- Birth: 163 BC
- Death: 86 BC, Rome, Rome, Lazio, Italy
Descendants of Marcus Aemilius Scaurus
1 Marcus Aemilius Scaurus
=Caecilia Metella
2 Aemilia SCAURA
=Manius Acilius Glabrio Marriage: BEF 85 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
3 Manius Acilius Glabrio
=(Unknown)
=Gnaeus POMPEIUS MAGNUS Marriage: AFT 82 BC
- Father: Marcus Antonius CRETICUS OCTAVIA II
- Mother: Julia Antonia CAESARIA
- Father: Marcus Antonius CRETICUS OCTAVIA II
- Mother: Julia Antonia CAESARIA
- Birth: 14 JAN 83 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Also known as: Mark Antony or Marcus Antonius III
- Occupation: People's Tribune of the Roman Republic, BET 1 AND 7 JAN 49 BC
- Occupation: Consul of the Roman Republic, with Julius Caesar, 44 BC
- Occupation: Triumvir of the Roman Republic, served with Octavian and Marcus Aemilius Lepidus, BET 43 BC AND 33 BC
- Occupation: Consul of the Roman Republic, served with Lucius Scribonius Libo, 34 BC
- Occupation: Consul of the Roman Republic, with Julius Caesar, 44 BC
- Occupation: Triumvir of the Roman Republic, served with Octavian and Marcus Aemilius Lepidus, BET 43 BC AND 33 BC
- Occupation: Consul of the Roman Republic, served with Lucius Scribonius Libo, 34 BC
- Affiliation: Political party: Populares
- National Identification: Roman Republic
- LifeSketch: Spouses : Fadia (dates unknown) Antonia Hybrida (?–47 BC) Fulvia (46–40 BC) Octavia Minor (40–32 BC) Cleopatra VII (32–30 BC) Children : Antonia Prima (Hybrida) Marcus Antonius Antyllus (Fulvia) Iullus Antonius (Fulvia) Antonia Major (Octavia Minor) Antonia Minor (Octavia Minor) Alexander Helios (Cleopatra VII) Cleopatra Selene II (Cleopatra VII) Ptolemy Philadelphus (Cleopatra VII) Senator of Rome, Consort to Queen Cleopatra of Egypt Death • 1 August 0030 BC age 53, Killed Self By Falling On His Sword During A Battle at Alexandria, Egypt Military career Allegiance : Roman Republic, Julius Caesar, Populares Years : 54–30 BC Battles/wars : . Gallic Wars . Caesar's Civil War . Battle of Forum Gallorum . Battle of Mutina . Liberators' civil war . Antony's Parthian War . Battle of Actium . Battle of Alexandria Known for his rivalry with Octavian for the full control of Rome and its territories. -- Wikiwand: Mark Antony
- Consort of Cleopatra: 32 BC-30 BC
- Title Of Nobility: Consort of Queen Cleopatra
- Consort of Celopatra: 32 BC-30 BC
- Title Of Nobility: Triumvir de Rome
- Title Of Nobility: Triumvir de Rome
- Title Of Nobility: Triumvir de Rome
- Title Of Nobility: Triumvir de Rome
- Death: 1 AUG 30 BC, Alexandria, Egypt
Cause: Suicide
Ancestors of Marcus Antonius III
/-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 LIBO I
| /-Lucius Julius LIBO II
| /-Numerius Julius CAESAR
| /-Lucius Julius Caesar I
| /-Sextus Julius Caesar I
| | | /-Marcus Flaccus I ROME TRS
| | | /-Marcus II Flaccus OF ROME
| | | | \-Aurelia Cornelia 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
| /-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
| /-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 Marcus Antonius III
1 Marcus Antonius III
=Antoina HYBRIDA MINOR
2 Antonia spouse of Pythodoros of TRALLES
=Pythodoros OF TRALLES Marriage: 36 BC, Tralles, Anatolia
3 Pythodorida spouse of Polemon I Pythodoros of PONTUS
=Polemon I Pythodoros of PONTUS Marriage: ABT 16 BC, Kingdom of Pontus, Anatolia
=Archaelaus King of Cappadocia Marriage: ABT 10, Anatolia
=Fulvia spouse of Marcus ANTONIUS III Marriage: ABT 46 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
2 Iullus ANTONIUS
2 Gaius Scribonius CURIO II
2 Marcus ANTONIUS ANTYLLUS
=Cleopatra VII Thea Philipator OF EGYPT
2 Alexander I Helios of Ptolemaic EGYPT
2 Ptolemy XVI PHILADELPHUS ANTONIUS
2 Cleopatra SELENE II VIII
=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
2 Antonia AUGUSTA Minor
=Nero Claudius DRUSUS Marriage: 16 Marriage: 16 BC Marriage: 19
3 Tiberius Claudius NERO GERMANICUS
=Agrippina spouse of Tiberius Claudius Nero GERMANICUS
3 Claudia Livillia JULIA of Rome
=Drusus Julius Caesar The YOUNGER Marriage: 4, Rome, Roma, Lazio, Italy
=Gaius Vipsanius AGRIPPA Of Rome
3 Germanicus Julius CAESAR
3 Herod AGRIPPA I of Judea
=Cypros IDUMEANS of Judea Marriage: 26
3 Claude I DE ROME
=Aemilia Lepida X
2 Antonia MAJOR
=Luciius Domitiius AHENOBARBUS Marriage: Rome, Roma, Lazio, Italy
3 Agrippina spouse of Tiberius Claudius Nero GERMANICUS
=Tiberius Claudius NERO GERMANICUS
3 Lucius Domitius AHENOBARBUS
3 Gnacus Domitius AHENOBARBUS VII
3 Domitia LEPIDA Major
3 Domitia LEPIDA Minor
3 Antonia OCTAVIA
3 Gnacus Domitius AHENOBARBUS
=Octavia Thurina Minor DE ROME
2 Antonia Augusta Minor DE ROME
Ancestors of Marcus Caecilia Metellus
/-Lucius Caecilius Metellus I
/-Quintus Caecilius Metellus Numidicus
/-Lucius Caecilius Metellus DENTER, Roman Consul, Praetor
/-Lucius CAECILIUS METELLUS Pontifex Maximus
/-Quintus Caecilius Metellus
/-Quintus Caecilius Metellus Macedonicus
Marcus Caecilia Metellus
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Marcus Flaccus I
/-Lucius Fulvius, I
/-Lucius Fulvius, II
/-Lucius Fulvius Bruttius Praesens DIROMA
/-Marcus CURVUS
/-Cassus CURVUS
Marcus Flaccus I
Descendants of Marcus Flaccus I
1 Marcus Flaccus I
=(Unknown)
2 Quintus Flaccus OF ROME
=Sulpicia Sulpicuia OF ROME
3 Marcus Fulvius Flaccus II
=(Unknown)
Ancestors of Marcus Fulvius Flaccus Bambalus III
/-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
Descendants of Marcus Fulvius Flaccus Bambalus III
1 Marcus Fulvius Flaccus Bambalus III
=Sempronia Tuditania DE ROME
2 Cossutia Fulvia
=Lucius Julius CAESAR III Governor of Macedonia
3 Lucius Julius CEASAR IV of Rome
3 Julia Antonia CAESARIA
=Marcus Antonius CRETICUS OCTAVIA II Marriage: ABT 88 BC, Rome, Roma, Lazio, Italy
2 Cornelia CAESAR
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Marcus Fulvius Flaccus II
/-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
Descendants of Marcus Fulvius Flaccus II
1 Marcus Fulvius Flaccus II
=(Unknown)
2 Marcus Fulvius Flaccus Bambalus III
=Sempronia Tuditania DE ROME
3 Cossutia Fulvia
=Lucius Julius CAESAR III Governor of Macedonia
3 Cornelia CAESAR
Ancestors of Marcus Maecius Orfitus
/-Marcus Nonius MUCIANUS
/-Marcus Nonius Mucianus Publius Delpius PEREGRINUS
| | /-Publius Delphinus PEREGRINUS
| \-Delpia spuse of Marcus Nonius MUCIANUS
| \-Alfia spouse of Publius Delphinus PEREGRINUS
/-Marcus Nonius DE ROME
| \-Manilia spouse of Marcus Nonius Mucianus Publius Delpius PEREGRINUS
/-Marcus Annius Severus DE ROME
| | /-Lucius Junius Caessenius PAETUS
| | /-Lucius Junius Caessennius ANTONINUS
| | | | /-Gnaeus Arrius ANTONINUS
| | | \-Arria ANTONIA
| | | \-Plotia ISAURICA
| \-Arria Caesennia Paulina CAESENNIUS
/-Marcus Maecius Probus
| \-Manlia Minor DE ROME
/-Marcus Pomponius Maecius PROBUS
| | /-Lucius Junius Rufinus Proculianus Proculianus
| \-Pomponia Arria
| | /-Marcus Nonius MUCIANUS
| | /-Marcus Nonius Mucianus Publius Delpius PEREGRINUS
| | | | /-Publius Delphinus PEREGRINUS
| | | \-Delpia spuse of Marcus Nonius MUCIANUS
| | | \-Alfia spouse of Publius Delphinus PEREGRINUS
| | /-Marcus Nonius DE ROME
| | | \-Manilia spouse of Marcus Nonius Mucianus Publius Delpius PEREGRINUS
| \-Arria Sextia PAULINA
| | /-Lucius Junius Caessenius PAETUS
| | /-Lucius Junius Caessennius ANTONINUS
| | | | /-Gnaeus Arrius ANTONINUS
| | | \-Arria ANTONIA
| | | \-Plotia ISAURICA
| \-Arria Caesennia Paulina CAESENNIUS
/-Marcus Maecius PROBUS
| \-Pupienia Sextia Paulina CETHEGILLA
Marcus Maecius Orfitus
| /-Marcus Pupienus MAXIMUS
| /-Marcus Claudius Pupienus MAXIMUS Emperor of Rome
| | \-Chlodia Pulchra
| /-Marcus Pupienus AFRICANUS MAXIMUS
| | | /-Titus Cornelius AFRICANUS
| | | /-Titus Sextius LATERANUS patrician
| | | | | /-Marcus VIBIUS
| | | | \-Vibia spouse of Titus Cornelius AFRICANUS
| | | | \-Julia VESTINA
| | | /-Titus Sextius Magius LATERANUS
| | | | | /-Asinius Placentius
| | | | | /-Asinius Pollio VERRUCOSCUS
| | | | | /-Asinius Pollio
| | | | | /-Asinius POLLIO
| | | | \-Asinia POLLA
| | \-Sextia Cethegillla
| | | /-Marcus Gavius Squilla GALLICANUS
| | | /-Marcus Gavius Squilla GALLICANUS
| | \-Cornelia CETHEGILLA
| | | /-Marcus Pompeius Macrinus THEOPHANES
| | \-Pompeia AGRIPPINA
\-Pupiena Sexta Paulina CETHEGILLA
| /-Lucius Eggius Marullus
| /-Lucius Eggius Ambibulus Pomponius Longinus
| | | /-Marcus POMPONIUS
| | | /-Marcus POMPONIUS Bassulus
| | \-Pomponia spouse of Lucius Eggius MARULLUS
| | | /-Publius Cantrius
| | \-Cantria LONGINA
| /-Lucius Eggius Marullus
| /-Lucius Cossonius Eggius Marullus
| | | /-Lucius Cossonius Gallus Vecilius CRISPINUS
| | \-Cossonia spouse of Lucius Eggius MARULLUS
| | | /-Lucius DOMITIUS
| | | /-Lucius DOMITIUS
| | | | \-Annaea spouse of Lucius DOMITIUS
| | \-Clodia PATRUINA
| | \-Clodia DECMINA
| /-Lucius Cossonius Scipio Orfitus
| | | /-Servius Cornelius Scipio SALVIDIENUS ORFITUS
| | | /-Servius Cornelius Scipio SALVIDIENUS ORFITUS
| | | | | /-Lucius Sergius PAULLUS
| | | | \-Sergia PAULLINA
| | | | \-Vispania JULIA
| | \-Cornelia NEGRINA
| | | /-Marcus Nonius MUCIANUS
| | | /-Marcus Nonius Mucianus Publius Delpius PEREGRINUS
| | | | | /-Publius Delphinus PEREGRINUS
| | | | \-Delpia spuse of Marcus Nonius MUCIANUS
| | | | \-Alfia spouse of Publius Delphinus PEREGRINUS
| | | /-Marcus Nonius DE ROME
| | | | \-Manilia spouse of Marcus Nonius Mucianus Publius Delpius PEREGRINUS
| | \-Arria Sextia PAULINA
| | | /-Lucius Junius Caessenius PAETUS
| | | /-Lucius Junius Caessennius ANTONINUS
| | | | | /-Gnaeus Arrius ANTONINUS
| | | | \-Arria ANTONIA
| | | | \-Plotia ISAURICA
| | \-Arria Caesennia Paulina CAESENNIUS
\-Cornelia Arria Sextus PRAETEXTATA
Descendants of Marcus Maecius Orfitus
1 Marcus Maecius Orfitus
=Furia spouse of Marcus Maecius ORFITUS
2 Maecia Proba CETHEGILLA
=Gaius Memmius Caecilianus Placidus
3 Marcus Maecius Memmius Furius BABURIUS CAECILIANUS PLACIDUS
=Fabia Paulina Placidus TITIANIA Marriage: ABT 315, Roma, Italy, Roman Empire
3 Placidia Maecia
3 Gaius Memmius ORTIFUS
- Father: Marcus Annius Severus DE ROME
- Mother: Manlia Minor DE ROME
- Birth: ABT 159, Companie, Italy, Roman Empire
- LifeSketch: Marcus Pomponius Maecius Probus (c. 195 – after 228) was a Consul in 228. He was the son of Marcus Maecius Probus and his wife Pomponia Arria. In the genealogical reconstruction by C. Settipani, he married and had: Marcus Maecius Probus (born c. 220), married to Pupiena Sextia Paulina Cethegilla (born c. 225), daughter of Marcus Pupienus Africanus and his wife Cornelia Marullina, and had: (Marcus Maecius Orfitus) (born c. 245), married to (Furia) (born c. 244), daughter of Gordian III and his wife Tranquillina, and had: (Maecia Proba) (born c. 270), married to (Faltonius) (born c. 260), son of Faltonius Pinianus, and had issue
- Death: 209, Italy, Roman Empire
Ancestors of Marcus Maecius Probus
/-Marcus Nonius MUCIANUS
/-Marcus Nonius Mucianus Publius Delpius PEREGRINUS
| | /-Publius Delphinus PEREGRINUS
| \-Delpia spuse of Marcus Nonius MUCIANUS
| \-Alfia spouse of Publius Delphinus PEREGRINUS
/-Marcus Nonius DE ROME
| \-Manilia spouse of Marcus Nonius Mucianus Publius Delpius PEREGRINUS
/-Marcus Annius Severus DE ROME
| | /-Lucius Junius Caessenius PAETUS
| | /-Lucius Junius Caessennius ANTONINUS
| | | | /-Gnaeus Arrius ANTONINUS
| | | \-Arria ANTONIA
| | | \-Plotia ISAURICA
| \-Arria Caesennia Paulina CAESENNIUS
Marcus Maecius Probus
\-Manlia Minor DE ROME
Descendants of Marcus Maecius Probus
1 Marcus Maecius Probus
=Pomponia Arria
2 Marcus Pomponius Maecius PROBUS
=Pupienia Sextia Paulina CETHEGILLA
3 Marcus Maecius PROBUS
=Pupiena Sexta Paulina CETHEGILLA
3 Proba PROBIA
3 Maecius Pomponius Maecius PROBUS
3 Dalmatius DE ROME
- Father: Lucius VIPSANIUS
- Birth: 63 BC, Arpino, Rome, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Praetor Urbanis, 40 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Consul of Rome, 37 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: curule Aedile, 33 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Consul of Rome, BET 28 BC AND 27 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Tribunicia potestas, 18 BC, Roma, Roman Empire
- Occupation: Consul of Rome, 37 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: curule Aedile, 33 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Consul of Rome, BET 28 BC AND 27 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Tribunicia potestas, 18 BC, Roma, Roman Empire
- Occupation: Consul of Rome, 37 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: curule Aedile, 33 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Consul of Rome, BET 28 BC AND 27 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Tribunicia potestas, 18 BC, Roma, Roman Empire
- Occupation: Consul of Rome, 37 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: curule Aedile, 33 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Consul of Rome, BET 28 BC AND 27 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Tribunicia potestas, 18 BC, Roma, Roman Empire
- Occupation: Consul of Rome, 37 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: curule Aedile, 33 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Consul of Rome, BET 28 BC AND 27 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Tribunicia potestas, 18 BC, Roma, Roman Empire
- Military: Participated in Caesar's Civil War, BET 49 BC AND 45 BC, Hispania, Graeca, Italia, Illyria...
- Awarded the Golden Crown: For his naval victory at Mylae and Naulochus over Sextus Pompeius, 36 BC, Puteoli, Naples, Roman Republic
- Fact: He was a close friend, son-in-law and lieutenant of Emperor Gaius Julius Caesar Augustus Octavianus., BET 44 BC AND 12 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia - Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa (64/62 BC – 12 BC) was a Roman consul, statesman, general and architect. He was a close friend, son-in-law, and lieutenant to Emperor Gaius Julius Caesar Augustus Octavianus. Was sent by Julius Caesar to Apolonia with Octavius and Maecenas to continue their studies. He was responsible for the construction of some of the most notable buildings in the history of Rome and for important military victories, most notably at the Battle of Actium in 31 BC against the forces of Mark Antony and Cleopatra. As a result of these victories, Octavianus became the first Roman Emperor, adopting the name of Augustus. Agrippa assisted Augustus in making Rome "a city of marble" and renovating aqueducts to give all Romans, from every social class, access to the highest quality public services. He was responsible for the creation of many baths, porticoes and gardens, as well as the original Pantheon. Agrippa was also husband to Julia the Elder (who later married the second Emperor Tiberius), maternal grandfather to Caligula, and maternal great-grandfather to the Emperor Nero. Virtually nothing is known of his early life until he is found with Maecenas as the companions of Octavian (the future emperor Augustus) at Apollonia, in Illyria, at the time of Julius Caesar’s murder in 44. Octavian, the adopted son of Caesar, returned with Agrippa to Italy to make his political claim as Caesar’s heir. In 43 Agrippa is thought to have held the office of tribune of the plebs; presumably in this capacity he prosecuted the tyrannicide Cassius, then absent in the East. In the struggle for power after Julius Caesar’s death, Agrippa served as one of Octavian’s key military commanders. In 41–40 he fought against Mark Antony’s brother Lucius. In 40 he held the post of praetor urbanus (magistrate mainly in charge of administration of justice at Rome) and was a major figure in negotiating a settlement between Octavian and Antony at Brundisium. During the next two years he was away on campaigns in Aquitania and on the Rhine River. When he returned to Italy, he conspicuously refused to celebrate a triumph for his successes in the north, but in 37 he held the office of consul. In the spring of 37 Octavian and Antony came to an agreement at Tarentum, and it must have been then that Antony arranged the marriage of Agrippa to the daughter of Titus Atticus, a wealthy friend of Cicero. Octavian’s efforts to resist at sea the son of the republican general Gnaeus Pompey, Sextus Pompeius, had not met with success. Agrippa therefore took charge of the operations. He constructed a fine harbour at Puteoli in the Bay of Naples and then won, in 36, two decisive naval victories (at Mylae and Naulochus), ending the threat from Pompeius. For this achievement Agrippa was awarded a golden crown. In 35–34 Octavian waged a vigorous campaign in Dalmatia, and in this Agrippa had a distinguished military role. In 33 Agrippa served as curule aedile (magistrate of public buildings and works) at Rome, even though it was a much lower post than the consulate that he had already held. He used the opportunity to win favour for Octavian by spending his own funds lavishly on building baths, cleaning sewers, and improving the water supply. When Octavian and Antony finally came into direct conflict at the Battle of Actium in 31, Agrippa commanded the fleet and was primarily responsible for Octavian’s victory. During Octavian’s absence from Rome after Actium, Agrippa managed affairs in the city together with Maecenas, the great patron of poets. In 29–28 Agrippa and Octavian jointly conducted a census and carried out a purge of the Senate; in 28 and 27 Agrippa held the consulate again, both times with Octavian (from 27, Augustus) as his colleague. In 23, a year of constitutional crisis, Augustus fell ill and presented his signet ring to Agrippa, who seemed thus to be designated the emperor’s successor. Agrippa took Augustus’ daughter Julia as his wife after divorcing a niece of Augustus (Marcella the Elder), who had replaced Atticus’ daughter as his wife some four or five years previously. Agrippa went immediately to Mytilene on the island of Lesbos, from which he administered affairs in the East. The nature of Agrippa’s constitutional power (imperium) at this time is controversial. It has been argued whether the Senate in 23 gave him an imperium greater than that of any other provincial governor in the East (imperium majus). After Augustus’ death Roman historians claimed that Agrippa’s sojourn at Mytilene was a kind of exile as a result of Augustus’ preference for his own nephew Marcellus. This appears implausible. Agrippa was soon back in Rome to act on behalf of the emperor, who himself left for the East in 22. Before Augustus’ return, in 19, Agrippa had left for Gaul and Spain. In Spain he finally subdued the recalcitrant Cantabrians. Returning to Rome in 18, Agrippa received the power of a tribune (tribunicia potestas), which Augustus also possessed. Perhaps, too, he received an imperium majus, if he had not been granted it in 23. He participated in Augustus’ celebration of the Secular Games at Rome in 17, after which he returned to the East as vicegerent of the emperor. In 15 he accepted an invitation from Herod I the Great to visit Judaea; while in the East, he established colonies of veterans at Berytus and Heliopolis, in Lebanon. He next settled an uprising in the Bosporan kingdom on the Black Sea and set up the cultivated dynast Polemo as king. Herod led a fleet to support Agrippa in the Bosporan affair, and, when it was over, the two traveled together along the coast of western Asia Minor. In 13 Agrippa’s tribunicia potestas was renewed, and at this time without doubt he received (or had renewed) a grant of imperium majus. Troubles in Pannonia required his presence, but the rigours of the winter of 13–12 caused a fatal illness; he died in March of 12 BC. Augustus delivered a funeral oration in honour of his colleague; a fragment of that oration, in Greek translation, has recently come to light. Agrippa deserved the honours Augustus heaped upon him. It is conceivable that without Agrippa, Octavian would never have become emperor. Rome remembered him for his generosity in attending to aqueducts, sewers, and baths; and in the mid-20s he completed the celebrated Pantheon. One of Agrippa’s five children by Julia, Agrippina the Elder, was the mother of one emperor (Caligula) and the grandmother of another (Nero). Agrippa’s autobiography is lost, but an extensive geographical commentary that he wrote influenced the extant works of the geographer Strabo and of Pliny the Elder.
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Munda, 17 MAR 45 BC, Andalusia, Hispania
- Military: Participated in the Liberators' civil war -The Liberators' civil war (43–42 BC) was started by the Second Triumvirate to avenge Julius Caesar's assassination.[1] The war was fought by the forces of Mark Antony and Octavian (the Second Triumvirate members) against the forces of Caesar's assassins,[2] led by Marcus Junius Brutus and Gaius Cassius Longinus, also called the Liberatores. The latter were defeated by the Triumvirs at the Battle of Philippi[3] in October 42 BC,[4][5] and committed suicide.[6] Brutus would also commit suicide after the second part of the battle.[7][8][9], BET 43 BC AND 42 BC, Philippi, Macedonia, Greece
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Mutina -Around one year after Julius Caesar's murder, negotiations between the Roman Senate and Antony broke off. Antony gathered his legions and marched against one of the assassins Decimus Junius Brutus Albinus, who was governor of Cisalpine Gaul. Mark Antony had Decimus Brutus confined around Mutina (modern Modena), just south of the Padus (Po) River on the via Aemilia. Pansa was sent north from Rome to link with Hirtius and Octavian in order to provide Brutus with aid., BET 44 BC AND 30 BC, Mutina, Italia, Roman Empire
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Alexandria -The Battle of Alexandria was fought on July 1 to July 30, 30 BC between the forces of Octavian and Mark Antony during the Last war of the Roman Republic. It was the final battle of the Roman Republic. In the Battle of Actium, Antony had lost the majority of his fleet and had been forced to abandon the majority of his army in Greece, where without supplies they eventually surrendered., 30 JUL 30, Alexandria, Egypt
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Actium- The Battle of Actium was the decisive naval battle in the Last war of the Roman Republic, fought between the fleet of Octavian and the combined fleet of Mark Antony and Queen Cleopatra of Egypt. It took place on 2 September 31 BC in the Ionian Sea near the promontory of Actium in Greece., 2 SEP 31, Actium, Greece
- Military: He was a General in the Roman Army, serving from 45 BC to 12 BC
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Munda, 17 MAR 45 BC, Andalusia, Hispania
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Mutina -Around one year after Julius Caesar's murder, negotiations between the Roman Senate and Antony broke off. Antony gathered his legions and marched against one of the assassins Decimus Junius Brutus Albinus, who was governor of Cisalpine Gaul. Mark Antony had Decimus Brutus confined around Mutina (modern Modena), just south of the Padus (Po) River on the via Aemilia. Pansa was sent north from Rome to link with Hirtius and Octavian in order to provide Brutus with aid., BET 44 BC AND 30 BC, Mutina, Italia, Roman Empire
- Military: Participated in the Liberators' civil war -The Liberators' civil war (43–42 BC) was started by the Second Triumvirate to avenge Julius Caesar's assassination.[1] The war was fought by the forces of Mark Antony and Octavian (the Second Triumvirate members) against the forces of Caesar's assassins,[2] led by Marcus Junius Brutus and Gaius Cassius Longinus, also called the Liberatores. The latter were defeated by the Triumvirs at the Battle of Philippi[3] in October 42 BC,[4][5] and committed suicide.[6] Brutus would also commit suicide after the second part of the battle.[7][8][9], BET 43 BC AND 42 BC, Philippi, Macedonia, Greece
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Alexandria -The Battle of Alexandria was fought on July 1 to July 30, 30 BC between the forces of Octavian and Mark Antony during the Last war of the Roman Republic. It was the final battle of the Roman Republic. In the Battle of Actium, Antony had lost the majority of his fleet and had been forced to abandon the majority of his army in Greece, where without supplies they eventually surrendered., 30 JUL 30, Alexandria, Egypt
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Actium- The Battle of Actium was the decisive naval battle in the Last war of the Roman Republic, fought between the fleet of Octavian and the combined fleet of Mark Antony and Queen Cleopatra of Egypt. It took place on 2 September 31 BC in the Ionian Sea near the promontory of Actium in Greece., 2 SEP 31, Actium, Greece
- Military: He was a General in the Roman Army, serving from 45 BC to 12 BC
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Munda, 17 MAR 45 BC, Andalusia, Hispania
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Mutina -Around one year after Julius Caesar's murder, negotiations between the Roman Senate and Antony broke off. Antony gathered his legions and marched against one of the assassins Decimus Junius Brutus Albinus, who was governor of Cisalpine Gaul. Mark Antony had Decimus Brutus confined around Mutina (modern Modena), just south of the Padus (Po) River on the via Aemilia. Pansa was sent north from Rome to link with Hirtius and Octavian in order to provide Brutus with aid., BET 44 BC AND 30 BC, Mutina, Italia, Roman Empire
- Military: Participated in the Liberators' civil war -The Liberators' civil war (43–42 BC) was started by the Second Triumvirate to avenge Julius Caesar's assassination.[1] The war was fought by the forces of Mark Antony and Octavian (the Second Triumvirate members) against the forces of Caesar's assassins,[2] led by Marcus Junius Brutus and Gaius Cassius Longinus, also called the Liberatores. The latter were defeated by the Triumvirs at the Battle of Philippi[3] in October 42 BC,[4][5] and committed suicide.[6] Brutus would also commit suicide after the second part of the battle.[7][8][9], BET 43 BC AND 42 BC, Philippi, Macedonia, Greece
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Alexandria -The Battle of Alexandria was fought on July 1 to July 30, 30 BC between the forces of Octavian and Mark Antony during the Last war of the Roman Republic. It was the final battle of the Roman Republic. In the Battle of Actium, Antony had lost the majority of his fleet and had been forced to abandon the majority of his army in Greece, where without supplies they eventually surrendered., 30 JUL 30, Alexandria, Egypt
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Actium- The Battle of Actium was the decisive naval battle in the Last war of the Roman Republic, fought between the fleet of Octavian and the combined fleet of Mark Antony and Queen Cleopatra of Egypt. It took place on 2 September 31 BC in the Ionian Sea near the promontory of Actium in Greece., 2 SEP 31, Actium, Greece
- Military: He was a General in the Roman Army, serving from 45 BC to 12 BC
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Munda, 17 MAR 45 BC, Andalusia, Hispania
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Mutina -Around one year after Julius Caesar's murder, negotiations between the Roman Senate and Antony broke off. Antony gathered his legions and marched against one of the assassins Decimus Junius Brutus Albinus, who was governor of Cisalpine Gaul. Mark Antony had Decimus Brutus confined around Mutina (modern Modena), just south of the Padus (Po) River on the via Aemilia. Pansa was sent north from Rome to link with Hirtius and Octavian in order to provide Brutus with aid., BET 44 BC AND 30 BC, Mutina, Italia, Roman Empire
- Military: Participated in the Liberators' civil war -The Liberators' civil war (43–42 BC) was started by the Second Triumvirate to avenge Julius Caesar's assassination.[1] The war was fought by the forces of Mark Antony and Octavian (the Second Triumvirate members) against the forces of Caesar's assassins,[2] led by Marcus Junius Brutus and Gaius Cassius Longinus, also called the Liberatores. The latter were defeated by the Triumvirs at the Battle of Philippi[3] in October 42 BC,[4][5] and committed suicide.[6] Brutus would also commit suicide after the second part of the battle.[7][8][9], BET 43 BC AND 42 BC, Philippi, Macedonia, Greece
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Alexandria -The Battle of Alexandria was fought on July 1 to July 30, 30 BC between the forces of Octavian and Mark Antony during the Last war of the Roman Republic. It was the final battle of the Roman Republic. In the Battle of Actium, Antony had lost the majority of his fleet and had been forced to abandon the majority of his army in Greece, where without supplies they eventually surrendered., 30 JUL 30, Alexandria, Egypt
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Actium- The Battle of Actium was the decisive naval battle in the Last war of the Roman Republic, fought between the fleet of Octavian and the combined fleet of Mark Antony and Queen Cleopatra of Egypt. It took place on 2 September 31 BC in the Ionian Sea near the promontory of Actium in Greece., 2 SEP 31, Actium, Greece
- Military: He was a General in the Roman Army, serving from 45 BC to 12 BC
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Munda, 17 MAR 45 BC, Andalusia, Hispania
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Mutina -Around one year after Julius Caesar's murder, negotiations between the Roman Senate and Antony broke off. Antony gathered his legions and marched against one of the assassins Decimus Junius Brutus Albinus, who was governor of Cisalpine Gaul. Mark Antony had Decimus Brutus confined around Mutina (modern Modena), just south of the Padus (Po) River on the via Aemilia. Pansa was sent north from Rome to link with Hirtius and Octavian in order to provide Brutus with aid., BET 44 BC AND 30 BC, Mutina, Italia, Roman Empire
- Military: Participated in the Liberators' civil war -The Liberators' civil war (43–42 BC) was started by the Second Triumvirate to avenge Julius Caesar's assassination.[1] The war was fought by the forces of Mark Antony and Octavian (the Second Triumvirate members) against the forces of Caesar's assassins,[2] led by Marcus Junius Brutus and Gaius Cassius Longinus, also called the Liberatores. The latter were defeated by the Triumvirs at the Battle of Philippi[3] in October 42 BC,[4][5] and committed suicide.[6] Brutus would also commit suicide after the second part of the battle.[7][8][9], BET 43 BC AND 42 BC, Philippi, Macedonia, Greece
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Alexandria -The Battle of Alexandria was fought on July 1 to July 30, 30 BC between the forces of Octavian and Mark Antony during the Last war of the Roman Republic. It was the final battle of the Roman Republic. In the Battle of Actium, Antony had lost the majority of his fleet and had been forced to abandon the majority of his army in Greece, where without supplies they eventually surrendered., 30 JUL 30, Alexandria, Egypt
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Actium- The Battle of Actium was the decisive naval battle in the Last war of the Roman Republic, fought between the fleet of Octavian and the combined fleet of Mark Antony and Queen Cleopatra of Egypt. It took place on 2 September 31 BC in the Ionian Sea near the promontory of Actium in Greece., 2 SEP 31, Actium, Greece
- Military: He was a General in the Roman Army, serving from 45 BC to 12 BC
- Death: MAR 12 BC, Roma, Roman Empire
- Burial: 12 BC, Rome, Italy, Roman Empire
- Partnership with: Julia Caesaris MAJOR
Marriage: ABT 23 BC, Roma, Roman Empire
- Child: Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa POSTUMUS d.s.p. Birth: 26 JUN 12 BC, Rome, Italy, Roma Empire
- Child: Gaius Vipsanius AGRIPPA Of Rome Birth: 20 BC, Roma, Roman Empire
- Child: Vipsania Agrippina MAJOR 'THE ELDER' Birth: 14 BC, Athens, Attikí, Greece
- Child: Lucius Agrippa JULIUS CAESAR I Birth: 17 BC, Rome, Città Metropolitana di Roma Capitale, Lazio, Italy
- Child: Vipsania Julia AGRIPPINA Julia Minor Birth: 19 BC, Rome, Roma, Lazio, Italy
- Partnership with: Claudia MARCELLA Major
Marriage: 28 BC, Roma, Roman Empire
Divorce: BEF 23 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Partnership with: Pomponia Caecilia Attica of Rome
Marriage: ABT 37 BC
Ancestors of Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa of Arpino
/-Lucius VIPSANIUS
Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa of Arpino
Descendants of Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa of Arpino
1 Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa of Arpino
=Julia Caesaris MAJOR Marriage: ABT 23 BC, Roma, Roman Empire
2 Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa POSTUMUS d.s.p.
2 Gaius Vipsanius AGRIPPA Of Rome
2 Vipsania Agrippina MAJOR 'THE ELDER'
2 Lucius Agrippa JULIUS CAESAR I
2 Vipsania Julia AGRIPPINA Julia Minor
=Lucius Aemilius PAULLUS
3 Julia of The Roman EMPIRE
=Gaius Octavius Laenas I of ROME
3 Ameilia Caesia LEPIDA
3 Lepida Paetina of Roma
3 Marcus Aemillus LEPIDUS
3 Dominia Lepida Ahenobartus DE ROME
3 Livia
3 Aemilia GERMANICUS
3 Aemilia Lepida PAULLUS
3 Aemilia LEPIDA
=Gneus Domitius AHENOBARBUS VI
=Claudia MARCELLA Major Marriage: 28 BC, Roma, Roman Empire
2 Iulla ANTONIA
2 Vipsania Marcelina
2 Lucius ANTONIUS
2 Vipsania MARCELLA, THE YOUNGER
=Pomponia Caecilia Attica of Rome Marriage: ABT 37 BC
2 Vipsania ATTICA (wife of Quintus)
2 Vipsania Agrippina
=(Unknown)
3 Drusus Julius Caesar The YOUNGER
=Claudia Livillia JULIA of Rome Marriage: 4, Rome, Roma, Lazio, Italy
- Father: Marcus Vitorius Marcellus Major DE ROME
- Father: Gaius VITORIUS
- Birth: 57
- Title Of Nobility: Roman Senator
- Source URL: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marcus_Vitorius_Marcellus
- Life Sketch: Marcellus was in Rome and was in charge of overseeing the construction of the road to improve public access into and out of the city.
- Death: AFT 105
Ancestors of Marcus Vitorius Marcellus
/-Marcus Vitorius Marcellus Major DE ROME
Marcus Vitorius Marcellus
Descendants of Marcus Vitorius Marcellus
1 Marcus Vitorius Marcellus
=Hosida Geta DE ROME
2 Victoria Geta DE ROME
=Lucius Septimus Severus MAJOR DE LEPTIS MAGNA
3 Publius Septimus Geta DE LEPTIS MAGNA
=Fulvia Pia Pius DE ROME
2 Julia DOMNA
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Marericus Aemilius IV Lepidus
/-Pomponius father of Numa II POMPILIUS
/-Numa II POMPILIUS
/-Mamericus father of Mamericus AEMILIUS I
| | /-Plusieurs Générations DE SABINS
| | /-Titus TATIUS I
| \-Tatia spouse of Numa II POMPILIUS
/-Mamericus Aemilius I
/-Mamericus Aemilius II
/-Mamericus Aemilius III
Marericus Aemilius IV Lepidus
Descendants of Marericus Aemilius IV Lepidus
1 Marericus Aemilius IV Lepidus
=(Unknown)
2 Marcus Aemilius MAMERCUS
=(Unknown)
3 Lucius Aemilius Mamercus
=(Unknown)
- Father: Edward III King of England
- Mother: Philippa DE HAINAULT, Queen Consort of England
- Birth: 28 JUL 1346, Windsor Castle, Berkshire, England, United Kingdom
- Also known as: Margaret, Countess of Pembroke
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia Margaret of England (20 July 1346 – October/December 1361) was a royal princess born in Windsor, the daughter of King Edward III of England and his consort, Philippa of Hainault. Margaret would be the last princess born to a reigning English monarch for over a century, until the birth of Elizabeth of York in 1466.[1] She was also known as Margaret of Windsor. Marriage Margaret was the daughter of King Edward III of England and his consort, Philippa of Hainault.[2] She was also known as Margaret of Windsor.[2] Margaret's first marriage prospect was Albert III of Austria but this changed due to politics at the time. A few years later she was affianced to John of Blois, son of Charles of Blois and rival of John V of Brittany to the Breton throne; however, this engagement was abandoned because her sister Mary was already married to John V. Margaret was raised with John Hastings, 2nd Earl of Pembroke, son of Laurence Hastings, 1st Earl of Pembroke and his wife Agnes, the daughter of Roger Mortimer (the favourite of Isabella of France). As children they had a close companionship. On 13 May 1359, she became the wife of John Hastings in the same week as her brother John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster married Blanche of Lancaster, in Reading.[3] Early death Two years later, Margaret died, and was buried in Abingdon Abbey. The exact date and cause of her death is unknown; she was last mentioned as living on 1 October 1361.[2]
- Death: 1 OCT 1361
- Burial: Abbey Church, Abingdon, Berkshire, England, United Kingdom
Ancestors of Margaret of England
/-Hugues du Perche DE GÂTINAIS
/-Geoffroy II de Gâtinais DE GÂTINAIS
| \-Beatrice DE MACON
/-Foulques IV le Réchin D'ANJOU
| | /-Foulques III D'ANJOU
| \-Ermengarde DE ANJOU
| \-Hildegarde DE HAUTE-LORRAINE DE SUNDGAU
/-Foulques D'ANJOU Roi de Jérusalem
| | /-Amaury I of Montfort
| | /-Simon I DE MONTFORT Seigneur de Montfort et Comte d'Evreux
| | | \-Bertrade DE GOMETZ
| \-Bertrade DE MONTFORT
| \-Agnes FitzRichard DE EVEREUX
/-Geoffroy V Plantagenet D'ANJOU
| | /-Lancelin I DE BEAUGENCY
| | /-Jean DE BEAUGENCY
| | | \-Herberge DE BEAUGENCY MAINE
| | /-Helias de La Flèche DU MAINE
| | | | /-Herbert I Chien» DU MAINE
| | | \-Paula DU MAINE
| | | \-Paula DE PREUILLY II
| \-Ermengarde DE BEAUGENCY
| | /-Robert de Château DU LOIR
| | /-Gervais II DU LOIR Seigneur de Château-du-Loir
| | | \-Armenbourge VERGY
| \-Matilde de Château DU LOIRE
| | /-Herbert I Chien» DU MAINE
| \-Eremburge CHIEN DE MAINE
| \-Paula DE PREUILLY II
/-Henry II of ENGLAND
| | /-Richard II DE NORMANDIE
| | /-Robert I DE NORMANDIE
| | | \-Judith DE BRETAGNE
| | /-Williame the CONQUEROR
| | | \-Herleva DE FALAISE
| | /-Henry I of ENGLAND
| | | \-Matilda OF FLANDERS Queen of England
| \-Matilda of ENGLAND
| \-Matilda of SCOTLAND
/-John I of ENGLAND
| | /-Guillaume IV de Poitou D'AQUITAINE
| | /-Guillaume V Poitou et D'AQUITAINE
| | | \-Emma DE BLOIS comtesse de Poitiers
| | /-Guillaume VIII D'AQUITAINE
| | | \-Agnès DE BOURGOGNE
| | /-Guillaume IX D'AQUITAINE
| | | | /-Robert II DES FRANCS
| | | | /-Robert I DE BOURGOGNE
| | | | | \-Constance D'ARLES
| | | \-Hildegarde DE BOURGOGNE
| | | | /-Foulques III D'ANJOU
| | | \-Ermengarde DE ANJOU
| | | \-Hildegarde DE HAUTE-LORRAINE DE SUNDGAU
| | /-Guillaume X D'AQUITAINE Duc d'Aquitaine
| | | | /-Guillaume III DE TOULOUSE
| | | | /-Pons Guillaume DE TOULOUSE
| | | | | \-Emma DE PROVENCE
| | | | /-Guillaume IV DE TOULOUSE
| | | | | \-Almodis de la MARCHE
| | | \-Philippa DE TOULOUSE
| | | \-Emma DE MORTAIN Comtesse de Toulouse
| \-Eleanor of AQUITAINE
| \-Aenor DE CHATELLERAULT, Duchess of Aquitaine
/-Henry III of ENGLAND
| | /-Geoffroi DE TAILLEFER
| | /-Foulques D'ANGOULEME
| | | \-Petronille D’ARCHIAC Countess d’Angoulême
| | /-Guillaume V D'ANGOULÊME Comte d’Angoulême
| | | | /-Robert d'Eu
| | | \-Cundoha d'Eu
| | | \-Beatrix de Falaise
| | /-Vulgrin II D'ANGOULÊME
| | | | /-Amanieu DE BENAUGES ET DE SAINT-MACAIRE
| | | \-Vitapoy DE BENAUGES
| | /-Guillaume VI Taillefer D'ANGOULÊME
| | | | /-Roger the POITEVIN
| | | \-Pontia MONTGOMMERIE DE LA MARCHE
| | /-Aymar Taillefer D'ANGOULÊME
| | | | /-Ademar II DE CHARBANOIS Viscount of Limoges
| | | | /-Adémar III DE LIMOGES
| | | | | \-Humberge TAILLEFER D’ANGOULÊME
| | | \-Emma DE LIMOGES
| | | | /-Geoffroi DE TAILLEFER
| | | | /-Foulques D'ANGOULEME
| | | | | \-Petronille D’ARCHIAC Countess d’Angoulême
| | | | /-Guillaume V D'ANGOULÊME Comte d’Angoulême
| | | | | | /-Robert d'Eu
| | | | | \-Cundoha d'Eu
| | | | | \-Beatrix de Falaise
| | | \-Graule Taillefer D' ANGOULEME
| | | | /-Amanieu DE BENAUGES ET DE SAINT-MACAIRE
| | | \-Vitapoy DE BENAUGES
| \-Isabelle D' ANGOULÊME of England
| | /-Robert II DES FRANCS
| | /-Henri I DES FRANCS
| | | \-Constance D'ARLES
| | /-Philippe I DES FRANCS
| | | | /-Yaroslav I of RUSSIA
| | | \-Anne DE KIEV
| | | \-Ingigerd OLAFSDOTTIR
| | /-Louis VI DES FRANCS
| | | | /-Dietrich III DER JERUSALEMER
| | | | /-Florens I VON HOLLAND
| | | | | \-Othelhildis von Haldensleben
| | | \-Bertha VON HOLLAND
| | | \-Gertrud VON SACHSEN
| | /-Pierre DE FRANCE
| | | \-Adélaïde DE SAVOIE Reine des Francs
| \-Alice DE COURTENAY
| \-Elizabeth de COURTENAY
/-Edward I of ENGLAND
| | /-Ramon BERENGER I
| | /-Ramon BERENGUER II
| | | \-Almodis de la Haute MARCHE
| | /-Ramon BERENGUER III de Barcelona
| | | \-Mahalda Guiscard OF APULIA
| | /-Ramón Berenguer IV DE BARCELONA
| | | \-Douce DE PROVENCE
| | /-Alfonso II DE ARAGON
| | | \-Petronila I Queen of Aragon
| | /-Alfonso II DE ARAGON
| | | \-Sancha DE CASTILLA Reina consorte de Aragón
| | /-Raimund IV BERENGUER
| | | \-Garsende DE SABRAN
| \-Éléonore DE PROVENCE
| \-Béatrix DE SAVOIE Comtesse de Provence
/-Edward II King of England
| \-Eleanor DE CASTILE Queen consort of England
/-Edward III King of England
| \-Isabella of France, Queen of England
Margaret of England
\-Philippa DE HAINAULT, Queen Consort of England
Ancestors of Maso vom Elsaß
/-Adalrich des Pagus ATTORIENSIS
/-Eticho HERZOG IM ELSAß
| | /-Aedatric I DE BOURGOGNE
| | /-Alethee DE BOURGOGNE
| | | | /-Richer ou Richard I D'ARTOIS
| | | | /-Richard II D'ARTOIS
| | | \-Richarianne D'ARTOIS
| | /-Gunnebald IV DE BOURGOGNE
| | | | /-Gondoald DE MEAUX
| | | \-Theudelinde DE MEAUX
| | | | /-Theodebert DES FRANCS
| | | \-Theudelinde DE FRANCIE
| | | \-Wisigardis DES LOMBARDE
| \-Hiltrude DE BURGUNDY Duchess de Burgundy
| | /-Hidulf DE FRIOUL
| | | \-Sedeleude DE GENEVE
| | /-Gisulf I DE FRIOULI
| | | \-Rodelinde D’OSTROGOTHIE
| | /-Gisulf II DE FRIOUL
| | | \-Romhilde DE AUSTRASIË ET LOMBARDIE
| \-Leudegarde DI FRIOULI
| | /-Garibald I DE BAVIERE
| \-Segolene DE BEZIERS
| \-Waldrade DE LOMBARDIE
/-Adalbert HERZOG IM ELSAß
| | /-Chlodio Le Chevelu of the Salian FRANKS
| | /-Merovech of the Salian FRANKS
| | | \-Hildegonde DE TOXANDRIE
| | /-Childerich I FRÄNKISCHER
| | /-Hlodowig I DE FRÄNKS
| | | \-Basena von Thüringen
| | /-Chlothar I DER FRANKEN
| | | | /-Gundicar Gebica DE BOURGOGNE
| | | | /-Gundowech DE BOURGOGNE
| | | | | \-Bruenhild spouse of Gundicar Gebica DE BOURGOGNE
| | | | /-Chilperich II DE BOURGOGNE
| | | | | \-Caretene DE SUÉVIE
| | | \-Clotilde DE BOURGOGNE
| | | | /-Rechila of the SUEVI
| | | | /-Flavius RICIMER Magister militum
| | | | | \-Walia OF THE VISIGOTHS
| | | \-Caratene AGRIPPINA
| | | \-Alypia DE ROME
| | /-Chilperic I of SOISSONS
| | | \-Arnegunde VON THÜRINGEN
| | /-Chlothar II of NEUSTRIA
| | | \-Fredegunde Frankenkönigin
| | /-Dagobert I of AUSTRASIA
| | | \-Haldetrude DE SOISSONS
| | /-Sigibert III of the FRANKS
| | | \-Ragnetrude D’ARDENNES
| | | \-Clotilde DE NEUSTRIE
| | | \-Audovere DE SOISSONS
| \-Berswinde D'AUSTRASIE
| \-Emnechilde OF BURGUNDY
Maso vom Elsaß
\-Gerelind VON PFALZEL
- Father: Foulques D'ANJOU Roi de Jérusalem
- Mother: Ermengarde DE BEAUGENCY
- Birth: 1110, Angers, Maine-Et-Loire, France
- Also known as: Mathilde d'Anjou
- Also known as: Alice or Isabella de Gâtinais
- Occupation: She became a nun in Fontevraud and changed her name to Mathilde., 1129
- Occupation: She was elected Abbess of Fontevraud., 1150
- Occupation: She was elected Abbess of Fontevraud., 1150
- Find A Grave: MEMORIAL ID: 39541717, 1154, Fontevraud Abbey, Fontevrault-l'Abbaye, Maine-et-Loire, Pays de la Loire, France
- Eldest daughter of Fulk V: Eldest daughter of Fulk V and his first wife Eremburge du Maine.
- When her father allied himself with Henry I: When her father allied himself with Henry I of England in 1113, she and Henry's son, William "Atheling," were betrothed. They were married in June 1119 but William drowned in November 1120 at Barfleur.
- Fact 2: Aka Alice DE Anjou.
- Fact 1: After Her Husband Drowned She Became A Nun CA. 1121 At Fontevrault Abbey.
- Find A Grave: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/39541717/_, 1154, Fontevraud Abbey, Fontevrault-l'Abbaye, Maine-et-Loire, Pays de la Loire, France
- Find A Grave: Parent: Fulk of Anjou - Find a Grave Website
- Find A Grave: Spouse: William Aetheling de Normandie - Find a Grave Website
- Find A Grave: 4 Siblings - Find a Grave Website
- Burial: 1154, Fontevraud Abbey, Fontevrault-l'Abbaye, Maine-et-Loire, Pays de la Loire, France
- Death: 5 MAY 1155, Fontevrault-l'Abbaye, Maine-et-Loire, Pays de la Loire, France
Ancestors of Mathilde d'Anjou
/-Geoffrey of ORLEANS
/-Aubri DUX of Orleans
/-Geoffrey I Viscount of Orleans
| \-Rothaut de FRANCE
/-Geoffrey I Viscount of Châteaudun
| | /-Comte Gausbert RORGONID
| \-Rachel ORLEANS DE CHARTRES
| | /-Lambert Nantes SPOLETO
| | /-Seigneur DE AMBOISE
| \-Contesse Abbess Ava De Auvergne
| \-Judith DE NANTES
/-Geoffrey I Vicomte de Châteaudun
| | /-Rorgon Graf von Maine
| | /-Rorgon II Graf von Maine
| | | \-Rotrude daughte of Karolus Magnus Rex Francorum Imperator ROMANORUM
| | /-Godefroy II DU MAINE
| | | \-Adaltrude D'ORLÉANS
| | /-Gauzlin II DU MAINE
| | | \-Godehilde CAROLINGIEN
| \-Hidegarde VISCOUNTESS OF CHATEAUDUN
| \-Godehilde du Maine
/-Fulcois DU PERCHE comte de Mortagne
| | /-Helouin I DE PONTHIEU
| | /-Helgaud II DE MONTREUIL Count of Ponthieu
| | | \-Helissende DE RAMERUPT
| | /-Roger DU MAINE
| | | \-Berthe DE PONTHIEU
| | /-Hugues I DU MAINE
| | | | /-Ludwig I des Fränkischen REICHES
| | | | /-Charles II LE CHAUVE Empereur d'Occident
| | | | | \-Judith Römische Kaiserin
| | | \-Rothilde DU MAINE
| | | | /-Buvinus VON METZ
| | | \-Richilde DE PROVENCE
| | | \-Richilde D'ARLES
| | /-Herve I DE MORTAGNE of Perche
| | | | /-Rorgon II Graf von Maine
| | | | /-Godefroy II DU MAINE
| | | | | \-Adaltrude D'ORLÉANS
| | | | /-Gauzlin II DU MAINE
| | | | | \-Godehilde CAROLINGIEN
| | | \-Bilichilde DU MAINE
| | | \-Godehilde du Maine
| \-Hildegarde de MORTAGNE
| | /-Bouchard de FEZENSAC
| | /-Geoffrey DE GATINAI
| | | \-Bava DE FEZENSAC
| | /-Aubri II D'ORLÉANS
| | | \-Hildegarde DE GASCOGNE
| | /-Geoffroi Gaucelin DE GATINAIS I
| | | \-Rothaut spouse of Aubri II D'ORLÉANS
| \-Gerberge Mélisende DU GATINAIS
| | /-Aubry DE ORLEANS de Narbonne II
| \-Gerberge NARBONNE
| \-Edhilde de Wessex
/-Hugues du Perche DE GÂTINAIS
| | /-Geoffrey of ORLEANS
| | /-Aubri DUX of Orleans
| | /-Geoffrey I Viscount of Orleans
| | | \-Rothaut de FRANCE
| | /-Geoffrey I Viscount of Châteaudun
| | | | /-Comte Gausbert RORGONID
| | | \-Rachel ORLEANS DE CHARTRES
| | | | /-Lambert Nantes SPOLETO
| | | | /-Seigneur DE AMBOISE
| | | \-Contesse Abbess Ava De Auvergne
| | | \-Judith DE NANTES
| | /-Hugues DE CHÂTEAUDUN
| | | | /-Rorgon Graf von Maine
| | | | /-Rorgon II Graf von Maine
| | | | | \-Rotrude daughte of Karolus Magnus Rex Francorum Imperator ROMANORUM
| | | | /-Godefroy II DU MAINE
| | | | | \-Adaltrude D'ORLÉANS
| | | | /-Gauzlin II DU MAINE
| | | | | \-Godehilde CAROLINGIEN
| | | \-Hidegarde VISCOUNTESS OF CHATEAUDUN
| | | \-Godehilde du Maine
| \-Melisende of CHÂTEAUDUN
| \-Hildegarde DU PERCHE
/-Geoffroy II de Gâtinais DE GÂTINAIS
| | /-Count Francon DE NARBONNE I
| | /-Lindoin Lieven DE NARBONNE
| | | \-Liutaud DE NARBONNE I
| | /-Mayeul DE NARBONNE I
| | | \-Landrade de Narbonne
| | /-Aubri de NARBONNE 1st Comte de Mâcon
| | | | /-Sigeber Gilbert DE ROUERGUE
| | | | /-Foulques Ou Foucaud DE ROUERGUE
| | | | | \-Berthe D`AUTUN
| | | | /-Raymond I DE TOULOUSE
| | | | | | /-Fredelán DE ROUERGUE Conde de Tolouse
| | | | | \-Sénégonde DE TOULOUSE
| | | | | \-Aube D`AUTUN
| | | \-Raimonde DE ROUERGUE
| | | | /-Josseaume DE REIMS Comte de Reims
| | | | /-Rémy IV Sosa DE REIMS Remigius
| | | | | \-Ciligia DU REMOIS
| | | \-Berta DE TOLOSA
| | | \-Arsinde DE PONTHIEU
| | /-Liétald II DE MÂCON
| | | | /-Bernard DE SEPTIMANIE
| | | | /-Bernhard II OF POITIERS
| | | | | \-Dhouda DE GASCOGNE
| | | | /-Bernard III D'AUVERGNE
| | | | | | /-Roricon DU MAINE
| | | | | \-Blichilde OF MAINE
| | | | | \-Bilichildis DU MAINE
| | | | /-Ranulf DE MÂCON
| | | | | | /-Guerin DE CHALONS
| | | | | \-Ermengarde spouse of Bernard III D'AUVERGNE
| | | \-Attala DE SEPTIMANIE
| | | \-Aya BOURGOGNE
| | /-Aubry II DE MÂCON
| | | \-Ermengarde DE DIJON
| \-Beatrice DE MACON
/-Foulques IV le Réchin D'ANJOU
| | /-Torquat Tortulfe d' ANJOU
| | /-Tertulle du Gâtinais
| | | | /-Geoffroy DE VERMANDOIS
| | | \-Aldenne DE VERMANDOIS
| | | \-Yuy DE GATINAIS
| | /-Ingelger D’ANGERS
| | | | /-Karolus Magnus Rex Francorum Imperator ROMANORUM
| | | | /-Hugo VON SAINT-QUENTIN Erzkanzler
| | | | | \-Regina spouse of Karolus FRANCORUM
| | | \-Petronilla D'AUXERRE
| | | \-Regina of Auxerre DE LA FRANKS
| | /-Foulques D'ANJOU
| | | | /-Adalhard FÉZENSAC
| | | | /-Foulques DE BUZANCAIS DU GATINAIS
| | | \-Adelais DE BUZANÇAIS
| | | | /-Aymon D'AMBOISE
| | | \-Adèle D'AMBOISE
| | | | /-Garnier DE NANTES
| | | \-Adaltrude DE NANTES
| | | \-Marie DE FEZENSAC
| | /-Foulques II D'ANJOU dit 'le Bon'
| | | | /-Adalhard DE LOCHES
| | | | /-Garnier DE LOCHES
| | | \-Roscille DE LOCHES
| | | \-Tecendra spouse of Garnier DE LOCHES
| | /-Geoffroy I D'ANJOU
| | | | /-Budic de Bretagne of POHER
| | | | /-Erispoe I DE POHER
| | | | | \-Miriam DE FRAMLING Queen of Bretagne
| | | | /-Riwallon III DE POHER
| | | | /-Saloman of BRETAGNE
| | | | | \-Roiandrech DE CORNOUAILLE Frenhines de Bretagne
| | | | /-Herve DE POHER de Bretagne du Maine
| | | | | \-Guenebret DE BRETAGNE
| | | \-Gerberge DU MAINE
| | | \-Godehilde CAROLINGIAN
| | /-Foulques III D'ANJOU
| | | | /-Pippin VON ITALIEN
| | | | /-Bernhard DER LANGOBARDEN
| | | | /-Pépin II DE VERMANDOIS
| | | | | | /-Heribert de Gellone VON VIVARAIS
| | | | | \-Cunegonde DE GELLONE
| | | | /-Hérbert I DE VERMANDOIS
| | | | /-Hérbert II DE VERMANDOIS
| | | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Hérbert I DE VERMANDOIS
| | | | /-Robert I DE VERMANDOIS
| | | | | | /-Robert II im Oberrheingau und im WORMSGAU
| | | | | | /-Robert III im OBERRHEINGAU
| | | | | | | \-Theoderata spouse of Robert II im Oberrheingau und im WORMSGAU
| | | | | | /-Robert IV DE PARIS
| | | | | | | | /-Adrien D'ORLÉANS
| | | | | | | \-Waldrada spouse of Robert III im OBERRHEINGAU
| | | | | | | \-Waldrada VON HORNBACH
| | | | | | /-Robert I DES FRANCS
| | | | | | | | /-Luitfrid II DE SUNDGAU
| | | | | | | | /-Hugo VON TOURS
| | | | | | | | | \-Hiltrude VOM WORMSGAU
| | | | | | | \-Adélaïde DE TOURS
| | | | | | | \-Ava DE MORVOIS
| | | | | \-Adela de FRANCE
| | | | | \-Aélis DU MAINE
| | | \-Adela DE MEAUX
| | | \-Wéra DE CHALON
| \-Ermengarde DE ANJOU
| \-Hildegarde DE HAUTE-LORRAINE DE SUNDGAU
/-Foulques D'ANJOU Roi de Jérusalem
| | /-Giselbert im Maas und SCHELDEGAU
| | /-Reginar I Herzog von Lothringen
| | | \-Ermengarde DU MORELL
| | /-Reginar II VON HENNEGAU
| | | | /-Albéron I DE LORRAINE
| | | | /-Alberon I DE RETHEL
| | | | | \-Malberte DE HAINAUT
| | | | /-Alberon II DE RETHEL
| | | \-Alberade DE RETHEL
| | | \-Hildeberte DE NAMUR
| | /-Amaury DE VALENCIENNES
| | | \-Alix DE BOURGOGNE ALIAS VON BURGUND
| | /-Guillaume DE MONTFORT
| | | \-Judith DE CAMBRAI
| | /-Amaury I of Montfort
| | | \-Albreada ESPERON
| | /-Simon I DE MONTFORT Seigneur de Montfort et Comte d'Evreux
| | | \-Bertrade DE GOMETZ
| \-Bertrade DE MONTFORT
| \-Agnes FitzRichard DE EVEREUX
Mathilde d'Anjou
| /-Landry Sore DE LA FLÈCHE
| /-Lancelin I DE BEAUGENCY
| | \-Alberge DU MAINE
| /-Jean DE BEAUGENCY
| | \-Herberge DE BEAUGENCY MAINE
| /-Helias de La Flèche DU MAINE
| | | /-Helgaud II DE PONTHIEU
| | | /-Helouin I DE PONTHIEU
| | | | \-Berthe de PONTHIEU
| | | /-Helgaud II DE MONTREUIL Count of Ponthieu
| | | | | /-Helgaud II DE PONTHIEU
| | | | \-Helissende DE RAMERUPT
| | | | \-Oñeca IÑIGUEZ Princess Countess of Pomplona
| | | /-Roger DU MAINE
| | | | \-Berthe DE PONTHIEU
| | | /-Hugues I DU MAINE
| | | | | /-Karolus Magnus Rex Francorum Imperator ROMANORUM
| | | | | /-Ludwig I des Fränkischen REICHES
| | | | | | \-Hildegard von Vinzgau FRÄNKISCHE
| | | | | /-Charles II LE CHAUVE Empereur d'Occident
| | | | | | | /-Welf I Graf in Baiern
| | | | | | \-Judith Römische Kaiserin
| | | | | | \-Hedwig von Sachsen
| | | | \-Rothilde DU MAINE
| | | | | /-Richard d'Amiens D'AMIENS
| | | | | /-Buvinus VON METZ
| | | | | | \-Ingeltude D'AMIENS D'AUTUN
| | | | \-Richilde DE PROVENCE
| | | | | /-Boso D'ARLES
| | | | \-Richilde D'ARLES
| | | | \-Engeltrude D'ORLEANS
| | | /-Hugues II DU MAINE
| | | | | /-Rorgon Graf von Maine
| | | | | /-Rorgon II Graf von Maine
| | | | | | \-Rotrude daughte of Karolus Magnus Rex Francorum Imperator ROMANORUM
| | | | | /-Godefroy II DU MAINE
| | | | | | \-Adaltrude D'ORLÉANS
| | | | | /-Gauzlin II DU MAINE
| | | | | | \-Godehilde CAROLINGIEN
| | | | \-Bilichilde DU MAINE
| | | | \-Godehilde du Maine
| | | /-Hugues DE LUSIGNAN III
| | | | \-Ermengarde DE VERMANDOIS
| | | /-Herbert I Chien» DU MAINE
| | | | \-Ermengarde DE RENNES
| | \-Paula DU MAINE
| | | /-Hardrad DE PREUILLY
| | | /-Atto de Preuilly DE TOURS
| | | /-Aton DE PREUILLY II
| | | | \-Ingel d'Anjou de Gatinais D'AUXERRE
| | | /-Fulcuffe DE PREUILLY
| | | | \-Emma de OU SININNA
| | | /-Effroy DE PREUILLY
| | | | \-Adélania DE MAULEON
| | | /-Gosbert ou Gaudebert DE PREUILLY
| | | | | /-Léger d'issoudun DE DÉOLS
| | | | | /-Emenon D'ISSOUDUN de Déols
| | | | \-Béatrix D'ISSOUDUN
| | | | | /-Ison de Reillanne de Provence DE MACON
| | | | \-Adhémauris DE BAUX
| | | | \-Wandesmoda Constance de Benevent DE GAETE
| | \-Paula DE PREUILLY II
| | \-Adèle du Bouchet de Marseille D'ARLES
\-Ermengarde DE BEAUGENCY
| /-Hamon DE DINAN I
| /-Hamon de Dinan I DE GREULLY
| /-Hamon DE CREULLY
| | \-Rantlina DE BRITTANY
| /-Robert de Château DU LOIR
| | | /-Gurwant DE RENNES
| | | /-Judicael DE RENNES Duc de Bretagne
| | | | | /-Erispoë DE BRETAGNE II
| | | | \-Daughter de Erispoe II DE BRETAGNE
| | | | \-Marmoëc DE POHER
| | | /-Juhel of Rennes
| | | /-Martin DE BRETAGNE DE VITRE
| | | | \-Berberga spouse of Juhel of RENNES
| | | /-Ruivallon AUBROY
| | | | | /-Prinis DE LÉON I
| | | | | /-Even le Grand DE LÉON I
| | | | | /-Hamon DE LÉON
| | | | | /-Pirinis DE LEON II
| | | | \-Salomé DE LEÓN
| | \-Roiantelina DE VITRE
| | | /-Gurwant DE RENNES
| | | /-Judicael DE RENNES Duc de Bretagne
| | | | | /-Erispoë DE BRETAGNE II
| | | | \-Daughter de Erispoe II DE BRETAGNE
| | | | \-Marmoëc DE POHER
| | | /-Juhel of Rennes
| | | /-Martin DE BRETAGNE DE VITRE
| | | | \-Berberga spouse of Juhel of RENNES
| | \-Génergaude D'AUBREY de la Vicaire
| | | /-Prinis DE LÉON I
| | | /-Even le Grand DE LÉON I
| | | /-Hamon DE LÉON
| | | /-Pirinis DE LEON II
| | \-Salomé DE LEÓN
| /-Gervais II DU LOIR Seigneur de Château-du-Loir
| | \-Armenbourge VERGY
\-Matilde de Château DU LOIRE
| /-Helgaud II DE PONTHIEU
| /-Helouin I DE PONTHIEU
| | \-Berthe de PONTHIEU
| /-Helgaud II DE MONTREUIL Count of Ponthieu
| | | /-Helgaud II DE PONTHIEU
| | \-Helissende DE RAMERUPT
| | \-Oñeca IÑIGUEZ Princess Countess of Pomplona
| /-Roger DU MAINE
| | \-Berthe DE PONTHIEU
| /-Hugues I DU MAINE
| | | /-Karolus Magnus Rex Francorum Imperator ROMANORUM
| | | /-Ludwig I des Fränkischen REICHES
| | | | \-Hildegard von Vinzgau FRÄNKISCHE
| | | /-Charles II LE CHAUVE Empereur d'Occident
| | | | | /-Welf I Graf in Baiern
| | | | \-Judith Römische Kaiserin
| | | | \-Hedwig von Sachsen
| | \-Rothilde DU MAINE
| | | /-Richard d'Amiens D'AMIENS
| | | /-Buvinus VON METZ
| | | | \-Ingeltude D'AMIENS D'AUTUN
| | \-Richilde DE PROVENCE
| | | /-Boso D'ARLES
| | \-Richilde D'ARLES
| | \-Engeltrude D'ORLEANS
| /-Hugues II DU MAINE
| | | /-Rorgon Graf von Maine
| | | /-Rorgon II Graf von Maine
| | | | \-Rotrude daughte of Karolus Magnus Rex Francorum Imperator ROMANORUM
| | | /-Godefroy II DU MAINE
| | | | \-Adaltrude D'ORLÉANS
| | | /-Gauzlin II DU MAINE
| | | | \-Godehilde CAROLINGIEN
| | \-Bilichilde DU MAINE
| | \-Godehilde du Maine
| /-Hugues DE LUSIGNAN III
| | \-Ermengarde DE VERMANDOIS
| /-Herbert I Chien» DU MAINE
| | \-Ermengarde DE RENNES
\-Eremburge CHIEN DE MAINE
| /-Hardrad DE PREUILLY
| /-Atto de Preuilly DE TOURS
| /-Aton DE PREUILLY II
| | \-Ingel d'Anjou de Gatinais D'AUXERRE
| /-Fulcuffe DE PREUILLY
| | \-Emma de OU SININNA
| /-Effroy DE PREUILLY
| | \-Adélania DE MAULEON
| /-Gosbert ou Gaudebert DE PREUILLY
| | | /-Léger d'issoudun DE DÉOLS
| | | /-Emenon D'ISSOUDUN de Déols
| | \-Béatrix D'ISSOUDUN
| | | /-Ison de Reillanne de Provence DE MACON
| | \-Adhémauris DE BAUX
| | \-Wandesmoda Constance de Benevent DE GAETE
\-Paula DE PREUILLY II
\-Adèle du Bouchet de Marseille D'ARLES
- Father: Levi ben Melchi ha-David of Arimathea
- Mother: Pauline bint Eleazar of Judea
- Birth: 66 BC, Judea, Kingdom of Jerusalem
- Also known as: Mat'tat
- Also known as: Matthat Ben Levi of the Bible
- Also known as: Father of Joseph of Arimathea
- Also known as: Mattat ha David of Arimathie
- Also known as: Nasi
- Also known as: Nasi
- Also known as: Matthat Ben Levi of the Bible
- Also known as: Father of Joseph of Arimathea
- Also known as: Mattat ha David of Arimathie
- Also known as: Nasi
- Also known as: Father of Joseph of Arimathea
- Also known as: Matthat Ben Levi of the Bible
- Also known as: Mattat ha David of Arimathie
- Also known as: Nasi
- Also known as: Father of Joseph of Arimathea
- Also known as: Matthat Ben Levi of the Bible
- Also known as: Mattat ha David of Arimathie
- Title Of Nobility: Prince of David
- Affiliation: a member of the Sanhedrin
- LifeSketch: Matthat son of Levi ben Melchi Birthdate: circa 67 BC Birthplace: Northern Kingdom,, Israel Death: -1 (61-70) Galile Judea,, Nazareth, Yizrael, North District, Israel Immediate Family: Son of Levi Ben Melchi Husband of Salome; Rachel of Arimathea and Esthra / Estha Father of : JoAnna of Arimathea; Saint Joseph of Arimathea; Saint Joachim; Heli ben Matat and Bianca Brother of Panther ben Levi and Orodes (Herodius) ben Levi __________________________________________________ About Matthat . ., Son of Levi ben Melchi 40th generation descendant of King David. MATTHAT: gift of God. The son of Levi, and father of Heli (Luke 3:24). Easton's Bible Dictionary (gift of God), a form of the name Matthan. son of Levi, in the genealogy of Christ. (Luke 3:20) (B.C. after 623.) Grandfather of the Virgin Mary. (Luke 3:21) Smith's Bible Dictionary Prince Mattathias and Princess Alexandra II - The Paternal Grandparents of the Maiden, Miriam Mary’s father, Heli or Alexander Helios III as he was known in history, was a Prince of David, whose father, Prince Mattan or Mattathias was renown, if for nothing else but his marriages to three notable women in Judea. His 1st wife was Esther of Jerusalem, his 2nd, Rachel of Arimathea, and his 3rd wife was Salome of Jerusalem, an Idumean Herodian princess, who was called “The Proselyte”. His 1st wife, Esther of Jerusalem, became the mother of Heli ben Mattat or Prince Alexander Helios III. He became the father of Mary, the mother of Jesus. Esther of Jerusalem can be identified as the future Maccabee Queen known by her Greek name as Queen Alexandra II, who was the great grandmother of Yeshua (Jesus). Yet, who were the other step-mothers, of Jesus’ grandfather, Heli, and who were Heli’s other siblings? Wives and Children of Mattathias, (Mattat ben Levi) Prince of David Three Wives of Prince Mattat ___________________________ |________________________ |........................................|........................................| Princess Alexandra II.....Rachel of Arimathea.....Salome of Jerusalem (Elizabeth of Jerusalem) “The Proselyte” Maccabee Daughter of King Hyrcanus |........................................|........................................| Heli (Alexander III HeliosI).....Joseph of Arimathea.....Prince Gjor Alexandra III |........................................|........................................| The “Temple Virgin” Miriam.....Josephes “King of the Jews” | Enygeus Simon V Bar Gjora Yehoshua ben Miriam (Jesus son of Mary) __________________________________________________ Though the evidence is only circumstantial, it is suggested by David Hughes and other genealogist that the wife of Mattan ben Levi, called Esther of Jerusalem, was actually the Jewish name of the last Maccabee Queen, whose later Greek regnal name was Queen Alexandra II. Before Alexandra became a Maccabee Queen with her 2nd marriage to Maccabee King Alexander II, her cousin, and later her 3rd marriage to Maccabee King Antigonus, also her cousin, she was married to a Nasi and Prince of Israel, called Mattathias. Was this Mattathias also the person as Mattan ben Levi, the father of Heli, the grandfather of Mary, and the great grandfather of Yehoshua (Jesus)? The evidence suggests the affirmative. The name of the children of this union between Mattathias, the Nasi and Prince of Israel and Princess Alexandra II, prior to 49 BCE was Prince Alexander III Helios (the Biblical Heli) and his sister, Princess Alexandra III. This young Davidian and Maccabee princess later became the wife of Ptolemy Bar Mennius, a Babylonian Exilarch whose descendants are traced to Europe today. We ask again, was this Davidian Nasi Prince Mattan ben Levi, the same Nasi as Prince Mattathias, who married the Maccabee Princess, and future Maccabee Queen, as the daughter of the Maccabee Priest-King Hyrcanus II and through this union had a son called Prince Alexander III “Helios”? __________________________________________________ Luke 3:24 - Which was the son of Matthat, which was the son of Levi, which was the son of Melchi, which was the son of Janna, which was the son of Joseph, https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/scriptures/nt/luke/3.24?lang=eng&clang=eng#p24 Il figlio di Levi (3) e il padre di Eli (2), e il bisnonno di Gesù Lu 3:24. ________________________________________________ According to medieval legends, José de Arimatea was younger brother of Joaquín, the father of the Virgin Mary, which makes him uncle uncle of Jesus. He became tutor of the Nazarene after the early death of San José, María's husband. It is also said that it was a decurion of the Roman Empire, a kind of minister, in charge of the exploitation of lead and tin. For the Middle Ages, legends were created that attributed the transfer of the Shroud, the Grail and other relics from the city of Jerusalem to other sites in the Mediterranean basin. The first to develop this idea was Robert de Boron in his poem Joseph d'Arimathe (Joseph of Arimathea). The truth is that the four evangelists agree in telling the same episode where Saint Joseph of Arimathea intervened. Jesus just died on the cross, Peter denied him three times in public, the apostles disperse, but this man asks the Roman procurator Pontius Pilate to allow him to bury the body of Jesus. With the help of Nicodemus, he unlocks the body of the cross and buries it in his own tomb, a new tomb, recently excavated in the rock, where the basilica of the Holy Sepulcher is located. They wrapped it in linen cloths and placed it in the grave with a large stone in the entrance. Because of this, the Catholic tradition has him as patron of embalmers and gravediggers. Its celebration in the catholic santoral is celebrated on March 17.
- Fact: a member of the Sanhedrin
- Fact: Father of Joseph of Arimathea
- Fact: Father of Joseph of Arimathea
- Fact: Father of Joseph of Arimathea
- Fact: Father of Joseph of Arimathea
- Death: 1, Nazareth, Galilee, Judea, Kingdom of Jerusalem
- Burial: 1, Nazareth, Galilee, Judea, Kingdom of Jerusalem
- Partnership with: Salome of Jerusalem
- Child: Alexander III Helios Heli Eli BEN MATTHAT ha David Birth: ABT 80 BC, Judea, Roman Empire
- Child: Zachariah BEN MATTHAT of Abijah Birth: ABT 60 BC
- Child: Heli BEN MATTHAT tribe of Nathan Birth: ABT 80 BC, Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel
- Child: Joseph ben Matthat of Rameh Birth: 33 BC, Rameh near Sophim, Mount Ephraim, Arimathea, Kingdom of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Isreal
Ancestors of Matthat ben Levi ben Melchi of Arimathea
/-Esli or Eslim BEN NAGGE
/-Nahum BEN ESLI
/-Amos BEN NAHUM
| \-Johanna Bint SIMON
/-Mattathias BEN AMOS
| | /-Johanan Ben JOIADA
| | /-Juddua Ben JOHANNAN
| | /-Onias ben JUDDA
| | /-Simon ben ONIAS (Emporer "The Just")
| \-Isha Ha AMOS
/-Joseph BEN MATTATHIAS ha-David
| | /-Simon
| \-Yalpath bint Simon
/-Janna or Johanna BEN JOSEPH ha-David
| \-Yulpath bat Simon de Just
/-Melchi Achim BEN JANA ha-David
| | /-Esli or Eslim BEN NAGGE
| | /-Nahum BEN ESLI
| | /-Amos BEN NAHUM
| | | \-Johanna Bint SIMON
| | /-Mattathias BEN AMOS
| | | | /-Johanan Ben JOIADA
| | | | /-Juddua Ben JOHANNAN
| | | | /-Onias ben JUDDA
| | | | /-Simon ben ONIAS (Emporer "The Just")
| | | \-Isha Ha AMOS
| | /-Joseph BEN MATTATHIAS ha-David
| | | | /-Simon
| | | \-Yalpath bint Simon
| \-Joanna BINT JOSEPH Of Israel
| \-Yulpath bat Simon de Just
/-Levi ben Melchi ha-David of Arimathea
| \-Johanna BINT JOSEPH
Matthat ben Levi ben Melchi of Arimathea
| /-Eliud ben Ackim HA DAVID of Judae
| /-Eleazar BEN ELIUD
| | \-Awad
\-Pauline bint Eleazar of Judea
\-Hayat DE JERUSALEM
Descendants of Matthat ben Levi ben Melchi of Arimathea
1 Matthat ben Levi ben Melchi of Arimathea
=Salome of Jerusalem
2 Alexander III Helios Heli Eli BEN MATTHAT ha David
=Hanna BAT YEHOSHUA III ha-Kohen
3 Virgin MARY of Nazareth
=Joseph BEN JACOB of Nazareth Marriage: MAY 1, Nazareth, Israel
3 Salome BEN JACOB
2 Zachariah BEN MATTHAT of Abijah
2 Heli BEN MATTHAT tribe of Nathan
2 Joseph ben Matthat of Rameh
=Rachel Anna Alyuba BINT SIMON ELEAZOR The Prophetess Of Arimathaea
3 Matthat Ben Joseph D'ISRAEL
=Enygeus LEVI
=Anna GRATIENNE
3 Brons ALAN
3 Mandubratius Arch Druid SILURIA
3 Anna of Ancient Arimathea QUEEN
3 Anna or Don verch MATHONWY
3 Anna of Arimathea QUEEN
- Father: Jonathon BEN ANNAS High Priest
- Also known as: King of the Benjamite Tribe Cyrus of Magdala
- Also known as: King Cyrus of Magdala
- Also known as: Hérode I Le Grand Roi d'Israël
- Also known as: King Herod "The Great" Cyrus (La Tour) of Magdala
- Also known as: King Herod "The Great" Cyrus (La Tour) of Magdala
- Also known as: King Cyrus of Magdala
- Also known as: Hérode I Le Grand Roi d'Israël
- Also known as: Hérode I Le Grand Roi d'Israël
- Also known as: King Cyrus of Magdala
- Also known as: King Herod "The Great" Cyrus (La Tour) of Magdala
- Also known as: Hérode I Le Grand Roi d'Israël
- Also known as: King Cyrus of Magdala
- Also known as: King Herod "The Great" Cyrus (La Tour) of Magdala
- Matthew Syro Levi Alphaeus Syrus Ben Jairus: https://www.genealogieonline.nl/en/genealogy-heynen/P6783.php
- Possible Son of Annas, the Chief Priest: https://www.geni.com/people/Matthias-ben-Ananus-High-Priest-of-Iudaea/6000000021729702967
- Title Of Nobility: (Priest Jairus)
- Title Of Nobility: Saint Lazarus
- Title Of Nobility: King of the Bengamite Tribe
- Title Of Nobility: Saint Lazarus
- Title Of Nobility: King of the Bengamite Tribe
- Title Of Nobility: Saint Lazarus
- Title Of Nobility: King of the Bengamite Tribe
- Title Of Nobility: Saint Lazarus
- Title Of Nobility: King of the Bengamite Tribe
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Ancestors of Matthew Syro
/-Uin Nig To SHOU
/-Annas or Ananus BEN SETH
/-Jonathon BEN ANNAS High Priest
Matthew Syro
Descendants of Matthew Syro
1 Matthew Syro
=Eucharia MENAHEM Essene
2 Mary MAGDELENE
=Jesus CHRIST ben Elohim
3 Sarah Damaris BAT YESHUAH
=Antenor KING OF THE WEST FRANKS IV
3 Joseph Rama Theo BEN JESUS Bishop of Saraz
2 Simon Magnus LAZARUS OF BETHANY
2 Martha OF BETHANY
- Birth: ABT 500
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Descendants of Mectilde
1 Mectilde
=Childebert OF PUY
2 Waldeca OF PUY
=(Unknown)
3 Astidius OF PUY
=(Unknown)
Ancestors of Megapenthes of Sparta
/-Tantalos of Lydia KING
/-Pelops of Pisa, Lydia and Mycenae
/-Atreus of Mycenae in ARGOS
| | /-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
/-Plisthenes of Mycenae
| | /-Dorus King of the Dorians
| | /-Tectamus King of Kreta
| | | \-Iolcus spouse of Dorus King of the DORIANS
| | /-Asterius of CRETE
| | | \-Androgeneia spouse of Tectamus King of KRETA
| | /-Minos of CRETE
| | | | /-Agenor BEN ANTENOR
| | | \-Europa of PHOENICIA
| | | | /-Nilus father of Telaphassa Queen of TYRE
| | | \-Telaphassa QUEEN of Tyre
| | /-Lycastus of CRETE
| | | | /-Lyctius of CRETE
| | | \-Itone of CRETE
| | /-Minos of CRETE
| | | | /-Japheth יפת BEN NOAH
| | | | /-Hekateros BEN JAPHETH
| | | | | \-Adataneses BAT ELIAKIM
| | | | /-Socus BEN HEKATEROS of Phrygia
| | | | | | /-Japheth יפת BEN NOAH
| | | | | \-Ankhiale BINT JAPHETH
| | | | | \-Adataneses BAT ELIAKIM
| | | | /-Corybas of the CORYBANTES
| | | | | | /-Japheth יפת BEN NOAH
| | | | | | /-Hekateros BEN JAPHETH
| | | | | | | \-Adataneses BAT ELIAKIM
| | | | | \-Combe BAT HEKATEROS of Phrygia
| | | | | | /-Japheth יפת BEN NOAH
| | | | | \-Ankhiale BINT JAPHETH
| | | | | \-Adataneses BAT ELIAKIM
| | | \-Ide of CRETE
| | | | /-Agenor BEN ANTENOR
| | | | /-Cilix ben AGENOR
| | | | | | /-Nilus father of Telaphassa Queen of TYRE
| | | | | \-Telaphassa QUEEN of Tyre
| | | \-Thebe CILIX
| | /-Catreus CRETE
| | | \-Pasiphae of CORINTH
| \-Aerope of CRETE
/-Menelaus KING of Sparta
| | /-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
Megapenthes of Sparta
\-Pieris a SLAVE
Descendants of Megapenthes of Sparta
1 Megapenthes of Sparta
=Iphiloche of SPARTA
2 Iphianira of ARGOS
=Melampus of ARGOS
3 Antiphates of ARGOS
=Zeuxippe bint Hippocoon of GREECE
2 Theanes of SPARTA
Ancestors of Megingoz von Alemannien
/-Gérold VOM ANGLACHGAU Graf im Kraichgau und Anglachgau
Megingoz von Alemannien
| /-Lendisius Leutharius ALÉMANIE
| /-Gotfrid AGILOLFING
| | | /-Willibald OF BURGUNDY
| | \-Fara Van BOURGONDIË
| | \- BURGONDE
| /-Gotfrid Herzog der Alamannen
| | | /-Theodo ALAMANNIA
| | \-Oda Theodos BAYERN
| | | /-Willibald of the Burgundians BURGANDY
| | \-Wilibalda de Borgoña
| | \-Brynhild QUEEN
| /-Houching von Alamannien
| | \-Regine Ragnetrude AGILOFINGES von Baiern
| /-Hnabi alamannischer Herzog
| | \-Hersuinda von BAYERN
\-Imma Gräfin im Kraichgau
\-Herswinde
- Father: Chlothar II of NEUSTRIA
- Mother: Haldetrude DE SOISSONS
- Birth: ABT 604, Kingdom of Neustria, Gaul, Frankish Empire
- LifeSketch: Foundation for Medieval Genealogy [MEROVECH (-after 25 Dec 604). Fredegar records that "Clotharius" sent "filium suum Maeroeum et Landericum maioris domus" to lead his troops against Berthoald maior domus of Burgundy, in the ninth year of King Theoderich's reign, and that Merovech was captured while Landeric fled[368]. Presumably he was executed as no further mention of him has been found. There must be some doubt that Merovech could have been the son of King Clotaire II. Considering that King Clotaire was born in 584, he is unlikely to have been the father of someone sent into battle in 604. It is recognised that other sons of Merovingian kings started military careers at an early age, presumably as symbolic figureheads, for example Gunthar oldest son of King Clotaire I and Theodebert, oldest son of King Chilperich I. However, Merovech could not have been more than six/seven years old at the time at the very most, which appears considerably younger than these other cases.] Wikipedia - Merovech, who was sent (by) Landéric, mayor of the palace of Neustria, to avoid Austrasien Berthoald at Arle in 604, but was caught and killed... (Note: in this interpretation he was not sent into battle, rather he was being moved for his own safety which didn't turn out so well.)
- Death: AFT 604, Kingdom of Neustria, Frankish Empire
Ancestors of Merovech
/-Chlodio Le Chevelu of the Salian FRANKS
/-Merovech of the Salian FRANKS
| | /-Genebald Duke of The East Franks
| | /-Dagobert DER FRANKEN 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
/-Childerich I FRÄNKISCHER
/-Hlodowig I DE FRÄNKS
| \-Basena von Thüringen
/-Chlothar I DER FRANKEN
| | /-Hilderic DE BOURGOGNE
| | /-Childeric DE BOURGOGNE
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Hilderic de Bourgogne Queen of the VISIGOTH
| | /-Gebica DE BOURGOGNE
| | /-Giselher I DE BOURGOGNE
| | | | /-Ariaric BALTHES
| | | | /-Aoric of the VISIGOTHS
| | | \-Grimhild OF THE VISIGOTHS
| | /-Gundicar Gebica DE BOURGOGNE
| | | \-Dietlinde OF THE GOTHS
| | /-Gundowech DE BOURGOGNE
| | | \-Bruenhild spouse of Gundicar Gebica DE BOURGOGNE
| | /-Chilperich II DE BOURGOGNE
| | | \-Caretene DE SUÉVIE
| \-Clotilde DE BOURGOGNE
| | /-Rechila of the SUEVI
| | /-Flavius RICIMER Magister militum
| | | \-Walia OF THE VISIGOTHS
| \-Caratene AGRIPPINA
| \-Alypia DE ROME
/-Chilperic I of SOISSONS
| \-Arnegunde VON THÜRINGEN
/-Chlothar II of NEUSTRIA
| \-Fredegunde Frankenkönigin
Merovech
\-Haldetrude DE SOISSONS
- Father: Chilperic I of SOISSONS
- Mother: Audovera of the FRANKS
- Birth: ABT 550, Soissons, Kingdom of Neustria, Frankish Empire
- LifeSketch: MEROVECH (-murdered Thérouanne 577, bur 584 Paris, Saint-Germain-des-Prés). Gregory of Tours names (in order) Theudebert, Merovech and Clovis as the sons of King Chilperich and Audovera[330]. Merovech was held in custody following his marriage, tonsured and sent to the monastery of Anille at Le Mans, but sought refuge in the church of St Martin at Tours before being murdered after he went into hiding in the area of Reims[331]. The Marii Episcopi Aventicensis Chronica records that "Meroveus filius Hilperici" was killed in 578[332]. m (Rouen after Easter 576) as her second husband, BRUNECHILDIS [Brunequilda/Brunechilde] of the Visigoths, widow of SIGEBERT I King of the Franks, daughter of ATANAGILDO King of the Visigoths & his wife Gosvinta --- ([545/50]-Renève-sur-Vingeanne Autumn 613, bur Autun, abbaye de Saint-Martin). Gregory records that Merovech married his uncle's widow in Rouen soon after Easter in the year following her first husband's murder[333].
- Married her nephew after her husband's death: MEROVECH (-murdered Thérouanne 577, bur 584 Paris, Saint-Germain-des-Prés). Gregory of Tours names (in order) Theudebert, Merovech and Clovis as the sons of King Chilperich and Audovera[330]. Merovech was held in custody following his marriage, tonsured and sent to the monastery of Anille at Le Mans, but sought refuge in the church of St Martin at Tours before being murdered after he went into hiding in the area of Reims[331]. The Marii Episcopi Aventicensis Chronica records that "Meroveus filius Hilperici" was killed in 578[332]. m (Rouen after Easter 576) as her second husband, BRUNECHILDIS [Brunequilda/Brunechilde] of the Visigoths, widow of SIGEBERT I King of the Franks, daughter of ATANAGILDO King of the Visigoths & his wife Gosvinta --- ([545/50]-Renève-sur-Vingeanne Autumn 613, bur Autun, abbaye de Saint-Martin). Gregory records that Merovech married his uncle's widow in Rouen soon after Easter in the year following her first husband's murder[333].
- Death: 577, Therouanne, Kingdom of Neustria, Gaul, Frankish Empire
- Burial: 584, St Germain des Prés, Kingdom of Neustria, Gaul, Frankish Empire
Ancestors of Merovech de Neustria
/-Chlodio Le Chevelu of the Salian FRANKS
/-Merovech of the Salian FRANKS
| | /-Dagobert Roi des Francs DE COLOGNE I
| | /-Genebald Duke of The East Franks
| | /-Dagobert DER FRANKEN VON KOLN
| | | | /-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
/-Childerich I FRÄNKISCHER
/-Hlodowig I DE FRÄNKS
| \-Basena von Thüringen
/-Chlothar I DER FRANKEN
| | /-Ovida DE BOURGOGNE
| | /-Hilderic DE BOURGOGNE
| | | \-Friege DE SILURIA
| | /-Childeric DE BOURGOGNE
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Hilderic de Bourgogne Queen of the VISIGOTH
| | /-Gebica DE BOURGOGNE
| | /-Giselher I DE BOURGOGNE
| | | | /-Gannebaud Balthes
| | | | /-Ariaric BALTHES
| | | | /-Aoric of the VISIGOTHS
| | | \-Grimhild OF THE VISIGOTHS
| | /-Gundicar Gebica DE BOURGOGNE
| | | \-Dietlinde OF THE GOTHS
| | /-Gundowech DE BOURGOGNE
| | | \-Bruenhild spouse of Gundicar Gebica DE BOURGOGNE
| | /-Chilperich II DE BOURGOGNE
| | | \-Caretene DE SUÉVIE
| \-Clotilde DE BOURGOGNE
| | /-Rechila of the SUEVI
| | /-Flavius RICIMER Magister militum
| | | \-Walia OF THE VISIGOTHS
| \-Caratene AGRIPPINA
| \-Alypia DE ROME
/-Chilperic I of SOISSONS
| \-Arnegunde VON THÜRINGEN
Merovech de Neustria
\-Audovera of the FRANKS
- Father: Chlodio Le Chevelu of the Salian FRANKS
- Mother: Hildegonde DE TOXANDRIE
- Birth: BET 27 OCT 411 AND 415, Kingdom of the Salian Franks, Gaul, Roman Empire
- Also known as: Merowig of the Franks
- Title Of Nobility: King of the Salien Franks.
- Clan Name: House of Merovingians
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia Gregory of Tours (II,9) reported that "Chlogio" (as he spells his name in Latin) attacked from a fort (castrum) named "Dispargum" on the edge of the "Thoringian" land, which is described as being west of the Rhine. One translation of what Gregory wrote, adding some Latin key words in square brackets: It is commonly said that the Franks came originally from Pannonia and first colonized the banks of the Rhine. Then they crossed the river, marched through Thuringia [Thoringiam transmeasse], and set up in each country district [pagus] and each city [civitas] long-haired kings chosen from the foremost and most noble family of their race. [...] They also say that Clodio, a man of high birth and marked ability among his people, was King of the Franks and that he lived in the castle of Duisberg [Dispargum castrum] in Thuringian territory [in terminum Thoringorum]. In those parts, that is towards the south, the Romans occupied the territory as far as the River Loire. [...] Clodio sent spies to the town of Cambrai. When they discovered all that they needed to know, he himself followed and crushed the Romans and captured the town. He lived there only a short time and then occupied the country up to the Somme. Some say that Merovech, the father of Childeric, was descended from Clodio.[4] This description of locations does not match the normal medieval and modern "Thuringia", which is far inland and east of the Rhine and Frankish areas.[2][5] Dispargum has therefore been interpreted many ways, for example possibly as Duisburg on the Rhine itself, or Duisburg near Brussels, or Diest, which is also in Belgium.[5] The latter two proposals would fit the geography well, because they are within striking distance of the Silva Carbonaria, and close to Toxandria, which is known to have been settled by the Salians in the time of Julian the Apostate. It requires "Thoringorum" (genitive case) to be referring to the "Civitas Tungrorum". This matches Gregory's previous mention in the same passage of how the Franks had earlier settled on the banks of the Rhine and then moved into "Thoringia" on the left side of the Rhine. **************************** Wikipedia- Merovech is the semi-legendary founder of the Merovingian dynasty of the Salian Franks (although either Childeric I, his supposed son, or Clovis I, his supposed grandson, also can be considered the founder), which later became the dominant Frankish tribe. He is proposed to be one of several barbarian warlords and kings that joined forces with the Roman general Aetius against the Huns under Attila at the Battle of the Catalaunian Plains in Gaul. The family of Childeric and Clovis, the first Frankish large-scale royal dynasty called themselves Merovingians ("descendants of Meroveus") after him, and this was known to historians in the following centuries, but no more contemporary evidence exists. The most important such written source, Gregory of Tours, recorded that Merovech was said to be descended from Chlodio, a roughly contemporary Frankish warlord who pushed from the Silva Carbonaria in modern central Belgium as far south as the Somme, north of Paris in modern-day France. The name "Merovech" is related to Marwig, lit. "famed fight" (compare modern Dutch mare "news, rumour"/vermaard "famous" as well as "(ge)vecht," "fight" with" -vech)." There is little information about him in the later histories of the Franks. Gregory of Tours named him only once as the father of Childeric I, but remained vague about his relationship to Chlodio. The "Chronicle of Fredegar" recounts that Merovech was born after Chlodio's wife encountered a sea creature while bathing in the sea; according to Fredegar it remained unclear whether Merovech's father was the creature or Chlodio. Another theory considers this legend to be the creation of a mythological past needed to back up the fast-rising Frankish rule in Western Europe. Clodio is said to have been defeated by Flavius Aëtius at Vicus Helena in Artois in 448. Historian Ian S. Wood therefore would place his son somewhere in the second half of the fifth century. A contemporary Roman historian, Priscus, writes of having witnessed in Rome a "lad without down on his cheeks as yet and with fair hair so long that it poured down his shoulders, Aetius had made him his adopted son," Priscus writes that the excuse Attila used for waging war on the Franks was the death of their king and the disagreement of his children over the succession, the elder being allied with Attila and the younger with Aetius. As Chlodio died just before Attila's invasion, this seems to suggest that Merovech was in fact Chlodio's son. The legend about Merovech's conception was adapted in 1982 by Michael Baigent, Richard Leigh and Henry Lincoln in their book "The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail," as the seed of a new idea. They hypothesized that this "descended from a fish" legend actually referred to the concept that the Merovingian line had married into the bloodline of Jesus Christ, since the symbol for early Christians also had been a fish. This theory, with no other basis than the authors' hypothesis, was further popularized in 2003 via Dan Brown's bestselling novel, "The Da Vinci Code." However, there was no evidence for this claim that Merovech is descended from Jesus. The identity and historicity of Merovech is one of the driving mysteries in "The Widow’s Son," second book of Robert Anton Wilson’s "The Historical Illuminatus Chronicles," first introducing the fish legend to the reader by having the early Merovingians appear in a vision as a hideous fish creature resembling H. P. Lovecraft’s Deep Ones, before settling on a variation on "Holy Blood, Holy Grail," which goes a step further by identifying Jesus and Mary Magdalene as the bridegroom and bride in "The Alchemical Marriage of Christian Rosycross" and Merovech as the titular Widow's Son from Masonic lore and positing that the entire bloodline is descended from alien-human hybrids. -- Wikiwand: Merovech
- Death: 14 JUN 458, Tournai, Kingdom of the Salian Franks, Gaul, Roman Empire
- Burial: 458, Tournai, Kingdom of the Salian Franks, Gaul, Roman Empire
Ancestors of Mérovée King of the Salian Franks
/-Chlodio Le Chevelu of the Salian FRANKS
Mérovée King of the Salian Franks
| /-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
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Descendants of Misstress
1 Misstress
=Richard OF YORK 3rd Duke of York
2 John NORMAN OF YORK
=Agnes de Forrest
3 John NORMAN
=Elizabeth DODKIN
3 Robertt NORMAN
2 Mary, Duchess of York PLANTAGENET
Ancestors of Mithridate VII, Eupator Dyonisos DE PONT EUXIN-DE SYRIE
Mithridate VII, Eupator Dyonisos DE PONT EUXIN-DE SYRIE
| /-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
| | | | | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | | | | /-Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | | | | \-Apama of PERSIA
| | | | | /-Spitamenes Satrap of BAKTRIA
| | | | | | | /-Pharnavaz father of DASKALYTIS
| | | | | | \-Daskalytis spouse of Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | | \-Apama I of BACTRIA
| | | | | /-Pharnaces Arshamid Daskyleion I
| | | | | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | | | \-Apame Amastris DASCYLIUM
| | | | | /-Artaxerxes II Memnon DE PERSE
| | | | \-Apama of PERSIA
| | | | \-Stateira Hydarnid D'ARMÉNIE
| | \-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
| | | | | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | | | | /-Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | | | | \-Apama of PERSIA
| | | | | /-Spitamenes Satrap of BAKTRIA
| | | | | | | /-Pharnavaz father of DASKALYTIS
| | | | | | \-Daskalytis spouse of Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | | \-Apama I of BACTRIA
| | | | | /-Pharnaces Arshamid Daskyleion I
| | | | | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | | | \-Apame Amastris DASCYLIUM
| | | | | /-Artaxerxes II Memnon DE PERSE
| | | | \-Apama of PERSIA
| | | | \-Stateira Hydarnid D'ARMÉNIE
| | | /-Andromachos SELEUKID
| | | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas DE MACÉDOINE
| | \-Laodice II of SYRIA
| | | /-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
| | | | | /-Agesilaus II of SPARTA
| | | | | /-Archidamus III 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
| /-Antiochus KING IV, Epiphanes, of the Seleucid Empire
| | | /-Mithridates KING II, of Pontus
| | \-Laodice III, Queen Consort of the Seleucid Empire
| | \-Laodike VON SYRIEN
\-laodice de Pont EUXIN
| /-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
Ancestors of Mithridates
/-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
Mithridates
\-Apame
Ancestors of Mithridates I of Phrygien
/-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
/-Pharnaces Arshamid Daskyleion I
Mithridates I of Phrygien
Ancestors of Mithridates I King of Achaemenid Media Atropatene Kingdom of Armenia
/-Ariobarzanes Prince
Mithridates I King of Achaemenid Media Atropatene Kingdom of Armenia
Descendants of Mithridates I King of Achaemenid Media Atropatene Kingdom of Armenia
1 Mithridates I King of Achaemenid Media Atropatene Kingdom of Armenia
=Daughter of Tigraes II Wife of Mithradates I of MEDIA
2 Ariobarzanes KING I, of Media Atropatene
=(Unknown)
3 Artavasdes King I of Media ATROPATENE
=Laodice Queen of Parthia of the Parthian EMPIRE
= DAUGHTER
=Antiochis de COMMAGENE
=Athenais of Media Atropatene
=Evranduni DE COMMAGENE
=Athenais Philostorgos II, Roman Client Queen of Cappadocia
=Laodice QUEEN VII, Thea Philadelphus of Commagene
Descendants of Monime, Greek Macedonian Noblewoman
1 Monime, Greek Macedonian Noblewoman
=Mithridates OF PONTUS VI
2 Athenais PHILOSTORGOS II
Ancestors of Neustra d'Ardennes
/-Chlodebaud König von Köln
/-Aldaric OF ARDENNES
| \-Amalaberge VON SACHSEN Königin von Köln
/-Waudbert I DE POUTHIEU D'ARDENNES
| | /-Childebert OF COLOGNE
| \-Argotta DES OSTROGOTHS
| | /-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
/-Brunulphe I D’ARDENNES
| \-Lucille DE PANNONIE
/-Brunolf IV D`ARDENNES
| \-Crotechielde Fredegonde D`OSTROGOTHIE
Neustra d'Ardennes
\-Clotilde DE NEUSTRIE
\-Audovere DE SOISSONS
- Father: Angilbert DE PONTHIEU
- Mother: Bertha spouse of ANGILBERT
- Birth: ABT 795, Centuille, Ponthieu, France
- Also known as: Nithard 'the Chronicler'
- Also known as: Nidthard de Ponthieu
- Also known as: Nidthard de Ponthieu
- Also known as: Nidthard de Ponthieu
- Also known as: Nidthard de Ponthieu
- BATTLE OF FONTENOY: He served his cousin Charles the Bald in both war and peace, fighting at his side during the Carolingian civil war and at the battle of Fontenoy in June 841.
- Historiae or De dissensionibus filiorum Ludovici pii: At the request of Charles the Bald, Nithard wrote 'Historiae or De dissensionibus filiorum Ludovici pii' (“On the Dissensions of the Sons of Louis the Pious”) which deals with the discord between the sons of Louis during the years 840–843., 843, Austrasia
- ABBOT OF SAINT-RIQUIER: In 843 Charles made Nithard lay abbot of Saint-Riquier, a position he held for only a few months before he died in a battle against the forces of Pippin II of Aquitaine., 843, Saint-Riquier, Seine-Maritime, Upper Normandy, France
- WOUNDED FIGHTING NORSEMEN NEAR ANGOULEME: It is probable that Nithard died as the result of wounds received whilst fighting against the Northmen near Angoulême., 844, Angoulême, Charente, Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France
- Clan Name: CAROLINGIAN DYNASTY
- Find A Grave: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/101487737/nithard-de_ponthieu
- LifeSketch: Nithard (790-845), a Frankish historian, was the grandson of Charlemagne, by Bertha, a daughter of the great emperor. His father was Angilbert. He appears to have served his cousin, Charles the Bald, on peaceful errands and also on the field of battle. He fought for Charles at Fontenoy in June 841; he died as the result of wounds received whilst fighting for him against the Northmen near Angoulãeme. The date of his death was probably June 14 or May 15, 844 or 845. "Nithard's historical work consists of four books on the history of the Carolingian empire under the turbulent sons of the emperor Louis I, especially during the troubled period between 840 and 843. The Historiae or De dissensionibus filiorum Ludovici pii (On the Dissensions of the Sons of Louis the Pious) is valuable for the light which it throws upon the causes which led to the disintegration of the Carolingian empire. Although rough in style, partisan in character and sometimes incorrect in detail, the books are the work of a man who had an intimate knowledge of the events which he relates, who possessed a clear and virile mind, and who above all was not a recluse but a man of action. They are dedicated to Charles the Bald, at whose request they were written." ________________________________________________ Nithard "The Chronicler" Abbot of St. Riquier Born: Abt 795, Centuille, Ponthieu, France Died: Abt 843 Nithard "The Chronicler" Frankish historian, son of Angilbert and Bertha, daughter of Charlemagne; died about 843 or 844 in the wars against the Normans. Little is known about his early life, but in the quarels between the sons of Louis the Pious he proved a zealous adherent of Charles the Bald, by whose command he went as ambassador to Lothair in 840, though without success. At the battle of Fontenoy, in 841, he fought bravely at the side of Charles, and afterwards wrote, at the request of that prince, the history of the period in order to establish the right of Charles the Bald. This work, which usually bears the title: "De dissensionibus filiorum Ludovici Pii ad annum usque 843, seu Historiarum libri quaattuor 841-843", recites in rather uncouth language the causes of the quarrels and describes, minutely and clearly, the unjust behaviour of Lothair, sometimes a little partially, but with understanding and a clear insight into the conditions. He was the only layman of his time who devoted himself to the writing of a history, and he reported earnestly and truthfully what he himself had seen and heard. It is very probable that he was lay abbot of St. Riquier. His body was buried there, and when it was found, in the eleventh century, Mico, the poet of the abbey, composed a lengthy rhymed epitaph. Nithard's historical work has been published by Migne in "P. L.", CXVI, 45-76. http://www.deloriahurst.com/deloriahurst%20page/3038.html ________________________________________________ Nithard (c. 795–844), a Frankish historian, was the son of Charlemagne's daughter Bertha. His father was Angilbert. Nithard was born sometime around the year Charlemagne was crowned Imperator Augustus in December 800. He was probably raised either at the imperial palace, where his mother continued to live until the death of the emperor, or at the monastery of St. Riquier, where his father was lay abbot. He would have been educated most likely at the imperial schola, which offered the kind of high-quality instruction in both military and literary training he is known to have received. Nithard himself later became lay abbot of St Riquier in commendam. He served his cousin Charles the Bald in both war and peace, fighting at his side during the Carolingian civil war and at the battle of Fontenoy in June 841. It is probable that he died as the result of wounds received whilst fighting for him against the Northmen near Angoulême. The date of his death is disputed among scholars, but consensus is now for June 14, 844. In the 11th century his body, with the fatal wound still visible, was found in the grave of his father, Angilbert. Nithard's historical work consists of four books on the history of the Carolingian empire under the turbulent sons of the emperor Louis I, especially during the turbulent period between 838 and 843. The Historiae or De dissensionibus filiorum Ludovici pii (On the Dissensions of the Sons of Louis the Pious) is valuable for the light which it throws upon the causes which led to the disintegration of the Carolingian empire. Nithard's work has been described as a "nostalgic lament": In the times of Charles the Great of good memory, who died almost thirty years ago, peace and concord ruled everywhere because our people were treading the one proper way, the way of the common welfare, and thus the way of God. But now since each goes his separate way, dissension and struggle abound. Once there was abundance and happiness everywhere, now everywhere there is want and sadness The first three of these books were written before Nithard's appointment as lay-abbey of St-Riquier in the winter of 842, the fourth and final in spring of 843 after taking up office there. Although rough in style, partisan in character and sometimes incorrect in detail, the books are the work of a man who had an intimate knowledge of the events which he relates, who possessed a clear and virile mind, and who above all was not a recluse but a man of action. They are dedicated to Charles the Bald, at whose request they were written. His work as a military intellectual places him in the tradition of Xenophon, Julius Caesar, Ammianus Marcellinus, and Flavius Merobaudes. For the military historian, Nithard's description of the complex exercises of cavalry in Gaul is particularly valuable as a supplement to the account in the Tactical Handbook of Arrian as well as for its insight into Carolingian techniques. Only two manuscripts of the Historiae survived, one roughly contemporary and an incomplete Renaissance-era text useless in the reconstruction of the text. . The standard critical edition of Nithard (with French translation) is that of Philippe Lauer, Histoire des fils de Louis le Pieux, Paris: Champion, 1926. . The 1907 Latin edition of Ernst Müller was republished in 1965 as part of the Monumenta Germaniae Historica series. An English translation by Bernhard Walter Scholz and Barbara Rogers is available in Carolingian Chronicles: Royal Frankish Annals and Nithard’s Histories (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan, 1972). ________________________________________________
- Death: 14 JUN 844, Saint-Riquier, Somme, Picardy, France
Ancestors of Nithard Comte de Ponthieu
/-Chlodebaud König von Köln
/-Aldaric OF ARDENNES
| \-Amalaberge VON SACHSEN Königin von Köln
/-Waudbert I DE POUTHIEU D'ARDENNES
| | /-Childebert OF COLOGNE
| \-Argotta DES OSTROGOTHS
| \-Amalaberge VON METZ OF FRANKS AT COLOGNE
/-Landry Walbert II D'ARDENNES DE PONTHIEU-DE PANNONIE
| | /-Flavius Zeno Perpetuus Augustus Eastern ROMAN Emperor
| | /-Zenon II Roman Emperor of the EAST
| | | \-Ariadne Ou la Princess Ajdane, Imperatrice DE CONSTANTINOPLE D'ORIENT
| \-Lucille Tarasicodissa DE BYZANCE
| | /-Leo Thrax Magnus Eastern EMPEROR
| \-Ariadne DE PANNONIE De Panonnie
| \-Verina
/-Wedulphe III DE THEROUANNE DE LOMMOIS
| | /-Bissingh I VON THURINGEN
| | /-Hermanfried VON THURINGEN
| | | \-Basine VAN KEULEN
| | /-Analfried VON THURINGEN
| | | | /-Trasimond DER VANDALEN Prins der Vandalen
| | | \-Amalaberge D`OSTROGOTHIE
| | | \-Amalafrieda Balthes DER VANDALEN
| \-Gundolde Amalgaberge VON THURINGEN DE THEROUANNE
/-Aubert Waudbert IV DE CAMBRAI DE LOMMOIS
| | /-Berismond D`OSTROGOTHIE
| | /-Witteric D`OSTROGOTHIE
| | /-Utheric D`OSTROGOTHIE
| | /-Altharic D`OSTROGOTHIE
| | | | /-Teodomiro Pietas Amal D`OSTROGOTHIE
| | | | /-Theodoris Amal D`OSTROGOTHIE
| | | | | \-Erlicia Erelieve DE COLOGNE
| | | \-Amalasunthe D`OSTROGOTHIE
| | | \-Aldoflede DE FRANCE MEROWINGEN
| \-Clothilde D'OSTROGOTHIE
| \-Clothilde D`WISIGOTHE
/-Waudbert V Ansbert DE CAMBRAI DE LOMMOIS
| | /-Lando DE MENAPIE
| | /-Austrapius DE HESPENGAU DE MENAPIE
| | /-Carolus IV HESBAYE
| | | \-Flaustine DE MENAPIE
| | /-Carolus Charles V DE HESPENGAU
| | | | /-Kimon AQUITAINE
| | | | /-Scaramond D'AQUITAINE
| | | \-Waldrade D`AQUITAINE
| | | \-Theodolinde DE BURGUNDIE
| | /-Carloman DE HESPENGAU
| | | | /-Pepin VAN HENEGOUWEN
| | | \-Ita VON HENEGOUWEN
| \-Amalgaberga DE LANDEN
| | /-Merwig II VON THÜRINGEN
| | /-Bissingh I VON THURINGEN
| | /-Hermanfried VON THURINGEN
| | | | /-Chlodwig II Banin Ludwig VAN KEULEN
| | | \-Basine VAN KEULEN
| | | \-Wedelphe VON SACHSEN
| | /-Analfried VON THURINGEN
| | | | /-Genzo DER VANDALEN
| | | | /-Trasimond DER VANDALEN Prins der Vandalen
| | | \-Amalaberge D`OSTROGOTHIE
| | | | /-Theodoric OSTROGOTHS
| | | \-Amalafrieda Balthes DER VANDALEN
| | | \-Erlicia Erelieve DE COLOGNE
| \-Amalaberge II VON THURINGEN
/-Waudbert DE LOMMOIS VI
| | /-Raoul I VON THÜRINGEN
| | /-Hedan VON THURINGEN
| | | \-Berthilda VON THURINGEN
| \-Berthilde VON THURINGEN
| \-Berthilde spouse of Hédan I VON THÜRINGEN
/-Waudbert VII DE LOMMOIS
| \-Adeltrude MAUBEUGE von Hennegau
/-Waudebert VIII of Lommois
| | /-Duc De Bavaria THEODO II
| | /- THEUDEBERT II
| \-Aldegonde DE BAVIÈRE
| \-Imma of ALAMANNIA
/-Angilbert DE PONTHIEU
| | /-Clodgar de Therouanne DE BOULOGNE
| | /-Haymon DE BOULOGNE
| | | \-Gania OF CORNOUAILLE Princess of Britton
| | /-Chrodulphe DE BOULOGNE de Cambrai
| | | | /-Scaremond Severus AQUITANIE
| | | \-Maurianne d'Aquitaine DE COLOGNE
| | | \-Bobilla DE LYON
| | /-Chrodbert OF BOULOGNE
| | | \-Avicie de Cambrai DE BOULOGNE
| | /-Theudric Thierry BOULOGNE
| | | \-Isabeau de PONTHIEU
| | /-Folkmar Count of BOULOGNE
| | | \-Richilde de NEUSTRIA
| | /-Wilbert DE BOULOGNE
| | | \-- Boulogne VON SACHSEN
| | /-Walmar DE BOULOGNE
| | | \-Ada Wilbert Boulogne DE FAMARS
| | /-Thierry II DE PONTHIEU
| | | \-Marie DE PONTHIEU
| \-Ermengarde DE PONTHIEU
| | /-Theodoric de Thuringe D'AUSTRASIE
| \-Berthilde DE THURINGE
| | /-Raoul I VON THÜRINGEN
| | /-Hedan VON THURINGEN
| | | \-Berthilda VON THURINGEN
| | /-Gosbert VAN THÜRINGEN
| | | \-Berthilde spouse of Hédan I VON THÜRINGEN
| \-Immina VAN THURINGEN
| \-Geilana VON WÜRZBURG
Nithard Comte de Ponthieu
| /-Arnulf Bischof von Metz
| /-Ansegisel Maior Domus
| | \-Doda
| /-Pippin II VON HERSTAL Maior Domus
| | | /-Karlmann von Landen
| | | /-Pippin DER ÄLTERE Maior Domus
| | | | | /-Garibald I, Herzog der Bajuwaren in Baiern
| | | | \-Gertrudis von Baiern
| | | | | /-Zuchilo Herzog und Feldherr
| | | | | /-Wacho König der Langobarden
| | | | \-Waldrada von den Langobarden
| | | | | /-Elemund King of the Gepids
| | | | \-Austrigusa Königin der Langobarden
| | \-Begga von Herstal
| | \-Ittaberga DE NIVELLES
| /-Karl MARTELL Maior Domus
| | \-Chalpaida
| /-Pippin III der Jüngere DER FRANKEN
| | | /-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
| | | | | /-Desiderius BISHOP von Verdun
| | | | | /-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
| | | | | /-Theodebald I BAVARIANS
| | | | \-Garitrudis BAYERN Hamage
| | | | \-Blithildis OF KÖLN
| | | /-Leutwinus VAN TRIER Bishop of Treves
| | | | | /-Chodulphe de Metz
| | | | \-Gunza DE METZ von Trier
| | | | \-Hilda de Landen
| | \-Chrotrude
| | \-Willigarde VON BAYERN DE TREVES
| /-Karolus Magnus Rex Francorum Imperator ROMANORUM
| | | /-Unknown Graf VON LAON
| | | /-Charibert von Laon Graf von Laon
| | | | | /-Theotar dux
| | | | | /-Hugues D'AUSTRASIA Mayor of the Palace
| | | | | /-Hugobert Seneschall und Pfalzgraf
| | | | \-Bertrada DIE ÄLTERE
| | | | \-Irmina VON OEREN Äbtissin von Oeren
| | \-Bertrada DIE JÜNGERE von Laon
\-Bertha spouse of ANGILBERT
| /-Gérold VOM ANGLACHGAU Graf im Kraichgau und Anglachgau
\-Hildegard von Vinzgau FRÄNKISCHE
| /-Lendisius Leutharius ALÉMANIE
| /-Gotfrid AGILOLFING
| | | /-Willibald OF BURGUNDY
| | \-Fara Van BOURGONDIË
| | \- BURGONDE
| /-Gotfrid Herzog der Alamannen
| | | /-Theodo ALAMANNIA
| | \-Oda Theodos BAYERN
| | | /-Willibald of the Burgundians BURGANDY
| | \-Wilibalda de Borgoña
| | \-Brynhild QUEEN
| /-Houching von Alamannien
| | \-Regine Ragnetrude AGILOFINGES von Baiern
| /-Hnabi alamannischer Herzog
| | \-Hersuinda von BAYERN
\-Imma Gräfin im Kraichgau
\-Herswinde
Descendants of Nithard Comte de Ponthieu
1 Nithard Comte de Ponthieu
=Hiltrude DE HAINAUT
2 Helgaud II DE PONTHIEU
=Berthe de PONTHIEU Marriage: ABT 826
3 Helouin I DE PONTHIEU
=Helissende DE RAMERUPT
3 Hildoin MONTDIDIER I
=Oñeca IÑIGUEZ Princess Countess of Pomplona Marriage: ABT 824, Montreuil-sous-Bois, Neutria, Francia (Frankish Kingdom)
3 Helissende DE RAMERUPT
=Helouin I DE PONTHIEU
=Herlouin De MONTREUIL
3 Herlouin II DE PONTHIEU DE MOUNTDIDIER
3 Count Helgaud DE PONTHIEU
Ancestors of Noemi
/-Matthan Melchi Ben Eleazar HA-DAVID
| \-Tsamiti Ha-David of Judea
/-Hezekiah 'the Zealot' BEN MATTHAN
| | /-Eliud ben Ackim HA DAVID of Judae
| | /-Eleazar BEN ELIUD
| | | \-Awad
| \-Estha BEN ELEAZAR of Jerusalem
| \-Hayat DE JERUSALEM
/-Judas 'the Zealot' BEN HEZEKIAH of Gamla
/-Menahem BEN JUDAS The Essene
Noemi
- Father: Pharnaces OF PONTUS I
- Mother: Nysa, Queen of Pontus
- Birth: 150 BC
- Also known as: Greek: Νύσ(σ)α
- Also known as: Laodice
- Also known as: Laodice
- Title Of Nobility: She was the ruler of Cappadocia on behalf of her minor son in .
- LifeSketch: Nysa was of Greek Macedonian and Persian ancestry. She was the daughter of Pharnaces I of Pontus and queen Nysa. Her brother was Mithridates, who became Mithridates V of Pontus. She also is known as Laodice. She was the namesake of her mother, who is believed to have died during the birth of either her or Mithridates. She was born and raised in the Kingdom of Pontus. Sometime after 160 BC, she married King Ariarathes V of Cappadocia. They were distant relatives as they had lineage from the Seleucid dynasty and from the Pontian monarchs. Through this marriage Nysa became Queen of Cappadocia. Ariarathes V and Nysa were attracted to the culture of Athens. She had either given the Athenians a gift or done a favor for them. They were honored as patrons by the Technitai of Dionysus at Athens. The guild voted a decree in their honor. It placed a statue of Ariarathes V in their shrine and celebrated the birthdays of Nysa and Ariarathes V in recognition of the gifts the artists had received from them. Ariarathes V died in 130 BC and his youngest son with Nysa, Ariarathes VI of Cappadocia, succeeded him. During their marriage Nysa bore Ariarathes V, five other sons. At some point, Nysa poisoned her five other children so she might obtain the government of the Kingdom. Ariarathes VI was still too young to rule, so Nysa acted as his regent between 130 BC-126 BC. The citizens of Cappadocia - who were loyal to the ruling dynasty - had Nysa put to death on account of her cruelty and allowed Ariarathes VI to continue to reign as king. Nysa’s regency reflected a period of turbulence in the royal family which ended with her death. Her reign was the beginning of the end of this ruling dynasty of Cappadocia. Her grandchildren Ariarathes VII and Ariarathes VIII were the last kings of this dynasty. -- Wikiwand: Nysa of Cappadocia
- Title Of Nobility: Queen of Cappadocia
- Title Of Nobility: Princess from the Kingdom of Pontus
- Title Of Nobility: Queen of Cappadocia
- Title Of Nobility: Princess from the Kingdom of Pontus
- Death: 126 BC
Ancestors of Nysa, Queen of Cappadocia
/-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
| | | | | | /-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
| \-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
| | | | /-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
Nysa, Queen of Cappadocia
| /-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
| | | | | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | | | | /-Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | | | | \-Apama of PERSIA
| | | | | /-Spitamenes Satrap of BAKTRIA
| | | | | | | /-Pharnavaz father of DASKALYTIS
| | | | | | \-Daskalytis spouse of Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | | \-Apama I of BACTRIA
| | | | | /-Pharnaces Arshamid Daskyleion I
| | | | | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | | | \-Apame Amastris DASCYLIUM
| | | | | /-Artaxerxes II Memnon DE PERSE
| | | | \-Apama of PERSIA
| | | | \-Stateira Hydarnid D'ARMÉNIE
| | \-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
| | | | | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | | | | /-Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | | | | \-Apama of PERSIA
| | | | | /-Spitamenes Satrap of BAKTRIA
| | | | | | | /-Pharnavaz father of DASKALYTIS
| | | | | | \-Daskalytis spouse of Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | | \-Apama I of BACTRIA
| | | | | /-Pharnaces Arshamid Daskyleion I
| | | | | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | | | \-Apame Amastris DASCYLIUM
| | | | | /-Artaxerxes II Memnon DE PERSE
| | | | \-Apama of PERSIA
| | | | \-Stateira Hydarnid D'ARMÉNIE
| | | /-Andromachos SELEUKID
| | | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas DE MACÉDOINE
| | \-Laodice II of SYRIA
| | | /-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
| | | | | /-Agesilaus II of SPARTA
| | | | | /-Archidamus III 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
| /-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
Ancestors of Nysa, Queen of Pontus
/-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
| | | | | \-Apama I of BACTRIA
| | | \-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
| | | | | \-Apama I of BACTRIA
| | | | /-Andromachos SELEUKID
| | | | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas DE MACÉDOINE
| | | \-Laodice II of SYRIA
| | | | /-Kleomenes AGIADAI of Sparta
| | | | /-Kleonymos AGIADAI of Sparta
| | | | /-Leonidas II Agiadai of SPARTA
| | | | | | /-Archidamus IV 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
| | | | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | | | /-Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | | | \-Apama of PERSIA
| | | | /-Spitamenes Satrap of BAKTRIA
| | | | | | /-Pharnavaz father of DASKALYTIS
| | | | | \-Daskalytis spouse of Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | \-Apama I of BACTRIA
| | | | /-Pharnaces Arshamid Daskyleion I
| | | | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | | \-Apame Amastris DASCYLIUM
| | | | /-Artaxerxes II Memnon DE PERSE
| | | \-Apama of PERSIA
| | | \-Stateira Hydarnid D'ARMÉNIE
| \-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
| | | | | | /-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
| | /-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
/-Mithridates OF PONTUS VI
| | /-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
| \-Laodice QUEEN V
| | /-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
Nysa, Queen of Pontus
| /-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
| | | | | | \-Apama I of BACTRIA
| | | | \-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
| | | | | | \-Apama I of BACTRIA
| | | | | /-Andromachos SELEUKID
| | | | | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas DE MACÉDOINE
| | | | \-Laodice II of SYRIA
| | | | | /-Kleomenes AGIADAI of Sparta
| | | | | /-Kleonymos AGIADAI of Sparta
| | | | | /-Leonidas II Agiadai of SPARTA
| | | | | | | /-Archidamus IV 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
| | | | | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | | | | /-Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | | | | \-Apama of PERSIA
| | | | | /-Spitamenes Satrap of BAKTRIA
| | | | | | | /-Pharnavaz father of DASKALYTIS
| | | | | | \-Daskalytis spouse of Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | | \-Apama I of BACTRIA
| | | | | /-Pharnaces Arshamid Daskyleion I
| | | | | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | | | \-Apame Amastris DASCYLIUM
| | | | | /-Artaxerxes II Memnon DE PERSE
| | | | \-Apama of PERSIA
| | | | \-Stateira Hydarnid D'ARMÉNIE
| | \-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
| | | | | | | /-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
| | | /-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
Ancestors of Nysa, Queen 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
| | | | /-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
/-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
| | | | /-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
| | /-Andromachos SELEUKID
| | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas DE MACÉDOINE
| \-Laodice II of SYRIA
| | /-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
| | | | /-Archidamus II of SPARTA
| | | | /-Agesilaus II of SPARTA
| | | | | \-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
/-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
Descendants of Nysa, Queen of Pontus
1 Nysa, Queen of Pontus
=Pharnaces OF PONTUS I
2 Nysa, Queen of Cappadocia
2 Mithradates EUERGETES OF PONTUS V
=Laodice QUEEN V Marriage: 149, Pontos
3 Pythodoris VON PONTOS
=Sames II King of Commagene
3 Pharanaces
3 Mithridates OF PONTUS VI
=Concubine
=Laodice of PONTUS III Marriage: 1
=Antiochis DE PERGAME
=Cléopatre OF ATHAMANIE
=Unknown Spouse of Mithridates VI of PONTUS
=Kamasarye II de Bosphore DU BOSPHORE
=Hypsicratea spouse of Mithridates of PONTUS VI Marriage: 120 BC
=Monime, Greek Macedonian Noblewoman
=Kamasarye VON BOSPORUS
3 VI CLEOPATRA
=(Unknown)
3 Concubine
=Mithridates OF PONTUS VI
2 Nysa OF CAPPADOCIA
- Father: Aretas II King of Nabataea
- Birth: ABT 140 BC
- Also known as: King of Nabataea Obodas I of the Arabs
- Title Of Nobility: King of the Nabataeans
- LifeSketch: Obodas I was king of the Nabataeans from 96 BC to 85 BC. After his death, Obodas was worshiped as a deity. Obodas was the successor of Aretas II, from whom he inherited the war with the Hasmonean kingdom. He defeated them around 93 BCE on the Golan Heights. Then he ambushed Alexander Jannaeus near Gadara (Umm Qais), just east of the Sea of Galilee. Using camel cavalry, he forced Jannaeus into a valley where he completed the ambush, thereby getting revenge for the Nabateans' loss of Gaza. Moab and Gilead, two mountains east of the Dead Sea and the Jordan River, were returned. Around 86 BCE, the Seleucid ruler, Antiochus XII Dionysus, invaded Nabatea. During the Battle of Cana, Antiochus was slain and his demoralized army perished in the desert. The Nabataeans, seeing how Obodas defeated both the Hasmoneans and the Greeks, started to venerate Obodas as a god. Obodas was buried in the Negev, at a place that was renamed in his honour, Avdat. He was succeeded by his brother Aretas III.
- Death: 86 BC, Nabataea, Jordan
- Burial: 86 BC, Avdat, Negev, Southern, Israel
Ancestors of Obodas I King 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
Descendants of Obodas I King of Nabataea
1 Obodas I King of Nabataea
=Unknown Spouse of Obodas I of the ARABS
2 Eupatra
=Aretas III King of the Nabataean
3 Aretas IV King of the Nabataeans
3 Cypros or Cypris of Nabataea
=Antipater II THE IDUMAEAN Procurator of Judaea
Ancestors of Ocha
/-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
Ocha
\-Apame
Ancestors of Octern
/-Tegfan DEHEUWAINT
| | /-Edempwem ab OWAIN
| \-Wladysus verch EDENOWEN
/-Coel Hen ap Tegfan of RHEGED
Octern
\-Unknown Princess of Dumnonia and BRITTANY
Ancestors of Oda Gräfin im Wormsgau
/-Charibert in NEUSTRIEN
/-Chrodobertus I DE NEUSTRIE Bischof von Tours
| \-Wulfgurd DE HESBAYE
/-Lantbertus I in NEUSTRIEN
| \-Glismoda spouse of Chrodobertus I de Neustrie Bischof VON TOURS
/-Chrodobertus II DE NEUSTRIA
| \-Chrotlind DE NEUSTRIE
/-Lambert II in NEUSTRIEN
| \-Dota HESBYE
/-Robert I im HASPENGAUF
| \-Chrothlind spouse of Lambert II in NEUSTRIEN
/-Thuringbert im HASPENGAU
| | /-Adelhelm.im WORMSGAU
| \-Williswint im OBERRHEINGAU
| \-Alleaume von Burgund
/-Robert II im Oberrheingau und im WORMSGAU
/-Robert III im OBERRHEINGAU
| \-Theoderata spouse of Robert II im Oberrheingau und im WORMSGAU
Oda Gräfin im Wormsgau
| /-Gérold VOM ANGLACHGAU Graf im Kraichgau und Anglachgau
| /-Adrien D'ORLÉANS
| | | /-Lendisius Leutharius ALÉMANIE
| | | /-Gotfrid AGILOLFING
| | | | | /-Willibald OF BURGUNDY
| | | | \-Fara Van BOURGONDIË
| | | | \- BURGONDE
| | | /-Gotfrid Herzog der Alamannen
| | | | | /-Theodo ALAMANNIA
| | | | \-Oda Theodos BAYERN
| | | | | /-Willibald of the Burgundians BURGANDY
| | | | \-Wilibalda de Borgoña
| | | | \-Brynhild QUEEN
| | | /-Houching von Alamannien
| | | | \-Regine Ragnetrude AGILOFINGES von Baiern
| | | /-Hnabi alamannischer Herzog
| | | | \-Hersuinda von BAYERN
| | \-Imma Gräfin im Kraichgau
| | \-Herswinde
\-Waldrada spouse of Robert III im OBERRHEINGAU
\-Waldrada VON HORNBACH
- Birth: ABT 820, Herzogtum Sachsen, Fränkisches Reich
- Also known as: Oda, Bilungen De Saxe
- LifeSketch: "About 830 Liudolf married Oda, daughter of Billung and Aeda." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liudolf,_Duke_of_Saxony#Life Granddaughter of Karel de Grote: (dutch) Liudolf was gehuwd met Oda (ca. 806 - 17 mei 913), dochter van de princeps van Billung (Billungers) en Aeda, dochter van Pepijn van Italië en dus kleindochter van Karel de Grote. Oda stichtte in 885 het klooster van Calbe an der Milde en werd meer dan 100 jaar oud. Liudolf en Oda hadden twaalf kinderen. https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liudolf_van_Saksen
- Affiliation: more info plz
- Death: 17 MAY 913, Herzogtum Sachsen, Ostfrankenreich
- Burial: Gandersheim, Hzgt. Sachsen, Ostfränkisches Reich
- Partnership with: Liudolf VON SACHSEN
Marriage: ABT 832
- Child: Otto I VON SACHSEN Birth: ABT 835, Hzgt. Sachsen, Fränisches Reich
- Child: Oda VON SACHSEN Birth: 845, Hzgt. Sachsen, Fränisches Reich
- Child: Hathumoda VON SACHSEN Birth: ABT 842, Hzgt. Sachsen, Fränkisches Reich
- Child: Brun, Herzog von Sachsen Birth: ABT 833, Hzgt. Sachsen, Fränisches Reich
- Child: Liutgard VON SACHSEN Birth: ABT 845, Sachsen, Germany
- Child: Christina VON GANDERSHEIM Äbtissin Birth: 848, Hzgt. Sachsen, Fränisches Reich
Descendants of Oda Herzogin von Sachsen
1 Oda Herzogin von Sachsen
=Liudolf VON SACHSEN Marriage: ABT 832
2 Otto I VON SACHSEN
=Haduich VON BABENBERG Marriage: AFT 869
3 Heinrich I VON SACHSEN
=Mathilde Königin DES OSTFRÄNKISCHEN Marriage: 909, Wallhausen, Deutschland Marriage: 909, Wallhausen, Sangerhausen, Sachsen-Anhalt, Germany Marriage: 909, Wallhausen, Sangerhausen, Sachsen-Anhalt, Germany
=Hatheburg of Merseburg Marriage: 906
3 Ludiolf VON SACHSEN
3 Mechtild VON SACHSEN
3 Brunchild
3 Thankmar von SACHSEN
3 Oda von Sachsen
2 Oda VON SACHSEN
2 Hathumoda VON SACHSEN
2 Brun, Herzog von Sachsen
2 Liutgard VON SACHSEN
2 Christina VON GANDERSHEIM Äbtissin
- Father: Otto I VON SACHSEN
- Mother: Haduich VON BABENBERG
- Birth: ABT 880, Saxony, Ger
- Also known as: Oda von SACHSEN
- LifeSketch: -- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oda_of_Saxony -- Oda of Saxony was a Saxon princess. SHE WAS THE DAUGHTER OF Otto I, Duke of Saxony (G98N-1MN) and Hedwiga of Babenberg (L8TG-1DR). She married King Zwentibold of Lotharingia and at his death in August 900 (when Oda was younger than 15), she contracted a SECOND MARRIAGE with Gerhard I of Metz (9CD1-KW4). From this union were born: ~ Wigfried, abbot of St. Ursula in Cologne, and then archbishop of Cologne from 924 to 953. ~ Oda (Uda) of Metz (d. aft. 18 May 963), married Gozlin, Count of Bidgau and Methingau (d. 942).[2] ~ A daughter of name unknown. ~ Godfrey, count of the Jülichgau. -- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oda_of_Saxony --
- Death: AFT 2 JUL 952, Ostfrankenreich (Present Germany)
Ancestors of Oda von Sachsen
/-Bruno father of Liudolf VON SACHSE
/-Liudolf VON SACHSEN
/-Otto I VON SACHSEN
| \-Oda Herzogin von Sachsen
Oda von Sachsen
| /-Chrodobertus I DE NEUSTRIE Bischof von Tours
| /-Lantbertus I in NEUSTRIEN
| | \-Glismoda spouse of Chrodobertus I de Neustrie Bischof VON TOURS
| /-Chrodobertus II DE NEUSTRIA
| | \-Chrotlind DE NEUSTRIE
| /-Lambert II in NEUSTRIEN
| | \-Dota HESBYE
| /-Robert I im HASPENGAUF
| | \-Chrothlind spouse of Lambert II in NEUSTRIEN
| /-Cancor in ALEMANNIEN
| | | /-Adelhelm.im WORMSGAU
| | \-Williswint im OBERRHEINGAU
| | \-Alleaume von Burgund
| /-Heimrichf im OBERRHEINGAU
| | \-Angila spouse of Cancor in ALEMANNIEN
| /-Heimrich VON SAALGAU
| /-Poppo I VON GRABFELD
| /-Heinrich VON BABENBERG
| | \-Williswind spouse of Poppo I VON GRABFELD
\-Haduich VON BABENBERG
\-Ingeltrude VON FRIAUL
- Father: Gotfrid Herzog der Alamannen
- Mother: Regine Ragnetrude AGILOFINGES von Baiern
- Birth: 680, Herzogtum Bayern Frankisch Reich
- Reign: BET 737 AND 748, Herzogtum Bayern
- Clan Name: House of Agilofings
- LifeSketch: Odilo, also Oatilo or Uatilo (died 18 January 748) of the Agilolfing dynasty was Duke of Bavaria from 736 until his death. He had the Lex Baiuvariorum compilation edited, the first ancient Germanic law collection of the Bavarians. Odilo by his Agilolfing descent was an Alemannic nobleman, a son of Duke Gotfrid (d. 709) whom he succeeded in Thurgau until 736, when with the death of Hugbert of Bavaria the older line of the dynasty became extinct and he inherited the rulership of the Duchy of Bavaria. Odilo presided over the establishment of bishoprics in Bavaria in 739, when the four dioceses of Regensburg, Freising, Passau, and Salzburg were established by St. Boniface, who in 741 also founded by the Diocese of Würzburg in adjacent Franconia. His measures sparked a revolt by Bavarian nobles and the duke temporarily had to seek refuge at the court of the Frankish Mayor of the Palace Charles Martel. In 741, Odilo married Charles Martel's daughter Hiltrud, but upon the death of her father found himself at war with her brothers Carloman and Pepin the Short. He was finally defeated in 743 and had to accept Frankish overlordship over Bavaria, but remained duke. He further consolidated his rule, when he came to the aid of Prince Boruth of Carantania against repeated Avar incursions and was able to vassalize the Slavic principality in the southeast. After his death in 748, Grifo, a younger son of Charles Martel and half-brother of Odilo's widow Hiltrud, sought to establish his own rule in Bavaria and abducted Odilo's infant son Tassilo III. However, the next year he was defeated by Pepin the Short who installed seven-year-old Tassilo III as Duke of Bavaria. Odilo is accepted as the founder of the abbeys of Benediktbeuern (in 739), Niederaltaich (741), and Mondsee (748), as well as a number of others. He was buried at Gengenbach Abbey in Alamannia. References Borgolte Michael, Die Grafen Alemanniens in merowingischer und karolingischer Zeit. Eine Prosopographie, Jan Thorbecke Verlag Sigmaringen 1986. Borgolte Michael, Geschichte der Grafschaften Alemanniens in fränkischer Zeit, Jan Thorbecke Verlag Sigmaringen 1984. Geuenich, Dieter, Geschichte der Alemannen, Verlag W. Kohlhammer Stuttgart Berlin Köln 1997. - Odilo, ein Sohn von Gotfrid, stammte mütterlicherseits aus dem bairischen Herzogsgeschlecht der Agilolfinger. Der Herzog aber, der dem Volke vorsteht, ist allezeit auf dem Geschlecht der Agilolfinger gewesen und muss es sein..., bestimmte das bairische Stammesrecht, das Lex Baiuvariorum. Im Jahr 736 erfolgte der Regierungsantritt Herzog Odilos als Nachfolger Hugberts. Odilo verwirklichte im Jahr 739 die bairische Diözesaneinteilung. Die Bistümer Regensburg, Freising, Passau und Salzburg wurden kirchenrechtlich gegründet und ihre Grenzen festgelegt; der Herzog blieb aber Kirchenoberhaupt. Im Jahr 742 heiratete Odilo mit Hiltrud eine Tochter des fränkischen Hausmeiers Karl Martell, mit dessen Söhnen Karlmann und Pippin der Jüngere es im darauffolgenden Jahr (743) zum Konflikt kam. Odilo unterlag in der Schlacht bei Epfach am Lech, floh und musste dann mit dem Friedensschluss von 744 die fränkische Oberhoheit über Baiern bestätigen. Odilo behielt sein Herzogtum. Später im Jahr führte Karlmann dann noch eine Strafexpedition gegen die Ostsachsen durch, die mit Odilo in den Kampf gezogen waren. Herzog Odilo starb im Jahr 748. Nach seinem Tod versuchte Grifo, Baiern aus der Oberhoheit des Frankenreiches zu befreien. Zusammen mit dem Grafen Swidger entführte er die Witwe Odilos und dessen Sohn, den späteren Tassilo III. Pippin musste im Jahr 749 erneut gegen das bairische Stammesherzogtum ziehen. Nach seinem Sieg wurde Odilos Sohn Tassilo III., geb. 741, unter der Vormundschaft seiner Mutter Hiltrud zum Nachfolger seines Vaters ernannt. Odilo gilt als Gründer der Klöster Benediktbeuern im Jahr 739, Niederaltaich (mit Pirmin) im Jahr 741 und Mondsee im Jahr 748 im heutigen Oberösterreich und noch einer Reihe weiterer Klöster, darunter die Zelle zu Chammünster.[1] Herzog Odilo wurde im Kloster Gengenbach im Ortenaukreis, das von Pirmin bereits im Jahr 727 gegründet wurde, beerdigt
- Death: Herzogtum Bayern Frankisch Reich
- Burial: Kloster Gengenbach, Hzgt. Bayern
Ancestors of Odilo Herzog der Bajuwaren in Baiern.
/-Lendisius Leutharius ALÉMANIE
/-Gotfrid AGILOLFING
| | /-Willibald OF BURGUNDY
| \-Fara Van BOURGONDIË
| \- BURGONDE
/-Gotfrid Herzog der Alamannen
| | /-Theodo ALAMANNIA
| \-Oda Theodos BAYERN
| | /-Willibald of the Burgundians BURGANDY
| \-Wilibalda de Borgoña
| \-Brynhild QUEEN
Odilo Herzog der Bajuwaren in Baiern.
\-Regine Ragnetrude AGILOFINGES von Baiern
- Birth: ABT 810, Wantage, Wessex
- Also known as: Osburhga
- Also known as: Osburga
- Also known as: Osburh
- Also known as: Osburh of Wight
- Also known as: Osburga
- Also known as: Osburh of Wight
- WIFE OF THE KING ...BUT NOT QUEEN: In accordance with ninth century West Saxon custom, Osburh was not given the title of queen. According to King Alfred, this was because of the infamous conduct of a former queen of Wessex called Eadburh, who had accidentally poisoned her husband.
- Affiliation: Royal House of Wessex (by marriage)
- Osburhga and King Æthelwulf had 6 Children: Æthelstan, Æthelswith, Æthelbald, Æthelbert, Æthelred, Alfred
- LifeSketch: Osburhga, or Osburh, (also known as Osburhga Oslacsdotter) was the first wife of King Æthelwulf of Wessex and mother of Alfred the Great. Alfred's biographer, Asser, described her as "a most religious woman, noble in character and noble by birth" Osburhga's existence is known only from Asser's Life of King Alfred. She is not named as witness to any charters, nor is her death reported in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. So far as is known, she was the mother of all Æthelwulf's children, his five sons Æthelstan, Æthelbald, Æthelberht, Æthelred and Alfred the Great, and his daughter Æthelswith, wife of King Burgred of Mercia. Osburhga was the daughter of Oslac (who is also only known from Asser's Life), the name of her mother is not known. Her father Oslac was King Æthelwulf's pincerna (butler). This was not comparable to a modern day butler, the Pincerna was an important figure in the royal court and household similar to a High Steward. Oslac is described as a descendant of King Cerdic's Jutish nephews, Stuf and Wihtgar, who conquered the Isle of Wight. Osburhga is best known from Asser's story about a book of Saxon songs, which she showed to Alfred and his brothers, offering to give the book to whoever could first memorize it, a challenge which Alfred took up and won. This exhibits high-status ninth-century women's interest in books and their role in educating their children While Osburhga was certainly the wife of the King she did not hold the title of Queen. In accordance with ninth century West Saxon custom, she was not given the title of queen. According to King Alfred, this was because of the infamous conduct of a former queen of Wessex called Eadburh, who had accidentally poisoned her husband. This is one of the points of contention between Osburhga's sons and her husband's 2nd wife Judith of France. As part of their marriage agreement, Judith's father insisted Judith be anointed Queen before they even left France.
- Death: 855, Kingdom of Wessex
Descendants of Osburhga of Wessex
1 Osburhga of Wessex
=Æthelwulf of WESSEX Marriage: ABT 830 Marriage: ABT 826, Mercia, Wessex
2 Alfred the GREAT
=Ealhswith of Mercia Marriage: 868, Gainsborough, Lincolnshire, Kingdom of Mercia
3 Ælfthryth of WESSEX
=Baudouin II DE FLANDRE Marriage: 884
3 Æthelgifu OF WESSEX, ABBESS OF SHAFTESBURY
3 Æthelflæd, Lady of the Mercians
3 Edward THE ELDER King of the English
3 Æthelweard OF WESSEX
3 Edmund of WESSEX
- Father: Théodoric I of the OSTROGOTHS
- Mother: Babaidokhtar SARMATHA
- Birth: 475, Pannonia, Roman Empire
- LifeSketch: Foundation for Medieval Genealogy King Theodoric had two illegitimate daughters by his concubine: 2. THEODEGOTHA [Thiudigotho]. Iordanes names "unam…Thiudigoto et aliam Ostrogotho" as the two daughters of Theodoric born "ex concubina…in Moesia" before his marriage to Audofledis, specifying that they came to Italy and were married "unam Alarico Vesegotharum et aliam Sigismundo Burgundzonorum"[302]. Procopius records that “regi Visigothorum Alarico” married "Theoderici…Theudichusam virginem filiam"[303]. m ([494][304]) ALARIC II King of the Visigoths, son of EURIC King of the Visigoths & his wife --- (-killed in battle Poitiers 507). 3. OSTROGOTHO ([475/80]-before [520]). Iordanes names "unam…Thiudigoto et aliam Ostrogotho" as the two daughters of Theodoric born "ex concubina…in Moesia" before his marriage to Audofledis, specifying that they came to Italy and were married "unam Alarico Vesegotharum et aliam Sigismundo Burgundzonorum"[305]. Her father arranged her marriage as part of his negotiations for an alliance with the Burgundians. According to Settipani[306], this marriage took place soon after Theoderic arrived in Italy. Wolfram suggests[307] that Theodoric's alliance with the Burgundians was settled in 496. m ([494/96]) as his first wife, SIGISMUND of Burgundy, son of GONDEBAUD King of Burgundy & his wife Caratena (-murdered 523, bur Agaune). He succeeded his father in 516 as SIGISMUND King of Burgundy.
- Death: 523, Kingdom of Bourgogne, Gaul, Frankish Empire
Ancestors of Ostrogotha of the Ostrogoths
/-Amal D'OSTROGOTHIE
/-Hisarna of the GREUTHENGI
/-Ostrogotho of the GREUTHUNGI
/-Hunuil d'Ostrogoths of the GREUTHINGI
| | /-Visbur AV UPPSALA
| | /-Hod VIBURSSON
| \-Bodvid HODSDATTER
| | /-Tiberius Julius II COTYS
| \-Dana TIBERIUSDATTER
/-Athal Noble One OF THE GREUTHINGI OSTROGOTHS
| \-Vandalar of the Ostrogoths
/-Achiulf of the OSTROGOTHS
| \-Erelicia of The Ostrogoths
/-Valaravus OF THE OSTROGOTHS
| \-Withemir of the Ostrogoths
/-Vinitharius of the Ostrogoths Vanadi SLAVS
| | /-Thierry DE NEUSTRIE
| | /-Walechise DE NEUSTRIE
| | | \-Dode DE FRANCIE
| | /-Hermanfried DE NEUSTRIE
| | | \-Waldrada Lethingi DE LOMBARDI
| \-Farahild of Neustria
| | /-Ethei OF THE HUNS
| | /-Szemen OF THE HUNS
| | /-Kama Tarkhan OF THE HUNS
| | /-Avitochola Oposh of the HUNS
| | | \-Wadamerca DES OSTROGOTHIE
| | /-Donaton OF THE HUNS
| \-Faraild OF THE HUNS
| | /-Far RAMA
| \-Fur Ana of the HUNS
/-Vandalerius Videric Winither D`OSTROGOTHIE
| \-Erelicia OF THE OSTROGOTHS
/-Theodemir of the OSTROGOTHS
| | /-Dagobert Roi des Francs DE COLOGNE I
| | /-Genebald Duke of The East Franks
| | /-Dagobert DER FRANKEN VON KOLN
| | | | /-Sunna DES SICAMBRED DES FRANCS
| | | | /-Childeric I King of the Franks
| | | | /-Bartherus VON KOLN
| | | | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | \-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
| \-Amalaberga OF THE OSTROGOTHS
| \-Blesinde VON SCHWABEN
/-Théodoric I of the OSTROGOTHS
| | /-Dagobert Roi des Francs DE COLOGNE I
| | /-Genebald Duke of The East Franks
| | /-Dagobert DER FRANKEN VON KOLN
| | | | /-Childeric I King of the Franks
| | | | /-Bartherus VON KOLN
| | | | | \-Ceasonia Julianus 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
| | /-Pharamond of the East FRANKS
| | | | /-Sunna DES SICAMBRED DES FRANCS
| | | | /-Childeric I King of the Franks
| | | | /-Marcomir V DE TOXANDRIE King of The Franks
| | | | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | | /-Gonobaud Ier DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | | | /-Haquinus DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | | | /-Ibor DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | | | | \-Aalis DER LONGOBARDEN
| | | | | \-Ilnegonde VAN LOMBARDIE
| | | | | | /-Agio Gungingi DER LONGOBARDEN
| | | | | \-Gambara Aalis GUNGING
| | | | /-Ragaise DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | | | /-Sunna DES SICAMBRED DES FRANCS
| | | | | | /-Childeric I King of the Franks
| | | | | | /-Marcomir V DE TOXANDRIE King of The Franks
| | | | | | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | | | | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | | | \-Althildis of the East FRANKS
| | | | | | /-Haquinus DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | | | /-Ibor DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | | | | \-Aalis DER LONGOBARDEN
| | | | | \-Ilnegonde VAN LOMBARDIE
| | | | | | /-Agio Gungingi DER LONGOBARDEN
| | | | | \-Gambara Aalis GUNGING
| | | | /-Malaric I King of the Franks at Toxandrie
| | | | | \-Blésinde D'ALÉMANIE
| | | | /-Mellobaude I DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | | | /-Zamoxis DE WISIGOTHIE
| | | | | | /-Wisigard OSTROGOTHA DE WISIGOTHIC
| | | | | | /-Cnico DE WISIGOTHIE
| | | | | | | \-Nascida BENKANT
| | | | | | /-Gannebaud of the Thervengi
| | | | | | /-Fritigem VON THÜRINGEN II
| | | | | | | | /-Thuringus DE THURINGE
| | | | | | | | /-Fritigern Ier DE THURINGE
| | | | | | | | | \-Demoiselle DE GOTHIE
| | | | | | | | /-Begon DE THURINGE
| | | | | | | | | \-Aelia Euphenia DE ROME
| | | | | | | \-Fritigerna DE THURINGEN
| | | | | | | \-Uxor Begon IGNATOE
| | | | | \-Ascyla LA GAULOISE
| | | | | | /-Octavius DE MENAPIE
| | | | | | /-Valardius DE MENAPIE
| | | | | | | \-Catheloys Castellors DE TINTAGEL
| | | | | | /-Valerius II DE MENAPIE
| | | | | | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | | | | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Vuericus DE MENAPIE
| | | | | | | | /-Quintus Anicius Faustus Abucuu II
| | | | | | | | /-Quintus Anicius Faustus Paulinus II DE ROME
| | | | | | | | | \-Coceeia Vibiana COCCEII
| | | | | | | \-Gambara Aalis DES LONGOBARDS
| | | | | | | | /-Baltaire Bartherius DES FRANCS SICAMBRES
| | | | | | | \-Asinia Juliana Nicomacha D`ASIE
| | | | | | | \-Asinia Juliana Nicomacha DE ROME
| | | | | \-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
| | | \-Hatilde DE FRANCIE
| | | | /-Sunna DES SICAMBRED DES FRANCS
| | | | /-Childeric I King of the Franks
| | | | /-Marcomir V DE TOXANDRIE King of The Franks
| | | | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | | /-Gonobaud Ier DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | | | /-Haquinus DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | | | /-Ibor DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | | | | \-Aalis DER LONGOBARDEN
| | | | | \-Ilnegonde VAN LOMBARDIE
| | | | | | /-Agio Gungingi DER LONGOBARDEN
| | | | | \-Gambara Aalis GUNGING
| | | | /-Ragaise DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | | | /-Sunna DES SICAMBRED DES FRANCS
| | | | | | /-Childeric I King of the Franks
| | | | | | /-Marcomir V DE TOXANDRIE King of The Franks
| | | | | | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | | | | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | | | \-Althildis of the East FRANKS
| | | | | | /-Haquinus DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | | | /-Ibor DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | | | | \-Aalis DER LONGOBARDEN
| | | | | \-Ilnegonde VAN LOMBARDIE
| | | | | | /-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
| \-Erelieva OF CRELIEVA DE OSTROGOTHIE
| | /-Genebald II of The East FRANKS
| \-Argotta DAUGHTER OF GENEBALD OF VALENTINA
| \-Blesinde OF SUEVI
Ostrogotha of the Ostrogoths
\-Babaidokhtar SARMATHA
- Birth: 985, Schweinfurt, Bavaria, Germany
- LifeSketch: http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/HOLLAND.htm#_Toc482446630 "According to Europäische Stammtafeln, she was *Othelindis von Haldensleben*, daughter of Bernhard I Markgraf der Nordmark Graf von Haldensleben, *but the primary source on which this is based has not yet been identified*. The Chronologia Johannes de Beke records the marriage of "Theodericus…tercius…comes Hollandie" and "Utilhildim filiam…ducis Saxonie". The corresponding duke of Saxony would have been the Billung Duke Bernhard I (who died in 1011). However, if Duke Bernhard was Othelindis's father, the wife of Count Dirk III's son Count Floris would have been his first cousin on his mother's side, which seems unlikely to be correct." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dirk_III,_Count_of_Holland#Family "Dirk III married Othelindis, *perhaps* daughter of Bernard, Margrave of the Nordmark." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernard,_Margrave_of_the_Nordmark "He also left daughters, Theutberga, Oda, and *perhaps* Othelindis, wife of Dirk III, Count of Holland." ----- Refer to the following Wikipedia entries for more information regarding 'Nordmark.' https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nordmark https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northern_March https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Margraves_of_the_Nordmark .
- Death: 31 MAR 1044, Quedlinburg, Herzogtum Sachsen, HRR
- Partnership with: Dietrich III DER JERUSALEMER
Marriage: ABT 1015
- Child: Dietrich IV. VON HOLLAND Graf von Holland. Birth: ABT 1016, Holland, Nederland
- Child: Florens I VON HOLLAND Birth: 1017, Vlaardingen, South Holland, Netherlands
- Child: Luitgard VAN HOLLAND Birth: 1019, Vlaardingen, South Holland, Netherlands
- Child: Bertrada von WESTFRIESLAND Birth: 1021, Vlaardingen, South Holland, Netherlands
- Child: Suanehilde VAN HOLLAND Birth: 1023, Vlaardingen, Zuid-Holland, Nederland
Descendants of Othelhildis von Haldensleben
1 Othelhildis von Haldensleben
=Dietrich III DER JERUSALEMER Marriage: ABT 1015
2 Dietrich IV. VON HOLLAND Graf von Holland.
2 Florens I VON HOLLAND
=Gertrud VON SACHSEN Marriage: 1049
3 Albert VON HOLLAND Domherr
3 Dietrich V VON HOLLAND
3 Peter VON HOLLAND Domherr
3 Bertha VON HOLLAND
=Philippe I DES FRANCS Marriage: 1072
3 Florens VON HOLLAND Domherr
3 Adele DE HOLLANDE
3 Machteld HOLLAND
2 Luitgard VAN HOLLAND
2 Bertrada von WESTFRIESLAND
2 Suanehilde VAN HOLLAND
- Father: Heinrich I VON SACHSEN
- Mother: Mathilde Königin DES OSTFRÄNKISCHEN
- Birth: 23 NOV 912, Wallhausen, Saxony, East Francia
- Also known as: Otto the Great
- Also known as: Otto I, Holy Roman Emperor
- Also known as: Otto der Grosse
- Also known as: Otto I Deutschland
- Also known as: Holy Roman Emperor Otto I 'the great'
- Also known as: Otto I, King of Germany
- Also known as: Duke Otto II of Saxony
- RESCUED QUEEN OF ITALY: When 19 year old, recently widowed, queen of Italy, Adelaide, was taken prisoner by Berengar of Ivrea in 951, she turned to Otto for aid. He marched into Italy, married Adelaide himself, and became King of the Lombards., 23 SEP 951, Pavia, Lombardy
- KING OF EAST FRANCIA (King of Germans): Coronation on 7 August 936 in Aachen Cathedral; Reigned 2 July 936 to 7 May 973; Succeeded by Otto II
- DUKE OF SAXONY: Succeeded Henry the Fowler to become Duke of Saxony from 2 July 936 to 7 May 973; was succeeded by Bernard I
- HOLY ROMAN EMPEROR: Coronation on 2 February 962 at Old St. Peter's Basilica, Rome; Reigned 2 February 962 – 7 May 973 ; succeeded by Otto II
- KING OF ITALY: Coronation on 10 October 951 at Pavia; Reigned 25 December 961 to 7 May 973; Succeeded by Otto II, 7 MAY 973, Pavia, Lombardy
- Title Of Nobility: Holy Roman Emperor, King of East Francia, King of Italy, Duke of Saxony
- LifeSketch: Otto the Great, also known as Otto I of Germany. Born in 912 in Wallhausen, his parents where Henry I, King of the Romans (The Fowler) and Matilda of Ringelheim. He married Edith, the daughter of Edward I. (the Elder) in 930. They had a happy marriage and had six children. He succeeded his father as King in July 936, and was crowned in Aachen on August 7. He had to defend his kingship mainly against relatives that thought they had better reasons to be Henry’s successor. The fighting stopped in 954 when the Hungarians started to threaten the kingdom. Queen Edith died in 946. In 951 Otto went to Italy and rescued Adelheid of Burgundy, the widow of King Lothar of Italy, who was imprisoned by Berengar II of Ivrea. He married Adelheid later that year. In August 955 he defeated the Hungarians near Augsburg. Pope John XII called for Otto's help when Berengar II threatened the papal state. Otto secured his sons succession to the throne and went to Italy. On February 2, 962 he and his wife were crowned Emperor and Empress. He was the first to be crowned Holy Roman Emperor by the hand of a Pope. He returned to Germany but was again called to Italy, this time by Pope John XIII, for help. To settle the conflict with Byzantium he crowned his son co-regent in 967 and upon his return to Germany married him to the Byzantium princess Theophano in 972. He died in 973 in the Palatinate of Memleben. Otto I. der Große * 23. November 912; † 7. Mai 973 in Memleben ab 936 Herzog von Sachsen und König des Ostfrankenreiches (regnum francorum orientalium), ab 951 König von Italien und ab 962 römisch-deutscher Kaiser ( Heiligen Römischen Reiches. )
- DIED AT MEMLEBAN PALACE: To mark the Rogation Days, Otto travelled to his palace at Memleben, the place where his father had died 37 years earlier. While there, Otto became seriously ill with fever and, after receiving his last sacraments, died on 7 May 973. Otto was buried in Magdeburg Cathedral alongside his first wife Eadgyth. Legend has it, that although his body was buried in Magdeburg, his heart was buried in Memleben.
- RULED: 936-973
- Death: 7 MAY 973, Memleben, Saxony, Holy Roman Empire
- Burial: MAY 973, Cathedral of Saints Maurice and Catherine, Madgeburg, East Francia, Holy Roman Empire
Ancestors of Otto the Great
/-Bruno father of Liudolf VON SACHSE
/-Liudolf VON SACHSEN
/-Otto I VON SACHSEN
| \-Oda Herzogin von Sachsen
/-Heinrich I VON SACHSEN
| | /-Lantbertus I in NEUSTRIEN
| | /-Chrodobertus II DE NEUSTRIA
| | | \-Chrotlind DE NEUSTRIE
| | /-Lambert II in NEUSTRIEN
| | | \-Dota HESBYE
| | /-Robert I im HASPENGAUF
| | | \-Chrothlind spouse of Lambert II in NEUSTRIEN
| | /-Cancor in ALEMANNIEN
| | | | /-Adelhelm.im WORMSGAU
| | | \-Williswint im OBERRHEINGAU
| | | \-Alleaume von Burgund
| | /-Heimrichf im OBERRHEINGAU
| | | \-Angila spouse of Cancor in ALEMANNIEN
| | /-Heimrich VON SAALGAU
| | /-Poppo I VON GRABFELD
| | /-Heinrich VON BABENBERG
| | | \-Williswind spouse of Poppo I VON GRABFELD
| \-Haduich VON BABENBERG
| \-Ingeltrude VON FRIAUL
Otto the Great
| /-Widukind VON ENGERN
| /-Wigbert in SACHSEN
| | \-Geva von Haithabu
| /-Waltbert im GRAINGAU
| /-Reginbern in SACHSEN
| | \-Altburge spouse of Waltbert im GRAINGAU
| /-Thiadrich in WESTFALEN
| | \-Mathilde im GRAINGAU
\-Mathilde Königin DES OSTFRÄNKISCHEN
\-Reinhild spouse of Thiadrich in WESTFALEN
Ancestors of Owen Mor
/-Trer MAC ROTHRER Ui Eremoin
/-Roshin MAC TRER Ui Eremoin
/-Corbred Suin mac Roshin I of Ireland
/-Iar MAC DEDAD
| \-Manius spouse of Corbred Suin mac Roshin I of IRELAND
/-Eterscel MOR
/-Conaire Cóem mac Mug LÁMA
| \-Mess BUACHALLA
Owen Mor
| /-Fionn Mafionnloch OHENNA
| /-Eochaidh Feidhlioch MACFIONN
| | \-Benta CREOMBTHAN
| /-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
| /-Tuathal Techtmar mac FIACHU
| | | /-Ederus of Alba
| | | /-Imgheal of the PICTS
| | \-Eithne of ALBA
| | | /-Fargall of DENMARK
| | \-Dervorgill of IRELAND
| /-Feidhlimidh mac TUATHAL
| | | /-Cyllincoellyn father of Sgaile BALBH
| | | /-Sgaile Balbh mac CYLLINCOELLYN
| | \-Báine ingen Sgaile of ALBA
| | \-Fiacha Fionn OLA
| /-Conn Ceadchathach Mac FEIDEILMID
| | | /-Indearg of DENMARK
| | \-Una Ughna OLLCHROTHACH
| | \-Lochlioh of Denmark
\-Saruit ingen CONN of Ireland
| /-Cathair Mór MAC FEIDHLIMIDH FIORURGHLAS
\-Eithne TAEBFADA
\-Feargusa of Mumhan
Descendants of Paolina
1 Paolina
=Marco Tullio CICERO
2 Attilio CICERO
=(Unknown)
3 Marco Tullio CICERO
=Helvia CICERO
3 Silvia CICERO
2 Guglielmo CICERO
2 Laura CICERO
2 Riccardo CICERO
2 Tilio CICERO
- Birth: ABT 190 BC
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Descendants of Pasquala Maria
1 Pasquala Maria
=Marcus ANTONIUS
2 Gaius Marcus ANTONIUS
=(Unknown)
3 Marcus Antonius of ROME
=Julia spouse of Marcus Antonius of ROME
2 Gaius ANTONIUS
- Father: Eleazar BEN ELIUD
- Mother: Hayat DE JERUSALEM
- Birth: ABT 95 BC, Judea, The Holy Roman Empire
- LifeSketch: When Pauline bint Eleazar of Judea was born about 0095 BC, her father, Eleazar Ben Eliud, was 25 and her mother, Hayat de JERUSALEM, was 26. She had at least 1 son with Levi ben Melchi.
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Ancestors of Pauline bint Eleazar of Judea
/-Eliud ben Ackim HA DAVID of Judae
/-Eleazar BEN ELIUD
| \-Awad
Pauline bint Eleazar of Judea
\-Hayat DE JERUSALEM
Descendants of Pauline bint Eleazar of Judea
1 Pauline bint Eleazar of Judea
=Levi ben Melchi ha-David of Arimathea
2 Matthat ben Levi ben Melchi of Arimathea
=Salome of Jerusalem
3 Alexander III Helios Heli Eli BEN MATTHAT ha David
=Hanna BAT YEHOSHUA III ha-Kohen
3 Zachariah BEN MATTHAT of Abijah
3 Heli BEN MATTHAT tribe of Nathan
3 Joseph ben Matthat of Rameh
=Rachel Anna Alyuba BINT SIMON ELEAZOR The Prophetess Of Arimathaea
2 Jacob Ben LEVI
- Father: Tantalos of Lydia KING
- Death: ABT 1350 BC, Arkadia, Greece
- Birth: 1400 BC, Asgard
- LifeSketch: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pelops
Ancestors of Pelops of Pisa, Lydia and Mycenae
/-Tantalos of Lydia KING
Pelops of Pisa, Lydia and Mycenae
Descendants of Pelops of Pisa, Lydia and Mycenae
1 Pelops of Pisa, Lydia and Mycenae
=Hippodamia of PISA
2 Atreus of Mycenae in ARGOS
=Aerope of CRETE
3 Plisthenes of Mycenae
=Cleolla of Mycenae
3 Lagos or Pleisthenes of Mycenae or MYKONOS
2 Pittheus King of Troezen
2 Astydamia II of PISA
2 Alcathous of Megara
2 Dias of Mycenae
=Archippe
3 Cleolla of Mycenae
=Plisthenes of Mycenae