115–107 BC; divorced) . Ptolemy X (107–102 BC; divorced) . Antiochus VIII (102-96 BC; widowed) . Antiochus IX (95 BC; widowed) . Antiochus X (95–92 BC; widowed) Issue : Antiochus XIII Philadelphus, known as Asiaticus Father : Ptolemy VIII Mother : Cleopatra III ____________________________________________________ Children of Antiochus X and Cleopatra Selene I : The Roman statesman Cicero wrote about two sons of Antiochus X and Cleopatra Selene who visited Rome during his time (between 75 and 73 BC); one of them was named Antiochus. The king might have also fathered a daughter with his wife; according to the first century historian Plutarch, the Armenian king Tigranes II, who killed Cleopatra Selene in 69 BC, "put to death the successors of Seleucus, and [carried] off their wives and daughters into captivity". This statement makes it possible to assume that Antiochus X had at least one daughter with his wife. Antiochus XIII: mentioned by Cicero. His epithets raised questions about how many sons with that name Antiochus X fathered; when Antiochus XIII issued coins as a sole ruler, he used the epithet Philadelphos ("brother-loving"), but on jugate coins that show Cleopatra Selene as regent along with a ruling son named Antiochus, the epithet Philometor ("mother-loving") is used. The historian Kay Ehling [de], agreeing with the view of Bouché-Leclercq, argued that two sons, both named Antiochus, resulted from the marriage of Antiochus X and Cleopatra Selene. Cicero, on the other hand, left one of the brothers unnamed, and clearly stated that Antiochus was the name of only one prince. Ehling's theory is possible but only if "Antiochus Philometor" was the prince named by Cicero, and the brother, who had a different name, assumed the dynastic name Antiochus with the epithet Philadelphos when he became king following the death of Antiochus Philometor. In the view of the historian Adrian Dumitru, such a scenario is complicated; more likely, Antiochus XIII bore two epithets, Philadelphos and Philometor. Several numismatists, such as Oliver D. Hoover, Catharine Lorber and Arthur Houghton, agree that both epithets denoted Antiochus XIII. Seleucus VII: the numismatist Brian Kritt deciphered and published a newly discovered jugate coin bearing the portrait of Cleopatra Selene and a co-ruler in 2002. Kritt's reading gave the name of King Seleucus Philometor and, considering the epithet which means mother loving, equated him with the unnamed son mentioned by Cicero. Kritt gave the newly discovered king the regnal name Seleucus VII. Some scholars, such as Lloyd Llewellyn Jones and Michael Roy Burgess [de], accepted the reading, but Hoover rejected Kritt's reading as the coin is badly damaged and some of the letters cannot be read. Hoover proposed a different reading where the king's name is Antiochus, to be identified with Antiochus XIII. Seleucus Kybiosaktes: the unnamed son mentioned by Cicero does not appear in other ancient literature. Seleucus Kybiosaktes, a man who appeared c. 58 BC in Egypt as a husband of its queen Berenice IV, is identified by modern scholarship with the unnamed prince. According to the first century BC historian Strabo, Kybiosaktes pretended to be of Seleucid descent. Kritt considered it plausible to identify Seleucus VII with Seleucus Kybiosaktes.
- Title Of Nobility: Queen consort of Syria
- Title Of Nobility: Queen regnant of Syria
- Clan Name: Seleucid Dynasty (by marriage)
- Death: 69 BC, Seleucia at the Zeugma, Turkey
Descendants of Cleopatra Selene I Queen of Egypt
1 Cleopatra Selene I Queen of Egypt
=Antiochus VIII Grypos, KING Philometor of Syria Marriage: BET 102 BC AND 96 BC
- Birth: 110 BC
- Death: AFT 58 BC
Descendants of Cleopatra the Elder, Princess of Pontus
1 Cleopatra the Elder, Princess of Pontus
=Tigranes II King of ARMENIA
2 Daughter of Tigraes II Wife of Mithradates I of MEDIA
=Mithridates I King of Achaemenid Media Atropatene Kingdom of Armenia
3 Ariobarzanes KING I, of Media Atropatene
=(Unknown)
- Birth: 20
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Descendants of Clodia of Rome
1 Clodia of Rome
=(Unknown)
2 Clodius Vibius Varus of Rome
=Julia VESTINA de Roma
3 Vibia of Rome
=Gaius Julius Lupus Titus Vibius Varus Laevillus I of The Roman Empire
Ancestors of Clodius Vibius Varus of Rome
Clodius Vibius Varus of Rome
\-Clodia of Rome
Descendants of Clodius Vibius Varus of Rome
1 Clodius Vibius Varus of Rome
=Julia VESTINA de Roma
2 Vibia of Rome
=Gaius Julius Lupus Titus Vibius Varus Laevillus I of The Roman Empire
3 Gaius Julius Lupus Titus Vibius Varus Laevillus II of The Roman Empire
=Julia Quadratilla Major Bassa VAN ROME
Ancestors of Closdesvinte de los Francos
/-Chlodio Le Chevelu of the Salian FRANKS
Closdesvinte de los Francos
| /-Dagobert Roi des Francs DE COLOGNE I
| /-Genebald Duke of The East Franks
| /-Dagobert DER FRANKEN VON KOLN
| | | /-Farabert DE FRANCS
| | | /-Sunna DES SICAMBRED DES FRANCS
| | | /-Childeric I King of the Franks
| | | /-Bartherus VON KOLN
| | | | | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Vibius Varus Laevillus D'ASIE
| | | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | /-Chlodio III VON KOLN
| | | | \-Euergaine VERCH LLIEFFER MAWR OF CAMULOD
| | | /-Walter VON KOLN
| | \-Athildis L`ANCIENNE DES FRANCS
| /-Chlodio of the Franks at COLOGNE
| | \-Asilia DE LOMBARDIE
| /-Marcomir of the East FRANKS
| | \-Blesinde VON SCHWABEN
\-Hildegonde DE TOXANDRIE
\-Hildegonde DE LOMBARDIE
- Birth: MAY 497, Kingdom of Neustria, Gaul, Frankish Empire
- Also known as: Clothar
- Also known as: Chlothaire I King of Soissons
- Title Of Nobility: King of Austrasia, BET 555 AND 558, Reims
- Christening of Chlothaire: Chlothar's father, Clovis I, had converted to Nicene Christianity, but Chlothar, like other Merovingians, did not consider that the Christian doctrine of monogamy should be expected of royalty: he had five wives, more from political expediency, for the purpose of forming alliances, than for personal motives.
- Clan Name: House of Merovingians
- Six known wives/partners: (Date and Place unknown)
- LifeSketch: Chlothar I (c. 497 – 29 November 561)[a] was a king of the Franks of the Merovingian dynasty and one of the four sons of Clovis I. Chlothar's father, Clovis I, divided the kingdom between his four sons. In 511, Clothar I inherited two large territories on the Western coast of Francia, separated by the lands of his brother Childebert I's Kingdom of Paris. Chlothar spent most of his life in a campaign to expand his territories at the expense of his relatives and neighbouring realms in all directions. His brothers avoided outright war by cooperating with Chlothar's attacks on neighbouring lands in concert or by invading lands when their rulers died. The spoils were shared between the participating brothers. By the end of his life, Chlothar had managed to reunite Francia by surviving his brothers and seizing their territories after they died. But upon his own death, the Kingdom of the Franks was once again divided between his own four surviving sons. A fifth son had rebelled and was killed, along with his family. At the end of his reign, the Frankish kingdom was at its peak, covering the whole of Gaul (except Septimania) and part of present-day Germany. Chlothar died at the end of 561 of acute pneumonia at the age of 64, leaving his kingdom to his four sons. They went to bury him at Soissons in the Basilica of St. Marie, where he had started to build the tomb of St. Médard.[24] Succession Charibert received the ancient kingdom of Childebert I, between the Somme and Pyrénées, with Paris as its capital, and including the Paris Basin, Aquitaine and Provence. Guntram received Burgundy with a part of the Kingdom of Orléans, where he established his capital. Sigebert received the Kingdom of Metz with its capital Reims and Metz. Chilperic received the territories north of the Kingdom of Soissons.[25]
- Death: 23 NOV 561, Kingdom of Neustria, Gaul, Frankish Empire
Descendants of Clothaire "The Old" King of the Franks
1 Clothaire "The Old" King of the Franks
=Waldrada von den Langobarden
- Birth: ABT 35, Roman Empire
- Death: Roman Empire
Descendants of Cocceia
1 Cocceia
=Titus Flavius SABINUS V
2 Titus Flavius CLEMENS
=Flavia Domitilla RUFUS
3 Praefect Titus Flavius TITIANUS
=Unknown Spouse of Titus Flavius TITIANUS
2 Marcus Titus Flavius II SABINUS
- Father: Marius of the British SILURES
- Mother: Julia Victoria Penardun verch Prasutagus of the Iceni
- Birth: 66, Camulod, Montgomeryshire, Powys, Wales
- LifeSketch: Coilus was a legendary king of the Britons during the time of the Roman occupation of Britain as recounted in Geoffrey of Monmouth's pseudohistorical Historia Regum Britanniae. He was the son of King Marius and ruled following his father's death. Wikipedia.com According to Geoffrey, Coilus was brought up in Rome and favoured the company of Romans in Britain. Throughout his reign he paid Rome its tribute without question. In Britain, he allowed the nobles peace and granted them large gifts. He was succeeded by his only son, St Lucius. For other uses, see King Cole. - this is a different person! King Cole or Coel is the name of a figure, or multiple figures with similar names, prominent in British literature and legend since the Middle Ages. Early Welsh tradition knew of a Coel Hen (Coel the Old), a leader in Roman or Sub-Roman Britain and the progenitor of several kingly lines in the Hen Ogledd ("the Old North"), the Brythonic-speaking part of northern England and southern Scotland. Later medieval legend told of a Coel, apparently derived from Coel Hen, who was the father of Saint Helena and the grandfather of Roman Emperor Constantine the Great. Other similarly-named characters may be confused or conflated with the Welsh Coel. The traditional "King Coel" may be the historical basis for the popular nursery rhyme "Old King Cole".[1] Context and evidence Coel Hen appears in the Harleian genealogies and the later pedigrees known as the Bonedd Gwŷr y Gogledd (The Descent of the Men of the North) at the head of several post-Roman royal families of the Hen Ogledd.[2] His line, collectively called the Coeling, included such noted figures as Urien, king of Rheged; Gwallog, perhaps king of Elmet; the brothers Gwrgi and Peredur, and Clydno Eiddin, king of Eiddin or Edinburg.[2][3] He was also considered to be the father-in-law of Cunedda, founder of Gwynedd in North Wales, by his daughter Gwawl.[4] The genealogies give him the epithet Godebog, meaning "Protector" or "Shelterer".[2] The poem Y Gododdin mentions some enmity between the "Sons of Godebog" and the heroes who fought for the Gododdin at the Battle of Catraeth.[3] As an ancestor figure, Coel Hen compares to Dumnagual Hen, who is likewise attributed with founding kingly lines in the Hen Ogledd. According to Welsh tradition the region of Kyle was named for Coel, and a mound at Coylton in Argyll was regarded as his tomb.[5] Projections back from dated individuals suggest that Coel Hen lived around AD 350 – 420, during the time of the Roman departure from Britain.[3] In his widely-criticized book[6] The Age of Arthur, historian John Morris suggested that Coel may have been the last of the Roman Duces Brittanniarum (Dukes of the Britons) who commanded the Roman army in northern Britain.[7] According to Morris he may have taken over the northern capital at Eburacum (York) to rule over what had been the northern province of Roman Britain. Upon Coel Hen's death, his lands would have been split between his sons, Garmonion and Cunedda II, and later his grandsons, Dunwal Moelmut, Cunedda III, and Gwrwst Ledlwn, thus creating the many old northern kingdoms of Britain. Later sources Geoffrey's largely fictional Historia Regum Britanniae expands upon Henry's brief mention, listing Coel as a King of the Britons following the reign of King Asclepiodotus (fl 292-296).[11] He states that, upset with Asclepiodotus's handling of the Diocletianic Persecution, Coel began a rebellion in the duchy of Caercolun (Colchester), of which he was duke. He met Asclepiodotus in battle and killed him, thus taking the kingship of Britain upon himself. Rome, apparently, was pleased that Britain had a new king and sent a senator, Constantius Chlorus, to negotiate with Coel. Afraid of the Romans, Coel met Constantius and agreed to pay tribute and submit to Roman laws as long as he was allowed to retain the kingship. Constantius agreed to these terms but, one month later, Coel died.[11] Constantius married Coel's daughter, Helena, and crowned himself as Coel's successor. Helen later gave birth to a son who became the Emperor, Constantine the Great, giving a British pedigree to the Roman imperial line.[12] King Cole (disambiguation). King Cole or Coel is the name of a figure, or multiple figures with similar names, prominent in British literature and legend since the Middle Ages. Early Welsh tradition knew of a Coel Hen (Coel the Old), a leader in Roman or Sub-Roman Britain and the progenitor of several kingly lines in the Hen Ogledd ("the Old North" ), the Brythonic-speaking part of northern England and southern Scotland. Later medieval legend told of a Coel, apparently derived from Coel Hen, who was the father of Saint Helena and the grandfather of Roman Emperor Constantine the Great. Other similarly-named characters may be confused or conflated with the Welsh Coel. The traditional "King Coel" may be the historical basis for the popular nursery rhyme "Old King Cole" .[1] Context and evidence Coel Hen appears in the Harleian genealogies and the later pedigrees known as the Bonedd Gwŷr y Gogledd (The Descent of the Men of the North) at the head of several post-Roman royal families of the Hen Ogledd.[2] His line, collectively called the Coeling, included such noted figures as Urien, king of Rheged; Gwallog, perhaps king of Elmet; the brothers Gwrgi and Peredur, and Clydno Eiddin, king of Eiddin or Edinburg.[2][3] He was also considered to be the father-in-law of Cunedda, founder of Gwynedd in North Wales, by his daughter Gwawl.[4] The genealogies give him the epithet Godebog, meaning "Protector" or "Shelterer" .[2] The poem Y Gododdin mentions some enmity between the "Sons of Godebog" and the heroes who fought for the Gododdin at the Battle of Catraeth.[3] As an ancestor figure, Coel Hen compares to Dumnagual Hen, who is likewise attributed with founding kingly lines in the Hen Ogledd. According to Welsh tradition the region of Kyle was named for Coel, and a mound at Coylton in Argyll was regarded as his tomb.[5] Projections back from dated individuals suggest that Coel Hen lived around AD 350 – 420, during the time of the Roman departure from Britain.[3] In his widely-criticized book[6] The Age of Arthur, historian John Morris suggested that Coel may have been the last of the Roman Duces Brittanniarum (Dukes of the Britons) who commanded the Roman army in northern Britain.[7] According to Morris he may have taken over the northern capital at Eburacum (York) to rule over what had been the northern province of Roman Britain. Upon Coel Hen's death, his lands would have been split between his sons, Garmonion and son-in-law, Cunedda II, and later his grandsons, Dunwal Moelmut, Cunedda III, and Gwrwst Ledlwn, thus creating the many old northern kingdoms of Britain. [edit] Later sources In his Historia Anglorum, Henry of Huntingdon mentions that a King Coel of Colchester was the father of Saint Helena and therefore the grandfather of Constantine the Great.[8][9] The same claim appears in Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia Regum Britanniae, in a passage using some of the same words. However, Henry appears to have written this part of the Historia Anglorum before he knew about Geoffrey's work, leading J. S. P. Tatlock to conclude that Geoffrey borrowed the passage from Henry, rather than the other way around.[10] The source of the claim is unknown, but it may have come from a lost hagiography of Helena.[10] Geoffrey's largely fictional Historia Regum Britanniae expands upon Henry's brief mention, listing Coel as a King of the Britons following the reign of King Asclepiodotus.[11] He states that, upset with Asclepiodotus's handling of the Diocletianic Persecution, Coel began a rebellion in the duchy of Caercolun (Colchester), of which he was duke. He met Asclepiodotus in battle and killed him, thus taking the kingship of Britain upon himself. Rome, apparently, was pleased that Britain had a new king and sent a senator, Constantius Chlorus, to negotiate with Coel. Afraid of the Romans, Coel met Constantius and agreed to pay tribute and submit to Roman laws as long as he was allowed to retain the kingship. Constantius agreed to these terms but, one month later, Coel died.[11] Constantius married Coel's daughter, Helena, and crowned himself as Coel's successor. Helen later gave birth to a son who became the Emperor, Constantine the Great, giving a British pedigree to the Roman imperial line.[12]. *************** British legends -Wikipedia, Constantius Chlorus Constantius's activities in Britain were remembered in medieval Welsh legend, which frequently confused his family with that of Magnus Maximus, who also was said to have wed a Saint Elen and sired a son named Constantine while in Britain. Henry of Huntingdon's History of the English identified Constantius's wife Helen as British[49] and Geoffrey of Monmouth repeated the claim in his 1136 History of the Kings of Britain. Geoffrey related that Constantius was sent to Britain by the Senate after Asclepiodotus (here a British king) was overthrown by Coel of Colchester. Coel submitted to Constantius and agreed to pay tribute to Rome, but died only eight days later. Constantius married his daughter Helena and became king of Britain. He and Helena had a son, Constantine, who succeeded to the throne of Britain when his father died at York eleven years later.[50] These accounts have no historical validity: Constantius had divorced Helena before he went to Britain. Similarly, the History of the Britons traditionally ascribed to Nennius[51] mentions the inscribed tomb of "Constantius the Emperor" was still present in the 9th century in Segontium (near present-day Caernarfon, Wales).[52] David Nash Ford credited the monument to Constantine, the supposed son of Magnus Maximus and Elen, who was said to have ruled over the area prior to the Irish invasions.[53]
- Title Of Nobility: Old King Coel
- Title Of Nobility: King of the Britons
- Death: 150, Colchester, Kingdom of Essex, Briton
Ancestors of Colius ap Marius of Bretagne
/-Kimbelinus of BRITAIN
/-Arvirargus Gweyrydd ap CUNOBELIN
| \-Unknown Spouse of Kimbelius King of BRITAIN
/-Marius of the British SILURES
| | /-Tiberius Claudius NERO
| | /-Publius Claudius Nero CLAUDIUS
| | /-Appius Claudius NERO
| | /-Tiberius Claudius Nero
| | /-Appius Claudius NERO
| | /-Tibetius Claudius NERO
| | | | /-Cornelius Cinna LUCIUS
| | | | /-Lucius Cornelius CINNA
| | | | | | /-Annius Pupius
| | | | | \-Annia
| | | \-Cornelia CINNAE Minor
| | /-Tiberius Claudius NERO III
| | /-Nero Claudius DRUSUS
| | | | /-Quintus Servilius CAEPIO
| | | | /-Quintus Servilius Caepio THIRD OF ROME
| | | | | \-Caecilia METALLA
| | | | /-Marcus Livius Drusus III DE ROME
| | | | | \-Livia Drusa DE ROME
| | | | /-Marcus Livius Drusus Claudianus Emporer Appius Claudius PULCHER
| | | | | \-Servilia Caepia MAJOR
| | | \-Livia DRUSILA
| | | | /-Marcus Aufidius LURCO
| | | \-Aufidia LURCO
| | /-Tiberius Claudius NERO GERMANICUS
| | | | /-Marcus ANTONIUS
| | | | /-Gaius Marcus ANTONIUS
| | | | | \-Pasquala Maria
| | | | /-Marcus Antonius of ROME
| | | | /-Marcus Antonius CRETICUS OCTAVIA II
| | | | | \-Julia spouse of Marcus Antonius of ROME
| | | | /-Marcus Antonius III
| | | | | | /-Lucius Julius Caesar I
| | | | | | /-Sextus Julius Caesar I
| | | | | | | \-Cornelia Cinna MINOR
| | | | | | /-Sextus Julius CAESAR II
| | | | | | | \-Aurelia CORNELIA
| | | | | | /-Lucius Julius Caesar II of ROME
| | | | | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Sextus Julius Caesar SEXTUS
| | | | | | /-Lucius Julius CAESAR III Governor of Macedonia
| | | | | | | | /-Pompillus LAENAS
| | | | | | | \-Popilia LAENATES
| | | | | \-Julia Antonia CAESARIA
| | | | | | /-Marcus Flaccus I
| | | | | | /-Quintus Flaccus OF ROME
| | | | | | /-Marcus Fulvius Flaccus II
| | | | | | | | /-Servius Sulpicius Paterculus
| | | | | | | \-Sulpicia Sulpicuia OF ROME
| | | | | | /-Marcus Fulvius Flaccus Bambalus III
| | | | | \-Cossutia Fulvia
| | | | | | /-Sempronius Tuditanus
| | | | | \-Sempronia Tuditania DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Publius Mucius SCAEVOLA
| | | | | | /-Publius Licinius Crassus Dives Mucianus DE ROME
| | | | | | | \-Licinia
| | | | | \-Licinia Crassa DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Gaius Claudius PULCHER
| | | | | \-Claudia DE ROME
| | | \-Antonia AUGUSTA Minor
| | | | /-Gnaeus OCTAVIUS RUFUS II
| | | | /-Gaius I Octavius
| | | | | \-Wife Of Gnaeus Octavius RUFUS II
| | | | /-Gaius II OCTAVIUS
| | | | | \-Octavius spouse of Gaius I OCTAVIUS
| | | | /-Gaius Octavius III Magistrate of VELITRAE
| | | | | \-Servilia WIFE OF GAIUS II OCTAVIUS
| | | | /-Gaius Octavius
| | | | | \-Aurelia COTTA
| | | \-Octavia of ROME
| | | | /-Attius father of Marcus Atius Balbus de Rome gens ATII
| | | | /-Marcus Atius Balbus de Rome gens ATII
| | | | | \-Pompiea STRABO
| | | | /-Marcus ATIUS BALBUS
| | | | | \-Pompeia LUCILLA BEN SEXTUS
| | | \-Atia Balba CAESONIA
| | | | /-Gaius Julius CEASAR
| | | | /-Julius CAESAR II
| | | | /-Gaius Julius CAESAR III
| | | | | | /-Consul Quintus II MARCIUS REX
| | | | | | /-Quintus MARCIUS Rex
| | | | | \-Marcia Quinta REGINA
| | | \-Julia CAESARIUS
| | | | /-Lucius Aurelius Cotta I
| | | | /-Lucius Aurelius Cotta AURELIUS
| | | | /-Lucius Aurelius COTTA
| | | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Lucius Aurelius Cotta AURELIUS
| | | \-Aurelia COTTA VAN ROME
| | | | /-Públius RUTÍLIUS RUFO
| | | | /-Publius Rutilius RUFUS I
| | | \-Rutilia Rufa DIROMA
| | | \-Livia Julia DRUSILLA AUGUSTA Rome
| \-Venissa Britannia BRITAIN
| | /-Gneus Domitius AHENOBARBUS VI
| | /-Luciius Domitiius AHENOBARBUS
| | | | /-Marcus Aemillius Lepidus DE ROME
| | | | /-Marcus Aemilius Lepidus DE ROME
| | | | /-Marcus Aemelius Lepidus DE ROME
| | | | /-Lucius Aemilius LEPIDUS PAULLUS
| | | | | | /-Lucius Appuleius Saturninus de Rome Tribune of the PLEBE
| | | | | | /-Lucius Appuleius Saturninus NEAR ROME II Tribune
| | | | | \-Appulia SATURNINA
| | | | /-Lucius Aemilius Lepidus PAULLUS
| | | | | | /-Marcus Junius BRUTUS
| | | | | \-Junia Bruta Paullus
| | | | | \-Servilia Caepia MAJOR
| | | | /-Lucius Aemilius PAULLUS
| | | | | \-Cornelia SCIPIONIS
| | | \-Aemilia LEPIDA
| | | | /-Lucius VIPSANIUS
| | | | /-Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa of Arpino
| | | \-Vipsania Julia AGRIPPINA Julia Minor
| | | | /-Gaius II OCTAVIUS
| | | | /-Gaius Octavius III Magistrate of VELITRAE
| | | | | \-Servilia WIFE OF GAIUS II OCTAVIUS
| | | | /-Gaius Octavius
| | | | | \-Aurelia COTTA
| | | | /-Gaius Octavius of ROME
| | | | | | /-Marcus Atius Balbus de Rome gens ATII
| | | | | | /-Marcus ATIUS BALBUS
| | | | | | | \-Pompeia LUCILLA BEN SEXTUS
| | | | | \-Atia Balba CAESONIA
| | | | | | /-Gaius Julius CAESAR III
| | | | | \-Julia CAESARIUS
| | | | | \-Aurelia COTTA VAN ROME
| | | \-Julia Caesaris MAJOR
| | | | /-Lucius Scribonius LIBO
| | | \-Scribonia AUGUSTUS LIBO
| | | \-Sentia DE ROME
| \-Agrippina spouse of Tiberius Claudius Nero GERMANICUS
| | /-Marcus ANTONIUS
| | /-Gaius Marcus ANTONIUS
| | | \-Pasquala Maria
| | /-Marcus Antonius of ROME
| | /-Marcus Antonius CRETICUS OCTAVIA II
| | | \-Julia spouse of Marcus Antonius of ROME
| | /-Marcus Antonius III
| | | | /-Lucius Julius Caesar I
| | | | /-Sextus Julius Caesar I
| | | | | \-Cornelia Cinna MINOR
| | | | /-Sextus Julius CAESAR II
| | | | | \-Aurelia CORNELIA
| | | | /-Lucius Julius Caesar II of ROME
| | | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Sextus Julius Caesar SEXTUS
| | | | /-Lucius Julius CAESAR III Governor of Macedonia
| | | | | | /-Pompillus LAENAS
| | | | | \-Popilia LAENATES
| | | \-Julia Antonia CAESARIA
| | | | /-Marcus Flaccus I
| | | | /-Quintus Flaccus OF ROME
| | | | /-Marcus Fulvius Flaccus II
| | | | | | /-Servius Sulpicius Paterculus
| | | | | \-Sulpicia Sulpicuia OF ROME
| | | | /-Marcus Fulvius Flaccus Bambalus III
| | | \-Cossutia Fulvia
| | | | /-Sempronius Tuditanus
| | | \-Sempronia Tuditania DE ROME
| | | | /-Publius Mucius SCAEVOLA
| | | | /-Publius Licinius Crassus Dives Mucianus DE ROME
| | | | | \-Licinia
| | | \-Licinia Crassa DE ROME
| | | | /-Gaius Claudius PULCHER
| | | \-Claudia DE ROME
| \-Antonia MAJOR
| | /-Gnaeus OCTAVIUS RUFUS II
| | /-Gaius I Octavius
| | | \-Wife Of Gnaeus Octavius RUFUS II
| | /-Gaius II OCTAVIUS
| | | \-Octavius spouse of Gaius I OCTAVIUS
| | /-Gaius Octavius III Magistrate of VELITRAE
| | | \-Servilia WIFE OF GAIUS II OCTAVIUS
| | /-Gaius Octavius
| | | \-Aurelia COTTA
| \-Octavia of ROME
| | /-Attius father of Marcus Atius Balbus de Rome gens ATII
| | /-Marcus Atius Balbus de Rome gens ATII
| | | \-Pompiea STRABO
| | /-Marcus ATIUS BALBUS
| | | \-Pompeia LUCILLA BEN SEXTUS
| \-Atia Balba CAESONIA
| | /-Gaius Julius CEASAR
| | /-Julius CAESAR II
| | /-Gaius Julius CAESAR III
| | | | /-Consul Quintus II MARCIUS REX
| | | | /-Quintus MARCIUS Rex
| | | \-Marcia Quinta REGINA
| \-Julia CAESARIUS
| | /-Lucius Aurelius Cotta I
| | /-Lucius Aurelius Cotta AURELIUS
| | /-Lucius Aurelius COTTA
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Lucius Aurelius Cotta AURELIUS
| \-Aurelia COTTA VAN ROME
| | /-Públius RUTÍLIUS RUFO
| | /-Publius Rutilius RUFUS I
| \-Rutilia Rufa DIROMA
| \-Livia Julia DRUSILLA AUGUSTA Rome
Colius ap Marius of Bretagne
| /-Eneid of Cornwall KING
| /-Manogan ap Eneid Druid King of Britain Mynogian DIGUEILLIUS
| | \-Penardin of The Druids PRINCESS
| /-Beli Mawr AP MANOGAN Britons
| | \-Anna Royal house of Tudor
| /-Prasutagus Brenin o ICENA
| | \-Don FERCH MATHONWY
\-Julia Victoria Penardun verch Prasutagus of the Iceni
\-Boadicia of BRITAIN
Ancestors of Concubine
/-Ariobarzanes ARSHAMID OF PONTUS I
/-Mithridates II of PONTUS
| | /-Antiochus III Theos, Basileus of the Seleucid Empire
| | /-Seleucus II Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche SELEÚKEIA
| | | | /-Antiochus of Orestis General of MACEDONIA
| | | | /-Seleucus of SYRIA I
| | | | | \-Laodice I, of Macedonia
| | | | /-Achaeus KING General of the Seleucid Army, of Syria
| | | | | | /- SPITAMENES
| | | | | \-Apama Queen Consort of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Spitamenes Satrap of BAKTRIA
| | | | | \-Apama I of BACTRIA
| | | | | \-Apame Amastris DASCYLIUM
| | | \-Laodice Queen I Consort of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas DE MACÉDOINE
| | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Antiochus of Orestis General of MACEDONIA
| | | | /-Seleucus of SYRIA I
| | | | | \-Laodice I, of Macedonia
| | | | /-Achaeus KING General of the Seleucid Army, of Syria
| | | | | | /- SPITAMENES
| | | | | \-Apama Queen Consort of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Spitamenes Satrap of BAKTRIA
| | | | | \-Apama I of BACTRIA
| | | | | \-Apame Amastris DASCYLIUM
| | | | /-Andromachos SELEUKID
| | | | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas DE MACÉDOINE
| | | \-Laodice II of SYRIA
| | | | /-Kleombrotos I Agadai OF SPARTA
| | | | /-Kleomenes AGIADAI of Sparta
| | | | /-Kleonymos AGIADAI of Sparta
| | | | /-Leonidas II Agiadai of SPARTA
| | | | | | /-Eudamidas I of SPARTA
| | | | | | /-Archidamus IV of SPARTA
| | | | | | | \-Archidamia of SPARTA
| | | | | \-Chilonis of SPARTA
| | | \-Proaga de Sparte ,Princesse Agiade, De Sparte
| | | | /-Antiochus of Orestis General of MACEDONIA
| | | | /-Seleucus of SYRIA I
| | | | | \-Laodice I, of Macedonia
| | | \-Laodice PRINCESS OF SYRIA
| | | \-Apama OF BACTRIA
| \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | /-Mithridates KING II, of Pontus
| \-Laodice III, Queen Consort of the Seleucid Empire
| \-Laodike VON SYRIEN
/-Pharnaces OF PONTUS I
| | /-Antiochus III Theos, Basileus of the Seleucid Empire
| \-Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| | /-Antiochus of Orestis General of MACEDONIA
| | /-Seleucus of SYRIA I
| | | \-Laodice I, of Macedonia
| | /-Achaeus KING General of the Seleucid Army, of Syria
| | | | /- SPITAMENES
| | | \-Apama Queen Consort of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Pharnaces Arshamid Daskyleion I
| | | | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | | | /-Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | | | | /-Artaxerxes II Memnon DE PERSE
| | | | | \-Apama of PERSIA
| | | | | \-Stateira Hydarnid D'ARMÉNIE
| | | | /-Spitamenes Satrap of BAKTRIA
| | | | | | /-Pharnavaz father of DASKALYTIS
| | | | | \-Daskalytis spouse of Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | \-Apama I of BACTRIA
| | | | /-Daskyleion of Bactria
| | | | /-Pharnaces Arshamid Daskyleion I
| | | | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | | \-Apame Amastris DASCYLIUM
| | | | /-Darius II Ochus ACHAEMENID
| | | | /-Artaxerxes II Memnon DE PERSE
| | | | | \-Parysatis Queen Consort of PERSIA
| | | \-Apama of PERSIA
| | | | /-Hydarnes III SATRAPE of Armenia
| | | \-Stateira Hydarnid D'ARMÉNIE
| | | \-Parysatis Queen Consort of PERSIA
| \-Laodice Queen I Consort of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas DE MACÉDOINE
/-Mithradates EUERGETES OF PONTUS V
| | /-Antiochus III Theos, Basileus of the Seleucid Empire
| | /-Seleucus II Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche SELEÚKEIA
| | | | /-Antiochus of Orestis General of MACEDONIA
| | | | /-Seleucus of SYRIA I
| | | | | \-Laodice I, of Macedonia
| | | | /-Achaeus KING General of the Seleucid Army, of Syria
| | | | | | /- SPITAMENES
| | | | | \-Apama Queen Consort of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | | | | /-Spitamenes Satrap of BAKTRIA
| | | | | | | \-Daskalytis spouse of Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | | | \-Apama I of BACTRIA
| | | | | | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | | | | \-Apame Amastris DASCYLIUM
| | | | | \-Apama of PERSIA
| | | \-Laodice Queen I Consort of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas DE MACÉDOINE
| | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Antiochus of Orestis General of MACEDONIA
| | | | /-Seleucus of SYRIA I
| | | | | \-Laodice I, of Macedonia
| | | | /-Achaeus KING General of the Seleucid Army, of Syria
| | | | | | /- SPITAMENES
| | | | | \-Apama Queen Consort of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | | | | /-Spitamenes Satrap of BAKTRIA
| | | | | | | \-Daskalytis spouse of Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | | | \-Apama I of BACTRIA
| | | | | | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | | | | \-Apame Amastris DASCYLIUM
| | | | | \-Apama of PERSIA
| | | | /-Andromachos SELEUKID
| | | | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas DE MACÉDOINE
| | | \-Laodice II of SYRIA
| | | | /-Pausanias Agiadai de SPARTA
| | | | /-Kleombrotos I Agadai OF SPARTA
| | | | /-Kleomenes AGIADAI of Sparta
| | | | /-Kleonymos AGIADAI of Sparta
| | | | /-Leonidas II Agiadai of SPARTA
| | | | | | /-Archidamus III of SPARTA
| | | | | | /-Eudamidas I of SPARTA
| | | | | | | \-Deinicha spouse of Archidamus III of SPARTA
| | | | | | /-Archidamus IV of SPARTA
| | | | | | | \-Archidamia of SPARTA
| | | | | \-Chilonis of SPARTA
| | | \-Proaga de Sparte ,Princesse Agiade, De Sparte
| | | | /-Antiochus of Orestis General of MACEDONIA
| | | | /-Seleucus of SYRIA I
| | | | | \-Laodice I, of Macedonia
| | | \-Laodice PRINCESS OF SYRIA
| | | \-Apama OF BACTRIA
| | /-Antiochus KING IV, Epiphanes, of the Seleucid Empire
| | | | /-Mithridates KING II, of Pontus
| | | \-Laodice III, Queen Consort of the Seleucid Empire
| | | \-Laodike VON SYRIEN
| \-Nysa, Queen of Pontus
| | /-Antigonus KING II, Gonatas, of Macedon
| | /-Aetolicus of Macedonia Demetrius II
| | /-Philip V King of MACEDONIA
| | | | /-of Epirus Alexander King II
| | | \-Phthia of EPIEUS
| | | \-Olympias II of EPIRUS
| \-Laodice QUEEN IV, Of The Seleucid Empire
| | /-Polycrates of ARGOS
| | /-Mnasiadas of ARGOS
| | | \-Zeuxo of CYRENE
| \-Polycrateia of ARGOS
| \-Unknown Spouse of Mnasiadas of ARGOS
Concubine
Descendants of Concubine
1 Concubine
=Mithridates OF PONTUS VI
2 Pharnaces II, King of Pontus
=(Unknown)
3 Dynamis of PONTUS
=(Unknown)
2 Nysa, Queen of Pontus
- Birth: ABT 462
- Death: 510
Descendants of Concubine
1 Concubine
=Hlodowig I DE FRÄNKS
- Father: Salomon I AP GRADLON
- Mother: Flavia Junia VERCH PATRICIUS RUSTICUS
- Birth: ABT 360
- Also known as: Custennin Custennin
- Also known as: Full name: Flavius Claudius Constantinus
- Also known as: Regnal name: Imperator Caesar Flavius Claudius Constantius Augustus
- Also known as: Constantine II of Britain
- Also known as: Flavius Claudius Constantinus , Constantin Le Béni
- Also known as: Constantine Corneu ap Conomar
- Also known as: King Constantine Custennin Gorneu Ab Cynfor , of Britain
- Also known as: Salomon 'de Heilige'
- Title Of Nobility: declared himself Western Roman Emperor in Britannia and established himself in Gaul
- Dissatisfied with the inability of Emperor Honorius to contain the threat from the: Vandals, Alans, and Suevi crossing the Rhine, the Roman army elected Emperor Constantine, who established his base at Arles.
- LifeSketch: The British Museum disputes that this Constantinus (III) is actually Uther Pendragon's father. Constantinus III was a Roman soldier rising to power in Britain. Geoffrey of Monmouth seems to have woven two together From Wikipedia - His full name was Flavius Claudius Constantinus. He was Emperor of Rome (Britain, Gaul and Spain) (407). He was a Roman general who declared himself Western Roman Emperor in 407, abdicated in 411, and was captured and executed shortly afterwards. Some modern scholars speculate he might have been the Constantine who was son of the Roman usurper Magnus Clemens Maximus, executed in 388. Roman troops in Britain elevated him to the position of Emperor following the deposition and murder of Marcus and Gratian, other British claimants. He was acclaimed Emperor in Britain, crossed into Gaul, established his capital at Arles, and in 408 extended his authority to Spain. In 409, he was recognized as Augustus by Honorius, the Emperor in Rome. In 410, the Visigoths sacked Rome. Constantine's general Gerontius then switched sides and, with the help of another rival emperor, Maximus, took Spain and parts of Gaul. In Britain, the local nobility appealed to Honorius for help, but help was declined and Honorius advised the Britons to defend themselves. Constantine was besieged in Arles. He surrendered and was executed. Orosius gives an account of events in Spain: "To oppose [his rivals, the brothers Didymus and Verinianus], Constantine sent into Spain his son Constans, who, shameful to say, had been transformed from a monk into a Caesar. With him Constantine sent certain barbarians, who had at one time been received as allies and drawn into military service, and who were called Honoriaci. They were the cause of the first misfortune that befell Spain. After killing the brothers who were trying to defend the Pyrenean Alps with their private forces, these barbarians received permission to plunder the plains of Pallantia as a reward for their victory. Later, after the removal of the faithful and efficient peasant guard, they were entrusted with the defense of the mountains just mentioned and their passes. These Honoriaci, having had a taste of plunder and being allured by its abundance, planned to secure both freedom from punishment for their crimes and a wider scope for their wickedness. Therefore they betrayed their watch over the Pyrenees, left the passes open, and so loosed upon the provinces of Spain all the nations that were wandering through Gaul and even joined them. There, after engaging for some time in bloody raids and inflicting serious damage upon people and property (for which they themselves are now sorry), and after a division had been made of what had been taken, they have remained in possession of their share to the present day." [ÙCiÙDHistories Against the PagansÙC/iÙD, 7.40.] Gregory of Tours, citing Renatus, gives an account of the final sequence of events: "The usurper Constantine summoned his son Constans, also a usurper, from Spain to consult with him on affairs of state. And so Constans left the paraphernalia of his court and his wife at Saragossa and, entrusting all his interests in Spain to Gerontius, traveled without a pause to meet his father. When they met and a good number of days passed without any bad news from Italy, Constantine gave himself over to gluttony and drunkenness and told his son to return to Spain. Constans had sent his forces on ahead and was staying behind with his father when news came from Spain that one of his dependents, Maximus, had been made emperor by Gerontius and was arming himself with a following of barbarian peoples. Taking fright at this news, Constans and Decimius Rusticus, now prefect but formerly master of the offices, sent Edobech on ahead to the peoples of Germania, and they themselves set out for the Gallic provinces, intending to return right away to Constantine with Franks, Alemanni, and all available soldiers . . . . [The siege here is that of Arles in 411. Honorius's forces were commanded by Constantius. Jovinus was proclaimed emperor in 411 and beheaded in 412.] "The siege of Constantine was just entering its fourth month when news suddenly arrived from Farther Gaul that Jovinus had assumed the imperial insignia and was threatening the besiegers with Burgundians, Alemanni, Franks, Alans, and all his forces. Siege operations were expedited, the gates were opened, and Constantine was given up. He was immediately sent to Italy, but he was met by executioners sent by the emperor and beheaded on the river Mincio. . . . "In those same days Decimius Rusticus, prefect of the usurpers, Agroetius, formerly chief of the secretaries of Jovinus, and many nobles were captured in the Auvergne by the generals of Honorius and cruelly put to death. The city of Trier was plundered and burned by the Franks; this was their second attack." Was imprisoned by General Constantius, who had him beheaded on his way to Ravenna.
- Title Of Nobility: Co-emperor (with Honorius and Constans II)
- Title Of Nobility: Imperador Romano do Ocidente
- Title Of Nobility: King of Dumnonia
- Title Of Nobility: High King of Britain
- Death: 18 SEP 411, Near Ravenna, Emilia Romagna, Roman Empire
Ancestors of Constantine III
/-Caractacus AP BRAN King of Siluria
/-Cyllin of Siluria and Finland KING
| \-Eurgain of Bretagne
/-Owain AP CYLLIN King Of Wales
| \-Cartismandua BRIGNATES
/-Merichion Fawdfilun AP OWAIN
| | /-Lleurig
| \-Eurgen ferch LLEURIG
/-Cwrrig Goruc Mawr ap MEIRCHION
| | /-Joesphat DESPONSYNES Graal
| | /-Aminadab BAR JOSHUA DESPOSYNI 5th Grail King
| | | \-Gladwys VERCH EURGEIN
| \-Unknown ferch ANIMADAB
| | /-Coelus of the BRITONS
| | /-Lucius MAWR D´EWYAS
| | | \-Ystradwl Verch Cynvelyn VAN GLAMORGAN
| \-Eurgen verch Llieffer MAWR Queen of the East Franks
| | /-Eurgen father of GWLADYS
| \-Gwladys verch Eurgen d´Ewyas DES TRINOVANTES
/-Gwrrdwfn AP CWRRIG of Wales
| \-Unknown Spouse of Cwrrig Goruc ap MERCHION
/-Einudd ap GWRDDWFYN
| | /-Bretagne KING
| \-daughter DE BRETAGNE
/-Cereint ap Einudd of LLYDAW
| \-Unknown Spouse of Einudd ap Gwrddwfn of EWYAS
/-Cynan Meiriadog ap Caradoc of DUMNONIA
/-Gradion Mawr BRETAGNE
| | /-Calphurinius OF IRELAND
| \-Dareca VERCH CALPURNIUS of Ireland
| | /-Lleybryn OF GARTHAMADRUN
| | /-Cornold OF GARTHAMADRUN
| | /-Meurig OF GARTHAMADRUN
| | /-Ottar OF GARTHAMADRUN
| | /-Marthud OF GARTHAMADRUN
| | /-Odissus OF IRELAND
| | /-Potitus OF IRELAND
| \-Concessa OF GARTHAMADRUN
| \-nn DE TOURAINE
/-Salomon I AP GRADLON
| \-Tygrida VERCH CALPURNIUS Anakess d'Irlande
Constantine III
| /-Potitus FLAVIUS
| /-Avitus DI ROMA
| /-Patricius FLAVIUS
\-Flavia Junia VERCH PATRICIUS RUSTICUS
Ancestors of Contesse Abbess Ava De Auvergne
/-Lambert Nantes SPOLETO
/-Seigneur DE AMBOISE
Contesse Abbess Ava De Auvergne
\-Judith DE NANTES
Descendants of Contesse Abbess Ava De Auvergne
1 Contesse Abbess Ava De Auvergne
=Comte Gausbert RORGONID
2 Rachel ORLEANS DE CHARTRES
=Geoffrey I Viscount of Orleans Marriage: 899, Orléans, Loiret, Centre-Val de Loire, Française
3 Geoffrey I Viscount of Châteaudun
=Hidegarde VISCOUNTESS OF CHATEAUDUN
3 Isabeau de Chateaudun DU MAINE
3 Aubri Gatinais and ORLEANS
- Father: Roshin MAC TRER Ui Eremoin
- Birth: 67, Ireland
- Title Of Nobility: Son Roisin
- LifeSketch: Suin Ui Eremoin Macroshin King of Dál Riata https://www.genealogieonline.nl/en/stamboom-homs/I6000000009437648320.php
- Suin Ui Eremoin Macroshin King of Dál Riata: https://www.genealogieonline.nl/en/stamboom-homs/I6000000009437648320.php
- Title Of Nobility: King of Dál Riata
- Title Of Nobility: King of Dál Riata
- Title Of Nobility: King of Dál Riata
- Death: 117, Ireland, United Kingdom
Ancestors of Corbred Suin mac Roshin I of Ireland
/-Trer MAC ROTHRER Ui Eremoin
/-Roshin MAC TRER Ui Eremoin
Corbred Suin mac Roshin I of Ireland
Descendants of Corbred Suin mac Roshin I of Ireland
1 Corbred Suin mac Roshin I of Ireland
=Manius spouse of Corbred Suin mac Roshin I of IRELAND
2 Iar MAC DEDAD
=(Unknown)
3 Eterscel MOR
=Mess BUACHALLA
2 Eochaid MAC SUIN Ui Eremoin
2 Dedad Deagha mac Corbred Suin ui Eremoin of Ireland
Ancestors of Cornelia
/-Gnaeus Cornelius LENTULUS MARCELLINUS
Cornelia
| /-Lucius Scribonius LIBO
\-Scribonia AUGUSTUS LIBO
\-Sentia DE ROME
- Father: Publius CORNELIUS SCIPIO Africanus Major
- Mother: Amelia TERTIA
- Birth: ABT 190 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia Cornelia (c. 190s – c. 115 BC) was the second daughter of Publius Cornelius Scipio Africanus, the hero of the Second Punic War, and Aemilia Paulla. Although drawing similarities to prototypical examples of virtuous Roman women, such as Lucretia, Cornelia puts herself apart from the rest because of her interest in literature, writing, and her investment in the political careers of her sons. She was the mother of the Gracchi brothers, and the mother-in-law of Scipio Aemilianus. Biography Cornelia married Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus, grandson of Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus, when he was already at an advanced age. The union proved to be a happy one, and together they had 12 children,[1] which is very unusual by Roman standards. Six of them were boys and six were girls.[2] Only three are known to have survived childhood: Sempronia, who married her cousin Publius Cornelius Scipio Aemilianus, and the two Gracchi brothers (Tiberius and Gaius Gracchus), who would defy the political institutions of Rome with their attempts at popular reforms.[3] After her husband's death, she chose to remain a widow while still enjoying a princess-like status and set herself to educating her children. She even refused the marriage proposal of King Ptolemy VIII Physcon because she is made to be a virtuous and dutiful wife after the death of her only husband. However, her refusal could simply be justified by the fact that she had a desire for more independence and freedom in the manner in which her children were to be raised.[4] Later in her life, Cornelia studied literature, Latin, and Greek. Cornelia took advantage of the Greek scholars she brought to Rome, notably the philosophers Blossius (from Cumae) and Diophanes (from Mytilene), who were to educate young men. She had been taught the importance of receiving an education and came to play an extensive role in her sons' education during the "bygone republican era," resulting in the creation of a "superior breed of Roman political leader."[4] Cornelia always supported her sons Tiberius and Gaius, even when their actions outraged the conservative patrician families in which she was born. She took a lot of pride in them, comparing her children to "jewels" and other precious things, according to Valerius Maximus. After their violent deaths, she retired from Rome to a villa in Misenum but continued to receive guests. Her villa saw the likes of many learned men, including Greek scholars, who came from all over the Roman world to read and discuss their ideas freely.[5] Rome worshipped her virtues, and when she died at an advanced age, the city voted for a statue in her honor. Role in the political careers of her children It is important to note that M. I. Finely advances the argument that "the exclusion of women from any direct participation in political or governmental activity"[6] was a normal practice in Ancient Roman society. Therefore, it is extremely difficult to characterize the extent of Cornelia's involvement in the political careers of her children, yet there is important evidence to support the fact that she was, at the very least, engaged. A common social practice in Rome was extending the political line of a family through dynastic marriages, especially when two families were rising to power at about the same time. The marriage of Sempronia (Cornelia's daughter) to her cousin reaffirmed the continuation of the great Scipio lineage, seeing as though the legacy of Scipio Africanus had to be continued somehow. Scipio Aemilianus saw important growth in his political prestige as a result of this marriage, although not enough to compare to his brothers-in-law and their revolutionary political reforms. One of the most important aspects of the life of Cornelia is her relationship with her adult sons. Most of the information that we have on her role during this time is what Plutarch wrote in both the Life of Tiberius Gracchus and the Life of Gaius Gracchus. She is portrayed as active during their political careers, especially during Gaius’. Plutarch writes of how Gaius removed a law that disgraced Marcus Octavius, the tribune whom Tiberius had deposed, because Cornelia asked him to remove it.[7] Plutarch states that the people all approved of this out of respect for her (due to her sons and her father). Plutarch also writes that Cornelia may have helped Gaius undermine the power of the consul Lucius Opimius by hiring foreign harvesters to help provide resistance[8] (which suggests that harvesters were supporters of the Gracchi).[9] Plutarch also writes that, when one of Gaius's political opponents attacked Cornelia, Gaius retorted: "What," said he, "dost thou abuse Cornelia, who gave birth to Tiberius?"[10] And since the one who had uttered the abuse was charged with effeminate practices, "With what effrontery," said Gaius, "canst thou compare thyself with Cornelia? Hast thou borne such children as she did? And verily all Rome knows that she refrained from commerce with men longer than thou hast, though thou art a man."[11] This remark suggests that the Gracchi used their mother's reputation as a chaste, noble woman to their advantage in their political rhetoric.
- Death: 115 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
Ancestors of Cornelia Minor
/-Lucius CORNELIUS SCIPIO
/-Publius CORNELIUS SCIPIO
/-Publius CORNELIUS SCIPIO Africanus Major
| | /-Manius POMPONIUS MATHO
| \-Pomponia spouse of Publius Cornelius SCIPIO
Cornelia Minor
| /-Marcus Aemilius MAMERCUS
| /-Lucius Aemilius Mamercus
| /-Marcus Aemillius MAMERCUS
| /-Mamercus Aemilius MAMERCINUS
| /-Lucius Aemilius MAMERCUS
| /-Lucius Aemilius Memercinus
| /-Lucius Aemilius X Privernas
| /-Marcus Aemilius Paullus
| /-Marcus Aemilius PAULLUS
| /-Lucius Aemilius PAULLUS
\-Amelia TERTIA
Ancestors of Cornelia Scipionis
/-Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio Calvus
/-Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA
/-Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA CORCULUM Triumvir
/-Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA SERAPIO
| | /-Lucius CORNELIUS SCIPIO
| | /-Publius CORNELIUS SCIPIO
| | /-Publius CORNELIUS SCIPIO Africanus Major
| | | | /-Manius POMPONIUS MATHO
| | | \-Pomponia spouse of Publius Cornelius SCIPIO
| \-Cornelia MAJOR
| | /-Marcus Aemillius MAMERCUS
| | /-Mamercus Aemilius MAMERCINUS
| | /-Lucius Aemilius MAMERCUS
| | /-Lucius Aemilius Memercinus
| | /-Lucius Aemilius X Privernas
| | /-Marcus Aemilius Paullus
| | /-Marcus Aemilius PAULLUS
| | /-Lucius Aemilius PAULLUS
| \-Amelia TERTIA
Cornelia Scipionis
Ancestors of Cornelius Scipio Salvidienus Orfitus Major of ROME
/-Servius Cornelius SALVIDIENUS
Cornelius Scipio Salvidienus Orfitus Major of ROME
| /-Lucius Calpurnius Piso Frugi Licinianus OF ROME
| /-Licinus Crassus Frugi OF ROME
| | | /-Qunitus Sulpicius RUFUS
| | | /-Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
| | | /-Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
| | | /-Servius Sulpicius RUFUS
| | | /-Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
| | | | | /-Aulus Postumius ALBINUS
| | | | \-Postumia spouse of Servius Sulpicius RUFUS
| | | /-Suffectus Servius Sulpicius Camerinus RUFUS
| | | /-Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
| | | /-Quintus Sulpicius Camerinus Peticus CONSUL
| | \-Verania Gemina OF ROME
\-Calpurina LEPIDA
\-Cornelia Lepida OF ROME
Descendants of Cornelius Scipio Salvidienus Orfitus Major of ROME
1 Cornelius Scipio Salvidienus Orfitus Major of ROME
=Calpurina LEPIDA
2 Sextius Cocceius Serverianus
=Caesonia de Rome
3 Sextus Anicius Saturninus
=Seia MAXIMA
3 Sextius Severianus II Cocceius
2 Servilius Prudens DE ROME
Ancestors of Cossutia Fulvia
/-Lucius Fulvius, I
/-Lucius Fulvius, II
/-Lucius Fulvius Bruttius Praesens DIROMA
/-Marcus CURVUS
/-Cassus CURVUS
/-Marcus Flaccus I
/-Quintus Flaccus OF ROME
/-Marcus Fulvius Flaccus II
| | /-Quintus Sulpicius I SENATOR
| | /-Quintus Sulpicius PATERCULUS
| | /-Servius Sulpicius Paterculus
| \-Sulpicia Sulpicuia OF ROME
/-Marcus Fulvius Flaccus Bambalus III
Cossutia Fulvia
| /-Sempronius Tuditanus
\-Sempronia Tuditania DE ROME
| /-Publius Mucius SCAEVOLA
| /-Quintus Mucius SCAEVOLA
| /-Publius Mucius SCAEVOLA
| /-Publius Licinius Crassus Dives Mucianus DE ROME
| | | /-Publius Licinius VARAS
| | | /-Gaius Licinius VARAS
| | \-Licinia
\-Licinia Crassa DE ROME
| /-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
| /-Appius Claudius CAECUS
| /-Publius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
| /-Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
| /-Gaius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
| /-Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
| /-Appius Claudius PULCHER Counsul of Rome
| | \-Fonteia Claudia
| /-Gaius Claudius PULCHER
| | \-Caecilia Metella BALEARICA
\-Claudia DE ROME
Descendants of Cossutia Fulvia
1 Cossutia Fulvia
=Lucius Julius CAESAR III Governor of Macedonia
2 Lucius Julius CEASAR IV of Rome
2 Julia Antonia CAESARIA
=Marcus Antonius CRETICUS OCTAVIA II Marriage: ABT 88 BC, Rome, Roma, Lazio, Italy
3 Lucius Antonius (brother of Mark Antony)
3 Antonia Cretica
3 Lucius ANTONIUS
3 Gaius ANTONIUS
3 Antonia daughter of Marcus Antonius Creticus OCTAVIA II
3 Marcus Antonius III
=Antoina HYBRIDA MINOR
=Fulvia spouse of Marcus ANTONIUS III Marriage: ABT 46 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
=Cleopatra VII Thea Philipator OF EGYPT
=Fadia spouse of Marcus ANTONIUS III Marriage: BET 60 BC AND 52 BC, Rome, Roma, Lazio, Italy
=Glaphyra A CAPPADOCIAN GREEK HETAERA Marriage: courtesan only, Rome
=Octavia of ROME Marriage: BET 40 BC AND 32 BC
=Octavia Thurina Minor DE ROME
Ancestors of Cotys IV
/-Seuthes IV
Cotys IV
Descendants of Cotys IV
1 Cotys IV
=Semestra spouse of COTYS IV
2 Rhoemetalces I of Thrace
=Pythodoris I of Thrace
3 Cotys VIII of Thrace
=Antonia Tryphaena of THRACE Marriage: BEF 12, Kingdom of Thrace, Anatolia, Roman Empire
Ancestors of Cotys IX King of lesser Armenia
/-Seuthes IV
/-Cotys IV
/-Rhoemetalces I of Thrace
| \-Semestra spouse of COTYS IV
/-Cotys VIII of Thrace
| \-Pythodoris I of Thrace
Cotys IX King of lesser Armenia
| /-Zenon father of Polemon I Pythodoros of PONTUS
| /-Polemon I Pythodoros of PONTUS
\-Antonia Tryphaena of THRACE
| /-Pythodoros OF TRALLES
\-Pythodorida spouse of Polemon I Pythodoros of PONTUS
| /-Marcus ANTONIUS
| /-Gaius Marcus ANTONIUS
| | \-Pasquala Maria
| /-Marcus Antonius of ROME
| /-Marcus Antonius CRETICUS OCTAVIA II
| | \-Julia spouse of Marcus Antonius of ROME
| /-Marcus Antonius III
| | | /-Numerius Julius CAESAR
| | | /-Lucius Julius Caesar I
| | | /-Sextus Julius Caesar I
| | | | | /-Marcus II Flaccus OF ROME
| | | | \-Cornelia Cinna MINOR
| | | | \-Rutilia ROME
| | | /-Sextus Julius CAESAR II
| | | | \-Aurelia CORNELIA
| | | /-Lucius Julius Caesar II of ROME
| | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Sextus Julius Caesar SEXTUS
| | | /-Lucius Julius CAESAR III Governor of Macedonia
| | | | | /-Pompillus LAENAS
| | | | \-Popilia LAENATES
| | \-Julia Antonia CAESARIA
| | | /-Cassus CURVUS
| | | /-Marcus Flaccus I
| | | /-Quintus Flaccus OF ROME
| | | /-Marcus Fulvius Flaccus II
| | | | | /-Quintus Sulpicius PATERCULUS
| | | | | /-Servius Sulpicius Paterculus
| | | | \-Sulpicia Sulpicuia OF ROME
| | | /-Marcus Fulvius Flaccus Bambalus III
| | \-Cossutia Fulvia
| | | /-Sempronius Tuditanus
| | \-Sempronia Tuditania DE ROME
| | | /-Quintus Mucius SCAEVOLA
| | | /-Publius Mucius SCAEVOLA
| | | /-Publius Licinius Crassus Dives Mucianus DE ROME
| | | | | /-Gaius Licinius VARAS
| | | | \-Licinia
| | \-Licinia Crassa DE ROME
| | | /-Appius Claudius PULCHER Counsul of Rome
| | | /-Gaius Claudius PULCHER
| | | | \-Caecilia Metella BALEARICA
| | \-Claudia DE ROME
\-Antonia spouse of Pythodoros of TRALLES
\-Antoina HYBRIDA MINOR
- Father: Rhoemetalces I of Thrace
- Mother: Pythodoris I of Thrace
- Birth: 25 BC
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia Cotys III (Ancient Greek: Κότυς, flourished second half of 1st century BC and first half of 1st century, died 18 AD) was the Sapaean Roman client king of eastern Thrace from 12 to 18 AD.[1] Family and origins Cotys was the son and heir of loyal Roman client rulers Rhoemetalces I and Pythodoris I of Thrace. Cotys’ mother is only known through surviving numismatic evidence, which bears her image and her Royal title of Queen Pythodoris. Cotys’ father Rhoemetalces I was an ally of the first Roman Emperor Augustus. Rhoemetalces I was a direct descendant of the Thracian King Cotys I. Rhoemetalces I was the son of a previous Thracian King, whose name was Cotys and his mother is unknown. Rhoemetalces I was the middle son, who had an elder brother who was called Cotys and his younger brother was Rhescuporis II. Rhoemetalces I's eldest brother Cotys who was Thracian King and an ally to Roman General Pompey, had sent Pompey a force of auxiliaries under his son Rhescuporis I in 48 BC, during the Roman civil war between Pompey and Gaius Julius Caesar. When Rhoemetalces I's brother died, his nephew Rhescuporis I became Thracian King. Rhoemetalces I became the guardian to the young son of his brother, Cotys. Rhescuporis I died in 13 BC when he was defeated and slain in a battle by Vologaeses, chief of the Thracian Bessi, who was a leader in the revolt against the Romans in that year. During this revolt Rhoemetalces I and his family had fled Thrace and only returned when the revolt had ended. Augustus then returned Thrace to him and his family. When Rhescuporis I died, he left no heir so Rhoemetalces I became King of Thrace in 12 BC. Rhoemetalces I ruled Thrace until his death in 12 AD. The Roman historian, Tacitus, describes Rhoemetalces I as ‘attractive and civilized’. King of Thrace When Rhoemetalces I died, Augustus had divided the kingdom into two separate kingdoms: one part for his son Cotys to rule and other half for Rhoemetalces I's remaining brother Rhescuporis II to rule. Tacitus states that Cotys received the cultivated parts, most towns and most Greek cities of Thrace, while Rhescuporis received the wild and savage portion with enemies on its frontier.[2] Not much is known on the early life of Cotys. Cotys had married the Antonia Tryphaena, a Pontian princess who was the daughter of Roman client rulers, Polemon Pythodoros and Pythodorida of Pontus. She was of Anatolian Greek and Roman heritage. Tryphaena's mother was the first grandchild of Roman Triumvir, Mark Antony. However the relationship between Tryphaena and Cotys is unknown. Tacitus describes Cotys as a man of ‘gentle disposition, good natured and mannered’. The Roman poet Ovid, wrote an epistle addressed to him. Ovid praises Cotys for his cultivated taste for literature, and claimed his favour and protection as a brother-poet. Rhescuporis II always wanted to annex Cotys’ kingdom for himself to rule. However, he was unable to do this out of his fear of Augustus. However, when Augustus died in 14 AD, Rhescuporis II decided to take action. Tacitus describes his character as ‘treacherous’. Rhescuporis II was at first peaceful in seeking to annex his nephew's kingdom, but when Cotys resisted, Rhescuporis II plotted to kill his nephew. Rhescuporis II invited his nephew to a banquet to ratify a treaty between them. Cotys had not expected trouble and was arrested and imprisoned by his uncle. With Cotys imprisoned, Rhescuporis II seized his kingdom. In 18 AD Cotys was murdered by order of Rhescuporis II who falsely represented his death as self-inflicted.[3] Cotys’ wife and children fled Thrace to Cyzicus. In 18 AD Roman Emperor Tiberius opened a murder investigation into Cotys’ death. Tiberius put Rhescuporis II on trial in the Roman Senate and invited Tryphaena to attend the trial. During the trial Tryphaena accused Rhescuporis II of killing her husband. Tiberius found Rhescuporis II guilty and sent him to live in exile in Alexandria, Egypt. On his way to Egypt Rhescuporis II tried to escape and was killed by Roman soldiers. Tiberius returned the whole Thracian Kingdom to Tryphaena and Tiberius appointed Cotys and Tryphaena's first child, Rhoemetalces II, to rule with his mother. The son of Rhescuporis II, Rhoemetalces III was spared by Tiberius and the emperor allowed him to return to Thrace. Marriage and children Cotys had four children by Tryphaena and they were: A son, Rhoemetalces II, who was named after his paternal grandfather and ruled with Tryphaena from when his father died in 18 until his own death in 38. A daughter, Gepaepyris, who married the Roman client king Tiberius Julius Aspurgus of the Bosporan Kingdom. A son, Cotys IX, who became Roman client king of Lesser Armenia from 38 until at least 47. A daughter, Pythodoris II or Pythodorida II. She was named after her maternal grandparents and her paternal grandmother. In 38, after the death of Rhoemetalces II, Tryphaena abdicated the throne at the request of Roman Emperor Caligula. Pythodoris II married her second paternal cousin Rhoemetalces III and they ruled Thrace as Roman client rulers from 38 until 46.
- Death: 18, Kingdom of Thrace, Anatolia, Roman Empire
Ancestors of Cotys VIII of Thrace
/-Seuthes IV
/-Cotys IV
/-Rhoemetalces I of Thrace
| \-Semestra spouse of COTYS IV
Cotys VIII of Thrace
\-Pythodoris I of Thrace
Descendants of Cotys VIII of Thrace
1 Cotys VIII of Thrace
=Antonia Tryphaena of THRACE Marriage: BEF 12, Kingdom of Thrace, Anatolia, Roman Empire
2 Gepaepyrus spouse of Tiberius Julius ASPURGAS
=Tiberius Julius ASPURGAS King of the Bosporous
3 Tiberius Julius II COTYS
=(Unknown)
2 Rhoemetalces
2 Cotys IX King of lesser Armenia
2 Gepaepyris of THRACE
2 Pythodorus II
Ancestors of Crotberge Princess Of Paris
/-Childebert OF COLOGNE
Crotberge Princess Of Paris
| /-Chlodwig OF THÜRINGIA King of the Franks
\-Amalaberge VON METZ OF FRANKS AT COLOGNE
| /-Karlwig of THURINGIA
| /-Hogar KONING OF THURINGIA
| | \-Sif THURINGEN
| /-Erpes VON THÜRINGEN
| | \-Basina VON BECKON
| /-Merwig I KING OF THURINGIA
| | \-Uxor VON THURINGEN
| /-Carlowig II DE THURINGEN
| | \-Orgeluse FIRMUTEL
\-Wedelphe DE METZ of the Thüringians
| /-Walderavans AMAL
\-Amalaberge Queen of Thurgia De OSTROGOTHIE
\-Althildis DE LORRAINE
- Father: Robert d'Eu
- Mother: Beatrix de Falaise
- Birth: 1040, Angoulême, Charente, Poitou-Charentes, France
- Also known as: Condor
- Also known as: Condohe Vagena
- Also known as: Condohe Vagena
- Also known as: Condohe Vagena
- Also known as: Condohe Vagena
- Title Of Nobility: Countess Cundole de Vengena
- Title (Nobility): Countess of Angoulême
- Death: AFT 1087, Angoulême, Charente, Poitou-Charentes, France
Ancestors of Cundoha d'Eu
/-Robert d'Eu
Cundoha d'Eu
\-Beatrix de Falaise
Descendants of Cundoha d'Eu
1 Cundoha d'Eu
=Foulques D'ANGOULEME Marriage: 1080, Angouleme, Charente, FR
2 Guillaume V D'ANGOULÊME Comte d’Angoulême
=Vitapoy DE BENAUGES
3 Foulques son of Guillaume V D'ANGOULÊME
3 Graule Taillefer D' ANGOULEME
=Adémar III DE LIMOGES
=Geoffroi III DE RANÇON
3 Vulgrin II D'ANGOULÊME
=Pontia MONTGOMMERIE DE LA MARCHE Marriage: 1123
=Amable DE CHÂTELLERAULT
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
- Partnership with: Henry I of ENGLAND
Marriage: 1104, Pembroke, Pembrokeshire, Wales
Marriage: 1114
Marriage: 1127
Marriage: England
Descendants of Currently Unknown
1 Currently Unknown
=Henry I of ENGLAND Marriage: 1104, Pembroke, Pembrokeshire, Wales Marriage: 1114 Marriage: 1127 Marriage: England
2 Adeliza Matilda of PERCHE
2 Elizabeth FITZROY
2 Constance Fitz HENRY
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
- Partnership with: Richard I DE NORMANDIE
- Child: Geoffrey DE BRIONNE Birth: 953, Brionne, Normandy, France
- Child: Guillaume DE NORMANDIE Birth: Eu, De La Seine-Maritime, Haute-Normandie, France
- Child: Beatrice DE NORMANDIE Birth: ABT 975, Rouen, Seine-Inferieure, Normandy, France
- Child: Papie DE NORMANDIE Birth: 980, Fécamp, Seine-Maritime, Haute-Normandie, France
Descendants of Currently Unknown
1 Currently Unknown
=Richard I DE NORMANDIE
2 Geoffrey DE BRIONNE
2 Guillaume DE NORMANDIE
2 Beatrice DE NORMANDIE
2 Papie DE NORMANDIE
- Father: Cenred of WESSEX
- Birth: ABT 665, Wessex, England
- Christening: Wessex, England
- Also known as: Cuthburga
- Also known as: Saint Cuthburga
- Also known as: Cuthburg
- Also known as: Abbess Cuthburh
- Occupation: Queen of Northumbria and Abbess of Wimborne, Wimborne Minster, Dorset, Wessex
- Founded Wimborne Minster with her sister Cwenburh, as a double-monastery.: 705, Wimborne, Dorset, Wessex (now England)
- Canonized as Saint Cuthburga - Feast Day: August 31: (Date and Place unknown)
- Title Of Nobility: Princess of Wessex and Queen of Northumbria
- LifeSketch: Cuthburh of Wessex was the daughter of Cenred of Wessex. The name of her mother and her date of birth are unknown, however, it is likely that she was born about 670. Cuthburh had 3 siblings: Ine, King of Wessex, Ingild and a sister Cwenburh. Cuthburh married Aldfrith, King of Northumbria, Irish genealogies tell us they were second cousins. They likely married in 685, as a political alliance. Cuthburh's brother King Ine of Wessex was one of the most powerful kings in Anglo-Saxon England and by allying himself with Ine, Aldfrith's position and claim to the throne would be strengthened. There seems to be confusion over the identity of the mother of Aldfrith's children, however, Cuthburh was his only known wife. Aldfrith is known to have had at least 2 sons: Osred and Offa. It is generally accepted that Cuthburh was the mother of Osred, there is no record of Offa's mother. It is also believed that they had a daughter Osana, who was later known as Saint Osana. Cuthburh and Aldfrith were both very religious. Aldfrith, as an illegitimate son was not expected to ever inherit the throne and had been educated by the Monks of Iona for a career in the church. When his half-brother Ecgfrith died in 685, Aldfrith was reportedly at Iona Abbey in the Hebrides when he was recalled to Northumbria to become king. Prior to their marriage it is known that Cuthburh was a close friend of Abbess Ælfflæd of Whitby, Aldfrith's half-sister. Aldfrith and Cuthburh eventually separated for religious motives, before 696/97. Florence of Worcester states that they "renounced connubial intercourse for the love of God". Following this, Cuthburh as well as her sister Cwenburh took vows and became nuns at Barking Abbey, together they became pupils of St. Hildelith and studied sacred and classic literature. King Ine was impressed by how his sisters had devoted themselves to the service of God. For his sisters, and for the good of his people and his own soul, Ine had a double monastery erected, between 700 and 705, near his own residence in Wimborne. Cuthburh became the first Abbess of Wimborne Abbey, Cwenburh was a nun there with her. This is recorded in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. Aldfrith died on 14 December 704/705. Abbess Cuthburh died at Wimborne on 31st August 725. Her burial-place is said to be under the wall of the chancel. Cuthburh was canonized as Saint Cuthburga and her feast day is celebrated on August 31. Wimborne Abbey was destroyed by the Danes about 900. After being restored, it was dedicated anew in the name of St. Cuthburga and given over to secular canons. St. Cuthburga's chest, hollowed from a single piece of oak, was supposed to have survived the devastation and it is still pointed out in the North Aisle of the Minster. Aldfrith and Cuthburh married about 685 and separated 696/697. During their time together they are believed to have had 3 children: - Osred, became King of Northumbria - Offa - Osana (Saint Osana) Cwenburh of Wimborne was an 8th-century Anglo-Saxon saint, a sister of King Ine of Wessex and of Saint Cuthburh. Her sister Cuthburh was married to King Aldfrith of Northumbria and then became the first abbess of Wimborne monastery. Very little information survives about Cwenburh. She is known primarily from a mention in a single annal of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle: "718. In this year Ingild Ine's brother died, and their sisters were Cwenburh and Cuthburh. And Cuthburh raised the monastery at Wimborne; and she was given to Aldfrith, king of the Northumbrians; but they separated during his life." She is also included in the genealogical preface to the Chronicle in one copy, as part of a pedigree for the 9th-century King Æthelwulf of Wessex, the father of King Alfred. "... Eoppa [the son] of Ingild, and Ingild of Cenred, and Ine of Cenred, and Cuthburh of Cenred, and Cwenburh of Cenred, and Cenred of Ceolwald ..." It is possible that Cwenburh succeeded Cuthburh as abbess there after her sister's death. Cuthburh is later mentioned again in a list entitled On the Resting-Places of the Saints, found in two 11th century manuscripts "resteth Saint Cuthburh at Wimborne Minster", that first established the life and customs that are still kept in the monastery. In one version of the list the words "and Cwenburh" appear after Cuthburh. According to Felix Liebermann who made an edition of the text in the 19th century this appears to be a later addition, and the subsequent clause remains grammatically singular, referring only to Saint Cuthburh. The Abbess Tetta is sometimes viewed as a familiar name for Cwenburh, or alternatively as a third sister.
- Death: 31 AUG 725, Wimborne Minster, Dorset, England
- Burial: AFT 31 AUG 725, Wimborne Minster, Dorset, England
Ancestors of Cuthburh of Wessex
/-Gewis VON SAXON
/-Esla GEWISSON
| \-Effa of the SAXONS
/-Aelle Ella of ELISENS
| \-Isaive spouse of Esla GEWISSON
/-Cerdic of WESSEX
| \-Elesa of West SAXON
/-Creoda Cerdicsson of WESSEX
| \-Anafleda spouse of Cerdic of WESSEX
/-Cynric of WESSEX
| \-Hengist WESSEX
/-Ceawlin of WESSEX
| \-Unknown Spouse of Cynric of WESSEX
/-Cuthwine of WESSEX
| \-Unknown Spouse of Ceawlin of WESSEX
/-Cuthwulf de Clarede of WESSEX
| \-Unknown Spouse of Cuthwine of WESSEX
/-Ceolwald of WESSEX
| | /-Clemen AP BLEDRIC of Dumnonia
| \-Gwynhafar of DUMNONIA
/-Cenred of WESSEX
| | /-Natfraich of MUMHAN
| | /-Faolghus of MUMHAN
| | | | /-Freothalaf of the Anglo SAXONS
| | | \-Failbe Flann of MUMHAN
| | /-Donnghus of MUMHAN
| | | | /-Ainmuire of IRELAND
| | | \-Sabilla of MUMHAN of Ireland
| | | \-Sabhdh of ALBA
| | /-Donnghus II OF MUHMAN
| | | \-Donnghal DE MUMHAN of Kent
| | /-Donnghal DE MUHMAN II
| | | | /-Comgal MAC DOMANGART
| | | | /-Conall I of Dal RATA
| | | | | | /-Constantine of BRITON
| | | | | \-Alda VERCH CONSTANTINE
| | | \-Sabilla of IRELAND
| | | | /-Muireadach mac EÓGAIN
| | | | /-Muirchertach mac MUIREDAIG
| | | | | \-Erca INGEN LOARN of Dál Riata
| | | | /-Domnall Ilchelgach Mac MUIRCHERTAIG
| | | | | | /-Diu MacTengae Umai O'BRUIN
| | | | | \-Duinseach ingen DUACH Ua Briuin
| | | \-Sabhdha INGEN MUIRCHERTAIG of Alba
| | | | /-Ercc aka Enna MACCAIRTHENN
| | | | /-Cobthaigson of OILIOLLA
| | | | | \-Marca Earca LODHAM DUINFEACH
| | | \-Bridget NIC COBTHAIGSON
| | /-Crundmaol of MUMHAN
| | | \-Frigida I OF MUMHAIN
| | /-Laoghaire of MUMHAN
| | | | /-Antsecq D'ESSEX
| | | | /-Swaeppa D'ESSEX
| | | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Antsecq D'ESSEX
| | | | /-Sigefugel of ESSEX
| | | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Swaeppa D'ESSEX
| | | | /-Bedca of ESSEX
| | | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Sigefugel of ESSEX
| | | | /-Offa D'ESSEX Prince of Angels
| | | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Bedca of ESSEX
| | | | /-Æscwine of ESSEX
| | | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Offa D'ESSEX
| | | \-Eadgith of Essex
| | /-Figuine MAC LAOGHAIRE of Mumhan
| \-Fafertach INGEN FIGUINE
| \-Unknown Spouse of Fiquine Mac LAOGHAIRE
Cuthburh of Wessex
- Father: Cenred of WESSEX
- Birth: ABT 670, Kingdom of Wessex, Anglia
- Also known as: Quenburga
- Also known as: Cwenburh of Cenred
- Also known as: Saint Cwenburga
- Also known as: Saint Tetta
- Also known as: St Cwenburh
- Title Of Nobility: Princess of Wessex
- LifeSketch: Cwenburh of Wimborne was an 8th-century Anglo-Saxon saint, a sister of King Ine of Wessex and of Saint Cuthburh. Her sister Cuthburh was married to King Aldfrith of Northumbria and then became the first abbess of Wimborne monastery. Very little information survives about Cwenburh. She is known primarily from a mention in a single annal of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle: "718. In this year Ingild Ine's brother died, and their sisters were Cwenburh and Cuthburh. And Cuthburh raised the monastery at Wimborne; and she was given to Aldfrith, king of the Northumbrians; but they separated during his life." She is also included in the genealogical preface to the Chronicle in one copy, as part of a pedigree for the 9th-century King Æthelwulf of Wessex, the father of King Alfred. "... Eoppa [the son] of Ingild, and Ingild of Cenred, and Ine of Cenred, and Cuthburh of Cenred, and Cwenburh of Cenred, and Cenred of Ceolwald ..." It is possible that Cwenburh succeeded Cuthburh as abbess there after her sister's death. Cuthburh is later mentioned again in a list entitled On the Resting-Places of the Saints, found in two 11th century manuscripts "resteth Saint Cuthburh at Wimborne Minster", that first established the life and customs that are still kept in the monastery. In one version of the list the words "and Cwenburh" appear after Cuthburh. According to Felix Liebermann who made an edition of the text in the 19th century this appears to be a later addition, and the subsequent clause remains grammatically singular, referring only to Saint Cuthburh. The Abbess Tetta is sometimes viewed as a familiar name for Cwenburh, or alternatively as a third sister.
- Death: 718, England
Ancestors of Cwenburh of Wimborne
/-Gewis VON SAXON
/-Esla GEWISSON
| \-Effa of the SAXONS
/-Aelle Ella of ELISENS
| \-Isaive spouse of Esla GEWISSON
/-Cerdic of WESSEX
| \-Elesa of West SAXON
/-Creoda Cerdicsson of WESSEX
| \-Anafleda spouse of Cerdic of WESSEX
/-Cynric of WESSEX
| \-Hengist WESSEX
/-Ceawlin of WESSEX
| \-Unknown Spouse of Cynric of WESSEX
/-Cuthwine of WESSEX
| \-Unknown Spouse of Ceawlin of WESSEX
/-Cuthwulf de Clarede of WESSEX
| \-Unknown Spouse of Cuthwine of WESSEX
/-Ceolwald of WESSEX
| | /-Clemen AP BLEDRIC of Dumnonia
| \-Gwynhafar of DUMNONIA
/-Cenred of WESSEX
| | /-Natfraich of MUMHAN
| | /-Faolghus of MUMHAN
| | | | /-Freothalaf of the Anglo SAXONS
| | | \-Failbe Flann of MUMHAN
| | /-Donnghus of MUMHAN
| | | | /-Ainmuire of IRELAND
| | | \-Sabilla of MUMHAN of Ireland
| | | \-Sabhdh of ALBA
| | /-Donnghus II OF MUHMAN
| | | \-Donnghal DE MUMHAN of Kent
| | /-Donnghal DE MUHMAN II
| | | | /-Comgal MAC DOMANGART
| | | | /-Conall I of Dal RATA
| | | | | | /-Constantine of BRITON
| | | | | \-Alda VERCH CONSTANTINE
| | | \-Sabilla of IRELAND
| | | | /-Muireadach mac EÓGAIN
| | | | /-Muirchertach mac MUIREDAIG
| | | | | \-Erca INGEN LOARN of Dál Riata
| | | | /-Domnall Ilchelgach Mac MUIRCHERTAIG
| | | | | | /-Diu MacTengae Umai O'BRUIN
| | | | | \-Duinseach ingen DUACH Ua Briuin
| | | \-Sabhdha INGEN MUIRCHERTAIG of Alba
| | | | /-Ercc aka Enna MACCAIRTHENN
| | | | /-Cobthaigson of OILIOLLA
| | | | | \-Marca Earca LODHAM DUINFEACH
| | | \-Bridget NIC COBTHAIGSON
| | /-Crundmaol of MUMHAN
| | | \-Frigida I OF MUMHAIN
| | /-Laoghaire of MUMHAN
| | | | /-Antsecq D'ESSEX
| | | | /-Swaeppa D'ESSEX
| | | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Antsecq D'ESSEX
| | | | /-Sigefugel of ESSEX
| | | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Swaeppa D'ESSEX
| | | | /-Bedca of ESSEX
| | | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Sigefugel of ESSEX
| | | | /-Offa D'ESSEX Prince of Angels
| | | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Bedca of ESSEX
| | | | /-Æscwine of ESSEX
| | | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Offa D'ESSEX
| | | \-Eadgith of Essex
| | /-Figuine MAC LAOGHAIRE of Mumhan
| \-Fafertach INGEN FIGUINE
| \-Unknown Spouse of Fiquine Mac LAOGHAIRE
Cwenburh of Wimborne
- Father: Aretas III King of the Nabataean
- Mother: Eupatra
- Birth: 93 BC, Pétra, Kingdom of Nabataea
- Also known as: Cypros the Nabataean
- Also known as: Cyprus
- LifeSketch: Cyprus (I). Herod’s father, Antipater the Idumean, was the son of forced converts who became Jews during the reign of John Hyrcanus (135–104 C.E.). His acceptance of Judaism seemed to have been syncretistic and cosmopolitan. His marriage to Cyprus, the daughter of a Nabatean aristocrat, is proof of this. The issue that interests scholars most about Cyprus is the extent to which her foreign extraction influenced Herod’s Jewish or non-Jewish identity. This question is motivated by the matrilineal principle that governs Jewish identity today. The issue was of no interest to Josephus. His only comments about her, aside from genealogical references, depict her as an active ally of her daughter Salome in their pursuit to the death of Herod’s wife, Mariamme the Hasmonean (e.g. Ant. 15:80; 184–185). From Wikipedia Antipater married Cypros, a Nabataean noblewoman, which helped endear the Nabateans to him.[11] Their marriage helped bring about a close friendship between him and King Aretas, called by Josephus "Aretas the Arabian", to whom Cypros was related. The two men had such a relationship that Antipater entrusted his children to his friend when he went to war with the Hasmonean Aristobulus II. They had four sons: Phasael, Herod, Joseph, and Pheroas, and a daughter, Salome, one of several Salomes among the Herodians.[12] Antipater also had a brother named Phalion, who was killed in battle against Aristobulus at Papyron.[13]
- Death: 43 BC
Ancestors of Cypros or Cypris of Nabataea
/-Aretas I D'ARABIE PÉTRÉE King of the Nabataeans
/-Malichus I King of the Nabataeans
/-Aretas II King of Nabataea
/-Aretas III King of the Nabataean
Cypros or Cypris of Nabataea
| /-Aretas I D'ARABIE PÉTRÉE King of the Nabataeans
| /-Malichus I King of the Nabataeans
| /-Aretas II King of Nabataea
| /-Obodas I King of Nabataea
\-Eupatra
\-Unknown Spouse of Obodas I of the ARABS
Descendants of Cypros or Cypris of Nabataea
1 Cypros or Cypris of Nabataea
=Antipater II THE IDUMAEAN Procurator of Judaea
2 HEROD THE GREAT
=Mariamne BAT ALEXANDER Marriage: 37 BC, Samaria, Roman Empire
3 Alexander HERODIENS
=Glaphyra DE CAPPADOCE Marriage: ABT 18 BC, Judea, Roman Republic
3 Antipater II HERODIENS
3 Cypros II HERODIENS
3 Aristobule IV HERODIENS
=Bérenice A bar Costobarus of IDUMAEA Marriage: ABT 15 BC
3 Salampsio HERODIENS
=Phasael II IDUMEENS Marriage: 15 BC
2 Phasaelus BEN ANTIPATER of Judea
=Unknown Spouse of Phasael I of JUDAEA
3 Phasael II IDUMEENS
=Salampsio HERODIENS Marriage: 15 BC
2 Pheroras BEN ANTIPATER
2 Josephus BEN ANTIPATER
2 Salome IDUMEENS
=Costobarus IDUMEENS Marriage: 34 BC, Judea, Roman Republic
3 Bérenice A bar Costobarus of IDUMAEA
=Aristobule IV HERODIENS Marriage: ABT 15 BC
3 Antipater IV IDUMEENS
Ancestors of Daire Sirchrechtrach
/-Fionnlogh mac ROIGHNEIM
/-Fionn Mafionnloch OHENNA
| \-Benla ingenf CREOMBTHAN
/-Eochaidh Feidhlioch MACFIONN
| | /-Criomthan father of Benta CREOMBTHAN
| \-Benta CREOMBTHAN
| \-Naira Baine of Northern PICTS
/-Breas Nar IRELAND
| \-Clothfionn Feidlioch Croidheirg Uchtleathan IRELAND
/-Lugaidh Sriabh nDearg MACBREAS
| \-Cloth verch Eochaid FEIDLECH
/-Crimhthann II Nia Náir mac Lugaid Riab NDERG
| \-Dearborguill of DENMARK
/-Feredach Finnfechtnach mac CRIMTHANN
| \-Nar-Tath-Chaoch of the PICTS
/-Fiacha Finnolach of IRELAND
| \-Chabob Mar Fath of the PICTS
Daire Sirchrechtrach
| /-Ederus of Alba
| /-Imgheal of the PICTS
\-Eithne of ALBA
| /-Fargall of DENMARK
\-Dervorgill of IRELAND
Ancestors of Danaus
/-Belus father of AEGYPTUS
/-Aegyptus father of LYNCEUS
Danaus
\-Achiroe spouse of AEGYPTUS
Ancestors of Darius
/-Artaxerxes I of Persia, King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire
/-Darius II Ochus ACHAEMENID
| | /-Nebuchadnezzar III King of BABYLON
| | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | /-Deioces OF MEDES
| | | | /-Phraortes I VAN MEDINA King of Media
| | | | /-Cyaxares Uvakhshatra King of the MEDES
| | | \-Hildita of Babylon
| | | \-Aryenis Mermnadae of Linda
| \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | /-Amyites of Persia V
| \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | /-Belshazzar
| \- VASHTI
/-Artaxerxes II Memnon DE PERSE
| | /-Artaxerxes I of Persia, King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire
| \-Parysatis Queen Consort of PERSIA
| | /-Nebuchadnezzar III King of BABYLON
| | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | /-Deioces OF MEDES
| | | | /-Phraortes I VAN MEDINA King of Media
| | | | /-Cyaxares Uvakhshatra King of the MEDES
| | | \-Hildita of Babylon
| | | \-Aryenis Mermnadae of Linda
| \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | /-Amyites of Persia V
| \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | /-Belshazzar
| \- VASHTI
Darius
\-Apame
Ancestors of Darius II Prince of Media Atropatene
/-Ariobarzanes Prince
/-Mithridates I King of Achaemenid Media Atropatene Kingdom of Armenia
/-Ariobarzanes KING I, of Media Atropatene
| | /-Ervand Orontes III of COMMAGENE
| | /-Samos I King of ARMENIA
| | /-Arsamos I King of Armenia
| | /-Xerxes I of ARMENIA
| | /-Zariadres I of SOPHENE
| | | | /-Antiochus III Theos, Basileus of the Seleucid Empire
| | | | /-Seleucus II Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche SELEÚKEIA
| | | | | \-Laodice Queen I Consort of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | | | /-Andromachos SELEUKID
| | | | | \-Laodice II of SYRIA
| | | | | \-Proaga de Sparte ,Princesse Agiade, De Sparte
| | | \-Antiochis III Seleucide de Syrie de Pont EUXIN
| | | \-Laodiké III Du PONT
| | /-Artaxias I ARMENIA
| | /-Tigranes Artashid I
| | | \-Satenik of Alans
| | /-Tigranes II King of ARMENIA
| \-Daughter of Tigraes II Wife of Mithradates I of MEDIA
| \-Cleopatra the Elder, Princess of Pontus
/-Artavasdes King I of Media ATROPATENE
Darius II Prince of Media Atropatene
\-Athenais of Media Atropatene
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Daskyleion of Bactria
/-Achaemenes Apical Ancestor of the Achaemenid DYNASTY
/-Tiespes King of ANSHAN
/-Ariaramnes KING of Anshan
/-Arsames Prince of PERSIA
/- PHARNACES I
/-Artabazus I Persian NOBLEMAN
Daskyleion of Bactria
Descendants of Daskyleion of Bactria
1 Daskyleion of Bactria
=(Unknown)
2 Pharnaces Arshamid Daskyleion I
=(Unknown)
3 Pharnabaszus SATRAP
=Apama of PERSIA
3 Mithridates I of Phrygien
3 Pharnakes VON DASKYLEION
Ancestors of Dedad Deagha mac Corbred Suin ui Eremoin of Ireland
/-Trer MAC ROTHRER Ui Eremoin
/-Roshin MAC TRER Ui Eremoin
/-Corbred Suin mac Roshin I of Ireland
Dedad Deagha mac Corbred Suin ui Eremoin of Ireland
\-Manius spouse of Corbred Suin mac Roshin I of IRELAND
Ancestors of Demetrius II, Nicator Seleucid
/-Demetrius KING I, Soter, of Macedon
Demetrius II, Nicator Seleucid
Descendants of Demetrius II, Nicator Seleucid
1 Demetrius II, Nicator Seleucid
=Cleopatra Thea EUETERIA
2 Antiochus VIII Grypos, KING Philometor of Syria
=Cleopatra Tryphaena PRINCESS of Egypt
3 Laodice QUEEN VII, Thea Philadelphus of Commagene
=Mithridates I Callinikos King of COMMAGENE
3 Antiochus XII
3 Demetrius III
3 Philip I
3 Seleucus VI Epiphanes SYRIA
=Cleopatra Selene I Queen of Egypt Marriage: BET 102 BC AND 96 BC
2 Berenice I EGYPT
2 Antimachus Theos of BACTRIA
Ancestors of Demetrius III
/-Demetrius KING I, Soter, of Macedon
/-Demetrius II, Nicator Seleucid
/-Antiochus VIII Grypos, KING Philometor of Syria
| | /-Ptolemy VI Philometor Pharaoh of Egypt
| \-Cleopatra Thea EUETERIA
| \-Cleopatra II EPIPHINES bar Ptolemy V
Demetrius III
| /-Ptolemy VI Philometor Pharaoh of Egypt
\-Cleopatra Tryphaena PRINCESS of Egypt
\-Cleopatra III Euergetis Faraó gynaíka tou Aígyptos
Ancestors of Dias of Mycenae
/-Tantalos of Lydia KING
/-Pelops of Pisa, Lydia and Mycenae
Dias of Mycenae
| /-Alxion DI PISA
| /-Oenomaus DE KRETA King of Pisa
| | \-Harpina DI PISA
\-Hippodamia of PISA
| /-Abas OF ARGOS
| /-Acrisios D'ARGOS
\-Evarete DE ARGOS
| /-Lynceus OF ARGOS
| /-Lacédémon eme
\-Eurydice spouse of Acrisios D'ARGOS
| /-Lelex KÖNIG VON SPARTA
| /-Myles KING OF LACONIA
| | \-Queen Cleocharia of LACONIA
| /-Eurotas OF LACONIA
\-Sparta DE GRECE
\-Cleocharia NAIAD NYMPH
Descendants of Dias of Mycenae
1 Dias of Mycenae
=Archippe
2 Cleolla of Mycenae
=Plisthenes of Mycenae
3 Menelaus KING of Sparta
=Pieris a SLAVE
=Helen of TROY
3 Agamemnon of Mycenae KING
Ancestors of Didymeia
/-Antiochus of Orestis General of MACEDONIA
Didymeia
\-Laodice I, of Macedonia
- Birth: ABT 590, Austrasia, Frankenreich
- Also known as: Dode de Metz
- Death: 640, Metz, Moselgau, Austrasia, Fränkisches Reich
- Burial: Metz,
Descendants of Doda
1 Doda
=Arnulf Bischof von Metz Marriage: 601, Austrasia
2 Ansegisel Maior Domus
=Begga von Herstal Marriage: BEF 634, Heristal, , Liege,
3 Pippin II VON HERSTAL Maior Domus
=Chalpaida Marriage: ABT 677
=Plectrude Marriage: 670
3 Chrothechildis von Heristal
2 Chlodulf Bischof von Metz
Ancestors of Doda von Poitiers
/-Chrodobertus I (Robert I) VON HASPENGAU OF NEUSTRASIA (NEUSTRIA)
/-Lambert I De HASPENGAU Neustria
/-Bodilon de Poitiers Bishop of Treves BURGUNDY
| \-Demoiselle MEAUX
/-Warin VON POITOU Graf von Paris
| | /-Latinus Drepanius Pacatus Ier LATINII
| | /-Latinus Drepanius Pacatus II LATINII
| | /-Alethius LATINII
| | /-Latinus DE BOURGOGNE
| | /-Gondobald LatiniiI Count of LYON
| | | | /-Flavius Africanus SYAGIRUS
| | | | /-Afranius Syagrius AEGIDIUS Magister Militum and Prefect of Gaul
| | | | | \-Inconnue
| | | | /-Afranius Syagrius Governor of Gaul
| | | \-Syagria DE LYON
| | | \-Chrona DE BURGUNDY
| | /-Desiderius BISHOP von Verdun
| | | | /-Augin DE SOISSONS
| | | \-Agia DE SOISSONS DE SANCY
| | | \-Agia D’AISE
| | /-Salvius, COUNT OF ALBI
| | | \- DE TOUL
| | /-Desiré DE GRANDISON
| | | \-Herchenefreda
| | /-Ansaud DIJON
| | | \-Gerberge OF THE BURGUNDIANS
| | | | /-Augin DE SOISSONS
| | | \-Desideria DE SOISSONS
| | | \-Agia D’AISE
| \-Sigrada DE VERDUN vom Elsass
| | /-Erchenaud DE MOSELLE
| | /-Leutharius II Duke D'Alsace
| | | \-Leudefindis OF FRANCE
| \-Sigreda D' POINTIERS
| | /-Richemir FRANKONIANS
| \-Gerberge DE BOURGOGNE ET DE FRANCONIA
| | /-Agilulf BAVARIA II
| | /-Agivald Theodobert Garibald D'BAVIÈRE I
| | | | /-Godegisel King of Burgundy at Besançon
| | | \-Theodosia
| | | \-Teudelinda of the Salian Franks
| | /-Theodebald I BAVARIANS
| | | \-Wisigarde of France LOMBARDY
| \-Garitrudis BAYERN Hamage
| \-Blithildis OF KÖLN
Doda von Poitiers
| /-Chodulphe de Metz
\-Gunza DE METZ von Trier
\-Hilda de Landen
- Birth: ABT 800 BC, Troy, Greece
- Death: ABT 700 BC, Troy, Greece
- Burial: ABT 700 BC, Troy, Greece
Descendants of Dorus King of the Dorians
1 Dorus King of the Dorians
=Iolcus spouse of Dorus King of the DORIANS
2 Tectamus King of Kreta
=Androgeneia spouse of Tectamus King of KRETA
3 Asterius of CRETE
=Europa of PHOENICIA
=Sybila Erithrea of CADIZ
Ancestors of doughter of Theodemer de Toxandrie
/-Clodimir DES FRANCS
/-Farabert DE FRANCS
/-Sunna DES SICAMBRED DES FRANCS
/-Childeric I King of the Franks
/-Marcomir V DE TOXANDRIE King of The Franks
| | /-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
| | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| \-Ceasoria DE ROME
/-Gonobaud Ier DE TOXANDRIE
| | /-Germond LOMBARD
| | /-Haquinus DE LOMBARDIE
| | | \-Gambara DES WINNILES
| | /-Ibor DE LOMBARDIE
| | | \-Aalis DER LONGOBARDEN
| \-Ilnegonde VAN LOMBARDIE
| | /-Gaussus DER LONGOBARDEN
| | /-Agio Gungingi DER LONGOBARDEN
| \-Gambara Aalis GUNGING
/-Ragaise DE TOXANDRIE
| | /-Clodimir DES FRANCS
| | /-Farabert DE FRANCS
| | /-Sunna DES SICAMBRED DES FRANCS
| | /-Childeric I King of the Franks
| | /-Marcomir V DE TOXANDRIE King of The Franks
| | | | /-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
| | | | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| \-Althildis of the East FRANKS
| | /-Germond LOMBARD
| | /-Haquinus DE LOMBARDIE
| | | \-Gambara DES WINNILES
| | /-Ibor DE LOMBARDIE
| | | \-Aalis DER LONGOBARDEN
| \-Ilnegonde VAN LOMBARDIE
| | /-Gaussus DER LONGOBARDEN
| | /-Agio Gungingi DER LONGOBARDEN
| \-Gambara Aalis GUNGING
/-Malaric I King of the Franks at Toxandrie
| \-Blésinde D'ALÉMANIE
/-Mellobaude I DE TOXANDRIE
| | /-Fillemier DE WISIGOTHIE
| | /-Borbista DE WISIGOTHIE
| | /-Zamoxis DE WISIGOTHIE
| | /-Wisigard OSTROGOTHA DE WISIGOTHIC
| | /-Cnico DE WISIGOTHIE
| | | \-Nascida BENKANT
| | /-Gannebaud of the Thervengi
| | /-Fritigem VON THÜRINGEN II
| | | | /-Alanus DE SAXE DE THURINGE
| | | | /-Neugio DE SAXE DE THURINGE
| | | | /-Thuringus DE THURINGE
| | | | /-Fritigern Ier DE THURINGE
| | | | | | /-Hanala DE GOTHIE
| | | | | | /-Safracht DE GOTHIE
| | | | | | | \- HANA
| | | | | \-Demoiselle DE GOTHIE
| | | | | \- SAFRA
| | | | /-Begon DE THURINGE
| | | | | \-Aelia Euphenia DE ROME
| | | \-Fritigerna DE THURINGEN
| | | \-Uxor Begon IGNATOE
| \-Ascyla LA GAULOISE
| | /-Carolus II DE MENAPIE
| | /-Julius DE MENAPIE
| | | \-Athildis DE CAMULOD DE BRETAGNE
| | /-Octavius DE MENAPIE
| | | \-Hastilde Von Rugen 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
| | | | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | /-Vuericus DE MENAPIE
| | | | /-Quintus Anicius Faustus Sextus VAN ROMA
| | | | /-Quintus Anicius Faustus PAULINUS
| | | | | \-Acinia Juliana NICHOMACHA
| | | | /-Quintus Anicius Faustus Abucuu II
| | | | | | /-Aulus Julius Claudius Charax
| | | | | \-Julia Quadratilla Proculla of Rome
| | | | | \-Julia
| | | | /-Quintus Anicius Faustus Paulinus II 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
| | | \-Gambara Aalis DES LONGOBARDS
| | | | /-Farabert DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | /-Sunno Huanno DES FRANCS
| | | | | \-Catheloys de Paris of TITAGEL
| | | | /-Baltaire Bartherius DES FRANCS SICAMBRES
| | | \-Asinia Juliana Nicomacha D`ASIE
| | | | /-Quintus Anicius Faustus Sextus VAN ROMA
| | | | /-Anicius Faustus Paulinus of ROME
| | | | | \-Sergia Paulla Lucius VAN ROMA
| | | \-Asinia Juliana Nicomacha DE ROME
| | | | /-Paullus Lucius SERGIUS
| | | \-Paulla SERGIA
| \-Martisianda DE MORINIE
| \-Flavia Claudia Demetria Aelia DE THERA
| | /-Afranius Hannibalianus of TRALLES
| \-Flavia Minor Marathonius OF THERA
| \-Claudia Bassa Numeria Marcella CLAUDII
| \-Numeria MARCELLA
/-Flavius Richimer DE TOXANDRIE
| | /-Clodimir DES FRANCS
| | /-Farabert DE FRANCS
| | /-Sunna DES SICAMBRED DES FRANCS
| | /-Childeric I King of the Franks
| | /-Marcomir V DE TOXANDRIE King of The Franks
| | | | /-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
| | | | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | /-Gonobaud Ier DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | /-Germond LOMBARD
| | | | /-Haquinus DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | | \-Gambara DES WINNILES
| | | | /-Ibor DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | | \-Aalis DER LONGOBARDEN
| | | \-Ilnegonde VAN LOMBARDIE
| | | | /-Gaussus DER LONGOBARDEN
| | | | /-Agio Gungingi DER LONGOBARDEN
| | | \-Gambara Aalis GUNGING
| | /-Ragaise DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | /-Clodimir DES FRANCS
| | | | /-Farabert DE FRANCS
| | | | /-Sunna DES SICAMBRED DES FRANCS
| | | | /-Childeric I King of the Franks
| | | | /-Marcomir V DE TOXANDRIE King of The Franks
| | | | | | /-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
| | | | | | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | \-Althildis of the East FRANKS
| | | | /-Germond LOMBARD
| | | | /-Haquinus DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | | \-Gambara DES WINNILES
| | | | /-Ibor DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | | \-Aalis DER LONGOBARDEN
| | | \-Ilnegonde VAN LOMBARDIE
| | | | /-Gaussus DER LONGOBARDEN
| | | | /-Agio Gungingi DER LONGOBARDEN
| | | \-Gambara Aalis GUNGING
| | /-Malaric I TOXANDRIE
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Ragaise DE TOXANDRIE
| \-Ascyla OF THE GAULS Queen of Lombardy
| \-Gallic Belgic of the FRANKS
/-Theodemir Gondeon Magnus DE TOXANDRIE
| | /-Clodimir DES FRANCS
| | /-Farabert DE FRANCS
| | /-Sunna DES SICAMBRED DES FRANCS
| | /-Childeric I King of the Franks
| | /-Marcomir V DE TOXANDRIE King of The Franks
| | | | /-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
| | | | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | /-Gonobaud Ier DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | /-Germond LOMBARD
| | | | /-Haquinus DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | | \-Gambara DES WINNILES
| | | | /-Ibor DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | | \-Aalis DER LONGOBARDEN
| | | \-Ilnegonde VAN LOMBARDIE
| | | | /-Gaussus DER LONGOBARDEN
| | | | /-Agio Gungingi DER LONGOBARDEN
| | | \-Gambara Aalis GUNGING
| | /-Ragaise DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | /-Clodimir DES FRANCS
| | | | /-Farabert DE FRANCS
| | | | /-Sunna DES SICAMBRED DES FRANCS
| | | | /-Childeric I King of the Franks
| | | | /-Marcomir V DE TOXANDRIE King of The Franks
| | | | | | /-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
| | | | | | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | \-Althildis of the East FRANKS
| | | | /-Germond LOMBARD
| | | | /-Haquinus DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | | \-Gambara DES WINNILES
| | | | /-Ibor DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | | \-Aalis DER LONGOBARDEN
| | | \-Ilnegonde VAN LOMBARDIE
| | | | /-Gaussus DER LONGOBARDEN
| | | | /-Agio Gungingi DER LONGOBARDEN
| | | \-Gambara Aalis GUNGING
| | /-Malaric I TOXANDRIE
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Ragaise DE TOXANDRIE
| | /-Melloboude Marobod DE TOXANDRIE
| \-Ascyla de Toxandrie
| | /-Carolus II DE MENAPIE
| | /-Julius DE MENAPIE
| | | \-Athildis DE CAMULOD DE BRETAGNE
| | /-Octavius DE MENAPIE
| | | \-Hastilde Von Rugen RIGA
| | /-Godard DE MORINIE
| | | \-Catheloys Castellors DE TINTAGEL
| | /-Godefroy II DE MORINIE
| | /-Vuéric I MORINIE
| | /-Artsartos MORINIE
| | /-Martisiandios DE MORINIE
| \-Ascyla DE FRANCIE PAHLAV
| \-Martisianda DE MORINIE
doughter of Theodemer de Toxandrie
\-Blesinde KOLN