Ancestors of Siward SAXE
/-Itermond DES SAXONS
/-Heremond DES SAXONS
/-Scealwdea Skojld DES SAXONS
/-Arteric DES SAXONS
/-Ansering Amonarius Harderic DES SAXONS
/-Willicus Welking DES SAXONS
/-Swerting Svartige I VON SACHSEN
/-Swerting Svarticke de Saxe II
Siward SAXE
- Birth: 443, Ancient, Sachsen, Germany
- Title Of Nobility: Queen
- Death: 540, Y, Somme, Picardie, France
Descendants of Elesa of West SAXON
1 Elesa of West SAXON
=Aelle Ella of ELISENS
2 Cerdic of WESSEX
=Anafleda spouse of Cerdic of WESSEX
3 Creoda Cerdicsson of WESSEX
=Hengist WESSEX
2 ELESASON PRINCESS OF WEST SAXONY
- Father: Gewesius OF SAXONY
- Birth: 390, Saxony, Prussia, Germany
- Also known as: [Unknown] of Allemania
- Also known as: Queen Gewis Giurs of Saxony
- Also known as: Queen Gewis Giurs of Saxony
- Also known as: Queen Gewis Giurs of Saxony
- Also known as: Queen Gewis Giurs of Saxony
- NFS ID: MDB6-RJ1
- LifeSketch: Wife of Gewis and mother of Esla. Her name is not known. Neither is her DOB, her DOD or her origin.
- Death: 450, Ancient Saxony, Northern Germany
- Burial: 450, Ancient Saxony, Northern Germany
Ancestors of Effa of the SAXONS
/-Brendius of SCANDINAVIA
/-Fordigarus of SAXONY
/-Wigger OF SAXONY
/-Gewesius OF SAXONY
Effa of the SAXONS
Descendants of Effa of the SAXONS
1 Effa of the SAXONS
=Gewis VON SAXON
2 Esla GEWISSON
=Isaive spouse of Esla GEWISSON Marriage: ABT 434, Ancient Saxony, Germany Marriage: ABT 434, Ancient Saxony, Northern Germany
3 Aelle Ella of ELISENS
=Elesa of West SAXON
3 ELESASON PRINCESS OF WEST SAXONY
2 Brond of Saxony
- Birth: ABT 445, Munster, Ireland
- Title Of Nobility: Lord of the Anglo Saxons
- Death: Munster, Ireland
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Descendants of Freothalaf of the Anglo SAXONS
1 Freothalaf of the Anglo SAXONS
=(Unknown)
2 Failbe Flann of MUMHAN
=Natfraich of MUMHAN
3 Faolghus of MUMHAN
=Sabilla of MUMHAN of Ireland
3 Snedghus Mumhan Mac NATFRAICH
Ancestors of Witte SAXONS
/-Scealwdea Skojld DES SAXONS
/-Arteric DES SAXONS
/-Ansering Amonarius Harderic DES SAXONS
/-Willicus Welking DES SAXONS
/-Swerting Svartige I VON SACHSEN
/-Swerting Svarticke de Saxe II
/-Sivart VON SACHSEN
/-Witterkind VON SAXONY
/-Willchin II VON SACHSEN
/-Morbod VON SACHSEN
| \-Scandinavie NORDIK
/-Wodon Bodon DE SAXE
| | /-Fodepaid DES ASES
| | /-Finn ASGARD
| | /-Froethelat AV ASGARD
| \-Betsea av ASGARD
| \-Aud Humbla DE TARTARIE
Witte SAXONS
\-Freya DE VANALAND
- Birth: 271, Ancient Saxony, Northern Germany
- Also known as: Wegbrand Brona de Saxe
- Also known as: King Gechbrond Brandr of Germany
- Also known as: Brandis Brendius Brond Brono
- Also known as: Brond
- Also known as: Brond
- Also known as: King Gechbrond Brandr of Germany
- Also known as: Brandis Brendius Brond Brono
- Occupation: A member of aristocracy in ancient Europe, Europe
- Other: ABT 380, Eng.
- Fact: https://www.geni.com/people/Brand/6000000004112468363?through=6000000004111598767
- Title Of Nobility: Roi des Saxons
- Fact: https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Brond-3
- Title Of Nobility: M Brand de SAXE, Roi Anglo-Saxon
- Title Of Nobility: Prince of Angels
- Fact: https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Brond-3
- Title Of Nobility: M Brand de SAXE, Roi Anglo-Saxon
- Title Of Nobility: Prince of Angels
- Death: 360, Ancient Saxony, Northern Germany
Descendants of Brond Deira of SAXONY
1 Brond Deira of SAXONY
=Nanna of SCANDINAVIA
2 Frithugar Deira SAXONY
=Unknown Spouse of Frithugar Deira SAXONY Marriage: Saxony, Germany
3 Frewin VAN SAKSEN
=(Unknown)
2 Frithugar of the ANGLES
=Comes THEODOSIUS
2 Bernicia Prince of Angels
=Bronde Chas of SLAGEN Marriage: ABT 290, Slagen, Vestfold, Norway
2 Vanlandi av Skuttunge Svegdasson King of Uppsala
2 Carthan Cais Dubh CATHAN DES SAXONS
2 Bernic (Beaorn, Beorn) VON SACHEN
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Fordigarus of SAXONY
/-Brendius of SCANDINAVIA
Fordigarus of SAXONY
Descendants of Fordigarus of SAXONY
1 Fordigarus of SAXONY
=(Unknown)
2 Wigger OF SAXONY
=(Unknown)
3 Gewesius OF SAXONY
=(Unknown)
- Father: Brond Deira of SAXONY
- Mother: Nanna of SCANDINAVIA
- Birth: 299, Ancient Saxony, Germany
- Also known as: Frithugar Saxony
- Also known as: Frjodigar Brandsson
- Also known as: Froethgar of Saxony
- Also known as: Friðgar
- Also known as: Frithgar Brandsson
- Also known as: Frithugar Brondsson
- Also known as: Frjodigar Brandsson
- Also known as: Froethgar of Saxony
- Also known as: Friðgar
- Also known as: Frithgar Brandsson
- Also known as: Frithugar Brondsson
- Also known as: Frjodigar Brandsson
- Also known as: Froethgar of Saxony
- Also known as: Friðgar
- Also known as: Frithgar Brandsson
- Also known as: Frithugar Brondsson
- LdsBaptism: 20 JUN 1911
- LdsEndowment: 21 OCT 1927
- LdsSealingToParents: 30 NOV 1953
- LifeSketch: Frithugar (also Frithgar and Friðgar) appears in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle as the son of Brand (Brond) and a descendant of Woden. He is also identified as the father of Freawine, the father of Wig (Wye), the father of Gewis, the father of Esla, the father of Elesa, the father of Cerdic of Wessex who invaded Britain in 495 and founded the kingdom of Wessex. The name of Frithugar's mother and that of his wife are not identified. ----------------------------- Cerdic, first king of the West Saxons (519–534), is recorded as descended from Woden. This mythical descent is set out in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle: "Woden/Bældæg/Brand/Frithugar/Freawine/Wig/Gewis/Esla/Elesa/Cerdic". ---------------------------- In its entry for the year 552, following a note that Cerdic's son Cynric fought with the Britons at Sarum and put them to flight, the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle adds in a pedigree reaching from Cerdic back to the god Woden: Cerdic was the son of Elesa, Elesa of Esla, Esla of Gewis, Gewis of Wye, Wye of Frewin, Frewin of Frithgar, Frithgar of Brand, Brand of Balday, Balday of Woden.
- Death: 390, Ostpreisien, Niedersachsen, Germany
Ancestors of Frithugar Deira SAXONY
/-Brond Deira of SAXONY
Frithugar Deira SAXONY
\-Nanna of SCANDINAVIA
Descendants of Frithugar Deira SAXONY
1 Frithugar Deira SAXONY
=Unknown Spouse of Frithugar Deira SAXONY Marriage: Saxony, Germany
2 Frewin VAN SAKSEN
=(Unknown)
3 Uvigg FREAWINEASSON
=Unknown Spouse of Uvigg FREAWINEASSON Marriage: 382, Ancient, , Sachsen, Germany Marriage: 382, Ancient Saxony, Northern, Germany
3 Thrytho FREAWINESDOTTIR of Slesvik
3 Flandbert FREAWINESSON
3 Ket VON SACHSEN
- Father: Sachell BALB of the Saxons
- Birth: 300, Saxons, England
- Also known as: Sachal Sachell Saxons Balb
- Also known as: Scael Moen "the Dumb Saxon King
- Also known as: Koning van Saksen
- Also known as: Scael Moen "the Dumb Saxon King
- Also known as: Koning van Saksen
- Also known as: Scael Moen "the Dumb Saxon King
- Also known as: Koning van Saksen
- Title Of Nobility: King of the Saxons
- Death: AFT 356, Now, Kermān, Iran
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Sachell Balb of SAXONY
/-Sachell BALB of the Saxons
Sachell Balb of SAXONY
Descendants of Sachell Balb of SAXONY
1 Sachell Balb of SAXONY
=(Unknown)
2 Cathann Chasdubh VERCH SACHELL
=Nial More MACEOCHY
3 Niall Mor NAOIGHIALLACH
=Roighneach ingen MEADAIB Marriage: 376, Munster, Dal Riata, Ireland
=Inne ingen Luigheach MEANN Marriage: 404, Tara, County Meath, Ireland
3 Foghan Owen Bint Nail NOIGIALLACH
=Áengus Fert mac Fedlimid of DALRIADA Marriage: Scotland
3 Eochaid MUGMEDON II of Ireland
- Birth: 604, Sachsen, Germany
- Also known as: Bishop Of Metz Clodoule
- Death: 8 JUN 696, Metz, Moselle, Lorraine, France
Descendants of Saint Clodulphe De SAXONY Bishop Of Metz
1 Saint Clodulphe De SAXONY Bishop Of Metz
=Sigrada DE VERDUN vom Elsass
- Father: Æscwine of ESSEX
- Birth: ABT 565, Kingdom of Essex, Anglia
- RULED: BET 587 AND 604
- Title (Nobility): King of East Saxony
- LifeSketch: SLEDDA, son of ERCHENWIN [Æscwine] (-[597]). Henry of Huntingdon records that "Slede filius eius" succeeded "Erchenwin" as king of "Orientalium Saxonum"[163]. Roger of Wendover records that "Sledda filius eius" succeeded "Erkenwino rege orientalium Saxonum" in 587[164]. According to William of Malmesbury, Sledda was the first king of the East Saxons from [587][165]. He is not referred to either by Bede or in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. m RICULA of Kent, daughter of EORMENRIC King of Kent & his wife ---. Her parentage and marriage are indicated by Bede who records that her son "Saberet nepos Aedilbercti ex sorore Ricula" was king of "provinciæ Orientalium Saxonum", but subject to King Æthelberht, when Augustine appointed Mellitus as bishop in 604[166]. Henry of Huntingdon records that "Slede" married "filiam Ermenrici regis Cantuariorum, sororem…Ethelberti"[167]. Her marriage indicates the close relationship between the kingdom of Kent and the kingdom of the East Saxons, Yorke suggesting that Kent played a key role in bringing her husband's family to power[168]. Sledda & his wife had [two] children: 1. SÆBERHT [Sigeberht] (-[616/626]). Bede records that "Saberet nepos Aedilbercti ex sorore Ricula" was king of "provinciæ Orientalium Saxonum", but subject to King Æthelberht, when Augustine appointed Mellitus as bishop in 604[169]. Henry of Huntingdon names "Siberctum" as son of "Slede" and his wife "filiam Ermenrici regis Cantuariorum, sororem…Ethelberti"[170]. William of Malmesbury names Sebert as son of Sledda[171]. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle names "Sæberht the son of Ricole, Æthelberht's sister" as having been appointed king of the East Saxons by Æthelberht[172]. Bede records the death of "Sabercti regis Orientalium Saxonum", after the death of Æthelberht King of Kent, adding that he left three sons who were still pagans[173]. Henry of Huntingdon records that "Sebertus rex Estsexe" died in the same year in which Penda succeeded as king of Mercia[174], dated to 626 in other sources. m ---. The name of Sæberht’s wife is not known. Sæberht & [his wife] had three children: a) SÆWEARD [Sigeweard] (-killed [623]). Bede records the death of "Sabercti regis Orientalium Saxonum", after the death of Æthelberht King of Kent, adding that he left three sons who were still pagans and drove Bishop Mellitus to France because he refused to give them the Eucharistic bread[175]. William of Malmesbury names Sexred and Seward as sons of Sebert[176]. He succeeded his father as king of Essex, jointly with his two brothers. Roger of Wendover records that "Sexredum et Siwardum fratres" were killed by "Kinegilso rege occidentalium Saxonum et Quichelmo filio eius" in 623[177]. This date is inconsistent with Henry of Huntingdon’s report that their father died in 626 (see above). William of Malmesbury records that he and his brother were killed by the West Saxons[178]. Sæweard had three children: i) SIGEBERHT "Parvus" (-653). Florence of Worcester’s genealogies record that "Sigeberhtus cognomento Parvus…Sæwardi filius" succeeded when his father and uncle were killed[179]. Roger of Wendover records that "Sigebertus cognomento Parwus, Siwardi…filius" succeeded as king "apud orientales Saxones" after "Sexredum et Siwardum fratres", adding that the people immediately expelled "Mellitum Londonensium episcopum"[180]. Henry of Huntingdon records that "Sigebertus cognomina Parvus" succeeded as king of Essex on the death of "Sebertus rex Estsexe" but gives no relationship between the two[181]. William of Malmesbury names "Sigebert surnamed the Little" as son of Sæweard[182]. Sigeberht had one child: (a) SIGEHERE [Sigher] (-[683]). William of Malmesbury names "Sigher the son of Sigebert the Little and Sebbi the son of Seward" as successors of Swithelm, specifying that Sigher died before Sæbbi[183]. Bede names "reges Sigheri et Sebbi" as successors of "Suidhelmum" as kings of the East Saxons, subject to Wulfhere King of Mercia, specifying that Sigehere lapsed into paganism at the time of a plague but that King Wulfhere organised his reconversion[184]. Roger of Wendover records that "Sebba filio Sewardi et Sigehero filio Sigeberti parvi" ordained "Erkenwaldum" as bishop of London in 675[185]. Roger of Wendover records the death in 683 of "Sigehero orientalium Saxonum rege" adding that thereafter "Sebba" ruled as sole king[186]. m [OSYTH, daughter of ---. She founded a religious house at Chich in Essex[187]. The primary source which confirms her marriage has not yet been identified.] Sigehere & [his wife] had one child: (1) OFFA (-Rome after 709). William of Malmesbury names Offa son of Sigeher as successor of "Segard and Seufred", sons of Sæbbi, specifying that he governed the kingdom for a short time, was "a youth of engaging countenance and disposition", and went to Rome with "Cenred King of the Mercians and the blessed Egwin bishop of Wictians" where he died soon after[188]. He succeeded his cousin King Swæfred in 704 as King of the East Saxons. Bede records that "filius Sigheri regis Orientalium Saxonum…Offa" left his wife and went to Rome with "Coinred [rex] Merciorum" and became a monk[189]. m ---. The name of Offa’s wife is not known. Bede records that "filius Sigheri regis Orientalium Saxonum…Offa" left his wife and went to Rome with "Coinred [rex] Merciorum"[190]. ii) son . Bede records that, after the death of "Sabercti regis Orientalium Saxonum", his three sons who were still pagans drove Bishop Mellitus to France because he refused to give them the Eucharistic bread[191]. iii) son . Bede records that, after the death of "Sabercti regis Orientalium Saxonum", his three sons who were still pagans drove Bishop Mellitus to France because he refused to give them the Eucharistic bread[192]. iv) [SÆWEARD . William of Malmesbury, as noted below, records Sæbbi as the son of Sæweard. Florence of Worcester’s genealogies record precisely that "Sæbbi filius Sæwardi, filii regis S. Sæberhti" succeeded as one of the joint kings on the death of King Swithhelm[193]. From a chronological point of view, it appears unlikely that this Sæweard was the same person as King Sæweard who was killed in [623]. It is therefore possible that he was one of the unnamed sons of King Sæweard named by Bede (see above). This would be consistent with Sæbbi having succeeded as king jointly with Sigehere, who would have been Sæbbi’s first cousin in this scenario. m ---. The name of Sæweard’s wife is not known. Sæweard & [his wife] had one child: (a) SÆBBI (-London 694). Bede names "reges Sigheri et Sebbi" as successors of "Suidhelmum" as kings of the East Saxons, subject to Wulfhere King of Mercia, specifying that Sigehere lapsed into paganism at the time of a plague but that King Wulfhere organised his reconversion[194]. William of Malmesbury names "Sigher the son of Sigebert the Little and Sebbi the son of Seward" as successors of Swithelm, specifying that Sæbbi abdicated "in his thirtieth year" and became a monk "as Beda relates"[195]. - see below. b) SEXRED (-killed [623]). Bede records the death of "Sabercti regis Orientalium Saxonum", after the death of Æthelberht King of Kent, adding that he left three sons who were still pagans and drove Bishop Mellitus to France because he refused to give them the Eucharistic bread[196]. William of Malmesbury names Sexred and Seward as sons of Sebert[197]. He succeeded his father as King of Essex, jointly with his two brothers. Roger of Wendover records that "Sexredum et Siwardum fratres" were killed by "Kinegilso rege occidentalium Saxonum et Quichelmo filio eius" in 623[198]. This date is inconsistent with Henry of Huntingdon’s report that their father died in 626 (see above). William of Malmesbury records that he and his brother were killed by the West Saxons[199]. c) son . Bede records the death of "Sabercti regis Orientalium Saxonum", after the death of Æthelberht King of Kent, adding that he left three sons who were still pagans and drove Bishop Mellitus to France because he refused to give them the Eucharistic bread[200]. 2. [SIGEBALD [Seaxbald]. William of Malmesbury names "Sigebert the son of Sigebald who was the brother of Sebert"[201], although it appears more likely from a chronological point of view that his sons belonged to the following generation. If this is correct, Sigebald may have been the son of Sæberht.] Three children: a) SIGEBERHT (-killed [660]). William of Malmesbury names "Sigebert the son of Sigebald who was the brother of Sebert" as successor of Sigeberht "the Little", specifying that he was baptised in Northumbria by Bishop Finan, encouraged by Oswiu King of Northumbria[202]. Bede names "Orientales Saxones…rex…Sigberct" as successor of "Sigberctum cognomento Parvum", adding that he was a friend of Oswy King of Northumbria who influenced his conversion to Christianity through Cedd who was appointed bishop of London[203]. Roger of Wendover dates the baptism of "Sigebertum regem orientalium Saxonum" to 649[204]. William of Malmesbury records that he was murdered by his relations[205]. m ---. The name of Sigeberht’s wife is not known. Sigeberht & [his wife] had one child: i) SELRÆD (-killed 747). William of Malmesbury names "Selred son of Sigebert the Good" as successor of Offa, specifying that he ruled for 38 years but was slain[206]. He succeeded as SELRÆD King of the East Angles[207], although the date of his accession is not known. b) SWITHELM (-[665]). William of Malmesbury names Swithelm as brother and successor of Sigeberht, specifying that he had been baptised by Chedd in East Anglia[208]. Bede names "Suidhelm filius Sexbaldi" as successor of Sigeberht, although he does not say that the two were brothers, specifying that Swithelm was baptised by Cedd at the royal manor of the Angles of Rendles
- Title (Nobility): King of Essex
- Death: 604, Kingdom of Essex
Ancestors of Sledda of East SAXONY
/-Thymelko OF GERMANIA
/-Theddo ap Thymelko of GERMANY
/-Seaxnete ODINSSON
| \-Unknown Spouse of Theddo ap Thymelko of GERMANY
/-Gesecg D'ESSEX
| \-Unknown Spouse of Seaxnete ODINSSON
/-Antsecq D'ESSEX
| \-Unknown Spouse of Gesecg D'ESSEX
/-Swaeppa D'ESSEX
| \-Unknown Spouse of Antsecq D'ESSEX
/-Sigefugel of ESSEX
| \-Unknown Spouse of Swaeppa D'ESSEX
/-Bedca of ESSEX
| \-Unknown Spouse of Sigefugel of ESSEX
/-Offa D'ESSEX Prince of Angels
| \-Unknown Spouse of Bedca of ESSEX
/-Æscwine of ESSEX
| \-Unknown Spouse of Offa D'ESSEX
Sledda of East SAXONY
- Birth: 299, Ancient Saxony, Deutschland
- LdsBaptism: 20 JUN 1911
- LdsEndowment: 13 MAY 1925
- LifeSketch: Wife of Frithogar and mother of Freawine. Name is not known. Date of birth, date of death and origin are not known. Her son Freawine (Frowin or Frowinus) was identified as a governor of Schleswig in Gesta Danorum and in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle as an ancestor of the kings of Wessex. In the Gesta Danorum, Frowin was challenged to combat by the Myrging king Eadgils, and killed. Frowin's son in law, Offa of Angel, was the son of King Wermund. King Wermund liked both Frowin and his sons Ket and Wig and after Frowin's death raised Ket and Wig as his own.
- Death: 400, Ancient Saxony, Deutschland
- Burial: 400, Ancient Saxony, Deutschland
Descendants of Unknown Spouse of Frithugar Deira SAXONY
1 Unknown Spouse of Frithugar Deira SAXONY
=Frithugar Deira SAXONY Marriage: Saxony, Germany
2 Frewin VAN SAKSEN
=(Unknown)
3 Uvigg FREAWINEASSON
=Unknown Spouse of Uvigg FREAWINEASSON Marriage: 382, Ancient, , Sachsen, Germany Marriage: 382, Ancient Saxony, Northern, Germany
3 Thrytho FREAWINESDOTTIR of Slesvik
3 Flandbert FREAWINESSON
3 Ket VON SACHSEN
- Birth: 360, Reino, Benevento, Campania, Italy
- Death: 409, Reino, Benevento, Campania, Italy
Descendants of Wittichius SAXONY
1 Wittichius SAXONY
=Farahild of Neustria Marriage: 379 Marriage: Reino, Benevento, Campania, Italy
- Father: Quintus Mucius SCAEVOLA
- Birth: ABT 232 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Praetor triumphs over the Ligures, 179 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Consul, 175 BC, Roma, Roman Empire
- Occupation: Consul, 175 BC, Roma, Roman Empire
- Occupation: Consul, 175 BC, Roma, Roman Empire
- Occupation: Consul, 175 BC, Roma, Roman Empire
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
- Partnership with: Licinia
Marriage: ABT 170 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
Ancestors of Publius Mucius SCAEVOLA
/-Publius Mucius SCAEVOLA
/-Quintus Mucius SCAEVOLA
Publius Mucius SCAEVOLA
Descendants of Publius Mucius SCAEVOLA
1 Publius Mucius SCAEVOLA
=Licinia Marriage: ABT 170 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
2 Publius Licinius Crassus Dives Mucianus DE ROME
=Claudia DE ROME
3 Licinia Crassa DE ROME
=Sempronius Tuditanus
3 Licinia Crassi Minor
3 Marcus Licinius Crassus Agelastus DE ROME
2 Publius Mucius SCAEVOLA
- Father: Publius Mucius SCAEVOLA
- Mother: Licinia
- Birth: 176 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Tribune of the Plebs, 141 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Praetor, 136 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Consul of Roma: Publius Mucius Scaevola, consul in 133 BC; two years later he succeeded his brother, Publius Licinius Crassus Dives Mucianus, as Pontifex Maximus. He was regarded as one of the founders of the jus civile.[19][20][21][22][23][24][25], 133 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Pontifex Maximus, BET 130 BC AND 115 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Praetor, 136 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Consul of Roma: Publius Mucius Scaevola, consul in 133 BC; two years later he succeeded his brother, Publius Licinius Crassus Dives Mucianus, as Pontifex Maximus. He was regarded as one of the founders of the jus civile.[19][20][21][22][23][24][25], 133 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Pontifex Maximus, BET 130 BC AND 115 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia Publius Mucius Scaevola (c. 176 BC – 115 BC) was a prominent Roman politician and jurist who was consul in 133 BC. In his earlier political career he was tribune of the plebs in 141 BC and praetor in 136 BC. He also held the position of Pontifex Maximus for sixteen years after his consulship and died around 115 BC. Scaevola was consul at the time of Tiberius Gracchus' tribuneship and murder, and was heavily involved in reconciling the senate following Gracchus' death. According to Cicero, Scaevola supported Gracchus' land reforms (Lex Sempronia Agraria), but the extent of his involvement has been debated by some historians.[1] Publius Mucius Scaevola had a father of the same name, who was consul in 175 BC with Marcus Aemilius Lepidus.[4] Scaevola served as Pontifex Maximus following his younger brother Publius Licinius Crassus Dives Mucianus’s death. Mucianus was elected consul alongside with high priest Lucius Valerius Flaccus in the year 131 BC, after previously serving as Pontifex Maximus in 132 BC.[5][6] Scaevola was also the father of Quintus Mucius Scaevola who was a consul in 95 BC. He was responsible for the Lex Licinia Mucia, which sent Italian residents of Rome falsely claiming citizenship back to their own towns.[7] ...
- Published the Annales Maximi: Publius Mucius Scaevola became Pontifex Maximus in 130 BC, after his brother, Publius Licinius Crassus Dives Mucianus, was killed in battle while fighting in the kingdom of Pergamum.[25][26] His most notable contribution during this period was the publication of the final Annales Maximi. The Annales Maximi were annals maintained by the Pontifex Maximus, dating back to 400 BC.[27] The Pontifex Maximus, the highest-ranking priest in the Roman Republic, was responsible for recording the names of the magistrates of each year, as well as significant events. The annals ceased being written in the 130s BC, and Publius Mucius Scaevola reportedly published the complete record in his capacity as Pontifex Maximus.[28]
- Death: 115 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
Ancestors of Publius Mucius SCAEVOLA
/-Publius Mucius SCAEVOLA
/-Quintus Mucius SCAEVOLA
/-Publius Mucius SCAEVOLA
Publius Mucius SCAEVOLA
| /-Publius Licinius VARAS
| /-Gaius Licinius VARAS
\-Licinia
- Birth: ABT 285 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Praetor, 215 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Descendants of Publius Mucius SCAEVOLA
1 Publius Mucius SCAEVOLA
=(Unknown)
2 Quintus Mucius SCAEVOLA
=(Unknown)
3 Publius Mucius SCAEVOLA
=Licinia Marriage: ABT 170 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
3 Quintus Mucius SCAEVOLA
- Father: Publius Mucius SCAEVOLA
- Birth: 263 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Consul of Rome, 220 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Praetor, Governor of Sardinia, BET 215 BC AND 212 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Praetor, Governor of Sardinia, BET 215 BC AND 212 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Praetor, Governor of Sardinia, BET 215 BC AND 212 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia Quintus Mucius Scaevola (/ˈsiːvələ, ˈsɛv-/ SE(E)V-ə-lə; fl. late 3rd century BC) was a politician of the Roman Republic. He was made praetor in 215 BC, and became governor of Sardinia, a post that was extended twice, first for two years, and then for another year. Publius Mucius Scaevola and Quintus Mucius Scaevola, consul in 174 BC, are believed to have been his sons, and the brothers Publius Mucius Scaevola and Publius Licinius Crassus Dives Mucianus, both becoming Pontifex Maximus, were therefore his grandsons by Publius, while Quintus Mucius Scaevola Augur was his grandson by Quintus.
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Quintus Mucius SCAEVOLA
/-Publius Mucius SCAEVOLA
Quintus Mucius SCAEVOLA
Descendants of Quintus Mucius SCAEVOLA
1 Quintus Mucius SCAEVOLA
=(Unknown)
2 Publius Mucius SCAEVOLA
=Licinia Marriage: ABT 170 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
3 Publius Licinius Crassus Dives Mucianus DE ROME
=Claudia DE ROME
3 Publius Mucius SCAEVOLA
2 Quintus Mucius SCAEVOLA
- Father: Quintus Mucius SCAEVOLA
- Birth: ABT 230 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Praetor, 179 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Governor of Sicily, 179 BC, Sicily
- Occupation: Consul of Rome, 174 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Tribune, 171 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia Quintus Mucius Scaevola (/ˈsiːvələ, ˈsɛv-/ SE(E)V-ə-lə; fl. early 2nd century BC) was a politician of the Roman Republic, believed to be the son of his namesake who was praetor in 215 BC. He was made praetor in 179 BC, and became governor of Sicily. In 174 BC, he was made consul, and in 171 BC, tribune. In this latter position, he accompanied his brother-in-law Publius Licinius Crassus on campaign against Perseus of Macedonia. His son was Quintus Mucius Scaevola Augur (c. 159 – 88 BC), much younger than his cousins.
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Ancestors of Quintus Mucius SCAEVOLA
/-Publius Mucius SCAEVOLA
/-Quintus Mucius SCAEVOLA
Quintus Mucius SCAEVOLA
- Birth: 271
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Descendants of Brendius of SCANDINAVIA
1 Brendius of SCANDINAVIA
=(Unknown)
2 Fordigarus of SAXONY
=(Unknown)
3 Wigger OF SAXONY
=(Unknown)
- Birth: 275, Scandinavia
- Death: 350, Scandinavia
Descendants of Nanna of SCANDINAVIA
1 Nanna of SCANDINAVIA
=Brond Deira of SAXONY
2 Frithugar Deira SAXONY
=Unknown Spouse of Frithugar Deira SAXONY Marriage: Saxony, Germany
3 Frewin VAN SAKSEN
=(Unknown)
2 Frithugar of the ANGLES
- Father: Marcus Aemilius Scaurus
- Mother: Caecilia Metella
- Birth: 106 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- LifeSketch: In 82 B.C., Sulla persuaded Pompey to divorce Antistia in order to remarry his stepdaughter, Aemilia. At the time, Aemilia was pregnant by her husband, M. Acilius Glabrio. She was reluctant to marry Pompey but did so anyway and soon died in childbirth.
- Death: ABT 82 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
Ancestors of Aemilia SCAURA
/-Marcus Aemilius Scaurus
Aemilia SCAURA
| /-Quintus ANICIUS
| /-Lucius Caecilius Metellus DALMATICUS Pontifex Maximus
\-Caecilia Metella
| /-Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio Calvus
| /-Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA
| /-Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA CORCULUM Triumvir
| /-Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA SERAPIO
| | | /-Lucius CORNELIUS SCIPIO
| | | /-Publius CORNELIUS SCIPIO
| | | /-Publius CORNELIUS SCIPIO Africanus Major
| | | | | /-Manius POMPONIUS MATHO
| | | | \-Pomponia spouse of Publius Cornelius SCIPIO
| | \-Cornelia MAJOR
| | | /-Lucius Aemilius Memercinus
| | | /-Lucius Aemilius X Privernas
| | | /-Marcus Aemilius Paullus
| | | /-Marcus Aemilius PAULLUS
| | | /-Lucius Aemilius PAULLUS
| | \-Amelia TERTIA
| /-Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA
\-Cornelia SCIPIA
| /-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
\-Caecilis Metella Minor
Descendants of Aemilia SCAURA
1 Aemilia SCAURA
=Manius Acilius Glabrio Marriage: BEF 85 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
2 Manius Acilius Glabrio
=(Unknown)
3 Manius Acilius Glabrio
=(Unknown)
=Gnaeus POMPEIUS MAGNUS Marriage: AFT 82 BC
- Father: Heremod der Gothen of TROY
- Mother: Sceaf spouse of Heremod der Gothen of TROY
- Birth: 50 BC, Greece
- Also known as: Sceldwa Scilkwa
- Also known as: Sceldwea Tecti
- Also known as: Scealdea Skjöldr Ben Heremod
- Also known as: Skjaldun, Sköld, Sceldwax, Scyld der Gothen
- Also known as: Sceldwea Tecti
- Also known as: Scealdea Skjöldr Ben Heremod
- Also known as: Skjaldun, Sköld, Sceldwax, Scyld der Gothen
- Also known as: Sceldwea Tecti
- Also known as: Scealdea Skjöldr Ben Heremod
- Also known as: Skjaldun, Sköld, Sceldwax, Scyld der Gothen
- Title Of Nobility: King of Troy
- LifeSketch: Sköld (think "Shield") was the first Danish king according to the Beowulf narrative. He was the forebearer of a very long line of warrior kings. "Från Oden till Vasa" by Lars Ulwencreutz
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Ancestors of Skjold Sceldwa SCEALDEA
/-Hathra BEN HWALA
/-Itermon ben Hathra of Asgard More og ROMSDAL
/-Heremod der Gothen of TROY
Skjold Sceldwa SCEALDEA
\-Sceaf spouse of Heremod der Gothen of TROY
Descendants of Skjold Sceldwa SCEALDEA
1 Skjold Sceldwa SCEALDEA
=Gefion DE DANES
2 Beawa BEDWA
=Beltsea spouse of Beawa BEDWA
3 Tætwa TECTI
=Morgan le FAY
3 Woden D'ASGARD
2 Fridlief Sceldwa HERMOD I
2 Bjaed, Bjaf, Baewa Tecti OF ASGARD, Danish King
- Birth: ABT 825, Maasgau, Frankenreich, France
- Title Of Nobility: Graaf van Darnau
- LifeSketch: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gilbert,_Count_of_the_Maasgau Parents Giselbert of Maasgau are unknown. The father listed born 770 and the mother born 773. The wife of Giselbert of Maasgau was Ermengarde du Morell (unproven). At the beginning of 846 Giselbert succeeded in kidnapping one of Lothar's daughters. De Bidgau of Bitgau ( Latijn: pagus Bedensis) was een Frankische gouw rond het stadje Bitburg in Rijnland-Palts. Het gouwgraafschap hield rond 1050 op te bestaan en ging over in het graafschap Luxemburg, dat in de 16e eeuw deel werd van de Habsburgse Nederlanden. Pas in 1815, bij het Congres van Wenen, werd Bitburg, samen met het hele oostelijke deel van Luxemburg aan Pruisen afgestaan.
- Title Of Nobility: Graf von Maasgau, Comte de Maasgau, Graaf van Maasgau, Count of Maasgau
- Title Of Nobility: Graaf van Lommegau
- Title Of Nobility: Graf von Maasgau, Comte de Maasgau, Graaf van Maasgau, Count of Maasgau
- Title Of Nobility: Graaf van Lommegau
- Death: 6 SEP 885, Reims, Marne, Lothringen
Descendants of Giselbert im Maas und SCHELDEGAU
1 Giselbert im Maas und SCHELDEGAU
=Ermengarde DU MORELL
2 Reginar I Herzog von Lothringen
=Alberade DE RETHEL Marriage: ABT 880
3 Reginar II VON HENNEGAU
=Alix DE BOURGOGNE ALIAS VON BURGUND Marriage: Brabant, Belgium
2 Richwin I IM MAASGAU
2 Ehrenfried VAN MAASGAU
2 Adelbert I von Maasgau
Ancestors of Cornelia SCIPIA
/-Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio Calvus
/-Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA
/-Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA CORCULUM Triumvir
/-Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA SERAPIO
| | /-Lucius CORNELIUS SCIPIO
| | /-Publius CORNELIUS SCIPIO
| | /-Publius CORNELIUS SCIPIO Africanus Major
| | | | /-Manius POMPONIUS MATHO
| | | \-Pomponia spouse of Publius Cornelius SCIPIO
| \-Cornelia MAJOR
| | /-Mamercus Aemilius MAMERCINUS
| | /-Lucius Aemilius MAMERCUS
| | /-Lucius Aemilius Memercinus
| | /-Lucius Aemilius X Privernas
| | /-Marcus Aemilius Paullus
| | /-Marcus Aemilius PAULLUS
| | /-Lucius Aemilius PAULLUS
| \-Amelia TERTIA
/-Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA
Cornelia SCIPIA
| /-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
\-Caecilis Metella Minor
Descendants of Cornelia SCIPIA
1 Cornelia SCIPIA
=Lucius Caecilius Metellus DALMATICUS Pontifex Maximus
2 Caecilia Metella
=Marcus Aemilius Scaurus
3 Aemilia SCAURA
=Manius Acilius Glabrio Marriage: BEF 85 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
=Gnaeus POMPEIUS MAGNUS Marriage: AFT 82 BC
=Lucius Cornelius SULLA FELIX Marriage: ABT 87 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
3 Fausta Cornelia
=Publius Cornelius Lentulus MARCELLINUS
2 Gnaeus Cornelius LENTULUS MARCELLINUS
2 Publius Cornelius Lentulus Marcelinus née Marcus Claudius Marcellus
Ancestors of Pomponia spouse of Publius Cornelius SCIPIO
/-Manius POMPONIUS MATHO
Pomponia spouse of Publius Cornelius SCIPIO
Descendants of Pomponia spouse of Publius Cornelius SCIPIO
1 Pomponia spouse of Publius Cornelius SCIPIO
=Publius CORNELIUS SCIPIO Marriage: BEF 237 BC
2 Publius CORNELIUS SCIPIO Africanus Major
=Amelia TERTIA
3 Cornelia MAJOR
=Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA CORCULUM Triumvir
3 Cornelia Minor
2 Lucius CORNELIUS SCIPIO Asiaticus
- Father: Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA SERAPIO
- Birth: 154 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Consul of Rome, 111 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica[i] (c. 154 – 111 BC) was a politician of the Roman Republic. He belonged to the great patrician family of the Cornelii Scipiones, and was the son of the pontifex maximus Nasica Serapio, who famously murdered Tiberius Gracchus in 133 BC. Nasica was on track to a prestigious career like most of his ancestors, being praetor in 118 BC, but he died during his consulship in 111 BC. Family He was the matrilineal great-grandson of Scipio Africanus. He was married to Caecilia Metella, daughter of Quintus Caecilius Metellus Macedonicus. He had two children: Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica, who married a daughter of the famous orator Lucius Licinius Crassus, and a daughter who married Publius Cornelius Lentulus Marcellinus. His son was praetor in 93 BC and the father of Quintus Caecilius Metellus Pius Scipio Nasica.
- Death: 111 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
Ancestors of Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA
/-Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio Calvus
/-Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA
/-Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA CORCULUM Triumvir
/-Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA SERAPIO
| | /-Lucius CORNELIUS SCIPIO
| | /-Publius CORNELIUS SCIPIO
| | /-Publius CORNELIUS SCIPIO Africanus Major
| | | | /-Manius POMPONIUS MATHO
| | | \-Pomponia spouse of Publius Cornelius SCIPIO
| \-Cornelia MAJOR
| | /-Marcus Aemillius MAMERCUS
| | /-Mamercus Aemilius MAMERCINUS
| | /-Lucius Aemilius MAMERCUS
| | /-Lucius Aemilius Memercinus
| | /-Lucius Aemilius X Privernas
| | /-Marcus Aemilius Paullus
| | /-Marcus Aemilius PAULLUS
| | /-Lucius Aemilius PAULLUS
| \-Amelia TERTIA
Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA
Descendants of Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA
1 Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA
=Caecilis Metella Minor
2 Cornelia SCIPIA
=Lucius Caecilius Metellus DALMATICUS Pontifex Maximus
3 Caecilia Metella
=Marcus Aemilius Scaurus
=Lucius Cornelius SULLA FELIX Marriage: ABT 87 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
=Publius Cornelius Lentulus MARCELLINUS
3 Gnaeus Cornelius LENTULUS MARCELLINUS
3 Publius Cornelius Lentulus Marcelinus née Marcus Claudius Marcellus
2 Publius Cornelius Scipio NASICA
- Father: Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio Calvus
- Birth: 227 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Aedile, 197 BC, Roma Roman Republic
- Occupation: Praetor- assigned to Hispania Ulterior, 194 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Consul of Rome, 191 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Praetor- assigned to Hispania Ulterior, 194 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Consul of Rome, 191 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Praetor- assigned to Hispania Ulterior, 194 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Consul of Rome, 191 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica (born 227 BC; fl. 204 – 171 BC) (Nasica meaning "pointed nose") was a consul of ancient Rome in 191 BC. He was a son of Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio Calvus. Sometimes referred to as Scipio Nasica the First to distinguish him from his son and grandson, he was a cousin of Scipio Africanus. At the request of the Senate, he journeyed with the Roman matrons to receive the statue of Magna Mater in 204 when it arrived from Anatolia at Ostia. According to Livy and Ovid's Fasti we are told that he was chosen for this duty because he was the best of the Roman community. He was later aedile in 197. As praetor in Hispania Ulterior (194), he defeated the Lusitanians at Ilipa, and as consul subjugated the Boii.[1] He was not chosen as censor despite standing in both the elections of 189 and 184, a failure marking the decline of the influence of the Scipiones in Rome. He went on to help found Aquileia in 181, and appears in an inquiry of 171. This Scipio Nasica was the father of the Scipio Nasica who opposed Cato the Censor for several years on the question of Carthage. Both father and son were distinguished jurists; the father was reportedly given a house in the center of Rome by the Senate to make his advice more accessible to the Senate and people of Rome. He knew the epic poet Ennius as Cicero reports an anecdote on them.[2]
- Death: 171 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA
/-Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio Calvus
Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA
Descendants of Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA
1 Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA
=(Unknown)
2 Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA CORCULUM Triumvir
=Cornelia MAJOR
3 Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA SERAPIO
=(Unknown)
- Father: Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA
- Birth: 205 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Consul of Rome, 162 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Censor, 159 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Pontifex Maximus, 150 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Princeps Senatus, 147 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Censor, 159 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Pontifex Maximus, 150 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Princeps Senatus, 147 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Censor, 159 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Pontifex Maximus, 150 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Princeps Senatus, 147 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Censor, 159 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Pontifex Maximus, 150 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Princeps Senatus, 147 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Title Of Nobility: Triumvir - Dalmatae, 155 BC, Dalmatia, Kingdom of Illyria
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica Corculum[i] (born c. 206 BC – died c. 141 BC) was a politician of the Roman Republic. Born into the illustrious family of the Cornelii Scipiones, he was one of the most important Roman statesmen of the second century BC,[3] being consul two times in 162 and 155 BC, censor in 159 BC, pontifex maximus (chief priest) in 150 BC, and finally princeps senatus (leader of the Senate) in 147 BC. Corculum was a talented military commander, who played a decisive role during the Battle of Pydna in 168 BC; he later won a triumph over the Dalmatae in 155 BC. He was remembered as a staunch conservative, defender of the ancestral Roman customs against political and cultural innovations, notably Hellenism, in contradiction with the policies of his famous father-in-law Scipio Africanus and cousin Scipio Aemilianus. This conservatism led him to order the destruction of the first stone theatre in Rome in 151 BC and to oppose the final war against Carthage, advocated by his rival Cato the Censor. In spite of his political influence, Corculum could not prevent the war from being voted in 149 BC, with the probable support of his cousin Scipio Aemilianus, who destroyed Carthage in 146 BC. Due to a lack of sources, his life is sparsely known. Moreover, ancient authors often give contradictory accounts of his life; as a result, modern historians have had diverging interpretations to explain some of his deeds, especially his opposition to the war against Carthage, or his destruction of the first Roman theatre in stone.
- Death: 141 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
Ancestors of Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA CORCULUM Triumvir
/-Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio Calvus
/-Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA
Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA CORCULUM Triumvir
Descendants of Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA CORCULUM Triumvir
1 Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA CORCULUM Triumvir
=Cornelia MAJOR
2 Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA SERAPIO
=(Unknown)
3 Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA
=Caecilis Metella Minor
3 Cornelia Scipionis
- Father: Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA CORCULUM Triumvir
- Mother: Cornelia MAJOR
- Birth: 182 BC, Rome, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Pontifex Maximus, 141 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Consul of Rome, 138 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Consul of Rome, 138 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Consul of Rome, 138 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Consul of Rome, 138 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- A Firm Republican: A firm conservative, like his father and his cousin Scipio Aemilianus, he led the opposition to the tribune of the plebs Tiberius Gracchus, whom he finally murdered in 133 BC., 133 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia - Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica Serapio (182/181–132 BC) was a politician of the Roman Republic best remembered today for leading a mob that assassinated the tribune Tiberius Gracchus, and hunted and killed Tiberius' supporters afterwards. A member of the great patrician gens Cornelia, he was the son of Scipio Nasica Corculum, the pontifex maximus and princeps senatus. As with many other Cornelii Scipiones, Serapio obtained several prominent offices; he notably succeeded his father as pontifex maximus in 141 BC, and became consul in 138 BC. A firm conservative, like his father and his cousin Scipio Aemilianus, he led the opposition to the tribune of the plebs Tiberius Gracchus, whom he finally murdered in 133 BC. However, he was sent to Asia by the senate to avoid his prosecution by Gracchus' supporters, and died in Pergamum soon after. Family background Not much is known about the early life of Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica Serapio. He was a member of the gens Cornelia and the son of Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica Corculum and his wife Cornelia, daughter of Scipio Africanus. Scipio Nasica was born in 182 or 181 BC.[1] Scipio Nasica Serapio was the third member of his family to bear the agnomen Nasica (pointed nose). He succeeded his father as Pontifex Maximus in 141 BC, possibly because of his illustrious family name and his father's great reputation. It is likely that his branch of the Cornelii Scipiones had drifted away from the majority of the family, on account of politically opposing views towards the Third Punic War. Corculum was opposed to the invasion of Carthage, whereas Scipio Aemilianus actually led the siege of Carthage.[2] Political career[edit] One important reference to Scipio Nasica’s participation in politics is as a mysterious “Cornelius” by the historian Appian. This “Cornelius” is credited with a great Roman defeat at the hands of the widely feared “Pannonians.” After some deduction, one can identify the leader of the Roman forces to be Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica Serapio, who in 141 BC was the praetor of Macedonia. Some debate would classify a more likely candidate for the terrible “Pannonians” to be actually from the region of Illyria, just south of Pannonia proper. In the same year, Scipio Nasica would be awarded the title of Pontifex Maximus, inheriting it from his father who had just died. In 138 BC, Nasica would be elected to the office of consul, part of a series of “strong men” to rectify the recent bouts of unrest and defeats abroad. During his consulship, Scipio Nasica would attempt to avenge his own defeat as praetor; in doing so, he attempted to raise harsh levies on the Romans. Discontent with his demands, opposition would rise against him under the leadership of probably Nasica’s greatest political rival, the tribune Curiatius. Curiatius had Nasica arrested on the grounds of withholding the legal privileges of the tribunes against the levy. While in custody, Nasica was given the name “Serapio” as an insult, referring to the shape of his nose.[3] Scipio Nasica’s next major political involvement would be that in the murder of Tiberius Gracchus. Gracchus rose to office at a time when the Roman Republic was bloated with the effects of extensive expansion abroad; a huge influx of slave labor and foreign wealth, a change in the function of agriculture and devaluation in the crop market were causing a massive domestic crisis, challenging the fundamental values of Roman culture (there is a debate over whether it was a grain crisis or a manpower crisis).[4] Gracchus had taken the office of tribune and was passing laws of reform to help rectify this domestic crisis, though his legislation was empowering the plebs of Roman society. The majority of the Senate, who favored the patricians, felt threatened and aligned with Scipio Nasica and his cousin Scipio Aemilianus, who would lead the opposition against Gracchus. Nasica eventually became responsible for the assassination of Gracchus during elections in 133 BC. Scipio Nasica had gathered the senators to Gracchus’ bloody death claiming that the tribune desired to become king of Rome. To commit the assassination Scipio Nasica covered his head with the hood of his pontifex maximus robe, which possibly denoted the killing as a ritualized sacrifice for the good of Rome. After his assassination, Scipio led a witch hunt to eradicate any surviving supporters of Gracchus. Those who escaped the purge afterwards demanded that Scipio be held responsible for murder. Death Eventually the prolonged conflict between political parties caught up with Nasica, and the Senate sent him away to Pergamon on a mission. This was unusual, as a Pontifex Maximus would never normally be sent away from Rome. He later died there, allegedly at the hands of some of Gracchus’ supporters. Scipio Nasica Serapio was succeeded by his son of the same name, who became consul in 111 BC.
- Death: 132 BC, Pergamon, Anatolia
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA SERAPIO
/-Gnaeus Cornelius Scipio Calvus
/-Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA
/-Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA CORCULUM Triumvir
Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA SERAPIO
| /-Lucius CORNELIUS SCIPIO
| /-Publius CORNELIUS SCIPIO
| /-Publius CORNELIUS SCIPIO Africanus Major
| | | /-Manius POMPONIUS MATHO
| | \-Pomponia spouse of Publius Cornelius SCIPIO
\-Cornelia MAJOR
| /-Lucius Aemilius Mamercus
| /-Marcus Aemillius MAMERCUS
| /-Mamercus Aemilius MAMERCINUS
| /-Lucius Aemilius MAMERCUS
| /-Lucius Aemilius Memercinus
| /-Lucius Aemilius X Privernas
| /-Marcus Aemilius Paullus
| /-Marcus Aemilius PAULLUS
| /-Lucius Aemilius PAULLUS
\-Amelia TERTIA
Descendants of Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA SERAPIO
1 Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA SERAPIO
=(Unknown)
2 Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA
=Caecilis Metella Minor
3 Cornelia SCIPIA
=Lucius Caecilius Metellus DALMATICUS Pontifex Maximus
=Publius Cornelius Lentulus MARCELLINUS
3 Publius Cornelius Scipio NASICA
2 Cornelia Scipionis
- Birth: 54 BC
- Death: 16 BC, Rome, Lazio, Italy
Descendants of Cornelia SCIPIONIS
1 Cornelia SCIPIONIS
=Lucius Aemilius Lepidus PAULLUS Marriage: ABT 30 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
2 Aemilia PAULLA
=Lucius Munatius Plancus Marriage: ABT 13 BC, Roma, Roman Empire
3 Munia Plancine DE ROME
=Marcus Aemilius Lepidus DE ROME II
3 Munatia PLANCINA
3 Aemilia PLANCINA
2 Marcus Aemilius LEPIDUS
2 Lucius Aemilius PAULLUS
=Vipsania Julia AGRIPPINA Julia Minor
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
- Birth: Leinster, Ireland
- Death: Ireland
Descendants of Aoife SCOTLAND
1 Aoife SCOTLAND
=Conn Ceadchathach Mac FEIDEILMID
- Birth: 1080, Dunfermline, Fife, Scotland
- Also known as: Matilda of Blessed Memory
- Also known as: Matilda of Scotland, Queen Consort of England
- Also known as: Good Queen Maud
- Also known as: Matilda of Scotland, Queen Consort of England
- Also known as: Good Queen Maud
- Also known as: Good Queen Maud
- Also known as: Matilda of Scotland, Queen Consort of England
- FOSTERED AT ROMSEY ABBEY: Edith and her sister Mary went to Romsey Abbey to live with their Aunt Cristina and be educated in 1086, BET 1086 AND 1093, Romsey Abbey, Romsey, Hampshire, England
- BETROTHED AT AGE 13 TO ALAN RUFUS: Edith's parents betrothed her to Alan Rufus in early 1093. In November on 1093 both of her parents died, before the marriage took place, and Alan ran off with Gunhild of Wessex, daughter of Harold Godwinson. As fate would have it Alan died before that marriage took place.
- ORPHANED: Both of Edith's parents died in November 1093, within 3 days of each other. Orphaned, abandoned by her betrothed, and her family at war with each other, Edith left the monastery and did not return.
- COUNCIL OF BISHOPS: Before Edith could marry Henry she had to convince a specially convened council of Bishops that she had never taken vows to be a nun., 1100, Wilton, Wiltshire, England
- Title Of Nobility: Queen consort of England, 11 NOV 1100, Westminster Abbey, Westminster, Middlesex, England
- PRINCESS EDITH OF SCOTLAND BECAME QUEEN MATILDA OF ENGLAND: Christened Edith in 1080, she use used the name Edith for the first 20 years of her life. Upon her marriage to King Henry she was crowned Queen and in the investiture ceremony took the Norman name of Matilda., 11 NOV 1100, Westminster Abbey, Westminster, London, England
- Affiliation: House of Dunkeld
- God-daughter of Prince Robert Curthose and English Queen Matilda of Flanders: At her christening in 1080 she was named Edith and Prince Robert Curthose and English Queen Matilda of Flanders, who were both present, were named as her god-parents, a duty her mother took very seriously.
- LifeSketch: Matilda of Scotland (originally christened Edith, 1080 – 1 May 1118), also known as Good Queen Maud or Matilda of Blessed Memory, was Queen of England and Duchess of Normandy as the first wife of King Henry I. She acted as regent of England on several occasions in her husband's absence. Daughter of the King Malcolm III of Scotland and Princess-Saint Margaret of Wessex, Matilda was sent to be educated in a convent in southern England, where her aunt Cristina was abbess. According to Wilton Abbey's traditions in the 1140s, her aunt ordered her to take the veil in order to protect her from the lust of William II of England, which angered her father because of the effect it might have on her prospects of marriage. In 1093, Matilda was engaged to an English nobleman until her father and her brother Edward were killed in a minor raid. A messy succession conflict in Scotland followed between her uncle Donald III, her half-brother Duncan II and her brother Edgar until 1097, when the latter assumed the throne. Upon the accession of Henry I in 1100, following his brother William's death while hunting, the English King quickly proposed marriage to Matilda, who possessed the Anglo-Saxon royal blood, which the Norman dynasty largely lacked. Furthermore, her brother offered the prospect of better relations between the two countries. However, there was a difficulty about the marriage: a special church council was called to be satisfied that Matilda hadn't taken vows as a nun, but her firm testimony managed to convince them of. As Queen of England since the late 1100, Matilda embarked on several building projects for transportation and health, took a role in government as mediator to the Church, and led a literary court. She acted as regent when her husband was away, with many surviving charters are signed by her. Matilda and Henry had two children: Matilda and William Adelin, Duke of Normandy. She lived to see her daughter become Holy Roman Empress, but died two years before her son's drowning. Her widower remarried, but had no further legitimate children, which caused a succession crisis resulting in a long civil war known as The Anarchy. Queen Matilda was buried in Westminster Abbey and was fondly remembered by her subjects. There was an attempt to have her canonized, which wasn't pursued. Childhood She was born on 1080, in Dunfermline, Scotland. Her parents were King Malcolm III and Princess-Margaret of Wessex, making her descendant from both the Scottish and the Anglo-Saxon royal family since she was the great-granddaughter of Edmund Ironside and henceforth descended from Alfred the Great. The Scottish princess was christened Edith, with the Anglo-Norman prince Robert Curthose standing as godfather at the ceremony. English Queen Matilda of Flanders was present at the baptismal font and served as her godmother. Edith then pulled at Queen Matilda's headdress, which was seen as an omen that the infant would be Queen one day. Edith, her sister, and her brothers were raised by a loving but strict mother who didn't spare the rod when it came to raising her children in virtue, which some presupposed was the reason for the good behaviour the royal siblings displayed, and Margaret also stressed the importance of piety. When she was about six years old, Edith and her sister Mary were sent to be educated in Romsey Abbey, near Southampton in southern England, where their maternal aunt Cristina was abbess. Their studies went beyond the standard feminine pursuits, which wasn't surprising since her mother was a great lover of books. The princesses learned the languages English, French, and Latin, which were sufficiently to read St. Augustine's works and the Bible. It is presumed that Edith learned financial management and geometry as well. ... Issue Although her husband had a number of illegitimate children by various mistresses, Matilda and Henry had at least two children who reached adulthood: 1. Matilda (7 February 1102 – 10 September 1167): Became Lady of the English after The Anarchy. By marriage, she was Holy Roman Empress and Countess of Anjou. 2. William (5 August 1103 – 25 November 1120): Called "Adelin". Became Duke of Normandy. Married Matilda (d.1154), daughter of Count Fulk V of Anjou. The couple possibly had a stillborn child in July 1101, but historians aren't entirely sure whether there is enough evidence for this. Many, such as Chibnall, have claimed that there was no pregnancy before the one with Empress Matilda "as it allows no time for a normal second pregnancy". Through her, the post-Norman conquest English monarchs were related to the Anglo-Saxon House of Wessex monarchs. Death and legacy On 1 May 1118, Matilda died at Westminster Palace. She would have liked to have been buried at Holy Trinity, Aldgate, but King Henry asked for her to be buried at Westminster Abbey near Edward the Confessor. The inscription on her tomb reads: "Here lies the renowned queen Matilda the second, excelling both young and old of her day. She was for everyone the benchmark of morals and the ornament of life." The death of Matilda's son, William Adelin, in the disaster of the White Ship (November 1120) and her widower's failure to produce a legitimate son from his second marriage led to the succession crisis and, as a consequence, a long civil war. During his reign, Stephen of Blois insisted that Queen Matilda had in fact been a nun and that her daughter, Empress Matilda, was therefore not a legitimate successor to the English throne. Queen Matilda's reputation considerably improved throughout her grandson's reign, but she was remembered to a continuously lesser extent between the late 13th and 14th centuries. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matilda_of_Scotland The family records of Mildred Alberta Sweet Winfree add the additional historical comments, citing Who's Who In History v1, El Camino--Hassol: Edith, Matilda, or Maud (1080-1118) Queen of Henry, was the orphaned daughter of St. Margaret of Scotland. Educated at Wilton and Ramsey Abby where she said her Aunt Christine forced her to wear a black veil. Throwing it to the ground, when left alone, she was beaten when caught. When her mother died, she came to England to her Uncle EdgarÆtheling. She was sister to King David of Scotland, and to Alexander the Fierce, King of Scot. She founded a leper hospital at St. Giles in the Fields. She is described as "beautiful, good, and religious". "She died in the prime of her life, like most of her family".
- Death: 1 MAY 1118, Palace of Westminster, Westminster, Middlesex, England
- Burial: MAY 1118, Westminster Abbey, Westminster, Middlesex, England
Descendants of Matilda of SCOTLAND
1 Matilda of SCOTLAND
=Henry I of ENGLAND Marriage: 1100
2 Euphemia OF ENGLAND
2 Matilda of ENGLAND
=Geoffroy V Plantagenet D'ANJOU Marriage: 22 MAY 1127, Maine, Charente, Poitou-Charentes, France Marriage: 22 MAY 1127, Le Mans, Sarthe, Pays de la Loire, France Marriage: 1128
3 Henry II of ENGLAND
=Eleanor of AQUITAINE Marriage: 18 MAY 1152, France Knowbelle-Aquitia Invien Poitiels Marriage: 18 MAY 1152, Poitiers, Vienne, Duchy of Aquitaine, France Marriage: 18 MAY 1152, Poitiers, Vienne, Poitou, France
=Ykenai or Hikenai Marriage: Unmd
=Ida DE TOSNY Marriage: ABT 1176, no marriage
3 Marie SHAFTSBURY
3 Geoffroy VI D'ANJOU
3 Hamelin DE WARENNE
3 Guillaume D'ANJOU
3 William Plantagenet POITOU
3 Emma D'ANJOU
3 Mary D’ANJOU
=Heinrich V, Kaiser des Heiligen Römischen Reiches Marriage: Mainz, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany
2 William ÆTHELING
2 Richard ÆTHELING
- Father: Marcus Livius Drusus Claudianus Emporer Appius Claudius PULCHER
- Mother: Aufidia LURCO
- Birth: 50 BC
- He was the son of consul Lucius Scribonius Libo by his wife who was a member of the: "gens" Sulpicius, the family that the Roman Emperor Galba, had descended from on his paternal side. He was the great Grandson of Pompey and cousin of the Caesars.
- LifeSketch: Marcus Scribonius Libo Drusus (died September 13, AD 16) was a Roman accused of treason against the emperor Tiberius. He was likely the son or grandson of Marcus Livius Drusus Libo (adopted brother of empress Livia). It is possible that he was Marcus Livius nephew whom was adopted. Libo Drusus was regarded as a fatuous young man, who had tastes for absurdities. Along with his brother Lucius Scribonius Libo, he was accused of conspiring against the Roman Emperor Tiberius. This included asking a fortune-teller if he would be rich enough to pave the Via Appia, as far as Brundisium or Brindisi with money. Tacitus described the accusations against Libo as 'preposterous' and 'pointless'. The two men were tried in a senatorial court by the Emperor Tiberius. At the trial, Marcus was ill and pleaded for mercy. A maternal relative, Publius Sulpicius Quirinus, defended them and appealed to the Emperor. Tiberius told him to apply to the senate. Tiberius wanted to investigate Libo's slaves but there was a senatorial decree preventing confessions from tortured slaves from being used in trials against their own masters. To get around this Tiberius had Libo's slaves sold to the treasury agent, then the accusations made against Libo were considered confirmed by Libo's ex slaves. His aunt, Scribonia (second wife of Roman Emperor Augustus), tried to convince Marcus to face trial rather than commit suicide. However, Marcus committed suicide by stabbing himself twice in the stomach on 13 September 16 AD. The Roman Senate agreed to divide his property among his accusers, which was the common practice of the time. Furthermore, his statue and funeral masks were removed from descendants' funeral parades and members of the gens ‘Scribonius’ were forbidden to bear the name ‘Drusus’. His supporters were executed, and the day of his death was declared a public holiday. -- Wikiwand: Marcus Scribonius Libo
- Death: 13 SEP 16, committed suicide by stabbing himself twice in the stomach
Ancestors of Marcus SCRIBONIUS LIBO DRUSUS
/-Quintus Servilius CAEPIO
/-Quintus Servilius Caepio THIRD OF ROME
| \-Caecilia METALLA
/-Marcus Livius Drusus III DE ROME
| \-Livia Drusa DE ROME
/-Marcus Livius Drusus Claudianus Emporer Appius Claudius PULCHER
| \-Servilia Caepia MAJOR
Marcus SCRIBONIUS LIBO DRUSUS
| /-Marcus Aufidius LURCO
\-Aufidia LURCO
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Descendants of Aspasia of SCYTHIA
1 Aspasia of SCYTHIA
=Artaxerxes II Memnon DE PERSE
- Father: Marcus Antonius III
- Mother: Cleopatra VII Thea Philipator OF EGYPT
- Birth: 25 DEC 40 BC, Alexandria, Egypt
- Also known as: Cleopatra VIII (of Egypt)
- Also known as: Her second name in ancient Greek means moon, also meaning the Titaness-goddess of the Moon Selene, being the counterpart of her twin brother's second name Helios, meaning sun and the Titan-god of the Sun Helios.
- Also known as: Kleôpatra VIII Séléné d'ÉGYPTE, (ou) Soléne II De Jérusalem , Reine de Lybie, D'Egypte
- Title Of Nobility: Queen Consort of Numidia
- Dynasty: Ptolemaic: (Date and Place unknown)
- Only daughter of Greek Ptolemaic Queen Cleopatra VII of Egypt and: Roman Triumvir Mark Antony.
- Fraternal twin of Ptolemaic Prince Alexander Helios.: (Date and Place unknown)
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia Cleopatra Selene II (Greek: Κλεοπάτρα Σελήνη; summer 40 BC – c. 5 BC;[2] the numeration is modern) was a Ptolemaic princess and Queen of Numidia (briefly in 25 BC) and Mauretania (25 BC – 5 BC). She was an important royal woman in the early Augustan age. Cleopatra Selene was the only daughter of Greek Ptolemaic Queen Cleopatra VII of Egypt and Roman Triumvir Mark Antony. In the Donations of Antioch and of Alexandria, she was made ruler of Cyrenaica and Libya.[3] After Antony and Cleopatra's defeat at Actium and their suicides in Egypt in 30 BC, Selene and her brothers were brought to Rome and placed in the household of Octavian's sister, Octavia the Younger, a former wife of her father. Selene eventually married Juba II of Numidia and Mauretania. She had great influence in Mauretania's government decisions, especially regarding trade and construction projects. During their reign, the country became extremely wealthy. The couple had a son and successor, Ptolemy of Mauretania. Through their granddaughter Drusilla, the Ptolemaic line intermarried into Roman nobility for many generations. Cleopatra Selene was born in approximately 40 BC in Egypt, as Pharaoh Cleopatra VII's only daughter. Her second name ("moon" in Ancient Greek) opposes the second name of her twin brother, Alexander Helios ("sun" in Ancient Greek). She was raised and highly educated in Alexandria in a manner appropriate for a princess. The twins were formally acknowledged by their father, Triumvir Mark Antony, during a political meeting with their mother in 37 BC. Their younger brother, Ptolemy Philadelphos, was born a year later. Their mother most likely planned for Selene to marry her older half-brother Caesarion, possibly the only biological son of Julius Caesar, after whom he was named. Over the next two years, Antony bestowed a great deal of land on Cleopatra and their children under his triumviral authority. In 34 BC, during the Donations of Alexandria, huge crowds assembled to witness the couple sit on golden thrones on a silver platform with Caesarion, Cleopatra Selene, Alexander Helios, and Ptolemy Philadelphus sitting on smaller ones below them. Antony declared Cleopatra to be Queen of Kings, Caesarion to be the true son of Julius Caesar and King of Egypt, and proceeded to bestow kingdoms of their own upon Selene and her brothers. She was made ruler of Cyrenaica and Libya. Neither of the children were old enough to assume control of their lands, but it was clear that their parents intended they should do so in the future. This event, along with Antony's marriage to Cleopatra and divorce of Octavia Minor, older sister of Octavian (future Roman Emperor Caesar Augustus), marked a turning point that led to the Final War of the Roman Republic. In 31 BC. during a naval battle at Actium, Antony and Cleopatra were defeated by Octavian. By the time Octavian arrived in Egypt in the summer of 30 BC, the couple had sent the children away. Caesarion went to India, but en route he was betrayed by his tutor, intercepted by Roman forces and executed. Selene, Alexander, and Ptolemy Philadelphos went south to Thebes. Meanwhile, their parents committed suicide as Octavian and his army invaded Egypt. The deaths of their mother and Caesarion left Selene and Alexander nominally in charge of Egypt until the kingdom was officially annexed by the Roman Empire two weeks later. Life at Rome Octavian captured Selene and her brothers, and took them to Rome. During his triumph, he paraded the twins dressed as the moon and the sun in heavy golden chains, behind an effigy of their mother clutching an asp to her arm. The chains were so heavy that the children were unable to walk in them, eliciting unexpected sympathy from many of the Roman onlookers.[5] Once Egypt had ceased to exist as an independent kingdom, there remained the question of what to do with Selene and her brothers. In the absence of any surviving relative, responsibility for the children passed to Augustus, who in turn gave the siblings to Octavia to be raised in her household on the Palatine Hill.[6] They were members of an extended family that included their half-brother Iullus Antonius (their father's son with his late wife Fulvia), their half-sisters, both called Antonia (daughters of their father with Octavia), and Octavia's older children from a previous marriage, Marcus Claudius Marcellus and his two sisters called Marcella.[citation needed] Between 26 and 20 BC, Cleopatra Selene is the only known surviving member of the Ptolemaic dynasty.[7] Her brothers are not recorded in any known historical account and are presumed to have died, possibly from either illness or assassination.[note 1] Marriage and issue Octavia arranged for Cleopatra Selene to marry the intellectual King Juba II of Numidia, whose father had committed suicide in 46 BC. He was sent to be raised in Caesar's household; on Caesar's death in 44 BC custody passed to Octavian, the future Augustus. The marriage likely took place in 25 BC[8] and was commemorated in an epigram that survives in its entirety: Great neighbouring regions of the world, which divides the Nile, Swollen from black Ethiopia, divides, You have created common kings for both through marriage, making one race of Egyptians and Libyans. Let the children of Kings in turn hold from their fathers a strong rule over both lands. The couple had two children: Ptolemy of Mauretania born in 10 BC [9] He was named after his mother's dynasty and her younger brother. In naming her son, Cleopatra created a distinct Greek-Egyptian tone and emphasized her role as heiress of the Ptolemies in exile. A daughter, whose name has not survived, is mentioned in an inscription. It has been suggested that this was Drusilla of Mauretania, but she may have been a granddaughter through Ptolemy instead.[9] A hoard of Selene's coins has been dated at 17 AD. It is traditionally believed that she was alive to mint them, but this would mean that her husband married Princess Glaphyra of Cappadocia during Selene's lifetime. Historians generally assume that Juba wouldn't have taken a second wife as a thoroughly Romanized king, arguing that if he married Glaphyra before 4 AD, then his first wife must have already been dead.[10] However, even contemporary client kings with Roman citizenship took multiple wives. It is possible that Selene and Juba separated for a time, but that their rift was mended after Juba's divorce from Glaphyra. Queen of Mauretania In 25 BC, Augustus decided to confer on Juba II and Selene the newly created client kingdom of Mauretania since Numidia was, after a brief period of status as the Roman client kingdom under king Juba II (30 - 25 BC) once again directly annexed to the Roman Empire as the part of the Roman province of Africa Proconsularis. The young rulers renamed their new capital Caesarea (modern Cherchell, Algeria), in honor of the Emperor.[12] Mauretania was a vast territory, but lacked organization. Cleopatra Selene is said to have exercised great influence on the policies which Juba promoted. She imported many important advisers, scholars, and artists from her mother's royal court in Alexandria to serve in Caesarea. Through the couple's influence, the Mauretanian kingdom flourished. Economy Cleopatra supported Mauretanian trade. The kingdom developed a significant export throughout the Mediterranean region,[13] particularly with Spain and Italy. Their products included fish, grapes, pearls, figs, grain, wooden furniture and purple dye harvested from shellfish. Tingis (modern Tangier), a town at the Pillars of Hercules (modern Strait of Gibraltar), became a major trade centre. The value and quality of Mauretanian coins became recognised throughout the Roman Empire. Building projects Cleopatra's promotion of architecture marks a transition between the Hellenistic style and Roman. The construction and sculptural projects at Caesarea and Volubilis display a mixture of Ancient Egyptian, Greek and Roman architectural styles.[14] These buildings included a lighthouse in the style of Pharos of Alexandria in the harbour, a royal palace situated in the seafront, and numerous temples dedicated to Roman and Egyptian deities. Her vigorous promotion of her mother's legacy stood in sharp contrast to the negative image being disseminated in contemporary Augustan poetry.[15] Death The Royal Mausoleum of Mauretania, a tomb of Cleopatra Selene II and Juba II in Tipaza, Algeria. The couple ruled Mauretania for almost two decades until Cleopatra's death at the age of 35. Controversy surrounds her exact date of death. The following epigram by Greek epigrammatist Crinagoras of Mytilene is considered to be her eulogy:[16] The moon herself grew dark, rising at sunset, Covering her suffering in the night, Because she saw her beautiful namesake, Selene, Breathless, descending to Hades, With her she had had the beauty of her light in common, And mingled her own darkness with her death. If this poem isn't simply literary license, Selene's death seems to have ironically coincided with a lunar eclipse. If so, astronomical correlation then can be used to help pinpoint the date of her death: Lunar eclipses occurred in 9, 8, 5 and 1 BC and in AD 3, 7, 10, 11 and 14. The event in 5 BC most closely resembles the description given in the eulogy.[17] However, the date of her death is not ascertainable with any certainty. Zahi Hawass, former Director of Egyptian Antiquities, believes Cleopatra died in 8 AD.[18] Selene was placed in the Royal Mausoleum of Mauretania in modern Algeria, built by her and Juba east of Caesarea, still visible. Juba died in 23 AD and was buried in the same tomb. There is a fragmentary inscription dedicated to the couple as the "King and Queen of Mauretania". Their remains have not been found at the site, perhaps due to tomb raids.
- Title Of Nobility: Queen Consort of Mauretania
- Title Of Nobility: Ptolemaic Princess
- Death: 5 BC, Caesarea, Mauretania, Roman colony, Roman-Berber, North Africa
- Burial: Royal Mausoleum Of Mauretania, Africa
Ancestors of Cleopatra SELENE II VIII
/-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, 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
| | /-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
Cleopatra SELENE II VIII
\-Cleopatra VII Thea Philipator OF EGYPT
Ancestors of Apama SELEUCID
/-Antiochus III Theos, Basileus of the Seleucid Empire
Apama SELEUCID
| /-Antiochus of Orestis General of MACEDONIA
| /-Seleucus of SYRIA I
| | \-Laodice I, of Macedonia
| /-Achaeus KING General of the Seleucid Army, of Syria
| | | /- SPITAMENES
| | \-Apama Queen Consort of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /- PHARNACES I
| | | /-Artabazus I Persian NOBLEMAN
| | | /-Daskyleion of Bactria
| | | /-Pharnaces Arshamid Daskyleion I
| | | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | | /-Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | | | /-Artaxerxes I of Persia, King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire
| | | | | /-Darius II Ochus ACHAEMENID
| | | | | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | | | | /-Artaxerxes II Memnon DE PERSE
| | | | | | | /-Artaxerxes I of Persia, King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire
| | | | | | \-Parysatis Queen Consort of PERSIA
| | | | | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | | | \-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
| | | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | | /-Spitamenes Satrap of BAKTRIA
| | | | | /-Pharnavaz father of DASKALYTIS
| | | | \-Daskalytis spouse of Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | \-Apama I of BACTRIA
| | | /-Arsames Prince of PERSIA
| | | /- PHARNACES I
| | | /-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
| | | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar III King of BABYLON
| | | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | | | \-Hildita of Babylon
| | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | | /-Amyites of Persia V
| | | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | | | \- 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
| | | | | | \-Hildita of Babylon
| | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | | /-Amyites of Persia V
| | | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | | | \- VASHTI
| | \-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
| | | /-Nebuchadnezzar III King of BABYLON
| | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | \-Hildita of Babylon
| | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | /-Amyites of Persia V
| | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | \- VASHTI
\-Laodice Queen I Consort of the Seleucid EMPIRE
\-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas DE MACÉDOINE
- Father: Antiochus III Theos, Basileus of the Seleucid Empire
- Mother: Laodice Queen I Consort of the Seleucid EMPIRE
- Birth: 260 BC, Antioch, Syrian Arab Republic
- Also known as: Queen of Pontus Laodice of Syria
- LifeSketch: Laodice appears to have come from obscure origins. Laodice could have been a supposed daughter of the Seleucid King Antiochus IV Epiphanes. This is based on the assumption that the sister of Alexander Balas who appeared in Rome with him in 153 BC as a genuine daughter of Antiochus IV Epiphanes was the Laodice who married Mithridates III. Antiochus IV Epiphanes had two daughters who were Laodice VI from this marriage to his sister-wife Laodice IV and his other daughter was Antiochis the child from his concubine. However this assumption shows that Antiochus IV Epiphanes may have had another daughter called Laodice, however this is not certain. The assumption shows that there may be some confusion about the identity of this Laodice and Laodice VI. Laodice bore Mithridates III three children: Mithridates IV of Pontus, Pharnaces I of Pontus and Laodice. -- Wikiwand: Laodice (wife of Mithridates III of Pontus)
- Death: BEF 234 BC, Commagene, Syrian Arab Republic
- Partnership with: Mithridates II of PONTUS
- Child: Pharnaces OF PONTUS I Birth: ABT 225 BC, Pontus,Anatolia,Syria
- Child: Alexandros OF SYRIA Birth: Syrian Arab Republic
- Child: Mithridates III of PONTUS Birth: ABT 240 BC, Kizil Irmak Area,Black Coast,,Turkey
- Child: Laodice of PONTUS III Birth: ABT 130 BC, Pontus, Turkey
- Child: Stratonice SELEUCID Birth: Cappadocia, L'Aquila, Abruzzo, Italy
- Child: INFANT SON SYRIA Birth: Antioch, Syrian Arab Republic
Ancestors of Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
/-Antiochus III Theos, Basileus of the Seleucid Empire
Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
| /-Antiochus of Orestis General of MACEDONIA
| /-Seleucus of SYRIA I
| | \-Laodice I, of Macedonia
| /-Achaeus KING General of the Seleucid Army, of Syria
| | | /- SPITAMENES
| | \-Apama Queen Consort of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | /- PHARNACES I
| | | /-Artabazus I Persian NOBLEMAN
| | | /-Daskyleion of Bactria
| | | /-Pharnaces Arshamid Daskyleion I
| | | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | | /-Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | | | /-Artaxerxes I of Persia, King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire
| | | | | /-Darius II Ochus ACHAEMENID
| | | | | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | | | | /-Artaxerxes II Memnon DE PERSE
| | | | | | | /-Artaxerxes I of Persia, King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire
| | | | | | \-Parysatis Queen Consort of PERSIA
| | | | | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | | | \-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
| | | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | | /-Spitamenes Satrap of BAKTRIA
| | | | | /-Pharnavaz father of DASKALYTIS
| | | | \-Daskalytis spouse of Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | \-Apama I of BACTRIA
| | | /-Arsames Prince of PERSIA
| | | /- PHARNACES I
| | | /-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
| | | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar III King of BABYLON
| | | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | | | \-Hildita of Babylon
| | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | | /-Amyites of Persia V
| | | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | | | \- 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
| | | | | | \-Hildita of Babylon
| | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | | /-Amyites of Persia V
| | | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | | | \- VASHTI
| | \-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
| | | /-Nebuchadnezzar III King of BABYLON
| | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | \-Hildita of Babylon
| | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | /-Amyites of Persia V
| | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | \- VASHTI
\-Laodice Queen I Consort of the Seleucid EMPIRE
\-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas DE MACÉDOINE
Descendants of Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
1 Laodice II of Syria SELEUCID
=Mithridates II of PONTUS
2 Pharnaces OF PONTUS I
=Nysa, Queen of Pontus
3 Nysa, Queen of Cappadocia
3 Mithradates EUERGETES OF PONTUS V
=Laodice QUEEN V Marriage: 149, Pontos
=(Unknown)
3 Nysa OF CAPPADOCIA
2 Alexandros OF SYRIA
2 Mithridates III of PONTUS
2 Laodice of PONTUS III
=Mithridates OF PONTUS VI Marriage: 1
3 Laodice I DESYRIE
2 Stratonice SELEUCID
2 INFANT SON SYRIA
Ancestors of Laodice of Syria SELEUCID
/-Antiochus III Theos, Basileus of the Seleucid Empire
/-Seleucus II Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche SELEÚKEIA
| | /-Antiochus of Orestis General of MACEDONIA
| | /-Seleucus of SYRIA I
| | | \-Laodice I, of Macedonia
| | /-Achaeus KING General of the Seleucid Army, of Syria
| | | | /- SPITAMENES
| | | \-Apama Queen Consort of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Daskyleion of Bactria
| | | | /-Pharnaces Arshamid Daskyleion I
| | | | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | | | /-Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | | | | /-Darius II Ochus ACHAEMENID
| | | | | | /-Artaxerxes II Memnon DE PERSE
| | | | | | | \-Parysatis Queen Consort of PERSIA
| | | | | \-Apama of PERSIA
| | | | | | /-Hydarnes III SATRAPE of Armenia
| | | | | \-Stateira Hydarnid D'ARMÉNIE
| | | | | \-Parysatis Queen Consort of PERSIA
| | | | /-Spitamenes Satrap of BAKTRIA
| | | | | | /-Pharnavaz father of DASKALYTIS
| | | | | \-Daskalytis spouse of Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | \-Apama I of BACTRIA
| | | | /-Artabazus I Persian NOBLEMAN
| | | | /-Daskyleion of Bactria
| | | | /-Pharnaces Arshamid Daskyleion I
| | | | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | | \-Apame Amastris DASCYLIUM
| | | | /-Artaxerxes I of Persia, King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire
| | | | /-Darius II Ochus ACHAEMENID
| | | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | /-Artaxerxes II Memnon DE PERSE
| | | | | | /-Artaxerxes I of Persia, King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire
| | | | | \-Parysatis Queen Consort of PERSIA
| | | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | \-Apama of PERSIA
| | | | /-Hydarnes III SATRAPE of Armenia
| | | \-Stateira Hydarnid D'ARMÉNIE
| | | | /-Artaxerxes I of Persia, King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire
| | | \-Parysatis Queen Consort of PERSIA
| | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| \-Laodice Queen I Consort of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas DE MACÉDOINE
/-Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | /-Antiochus of Orestis General of MACEDONIA
| | /-Seleucus of SYRIA I
| | | \-Laodice I, of Macedonia
| | /-Achaeus KING General of the Seleucid Army, of Syria
| | | | /- SPITAMENES
| | | \-Apama Queen Consort of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| | | | /-Daskyleion of Bactria
| | | | /-Pharnaces Arshamid Daskyleion I
| | | | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | | | /-Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | | | | /-Darius II Ochus ACHAEMENID
| | | | | | /-Artaxerxes II Memnon DE PERSE
| | | | | | | \-Parysatis Queen Consort of PERSIA
| | | | | \-Apama of PERSIA
| | | | | | /-Hydarnes III SATRAPE of Armenia
| | | | | \-Stateira Hydarnid D'ARMÉNIE
| | | | | \-Parysatis Queen Consort of PERSIA
| | | | /-Spitamenes Satrap of BAKTRIA
| | | | | | /-Pharnavaz father of DASKALYTIS
| | | | | \-Daskalytis spouse of Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | \-Apama I of BACTRIA
| | | | /-Artabazus I Persian NOBLEMAN
| | | | /-Daskyleion of Bactria
| | | | /-Pharnaces Arshamid Daskyleion I
| | | | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | | \-Apame Amastris DASCYLIUM
| | | | /-Artaxerxes I of Persia, King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire
| | | | /-Darius II Ochus ACHAEMENID
| | | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | /-Artaxerxes II Memnon DE PERSE
| | | | | | /-Artaxerxes I of Persia, King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire
| | | | | \-Parysatis Queen Consort of PERSIA
| | | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | \-Apama of PERSIA
| | | | /-Hydarnes III SATRAPE of Armenia
| | | \-Stateira Hydarnid D'ARMÉNIE
| | | | /-Artaxerxes I of Persia, King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire
| | | \-Parysatis Queen Consort of PERSIA
| | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | /-Andromachos SELEUKID
| | | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas DE MACÉDOINE
| \-Laodice II of SYRIA
| | /-Cleombrotus REGENT OF SPARTA
| | /-Pausanias OF SPARTA
| | /-Pleistoanax Agiadai de SPARTA I
| | /-Pausanias Agiadai de SPARTA
| | /-Kleombrotos I Agadai OF SPARTA
| | /-Kleomenes AGIADAI of Sparta
| | /-Kleonymos AGIADAI of Sparta
| | /-Leonidas II Agiadai of SPARTA
| | | | /-Zeuxidamus of Sparta
| | | | /-Archidamus II of SPARTA
| | | | | \-Lathria of CLEONE
| | | | /-Agesilaus II of SPARTA
| | | | | | /-Melesippidas father of EUPOLIA
| | | | | \-Eupolia bint MELESIPPIDAS
| | | | /-Archidamus III of SPARTA
| | | | | | /-Aristomenidas of SPARTA
| | | | | \-Cleora of SPARTA
| | | | /-Eudamidas I of SPARTA
| | | | | \-Deinicha spouse of Archidamus III of SPARTA
| | | | /-Archidamus IV of SPARTA
| | | | | \-Archidamia of SPARTA
| | | \-Chilonis of SPARTA
| \-Proaga de Sparte ,Princesse Agiade, De Sparte
| | /-Antiochus of Orestis General of MACEDONIA
| | /-Seleucus of SYRIA I
| | | \-Laodice I, of Macedonia
| \-Laodice PRINCESS OF SYRIA
| \-Apama OF BACTRIA
Laodice of Syria SELEUCID
| /-Mithridates KING II, of Pontus
\-Laodice III, Queen Consort of the Seleucid Empire
\-Laodike VON SYRIEN
Ancestors of Stratonice SELEUCID
/-Antiochus of Orestis General of MACEDONIA
Stratonice SELEUCID
\-Laodice I, of Macedonia
Ancestors of Stratonice SELEUCID
/-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
| | | | | | /-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
| \-Nysa of SYRIA
| | /-Mithridates KING II, of Pontus
| \-Laodice III, Queen Consort of the Seleucid Empire
| \-Laodike VON SYRIEN
Stratonice SELEUCID
| /-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
| | | /-Artabazus I Persian NOBLEMAN
| | | /-Daskyleion of Bactria
| | | /-Pharnaces Arshamid Daskyleion I
| | | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | | /-Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | | | /-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
| | | /-Spitamenes Satrap of BAKTRIA
| | | | | /-Pharnavaz father of DASKALYTIS
| | | | \-Daskalytis spouse of Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | \-Apama I of BACTRIA
| | | /- PHARNACES I
| | | /-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
| | | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | | /-Artaxerxes II Memnon DE PERSE
| | | | | /-Artaxerxes I of Persia, King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire
| | | | \-Parysatis Queen Consort of PERSIA
| | | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | \-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
| | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
\-Laodice Queen I Consort of the Seleucid EMPIRE
\-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas DE MACÉDOINE
Ancestors of Antiochis III SELEUCIDE DE SYRIE-DE PONT EUXIN
/-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 I Persian NOBLEMAN
| | | | /-Daskyleion of Bactria
| | | | /-Pharnaces Arshamid Daskyleion I
| | | | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | | | /-Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | | | | /-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
| | | | /-Spitamenes Satrap of BAKTRIA
| | | | | | /-Pharnavaz father of DASKALYTIS
| | | | | \-Daskalytis spouse of Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | \-Apama I of BACTRIA
| | | | /- PHARNACES I
| | | | /-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
| | | | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | | | /-Artaxerxes II Memnon DE PERSE
| | | | | | /-Artaxerxes I of Persia, King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire
| | | | | \-Parysatis Queen Consort of PERSIA
| | | | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | | \-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
| | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| \-Laodice Queen I Consort of the Seleucid EMPIRE
| \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas DE MACÉDOINE
Antiochis III SELEUCIDE DE SYRIE-DE PONT EUXIN
| /-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 I Persian NOBLEMAN
| | | /-Daskyleion of Bactria
| | | /-Pharnaces Arshamid Daskyleion I
| | | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | | /-Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | | | /-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
| | | /-Spitamenes Satrap of BAKTRIA
| | | | | /-Pharnavaz father of DASKALYTIS
| | | | \-Daskalytis spouse of Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | \-Apama I of BACTRIA
| | | /- PHARNACES I
| | | /-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
| | | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | | /-Artaxerxes II Memnon DE PERSE
| | | | | /-Artaxerxes I of Persia, King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire
| | | | \-Parysatis Queen Consort of PERSIA
| | | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | \-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
| | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| /-Andromachos SELEUKID
| | \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas DE MACÉDOINE
\-Laodice II of SYRIA
| /-Anaxandridas II KING OF SPARTA
| /-Cleombrotus REGENT OF SPARTA
| /-Pausanias OF SPARTA
| /-Pleistoanax Agiadai de SPARTA I
| /-Pausanias Agiadai de SPARTA
| /-Kleombrotos I Agadai OF SPARTA
| /-Kleomenes AGIADAI of Sparta
| /-Kleonymos AGIADAI of Sparta
| /-Leonidas II Agiadai of SPARTA
| | | /-Leotychides II of SPARTA
| | | /-Zeuxidamus of Sparta
| | | | \-Eurydame D O /DIAKTORIDAS
| | | /-Archidamus II of SPARTA
| | | | | /-Thersandros CLEONE
| | | | \-Lathria of CLEONE
| | | /-Agesilaus II of SPARTA
| | | | | /-Melesippidas father of EUPOLIA
| | | | \-Eupolia bint MELESIPPIDAS
| | | /-Archidamus III of SPARTA
| | | | | /-Aristomenidas of SPARTA
| | | | \-Cleora of SPARTA
| | | /-Eudamidas I of SPARTA
| | | | \-Deinicha spouse of Archidamus III of SPARTA
| | | /-Archidamus IV of SPARTA
| | | | \-Archidamia of SPARTA
| | \-Chilonis of SPARTA
\-Proaga de Sparte ,Princesse Agiade, De Sparte
| /-Antiochus of Orestis General of MACEDONIA
| /-Seleucus of SYRIA I
| | \-Laodice I, of Macedonia
\-Laodice PRINCESS OF SYRIA
\-Apama OF BACTRIA
Ancestors of Seleucus II Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche SELEÚKEIA
/-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 I
| | | /-Artabazus I Persian NOBLEMAN
| | | /-Daskyleion of Bactria
| | | /-Pharnaces Arshamid Daskyleion I
| | | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | | /-Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | | | /-Artaxerxes I of Persia, King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire
| | | | | /-Darius II Ochus ACHAEMENID
| | | | | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | | | | /-Artaxerxes II Memnon DE PERSE
| | | | | | | /-Artaxerxes I of Persia, King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire
| | | | | | \-Parysatis Queen Consort of PERSIA
| | | | | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | | | \-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
| | | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | | /-Spitamenes Satrap of BAKTRIA
| | | | | /-Pharnavaz father of DASKALYTIS
| | | | \-Daskalytis spouse of Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | \-Apama I of BACTRIA
| | | /-Arsames Prince of PERSIA
| | | /- PHARNACES I
| | | /-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
| | | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar III King of BABYLON
| | | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | | | \-Hildita of Babylon
| | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | | /-Amyites of Persia V
| | | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | | | \- 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
| | | | | | \-Hildita of Babylon
| | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | | /-Amyites of Persia V
| | | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | | | \- VASHTI
| | \-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
| | | /-Nebuchadnezzar III King of BABYLON
| | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | \-Hildita of Babylon
| | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | /-Amyites of Persia V
| | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | \- VASHTI
\-Laodice Queen I Consort of the Seleucid EMPIRE
\-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas DE MACÉDOINE
Descendants of Seleucus II Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche SELEÚKEIA
1 Seleucus II Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche SELEÚKEIA
=Laodice II of SYRIA Marriage: Syrian Arab Republic
2 Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
=Laodice III, Queen Consort of the Seleucid Empire
3 king Antiochis III Seleucide de Syrie de Pont EUXIN
3 Cleopatra I Syra Queen of Egypt
3 Laodice of Syria SELEUCID
3 Antiochus KING IV, Epiphanes, of the Seleucid Empire
=Laodice QUEEN IV, Of The Seleucid Empire
3 Nysa of SYRIA
=Ariobarzanes ARSHAMID OF PONTUS I
=Laodiké III Du PONT
3 Antiochis III Seleucide de Syrie de Pont EUXIN
=Xerxes I of ARMENIA
=Orentès IV D'ARMENIE
=Ariarathes IV King of CAPPADOCIA
=Euboea of Chalcis Marriage: 191 BC
2 Laodice II of SYRIA
2 Antiochus EPIPHANES IV
2 Seleucus III Ceraunus SYRIA
2 Antiochis III SELEUCIDE DE SYRIE-DE PONT EUXIN
Ancestors of Achaios SELEUKID
/-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 I
| | /-Artabazus I Persian NOBLEMAN
| | /-Daskyleion of Bactria
| | /-Pharnaces Arshamid Daskyleion I
| | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | /-Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | | /-Artaxerxes I of Persia, King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire
| | | | /-Darius II Ochus ACHAEMENID
| | | | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | | | /-Artaxerxes II Memnon DE PERSE
| | | | | | /-Artaxerxes I of Persia, King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire
| | | | | \-Parysatis Queen Consort of PERSIA
| | | | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | | \-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
| | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | /-Spitamenes Satrap of BAKTRIA
| | | | /-Pharnavaz father of DASKALYTIS
| | | \-Daskalytis spouse of Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| \-Apama I of BACTRIA
| | /-Arsames Prince of PERSIA
| | /- PHARNACES I
| | /-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
| | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar III King of BABYLON
| | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | | \-Hildita of Babylon
| | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | /-Amyites of Persia V
| | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | | \- 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
| | | | | \-Hildita of Babylon
| | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | /-Amyites of Persia V
| | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | | \- VASHTI
| \-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
| | /-Nebuchadnezzar III King of BABYLON
| | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | \-Hildita of Babylon
| \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | /-Amyites of Persia V
| \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| \- VASHTI
/-Andromachos SELEUKID
| \-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas DE MACÉDOINE
Achaios SELEUKID
| /-Anaxandridas II KING OF SPARTA
| /-Cleombrotus REGENT OF SPARTA
| /-Pausanias OF SPARTA
| /-Pleistoanax Agiadai de SPARTA I
| /-Pausanias Agiadai de SPARTA
| /-Kleombrotos I Agadai OF SPARTA
| /-Kleomenes AGIADAI of Sparta
| /-Kleonymos AGIADAI of Sparta
| /-Leonidas II Agiadai of SPARTA
| | | /-Menares of SPARTA
| | | /-Leotychides II of SPARTA
| | | /-Zeuxidamus of Sparta
| | | | \-Eurydame D O /DIAKTORIDAS
| | | /-Archidamus II of SPARTA
| | | | | /-Agamedidas of CLEONE
| | | | | /-Thersandros CLEONE
| | | | \-Lathria of CLEONE
| | | /-Agesilaus II of SPARTA
| | | | | /-Melesippidas father of EUPOLIA
| | | | \-Eupolia bint MELESIPPIDAS
| | | /-Archidamus III of SPARTA
| | | | | /-Aristomenidas of SPARTA
| | | | \-Cleora of SPARTA
| | | /-Eudamidas I of SPARTA
| | | | \-Deinicha spouse of Archidamus III of SPARTA
| | | /-Archidamus IV of SPARTA
| | | | \-Archidamia of SPARTA
| | \-Chilonis of SPARTA
\-Proaga de Sparte ,Princesse Agiade, De Sparte
| /-Antiochus of Orestis General of MACEDONIA
| /-Seleucus of SYRIA I
| | \-Laodice I, of Macedonia
\-Laodice PRINCESS OF SYRIA
\-Apama OF BACTRIA
Ancestors of Alxendros SELEUKID
/-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
| | /-Arsames Prince of PERSIA
| | /- PHARNACES I
| | /-Artabazus I Persian NOBLEMAN
| | /-Daskyleion of Bactria
| | /-Pharnaces Arshamid Daskyleion I
| | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | /-Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | | /-Artaxerxes I of Persia, King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire
| | | | /-Darius II Ochus ACHAEMENID
| | | | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar III King of BABYLON
| | | | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | | | | \-Hildita of Babylon
| | | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | | | /-Amyites of Persia V
| | | | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | | | | \- 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
| | | | | | | \-Hildita of Babylon
| | | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | | | /-Amyites of Persia V
| | | | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | | | | \- VASHTI
| | | \-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
| | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar III King of BABYLON
| | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | | \-Hildita of Babylon
| | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | /-Amyites of Persia V
| | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | | \- VASHTI
| | /-Spitamenes Satrap of BAKTRIA
| | | | /-Pharnavaz father of DASKALYTIS
| | | \-Daskalytis spouse of Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| \-Apama I of BACTRIA
| | /-Ariaramnes KING of Anshan
| | /-Arsames Prince of PERSIA
| | /- PHARNACES I
| | /-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
| | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar III King of BABYLON
| | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | | | /-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
| | | | | | /-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
| \-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
| | /-Nebuchadnezzar III King of BABYLON
| | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | /-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
Alxendros SELEUKID
\-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas DE MACÉDOINE
Ancestors of Andromachos SELEUKID
/-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
| | /-Arsames Prince of PERSIA
| | /- PHARNACES I
| | /-Artabazus I Persian NOBLEMAN
| | /-Daskyleion of Bactria
| | /-Pharnaces Arshamid Daskyleion I
| | /-Pharnabaszus SATRAP
| | /-Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| | | | /-Artaxerxes I of Persia, King of Kings of the Achaemenid Empire
| | | | /-Darius II Ochus ACHAEMENID
| | | | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar III King of BABYLON
| | | | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | | | | \-Hildita of Babylon
| | | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | | | /-Amyites of Persia V
| | | | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | | | | \- 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
| | | | | | | \-Hildita of Babylon
| | | | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | | | /-Amyites of Persia V
| | | | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | | | | \- VASHTI
| | | \-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
| | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar III King of BABYLON
| | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | | \-Hildita of Babylon
| | | \-Andia KOSMARTYDENE
| | | | /-Amyites of Persia V
| | | \-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| | | \- VASHTI
| | /-Spitamenes Satrap of BAKTRIA
| | | | /-Pharnavaz father of DASKALYTIS
| | | \-Daskalytis spouse of Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
| \-Apama I of BACTRIA
| | /-Ariaramnes KING of Anshan
| | /-Arsames Prince of PERSIA
| | /- PHARNACES I
| | /-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
| | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar III King of BABYLON
| | | | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | | | /-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
| | | | | | /-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
| \-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
| | /-Nebuchadnezzar III King of BABYLON
| | /-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | | | /-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
Andromachos SELEUKID
\-Laodicé I Aesopia Perdikkas DE MACÉDOINE
Descendants of Andromachos SELEUKID
1 Andromachos SELEUKID
=Proaga de Sparte ,Princesse Agiade, De Sparte
2 Laodice II of SYRIA
=Seleucus II Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche SELEÚKEIA Marriage: Syrian Arab Republic
3 Antiochus III Megas Basileus of the Seleucid EMPIRE
=Laodice III, Queen Consort of the Seleucid Empire
=Laodiké III Du PONT
=Euboea of Chalcis Marriage: 191 BC
3 Laodice II of SYRIA
3 Antiochus EPIPHANES IV
3 Seleucus III Ceraunus SYRIA
3 Antiochis III SELEUCIDE DE SYRIE-DE PONT EUXIN
2 Achaios SELEUKID
Ancestors of Lucius Sergius Paullus SENATOR III
/-Publius Aelius Hadrianus Marullinus DE ROME
/-Ulpius Plotius DE ROME
| \-Aelia DE ROME
/-Aelius Afer DE ROME
| \-Marciana DE ROME
/-Aulus Gallus Larcius DE ROME
| | /-Ulpius DE ROME
| | /-Marcus Ulpius Traianus DE ROME
| | | | /-Marcus Ulpius DE ROME
| | | | /-Marcus Traius DE ROME
| | | \-Traia DE ROME
| \-Ulpia Trainus
| | /-Plotinus DE ROME
| \-Plotina DE ROME
| \-Plócia spouse of Plotinus DE ROME
/-Aulus Larcius Quirinus Lepiodus SULPICIANUS DE ROME
| | /-Sulpicius Camerinus DE ROME
| \-Sulpicia Telero DE ROME
| \-Postumia FESTA DE ROME
Lucius Sergius Paullus SENATOR III
| /-Lucius Arrius DE ROME
| /-Lucius Arrius Plarianus AUFIDIUS TURBO
| | | /-Quintus Plarius
| | \-Plaria Vera DE ROME
\-Arria Sabina
| /-Publius Aelius Hadrianus Marullinus DE ROME
| /-Ulpius Plotius DE ROME
| | \-Aelia DE ROME
| /-Aelius Afer DE ROME
| | \-Marciana DE ROME
| /-Aulus Gallus Larcius DE ROME
| | | /-Ulpius DE ROME
| | | /-Marcus Ulpius Traianus DE ROME
| | | | | /-Marcus Ulpius DE ROME
| | | | | /-Marcus Traius DE ROME
| | | | \-Traia DE ROME
| | \-Ulpia Trainus
| | | /-Plotinus DE ROME
| | \-Plotina DE ROME
| | \-Plócia spouse of Plotinus DE ROME
\-Atilia Sabina DE ROME
| /-Sulpicius Camerinus DE ROME
\-Sulpicia Telero DE ROME
\-Postumia FESTA DE ROME
Descendants of Lucius Sergius Paullus SENATOR III
1 Lucius Sergius Paullus SENATOR III
=Julia Claudia DE ROME
2 Paulla DE ROME
=Sergius Octavius HAENAS PAULINUS DE ROME
3 Lucius Sergius PAULLUS
=Julia Minor IV VIPSANIA
3 Lucius Sergius Paullus Minor DE ROME
- Birth: ABT 290 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Death: Rome, Rome, Lazio, Italy
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Descendants of Quintus Sulpicius I SENATOR
1 Quintus Sulpicius I SENATOR
=(Unknown)
2 Quintus Sulpicius PATERCULUS
=(Unknown)
3 Servius Sulpicius Paterculus
=(Unknown)
- Father: Senchormaich mac Cruitlinde
- Mother: Fionna Ingen MACCRUITLINDE
- Birth: 270, Dal Riada, Ireland, United Kingdom
- Also known as: Fedlimid Ruamach mac Senchormaich
- LifeSketch: PLEASE DO NOT MERGE THIS PERSON! A LOT OF TIME HAS AND IS BEING SPENT ON THIS FAMILY LINE. THANK YOU!
- Fact: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erc_of_Dalriada
- Death: 360
- Partnership with: Felim Finn MACCORMAC
- Child: Oengus Aengus Buidnech MAC FEDLIMID Birth: 293, Dunadd, Argyll, Scotland, United Kingdom
- Child: Finchormach MACFEDELMID Birth: ABT 295, Antrim, County Antrim, Ireland, United Kingdom
- Child: Angus Buiding mac Fedelmid of IRELAND Birth: 297, Dunadd, Argyll, Scotland, United Kingdom
Ancestors of Fedlimid mac SENCHORMAICH
/-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
/-Eochaid Cairbre Riada mac CONAIIE
| | /-Tuathal Techtmar mac FIACHU
| | /-Feidhlimidh mac TUATHAL
| | | \-Báine ingen Sgaile of ALBA
| | /-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
/-Fiacha Cathmail mac Cairbre
| | /-Fiachra CATHMAIL
| \-Morgan Finn nic Fideach O'HAILILL
/-Eochaid Antoit MAC FIACHRACH of Ireland
| \-Aine Nic Finn Ingen Fionna O'NAUDU
/-Achir Cirre MACECHACH
| \-Aiofe Ingen SRABHTEINE
/-Finn fiacc mac Archircir O'Connaire of DALRIADA
| \-Eithne Ingen MACOLLAMHDA
/-Cruitlinde mac FINDFECE
/-Senchormaich mac Cruitlinde
| \-Fionna MACACHIR
Fedlimid mac SENCHORMAICH
| /-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
| /-Eochaid Cairbre Riada mac CONAIIE
| | | /-Tuathal Techtmar mac FIACHU
| | | /-Feidhlimidh mac TUATHAL
| | | | \-Báine ingen Sgaile of ALBA
| | | /-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
| /-Fiacha Cathmail mac Cairbre
| | | /-Fiachra CATHMAIL
| | \-Morgan Finn nic Fideach O'HAILILL
| /-Eochaid Antoit MAC FIACHRACH of Ireland
| | \-Aine Nic Finn Ingen Fionna O'NAUDU
| /-Achir Cirre MACECHACH
| | \-Aiofe Ingen SRABHTEINE
| /-Finn fiacc mac Archircir O'Connaire of DALRIADA
| | \-Eithne Ingen MACOLLAMHDA
| /-Cruitlinde mac FINDFECE
\-Fionna Ingen MACCRUITLINDE
\-Fionna MACACHIR
Descendants of Fedlimid mac SENCHORMAICH
1 Fedlimid mac SENCHORMAICH
=Felim Finn MACCORMAC
2 Oengus Aengus Buidnech MAC FEDLIMID
=Finchormach MACFEDELMID Marriage: ABT 319, Dalriada
3 Fedlimid mac Oengus
=Sariad Ingen MACCONN Marriage: ABT 349, Scotland, United Kingdom
3 Eru Eirc of DALRAIDA
2 Finchormach MACFEDELMID
=Oengus Aengus Buidnech MAC FEDLIMID Marriage: ABT 319, Dalriada
3 Fedlimid mac Oengus
=Sariad Ingen MACCONN Marriage: ABT 349, Scotland, United Kingdom
3 Eru Eirc of DALRAIDA
2 Angus Buiding mac Fedelmid of IRELAND
- Father: Erispoe I DE POHER
- Birth: 824, Vermandois, Aisne, Picardie, France
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Ancestors of Pepin II of SENLIS
/-Budic II BRETAGNE
/-Hoël Mawr I AP BUDIC of Brittany de Cornwall
| \-Elaine VERCH GORLOIS of Garlot
/-Hoël II DE CORNUAILLE le Petit
/-Alain Judual AP HOËL FYCHAN de Bretagne
| \-Rimo Tymyr VERCH RHUN
/-Hoël III ap Alain DE CORNUAILLE
| \-Azenor DE BREST
/-Rhiwallon I DE POHER
| \-Fratelle FERCH OSOCHE
/-Waroch I OF POHER
| \-Pritelle D'ACQS
/-Riwallon II DE POHER
| \-Unknown Spouse of Waroch I of POHER
/-Daniel DREMRUD
| \-Gerwenn DE CORNOUIALLE
/-Budic de Bretagne of POHER
| \-Hadelauge CAROLINGIAN
/-Erispoe I DE POHER
| | /-David DE FRAMLING
| \-Miriam DE FRAMLING Queen of Bretagne
Pepin II of SENLIS
Ancestors of Paulla SERGIA
/-Gaius Octavius Laenas I of ROME
/-Gaius Octavius LAENAS
| | /-Marcus Aemilius Lepidus DE ROME
| | /-Marcus Aemelius Lepidus DE ROME
| | /-Lucius Aemilius LEPIDUS PAULLUS
| | | | /-Lucius Appuleius Saturninus NEAR ROME II Tribune
| | | \-Appulia SATURNINA
| | /-Lucius Aemilius Lepidus PAULLUS
| | | | /-Marcus Junius BRUTUS
| | | \-Junia Bruta Paullus
| | | \-Servilia Caepia MAJOR
| | /-Lucius Aemilius PAULLUS
| | | \-Cornelia SCIPIONIS
| \-Julia of The Roman EMPIRE
| | /-Lucius VIPSANIUS
| | /-Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa of Arpino
| \-Vipsania Julia AGRIPPINA Julia Minor
| | /-Gaius Octavius III Magistrate of VELITRAE
| | /-Gaius Octavius
| | | \-Aurelia COTTA
| | /-Gaius Octavius of ROME
| | | | /-Marcus ATIUS BALBUS
| | | \-Atia Balba CAESONIA
| | | \-Julia CAESARIUS
| \-Julia Caesaris MAJOR
| | /-Lucius Scribonius LIBO
| \-Scribonia AUGUSTUS LIBO
| \-Sentia DE ROME
/-Lænus Lucius OCTAVIUS
| | /-Lucius RUBELLIUS BLANDUS
| | /-Rubelius Blandus
| | | \-Livia JULIA
| \-Rubellia BASSA
| | /-Drusus Julius Caesar The YOUNGER
| | | | /-Lucius VIPSANIUS
| | | | /-Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa of Arpino
| | | \-Vipsania Agrippina
| | | \-Pomponia Caecilia Attica of Rome
| \-Julia Livia DRUSUS FILIA
| | /-Appius Claudius NERO
| | /-Tibetius Claudius NERO
| | | \-Cornelia CINNAE Minor
| | /-Tiberius Claudius NERO III
| | /-Nero Claudius DRUSUS
| | | | /-Marcus Livius Drusus III DE ROME
| | | | /-Marcus Livius Drusus Claudianus Emporer Appius Claudius PULCHER
| | | | | \-Servilia Caepia MAJOR
| | | \-Livia DRUSILA
| | | | /-Marcus Aufidius LURCO
| | | \-Aufidia LURCO
| \-Claudia Livillia JULIA of Rome
| | /-Marcus Antonius of ROME
| | /-Marcus Antonius CRETICUS OCTAVIA II
| | | \-Julia spouse of Marcus Antonius of ROME
| | /-Marcus Antonius III
| | | | /-Lucius Julius CAESAR III Governor of Macedonia
| | | \-Julia Antonia CAESARIA
| | | \-Cossutia Fulvia
| \-Antonia AUGUSTA Minor
| | /-Gaius Octavius III Magistrate of VELITRAE
| | /-Gaius Octavius
| | | \-Aurelia COTTA
| \-Octavia of ROME
| | /-Marcus ATIUS BALBUS
| \-Atia Balba CAESONIA
| \-Julia CAESARIUS
/-Sergius Octavius Laenas PONTIANNUS of Pisidian Antioch
| \-Pontia spouse of Lænus Lucius OCTAVIUS
/-Paullus Lucius SERGIUS
| \-Paullus PAULLA
/-Paullus Lucius SERGIUS
Paulla SERGIA
Descendants of Paulla SERGIA
1 Paulla SERGIA
=Anicius Faustus Paulinus of ROME
2 Asinia Juliana Nicomacha DE ROME
=Baltaire Bartherius DES FRANCS SICAMBRES
3 Asinia Juliana Nicomacha D`ASIE
=Quintus Anicius Faustus Paulinus II DE ROME
3 Marcomir DES FRANCS SICAMBRES
2 Cocceius Anicius Faustus Paulinus OF ROME
2 Caius Asinuis Nicomachus Lulianus DE ROME
=Anicius QUINTUS
2 Quintus Anicius Paulinus II
=Asinia Juliana Nicomacha of Rome
3 Asinia Juliana Faustus Paulinus of Rome
2 Paulinus Quintus I ANICIUS