- Birth: 25 JUL 1875, , , Indiana, USA
- Residence: 1880, Charlestown, Clark, Indiana, USA
- Residence: 1910, Indianapolis Ward 11, Marion, Indiana, USA
- Residence: 1920, Indianapolis Ward 13, Marion, Indiana, USA
- Residence: 1930, Gallup, McKinley, New Mexico, USA
- Residence: 1935, Sallup, Mckinley, New Mexico
- Residence: 1 APR 1940, Lynn Lane, Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA
- Death: 9 NOV 1954, Fresno, Fresno, California, USA
Descendants of Frances Belle PRATT
1 Frances Belle PRATT
=Noah Lucion WILKINSON Marriage: 25 JAN 1908, Marion, Grant, Indiana, USA
- Birth: ABT 1402, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland
- Also known as: Agnes Prestoun
- LifeSketch: The Life Summary of Agnes Lady Agnes Prestoun was born about 1402, in Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland. She had at least 1 son with John Turing. She died about 1496, in her hometown, at the age of 94.
- Death: ABT 1496, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland
Descendants of Agnes PRESTON
1 Agnes PRESTON
=John BEDSOLE
2 Catherine BEDSOLE
=George Wiley HARTZOG
3 Ann HARTZOG
=John ADAMSON
=John TURING
2 Katherine TURING
2 James TURING
=Margaret DEWAR Marriage: 1449, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland
3 Adam TURING
=Janet MURRAY Marriage: 1473, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland Marriage: 1473, Fordell, Fife, Scotland Marriage: 1473, Fordell, Fife, Scotland
- Father: Clodius Celsinus ADELPHIUS of the Roman Senate
- Mother: Faltonia Betitia Proba
- Birth: 338, Veronna, Italia
- Also known as: Claudius Pontius Petronius Probus
- Title Of Nobility: Sex. Proconsul D'Afrique,"Ank Ianat Domus Culmen"
- Death: 388, Limoges, Haute-Vienne (87), FRA
- Burial: 388, In Sarcophagus Behind The Altar In St.Peters, Roma, , Italy
Ancestors of Sextus Claudius Pretonius Probus PRETONII PROBI
/-Quirinus Fabius Clodius Aggrippianus CELSINUS
| | /-Fabius Heraclide of Egypt THEBES
| | /-Quintus Fabius Maximus Allobrogicus
| | /-Quintus Fabius Maximus DE ROME
| \-Fabia FUSCINILLA
| \-Aquilia AQUILIUS
/-Quintus Fabius Claudius Aggripianus Celsinus DE ROME
| | /-Quintus Fabius DE ROME
| \-Fabia Fuscinella
| | /-Publius Seius Fuscianus DE ROME
| \-Fuscinella DE ROME
/-Clodius CELSINUS
| \-Laberia POMPEIANA
/-Claudius Celcinus DE ROME
| \-Dementrias NOMAIDEN Celsinus
/-Clodius Celsinus ADELPHIUS of the Roman Senate
| | /-Gallus Julius SEVERES
| | /-Caius Iulius BASSUS
| | /-Gaius Julius Quadratus Bassus of Rome
| | | \-Julia TYCHE
| | /-Gaius Julius Asinius Quadratus of Rome
| | | | /-Gaius Asinius GALLUS SALONIANUS
| | | | /-Gaius Asinius Pollio
| | | | | \-Vipsania Agrippina
| | | \-Asinia Marcellius Bassus QUEEN
| | /-Gaius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus V of Rome
| | | | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Titus Vibius Varus Laevillus I of The Roman Empire
| | | | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Titus Vibius Varus Laevillus II of The Roman Empire
| | | | | \-Vibia of Rome
| | | | /-Aulus Julius Claudius Charax
| | | | | | /-Caius Julius Quadratus BASSUS
| | | | | \-Julia Quadratilla Major Bassa VAN ROME
| | | | | \-Julia Iotapa DECILICIA
| | | \-Julia Quadratilla Proculla of Rome
| | | \-Julia
| | /-Quintus Anicius Faustus of Tunisia
| | | | /-Sergius Octavius Laenas Paulinus OCTAVIUS
| | | | /-Lucius Sergius Paullus IV of Pisidian Antioch
| | | | | \-Paulla PAULLUS
| | | \-Julia QUADRATILLA
| | | \-Julia Vipsania of Rome
| | /-Quintus Faustus ANICIUS
| | | | /-Dagobert des Francs DE COLOGNE I
| | | | /-Genebald Duke of The Eastern FRANKS
| | | | | | /-Germain father of BRUCTERE
| | | | | | /-Bructere KING
| | | | | \-Ragnetrude Duchess of Austrasia of the East FRANKS
| | | | /-Ascyllius of The Eastern FRANKS
| | | \-Juliana Asinia V of The Roman EMPIRE
| | /-Sextus Ancius Faustus PAULINIANUS
| | | | /-Gaius Asinius Frugi ASINIUS
| | | | /-Caius Julius ASINIUS QUADRATUS D`ASIE
| | | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Gaius Asinius Frugi ASINIUS
| | | | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Vibius Varus Laevillus D'ASIE
| | | | | | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Titus Vibius Varus Laevillus I of The Roman Empire
| | | | | | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Titus Vibius Varus Laevillus II of The Roman Empire
| | | | | | | \-Vibia of Rome
| | | | | | /-Aulus Julius Claudius Charax
| | | | | | | | /-Caius Julius Quadratus BASSUS
| | | | | | | \-Julia Quadratilla Major Bassa VAN ROME
| | | | | | | \-Julia Iotapa DECILICIA
| | | | | \-Julia Quadratilla MINOR DE ROME
| | | | | \-Julia
| | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | | /-Lucius Sergius Paullus de ROME II
| | | | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Aulus Gallus Larcius DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Aulus Egrillius Rufius DE ROME
| | | | | | | \-Sulpicia Telero DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Aulus Julius PROCULUS DE ROME
| | | | | | | | /-Quintus Plarius DE ROME
| | | | | | | \-Plavis Vera DE ROME
| | | | | \-Julia Minor DE ROME
| | | | | \-Claudia BASILO
| | | \-Asinia Juliana Faustus Paulinus of Rome
| | | | /-Claudius CAPITILINUS DE ROME
| | | | /-Claudius Capitolinus I DE ROME
| | | | /-Cassius Statilius Severus Hadrianus DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Aulus Larcius Quirinus Lepiodus SULPICIANUS DE ROME
| | | | | \-Macrinia DE ROME
| | | | | \-Arria Sabina
| | | | /-Cassius DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Jeventius Celsus DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Juventius Celsus Aufidius Hoenius Severus DE ROME
| | | | | | | \-Hoenia Severilla DE ROME
| | | | | \-Juventia Maxime DE ROME
| | | | /-Caeionius Primus L'Étrusque DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Aulus Larcius QUIRINUS LEPIDUS SULPICIANUS
| | | | | | /-Aulius Larcius Quirinus Priscus DE ROME
| | | | | | | \-Arria Sabina
| | | | | | /-Aulus Larcius Lepidus DE ROME
| | | | | | | | /-Aulus Egrillius Rufius DE ROME
| | | | | | | \-Egrilla DE ROME
| | | | | | | \-Plavis Vera DE ROME
| | | | | \-Larcia CALIDA
| | | | | | /-Aulus Larcius QUIRINUS LEPIDUS SULPICIANUS
| | | | | | /-Aulius Larcius Quirinus Priscus DE ROME
| | | | | | | \-Arria Sabina
| | | | | \-Volumnia Calida DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Aulus Egrillius Rufius DE ROME
| | | | | \-Egrilla DE ROME
| | | | | \-Plavis Vera DE ROME
| | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | \-Rasenna ETRUSCI
| | /-Amnius Anicius JULIANUS
| | | | /-Tiberius Claudius Frontonianus
| | | | /-Tiberius Claudius Themistocles Marathonius
| | | | | | /-Lysiades IV Meliteus Archon of Athens
| | | | | | /-Leonides VII Meliteus Dadoukos
| | | | | | | \-Cephisdora of ATHENS
| | | | | | /-Tiberios Klaudios Lysiades Meliteus Archon of Athens
| | | | | | | | /-Themistokles HAGNOUSIOS
| | | | | | | \-Hagnousios Daughter of THEMISTOKLES IV
| | | | | | /-Tiberios Klaudios Sospis Meliteus DADOUCHOS
| | | | | | | | /-Antonius Sopsis VON CORINTHE
| | | | | | | | | \-Antonia SEDATA
| | | | | | | \-Antonia DE CORINTHE
| | | | | \-Themistoclea of Melite CLAUDIUS
| | | | | | /-Tiberios Klaudios NEIKOTELES SOUNIEUS
| | | | | | /-Tiberius Klaudios DEMOSTRATOS SOUNIEUS
| | | | | | | | /-Lykurgos Palleneus MELITHEA
| | | | | | | \-Philippea spouse of Tiberios Klaudios Neikoteles SOUNIEUS
| | | | | \-Klaudia Philippea II CLAUDIUS
| | | | /-Tiberius Claudius MARATHONIUS
| | | | | | /-Titius Claudius Dryantianus CLAUDII
| | | | | | /-Titius Claudius Agrippinus CLAUDII
| | | | | | | | /-Caius Lulius Antoninus LULII
| | | | | | | \-Lulia Lysimache LULII
| | | | | | | \-Licinia Maxima LUCINII
| | | | | | /-Titius Claudius Dryantianus Antoninus CLAUDII
| | | | | | | \-Aelia Platonis Matidia AELII
| | | | | \-Claudia Vettia Agrippina CLAUDII
| | | | | \-Avidia Alexandria AVIDII
| | | \-Amnia DEMETRIAS
| | | | /-Kleitosthenes II of THERA
| | | | /-Stasikes VON THERA
| | | | /-Kleitosthenes VON THERA
| | | | /-Flavius Clitosthénès Clausianus DE THERA
| | | | /-Titus Flavius Clitosthenes Julianus DE THERA
| | | | /-Flavius Stasicies DE THERA METROPHANES
| | | | | | /-Tiberius Claudius Frontonianus
| | | | | \-Claudia Frontoniana CLAUDIUS
| | | | | | /-Leonides VII Meliteus Dadoukos
| | | | | | /-Tiberios Klaudios Lysiades Meliteus Archon of Athens
| | | | | | | \-Hagnousios Daughter of THEMISTOKLES IV
| | | | | | /-Tiberios Klaudios Sospis Meliteus DADOUCHOS
| | | | | | | | /-Antonius Sopsis VON CORINTHE
| | | | | | | \-Antonia DE CORINTHE
| | | | | \-Themistoclea of Melite CLAUDIUS
| | | | | | /-Tiberios Klaudios NEIKOTELES SOUNIEUS
| | | | | | /-Tiberius Klaudios DEMOSTRATOS SOUNIEUS
| | | | | | | \-Philippea spouse of Tiberios Klaudios Neikoteles SOUNIEUS
| | | | | \-Klaudia Philippea II CLAUDIUS
| | | \-Flavia Claudia Demetria Aeliana DE THÉRA
| | | | /-Claudius CAPITILINUS DE ROME
| | | | /-Claudius Capitolinus I DE ROME
| | | | /-Claudius CAPITOLINUS II DE ROMA
| | | | | | /-Aulus Larcius Quirinus Lepiodus SULPICIANUS DE ROME
| | | | | \-Macrinia DE ROME
| | | | | \-Arria Sabina
| | | | /-Titus Tiberius Claudius NERO
| | | | | \-Iulia Polla DE ROME
| | | | /-Titus Claudius Bassus Capitolinus DE ROME
| | | | | \-Vulcanania DE ROME
| | | \-Claudia Capitolina DE ROME
| | | | /-Neratius Iunius Falvunusde ROME
| | | | | | /-Aelius Quadronius Verus DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Lucius Minicius Natalis
| | | | | \-Aemilia Pudentilla DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Aulus Quadronius Verus
| | | | | \-Quadronia spouse of Lucius Minicius NATALIS
| | | \-Numeria Marcella DE ROME
| | | \-Vulcania spouse of Neratius Iunius Falvunusde ROME
| \-Anicia Demetrias DE ROME
| \-Caesonia Manilla
Sextus Claudius Pretonius Probus PRETONII PROBI
\-Faltonia Betitia Proba
- Birth: 7 JAN 1906, Missouri, USA
- Residence: 1910, Clay, Greene, Missouri, USA
- Residence: 1920, Washington, Douglas, Missouri, USA
- Residence: 1930, Lindsay, Tulare, California, USA
- Death: DEC 1981, Centralia, Boone County, Missouri, USA
- Burial: Centralia, Boone County, Missouri, United States of America
Descendants of Melvin J. PREWIT
1 Melvin J. PREWIT
=Sarah Alice FERNEAU Marriage: 17 APR 1948, Kirksville, Adair, Missouri
- Birth: ABT 215, Wales
- Also known as: Cadvan of Cambria
- Title (Nobility): Prince of Wales
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
- Partnership with: Gladys of Wales
Marriage: ABT 245, Wales, United Kingdom
Marriage: ABT 245, Wales
Descendants of Cadvan PRINCE of Wales
1 Cadvan PRINCE of Wales
=Gladys of Wales Marriage: ABT 245, Wales, United Kingdom Marriage: ABT 245, Wales
2 Flavia Julia HELENA ('Helen of the Cross')
=Constantius Flavius VALERIUS Emperor of Rome Marriage: 272, Dardania, Blythnia, Asia Minor
3 Constantine I Emperor Of Roman EMPIRE
=Minervina of The Holy Roman Empire EMPRESS
=Flavia Maxima FAUSTA Empress of The Roman Empire
2 Strada of CUMBRIA
- Father: Cuthwine of WESSEX
- Mother: Unknown Spouse of Cuthwine of WESSEX
- Birth: 590, Wessex
- Also known as: Cedda
- Also known as: Cadda
- Also known as: Chad
- Affiliation: House of Wessex, House of Cerdic, Cerdicingas
- LifeSketch: Cedda, also Ceadda, Cadda and Chad. His name is derived from the Brythonic root 'cat' or 'cad', meaning 'battle'. Cedda was the 2nd son of Prince Cuthwine, son of King Ceawlin of Wessex. Cedda was born in 590 and had 1 older brother Cynebald born in 590, and a younger brother Cuthwulf, born 592, the name of their mother is not recorded. Cedda's grandfather Ceawlin was the King of Wessex, however, in June 592 he lost the throne and the entire family fled into exile. Cynebald would have been no more than 1 or 2 at the time. It is believed that his mother, who gave birth to his youngest brother about this time, possibly died in the tumult surrounding the loss of the throne and the family's flight into exile. The name of Cedda's wife is not known, however, they were the parents of one son: Coenberht, who was the father of King Caedwalla of Wessex. It is not known when Cedda died. Cedda, Prince of Wessex Birthdate: estimated between 552 and 602 Death: Immediate Family: Son of Ceawlin, king of Wessex Brother of Cuthwine and Cenberht, Prince of Wessex
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Ancestors of Ceadda PRINCE of Wessex
/-Frithugar Deira SAXONY
/-Frewin VAN SAKSEN
| \-Unknown Spouse of Frithugar Deira SAXONY
/-Uvigg FREAWINEASSON
| \-Unknown Spouse of Frewin VAN SAKSEN
/-Gewis VON SAXON
| \-Wig SAXON
/-Esla GEWISSON
| | /-Fordigarus of Ancient SAXONY
| | /-Wigger OF SAXONY
| | /-Gewesius OF SAXONY
| \-Effa of the SAXONS
/-Aelle Ella of ELISENS
| \-Isaive spouse of Esla GEWISSON
/-Cerdic of WESSEX
| \-Elesa WEST SAXON
/-Creoda Cerdicsson of WESSEX
| \-Anafleda spouse of Cerdic of WESSEX
/-Cynric of WESSEX
| \-Hengist WESSEX
/-Ceawlin of WESSEX
| \-Unknown Spouse of Cynric of WESSEX
/-Cuthwine of WESSEX
| \-Unknown Spouse of Ceawlin of WESSEX
Ceadda PRINCE of Wessex
\-Unknown Spouse of Cuthwine of WESSEX
- Father: Achiulf King of the Ostrogoths
- Mother: Withemir of the Ostrogoths
- Birth: 300, Scythia, Roman Empire
- Also known as: Wudulf Balthes of the Ostrogoths
- Also known as: Wultwulf, Vulthulf, Vuldulf, Wuldulf Vultwulf d'Ostrogothie
- Occupation: Prince of the Amali Goths, 7th King of the Ostrogoths (360-378), Vultwulf, Prince of the Amali, 360
- Title Of Nobility: 7th King of the Ostrogoths
- LifeSketch: Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (Medlands Project) Iordanes sets out the supposed ancestors of Athal, in order, as follows "Gapt…Hulmul…Augis…Amal a quo et origo Amalorum decurrit…Hisarnis…Ostrogotha…Hunuil…Athal"[31]. Nothing is known about the Amal Goth leaders, supposed descendants of Athal, who are shown below apart from the sparse amount of information which has been extracted from Iordanes. ATHAL . Athal had two children: 1. ACHIULF . Iordanes names "Achiulf et Oduulf" as the sons of Athal[32]. Achiulf had four children: a) ANSILA . Iordanes names "Ansila et Ediulf, Vultuulf et Hermenerig" as the sons of Achiulf[33]. b) EDIULF . Iordanes names "Ansila et Ediulf, Vultuulf et Hermenerig" as the sons of Achiulf[34]. c) VULTWULF . Iordanes names "Ansila et Ediulf, Vultuulf et Hermenerig" as the sons of Achiulf[35]. Vultwulf had one child: i) VALARAVANS . Iordanes names "Valaravans" as the son of Vultwulf[36]. Valaravans had one child: (a) VINITHARIUS . Iordanes names "Vinitharius" as the son of Valaravans[37]. Vinitharius had one child: (1) VANDALARIUS . Iordanes names "Vandiliarum" as son of Vinitharius[38]. - see below. d) HERMENRICH . Iordanes names "Ansila et Ediulf, Vultuulf et Hermenerig" as the sons of Achiulf[39]. Hermenrich had one child: i) HUNIMUND . Iordanes names "Hunimundum" as son of "Hermanaricus"[40]. Hunimund had one child: (a) THORISMUND (-killed in battle [451/55]). Iordanes names "Thorismundo" as son of "Hunimundus"[41]. Iordanes records that "Thorismundo filius eius" succeeded as King of the Goths after the death of "Hunimundus filius quondam regis…Hermanarici" but was killed fighting the Gepids in the second year of his reign[42]. Thorismund had one child: (1) BERIMUD . Iordanes names "Berimud" as son of "Thorismundo"[43]. Iordanes records that "Beremud…cum filio Vitiricho" left the Ostrogoths to join "Vallia rex Gothorum" [King of the Visigoths in Toulouse][44]. The implication of a later passage in Iordanes, which records that "Valamer…ex consobrino eius genitus Vandalario" succeeded as king after "Thorismundo" was killed[45], is that Berimud's departure was triggered after he was passed over in the succession. Berimud had one child: a. VETERICUS . Iordanes names "Vetericum" as son of "Berimud"[46]. Vetericus had one child: (i) EUTHARICH (-[522/23]). Iordanes names "Eutharicum" as son of "Vetericus" and as husband of "Amalasuentham" and father of their two children[47]. Eutharic was adopted by Emperor Justin in recognition of his father-in-law's decision to designate him his successor after his marriage. He was given Roman citizenship and became first consul in 519 as FLAVIUS EUTHARICUS CILLIGA[48]. Wolfram estimates that Eutharich died in [522/23][49]. Jordanes specifies that Eutharich predeceased King Theodoric's nomination of his son Athalaric as his successor. m (515) AMALASUINTHA, daughter of THEODORIC King of the Ostrogoths in Italy & his wife Audofledis of the Franks ([493]-murdered [30 Apr] 535). The Chronicle of Cassiodorus records the marriage in 515 of "Theodericus filiam usam dominam Amalasuintam" and "gloriosi viri dn Eutharici"[50]. 2. ODWULF . Iordanes names "Achiulf et Oduulf" as the sons of Athal[51]. VANDALARIUS, son of VINITHARIUS . Iordanes names "Vandiliarum" as son of "Vinitharius" and father of "Thiudemer et Valamir et Vidimir"[52]. Relative of Thorismund[53]. 1. VALAMIR (-killed in battle [468/69]). Iordanes names "Thiudemer et Valamir et Vidimir" as the sons of Vandilarius[54]. He and his brothers followed Attila the Hun into Gaul in 451[55]. Valamir commanded the Ostrogoth contingent in Attila's army which was defeated at the battle of the Catalaunian fields[56]. He was considered king of all Ostrogoths in Pannonia. Iordanes records that "Valamer…ex consobrino eius genitus Vandalario" succeeded as king after "Thorismundo" was killed fighting the Gepids in the second year of his reign[57]. He shared the land with his two brothers, retaining for himself the eastern part of the territory covering lower Slavonia. In 456, he defeated an attack by the Huns, who are said to have retreated to the River Dnieper[58]. He defeated another Hun attack on Bassianae, near Belgrade, in 467/68, but was killed in battle during a similar attack the following year. 2. THEODEMIR [Thiudimir] (-Kyrrhos 474). Iordanes names "Thiudemer et Valamir et Vidimir" as the sons of Vandilarius[59]. King of the Ostrogoths in Pannonia, subordinate to his brother Valamir, he ruled over the western part of their domain which covered the county of Somogy and north-eastern Croatia. He succeeded his brother in [468/49] as King of all the Pannonian Ostrogoths. Iordanes names "Theodemir" when recording that he succeeded his brother "Valamero rege Gothorum" together with "Vidimero fratre et filio Theodorico"[60]. When the Ostrogoths left Pannonia in [473], Theodemir and his contingent went towards Constantinople. They settled in Macedonia, based in the city of Kyrrhos[61]. - KINGS of ITALY. 3. VIDIMIR (-473). Iordanes names "Thiudemer et Valamir et Vidimir" as the sons of Vandilarius[62]. King of the Ostrogoths in Pannonia, subordinate to his brother Valamir, he ruled over the central part of their domain which covered upper Slavonia. Iordanes names "Theodemir" when recording that he succeeded his brother "Valamero rege Gothorum" together with "Vidimero fratre et filio Theodorico"[63]. When the Ostrogoths left Pannonia in [473], Vidimir went into Italy where he suffered several defeats. a) VIDIMIR. Iordanes records that "Vidimero cum Vidimero filio" were sent to "partes Hesperias" by Theodemir[64]. After his father's death, Emperor Glycerius sent Vidimir and his contingent of Pannonian Ostrogoths to Gaul, where he settled in the Limousin[65].
- Clan Name: House of Amali Goths
- Tribe Name: Greuthengi
- Title Of Nobility: Prince of the Greuthengi Ostrogoths
- Clan Name: Amal Of The Ostrogoths
- Death: 378, Scythia, Roman Empire, Ukraine
Ancestors of Vultwulf PRINCE of the Ostrogoths
/-Gapt of the Greuthengi
/-Hulmul DE BALTHES der Greuthengi
/-Augis DER GREUTHENGI, King of the Goths
| \-Unknown Spouse of HULMUL
/-King of the Greuthengi Amal D'OSTROGOTHIE
/-Hisarna of the GREUTHENGI
| | /-Berig I DE GOTHIE Premier roi historique des Goths
| | /-Hwala D'ASGARD King of The Goths
| | /-Berig III King of The Goths
| | | | /-Hod VIBURSSON
| | | \-Bodvid HODSDATTER
| | | \-Dana Tiberiusdatter VISBURSSON
| | /-Gjúki de Goths King of the GOTHS
| | | \-Asgard
| | /-Guntharich I King of the Goths
| | | \-Eigen DE SILURIA of the Goths
| \-Senhora Amal OF THE GOTHS
| \-Eigen Marius DE BALTHES of the Goths
/-Ostrogotho of the GREUTHUNGI
/-Hunuil d'Ostrogoths of the GREUTHINGI
| \-Nascida BENKANT
/-Athal Noble One OF THE GREUTHINGI OSTROGOTHS
| \-Vandalar of the Ostrogoths
/-Achiulf King of the Ostrogoths
| \-Erelicia of The Ostrogoths
Vultwulf PRINCE of the Ostrogoths
\-Withemir of the Ostrogoths
- Birth: ABT 230
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Descendants of Eudosia PRINCESS
1 Eudosia PRINCESS
=Ovida DE BOURGOGNE, King Of The Goths
2 Respa of the Goths
2 Ragaise Van de GOTEN
2 Veduca
2 Walderich Xanten, King of Burgundy
=Gebica VON XANTEN
3 Agelmunde Gundiger DE LOMBARDIE
=Ascyla DES LONGOBARDS
=Ute de BURGUNDY
3 Siegmund VON XANTEN
2 Hilderic DE BOURGOGNE King Of The Goths
=Queen WISIGOTHIE
3 Gibaric OF THE TERVINGI GOTHS
=Ariaric spouse of Gibaric of the Tervingi GOTHS
3 Fridigar OF THE VISIGOTHS
3 Giolahaire DE BURGUNDY
3 Guntharich III VAN BOURGONDIE
3 Athanarice of Tervingie
- Father: Coelus of the BRITONS
- Mother: Ystradwl Verch Cynvelyn VAN GLAMORGAN
- Birth: 86, Caerleon, Siluria, Gwent, Wales
- Also known as: Eurgen of Siluria
- Also known as: Eurgain of Siluria
- Also known as: Eugein of Siluria
- Also known as: Beli
- Also known as: Eurgin ferch Coel of Briton
- Also known as: Eurgain of Siluria
- Also known as: Eugein of Siluria
- Also known as: Beli
- Also known as: Eurgin ferch Coel of Briton
- Title (Nobility): Princess of Britain
- Death: 160, Siluria, Shelby, Wales
Ancestors of Eurgin of Briton PRINCESS
/-Llud Llaw Erient ap Beli of BRITONS
/-Tenefan AP LLUDD, King of the Catuvellauni Tribe
/-Cymbeline of The Silures Tribe of BRITON
| | /-Ceri Hir Lyngwyn OF ESYLLWG AP GWYN
| | /-Berwyn ap Ceri of The BRITONS
| | | \- OF ESYLLWG
| | /-Llyr Lleddiarth of Wales
| | | \-Anna spouse of Berwyn ap Ceri of The BRITONS
| \-Guneril VERCH LLYR SILURIA
| | /-Beli Mawr of the BRITONS
| | /-Lludd Llaw Ereint AP BELI
| | | \-Don Anna VERCH MATHONWY OF ARIMATHEA
| \-Lweriwadd of Cambria, Briton and Ireland QUEEN
/-Arviragus of Britain and SILURIA
| \-Anna Enygeus ARIMATHEA
/-Meurig of SILURIA
| | /-Tiberius Claudius NERO Caesar Augustus
| | /-Nero Claudius DRUSUS
| | | | /-Appias Claudius PULCHER
| | | | /-Marcus Livius Drusus CLAUDIANUS Pulcher
| | | | | | /-Quintus Servilius Caepio Consul of Rome
| | | | | \-Servilia
| | | | | | /-Quintus Caecilius Metellus
| | | | | | /-Quintus Caecilius Metellus Macedonicus
| | | | | \-Caecilia Metalla
| | | \-Livia Julia DRUSILLA Augusta of Rome
| | | | /-Marcus Aufidius LURCO
| | | \-Alfidia LURCO
| | /-Tiberius Claudius Caesar Agustus Germanicus
| | | | /-Aulus ANTONIUS
| | | | /-Marcus ANTONIUS
| | | | /-Gaius Marcus ANTONIUS
| | | | | \-Pasquala Maria
| | | | /-Marcus Antonius Praetor of ROME
| | | | /-Marcus Antonius II CRETICUS Octavia
| | | | /-Marcus Antonius III
| | | | | | /-Sextus Julius Caesar I
| | | | | | /-Sextus Julius CAESAR II
| | | | | | | \-Aurelia CORNELIA
| | | | | | /-Lucius Julius Caesar II of ROME
| | | | | | /-Lucius Julius CAESAR III Governor of Macedonia
| | | | | | | | /-Pompillus LAENAS
| | | | | | | \-Popilia LAENATES
| | | | | \-Julia Antonia CAESARIA
| | | | | | /-Quintus Flaccus OF ROME
| | | | | | /-Marcus Fulvius Flaccus II
| | | | | | /-Marcus Fulvius Flaccus Bambalus III
| | | | | \-Cossutia Fulvia
| | | | | | /-Sempronius Tuditanus
| | | | | \-Sempronia Tuditania DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Publius Licinius Crassus Dives Mucianus DE ROME
| | | | | \-Licinia Crassa DE ROME
| | | | | \-Claudia DE ROME
| | | \-Antonia Augusta Minor DE ROME
| | | \-Octavia Empress of ROME
| \-Genuissa VENISSA JULIA of Siluria
| \-Unknown Spouse of Tiberius Claudius Nero GERMANICUS
/-Coelus of the BRITONS
| | /-Prasutagus Brenin o ICENA
| | | \-Don Anna ferch MATHOMWY
| \-Julia Victoria Penardun verch Prasutagus of the Iceni
| | /-Beli MAWR
| | /-Antedios of the ICENI
| | | \-Anna DE CORNWALL
| \-Boadicia of BRITAIN
| \-Anna Penardiam MANDUBRATIUS
Eurgin of Briton PRINCESS
| /-Bran Fendigaid AP LLYR LLEDIAITH The Blessed of Britain
| | | /-Beli Mawr of the BRITONS
| | | /-Lludd Llaw Ereint AP BELI
| | | | \-Don Anna VERCH MATHONWY OF ARIMATHEA
| | \-Lweriwadd of Cambria, Briton and Ireland QUEEN
| /-Caractacus AP BRAN King of Siluria
| | | /-Matthat ben Levi ben Melchi of Arimathea
| | | /-Joseph ben Matthat of Rameh
| | \-Gwawl ferch Coel
| | \-Rachel Anna Alyuba BINT SIMON ELEAZOR The Prophetess Of Arimathaea
| /-Cyllin OF SILURIA AP CARACTACUS
| | \-Eurgain of Bretagne
\-Ystradwl Verch Cynvelyn VAN GLAMORGAN
| /-Theomantius Tenacius Tenuantius AP LLUDD of England
\-Puella Aelii TUBERONES ans
- Mother: Unknown SPOUSE
- Father: Knivida VON DEN WESTGOTEN
- Birth: 200, Germany
- Title Of Nobility: Princess of the West Goths
- Death: ABT 260, Austrasia, (now Belgium)
- Burial: ABT 260, Austrasia, (now Belgium)
Ancestors of Ovida of The West Goths PRINCESS
Ovida of The West Goths PRINCESS
\-Unknown SPOUSE
Descendants of Ovida of The West Goths PRINCESS
1 Ovida of The West Goths PRINCESS
=Knivida de Bourgogne DE VISIGOTHIE
2 Ovida DE BOURGOGNE, King Of The Goths
=Friege DE SILURIA
3 Withlaeg D'ANGEL Odinsson
=Nanna NEPSDÓTTIR
3 Ascaric of OSTROGOTHS AND VISIGOTHS
=Eudosia PRINCESS
3 Respa of the Goths
3 Ragaise Van de GOTEN
3 Veduca
3 Walderich Xanten, King of Burgundy
=Gebica VON XANTEN
3 Hilderic DE BOURGOGNE King Of The Goths
=Queen WISIGOTHIE
2 Micca of the VISIGOTHS
2 Argaith of the VISIGOTHS
2 Agilmund King of the Lombards
=Cniva DE WISIGOTHE
2 Argaith of the VISIGOTHS
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Descendants of PRINCESS OF DENMARK
1 PRINCESS OF DENMARK
=Eystein Adilsson of UPPSALA
2 Ingvar EYSTEINSSON
=Gautrek GAUTDOTTIR Marriage: Uppsala, Sweden
3 Bröt-Anund vel Onund INGVARSSON
=(Unknown)
=Mrs Ingvar EYSTEINSSON
2 EYSTEINSDATTER
Ancestors of Amyntas I PRINCESS OF MACEDONIA
/-Philippos I OF MACEDONIA
/-Aeropus I DE MACEDONIA
| \-Nikonoe spouse of Philippos I of MACEDONIA
/-Alcetas OF MACEDONIA
/-Amyntas I OF MACEDONIA
| \-Delle Aeropus I of MACEDONIA
Amyntas I PRINCESS OF MACEDONIA
| /-Arrabaios father of Irrhus of LYNKOS
| /-Irrhus OF LYNKOS
\-Eurydice of Lyncestis
- Father: Ecgberht of WESSEX
- Mother: Rædburhg of Francia
- Birth: ABT 808, Wessex, England
- Also known as: Eadgyth Ecgberhtsdottir
- National Identification: IND6274
- Title Of Nobility: Princess
- LifeSketch: Edith or Eadgyth is identified as the daughter of Ecgberht, King of Wessex, who ruled Wessex for 37 years. She is the sister of Æthelwulf, who succeeded their father in 839 to become king of Wessex. Little is known of Edith, her brother is believed to have been born about 806, and Edith was likely born about the same time. However this is by no means certain. We only know of Edith's existence from records of Polesworth Monastery where she became a nun and then latter became abbess. Monastery records state that : “sancta Editha sorore regis Athulphi” (holy Edith, sister of king Athulphus/Athululf) was a nun at the abbey, and "Egbrycht the king had on son…Arnulfe and a dowhtur…Edith”(Egbrycht the king had one son…Arnulfe[Athelwulf] and a daughter…Edith) who was made abbess. ------------------------------------ Foundation for Medieval Genealogy ECGBERHT, son of EALHMUND Under-King of Kent & his wife --- ([769/80]-4 Feb or [Jun] 839, bur Winchester Cathedral). The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that "Egbert succeeded to the kingdom of Wessex" after the death of Beorhtric in 802, in a later passage describing him as Ecgberht as son of Ealhmund, and in another passage which setting out his complete ancestry from his son Æthelwulf King of Wessex[1466]. According to the Chronicle, Ecgberht was expelled from England in 789 by King Beorhtric after he unsuccessfully challenged Beorhtric's succession[1467]. It may be significant that "England" rather than "Wessex" is specified in this passage of the Chronicle. Ecgberht's father was king of Kent around this time, and it is possible that the expulsion was from Kent, maybe a consequence of his father being deposed as Kentish king. According to William of Malmesbury, Beorhtric was allied with Offa King of Mercia at this time. He explains that Ecgberht had sought refuge with King Offa after his expulsion by King Beorhtric, but that the latter bribed Offa for Ecgberht's surrender and was offered Offa's daughter in marriage in return[1468]. Ecgberht sought refuge at the Frankish court until [792][1469]. Under-King in Kent in [796][1470]. On Beorhtric's death, he established himself in 802 as ECGBERHT King of Wessex, rebelling against Mercian overlordship. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that he ravaged the Britons of Dumnonia (Cornwall) 815[1471]. He defeated Beornwulf King of Mercia in 825 at Ellendun [=Wroughton, Wiltshire], which marked the end of Mercian ascendancy. King Ecgberht immediately sent his son Æthelwulf with a large army into Kent, which submitted to him along with Surrey, Sussex and Essex. East Anglia, in revolt against Mercia, turned to Ecgberht for protection[1472]. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that Ecgberht conquered Mercia in 829[1473], taking the title rex Merciorum, from evidence provided by a limited number of coins[1474], but lost control of Mercia again in 830. He exacted tribute from Eanred King of Northumbria in 829. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that the first Danish raiders landed at Sheppey in 835 and King Ecgberht was defeated by Viking invaders at Carhampton in 836[1475], but defeated the Vikings at Hingston Down, Cornwall in 838[1476], which is probably when Cornwall was integrated into Wessex. "Ægberhtus rex occidentalium Saxonum" granted land at Canterbury to "Ciaba clericus", jointly with "Æthelwulfi regis filii mei", by charter dated 836[1477]. "Æthelwulf rex Cancie" was co-grantor of land in Kent with "Egberthus rex occident Saxonum pater meus" by charters dated [833/39] and 838 respectively[1478]. Despite his successes, he does not seem to have claimed overlordship over all the southern English or referred to himself as king of England. He is listed as eighth bretwalda in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle[1479], supplementing the original list given by Bede. William of Malmesbury records that King Ecgberht died "after a reign of thirty-seven years" and was buried at Winchester[1480]. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that Ecgberht died in 839[1481]. m ([789/92]) REDBURGA, daughter of ---. The primary source which confirms her marriage has not yet been identified. According to Weir, she is said to have been "sister of the king of the Franks", who at the time was Charles I, later Emperor "Charlemagne", but her identity is uncertain[1482]. The primary source on which this is based has not been identified. If her origin was Frankish, King Ecgberht presumably married her during his exile at the Frankish court between [789/792]. King Ecgberht had two children: 1. ÆTHELWULF ([795/810]-13 Jan 858, bur Winchester). The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle names Æthelwulf as son of Ecgberht[1483]. He succeeded his father 839 as ÆTHELWULF King of Wessex. - see below. 2. EADGYTH (-Polesworth Abbey ----, bur Polesworth Abbey). A manuscript of Polesworth Monastery records that “sancta Editha sorore regis Athulphi” was a nun at the abbey[1484]. Another manuscript which narrates the foundation of Polesworth Monastery in more detail, but is stated in Dugdale’s Monasticon to date from 1640, records that “Egbrycht the king had on son…Arnulfe and a dowhtur…Edith”, and that the latter was made abbess[1485]. https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ENGLAND,%20AngloSaxon%20&%20Danish%20Kings.htm#EcgberhtWessexA
- Title Of Nobility: Abbess of Pellesworth
- Death: Polesworth Abbey, Warwickshire
- Burial: Polesworth Abbey,Warwickshire
Ancestors of Edith PRINCESS OF WESSEX (Abbess Of Pellesworth)
/-Cynric of WESSEX
/-Ceawlin of WESSEX
| \-Unknown Spouse of Cynric of WESSEX
/-Cuthwine of WESSEX
| \-Unknown Spouse of Ceawlin of WESSEX
/-Cuthwulf de Clarede of WESSEX
| \-Unknown Spouse of Cuthwine of WESSEX
/-Ceolwald of WESSEX
| | /-Clemen AP BLEDRIC of Dumnonia
| \-Gwynhafar of DUMNONIA
/-Cenred of WESSEX
| | /-Figuine mac Laoghaire of MUMHAN
| | | \-Eadgith of Essex
| \-Fafertach INGEN FIGUINE
| \-Unknown Spouse of Fiquine Mac LAOGHAIRE
/-Ingild OF WESSEX
/-Eoppa OF WESSEX
| \-Nothgyth of SUSSSX
/-Eafa Ealdorman of WESSEX
| \-Edwina OF KENT
/-Ealhmund of KENT
| | /-Ochta of KENT
| | /-Eormenric of KENT
| | | \-nn D`ALEMANIE
| | /-Æthelberht of KENT
| | | \-Queen Urchada of Kent
| | /-Eadbeald Oiscingas of KENT
| | | \-Bertha Queen of Kent
| | /-Eorcenberht of KENT
| | | \-Emma MEROVINGIAN OF AUSTRASIA
| | /-Egbert of KENT
| | | \-Seaxburh of KENT
| | /-Eadric of KENT
| | | \-Princess More MUMHAIN
| | /-Æthelbert OF KENT II
| | | \-Cynegh DE SAXONY
| \-Unknown Spouse of Eafa Ealdorman of WESSEX
| \-Berthe Aldegerge DE HERISTAL of Kent
/-Ecgberht of WESSEX
| \-Unknown Spouse of Ealhmund of KENT
Edith PRINCESS OF WESSEX (Abbess Of Pellesworth)
\-Rædburhg of Francia
- Birth: 5 APR 1878, Fayette, Howard County, Missouri, USA
- Residence: 1880, Richmond, Howard, Missouri, USA
- Residence: 1900, Richmond, Howard, Missouri, USA
- Residence: 1910, Armstrong, Howard, Missouri, USA
- Residence: 1920, Richmond, Howard, Missouri, USA
- Residence: 1925, Kansas City, Wyandotte, Kansas, USA
- Residence: 1927, Kansas City, Kansas, USA
- Residence: 1930, Kansas City, Jackson, Missouri, USA
- Residence: 1942, Kansas City, Missouri, USA
- Death: 4 SEP 1957, Kansas City, Jackson County, Missouri, USA
- Burial: Fayette, Howard County, Missouri, United States of America
Descendants of Gabriel PRITCHETT
1 Gabriel PRITCHETT
=Sara Maria "Sadie" HORNBACK Marriage: 7 JAN 1956, Kansas City, Jackson County, Missouri, USA
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Fabia PROBA
/-Justinianll 2nd EMPEROR OF BYZANTIUIUM
Fabia PROBA
\-Theadora IF TEH KHAZARS
Descendants of Fabia PROBA
1 Fabia PROBA
=(Unknown)
2 Leo III EMPEROR the Isaurian
=Maria EMPRESS
3 Anna DE BYZANCE-DULO DE BULGARIE
=Artabasdo II EMPERADOR BIZANTINO Marriage: 727, Empire byzantin
3 Kosmo
3 Constantine V COPRONYMUS
- Birth: 8 OCT 1845, Farmington, Lee County, Iowa USA
- Residence: 1850, Farmington, Van Buren, Iowa, USA
- Residence: 1860, Richland, Putnam, Missouri
- Residence: 1870, Lincoln, Putnam, Missouri, USA
- Residence: 1880, Washington, Appanoose, Iowa, United States of America
- Residence: 1900, Moulton, Appanoose, Iowa, USA
- Residence: 1910, Lincoln, Jasper, Missouri, USA
- Residence: 1920, Lincoln, Putnam, Missouri, USA
- Residence: 1 JAN 1925, Moulton, Appanoose, Iowa, USA
- Residence: 1930, Moulton, Appanoose, Iowa, USA
- Death: 20 JUL 1930, Moulton, Appanoose, Iowa, USA
- Burial: Udell, Appanoose County, Iowa, United States of America
- Partnership with: Malinda Ruth MCCONNELL
Marriage: 29 SEP 1867, , Putnam, Missouri, United States
Marriage: 1870, Putnam County, Missouri, USA
Descendants of Edward Stroud PROBASCO
1 Edward Stroud PROBASCO
=Malinda Ruth MCCONNELL Marriage: 29 SEP 1867, , Putnam, Missouri, United States Marriage: 1870, Putnam County, Missouri, USA
2 Emery Melville PROBASCO
=Anna NELSON Marriage: 1 JAN 1901, Indianola, Iowa
2 Mora Adel PROBASCO
=Thomas J NEIL Marriage: 8 JUL 1893, Adair, Missouri, USA
=Henry Perry POWERS Marriage: 26 SEP 1904, Ottumwa, Wapello County, Iowa
2 Sarah M PROBASCO
=James William TAYLOR Marriage: 21 JUN 1903, , Appanoose, Iowa, United States
- Father: Edward Stroud PROBASCO
- Mother: Malinda Ruth MCCONNELL
- Birth: 20 SEP 1870, Missouri
- Residence: 1880, Washington, Appanoose, Iowa, United States of America
- Residence: 1895, Moulton, Appanoose, Iowa, USA
- Residence: 1900, Moulton, Appanoose, Iowa, USA
- Residence: 1910, Vinita Ward 2, Craig, Oklahoma, USA
- Residence: 1920, Venita Ward 2, Craig, Oklahoma, USA
- Death: 1924, Oklahoma, United States of America
- Burial: Vinita, Craig County, Oklahoma, United States of America
- Partnership with: Anna NELSON
Marriage: 1 JAN 1901, Indianola, Iowa
Ancestors of Emery Melville PROBASCO
/-Edward Stroud PROBASCO
Emery Melville PROBASCO
| /-David Martin MCCONNELL
\-Malinda Ruth MCCONNELL
| /-John WILKINSON
| /-John WILKINSON Jr
| | | /-John MCGUME
| | \-Margaret MCGUME
| | \-Ann ??
| /-Joseph WILKINSON
| | | /-John DIXON
| | | /-John DIXON
| | | | \-Margaret HENDERSON
| | | /-James DIXON
| | | | \-Jonet ROBESON
| | | /-Henry DIXON
| | | | \-Rose Susanna TAINTOR
| | | /-William Henry DIXON
| | | | \-Rose Anna INGRAM
| | | /-George DIXON Sr.
| | | | \-Ann GREGG
| | | /-Caleb DIXON
| | | | \-Ann CHANDLER
| | \-Amy DIXON
| | | /-John GREGG
| | | /-William GREGG Sr
| | | | \-Elizabeth R COOKE
| | \-Hannah GREGG
| | | /-John Herman KINKEY
| | | /-Harmon KINKEY
| | | | \-Anne Catherine BAHOUT BOOTH
| | \-Margery HINKEY
| | \-Marjorie HERMAN
\-Maria L WILKINSON
| /-John RATCLIFF
| /-John RATCLIFF
| | \-Ann FARMER
\-Ruth RATCLIFF
\-Ruth WARD
Descendants of Emery Melville PROBASCO
1 Emery Melville PROBASCO
=Anna NELSON Marriage: 1 JAN 1901, Indianola, Iowa
- Father: Edward Stroud PROBASCO
- Mother: Malinda Ruth MCCONNELL
- Birth: 16 MAR 1872, Missouri
- Birth: ABT 1872, Missouri
- Residence: 1880, Washington, Appanoose, Iowa, United States of America
- Residence: 1900, Moulton, Appanoose, Iowa, USA
- Residence: 1910, Washington, Appanoose, Iowa, United States of America
- Residence: 1920, Washington, Appanoose, Iowa, United States of America
- Residence: 1 JAN 1925, Moulton, Appanoose, Iowa, USA
- Residence: 1930, Moulton, Appanoose, Iowa, USA
- Also known as: Mora PROBASCO
- Death: 18 NOV 1934, Moulton, Appanoose, Iowa, USA
- Burial: Udell, Appanoose County, Iowa, United States of America
- Partnership with: Thomas J NEIL
Marriage: 8 JUL 1893, Adair, Missouri, USA
- Partnership with: Henry Perry POWERS
Marriage: 26 SEP 1904, Ottumwa, Wapello County, Iowa
Ancestors of Mora Adel PROBASCO
/-Edward Stroud PROBASCO
Mora Adel PROBASCO
| /-David Martin MCCONNELL
\-Malinda Ruth MCCONNELL
| /-John WILKINSON
| /-John WILKINSON Jr
| | | /-John MCGUME
| | \-Margaret MCGUME
| | \-Ann ??
| /-Joseph WILKINSON
| | | /-John DIXON
| | | /-John DIXON
| | | | \-Margaret HENDERSON
| | | /-James DIXON
| | | | \-Jonet ROBESON
| | | /-Henry DIXON
| | | | \-Rose Susanna TAINTOR
| | | /-William Henry DIXON
| | | | \-Rose Anna INGRAM
| | | /-George DIXON Sr.
| | | | \-Ann GREGG
| | | /-Caleb DIXON
| | | | \-Ann CHANDLER
| | \-Amy DIXON
| | | /-John GREGG
| | | /-William GREGG Sr
| | | | \-Elizabeth R COOKE
| | \-Hannah GREGG
| | | /-John Herman KINKEY
| | | /-Harmon KINKEY
| | | | \-Anne Catherine BAHOUT BOOTH
| | \-Margery HINKEY
| | \-Marjorie HERMAN
\-Maria L WILKINSON
| /-John RATCLIFF
| /-John RATCLIFF
| | \-Ann FARMER
\-Ruth RATCLIFF
\-Ruth WARD
Descendants of Mora Adel PROBASCO
1 Mora Adel PROBASCO
=Thomas J NEIL Marriage: 8 JUL 1893, Adair, Missouri, USA
=Henry Perry POWERS Marriage: 26 SEP 1904, Ottumwa, Wapello County, Iowa
- Father: Edward Stroud PROBASCO
- Mother: Malinda Ruth MCCONNELL
- Birth: MAR 1887, Iowa
- Residence: 1895, Moulton, Appanoose, Iowa, USA
- Residence: 1900, Moulton, Appanoose, Iowa, USA
- Death: SEP 1971, , Denver, Colorado, United States
Ancestors of Sarah M PROBASCO
/-Edward Stroud PROBASCO
Sarah M PROBASCO
| /-David Martin MCCONNELL
\-Malinda Ruth MCCONNELL
| /-John WILKINSON
| /-John WILKINSON Jr
| | | /-John MCGUME
| | \-Margaret MCGUME
| | \-Ann ??
| /-Joseph WILKINSON
| | | /-John DIXON
| | | /-John DIXON
| | | | \-Margaret HENDERSON
| | | /-James DIXON
| | | | \-Jonet ROBESON
| | | /-Henry DIXON
| | | | \-Rose Susanna TAINTOR
| | | /-William Henry DIXON
| | | | \-Rose Anna INGRAM
| | | /-George DIXON Sr.
| | | | \-Ann GREGG
| | | /-Caleb DIXON
| | | | \-Ann CHANDLER
| | \-Amy DIXON
| | | /-John GREGG
| | | /-William GREGG Sr
| | | | \-Elizabeth R COOKE
| | \-Hannah GREGG
| | | /-John Herman KINKEY
| | | /-Harmon KINKEY
| | | | \-Anne Catherine BAHOUT BOOTH
| | \-Margery HINKEY
| | \-Marjorie HERMAN
\-Maria L WILKINSON
| /-John RATCLIFF
| /-John RATCLIFF
| | \-Ann FARMER
\-Ruth RATCLIFF
\-Ruth WARD
Descendants of Sarah M PROBASCO
1 Sarah M PROBASCO
=James William TAYLOR Marriage: 21 JUN 1903, , Appanoose, Iowa, United States
Ancestors of Julius PROCULUS
/-Gaius Julius Lupus Titus Vibius Varus Laevillus I of The Roman Empire
/-Gaius Julius Lupus Titus Vibius Varus Laevillus II of The Roman Empire
| | /-Vibullius I of Corinth
| | /-Vibullius II of Corinth
| | /-Vibullius Agrippa of Corinth
| | /-Lucius Appuleius Saturninus of Corinth
| | /-Lucius Vibullius Pius of Corinth
| | /-Clodius Vibius Varus of Rome
| | | \-Clodia of Rome
| \-Vibia of Rome
| \-Julia VESTINA de Roma
Julius PROCULUS
| /-Caius Julius Quadratus BASSUS
\-Julia Quadratilla Major Bassa VAN ROME
\-Julia Iotapa DECILICIA
Ancestors of Aulus Julius PROCULUS DE ROME
/-Aelius
/-Aelius Afer 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
/-Aulus Egrillius Rufius DE ROME
| | /-Quintus Sulpicius DE ROME
| | /-Sulpicius Camerinus DE ROME
| \-Sulpicia Telero DE ROME
| \-Postumia FESTA DE ROME
Aulus Julius PROCULUS DE ROME
| /-Plarius Quintas DE ROME
| /-Quintus Plarius DE ROME
\-Plavis Vera DE ROME
Descendants of Aulus Julius PROCULUS DE ROME
1 Aulus Julius PROCULUS DE ROME
=Claudia BASILO
2 Julia Minor DE ROME
=Lucius Sergius Paullus de ROME II
3 Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
=Gaius Julius Lupus Vibius Varus Laevillus D'ASIE
=Lucius Sergius Paullus Minor DE ROME
3 Sergia Paula DE ROME
3 Sergia PAULLA
=Caius Asinus Nichomachus Quadratus IULIANUS
2 Julia Minor IV VIPSANIA
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Gapt PROGENITOR OF THE AMALS
/-Giuki of VISIGOTHS
/-Gadaric king of the Ostrogoths
/-Filimer of the Ostrogoths king of the OSTROGOTHS
/-Filogud OF THE OSTROGOTHS
Gapt PROGENITOR OF THE AMALS
Descendants of Gapt PROGENITOR OF THE AMALS
1 Gapt PROGENITOR OF THE AMALS
=(Unknown)
2 Hulmul PROGENITOR OF THE AMALS
=(Unknown)
3 Augis OF THE OSTROGOTHS
=(Unknown)
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Hulmul PROGENITOR OF THE AMALS
/-Giuki of VISIGOTHS
/-Gadaric king of the Ostrogoths
/-Filimer of the Ostrogoths king of the OSTROGOTHS
/-Filogud OF THE OSTROGOTHS
/-Gapt PROGENITOR OF THE AMALS
Hulmul PROGENITOR OF THE AMALS
Descendants of Hulmul PROGENITOR OF THE AMALS
1 Hulmul PROGENITOR OF THE AMALS
=(Unknown)
2 Augis OF THE OSTROGOTHS
=(Unknown)
3 Amal of the OSTROGOTHS
=(Unknown)
3 Amala Augis AMAL DYNASTY
- Birth: ABT 160 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Descendants of Appias Claudius PULCHER
1 Appias Claudius PULCHER
=Servilia
2 Marcus Livius Drusus CLAUDIANUS Pulcher
=Alfidia LURCO
3 Livia Julia DRUSILLA Augusta of Rome
=Tiberius Claudius NERO Caesar Augustus Marriage: BET 42 BC AND 38 BC, Rome, Roma, Lazio, Italy
=Gaius Octavius "CAESAR AUGUSTUS" Emperor of Rome Marriage: BET 37 BC AND 14, Rome, Roma, Lazio, Italy
3 Marcus SCRIBONIUS LIBO DRUSUS
- Father: Appius Claudius PULCHER
- Mother: Fonteia Claudia
- Birth: 129 BC, Rome, Roman Republic
- Title Of Nobility: Praetor
- He was exiled by Gaius Marius while Sulla, whom he supported, was away in the east.: 88 BC
- He returned to Rome after Lucius Cornelius Cinna died.: 84 BC
- LifeSketch: Appius Claudius Pulcher (c. 129 BC – 76 BC) was a Roman noble, general and politician of the 1st century BC. He was the father of a number of renowned Romans, most notable: the infamous Clodius and Clodia. There is uncertainty about who his father was. It was most probably the Appius Claudius Pulcher who was consul in 143 BC. He was a supporter of Lucius Cornelius Sulla and served as praetor in 88 BC. He was exiled in that year by Gaius Marius while Sulla was away in the east. He returned to Rome after Lucius Cornelius Cinna died in 84 BC, and served as consul in 79 BC and as governor of Roman Macedonia from 78 BC to 76 BC. Appius Claudius Pulcher was likely married to a Caecilia Metella (a daughter of Balearicus), although this is not universally agreed upon, T. P. Wiseman believes that that his wife was a Servilia Caepione (it is known that there was a Servilia around this time that was the wife of a Pulcher, but it is not known who either of them were). Jeffrey Tatum thinks that there is too little information to be sure either way. He had six known children: . Appius Claudius Pulcher (consul of 54 BC) . Gaius Claudius Pulcher . Publius Claudius Pulcher, who changed his name to Clodius . Claudia Tertia, who married Quintus Marcius Rex . Claudia (who changed her name to Clodia), the wife of Quintus Caecilius Metellus Celer . Claudia (c. 90 BC – aft. 66 BC), first wife of Lucius Licinius Lucullus, whom she divorced in 66 BC
- Title Of Nobility: Consul of Rome
- Title Of Nobility: Governor of Roman Macedonia
- Title Of Nobility: Consul of Rome
- Title Of Nobility: Governor of Roman Macedonia
- Title Of Nobility: Consul of Rome
- Title Of Nobility: Governor of Roman Macedonia
- Title Of Nobility: Consul of Rome
- Title Of Nobility: Governor of Roman Macedonia
- Death: 76 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Partnership with: Caecilia Metella BALEARICA
- Child: Gaius Claudius PULCHER
- Child: Claudia PULCHRA Birth: 90 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Child: Publius Claudius PULCHER Birth: ABT DEC 93 BC, Rome, Roman Republic
- Child: Clodia MAIOR Birth: 30 JUN 95 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Child: Appius Claudius PULCHER Birth: 97 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Child: Claudia TERTIA PULCHER Birth: 95 BC, Rome, Lazio, Italy
Ancestors of Appius Claudius PULCHER Counsul of Rome
/-Appius Claudius SABINUS REGILLENSIS OR Inregillensis
/-Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus INREGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
/-Publius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER
/-Gaius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER
Appius Claudius PULCHER Counsul of Rome
\-Fonteia Claudia
Descendants of Appius Claudius PULCHER Counsul of Rome
1 Appius Claudius PULCHER Counsul of Rome
=Caecilia Metella BALEARICA
2 Gaius Claudius PULCHER
=(Unknown)
3 Claudia DE ROME
=Publius Licinius Crassus Dives Mucianus DE ROME
2 Claudia PULCHRA
2 Publius Claudius PULCHER
2 Clodia MAIOR
2 Appius Claudius PULCHER
2 Claudia TERTIA PULCHER
- Father: Gaius Claudius PULCHER
- Birth: 186 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Title Of Nobility: Consul of Rome
- LifeSketch: Son of Gaius Claudius Pulcher (who was consul in 177 BC), he was elected consul for 143 BC, and, to obtain a pretext for a triumph, attacked the Salassi, an Alpine tribe. He was at first defeated, but afterwards, following the directions of the Sibylline Books, gained a victory. On his return the celebration of the triumph was refused; but he held a triumph at his own expense, and when one of the tribunes attempted to drag him from his car, his daughter Claudia, one of the Vestal Virgins, walked by his side up to the capital. Next year he was an unsuccessful candidate for the censorship, though he afterwards held that office with Quintus Fulvius Nobilior, probably in 136 BC. He allied with Tiberius Gracchus who married his daughter Claudia. Appius backed Tiberius' land reform bill and in 133 BC with Tiberius and Tiberius' brother, Gaius Gracchus, was chosen commissioner for the division of the lands. Their post allowed them to survey the ager publicus, publicly owned land that Tiberius wanted to distribute to citizens who had lost their property. Another faction in the Senate opposed them and Tiberius was assassinated in 133 BC. Appius was the enemy of Scipio Aemilianus. He died shortly after Tiberius Gracchus, probably in 130 BC. He was one of the Salii, an augur, and princeps senatus. Cicero says that his style of speaking was fluent and vehement. He married Antistia. His great-granddaughter was Clodia.
- Title Of Nobility: Censor
- Title Of Nobility: Prêtre salien, Princeps Senatus (-136), Sénateur , Triumvir (-133)
- Title Of Nobility: Censor
- Title Of Nobility: Prêtre salien, Princeps Senatus (-136), Sénateur , Triumvir (-133)
- Title Of Nobility: Censor
- Title Of Nobility: Prêtre salien, Princeps Senatus (-136), Sénateur , Triumvir (-133)
- Title Of Nobility: Censor
- Title Of Nobility: Prêtre salien, Princeps Senatus (-136), Sénateur , Triumvir (-133)
- Death: ABT 130 BC
Ancestors of Appius Claudius PULCHER
/-Marcus CLAUSUS
/-Appius Claudius SABINUS REGILLENSIS OR Inregillensis
/-Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus INREGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
/-Publius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER
/-Gaius Claudius PULCHER
Appius Claudius PULCHER
Descendants of Appius Claudius PULCHER
1 Appius Claudius PULCHER
=Fonteia Claudia Marriage: 138 BC
2 Appius Claudius PULCHER Counsul of Rome
=Caecilia Metella BALEARICA
3 Gaius Claudius PULCHER
=(Unknown)
3 Claudia PULCHRA
3 Publius Claudius PULCHER
3 Clodia MAIOR
3 Appius Claudius PULCHER
3 Claudia TERTIA PULCHER
2 Gaius Claudius PULCHER
=Antistia VETORUM Marriage: 164 BC
2 Appius Claudius PULCHER
2 Claudia Minor
2 Claudia Vestal Virgin
2 Claudia Tertia
- Father: Appius Claudius PULCHER Counsul of Rome
- Mother: Caecilia Metella BALEARICA
- Birth: 97 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Praetor, 57 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Title Of Nobility: Consul of Rome
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia Appius Claudius Pulcher (97 BC – 49 BC) was a Roman patrician, politician and general in the first century BC. He was consul of the Roman Republic in 54 BC. He was an expert in Roman law and antiquities, especially the esoteric lore of the augural college of which he was a controversial member. He was head of the senior line of the most powerful family of the patrician Claudii. The Claudii were one of the five leading families (gentes maiores or "Greater Clans") which had dominated Roman social and political life from the earliest years of the republic. He is best known as the recipient of 13 of the extant letters in Cicero's ad Familiares corpus (the whole of book III), which date from winter 53-52 to summer 50 BC. Regrettably they do not include any of Appius' replies to Cicero as extant texts of any sort by members of Rome's ruling aristocracy are quite rare, apart from those of Julius Caesar. He is also well known for being the older brother of the infamous Clodius and Clodia. His wives and marriage details remain unknown, and he may not have married until after returning from the eastern wars. No sons survived to adulthood, but he had at least two daughters Claudiae neither of whom are mentioned directly by name, but only in the context of their relationships by marriage: the younger to Pompey the younger (born c.79 BC), while the elder was the first wife of Marcus Junius Brutus (born 85). The terminus ante quem for both marriages is spring 51 BC (calendar Iunius). Most likely Claudia maior married Brutus c.59 (when he turned 26) while her minor sister's match with Magnus' son was probably arranged around the time of the Luca and Ravenna conferences (spring 56 BC), with the marriage taking place in Pompeius' second consulate after Appius returned from Sardinia. It was an interesting choice of in-laws (adfines) since Brutus refused to speak to Pompeius Magnus until the Civil War, detesting him as a tyrant and the murderer of his father. As he had no living sons, he adopted his nephew Gaius Claudius Pulcher, who changed his name to Appius Claudius Pulcher, and who became consul in 38 BC. ******************* Academic.org Daughters of Appius Claudius Pulcher (praetor 57 BC) Claudia Pulchra Major was the elder daughter of Appius Claudius Pulcher (consul 54 BC), praetor of 57 BC, elder brother of Publius Clodius. She was the first wife of Marcus Junius Brutus,[2] who was praetor of 44 BC and the most famous of Julius Caesar's assassins. This marriage was very useful to Claudia's father as Brutus was very wealthy and it allied him with the leader of Optimates, Cato the Younger, who was Brutus' uncle. When Claudia's father was accused of bribery by Publius Cornelius Dolabella in 50 BC, Brutus was part of the faction that helped have him acquitted. In 45 BC Brutus divorced Claudia, without stating his reasons, in order that he could marry Porcia Catonis, who was the daughter of Cato and his first cousin.[3][4] Claudia is not mentioned again. Claudia Pulchra Minor was the younger daughter of Appius Claudius Pulcher. She was married to Gnaeus Pompeius who was the son of Pompey the Great and his third wife Mucia Tertia. Little is known of her life.
- Death: 49 BC, Naples, Roman Republic
Ancestors of Appius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus INREGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
/-Publius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER
/-Gaius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER Counsul of Rome
| \-Fonteia Claudia
Appius Claudius PULCHER
| /-Lucius Caecilius Metellus I
| /-Quintus Caecilius Metellus Numidicus
| /-Lucius Caecilius Metellus DENTER
| /-Lucius CAECILIUS METELLUS Pontifex Maximus
| /-Quintus Caecilius Metellus
| /-Quintus Caecilius Metellus Macedonicus
| /-Quintus Caecilius Metellus BALEARICUS
\-Caecilia Metella BALEARICA
- Father: Publius Claudius PULCHER
- Birth: 258 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Praetor, 215, Roma Roman Republic
- Occupation: Curule Aedile, 217, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Curule Aedile, 217, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Curule Aedile, 217, Roma, Roman Republic
- Title Of Nobility: Consul of Rome, 212 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- LifeSketch: Appius Claudius Pulcher (died 211 BC) was a Roman politician of the 3rd century BC, active in the Second Punic War. He was the son of Publius Claudius Pulcher (consul 249 BC), and the father of Appius Claudius Pulcher (consul 185 BC), Publius Claudius Pulcher (consul 184 BC), and Gaius Claudius Pulcher (consul 177 BC). His daughter, Claudia, married Pacuvius Calavius, the chief magistrate of Capua in 217 BC. In 217 BC, Claudius was an aedile. In the following year, he was a military tribune and fought at Cannae. Together with Publius Cornelius Scipio Africanus Major, he was raised to the supreme command by the troops who had fled to Canusium. In 215 BC, he was created a praetor, and conducted the survivors of the defeated army into Sicily, where his efforts to detach Hieronymus, the grandson of Hiero II, from his connection with the Carthaginians, were unsuccessful.[3] He remained in Sicily the following year as propraetor and legatus to Marcus Claudius Marcellus, having charge of the fleet and the camp at Leontini. In 213 BC, when the Carthaginians landed there, he co-commanded an expedition to the island with M. Claudius Marcellus. In 212 BC, he was elected consul, and in conjunction with his colleague Quintus Fulvius Flaccus undertook the siege of Capua. At the close of his year of office, in pursuance of a decree of the Senate, he went to Rome and created two new consuls. His own command was prolonged another year. In the battle against Hannibal's forces before Capua, he received a wound from whose effects he died shortly after the surrender of the city. He ineffectually opposed the infliction of the sanguinary vengeance that Fulvius took on the Capuans
- Capua, Roman Republic: During the Second Punic War (218–201 BC) Capua sided with Carthage against Rome. When the Romans recaptured the city in 211 BC, they deprived its citizens of political rights and replaced their magistrates with Roman prefects. The Roman colonies of Volturnum and Liternum were founded on Capuan territory in 194 BC. Spartacus, the slave leader, began his revolt at Capua in 73 BC. Although it suffered during the Roman civil wars in the last decades of the republic, it prospered under the empire (after 27 BC).
- Death: 211 BC, Capua, Roman Republic
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Appius Claudius PULCHER
/-Marcus CLAUSUS
/-Appius Claudius SABINUS REGILLENSIS OR Inregillensis
/-Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus INREGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
/-Publius Claudius PULCHER
Appius Claudius PULCHER
Descendants of Appius Claudius PULCHER
1 Appius Claudius PULCHER
=(Unknown)
2 Gaius Claudius PULCHER
=(Unknown)
3 Appius Claudius PULCHER
=Fonteia Claudia Marriage: 138 BC
=Antistia VETORUM Marriage: 164 BC
3 Claudia PULCHER
2 Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
2 Publius Claudius PULCHER
Ancestors of Appius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius SABINUS REGILLENSIS OR Inregillensis
/-Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus INREGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
/-Publius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER
/-Gaius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER
Appius Claudius PULCHER
\-Antistia VETORUM
- Father: Appius Claudius PULCHER
- Birth: ABT 215, Roma, Roman Republic
- Title Of Nobility: Consul of Rome
- The Aetolians: The Aetolians allied with the Romans, while Philip destroyed the temple of Apollo Thermios and allied with the Carthaginians. The Aetolians continued to fight on the side of the Romans even in the Battle of Cynoscephalae (196 BC), ignoring the great dangers looming for Greece as a result of this alliance. The Aetolians took the side of Antiochus III against the Roman Republic, and on the defeat of that monarch in 189 BC, they became virtually the subjects of Rome. Following the conquest of the Achaeans by Lucius Mummius Achaicus in 146 BC, Aetolia became part of the Roman province of Achaea. When the Roman garrisons were withdrawn because of the civil wars in Rome, the Aetolians, too, began to fight each other. Following Octavius’ victory at the Battle of Actium, the Aetolians who had sided with Antony disbanded completely. Octavius handed Calydon over to the Achaeans, who devastated it entirely and moved the statue of Artemis Laphria to Patras. There were subsequent invasions by Goths, Huns, and Vandals several centuries later at the end of the Roman Empire., BET 189 BC AND 146 BC, Aetolia, Greece
- LifeSketch: He was the son of Appius Claudius Pulcher (consul 212 BC) and the brother of Publius Claudius Pulcher (consul 184 BC). In 197 BC and the three following years, he served as a military tribune under Titus Quinctius Flamininus in Greece in the war with Philip V of Macedon.[1] He was again in Greece in 191 BC, serving first under Marcus Baebius Tamphilus in the war with Antiochus III the Great,[2] and afterwards under the consul Manius Acilius Glabrio against the Aetolians.[3] In 187 BC, he was made a praetor, and the governor of Tarentum, which fell to him by lot as his province.[4] In 185 BC, he was elected as a consul, and gained some advantages over the Ingauni, a Ligurian tribe, and, by his violent interference at the comitia, procured the election of his brother Publius to the consulship.[5] In 184 BC, when Philip was preparing for a new war with the Romans, Appius was sent at the head of an embassy into Macedon and Greece, to observe his movements and wrest from his grasp those cities of which he had made himself master.[6] In 176 BC, he was a member of an embassy sent to the Aetolians to bring about a cessation of their internal hostilities and oppose the machinations of Perseus of Macedon
- Title Of Nobility: He was a member of an embassy sent to the Aetolians
- Death: AFT 176 BC
Ancestors of Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Marcus CLAUSUS
/-Appius Claudius SABINUS REGILLENSIS OR Inregillensis
/-Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus INREGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
/-Publius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER
Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
Ancestors of Claudia PULCHER
/-Marcus CLAUSUS
/-Appius Claudius SABINUS REGILLENSIS OR Inregillensis
/-Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus INREGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
/-Publius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER
/-Gaius Claudius PULCHER
Claudia PULCHER
Ancestors of Claudia PULCHER
/-Marcus CLAUSUS
/-Appius Claudius SABINUS REGILLENSIS OR Inregillensis
/-Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus INREGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
/-Publius Claudius PULCHER
Claudia PULCHER
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Gaius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus INREGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
/-Publius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER
/-Gaius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER Counsul of Rome
| \-Fonteia Claudia
Gaius Claudius PULCHER
| /-Lucius Caecilius Metellus I
| /-Quintus Caecilius Metellus Numidicus
| /-Lucius Caecilius Metellus DENTER
| /-Lucius CAECILIUS METELLUS Pontifex Maximus
| /-Quintus Caecilius Metellus
| /-Quintus Caecilius Metellus Macedonicus
| /-Quintus Caecilius Metellus BALEARICUS
\-Caecilia Metella BALEARICA
Descendants of Gaius Claudius PULCHER
1 Gaius Claudius PULCHER
=(Unknown)
2 Claudia DE ROME
=Publius Licinius Crassus Dives Mucianus DE ROME
3 Licinia Crassa DE ROME
=Sempronius Tuditanus
3 Licinia Crassi Minor
3 Licinia Major
3 Marcus Licinius Crassus Agelastus DE ROME
- Father: Appius Claudius PULCHER
- Birth: 220 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Also known as: Caius
- Title Of Nobility: Augur
- LifeSketch: Wikiedia - Gaius Claudius Pulcher, a.k.a. Caius Claudius (died 167 BC), consul in 177 BC, was the son of Appius Claudius Pulcher, consul in 212 BC, and he was the father of Appius Claudius Pulcher, consul in 143 BC.[1] Augur in 195 BC, suffect praetor peregrinus in 180 BC, during his consulate in 177 BC, he set out to fight against the Istrians,[2] but failed to perform the proper ceremonies and was forced to return to Rome.[3] Setting out again, he defeated the Istrians and moved on to fight the Ligurians, recovering the town of Mutina.[4] In 169 BC he was elected censor with Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus, his former co-consul. Their censorship was quite severe and as a result they were impeached. They were acquitted due to Gracchus's popularity with the people.[5] Later, in 167 BC, he went as part of an embassy to Macedon.[6] In that year, he died.[7]
- Title Of Nobility: Suffect praetor peregrinus
- Title Of Nobility: Consul (-177), Ambassadeur en Macédoine (-167)
- Title Of Nobility: Censor
- Title Of Nobility: Suffect praetor peregrinus
- Title Of Nobility: Consul (-177), Ambassadeur en Macédoine (-167)
- Title Of Nobility: Censor
- Title Of Nobility: Suffect praetor peregrinus
- Title Of Nobility: Consul (-177), Ambassadeur en Macédoine (-167)
- Title Of Nobility: Censor
- Death: 167 BC, Macedonia, Greece
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Gaius Claudius PULCHER
/-Marcus CLAUSUS
/-Appius Claudius SABINUS REGILLENSIS OR Inregillensis
/-Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus INREGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
/-Publius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER
Gaius Claudius PULCHER
Descendants of Gaius Claudius PULCHER
1 Gaius Claudius PULCHER
=(Unknown)
2 Appius Claudius PULCHER
=Fonteia Claudia Marriage: 138 BC
3 Appius Claudius PULCHER Counsul of Rome
=Caecilia Metella BALEARICA
3 Gaius Claudius PULCHER
=Antistia VETORUM Marriage: 164 BC
3 Appius Claudius PULCHER
3 Claudia Minor
3 Claudia Vestal Virgin
3 Claudia Tertia
2 Claudia PULCHER
- Father: Appius Claudius PULCHER
- Mother: Fonteia Claudia
- Title Of Nobility: curule aedile
- LifeSketch: Gaius Claudius Pulcher was a Roman Republic consul in 92 BC, together with Marcus Perperna. His great-grandfather was Gaius Claudius Pulcher in 177 BC. In 100 BC he was one of those took up arms against Saturninus. In 99 BC he was curule aedile, and in the games celebrated by him elephants were for the first time exhibited in the circus, and painting employed in the scenic decorations. In 85 BC he was praetor in Sicily, and, by direction of the senate, gave laws to the Halesini respecting the appointment of their senate. The Mamertines made him their patronus. He was consul in 92 BC. Cicero speaks of him as a man possessed of great power and some ability as an orator.
- Title Of Nobility: Consul of Rome
- Title Of Nobility: Praetor in Sicily
- Death: AFT 85 BC, Roma, Roman Empire
Ancestors of Gaius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius SABINUS REGILLENSIS OR Inregillensis
/-Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus INREGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
/-Publius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER
/-Gaius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER
Gaius Claudius PULCHER
\-Fonteia Claudia
- Father: Appius Claudius PULCHER Counsul of Rome
- Mother: Caecilia Metella BALEARICA
- Birth: ABT DEC 93 BC, Rome, Roman Republic
- Also known as: born Publius Claudius Pulcher
- Also known as: He affected the "plebeian" spelling of his nomen after his controversial adoption into the plebeian Fonteii in 59 BC.
- Also known as: He affected the "plebeian" spelling of his nomen after his controversial adoption into the plebeian Fonteii in 59 BC.
- Occupation: Tribun de la plèbe, 58 BC
- Occupation: Sénateur romain Questeur Édile, 56 BC
- Occupation: Sénateur romain Questeur Édile, 56 BC
- Title Of Nobility: Roman Patrician
- LifeSketch: Publius Clodius Pulcher was a Roman nobilis of the patrician Claudian gens and a senator. He was known as an eccentric, mercurial and arrogant character. He became a major disruptive force in Roman politics during the First Triumvirate, of Pompey, Crassus, and Julius Caesar. He passed numerous laws in the tradition of the populares known as the "Leges Clodiae," and has been called "one of the most innovative urban politicians in Western history." As tribune, he pushed through an ambitious legislative program, including a grain dole, but he is chiefly remembered for his feud with Cicero and Titus Annius Milo, whose bodyguards murdered him on the Appian Way. -- Wikiwand: Publius Clodius Pulcher
- He was the youngest son of Appius Claudius Pulcher. The identity of his mother's family: was and is one of the most disputed issues of 1st century BC. Most likely she was a Servilia of the patrician Caepiones, daughter of Quintus Servilius Caepio, or a Caecilia Metella, sister of Quintus Caecilius Metellus Celer..
- Title Of Nobility: He was was a Roman "nobilis" of the patrician Claudian "gens" and a senator.
- Title Of Nobility: He was was a Roman "nobilis" of the patrician Claudian "gens" and a senator.
- Death: 18 JAN 52 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
Ancestors of Publius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus INREGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
/-Publius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER
/-Gaius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER Counsul of Rome
| \-Fonteia Claudia
Publius Claudius PULCHER
| /-Lucius Caecilius Metellus I
| /-Quintus Caecilius Metellus Numidicus
| /-Lucius Caecilius Metellus DENTER
| /-Lucius CAECILIUS METELLUS Pontifex Maximus
| /-Quintus Caecilius Metellus
| /-Quintus Caecilius Metellus Macedonicus
| /-Quintus Caecilius Metellus BALEARICUS
\-Caecilia Metella BALEARICA
- Father: Appius Claudius CAECUS
- Birth: 295 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Title Of Nobility: Curule Aedile, 253 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- The Battle of Drepana: The naval Battle of Drepana (or Drepanum) took place in 249 BC during the First Punic War near Drepana (modern Trapani) in western Sicily, between a Carthaginian fleet under Adherbal and a Roman fleet commanded by Publius Claudius Pulcher. Pulcher was blockading the Carthaginian stronghold of Lilybaeum (modern Marsala) when he decided to attack their fleet, which was in the harbour of the nearby city of Drepana. The Roman fleet sailed by night to carry out a surprise attack but became scattered in the dark. Adherbal was able to lead his fleet out to sea before it was trapped in harbour; having gained sea room in which to manoeuvre he then counter-attacked. The Romans were pinned against the shore, and after a day of fighting were heavily defeated by the more manoeuvrable Carthaginian ships with their better-trained crews. It was Carthage's greatest naval victory of the war; they turned to the maritime offensive after Drepana and all but swept the Romans from the sea. It was seven years before Rome again attempted to field a substantial fleet, while Carthage put most of its ships into reserve to save money and free up manpower., 249 BC, Drepana, Sicily
- LifeSketch: Publius Claudius Pulcher (died 249 BC/246 BC) was a Roman politician. Son of Appius Claudius Caecus, Publius was the first of the Claudii to be given the cognomen "Pulcher" ("handsome"). He was also the father of Appius Claudius Pulcher, consul in 212 BC. Curule aedile in 253 BC, as consul in 249 he was given command of the Roman fleet during the First Punic War. He lost the Battle of Drepana against the Carthaginians after ignoring a bad omen. According to Valerius Maximus, Suetonius and Cicero, when the sacred chickens refused to eat, Claudius threw them into the sea, saying: "Since they do not wish to eat, let them drink!" (Latin "Bibant, quoniam esse nollent"). He was recalled to Rome and ordered to appoint a dictator; his nomination of his subordinate Marcus Claudius Glicia was overruled. He was tried for incompetence and impiety, avoiding capital or corporal punishment due to double jeopardy and was instead fined a 120,000 assēs, 1,000 for each ship Rome had lost in the battle against Carthage. He died soon afterwards, possibly by suicide.
- Clan Name: House of Claudii
- Title Of Nobility: Consul of Rome
- Clan Name: Founder of the Claudii Pulchri
- Title Of Nobility: Consul of Rome
- Clan Name: Founder of the Claudii Pulchri
- Title Of Nobility: Consul of Rome
- Clan Name: Founder of the Claudii Pulchri
- Death: 249 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Publius Claudius PULCHER
/-Marcus CLAUSUS
/-Appius Claudius SABINUS REGILLENSIS OR Inregillensis
/-Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus INREGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
Publius Claudius PULCHER
Descendants of Publius Claudius PULCHER
1 Publius Claudius PULCHER
=(Unknown)
2 Appius Claudius PULCHER
=(Unknown)
3 Gaius Claudius PULCHER
=(Unknown)
3 Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
3 Publius Claudius PULCHER
2 Claudia PULCHER
- Father: Appius Claudius PULCHER
- Birth: ABT 211 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Residence: 181 BC
- Occupation: Praetor:Praetor was a title granted by the government of Ancient Rome to men acting in one of two official capacities: the commander of an army, in the field or, less often, before the army had been mustered; and as an elected magistratus, assigned various duties which varied at different periods in Rome's history., 188 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Consul of Rome:A consul held the highest elected political office of the Roman Republic (509 to 27 BC), and ancient Romans considered the consulship the highest level of the cursus honorum (an ascending sequence of public offices to which politicians aspired). Consuls were elected to office and held power for one year., 184 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Curule Aedile ("temple edifice") was an elected office of the Roman Republic. Based in Rome, the aediles were responsible for maintenance of public buildings (aedēs) and regulation of public festivals. They also had powers to enforce public order and duties to ensure the city of Rome was well supplied and its civil infrastructure well maintained, akin to modern local government., 189, Roma, Roman Republic
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia Publius Claudius Pulcher (Latin: P•CLAVDIVS•APP•F•P•N•PVLCHER), was son of Appius Claudius Pulcher (consul 212 BC) and brother of Appius Claudius Pulcher (consul 185 BC). In 189 BC he was curule aedile, and in 188 BC praetor.[1] He was elected to the consulship through the devices of his brother in 184 BC,[2] and in 181 BC he was one of the three commissioners appointed for planting a colony at Graviscae, a city on the coast of Etruria between Cosa and Castrum Novum.[3]
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Ancestors of Publius Claudius PULCHER
/-Marcus CLAUSUS
/-Appius Claudius SABINUS REGILLENSIS OR Inregillensis
/-Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus INREGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
/-Publius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER
Publius Claudius PULCHER
- Father: Appius Claudius PULCHER Counsul of Rome
- Mother: Caecilia Metella BALEARICA
- Birth: 90 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Absence of Lucullus: He was in command of the third Mithradatic War from 73BC-66BC in Asia, BET 73 BC AND 66 BC, Nisbis, Asia
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia (two or more articles) Lucullus (wikipedia) ...Two other notable transactions took place in 76 or 75 BC following Lucullus' return from Africa: his marriage to Claudia, the youngest daughter of Appius Claudius Pulcher, and his purchase of the Marian hilltop villa at Cape Misenum from Sulla's eldest daughter Cornelia. He also got himself the command of the Third Mithridatic War against Mithridates VI of Pontus.[25] This was a highly sought after command for Mithridates ruled very rich lands. The Eastern Wars, 73–67 BC Claudia (wikipedia) Claudia whom he married as her first husband, but divorced about the year 66, on his return to Rome after friction in Asia with her brother, Publius Clodius. Servilia Minor, the daughter of Livia and Quintus Servilius Caepio, sister of Servilia Major, and half-sister of Cato the Younger: also notorious for her loose morals, as she cheated on him, he forced himself to stay with her out of respect for her half-brother Cato.[49] She was the mother of Lucullus's son. When he died he made Cato the guardian of his son.[50]
- Death: Rome, Roman Republic
Ancestors of Claudia PULCHRA
/-Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus INREGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
/-Publius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER
/-Gaius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER Counsul of Rome
| \-Fonteia Claudia
Claudia PULCHRA
| /-Lucius Caecilius Metellus I
| /-Quintus Caecilius Metellus Numidicus
| /-Lucius Caecilius Metellus DENTER
| /-Lucius CAECILIUS METELLUS Pontifex Maximus
| /-Quintus Caecilius Metellus
| /-Quintus Caecilius Metellus Macedonicus
| /-Quintus Caecilius Metellus BALEARICUS
\-Caecilia Metella BALEARICA
- Birth: 20 OCT 1915, South Otselic, New York, USA
- Residence: Mesa
- Residence: 1920, Smyrna, Chenango, New York, USA
- Residence: 1 JUN 1925, Hamilton, Madison, New York, United States
- Residence: 1930, Hamilton, Madison, New York, USA
- Residence: 1930, Hamilton, Madison, New York, USA
- Residence: 1935, Sherbune, Chenango, New York
- Residence: 1 APR 1940, Eaton, Madison, New York, USA
- Death: 1 AUG 1977, Phoenix, Arizona, USA
- Burial: Mesa, Maricopa County, Arizona, United States of America
Descendants of Nina Alene PULLER
1 Nina Alene PULLER
=Howard Logan WILKINSON Marriage: 5 JUN 1937, Sherburne, Chenango, New York, USA
- Birth: 4 MAY 1868, Mount Zion, Macon, Illinois, USA
- Residence: 1870, Marrowbone, Moultrie, Illinois, USA
- Residence: 1880, Bethany, Moultrie, Illinois, USA
- Death: 24 APR 1891, Bethany, Moultrie, Illinois, USA
- Burial: Bethany, Moultrie County, Illinois, United States of America
Descendants of Mary Grace PYATT
1 Mary Grace PYATT
=Warren Alvin WILKINSON Marriage: 1886, Moultrie, Illinois, USA
- Father: Zenon
- Birth: ABT 60 BC, Kingdom of Pontus, Anatolia
- Title Of Nobility: King of Pontus, BET 36 BC AND 8, Kingdom of Pontus, Anatolia
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia Polemon Pythodoros, also known as Polemon I or Polemon I of Pontus (Greek: Πολέμων Πυθόδωρος; fl. 1st century BC – died 8 AD) was the Roman Client King of Cilicia, Pontus, Colchis and the Bosporan Kingdom. Polemon was the son and heir of Zenon and possibly Tryphaena. Zenon and Polemon adorned Laodicea with many dedicated offerings.[1] Polemon I of Pontus King of Pontus Reign 36 BC - AD 8 Successor Pythodorida of Pontus as Queen Regent King of The Bosporus Reign 14 BC – AD 8 Spouse Dynamis Pythodorida of Pontus Issue Artaxias III Polemon II of Pontus Antonia Tryphaena (All with Pythodorida) Father Zenon Military career Allegiance Roman Republic Years 36 BC Battles/wars Antony's Parthian War Life and career Polemon was Anatolian Greek. Polemon's father, Zenon, was an orator and a prominent aristocrat from Laodicea on the Lycus in Anatolia. Zenon supported Hybreas, an orator and prominent politician in Mylasa (the chief city of Caria). Hybreas got into trouble with the Roman general Quintus Labienus for making a sarcastic comment. Labienus marched on Mylasa. Many of its citizens were inclined to surrender. However, Zenon and Hybreas refused to yield and led their cities into a revolt. Zenon encouraged the locals to resist Labienus and King Pacorus I of Parthia, when their armies invaded Syria and Anatolia in 40 BC. Labienus sacked Mylasa. He 'shamefully maltreated' the home of Hybreas. [2] Zenon was a friend and ally of Roman Triumvir Mark Antony and played a leading role during the Parthian invasion. According to Appian, Mark Antony established client kings in the eastern areas of the Roman empire, which were under his control, on condition that they paid a tribute. In Anatolia Polemon was appointed to part of Cilicia, Darius, the son of Pharnaces II and grandson of Mithridates VI, to Pontus, and Amyntas to Pisidia. This was in 37 BC, before his war with Parthia, when he was making preparations for it and before he wintered in Athens in the winter of 37/36 BC.[3] According to Cassius Dio, in 36 BC Polemon took part in Mark Antony's campaign against Parthia. He was in a detachment led by Oppius Statianus which was attacked and slaughtered by the Parthians and the Medians. Polemon was the only one who was not killed. He was captured and then released for a ransom.[4] In that year, after his defeat in his war against Parthia, Mark Antony 'assigned principalities.' He gave Amyntas Galatia and added Lycaonia and parts of Pamphylia to his domain. He gave Cappadocia to Archelaus after driving out Ariarathes. In 35 BC he wanted to conduct a campaign against Artavasdes II, the king of Armenia. He sent Polemon to Artavasdes, the king of Media Atropatene to try to obtain an alliance with him. This was successful, and in 31 BC, when the agreement was finalised, Antony gave Polemon Lesser Armenia as a reward.[5] In 26 BC, Polemon, whom Cassius Dio described as the king of Pontus, “was enrolled among the friends and allies of the Roman people; and the privilege was granted the senators of occupying the front seats in all the theatres of his realm.” [6] Strabo gave an indication of how Polemon might have become a king of Pontus. He wrote Polemon and Lycomedes of Comana attacked Arsaces, one of the sons of Pharnaces II of Pontus, in Sagylium because he “was playing the dynast and attempting a revolution without permission from any of the prefects …” This stronghold was seized, but Arsaces fled to the mountains where he starved because he was without provisions and without water. Pompey had ordered the wells to be obstructed by rocks to prevent robbers from hiding on the mountains. Arsaces was captured and killed.[7] Arsaces probably claimed the throne because he was the grandson of Mithridates VI of Pontus, the last king of an independent Kingdom of Pontus. Sagylium was in the interior of Pontus, not far from Cappadocia and from Comana in Cappadocia, which was ruled by Lycomedes. Polemon must have assumed a royal title in Pontus due to the part he played in suppressing Arsaces. In a later passage, Cassius Dio, specified that Polemon was “the king of that part of Pontus bordering on Cappadocia …” (see below). Therefore, Pontus must have been assigned to several client kings who administered the various regions of Pontus. Plutarch listed Polemon among the eleven subject kings who sent troops to support Mark Antony in the Battle of Actium in his battle with Octavian in 31 BC. Polemon was among the five kings who did not participate in the battle personally.[8] In a further episode involving Polemon, Cassius Dio, referred to Polemon as "the king of that part of Pontus bordering on Cappadocia.” Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa sent Polemon against a certain Scribonius who claimed to be a grandson of Mithridates VI and that he had received the Bosporan Kingdom from Augustus after the death of its king, Asander. He married Asander's wife, Dynamis, the daughter of Pharnaces II, who had been entrusted with the regency of the kingdom by her husband. Thus, Scribonius controlled this kingdom. When Polemon reached the Cimmerian Bosporus, Scribonius had been killed by the people, who had heard of his advance. They resisted Polemon because they were afraid that he might be appointed as their king. Polemon defeated them but was unable to quell the rebellion until Agrippa went to Sinope to prepare a campaign against them. They surrendered. Polemon was appointed as their king. He married Dynamis with the support of Augustus.[9] The date of Polemon's death is unknown. An inscription indicates that he must have been still on the throne as late 2 BC.[10] Strabo wrote that Tanais, a Greek city in the Maeotian Swamp, was sacked by Polemon because “it would not obey him.” Polemon conquered Colchis. He attacked the Aspurgiani, a Maeotian people, under a pretence of friendship, but they defeated him, took him alive and killed him. Strabo also wrote that after Polemon's death “his [second] wife Pythodorida of Pontus [was] in power, being queen, not only of the Colchians, but also of Trapezus and Pharnacia and of the barbarians who live above these places …”[11] Marriages and succession Through his first wife, Dynamis, Polemon became stepfather to Tiberius Julius Aspurgus, her son from her first marriage. Dynamis probably died in 14 BC. Polemon remarried. His second wife, Pythodorida of Pontus, was a half Anatolian Greek and Roman noblewoman. She was the first grandchild of Antony. Strabo wrote that she was the daughter of Pythodorus of Tralles and gave some information about the two sons and the daughter of Polemon and Pythodorida.[12] They were: Zenon, also known as Zeno-Artaxias or Artaxias III, who became King of Greater Armenia in 18 AD and reigned until his death in 35 AD. He was appointed by Germanicus because the throne was vacant and he had popular support as he had imitated Armenian customs from an early age. He was saluted as Artaxias, after Artaxata, the capital of the kingdom.[13] Marcus Antonius Polemon Pythodoros, also known as Polemon II of Pontus. Strabo wrote that "as a private citizen is assisting his mother in the administration of her empire." Antonia Tryphaena who married Cotys VIII, King of Thrace. Cotys was murdered "and she lived in widowhood, because she had children by him; and the eldest of these [was] in power" at the time of Strabo. Pythodorida succeeded Polemon and ruled Tibareni and Chaldia, extending as far as Colchis. She also ruled Pharnacia and Trapezus (modern Trabzon). Strabo described her as "a woman who is wise and qualified to preside over affairs of state." She married Archelaus of Cappadocia until his death. She was still ruling at the time of Strabo and "in possession of not only of the places above mentioned, but also of others still more charming." She possessed the cities of Sidene and Themiscyra Phanaroea, close to Pharnacia, the area between the rivers Lycus (Kelkit) and Iris (Yeşilırmak), which included the cities of Magnopolis, Amaseia, and Cabeira (which Pompey had renamed Diospolis), Kainon Chorion, plus Zelitis and Megalopolitis. Pythodoris changed the name of Diospolis to Sebaste, embellished it and used it as a royal residence.[14]
- Title Of Nobility: King of the Bosporous
- Title Of Nobility: King of the Bosporous
- Title Of Nobility: King of the Bosporous
- Title Of Nobility: King of Cappodicia, BET 38 BC AND 17, Kingdom of Cappadocia, Anatolia
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia Archelaus (Greek: Ἀρχέλαος; fl. 1st century BC and 1st century, died 17 AD) was a Roman client prince and the last king of Cappadocia. Family and early life Archelaus was a Cappadocian Greek nobleman,[1][2] possibly of Macedonian descent. His full name was Archelaus Sisines.[3] He was the first-born son and namesake of the Roman Client Ruler and High Priest Archelaus of the temple state of Comana, Cappadocia and the hetaera Glaphyra.[4] Archelaus' father served as the High Priest of the Roman Goddess of War, Bellona. Archelaus had a brother called Sisines.[5] The paternal grandfather of Archelaus, also known as Archelaus, was the first in his family to be High Priest and Roman Client Ruler of Comana.[6] His paternal grandfather claimed to be descended from King Mithridates VI of Pontus.[7] Chronologically, his paternal grandfather may have been a maternal grandson of the Pontic King—his father Archelaus, the favorite general of Mithridates VI, may have married one of his monarch's daughters.[8] In 47 BC the Roman Dictator Gaius Julius Caesar after the conclusion of his military victory against the Triumvir Pompey, deprived and deposed his father of his office of high priest and rule over Comana.[9] His father was replaced by another Greek nobleman called Lycomedes.[10] Pompey was their family patron[11] and it was he that appointed his paternal grandfather to his post in Comana.[6] Years later, the mother of Archelaus, Glaphyra, became one of the mistresses to the Roman Triumvir Mark Antony.[12] Glaphyra had been a hetaera,[13] a type of courtesan. Glaphyra was famed and celebrated in antiquity for her beauty, charm, and seductiveness.[14] Through their affair, Glaphyra had induced Antony to install her son Archelaus as king of Cappadocia.[3] In 36 BC, Antony deposed and then executed the reigning king, Ariarathes X, and installed Archelaus as his successor. His mother appeared to possess great political power at the Royal Court.[3] Glaphyra's powerful influence can be demonstrated by contemporary invective, dating from around the time of the Battle of Actium in 31 BC, especially certain sexually frank and famous verses which the future Emperor Augustus composed about Antony's affair.[3] Reign as king After Archelaus assumed the Cappadocian throne, his royal title, known from surviving inscriptions, particularly coinage,[15] was: Ἀρχέλαος Φιλόπατρις Κτίστης, Archelaus Philopatris Ktistes,[16] Archelaus, lover and founder of his country in Greek. In his early reign Archelaus married what is believed to be his first wife,[17] an unnamed Princess from Armenia,[17] who died by 8 BC. There is a possibility that she may have been a distant relative of his, as she may have been a daughter of King Artavasdes II of Armenia (reigned 53 BC-34 BC) of the Artaxiad Dynasty, Artavasdes II was the father of the future Armenian Kings Artaxias II and Tigranes III. The father of Artavasdes II was Tigranes the Great,[18] who married Cleopatra of Pontus, a daughter of Mithridates VI from his first wife, his sister Laodice,[19] thus Artavasdes II was a maternal grandson to Mithridates VI and Laodice. With his first wife, Archelaus had two children: a daughter called Glaphyra[20] through whom he had further descendants, and a son called Archelaus of Cilicia. Archelaus was an ally to Antony, until his defeat at the Battle of Actium in 31 BC, where Archelaus defected to Octavian.[15][21] By making peace with Octavian, Archelaus was able to retain his crown.[22] When Octavian became the first Roman Emperor Augustus, Archelaus became an important client monarch to Rome, and Augustus considered Archelaus loyal.[23] Augustus had no commitment to provincialization as a matter of policy. In 25 BC, Augustus assigned Archelaus to rule Cilicia Trachea, the harbor city of Elaiussa Sebaste,[24] as well as parts of the surrounding Cilician coast and Armenia Minor.[21] By giving Archelaus all these extra territories to govern, Augustus was able to eliminate piracy[24] and build a more solid bulwark against Parthia.[21] On the Galatian border, Archelaus possessed crystal and onyx mines. Archelaus transferred his palace from the mainland to Elaiussa Sebaste.[24] After he and his family settled there, Archelaus developed the city. He built a royal residence, built a palace on the island in the harbor and he renamed the city in honor of Augustus.[25] Sebaste is the Greek equivalent word of the Latin word Augusta. Archelaus renamed a village, Garsaura, to Archelaïs,[26] turning it into an administrative centre, which later became a colony under the Roman Emperor Claudius.[26] Archelaus was an author of a geographical work and had written a treatise called On Stones and Rivers. At some point during the reign of Augustus, Archelaus had a temporary mental illness which resulted in the appointment of a guardian until he recovered.[20] In 18/17 BC, his daughter Glaphyra married prince Alexander of Judea in an arranged ceremony. Archelaus began to have friendly relations with the Herodian Dynasty. Archelaus on occasions acted as a mediator among members of the dynasty. Archelaus traveled to Jerusalem to visit Herod the Great in order to reconcile him with his son Alexander.[27] In appreciation, Herod reconciled Archelaus to the Roman Governor of Syria.[28] In 8 BC, the recently widowed Archelaus married Pythodorida of Pontus, another Roman client monarch. Pythodorida had two sons and a daughter from her recently deceased first husband Polemon I of Pontus. When Archelaus married Pythodorida, she and her family moved from the Black Sea to Elaiussa Sebaste. Pythodorida remained with Archelaus until he died; they had no children. This marriage linked their kingdoms, and thus both monarchs had indirect control of their spouses' realms. Their marriage arrangement was doubtless orchestrated by Augustus in order to bind together the royal houses of Anatolia as surrogates for Roman suzerainty.[21] Tiberius Although Archelaus was liked by the Romans, he experienced less success with his subjects.[21] On one occasion during the reign of Augustus, some Cappadocian citizens lodged an accusation against Archelaus in Rome.[21] The future Roman Emperor Tiberius, beginning his civil career, successfully defended Archelaus.[21] Despite this, Archelaus gave greater attention to Gaius Caesar, one of Augustus' grandsons and his heir apparent, eventually arousing Tiberius' jealousy.[15] Between 2 BC–6 AD, Tiberius was living on the Greek island of Rhodes, while Gaius Caesar was in the Eastern Mediterranean performing various political and military duties on behalf of Augustus. By 4 AD, however, Gaius Caesar had died,[29] and, when Augustus also died in 14 AD, Tiberius succeeded his adoptive father as Roman Emperor. By this time, Archelaus' health had failed.[20] By 17 AD, Archelaus had reigned over Cappadocia for fifty years and had lived to an advanced age.[30] In Archelaus' final year, there was a shortage of funds for military pay and Tiberius wanted to convert Cappadocia into a Roman province.[31] Tiberius enticed Archelaus to come to Rome.[32] When he arrived in Rome he was accused by the Roman Senate of plotting a revolution. Tiberius hoped Archelaus would be condemned to death by the Senate.[15] However, Archelaus died of natural causes before this could occur (Tacitus leaves open the possibility that he may have committed suicide).[32] Cappadocia became a Roman province and his widow returned to Pontus with her family. The Romans gave Armenia Minor to Archelaus' step-son Artaxias III to rule as a client king, while the remaining territories of his former dominion were given to his son to rule in the same fashion.
- Title Of Nobility: King of the Bosporous
- Death: 8, Kingdom of Pontus, Anatolia
- Partnership with: Pythodorida
Marriage: ABT 16 BC, Kingdom of Pontus, Anatolia
Marriage: ABT 10, Anatolia
- Partnership with: Dynamis
Ancestors of Polemon I PYTHODOROS King of Pontus
/-Zenon
Polemon I PYTHODOROS King of Pontus
Descendants of Polemon I PYTHODOROS King of Pontus
1 Polemon I PYTHODOROS King of Pontus
=Pythodorida Marriage: ABT 16 BC, Kingdom of Pontus, Anatolia Marriage: ABT 10, Anatolia
2 Antonia TRYPHAENA Queen of Thrace
=Cotys VIII of Thrace Marriage: BEF 12, Kingdom of Thrace, Anatolia, Roman Empire
3 Gepaepyrus
=Tiberius Julius ASPURGAS King of the Bosporous
3 Rhoemetalces
3 Cotys IX King of lesser Armenia
3 Pythodorus II
2 Poleman II OF PONTUS
2 Artaxias III King of Armenia
=Dynamis
2 Tiberius Julius ASPERGUS
Ancestors of Julia QUADRATILLA
/-Sergius Octavius Laenas Paulinus OCTAVIUS
/-Lucius Sergius Paullus IV of Pisidian Antioch
| \-Paulla PAULLUS
Julia QUADRATILLA
\-Julia Vipsania of Rome
Descendants of Julia QUADRATILLA
1 Julia QUADRATILLA
=Gaius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus V of Rome
2 Caius Asinus Nichomachus Quadratus IULIANUS
=Sergia PAULLA
3 Quintus Anicius I Paulinus DE ROME
=Cocceia DE ROME
=Asinia Juliana NICHOMACHA Marriage: Rome
=Coesia
=Dan V ASINIA
2 Quintas
2 Gaius Asinius Quadratus Protimus of Rome
=Claudia Antonia Lepida CLAUDIUS
3 Gaius Asinius Nicomachus Julianus Asinii of The Roman Empire
=Cæsonia Paulla of The Roman Empire
3 Gaius Asinius LEPIDUS
2 Quintus Anicius Faustus of Tunisia
=Juliana Asinia V of The Roman EMPIRE Marriage: Rome, Lazio, Italy
3 Quintus Anicius Faustus Paulinus II DE ROME
=Asinia Juliana Nicomacha of Rome
3 Paulinus Sextus ANICIUS
3 Quintus Anicius PAULINUS
3 Quintus Anicius Paulinus of Rome
3 Quintus Faustus ANICIUS
=Asinia Juliana Faustus Paulinus of Rome
=Vibia SERVERINA
- Birth: 110, Black Area, Europe
- Death: ABT 200, Heruli, Italy
Descendants of Anarnia QUEEN of Gothland
1 Anarnia QUEEN of Gothland
=Vitilaus King of the HERULI
2 Alaric I King of the HERULI
=Bella of COLN
3 Dietrich I DES HERULES
=Diana of TRIERS
3 Dietric 9th King of the Heruli
- Birth: 16 BC, Arimathea, judea, isreal
- Also known as: Anna Enygeus of Ancient Arimathea
- Also known as: Ann Beli
- Also known as: Ann Beli
- Alt. Birth: 16 BC, Aramnathea, Judea, Israel
- Alt. Death: 62, Ely, Province of Britain, The Roman Empire
- Alt. Birth: 16 BC, Aramnathea, Judea, Kingdom of Jerusalem
- Alt. Birth: 16 BC, Aramnathea, Judea, Kingdom of Jerusalem
- Death: 62, Siluria, Wales
- Partnership with: Bran of Wales, Britain and Siluria KING
- Child: Caradawc of Gwent KING
- Child: Gladys ( Pomponia Graecina) Birth: ABT 10, Glamorgan, Wales
- Child: Caradog AP BRAN of Wales VAUGHAN Birth: 5, Trevan, Llanilid, Glamorganshire, Wales, , , ,
- Child: Penardun Birth: About 40 - 20 BC
- Child: Togodumnus CUNOBELINUS Birth: ABT 10, Glamorgan, Wales
- Child: Penardin
- Child: Caradoc Caratacus Caradawg AP BRAN , of Britain Birth: 80, Trevan,Llanilid,Glamorganshire,England
- Child: Josephes Birth: ABT 17, of Arimathea, Judea, Israel
- Child: Caractacus AP BRAN - CARADOC, PENDRAGON GWEIRYDD Birth: ABT 6, Trevan Llanilid Glamorganshire, Wales
Descendants of Anna of Ancient Arimathea QUEEN
1 Anna of Ancient Arimathea QUEEN
=Bran of Wales, Britain and Siluria KING
2 Caradawc of Gwent KING
=(Unknown)
3 Coel AP CYLLIN
=(Unknown)
3 Kynan ap Caradoc OF BRITAIN
3 Guiderius ap Caradoc
3 Eudo OF THE GEWISSI
3 Guidgen ap Caradoc of Briton
3 Lleyn ap Caradoc
2 Gladys ( Pomponia Graecina)
2 Caradog AP BRAN of Wales VAUGHAN
2 Penardun
2 Togodumnus CUNOBELINUS
2 Penardin
2 Caradoc Caratacus Caradawg AP BRAN , of Britain
2 Josephes
2 Caractacus AP BRAN - CARADOC, PENDRAGON GWEIRYDD
Ancestors of Asinia Marcellius Bassus QUEEN
/-Gnaeus Asinius of Rome
/-Gaius Asinius Pollio DE ROME
/-Gaius Asinius GALLUS SALONIANUS
| | /-Lucius Quinctius
| \-Quinctia
/-Gaius Asinius Pollio
| | /-Lucius VIPSANIUS
| | /-Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa of Arpino
| \-Vipsania Agrippina
| | /-Titus POMPONIUS
| | /-Titus Pomponius Atticus
| | | | /-Lucius CAECILIUS SULLA FELIX
| | | \-Caecilia METALLA
| \-Pomponia Caecilia Attica of Rome
| \-Caecilia Pilea
Asinia Marcellius Bassus QUEEN
Descendants of Asinia Marcellius Bassus QUEEN
1 Asinia Marcellius Bassus QUEEN
=Caius Julius Quadratus BASSUS
2 Gaius Maesius PICATIANUS
=Gaius Julius Quadratus Bassus of Rome
2 Gaius Julius Asinius Quadratus of Rome
=Julia Quadratilla Proculla of Rome
3 Gaius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus V of Rome
=Julia QUADRATILLA
3 Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
=Ceasoria DE ROME
3 Julia Tyche
3 Antonius Julius Quadratus
=Iulia IULIS
3 Caius Asinius Niconachus ASINII
=Ansilia Marcella DE ROME
3 Gaius Julius Lupius Titus Vibius Varus Laevillus de Rome Quadratus de Galatie DE ROME
- Birth: ABT 439, Francia
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Descendants of Basina QUEEN of Thuringia
1 Basina QUEEN of Thuringia
=Gundioc Gundioch Gundowech DES BURGONDES
- Father: Lagos of MACEDONIA
- Mother: Antigone , of Macedon
- Birth: 340 BC, Macedonia, Greece
- Also known as: Berenice of Eordeaea
- Also known as: Berenike I
- Also known as: Berenike I
- Also known as: Berenike I
- Title Of Nobility: Queen of Egypt
- LifeSketch: Berenice I (340 BC – from 279 to 268 BC) was Queen of Egypt by marriage to Ptolemy I Soter. She became the second queen, after Eurydice, of the Ptolemaic dynasty of Egypt. Family Berenice was originally from Eordaea. She was the daughter of princess Antigone of Macedon, and an obscure local, a Greek Macedonian nobleman called Magas. Her maternal grandfather was a nobleman called Cassander who was the brother of Antipater, the regent for Alexander's empire, and through her mother was a relation to his family. First marriage In 325 BC, Berenice married an obscure local nobleman and military officer called Philip. Philip was previously married and had other children. Through her first marriage, she became the mother of King Magas of Cyrene, Antigone, who married King Pyrrhus of Epirus; and a daughter called Theoxena. Magas dedicated an inscription to himself and his father, when he served as a priest of Apollo. Pyrrhus gave her name to a new city called Berenicis. Philip died around 318 BC. Queen of Egypt After the death of her first husband, Berenice travelled to Egypt with her children as a lady-in-waiting for her mother's first cousin Eurydice who was the wife of Ptolemy I. Ptolemy I was one of the generals of King Alexander the Great and founder of the Ptolemaic dynasty of Ancient Egypt. Berenice became involved in a relationship with Ptolemy I, who married her in 317 BC. Berenice became the mother of Arsinoe II, Philotera, and a son, Ptolemy II Philadelphus. Her son Ptolemy II was recognized as his father's heir in preference to Eurydice's children to Ptolemy I. During his reign, Ptolemy II built a port on the Red Sea and named it Berenice after his mother. After she died, Ptolemy II and later Ptolemy IV Philopator decreed divine honors to her (Theocritus, Idylls xv. and xvii.). Issue With her first spouse Philip, she became the mother of: . King Magas of Cyrene . Antigone, who married King Pyrrhus of Epirus . Theoxena With her second spouse Ptolemy I, she became the mother of: . Arsinoe II, who married first Lysimachus, then her half-brother Ptolemy Keraunos and finally her full brother Ptolemy II. . Philotera c.312-c.275 BC, deified. . Ptolemy II Philadelphus, Pharaoh of Egypt.
- Death: BET 279 BC AND 268 BC, Egypt
Ancestors of Berenice QUEEN I, of Macedonia, of Egypt
/-Lagos of MACEDONIA
Berenice QUEEN I, of Macedonia, of Egypt
\-Antigone , of Macedon
Descendants of Berenice QUEEN I, of Macedonia, of Egypt
1 Berenice QUEEN I, of Macedonia, of Egypt
=Philip of Macedonia CYRENE
2 Antigone of MACEDONIA
=Pyrrhus I des Eacides DE THRACE Marriage: 296 BC
3 Olympias II of EPIRUS
=Alexander II of EPIRUS
2 Theoxana VON ÄGYPTEN
2 Magas I of CYRENE
=Ptolemy Soter I EGYPT King Of Egypt
2 Philotera BAR PTOLEMY SOTER I
2 Arsinoe II PHILADELPHOS Queen of Thrace and Egypt
2 Ptolemy II PHILADELPHUS King of Egypt
- Birth: Jerusalem, Israel
- Also known as: Sedeqetelebab Seskef
- Death: Israel
Descendants of Danus Sceafa QUEEN of Troy
1 Danus Sceafa QUEEN of Troy
=Danus I SCAEF
2 Bedweg father of Chwala BEDWEGSSON
=Sedeqetelebab OLLO
3 Chwala BEDWEGSSON
=Bodvig HODSDATTER
3 Hwala D'ASGARD
2 Hwala Anglo SAXON
- Father: Waldorans D`OSTROGOTHIE
- Mother: Claudia Adelphia DE ROME
- Birth: 371, Granada, Granada, Andalucia, Spain
- Also known as: Flora Frilla of the Vandals
- Also known as: Elisa De Granada
- Also known as: Concubine
- Also known as: Elisa De Granada
- Also known as: Concubine
- LDS ORDINANCES: Completed
- Title Of Nobility: Dame Romaine de Picardie
- LifeSketch: Said to be the daughter of Valaravans
- Death: ABT 450, Germany
Ancestors of Flora or Frilla QUEEN of the Vandals
/-Gapt of the Greuthengi
/-Hulmul DE BALTHES der Greuthengi
/-Augis DER GREUTHENGI, King of the Goths
| \-Unknown Spouse of HULMUL
/-King of the Greuthengi Amal D'OSTROGOTHIE
/-Hisarna of the GREUTHENGI
| | /-Berig III King of The Goths
| | /-Gjúki de Goths King of the GOTHS
| | | \-Asgard
| | /-Guntharich I King of the Goths
| | | \-Eigen DE SILURIA of the Goths
| \-Senhora Amal OF THE GOTHS
| \-Eigen Marius DE BALTHES of the Goths
/-Ostrogotho of the GREUTHUNGI
/-Hunuil d'Ostrogoths of the GREUTHINGI
| \-Nascida BENKANT
/-Athal Noble One OF THE GREUTHINGI OSTROGOTHS
| \-Vandalar of the Ostrogoths
/-Achiulf King of the Ostrogoths
| \-Erelicia of The Ostrogoths
/-Vultwulf D`OSTROGOTHIE
| | /-Tiberius Julius Rhoimetalkes DU BOSPHORE
| | /-Tiberius Julius Suromates II DU BOSPHORE
| | /-Tiberius Julius Rhescuporis II DU BOSPHORE
| | /-Tiberius Julius Suromates III DU BOSPHORE
| | /-Rhesuporis III DU BOSPHORE
| | /-Rhescuporis IV DU BOSPHORE
| | /-Sauromates IV DU BOSPHORE
| | /-Rhesarporis V DU BOSPHORE
| \-Julia DU BOSPHORE
/-Waldorans D`OSTROGOTHIE
| | /-Gapt of the Greuthengi
| | /-Hulmul DE BALTHES der Greuthengi
| | /-Augis DER GREUTHENGI, King of the Goths
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of HULMUL
| | /-King of the Greuthengi Amal D'OSTROGOTHIE
| | /-Filimer Gauticus DER GOTHEN King of the Baltic Goths
| | | | /-Berig III King of The Goths
| | | | /-Gjúki de Goths King of the GOTHS
| | | | | \-Asgard
| | | | /-Guntharich I King of the Goths
| | | | | \-Eigen DE SILURIA of the Goths
| | | \-Senhora Amal OF THE GOTHS
| | | \-Eigen Marius DE BALTHES of the Goths
| | /-Knivida de Bourgogne DE VISIGOTHIE
| | | \-Unknown of Ostrogoths GOTHS
| | /-Ovida DE BOURGOGNE, King Of The Goths
| | | \-Ovida of The West Goths PRINCESS
| | | \-Unknown SPOUSE
| | /-Hilderic DE BOURGOGNE King Of The Goths
| | | \-Eudosia PRINCESS
| | /-Gibaric OF THE TERVINGI GOTHS
| | | \-Queen WISIGOTHIE
| \-Unknown DES OSTROGOTHS
| \-Ariaric spouse of Gibaric of the Tervingi GOTHS
Flora or Frilla QUEEN of the Vandals
| /-Quirinus Fabius Clodius Aggrippianus CELSINUS
| | | /-Fabius Heraclide of Egypt THEBES
| | | /-Quintus Fabius Maximus Allobrogicus
| | | /-Quintus Fabius Maximus DE ROME
| | \-Fabia FUSCINILLA
| | \-Aquilia AQUILIUS
| /-Quintus Fabius Claudius Aggripianus Celsinus DE ROME
| | | /-Quintus Fabius DE ROME
| | \-Fabia Fuscinella
| | | /-Publius Seius Fuscianus DE ROME
| | \-Fuscinella DE ROME
| /-Clodius CELSINUS
| | \-Laberia POMPEIANA
| /-Claudius Celcinus DE ROME
| | \-Dementrias NOMAIDEN Celsinus
| /-Clodius Celsinus ADELPHIUS of the Roman Senate
| | | /-Caius Iulius BASSUS
| | | /-Gaius Julius Quadratus Bassus of Rome
| | | | \-Julia TYCHE
| | | /-Gaius Julius Asinius Quadratus of Rome
| | | | | /-Gaius Asinius Pollio
| | | | \-Asinia Marcellius Bassus QUEEN
| | | /-Gaius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus V of Rome
| | | | | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Titus Vibius Varus Laevillus II of The Roman Empire
| | | | | /-Aulus Julius Claudius Charax
| | | | | | \-Julia Quadratilla Major Bassa VAN ROME
| | | | \-Julia Quadratilla Proculla of Rome
| | | | \-Julia
| | | /-Quintus Anicius Faustus of Tunisia
| | | | | /-Sergius Octavius Laenas Paulinus OCTAVIUS
| | | | | /-Lucius Sergius Paullus IV of Pisidian Antioch
| | | | | | \-Paulla PAULLUS
| | | | \-Julia QUADRATILLA
| | | | \-Julia Vipsania of Rome
| | | /-Quintus Faustus ANICIUS
| | | | | /-Dagobert des Francs DE COLOGNE I
| | | | | /-Genebald Duke of The Eastern FRANKS
| | | | | | | /-Bructere KING
| | | | | | \-Ragnetrude Duchess of Austrasia of the East FRANKS
| | | | | /-Ascyllius of The Eastern FRANKS
| | | | \-Juliana Asinia V of The Roman EMPIRE
| | | /-Sextus Ancius Faustus PAULINIANUS
| | | | | /-Gaius Asinius Frugi ASINIUS
| | | | | /-Caius Julius ASINIUS QUADRATUS D`ASIE
| | | | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Gaius Asinius Frugi ASINIUS
| | | | | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Vibius Varus Laevillus D'ASIE
| | | | | | | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Titus Vibius Varus Laevillus II of The Roman Empire
| | | | | | | /-Aulus Julius Claudius Charax
| | | | | | | | \-Julia Quadratilla Major Bassa VAN ROME
| | | | | | \-Julia Quadratilla MINOR DE ROME
| | | | | | \-Julia
| | | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | | | /-Lucius Sergius Paullus de ROME II
| | | | | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | | | | | /-Aulus Egrillius Rufius DE ROME
| | | | | | | /-Aulus Julius PROCULUS DE ROME
| | | | | | | | \-Plavis Vera DE ROME
| | | | | | \-Julia Minor DE ROME
| | | | | | \-Claudia BASILO
| | | | \-Asinia Juliana Faustus Paulinus of Rome
| | | | | /-Claudius Capitolinus I DE ROME
| | | | | /-Cassius Statilius Severus Hadrianus DE ROME
| | | | | | \-Macrinia DE ROME
| | | | | /-Cassius DE ROME
| | | | | | | /-Juventius Celsus Aufidius Hoenius Severus DE ROME
| | | | | | \-Juventia Maxime DE ROME
| | | | | /-Caeionius Primus L'Étrusque DE ROME
| | | | | | | /-Aulius Larcius Quirinus Priscus DE ROME
| | | | | | | /-Aulus Larcius Lepidus DE ROME
| | | | | | | | \-Egrilla DE ROME
| | | | | | \-Larcia CALIDA
| | | | | | | /-Aulius Larcius Quirinus Priscus DE ROME
| | | | | | \-Volumnia Calida DE ROME
| | | | | | \-Egrilla DE ROME
| | | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | | \-Rasenna ETRUSCI
| | | /-Amnius Anicius JULIANUS
| | | | | /-Tiberius Claudius Frontonianus
| | | | | /-Tiberius Claudius Themistocles Marathonius
| | | | | | | /-Leonides VII Meliteus Dadoukos
| | | | | | | /-Tiberios Klaudios Lysiades Meliteus Archon of Athens
| | | | | | | | \-Hagnousios Daughter of THEMISTOKLES IV
| | | | | | | /-Tiberios Klaudios Sospis Meliteus DADOUCHOS
| | | | | | | | | /-Antonius Sopsis VON CORINTHE
| | | | | | | | \-Antonia DE CORINTHE
| | | | | | \-Themistoclea of Melite CLAUDIUS
| | | | | | | /-Tiberios Klaudios NEIKOTELES SOUNIEUS
| | | | | | | /-Tiberius Klaudios DEMOSTRATOS SOUNIEUS
| | | | | | | | \-Philippea spouse of Tiberios Klaudios Neikoteles SOUNIEUS
| | | | | | \-Klaudia Philippea II CLAUDIUS
| | | | | /-Tiberius Claudius MARATHONIUS
| | | | | | | /-Titius Claudius Dryantianus CLAUDII
| | | | | | | /-Titius Claudius Agrippinus CLAUDII
| | | | | | | | | /-Caius Lulius Antoninus LULII
| | | | | | | | \-Lulia Lysimache LULII
| | | | | | | | \-Licinia Maxima LUCINII
| | | | | | | /-Titius Claudius Dryantianus Antoninus CLAUDII
| | | | | | | | \-Aelia Platonis Matidia AELII
| | | | | | \-Claudia Vettia Agrippina CLAUDII
| | | | | | \-Avidia Alexandria AVIDII
| | | | \-Amnia DEMETRIAS
| | | | | /-Stasikes VON THERA
| | | | | /-Kleitosthenes VON THERA
| | | | | /-Flavius Clitosthénès Clausianus DE THERA
| | | | | /-Titus Flavius Clitosthenes Julianus DE THERA
| | | | | /-Flavius Stasicies DE THERA METROPHANES
| | | | | | | /-Tiberius Claudius Frontonianus
| | | | | | \-Claudia Frontoniana CLAUDIUS
| | | | | | | /-Tiberios Klaudios Lysiades Meliteus Archon of Athens
| | | | | | | /-Tiberios Klaudios Sospis Meliteus DADOUCHOS
| | | | | | | | \-Antonia DE CORINTHE
| | | | | | \-Themistoclea of Melite CLAUDIUS
| | | | | | | /-Tiberius Klaudios DEMOSTRATOS SOUNIEUS
| | | | | | \-Klaudia Philippea II CLAUDIUS
| | | | \-Flavia Claudia Demetria Aeliana DE THÉRA
| | | | | /-Claudius Capitolinus I DE ROME
| | | | | /-Claudius CAPITOLINUS II DE ROMA
| | | | | | \-Macrinia DE ROME
| | | | | /-Titus Tiberius Claudius NERO
| | | | | | \-Iulia Polla DE ROME
| | | | | /-Titus Claudius Bassus Capitolinus DE ROME
| | | | | | \-Vulcanania DE ROME
| | | | \-Claudia Capitolina DE ROME
| | | | | /-Neratius Iunius Falvunusde ROME
| | | | | | | /-Lucius Minicius Natalis
| | | | | | \-Aemilia Pudentilla DE ROME
| | | | | | \-Quadronia spouse of Lucius Minicius NATALIS
| | | | \-Numeria Marcella DE ROME
| | | | \-Vulcania spouse of Neratius Iunius Falvunusde ROME
| | \-Anicia Demetrias DE ROME
| | \-Caesonia Manilla
\-Claudia Adelphia DE ROME
\-Faltonia Betitia Proba