Ancestors of Annie WALLING
/-Enos Clark WALLING
Annie WALLING
| /-David CLEMMENS
\-Ada Ann "Annie" CLEMMENS
| /-John WILKINSON
| /-John WILKINSON Jr
| | | /-John MCGUME
| | \-Margaret MCGUME
| | \-Ann ??
| /-Joseph WILKINSON
| | | /-John DIXON
| | | /-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
| /-Seth WILKINSON
| | | /-John RATCLIFF
| | | /-John RATCLIFF
| | | | \-Ann FARMER
| | \-Ruth RATCLIFF
| | \-Ruth WARD
\-Sarah Elizabeth WILKINSON
| /-Thomas HIGGINBOTHAN
| /-George Oliver HIGGINBOTHAN
| | \-Elizabeth spouse of Thomas HIGGINBOTHAN
| /-George Oliver HIGGINBOTHAM Jr.
| | | /-Richard STEEPHENS
| | | /-John STEVENS
| | | | \-Mary BIRDLEY
| | \-Elizabeth STEVENS
| | | /-William SNOW
| | \-Sarah SNOW
| /-Ralph HIGGINBOTHAM
| /-John HIGGINBOTHAM
| | | /-Thomas HARBERT
| | \-Mary HENTHORN
| /-John C HIGGINBOTHAM
| | | /-John KENNEDY
| | \-Nancy Ann KENNEDY
| | \-Margaret KENNEDY
\-Nancy Ann HIGGINBOTHAM
| /-Hugh REED
| /-Hugh REED
| /-William REED
\-Jane REED
| /-John LYNN
| /-John Ellingsen LINN
| | \-Unknown Spouse of John LYNN
| /-Andrew LYNN
| | | /-Andrew JONES
| | \-Elizabeth JONES
| | \-Ellen JONES
| /-William David Cameron LYNN
| | | /-Gavin BLAIR
| | \-Ann Margaret BLAIR
| | | /-Lawrence CRAWFORD
| | \-Isabel CRAWFURD OF KILBIRNIE
| | \-Helen CAMPBELL
| /-John LINN
| | \-Margaret Jane PATTON
| /-John LINN
| | | /-Allan CAMERON
| | \-Margaret CAMERON
| | \-Jean MACGREGOR
\-Margaret LINN
\-Jane PATTERSON
Ancestors of Emma Getrude WALLING
/-Enos Clark WALLING
Emma Getrude WALLING
| /-David CLEMMENS
\-Ada Ann "Annie" CLEMMENS
| /-John WILKINSON
| /-John WILKINSON Jr
| | | /-John MCGUME
| | \-Margaret MCGUME
| | \-Ann ??
| /-Joseph WILKINSON
| | | /-John DIXON
| | | /-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
| /-Seth WILKINSON
| | | /-John RATCLIFF
| | | /-John RATCLIFF
| | | | \-Ann FARMER
| | \-Ruth RATCLIFF
| | \-Ruth WARD
\-Sarah Elizabeth WILKINSON
| /-Thomas HIGGINBOTHAN
| /-George Oliver HIGGINBOTHAN
| | \-Elizabeth spouse of Thomas HIGGINBOTHAN
| /-George Oliver HIGGINBOTHAM Jr.
| | | /-Richard STEEPHENS
| | | /-John STEVENS
| | | | \-Mary BIRDLEY
| | \-Elizabeth STEVENS
| | | /-William SNOW
| | \-Sarah SNOW
| /-Ralph HIGGINBOTHAM
| /-John HIGGINBOTHAM
| | | /-Thomas HARBERT
| | \-Mary HENTHORN
| /-John C HIGGINBOTHAM
| | | /-John KENNEDY
| | \-Nancy Ann KENNEDY
| | \-Margaret KENNEDY
\-Nancy Ann HIGGINBOTHAM
| /-Hugh REED
| /-Hugh REED
| /-William REED
\-Jane REED
| /-John LYNN
| /-John Ellingsen LINN
| | \-Unknown Spouse of John LYNN
| /-Andrew LYNN
| | | /-Andrew JONES
| | \-Elizabeth JONES
| | \-Ellen JONES
| /-William David Cameron LYNN
| | | /-Gavin BLAIR
| | \-Ann Margaret BLAIR
| | | /-Lawrence CRAWFORD
| | \-Isabel CRAWFURD OF KILBIRNIE
| | \-Helen CAMPBELL
| /-John LINN
| | \-Margaret Jane PATTON
| /-John LINN
| | | /-Allan CAMERON
| | \-Margaret CAMERON
| | \-Jean MACGREGOR
\-Margaret LINN
\-Jane PATTERSON
- Birth: 27 MAR 1856, Amity, Yamhill, Oregon, USA
- Residence: Boise, Ada Co., Idaho
- Residence: 1860, Amity, Yamhill, Oregon
- Residence: 1870, Boise, Ada, Idaho Territory, USA
- Residence: 1880, Wood River Mining, Alturas, Idaho, USA
- Residence: 1900, Boise Ward 1, Ada, Idaho, USA
- Death: 1 NOV 1908, Woodburn, Marion, Oregon, USA
- Burial: Boise, Ada County, Idaho, United States of America
- Partnership with: Ada Ann "Annie" CLEMMENS
Marriage: 31 DEC 1883, Ada County, Idaho, USA
- Child: Jesse Clark WALLING Birth: 23 OCT 1878, Bellevue, Blaine County, ID
- Child: Annie WALLING Birth: ABT 1879, Idaho
- Child: Emma Getrude WALLING Birth: 1880, Bellevue, Blaine County, ID
- Child: Sarah Myrtle WALLING Birth: 2 APR 1885, Ada County, Idaho, USA
- Child: Sidney David WALLING Birth: 16 OCT 1886, Boise, Ada, Idaho, USA
Descendants of Enos Clark WALLING
1 Enos Clark WALLING
=Ada Ann "Annie" CLEMMENS Marriage: 31 DEC 1883, Ada County, Idaho, USA
2 Jesse Clark WALLING
2 Annie WALLING
2 Emma Getrude WALLING
2 Sarah Myrtle WALLING
2 Sidney David WALLING
Ancestors of Jesse Clark WALLING
/-Enos Clark WALLING
Jesse Clark WALLING
| /-David CLEMMENS
\-Ada Ann "Annie" CLEMMENS
| /-John WILKINSON
| /-John WILKINSON Jr
| | | /-John MCGUME
| | \-Margaret MCGUME
| | \-Ann ??
| /-Joseph WILKINSON
| | | /-John DIXON
| | | /-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
| /-Seth WILKINSON
| | | /-John RATCLIFF
| | | /-John RATCLIFF
| | | | \-Ann FARMER
| | \-Ruth RATCLIFF
| | \-Ruth WARD
\-Sarah Elizabeth WILKINSON
| /-Thomas HIGGINBOTHAN
| /-George Oliver HIGGINBOTHAN
| | \-Elizabeth spouse of Thomas HIGGINBOTHAN
| /-George Oliver HIGGINBOTHAM Jr.
| | | /-Richard STEEPHENS
| | | /-John STEVENS
| | | | \-Mary BIRDLEY
| | \-Elizabeth STEVENS
| | | /-William SNOW
| | \-Sarah SNOW
| /-Ralph HIGGINBOTHAM
| /-John HIGGINBOTHAM
| | | /-Thomas HARBERT
| | \-Mary HENTHORN
| /-John C HIGGINBOTHAM
| | | /-John KENNEDY
| | \-Nancy Ann KENNEDY
| | \-Margaret KENNEDY
\-Nancy Ann HIGGINBOTHAM
| /-Hugh REED
| /-Hugh REED
| /-William REED
\-Jane REED
| /-John LYNN
| /-John Ellingsen LINN
| | \-Unknown Spouse of John LYNN
| /-Andrew LYNN
| | | /-Andrew JONES
| | \-Elizabeth JONES
| | \-Ellen JONES
| /-William David Cameron LYNN
| | | /-Gavin BLAIR
| | \-Ann Margaret BLAIR
| | | /-Lawrence CRAWFORD
| | \-Isabel CRAWFURD OF KILBIRNIE
| | \-Helen CAMPBELL
| /-John LINN
| | \-Margaret Jane PATTON
| /-John LINN
| | | /-Allan CAMERON
| | \-Margaret CAMERON
| | \-Jean MACGREGOR
\-Margaret LINN
\-Jane PATTERSON
Ancestors of Sarah Myrtle WALLING
/-Enos Clark WALLING
Sarah Myrtle WALLING
| /-David CLEMMENS
\-Ada Ann "Annie" CLEMMENS
| /-John WILKINSON
| /-John WILKINSON Jr
| | | /-John MCGUME
| | \-Margaret MCGUME
| | \-Ann ??
| /-Joseph WILKINSON
| | | /-John DIXON
| | | /-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
| /-Seth WILKINSON
| | | /-John RATCLIFF
| | | /-John RATCLIFF
| | | | \-Ann FARMER
| | \-Ruth RATCLIFF
| | \-Ruth WARD
\-Sarah Elizabeth WILKINSON
| /-Thomas HIGGINBOTHAN
| /-George Oliver HIGGINBOTHAN
| | \-Elizabeth spouse of Thomas HIGGINBOTHAN
| /-George Oliver HIGGINBOTHAM Jr.
| | | /-Richard STEEPHENS
| | | /-John STEVENS
| | | | \-Mary BIRDLEY
| | \-Elizabeth STEVENS
| | | /-William SNOW
| | \-Sarah SNOW
| /-Ralph HIGGINBOTHAM
| /-John HIGGINBOTHAM
| | | /-Thomas HARBERT
| | \-Mary HENTHORN
| /-John C HIGGINBOTHAM
| | | /-John KENNEDY
| | \-Nancy Ann KENNEDY
| | \-Margaret KENNEDY
\-Nancy Ann HIGGINBOTHAM
| /-Hugh REED
| /-Hugh REED
| /-William REED
\-Jane REED
| /-John LYNN
| /-John Ellingsen LINN
| | \-Unknown Spouse of John LYNN
| /-Andrew LYNN
| | | /-Andrew JONES
| | \-Elizabeth JONES
| | \-Ellen JONES
| /-William David Cameron LYNN
| | | /-Gavin BLAIR
| | \-Ann Margaret BLAIR
| | | /-Lawrence CRAWFORD
| | \-Isabel CRAWFURD OF KILBIRNIE
| | \-Helen CAMPBELL
| /-John LINN
| | \-Margaret Jane PATTON
| /-John LINN
| | | /-Allan CAMERON
| | \-Margaret CAMERON
| | \-Jean MACGREGOR
\-Margaret LINN
\-Jane PATTERSON
Ancestors of Sidney David WALLING
/-Enos Clark WALLING
Sidney David WALLING
| /-David CLEMMENS
\-Ada Ann "Annie" CLEMMENS
| /-John WILKINSON
| /-John WILKINSON Jr
| | | /-John MCGUME
| | \-Margaret MCGUME
| | \-Ann ??
| /-Joseph WILKINSON
| | | /-John DIXON
| | | /-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
| /-Seth WILKINSON
| | | /-John RATCLIFF
| | | /-John RATCLIFF
| | | | \-Ann FARMER
| | \-Ruth RATCLIFF
| | \-Ruth WARD
\-Sarah Elizabeth WILKINSON
| /-Thomas HIGGINBOTHAN
| /-George Oliver HIGGINBOTHAN
| | \-Elizabeth spouse of Thomas HIGGINBOTHAN
| /-George Oliver HIGGINBOTHAM Jr.
| | | /-Richard STEEPHENS
| | | /-John STEVENS
| | | | \-Mary BIRDLEY
| | \-Elizabeth STEVENS
| | | /-William SNOW
| | \-Sarah SNOW
| /-Ralph HIGGINBOTHAM
| /-John HIGGINBOTHAM
| | | /-Thomas HARBERT
| | \-Mary HENTHORN
| /-John C HIGGINBOTHAM
| | | /-John KENNEDY
| | \-Nancy Ann KENNEDY
| | \-Margaret KENNEDY
\-Nancy Ann HIGGINBOTHAM
| /-Hugh REED
| /-Hugh REED
| /-William REED
\-Jane REED
| /-John LYNN
| /-John Ellingsen LINN
| | \-Unknown Spouse of John LYNN
| /-Andrew LYNN
| | | /-Andrew JONES
| | \-Elizabeth JONES
| | \-Ellen JONES
| /-William David Cameron LYNN
| | | /-Gavin BLAIR
| | \-Ann Margaret BLAIR
| | | /-Lawrence CRAWFORD
| | \-Isabel CRAWFURD OF KILBIRNIE
| | \-Helen CAMPBELL
| /-John LINN
| | \-Margaret Jane PATTON
| /-John LINN
| | | /-Allan CAMERON
| | \-Margaret CAMERON
| | \-Jean MACGREGOR
\-Margaret LINN
\-Jane PATTERSON
- Birth: 10 APR 1866, Pike, Wyoming, New York, USA
- Residence: Fulton
- Residence: 1900, Pike, Wyoming, New York, USA
- Residence: 1910, Norwalk, Huron, Ohio, USA
- Residence: 1916, Akron, Ohio, USA
- Partnership with: Elmer E BECK
Marriage: 31 JAN 1925, Fulton County, Indiana
Marriage: 31 JAN 1925, Fulton County, Indiana, USA
Descendants of Lois G WARD
1 Lois G WARD
=Elmer E BECK Marriage: 31 JAN 1925, Fulton County, Indiana Marriage: 31 JAN 1925, Fulton County, Indiana, USA
- Birth: 8 JUL 1845, Alabama, USA
- Residence: 1870, Beat 15, Shelby, Alabama, USA
- Residence: 1880, Kingdom, Bibb, Alabama, USA
- Residence: 1900, Tylers, Shelby, Alabama, USA
- Residence: 1910, Precinct 5, Shelby, Alabama, USA
- Residence: 1920, Bamford, Shelby, Alabama, USA
- Death: 18 NOV 1924, Bibb Co, Alabama, USA
- Burial: 19 NOV 1924, West Blocton, Bibb County, Alabama, United States of America
Descendants of Nancy Jane WARD
1 Nancy Jane WARD
=William Redmond BUNN Marriage: 14 MAR 1872, Shelby Co, Alabama, USA
- Birth: 29 MAY 1759, , Chatham, North Carolina, USA
- Death: 23 AUG 1805, Eagle, Ross, Ohio, USA
- Burial: Eagle Mills, Vinton County, Ohio, United States of America
- Partnership with: John RATCLIFF
Marriage: 7 MAR 1779, Chatham Co, NC
- Child: Alice RATCLIFF Birth: 28 JAN 1779, , Chatham, North Carolina, USA
- Child: John RATCLIFF Birth: 9 MAR 1781, Silver City, , North Carolina, USA
- Child: Ann RATCLIFF Birth: 1783, , Chatham, North Carolina, USA
- Child: Timothy RATCLIFF Birth: 24 JAN 1785, North Carolina, United States of America
- Child: Susannah RATCLIFF Birth: 11 FEB 1787, Siler City, Chatham County, North Carolina, United States of America
- Child: Ruth RATCLIFF Birth: 21 JAN 1789, , Chatham, North Carolina, USA
- Child: Jesse RATCLIFF Birth: 27 JAN 1791, Siler City,Chatham,North Carolina,USA
- Child: Rachel RATCLIFF Birth: 1792, , Chatham, North Carolina, USA
- Child: Ezekiel RATCLIFF Birth: 14 SEP 1795, , Chatham, North Carolina, USA
- Child: Simon RATCLIFF Birth: 23 AUG 1800
Descendants of Ruth WARD
1 Ruth WARD
=John RATCLIFF Marriage: 7 MAR 1779, Chatham Co, NC
2 Alice RATCLIFF
2 John RATCLIFF
2 Ann RATCLIFF
2 Timothy RATCLIFF
2 Susannah RATCLIFF
2 Ruth RATCLIFF
=Joseph WILKINSON Marriage: 30 AUG 1810, Chillicothe, Ross, Ohio, United States
3 Hiram WILKINSON
=Barbara Ann CONRAD Marriage: 16 DEC 1837, Warren, Warren, Indiana, United States
3 John WILKINSON
=Mary Jane HIGGINBOTHAM Marriage: 17 NOV 1837, Warren County, Indiana
=Anthrite DAVIS Marriage: 13 AUG 1879, Appanoose County, Iowa
3 Seth WILKINSON
=Nancy Ann HIGGINBOTHAM Marriage: 16 OCT 1836, Williamsport, Warren Co., Indiana Marriage: 16 OCT 1836, Warren, Indiana, USA Marriage: 16 OCT 1836, of Eagle Twp., Brown, Ohio Marriage: 16 OCT 1836, Williamsport, Warren, Indiana, United States Marriage: 16 OCT 1836, Williamsport, Warren, Indiana, United States Marriage: 16 OCT 1836, Indiana, United States Marriage: 16 OCT 1836, Warren, Indiana, United States Marriage: 16 OCT 1836, Williamsport, Warren, Indiana, United States Marriage: 16 OCT 1836, Indiana, United States Marriage: 16 OCT 1836, Warren, Indiana, United States
3 Amy WILKINSON
3 Harriet WILKINSON
=Nathaniel TOOPES Marriage: 1856
3 Maria L WILKINSON
=David Martin MCCONNELL Marriage: 28 OCT 1841, Warren, Warren, Indiana, United States
3 William WILKINSON
=Nancy Poyner JOHNSTON Marriage: 10 AUG 1848, Benton Co.,IN
3 Margaret WILKINSON
=Thomas MCCONNELL Marriage: 1 JUN 1843, Warren Co., Indiana
=John indiana MCDADE Marriage: 16 NOV 1854, Benton, Iowa
2 Jesse RATCLIFF
2 Rachel RATCLIFF
2 Ezekiel RATCLIFF
2 Simon RATCLIFF
- Father: Sunno KING OF THE SICAMBRIAN FRANKS
- Mother: Merowna Merovna DE THURINGE II
- Birth: 364, Scythia, Ucrania
- Also known as: Maerovaec Merovaeus Merovee Meroveo Franks
- Title Of Nobility: Rey de los Francos hasta el 457
- LifeSketch: Mérovée I de France Birthdate: estimated between 383 and 443 Death: Immediate Family: Son of Pharamond, king of the Franks (Fictitious) and Argotta of the Franks Husband of wife of Mérovée I de France Nn Brother of Fredemundus; Clodius de Cologne, VI; Adalbertus de Cologne; Chararic (Guerric) de Tongres; Sigebert De Soissons, King de Cologne; Weldelphus; Frotmund (Fictional); Erlicia Erelieve de Cologne and Basina de Cologne « less Half brother of Chlodégar, king of the Salian Francs at Cologne and Clovis "the Riparian", King of the Franks https://www.geni.com/people/M%C3%A9rov%C3%A9e-I-de-France/6000000031257322988
- Life Sketch: One of several barbarian warlords and kings that joined forces with the Roman general Aetius against the Huns under Attila on the Catalaunian fields in Gaul
- Clan Name: House of Merovingians
- National Identification: Iniciador de la Dinastía Merovingia
- Title Of Nobility: King of Tournai, BET 447 AND 458, Tournai, Hainaut, Belgium
- Life Sketch: founder of the Merovingian dynasty of the Salian Franks (although Chlodio may in fact be the founder), which later became the dominant Frankish tribe. He allegedly lived in the first half of the fifth century. His name is a Latinization of a form close to
- Life Sketch: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merovech
- Death: 458, Tournai, Hainault, Belgium, Kingdom of the Franks, Roman Empire
Ancestors of Vandalarius ´Wandalar´ WARLORD DE LOS OSTROGODOS
/-Marcomir King of FRANKS
/-Clodimir DES FRANCS
/-Farabert DE FRANCS
/-Sunna DES SICAMBRED DES FRANCS
/-Childeric I King of the Franks
| | /-Caius Julius ASINIUS QUADRATUS D`ASIE
| | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Vibius Varus Laevillus D'ASIE
| | | \-Julia Quadratilla MINOR DE ROME
| | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | /-Lucius Sergius Paullus de ROME II
| | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | \-Julia Minor DE ROME
| \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | /-Cassius DE ROME
| | /-Caeionius Primus L'Étrusque DE ROME
| | | \-Larcia CALIDA
| \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| \-Rasenna ETRUSCI
/-Marcomir V DE TOXANDRIE
| | /-Gaius Asinius Frugi ASINIUS
| | /-Caius Julius ASINIUS QUADRATUS D`ASIE
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Gaius Asinius Frugi ASINIUS
| | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Vibius Varus Laevillus D'ASIE
| | | | /-Aulus Julius Claudius Charax
| | | \-Julia Quadratilla MINOR DE ROME
| | | \-Julia
| | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | /-Lucius Sergius Paullus de ROME II
| | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | | /-Aulus Julius PROCULUS DE ROME
| | | \-Julia Minor DE ROME
| | | \-Claudia BASILO
| \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | /-Cassius Statilius Severus Hadrianus DE ROME
| | /-Cassius DE ROME
| | | \-Juventia Maxime DE ROME
| | /-Caeionius Primus L'Étrusque DE ROME
| | | | /-Aulus Larcius Lepidus DE ROME
| | | \-Larcia CALIDA
| | | \-Volumnia Calida DE ROME
| \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| \-Rasenna ETRUSCI
/-Genebaud I des Franks RIPUAIRES
| \-Asinia Juliana Nicomacha DE ROME
/-Ragaise DE TOXANDRIE
| \-No Name DES ALAMANS
/-Malaric I King of the Franks at Toxandrie
| | /-Marcomir King of FRANKS
| | /-Clodimir DES FRANCS
| | /-Farabert DE FRANCS
| | /-Sunna DES SICAMBRED DES FRANCS
| | /-Childeric I King of the Franks
| | | | /-Caius Julius ASINIUS QUADRATUS D`ASIE
| | | | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Vibius Varus Laevillus D'ASIE
| | | | | \-Julia Quadratilla MINOR DE ROME
| | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | | /-Lucius Sergius Paullus de ROME II
| | | | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | | | \-Julia Minor DE ROME
| | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | | /-Cassius DE ROME
| | | | /-Caeionius Primus L'Étrusque DE ROME
| | | | | \-Larcia CALIDA
| | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | \-Rasenna ETRUSCI
| | /-Marcomir V DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | /-Gaius Asinius Frugi ASINIUS
| | | | /-Caius Julius ASINIUS QUADRATUS D`ASIE
| | | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Gaius Asinius Frugi ASINIUS
| | | | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Vibius Varus Laevillus D'ASIE
| | | | | | /-Aulus Julius Claudius Charax
| | | | | \-Julia Quadratilla MINOR DE ROME
| | | | | \-Julia
| | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | | /-Lucius Sergius Paullus de ROME II
| | | | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Aulus Julius PROCULUS DE ROME
| | | | | \-Julia Minor DE ROME
| | | | | \-Claudia BASILO
| | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | | /-Cassius Statilius Severus Hadrianus DE ROME
| | | | /-Cassius DE ROME
| | | | | \-Juventia Maxime DE ROME
| | | | /-Caeionius Primus L'Étrusque DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Aulus Larcius Lepidus DE ROME
| | | | | \-Larcia CALIDA
| | | | | \-Volumnia Calida DE ROME
| | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | \-Rasenna ETRUSCI
| | /-Chrocus I D`ALEMANIE
| | | | /-Gaius Julius Asinius Quadratus of Rome
| | | | /-Gaius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus V of Rome
| | | | | \-Julia Quadratilla Proculla of Rome
| | | | /-Caius Asinus Nichomachus Quadratus IULIANUS
| | | | | | /-Lucius Sergius Paullus IV of Pisidian Antioch
| | | | | \-Julia QUADRATILLA
| | | | | \-Julia Vipsania of Rome
| | | | /-Quintus Anicius I Paulinus DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Lucius Sergius Paullus Minor DE ROME
| | | | | \-Sergia PAULLA
| | | | | | /-Aulus Julius PROCULUS DE ROME
| | | | | \-Julia Minor DE ROME
| | | | | \-Claudia BASILO
| | | | /-Quintus Anicius Faustus DE ROME
| | | | | \-Cocceia DE ROME
| | | \-Juliana Fausta DE ROME
| | | \-Asina Luliana Nicomacha DE ROME
| \-Eva Blesinde Margolis DE ALEMANIE
| \-Blesindre DES ALAMANS
/-Priaros, KING OF THE FRANKS AT TOXANDRIA
| | /-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
| | | | /-Gjúki de Goths King of the GOTHS
| | | | /-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
| | /-Cniva DE WISIGOTHIE
| | | \-Nascida BENKANT
| | /-Gannebaud of the Thervengi
| | /-Fritigern II VON THURINGEN
| | | | /-Turig VON THURINGEN
| | | | /-Alanus DE SAXE DE THURINGE
| | | | | \-Rehea Silvia DE ROME
| | | | /-Neugio DE SAXE DE THURINGE
| | | | /-Thuringus DE THURINGE
| | | | /-Fritigern Ier DE THURINGE
| | | | | | /-Ethespamare DE GOTHIE
| | | | | | /-Hanala DE GOTHIE
| | | | | | /-Safracht DE GOTHIE
| | | | | | | \- HANA
| | | | | \-Demoiselle DE GOTHIE
| | | | | \- SAFRA
| | | | /-Begon DE THURINGE
| | | | | \-Aelia Euphemia DE ROME
| | | \-Fritigerna DE THURINGEN
| | | \-Uxor Begon IGNATOE
| \-Ascyla La Gauloise Hija DES FRANCS
| | /-Valardius DE MENAPIE
| | /-Valerius II DE MENAPIE
| | | | /-Gaius Asinius Frugi ASINIUS
| | | | /-Caius Julius ASINIUS QUADRATUS D`ASIE
| | | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Gaius Asinius Frugi ASINIUS
| | | | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Vibius Varus Laevillus D'ASIE
| | | | | | /-Aulus Julius Claudius Charax
| | | | | \-Julia Quadratilla MINOR DE ROME
| | | | | \-Julia
| | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | | /-Lucius Sergius Paullus de ROME II
| | | | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Aulus Julius PROCULUS DE ROME
| | | | | \-Julia Minor DE ROME
| | | | | \-Claudia BASILO
| | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | | /-Cassius Statilius Severus Hadrianus DE ROME
| | | | /-Cassius DE ROME
| | | | | \-Juventia Maxime DE ROME
| | | | /-Caeionius Primus L'Étrusque DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Aulus Larcius Lepidus DE ROME
| | | | | \-Larcia CALIDA
| | | | | \-Volumnia Calida DE ROME
| | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | \-Rasenna ETRUSCI
| | /-Vuericus DE MENAPIE
| | | | /-Gaius Julius Quadratus Bassus of Rome
| | | | /-Gaius Julius Asinius Quadratus of Rome
| | | | | \-Asinia Marcellius Bassus QUEEN
| | | | /-Gaius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus V of Rome
| | | | | | /-Aulus Julius Claudius Charax
| | | | | \-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 Anicius Faustus Paulinus II DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Dagobert des Francs DE COLOGNE I
| | | | | | /-Genebald Duke of The Eastern FRANKS
| | | | | | | \-Ragnetrude Duchess of Austrasia of the East FRANKS
| | | | | | /-Ascyllius of The Eastern FRANKS
| | | | | \-Juliana Asinia V of The Roman EMPIRE
| | | \-Gambara Aalis DES LONGOBARDS
| | | | /-Gaius Julius Asinius Quadratus of Rome
| | | | /-Gaius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus V of Rome
| | | | | \-Julia Quadratilla Proculla of Rome
| | | | /-Gaius Asinius Quadratus Protimus of Rome
| | | | | | /-Lucius Sergius Paullus IV of Pisidian Antioch
| | | | | \-Julia QUADRATILLA
| | | | | \-Julia Vipsania of Rome
| | | | /-Gaius Asinius Nicomachus Julianus Asinii of The Roman Empire
| | | | | \-Claudia Antonia Lepida CLAUDIUS
| | | \-Asinia Juliana Nicomacha of Rome
| | | | /-Sergius Octavius Laenas Paulinus OCTAVIUS
| | | | /-Lucius Sergius Paullus IV of Pisidian Antioch
| | | | | \-Paulla PAULLUS
| | | \-Cæsonia Paulla of The Roman Empire
| | | \-Julia Vipsania of Rome
| \-Martisianda DE MORINIE
| | /-Alfenius Avianus DE ROME
| | /-Afranius Flurianus DE ROME
| | | \-No Name DE TRALLES
| | /-Afranius Hannibalinus DE ROME
| | | | /-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
| \-Flavia Claudia Demetria Aelia DE THERA
| | /-Flavius Stacilocles Metrophanes DE THERA
| \-Flavia DE THERA
| | /-Claudius Capitolinus I DE ROME
| | /-Claudius CAPITOLINUS II DE ROMA
| | | \-Macrinia DE ROME
| | /-Titus Tiberius Claudius NERO
| | | \-Iulia Polla DE ROME
| | /-Titus Claudius Bassus Capitolinus DE ROME
| | | \-Vulcanania DE ROME
| \-Claudia Capitolina 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
/-Sunno KING OF THE SICAMBRIAN FRANKS
| | /-Farabert DE FRANCS
| | /-Sunna DES SICAMBRED DES FRANCS
| | /-Childeric I King of the Franks
| | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | /-Marcomir V DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Vibius Varus Laevillus D'ASIE
| | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | | /-Caeionius Primus L'Étrusque DE ROME
| | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | \-Rasenna ETRUSCI
| | /-Genebaud I des Franks RIPUAIRES
| | | \-Asinia Juliana Nicomacha DE ROME
| | /-Ragaise DE TOXANDRIE
| | | \-No Name DES ALAMANS
| | /-Malaric I King of the Franks at Toxandrie
| | | | /-Farabert DE FRANCS
| | | | /-Sunna DES SICAMBRED DES FRANCS
| | | | /-Childeric I King of the Franks
| | | | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | | /-Marcomir V DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | | | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Vibius Varus Laevillus D'ASIE
| | | | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Caeionius Primus L'Étrusque DE ROME
| | | | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | | | \-Rasenna ETRUSCI
| | | | /-Chrocus I D`ALEMANIE
| | | | | | /-Caius Asinus Nichomachus Quadratus IULIANUS
| | | | | | /-Quintus Anicius I Paulinus DE ROME
| | | | | | | \-Sergia PAULLA
| | | | | | /-Quintus Anicius Faustus DE ROME
| | | | | | | \-Cocceia DE ROME
| | | | | \-Juliana Fausta DE ROME
| | | | | \-Asina Luliana Nicomacha DE ROME
| | | \-Eva Blesinde Margolis DE ALEMANIE
| | | \-Blesindre DES ALAMANS
| | /-Mellobaude I DE TOXANDRIE King of the Franks
| | | | /-King of the Greuthengi Amal D'OSTROGOTHIE
| | | | /-Hisarna of the GREUTHENGI
| | | | | \-Senhora Amal OF THE GOTHS
| | | | /-Ostrogotho of the GREUTHUNGI
| | | | /-Cniva DE WISIGOTHIE
| | | | | \-Nascida BENKANT
| | | | /-Gannebaud of the Thervengi
| | | | /-Fritigern II VON THURINGEN
| | | | | | /-Neugio DE SAXE DE THURINGE
| | | | | | /-Thuringus DE THURINGE
| | | | | | /-Fritigern Ier DE THURINGE
| | | | | | | | /-Safracht DE GOTHIE
| | | | | | | \-Demoiselle DE GOTHIE
| | | | | | | \- SAFRA
| | | | | | /-Begon DE THURINGE
| | | | | | | \-Aelia Euphemia DE ROME
| | | | | \-Fritigerna DE THURINGEN
| | | | | \-Uxor Begon IGNATOE
| | | \-Ascyla La Gauloise Hija DES FRANCS
| | | | /-Valardius DE MENAPIE
| | | | /-Valerius II DE MENAPIE
| | | | | | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Vibius Varus Laevillus D'ASIE
| | | | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Caeionius Primus L'Étrusque DE ROME
| | | | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | | | \-Rasenna ETRUSCI
| | | | /-Vuericus DE MENAPIE
| | | | | | /-Gaius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus V of Rome
| | | | | | /-Quintus Anicius Faustus of Tunisia
| | | | | | | \-Julia QUADRATILLA
| | | | | | /-Quintus Anicius Faustus Paulinus II DE ROME
| | | | | | | | /-Ascyllius of The Eastern FRANKS
| | | | | | | \-Juliana Asinia V of The Roman EMPIRE
| | | | | \-Gambara Aalis DES LONGOBARDS
| | | | | | /-Gaius Asinius Quadratus Protimus of Rome
| | | | | | /-Gaius Asinius Nicomachus Julianus Asinii of The Roman Empire
| | | | | | | \-Claudia Antonia Lepida CLAUDIUS
| | | | | \-Asinia Juliana Nicomacha of Rome
| | | | | | /-Lucius Sergius Paullus IV of Pisidian Antioch
| | | | | \-Cæsonia Paulla of The Roman Empire
| | | | | \-Julia Vipsania of Rome
| | | \-Martisianda DE MORINIE
| | | | /-Alfenius Avianus DE ROME
| | | | /-Afranius Flurianus DE ROME
| | | | | \-No Name DE TRALLES
| | | | /-Afranius Hannibalinus DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Titus Tiberius Claudius NERO
| | | | | | /-Titus Claudius Bassus Capitolinus DE ROME
| | | | | | | \-Vulcanania DE ROME
| | | | | \-Claudia Capitolina DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Neratius Iunius Falvunusde ROME
| | | | | \-Numeria Marcella DE ROME
| | | | | \-Vulcania spouse of Neratius Iunius Falvunusde ROME
| | | \-Flavia Claudia Demetria Aelia DE THERA
| | | | /-Flavius Stacilocles Metrophanes DE THERA
| | | \-Flavia DE THERA
| | | | /-Titus Tiberius Claudius NERO
| | | | /-Titus Claudius Bassus Capitolinus DE ROME
| | | | | \-Vulcanania DE ROME
| | | \-Claudia Capitolina DE ROME
| | | | /-Neratius Iunius Falvunusde ROME
| | | \-Numeria Marcella DE ROME
| | | \-Vulcania spouse of Neratius Iunius Falvunusde ROME
| | /-Flavius Richomeres DE TOXANDRIE Consul to the Roman Empire
| | | | /-Mitchridate IV DE PARTHIE
| | | | /-Vologese IV DE PARTHIE
| | | | | \-Avde D`OSHROENE
| | | | /-Vologese V DE PARTHIE
| | | | | \-Satinike D`OSSETIE
| | | | /-Chrosos I D`ARMENIE
| | | | | \-Arshakuni D`IBERIE
| | | | /-Tiridate II D`ARMENIE
| | | | | \-Urihunu DE PARTHIE
| | | | /-Khosrov II D`ARMENIE
| | | | | \-Saschken DES KAUCHANS
| | | | /-Tiridate IV D`ARMENIE
| | | | | \-Alcathoe DU BOSPHORE
| | | \-Ascyla OF THE GAULS Queen of Lombardy
| | | \-Ashken D'ALANIA
| \-Dulce Douce DE MENAPIE
| | /-Clodimir DES FRANCS
| | /-Farabert DE FRANCS
| | /-Sunna DES SICAMBRED DES FRANCS
| | /-Childeric I King of the Franks
| | | | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Vibius Varus Laevillus D'ASIE
| | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | | /-Caeionius Primus L'Étrusque DE ROME
| | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | \-Rasenna ETRUSCI
| | /-Marcomir V DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | /-Caius Julius ASINIUS QUADRATUS D`ASIE
| | | | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Vibius Varus Laevillus D'ASIE
| | | | | \-Julia Quadratilla MINOR DE ROME
| | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | | /-Lucius Sergius Paullus de ROME II
| | | | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | | | \-Julia Minor DE ROME
| | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | | /-Cassius DE ROME
| | | | /-Caeionius Primus L'Étrusque DE ROME
| | | | | \-Larcia CALIDA
| | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | \-Rasenna ETRUSCI
| | /-Genebaud I des Franks RIPUAIRES
| | | \-Asinia Juliana Nicomacha DE ROME
| | /-Ragaise DE TOXANDRIE
| | | \-No Name DES ALAMANS
| | /-Malaric I King of the Franks at Toxandrie
| | | | /-Clodimir DES FRANCS
| | | | /-Farabert DE FRANCS
| | | | /-Sunna DES SICAMBRED DES FRANCS
| | | | /-Childeric I King of the Franks
| | | | | | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Vibius Varus Laevillus D'ASIE
| | | | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Caeionius Primus L'Étrusque DE ROME
| | | | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | | | \-Rasenna ETRUSCI
| | | | /-Marcomir V DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | | | /-Caius Julius ASINIUS QUADRATUS D`ASIE
| | | | | | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Vibius Varus Laevillus D'ASIE
| | | | | | | \-Julia Quadratilla MINOR DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | | | | /-Lucius Sergius Paullus de ROME II
| | | | | | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | | | | | \-Julia Minor DE ROME
| | | | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Cassius DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Caeionius Primus L'Étrusque DE ROME
| | | | | | | \-Larcia CALIDA
| | | | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | | | \-Rasenna ETRUSCI
| | | | /-Chrocus I D`ALEMANIE
| | | | | | /-Gaius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus V of Rome
| | | | | | /-Caius Asinus Nichomachus Quadratus IULIANUS
| | | | | | | \-Julia QUADRATILLA
| | | | | | /-Quintus Anicius I Paulinus DE ROME
| | | | | | | | /-Lucius Sergius Paullus Minor DE ROME
| | | | | | | \-Sergia PAULLA
| | | | | | | \-Julia Minor DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Quintus Anicius Faustus DE ROME
| | | | | | | \-Cocceia DE ROME
| | | | | \-Juliana Fausta DE ROME
| | | | | \-Asina Luliana Nicomacha DE ROME
| | | \-Eva Blesinde Margolis DE ALEMANIE
| | | \-Blesindre DES ALAMANS
| \-Ascyla Queen of Lombardy DE ASCYLLIUS
| | /-Augis DER GREUTHENGI, King of the Goths
| | /-King of the Greuthengi Amal D'OSTROGOTHIE
| | /-Hisarna of the GREUTHENGI
| | | | /-Guntharich I King of the Goths
| | | \-Senhora Amal OF THE GOTHS
| | | \-Eigen Marius DE BALTHES of the Goths
| | /-Ostrogotho of the GREUTHUNGI
| | /-Cniva DE WISIGOTHIE
| | | \-Nascida BENKANT
| | /-Gannebaud of the Thervengi
| | /-Fritigern II VON THURINGEN
| | | | /-Alanus DE SAXE DE THURINGE
| | | | /-Neugio DE SAXE DE THURINGE
| | | | /-Thuringus DE THURINGE
| | | | /-Fritigern Ier DE THURINGE
| | | | | | /-Hanala DE GOTHIE
| | | | | | /-Safracht DE GOTHIE
| | | | | | | \- HANA
| | | | | \-Demoiselle DE GOTHIE
| | | | | \- SAFRA
| | | | /-Begon DE THURINGE
| | | | | \-Aelia Euphemia DE ROME
| | | \-Fritigerna DE THURINGEN
| | | \-Uxor Begon IGNATOE
| \-Ascyla La Gauloise Hija DES FRANCS
| | /-Valardius DE MENAPIE
| | /-Valerius II DE MENAPIE
| | | | /-Caius Julius ASINIUS QUADRATUS D`ASIE
| | | | /-Gaius Julius Lupus Vibius Varus Laevillus D'ASIE
| | | | | \-Julia Quadratilla MINOR DE ROME
| | | | /-Caius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus D'ASIE
| | | | | | /-Lucius Sergius Paullus de ROME II
| | | | | \-Sergia Paula Leanas DE ROME
| | | | | \-Julia Minor DE ROME
| | | \-Ceasonia Julianus DE ROME
| | | | /-Cassius DE ROME
| | | | /-Caeionius Primus L'Étrusque DE ROME
| | | | | \-Larcia CALIDA
| | | \-Ceasoria DE ROME
| | | \-Rasenna ETRUSCI
| | /-Vuericus DE MENAPIE
| | | | /-Gaius Julius Asinius Quadratus of Rome
| | | | /-Gaius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus V of Rome
| | | | | \-Julia Quadratilla Proculla of Rome
| | | | /-Quintus Anicius Faustus of Tunisia
| | | | | | /-Lucius Sergius Paullus IV of Pisidian Antioch
| | | | | \-Julia QUADRATILLA
| | | | | \-Julia Vipsania of Rome
| | | | /-Quintus Anicius Faustus Paulinus II DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Genebald Duke of The Eastern FRANKS
| | | | | | /-Ascyllius of The Eastern FRANKS
| | | | | \-Juliana Asinia V of The Roman EMPIRE
| | | \-Gambara Aalis DES LONGOBARDS
| | | | /-Gaius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus V of Rome
| | | | /-Gaius Asinius Quadratus Protimus of Rome
| | | | | \-Julia QUADRATILLA
| | | | /-Gaius Asinius Nicomachus Julianus Asinii of The Roman Empire
| | | | | \-Claudia Antonia Lepida CLAUDIUS
| | | \-Asinia Juliana Nicomacha of Rome
| | | | /-Sergius Octavius Laenas Paulinus OCTAVIUS
| | | | /-Lucius Sergius Paullus IV of Pisidian Antioch
| | | | | \-Paulla PAULLUS
| | | \-Cæsonia Paulla of The Roman Empire
| | | \-Julia Vipsania of Rome
| \-Martisianda DE MORINIE
| | /-Alfenius Avianus DE ROME
| | /-Afranius Flurianus DE ROME
| | | \-No Name DE TRALLES
| | /-Afranius Hannibalinus DE ROME
| | | | /-Claudius CAPITOLINUS II DE ROMA
| | | | /-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
| | | | | \-Aemilia Pudentilla DE ROME
| | | \-Numeria Marcella DE ROME
| | | \-Vulcania spouse of Neratius Iunius Falvunusde ROME
| \-Flavia Claudia Demetria Aelia DE THERA
| | /-Flavius Stacilocles Metrophanes DE THERA
| \-Flavia DE THERA
| | /-Claudius CAPITOLINUS II DE ROMA
| | /-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
| | | \-Aemilia Pudentilla DE ROME
| \-Numeria Marcella DE ROME
| \-Vulcania spouse of Neratius Iunius Falvunusde ROME
Vandalarius ´Wandalar´ WARLORD DE LOS OSTROGODOS
\-Merowna Merovna DE THURINGE II
Descendants of Living WARNE
1 Living WARNE
=Suzanne Elaine WILKINSON
- Birth: 29 APR 1896, Des Moines, Polk, Iowa, USA
- Residence: 1929, Pasadena, California, USA
- Also known as: Helen WARREN
- Death: 8 MAR 1975, Los Angeles
Descendants of Helen Elizabeth WARREN
1 Helen Elizabeth WARREN
=Beryl BOGUE
Ancestors of Harald WARTOOTH
/-Hrœrekr RINGSLINGER
Harald WARTOOTH
| /-Fróði
| /-Halfdan Scylding son of FRÓÐI
| /-Hroar
| | | /-Agn Dagsson King Of SWEDEN
| | | /-Alrik Agnasson KÖNIG
| | | | \-Skjalf FROSTASDOTTIR
| | | /-Yngvi ALREKSSON of Sweden
| | | | | /-Dag Dyggvasson of SWEDEN
| | | | \-Dagreid DAGSDOTTIR of Sweden
| | | | \-Þóra ANGANTYRSDOTTER of Sweden
| | | /-Alf of GÖTALAND
| | | | | /-Frosti Vermundsson King of Finland
| | | | \-Bera of Sweden EIRIKSDATTER
| | \-Sigris of the GOTHS
| | | /-Siward KING of Götaland
| | \-Alfhild Siwardsdotter
| /-Valdar of Denmark KING
| | | /-Norbril King of NORTHUMBRIA
| | \-Ogne NORBRILSDOTTIR
| | \-Hroar HALFDANSDOTTER of Roskilde
| /-Harald VALDARSSON
| /-Halfdan HARALDSSON
| | | /-heidrek
| | \-Hildur HEIDREKSDATTER
| /-Ivar VIDFAMNE
| | \-Moald DIGRA
\-Auðr ÍVARSDÓTTIR
- Birth: ABT 945
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Descendants of Haralsdsdottir spouse of Ivar II of WATERFORD
1 Haralsdsdottir spouse of Ivar II of WATERFORD
=Ivar II of WATERFORD
2 Ragnvald I Ivarsson of WATERFORD
=Hvarflad HLODVERSDOTTIR
3 Ranald of WATERFORD
=Subneach Nic NIALLGHUSA II
=Radnall IVARRSDOTTIR
Ancestors of Ivar II of WATERFORD
/-Godfrey father of Olaf GEIRSTADA
/-Olaf GEIRSTADA
/-Ranald father of GODFREY
/-Godfrey father of Ivar of DUBLIN
/-Ivar of DUBLIN
/-Guthorm father of Ragnal l ua ÍMAIR
/-Ragnal l ua ÍMAIR
/-Ivar I RAGNALLSON
Ivar II of WATERFORD
\-Ragnall spouse of Ivar I RAGNALLSON
Descendants of Ivar II of WATERFORD
1 Ivar II of WATERFORD
=Haralsdsdottir spouse of Ivar II of WATERFORD
2 Ragnvald I Ivarsson of WATERFORD
=Hvarflad HLODVERSDOTTIR
3 Ranald of WATERFORD
=Subneach Nic NIALLGHUSA II
=Radnall IVARRSDOTTIR
- Father: Ivar II of WATERFORD
- Mother: Haralsdsdottir spouse of Ivar II of WATERFORD
- Birth: 945, County Waterford, Ireland
- Also known as: Ragnvald Ranald of Waterford (Ivarsson), of Waterford
- Also known as: Niallgus MacDomhnaill
- Also known as: Niallgus MacDonnell
- Also known as: Niallgus MacDomhnaill
- Also known as: Niallgus MacDonnell
- Also known as: Niallgus MacDomhnaill
- Also known as: Niallgus MacDonnell
- Also known as: Niallgus MacDomhnaill
- Also known as: Niallgus MacDonnell
- Title Of Nobility: King of Waterford
- Title Of Nobility: Prince of Waterford
- Title Of Nobility: Prince of Waterford
- Title Of Nobility: Prince of Waterford
- Title Of Nobility: Prince of Waterford
- Death: 1021, County Waterford, Ireland
Ancestors of Ragnvald I Ivarsson of WATERFORD
/-Godfrey father of Olaf GEIRSTADA
/-Olaf GEIRSTADA
/-Ranald father of GODFREY
/-Godfrey father of Ivar of DUBLIN
/-Ivar of DUBLIN
/-Guthorm father of Ragnal l ua ÍMAIR
/-Ragnal l ua ÍMAIR
/-Ivar I RAGNALLSON
/-Ivar II of WATERFORD
| \-Ragnall spouse of Ivar I RAGNALLSON
Ragnvald I Ivarsson of WATERFORD
\-Haralsdsdottir spouse of Ivar II of WATERFORD
Descendants of Ragnvald I Ivarsson of WATERFORD
1 Ragnvald I Ivarsson of WATERFORD
=Hvarflad HLODVERSDOTTIR
2 Ranald of WATERFORD
=Subneach Nic NIALLGHUSA II
3 Meargach IMERGI MAC RAGNAILL
3 Echmarcach mac RAGNAILL
=Unknown Spouse of Eschmarcach Meargach MACRANALD II
3 Imergi of DUBLIN
=Radnall IVARRSDOTTIR
- Father: Ragnvald I Ivarsson of WATERFORD
- Mother: Hvarflad HLODVERSDOTTIR
- Title Of Nobility: King of Waterford
- LifeSketch: Ragnall ua Ímair (died 1035), also known as Ragnall mac Ragnaill, was an eleventh-century King of Waterford. He appears to have ruled as king from 1022 to 1035, the year of his death. Ragnall seems to have been a descendant of Ímar, King of Waterford. Ragnall's father may have been Ragnall mac Ímair, King of Waterford. Such a relationship would indicate that the patronym ua Ímair—accorded to Ragnall by the Irish Annals that note his death—refers to Ragnall mac Ímair's father, the aforesaid Ímar. [If, on the other hand, Ragnall was not a son of Ragnall mac Ímair, another possibility is that he was the son of Ragnall mac Gofraid, King of the Isles.] Very little is known of the Waterfordian kingship in the early eleventh century. Ímar died in 1000. His son, the aforesaid Ragnall mac Ímair, died as king in 1018. Another son of Ímar, Sitriuc mac Ímair, King of Waterford was slain by the King of Osraige in 1022. An apparent brother of Ragnall died in 1015. Ragnall himself appears to have ruled Waterford from 1022 to 1035. The seventeenth-century Annals of the Four Masters, the fourteenth-century Annals of Tigernach, and the fifteenth- to sixteenth-century Annals of Ulster reveal that, in 1035, Ragnall was slain by Sitriuc mac Amlaíb, King of Dublin. The following year, Sitriuc mac Amlaíb was driven out of Dublin by Echmarcach mac Ragnaill. Whilst the parentage of the latter is uncertain, if he was a related to Ragnall—perhaps as either a brother or son—it could mean that Echmarcach's actions against Sitriuc mac Amlaíb were undertaken in revenge for his death. Against this possibility is the fact that there is no evidence that Echmarcach, or his known family, had any connection with Waterford. Whatever the case, Ragnall's fall appears to have been an important benchmark in Waterford's history, and after this date the enclave increasingly fell prey to the machinations of the Uí Briain and the Uí Cheinnselaig. In fact, two years after the killing, the King of Waterford was Cú Inmain ua Robann, an apparent Irishman.
- Death: 1035, Dublin, Ireland
- Burial: 1035, Dublin, Ireland
Ancestors of Ranald of WATERFORD
/-Godfrey father of Olaf GEIRSTADA
/-Olaf GEIRSTADA
/-Ranald father of GODFREY
/-Godfrey father of Ivar of DUBLIN
/-Ivar of DUBLIN
/-Guthorm father of Ragnal l ua ÍMAIR
/-Ragnal l ua ÍMAIR
/-Ivar I RAGNALLSON
/-Ivar II of WATERFORD
| \-Ragnall spouse of Ivar I RAGNALLSON
/-Ragnvald I Ivarsson of WATERFORD
| \-Haralsdsdottir spouse of Ivar II of WATERFORD
Ranald of WATERFORD
| /-Sveidi 'the Sea King'
| /-Halfdan SVEIDISSON
| /-Ivar HALFDANSSON
| /-Eystein IVARSSON
| /-Ragnvald EYSTEINSSON
| | | /-Eystein HALFDANSSON
| | | /-Halfdan EYSTEINSSON
| | | | \-Hild EIRIKSDOTTER
| | | /-Gudrød HALFDANSSON
| | | | | /-Dag av VESTMAR
| | | | \-Liv DAGSDATTER
| | | /-Olav GUDRØDSSON
| | | | \-Alfhild ALFARINSDOTTIR
| | | /-Ragnvald OLAVSSON
| | \-Aseda RAGNVALDSDATTER
| | | /-Randver RADBARDSSON
| | | /-Sigurd RANDVERSSON
| | | /-Ragnar SIGURDSSON
| | | | | /-Gandalf ALFGEIRSSON
| | | | \-Alfhild daughter of King Alf of Álfheimr
| | | | \-Gauthild ALFSDOTTIR
| | | /-Sigurd RAGNARSSON
| | | | | /-Sigmund son of Völsung and HLJOD
| | | | | /-Sigurd FAFNESBANE
| | | | | | \-Hjördís daughter of EYLIMI
| | | | \-Åslaug SIGURDSDATTER
| | | | | /-Budli LEINFNISEN
| | | | \-Brynhild Budlisdottir
| | \-Thora SIGURÐARDÓTTIR
| | | /-Ælla King of NORTHUMBRIA
| | \-Heluna ÆLLASDATTER
| /-Einar RAGNVALDSSON
| | | /-Rolf NEFIO
| | \-Hilda Helinda HROLFSDOTTIR
| | \-Neifa GROSSHERTZ
| /-Thorfinn EINARSSON
| /-Hlodvir TORFINNSSON
| | | /-Duncan Mormaer of CAITHNESS
| | \-Grelad OF CAITHNESS
| | | /-Thornstein OLAFSSON
| | \-Groa THORSTEINSDOTTIR
| | | /-Eyvindur Austmann BJARNARSON
| | \-Thorhild EYVINDSDOTTIR
| | \-Rafertach Tafarta KJARVALDSDOTTIR
\-Hvarflad HLODVERSDOTTIR
| /-Colmán mac Cormaicc UÍ CHEINNSELAIG
| /-Ronán mac Colmáin O'CHENNSELAIG
| | \-Fedelm ingen Aengus of LAIGIN
| /-Crundmael Erbuilc mac Ronan of OSSORY
| | | /-Ailill mac DAIMINI
| | \-Lassar ingen DAIMHIN
| /-Fáeláin mac CRUNDMAEL
| | \-Failend INGEN SUIBNE , of Ireland
| /-Cu Chercca MacFaelan of OSSORY
| | \-Frifida Na OSSORY
| /-Anmchaid MacConCherca of OSSORY
| /-Fergail MACANMACHADA of Osraige
| | \-Unknown Spouse of Anmchaid mac Ui Eremoin Cu CHERRA
| /-Dunghal Mac FEARGAL
| | \-Unknown Spouse of Fergal MACANMOHAID
| /-Cerball Kjarval MACDÚNLAINGE
| | \-Maelfebhal Caearbhall OF IRELAND
\-Eithne daughter of KIARVAL
| /-Conall Guthbinn mac SUIBNE
| /-Airmetaig Cáech mac CONALL
| /-Diarmait DIAN
| /-Murchadh Midi mac Diarmait DIAN
| /-Domhnall Mac Murchada of IRELAND
| | | /-Brocain mac CONGAIL
| | | /-Sarain mac BROCAIN
| | | /-Congal Comgall Delbnamor Ireland Mac SARAIN
| | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Sarain mac BROCAIN
| | \-Ailphin INGEN CONGAILE
| | \-Unknown Spouse of Congal Comgall Delbnamor Ireland Mac SARAIN
| /-Donnchad Midi of IRELAND
| | | /-Gerthide mac CRONAIN
| | | /-Cenn Faelad Cennfaelad mac GERTHIDE
| | | | \-Unknown Spouse of. Gerthide mac Cronan CINNANACHTA
| | | /-Cenn Mac Cenn Faelad of CIANNACHTA
| | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Cennfaelad mac Ciannachta GERTHIDE
| | | /-Ailill mac Cenn FAELAD
| | | | \-Sinusa CIANNACHTA
| | \-Ailbíne INGEN AILELLO
| | | /-Mongan MAC SARAIN DAL N-ARAIDHE
| | | /-Aedan mac MONGAIN
| | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Mongain mac Ui Echach Coba SARAIN
| | | /-Fergus MAC ÁEDÁIN Dál n-Araidhe
| | \-Oiriu Ingen Fergus Eriu AILILL
| | | /-Feradach Culaub mac Amalgaid Ó Cuin
| | | /-Caech Odar Caech MACCLODHAR
| | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Feradach Culdub MACAMALGADA
| | \-Mael Teglaig ingen Maclodhar Caech Ó Cuinn NAME FERGUS MAC ÁEDÁIN
| | \-Roinseach CAECH
| /-Máel Ruanaid MACDONNCHAD
| | | /-Fiachu DUBTUINNE MAC DEMAIN
| | | /-Mael Coba MACFIACHNAE of Uladh
| | | | \-Cumne Find Cach Dalinraide mac BAETAIN
| | | /-Óengus MAC MAÍLCOBA DÁL FIATACH
| | | /-Muiredach MAC ÓENGUSA DÁL FIATACH
| | | /-Cathal MAC MUIREDAIG DÁL FIATACH
| | | | \-Unknown Spouse of mac Óengusa Dál FIATACH
| | \-Bé Fáil INGEN CATHAIL
| /-Máel Sechnaill Iof IRELAND
| | | /-Cathal father of FIACHRA
| | | /-Fiachra mac CATHAL
| | | /-Cathel mac Fiachrach FIACHRA
| | \-Arog ingen CATHAIL
\-Maelfebhal INGEN MAEL SECNAILL, Queen of Meath
| /-Donnchad MacFlann O'NEIL
\-Flanna MACCERBAILL
\-Dubnleandna MACTIGHESRNAN
Descendants of Ranald of WATERFORD
1 Ranald of WATERFORD
=Subneach Nic NIALLGHUSA II
2 Meargach IMERGI MAC RAGNAILL
2 Echmarcach mac RAGNAILL
=Unknown Spouse of Eschmarcach Meargach MACRANALD II
3 Solomh MACMEARGAIGH
=Columba SAINT Marriage: ABT 1060, Hebrides, Scotland
3 Mór ingen ECHMARCACH
2 Imergi of DUBLIN
- Birth: 18 NOV 1867, Macy, Indiana
- Residence: 1880, Union, Miami, Indiana, USA
- Residence: 1900, Union, Miami, Indiana, USA
- Residence: 1910, Union, Miami, Indiana, USA
- Residence: 1920, Union, Miami, Indiana, USA
- Residence: 1930, Allen, Miami, Indiana, USA
- Death: 11 JUL 1938, Indiana, USA
- Burial: Macy, Miami County, Indiana, United States of America
Descendants of Effie A WAYMIRE
1 Effie A WAYMIRE
=George Edmon CARRUTHERS Marriage: 17 OCT 1891, Miami, Indiana
Descendants of Living WEBB
1 Living WEBB
=Edmond Dale GOFF
- Birth: Canadian English
- Death: BET 1893 AND 1900, Probably in Arkansas
Descendants of (unknown) WEBSTER
1 (unknown) WEBSTER
=Mary C. EWER
- Birth: 1 JUL 1915, Blakesburg, Iowa, USA
- Residence: 1 JAN 1925, Blakesburg, Wapello, Iowa, USA
- Residence: 1930, Blakesburg, Wapello, Iowa, USA
- Residence: Blakesburg, Iowa
- Residence: 1935, Rural, Wapello, Iowa
- Residence: 1 APR 1940, Ottumwa, Wapello, Iowa, USA
- Residence: 1941, Ottumwa, Iowa, USA
- Death: 26 FEB 1996, Blakesburg, Iowa, USA
- Burial: Blakesburg, Wapello County, Iowa, United States of America
Descendants of Wanda Elizabeth WEIDMAN
1 Wanda Elizabeth WEIDMAN
=Harry Fay BRINEGAR Marriage: 24 DEC 1937, Ottumwa, Wapello, Iowa, USA
- Birth: AUG 1859, Illinois
- Residence: 1860, Appanoose, Hancock, Illinois
- Residence: 1900, Precinct 5, Kiowa, Colorado, USA
- Residence: 1910, Precinct 5, Kiowa, Colorado, USA
- Residence: 1930, Kit Carson, Cheyenne, Colorado, USA
- Residence: 1935, Kit Carson, Cheyenne, Colorado
- Residence: 1 APR 1940, Kit Carson, Cheyenne, Colorado, USA
- Death: 27 FEB 1942, Denver, Denver, Colorado, USA
- Burial: Kit Carson, Cheyenne County, Colorado, United States of America
Descendants of Henry WEISBROD
1 Henry WEISBROD
=Anna Winifred WILKINSON Marriage: 1891, Saguache, Colorado, USA
- Birth: ABT 1876, Indiana
- Residence: 1920, Indianapolis Ward 13, Marion, Indiana, USA
- Residence: 1935, Sallup, Mckinley, New Mexico
- Residence: 1 APR 1940, Lynn Lane, Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA
Descendants of Fannie WELKENSON
1 Fannie WELKENSON
=Noah Lucion WILKINSON
- Birth: 11 SEP 1876, Macy, Miami County, Indiana, USA
- Residence: 1880, Allen, Miami, Indiana, USA
- Residence: 1900, Allen, Miami, Indiana, USA
- Residence: 1910, Monroe, Knox, Ohio, USA
- Residence: 1920, Allen, Miami, Indiana, USA
- Residence: 1930, Franklin, Kosciusko, Indiana, USA
- Death: 30 MAR 1938, Fredericktown, Knox County, Ohio, USA
- Burial: Macy, Miami County, Indiana, United States of America
Descendants of Maude Mabel WELLER
1 Maude Mabel WELLER
=Samuel Baldwin ZARTMAN Marriage: 28 OCT 1893, Miami, Indiana
- Birth: ABT 985, Mecklenburg-Schwerin, Saksa
- Death: AFT 1000
- LdsBaptism: 7 FEB 1931
- LdsEndowment: 30 MAR 1931
- LifeSketch: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edla "Edla, traditionally called Edla, Duchess of Venden (Edla, hertiginna av Venden) (10th-11th centuries), was a Slavic Viking age woman. She was the mother of King Emund of Sweden and Queen Astrid of Norway. "Tradition says Edla was the daughter of a Lechitic Tribal chief who has ruled part of terrain between Oder and Elbe . She was brought to Sweden as a prisoner of war c. 1000 at the same time or a little before, the arrival of Estrid of the Obotrites (Estrid av obotriterna). King Olof Skötkonung married Estrid but also fell in love with Edla and took her as his mistress. She became the mother of Emund, Astrid, and probably Holmfrid. Snorre Sturlasson says that her children were sent to foster parents away from the royal court because Queen Estrid was not kind to them. This could indicate that Edla died when her children were small. "Children: - Emund the Old, King of Sweden - Astrid Olofsdotter, married King Olav II of Norway - Holmfrid, wife of Sven Ladejarl" [NB: Information sourced from Wikipedia is subject to change by third-parties. Follow the URL noted above to review the latest content.] .
Descendants of Edla oF Mecklenburg WENDIN
1 Edla oF Mecklenburg WENDIN
=Olof SKÖTKONUNG
=Jorund "the Young" "JØRUND SVITJORD YNGVESSON"
=Guerinfrey D'AUMALE d'Aumale
- Father: Alfred of WESSEX
- Mother: Ealhswith of Mercia
- Birth: ABT 872, Wessex, England
- Also known as: Ælfthryth FitzAlfred
- Also known as: Æthelswitha
- Also known as: Ethelwitha
- Also known as: Aelfthryth, Princess of Wessex
- Title Of Nobility: Princess of England, Countess of Flanders, Countess of Artois, Countess of Boulogne, Countess of Ternois
- Affiliation: Royal House of Wessex
- LifeSketch: Ælfthryth of Wessex, also known as Ælfthryth, Countess of Flanders, and Elftrudis (Elftrude, Elfrida). She was the youngest daughter of Alfred the Great and his wife Ealhswith, born is Wessex about 877. Between 893 and 899, Ælfthryth married Baldwin II Count of Flanders (also known as the 2nd Margrave of Flanders) Together they had the following children: - Arnulf I of Flanders (c. 890–964/65); married Adela of Vermandois - Adalulf, Count of Boulogne (c. 890 – 933) - Ealswid - Ermentrud Ælfthryth died 7 June 929, likely in Bruges, West Flanders (now Belgium) ------------------------------------ “Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial & Medieval Families,” Douglas Richardson (2013): “BAUDOUIN II the Bald, Count/Marquis of Flanders, 879-918, Count of Artois and Lay-abbot of Saint-Vaast, 892-899, Lay-abbot of Saint-Bertin, 900, Count of Boulogne, 898? -918, Count of Ternois, about 892-918, 2nd and eldest surviving son and heir, born about 863-865. He married in 884 ÆLFTHRYTH (or ELSTRUDE) OF WESSEX, daughter of Alfred the Great, King of Wessex, by Ealswith, daughter of Æthelred Mucil, earldorman of the Gaini. She was born about 870. They had two sons, Arnulf (I) [Count/Marquis of Flanders] and Adalolf (or Adolf), and two daughters, Ealhswid and Ermentrude. In 918 his wife, Ælfthryth (or Elstrude), "daughter of the King of the English," gave Liefasham [Levisham], Kent to the Abbey of Mont-Blandin in Gand. BAUDOUIN II, Count/Marquis of Flanders, died in 918, probably 10 Sept. His widow, Ælfthryth (or Elstrude), died 7 June 929. He and his wife were buried in the abbey of Saint-Pierre, Gand. Histoire des Comtes de Flandre (1698): 12-15. Panckoucke Abrégé Chronologique de l'Histoire de Flandre (1762): 8-12. Galopin Historiae Flandricae (1781): 6-7. Kervyn de Volkaersbeke Les Églises de Gand 2 (1838): 218-220. Chartes & Docs. de l’Abbaye de Saint Pierre an Mont Blandin à Gand (1868): 40-42 (Elstrude, Countess of Flanders, styled "kinswoman" [consanguinea] by Edgar, King of England in charter dated 964). Wauters Table Chronologique des Chartes et Diplômes Imprimés 1 (1866): 320, 331. Études d'Histoire de Moyen Age dédiées à Gabrielle Monad (1896): 155-162. Compte-Rendu des Séances de la Commission Royale d'Histoire 5th Ser. 9 (1898): 142-180 (sub Comtes de Flandre). Bled Regestes des Évêques de Thérouanne, 500-1553 1 (1904): 62. Brandenburg Die Nachkommen Karls des Großen (1935) V 20. Strecker Die Lateinischen Dichter des Deutschen Mittelalters (Monumenta Germaniæ Historica: Die Ottonenzeit 5(1)) (1937): 297-300. Schwennicke Europäische Stammtafeln 2 (1984): 5 (sub Flanders). Winter Descs. of Charlemagne (800-1400) (1987): V.47, VI.45-VI.49.” ------------------- FOUNDATION FOR MEDIEVAL GENEALOGY BAUDOUIN ([865/67]-[10 Sep] 918, bur St Bertin, transferred 929 to Gent, St Pieter). He is named as second of the three sons of Baudouin and his wife Judith in the list of counts of Flanders recorded in the Cartulaire de Saint-Bertin[57]. He succeeded his father in 879 as BAUDOUIN II "le Chauve" Count of Flanders. According to Rösch, Baudouin II was nicknamed after his maternal grandfather although it is surprising that such a personal nickname could be so transmitted[58]. From his succession, he came under great pressure from Viking raids, and took refuge in the marshes of Saint-Omer in 883[59]. Baudouin II expanded his territories by occupying the pagi of Mempisc, Courtrai and the Ijzer, seizing control of the counties of Ternois and Boulonnais after 892 as well as the Tournaisis (except for the town of Tournai)[60]. Although Count Baudouin at first supported the election of Eudes as king of France in 888, the latter opposed the count's becoming lay-abbot of St Bertin (in 892, in succession to abbot Rudolf[61]) and pursued the count to Bruges, although the king was unable to capture the town. The Annales Vedastini record the death "Non Ian 892" of "Rodulfus abba", that "castellani Egfridum comitem" was sent to announce the news to the king, and that in his absence "Balduinum a Flandris…per consilium Evreberti qui nimis fuerat versutissimus" seized the abbacy against the wishes of the king who had promised it to Egfrid[62]. The Annales Vedastini record that "Balduinus" captured Artois in 892[63]. Count Baudouin supported the coronation of Charles III "le Simple" as king of the West Franks in 895, but afterwards supported Zwentibold Duke of Lotharingia. The Annales Vedastini name "Balduinus…comes et Rodulfus frater eius necnon et Ragnerus" when recording that they joined Zwentibold in 895[64]. Baudouin II invaded Péronne in 899[65] and attacked Vermandois, Artois and Boulogne, but was driven out of Vermandois by 900, although he reconquered it and killed Héribert II Comte de Vermandois in revenge for the death of his brother Raoul[66]. Count Baudouin also controlled the abbeys of St Vaast and St Bertin. The Annales Blandinienses record the death in 918 of "Balduvinus comes", specifying that he was buried at "Blandinio"[67]. An undated charter, dated to [962], recording the last wishes of "marchysi Arnulfi", notes that "pater meus et mater mea" were buried in the abbey of Saint-Pierre de Gand[68]. His territories were divided between his two sons on his death[69]. m ([893/99]) ÆLFTHRYTH of Wessex, daughter of ALFRED King of Wessex & his wife Ealhswith of the Gainas ([877]-7 Jun 929, bur Gent, St Pieter). "Elfthtritham" is named by Roger of Hoveden, third in his list of King Alfred's daughters by Queen Ealhswith[70]. She is called "Æthelswitha" by Asser[71]. "Elftrudis" is named as wife of Count Baudouin II in the Cartulaire de Saint-Bertin without giving her origin[72]. The Genealogia Comitum Flandriæ names "filia Edgeri regis Anglorum, nomine Elferudem" as the wife of "Balduinus Calvus"[73], although "Edgeri" is clearly an error for "Alfredi". This marriage represented the start of a long-lasting alliance between England and Flanders, founded on their common interest in preventing Viking settlements along the coast. "Elstrudis comitissa…cum filiis suis Arnulfo et Adelolfo" donated "hereditatem suam Liefsham…in terra Anglorum in Cantia" to Saint-Pierre de Gand, for the soul of "senioris sui Baldwini", by charter dated 11 Sep 918[74]. The Annales Blandinienses record the death in 929 of "filia regis Elftrudis comitissa"[75]. The Memorial of "Elstrudis…Balduini…domini" records her death "VII Iunii"[76]. An undated charter, dated to [962], recording the last wishes of "marchysi Arnulfi", notes that "pater meus et mater mea" were buried in the abbey of Saint-Pierre de Gand[77]. Count Baudouin II & his wife had [five] children: a) ARNOUL de Flandres (after [893/99]-murdered 27 Mar 964, bur Gent, St Pieter). The Genealogica Arnulfi Comitis names (in order) "Arnulfum, fratrem eius Adelulfum" as the two sons of "Balduinus"[78]. He succeeded his father in 918 as ARNOUL I "le Grand" Count of Flanders and Artois. b) ADALOLF [Æthelwulf] de Flandres (after [893/99]-13 Nov 933, bur Gent St Pieter). The Genealogica Arnulfi Comitis names (in order) "Arnulfum, fratrem eius Adelulfum" as the two sons of "Balduinus"[79]. "Adalolphus" is named son of Count Baudouin II in the Cartulaire de Saint-Bertin, which specifies that he succeeded his father in 918 as Comte de Boulogne-sur-Mer, de Thérouanne, and lay-Abbot of St Bertin[80]. "Elstrudis comitissa…cum filiis suis Arnulfo et Adelolfo" donated "hereditatem suam Liefsham…in terra Anglorum in Cantia" to Saint-Pierre de Gand, for the soul of "senioris sui Baldwini", by charter dated 11 Sep 918[81]. The Annales Blandinienses record the death in 933 of "Adalulfus comes", specifying that he was buried "in monasterio sancti Petri"[82]. - COMTES de BOULOGNE. c) EALSWID de Flandres. "Ealhswid" is named as daughter of Count Baudouin and his wife Ælfthryth in the Chronicle of Æthelweard[83]. d) ERMENTRUDE de Flandres. "Earmentruth" is named as daughter of Count Baudouin and his wife Ælfthryth in the Chronicle of Æthelweard[84]. e) [---. No information has been found concerning this possible fifth child of Count Baudouin II. If "avunculus" is used in its strict sense in the source cited below, the child was a daughter. However, it is possible that "avunculus" was used informally as the counterpart of "nepos", the latter being much less precise and possibly indicating a more remote blood relationship. If Abbot Hildebrand's mother was the sister of Count Arnoul, it is possible that she was the same person as either Ealswid or Ermentrude who are named above. No information has been found about the father of Hildebrand. m ---.] One child: i) [HILDEBRAND (-after 961). Abbot of Saint-Bertin 950: the cartulaire of Saint-Bertin records that "post Widonem...abbatem...Hildebrando nepoti suo" succeeded as abbot and was ordained “XVI Kal Apr” 950 by “Vuicfrido Taruennensis ecclesiæ episcopo” and that “comes Arnulfus ipsius abbatis avunculus” returned “villam...Arecas” to the monastery[85]. The Chronica Monasterii Sancti Bertini also records "Hildebrandus…avunculo suo comite Arnulfo"[86]. Abbé de Saint-Bertin et de Saint-Vaast. No other information has been found to enable a more precise relationship to be identified either between Count Arnoul and Abbot Hildebrand or between Abbot Hildebrand and Abbot Guy. An indication of Hildebrand´s earlier family background is provided by the cartulaire of Saint-Bertin which records that, when "abbas et comes Arnulfus" was unwell he accepted the recommendation made by “Gerardum...abbatem” to convert the monks to “regularis vitæ regimen”, adding that “Wido ipsius Gerardi nepos” was consecrated abbot in 947 but later transferred to St Bavo[87].] https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FLANDERS,%20HAINAUT.htm#BaudouinIIFlandersdied918
- Death: 7 JUN 929, Ghent, Ripuarian Dukedom, West Francia
- Burial: AFT 7 JUN 929, Gent, Oost-Vlaanderen, België
Ancestors of Ælfthryth of WESSEX
/-Cuthwine 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
| | /-Æthelberht 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
/-Æthelwulf of WESSEX
| \-Rædburhg of Francia
/-Alfred of WESSEX
| \-Osburhga of Wessex
Ælfthryth of WESSEX
\-Ealhswith of Mercia
- Father: Edward the ELDER
- Mother: Ælfflæd OF WILTSHIRE
- Birth: ABT 902, Wessex
- Also known as: Aelfwerdus
- Also known as: Ælfweard ,of Wessex
- Also known as: Elfweard Wessex
- Also known as: Prince Elfweard Wessex
- Also known as: Aelfwerd
- Also known as: Ælfwerd
- KING OF WESSEX FOR 16 DAYS: BET 17 JUL AND 2 AUG 924
- LifeSketch: Ælfweard (/ˈælfwɔːrd/; c. 902 – 2 August 924) was the second son of Edward the Elder, the eldest born to his second wife Ælfflæd. Ælfweard died only 16 days after his father, on 2 August 924 at Oxford, and was buried at the New Minster, Winchester. Æthelstan still had difficulty in securing acceptance in Wessex, and he was not crowned King of the Anglo-Saxons until 4 September 925.
- Title Of Nobility: King of Wessex
- Death: 2 AUG 924, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England
- Burial: 924, New Minster, Hampshire, England
Ancestors of Ælfweard of WESSEX
/-Cuthwulf de Clarede of WESSEX
/-Ceolwald of WESSEX
| \-Gwynhafar of DUMNONIA
/-Cenred of WESSEX
| | /-Figuine mac Laoghaire of MUMHAN
| \-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
| | /-Eadbeald Oiscingas 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
/-Æthelwulf of WESSEX
| \-Rædburhg of Francia
/-Alfred of WESSEX
| \-Osburhga of Wessex
/-Edward the ELDER
| \-Ealhswith of Mercia
Ælfweard of WESSEX
\-Ælfflæd OF WILTSHIRE
- Father: Æthelwulf of WESSEX
- Mother: Osburhga of Wessex
- Birth: 834, Wantage, Berkshire, England
- Also known as: Æthelbald
- Also known as: Ethelbald
- APPOINTED KING OF WESSEX: In 855 Æthelwulf went on pilgrimage to Rome and appointed Æthelbald King of Wessex.
- REFUSED TO RETURN KINGSHIP TO ÆTHELWULF: Upon Æthelwulf's returned to England in 856, Æthelbald refused to give up the crown. The Kingdom of Wessex was divided, with Æthelbald ruling the west and his father the east., 856, Wessex
- FATHER DIED: Upon his father's death Æthelbald became unopposed ruler of all of Wessex, and ruled until his own death in 860
- MARRIED HIS STEP MOTHER, JUDITH OF FRANCE: Immediately upon the death of his father and succeeding him as king, Æthelbald married his step-mother, 14 year old Judith of France. This was probably done to strengthen his position as king because Judith was the daughter of the West Frankish king.
- Title Of Nobility: King of England, Roi des Wessex, King of Wessex, König der West Sachsen
- LifeSketch: Æthelbald was the second son of King Æthelwulf of Wessex and his first wife Osberga, born about 834 in Wessex. His oldest brother Æthelstan is believed to have died shortly after defeating the Vikings in 850. Æthelwulf and Æthelbald defeated them again at the Battle of Aclea in 851. In 855 Æthelwulf appointed Æthelbald acting King of Wessex and his next younger brother Æthelberht acting King of Kent, while he went on pilgrimage to Rome. Æthelwulf returned from Rome in late 856 with a 12 year old bride, Judith of France. Not only was Judith younger than Æthelbald but she had been anointed Queen, where as Osberga, Æthelbald's mother had not. In rebellion against his father Æthelbald refused to return control of Wessex to Æthelwulf. In the end they split Wessex. After Æthelwulf's death in 858, Æthelbald immediately married his father's young widow. Æthelbald became full King of all of Wessex and Æthelberht full King of Kent. Æthelbald reigned on his own, with Judith by his side, for about 2 1/2 years and died in July of 860. Æthelberht who was already King of Kent succeeded his brother to become King of Wessex as well and united the two into one kingdom. Judith and Æthelbald had no children and Judith returned to France to eventually marry Baldwin, Margrave of Flanders.
- REIGN AS KING OF WESSEX: From 855 to 860
- NoChildren: (Date and Place unknown)
- Ruled: 855/856-860
- Death: 20 DEC 860, Sherborne, Dorset, England
- Burial: 860, Sherborne Abbey, Sherborne, West Dorset District, Dorset, England
Ancestors of Æthelbald of WESSEX
/-Ceawlin 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
| | /-Eormenric of KENT
| | /-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
/-Æthelwulf of WESSEX
| \-Rædburhg of Francia
Æthelbald of WESSEX
\-Osburhga of Wessex
- Father: Alfred of WESSEX
- Mother: Ealhswith of Mercia
- Birth: 871, Wessex, England
- Also known as: Egiva
- Also known as: Æthelgyth; Ethelgivu
- Also known as: Æthelgifu, Abbess of Shaftsbury
- Also known as: Ælfgifu of Shaftesbury
- Also known as: Abbess Ethelgifu Wessex
- Occupation: Abbess of Shaftesbury, Shaftesbury, Dorset, England
- Title Of Nobility: Princess of Wessex
- LifeSketch: Æthelgifu (Old English pronunciation: [æðeljivu]), was the daughter of King Alfred the Great, an Anglo-Saxon king of the 9th century. She was the third of Alfred and his wife Ealhswith's five children and the second eldest daughter. She was likely born sometime in the 870s.[1] A Welsh monk named Asser who wrote a biography of Alfred the Great, described her as 'devoted to God through her holy virginity, subject and consecrated to the rule of monastic life, entered the service of God'. She was said to have become a nun as a result of her bad health.[1] Alfred founded Shaftesbury Abbey ca. 890 and placed Æthelgifu as its first abbess. This Abbey along with Athelney monastery (for monks) received 1/8 of Alfred's annual revenue in support. It appears to have housed nuns from an upper-class background. Very little is known about Æthelgifu's time as abbess.[1] In Alfred's will, there is mention of two estates left 'to his middle daughter Æthelgifu' at Kingsclere and at Candover in Hampshire, and the will itself makes no mention of her role as abbess. It is possible that the will was written before Æthelgifu became abbess, or it is possible that these estates were given to her while she was abbess, but they reverted to the male line once she died.[1] - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%86thelgifu,_abbess_of_Shaftesbury
- NoCoupleRelationships: (Date and Place unknown)
- NoChildren: (Date and Place unknown)
- MIDDLE DAUGHTER: Identified in Alfred's will as his middle daughter.
- Death: 896, Shaftesbury Abbey, Shaftesbury, Dorset, England
Ancestors of Æthelgifu of WESSEX
/-Cuthwine 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
| | /-Æthelberht 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
/-Æthelwulf of WESSEX
| \-Rædburhg of Francia
/-Alfred of WESSEX
| \-Osburhga of Wessex
Æthelgifu of WESSEX
\-Ealhswith of Mercia
- Father: Æthelwulf of WESSEX
- Mother: Osburhga of Wessex
- Birth: BET 834 AND 848, Wantage, Berkshire, Kingdom of Wessex
- Also known as: & Wessex King of Kent
- Also known as: Ethelred Ethelwulfson
- Also known as: Æpelræd
- Also known as: Ethelred the Pious
- Also known as: Aethelred , King of Wessex and Kent
- KING OF KENT: When Æthelwulf went on pilgrimage to Rome in 855 he appointed his oldest surviving son, Æthelbald, as king of Wessex while Æthelberht became king of the recently conquered territory of Kent., 855, Kent, England
- KING OF WESSSEX: When Æthelbald died in 860, Æthelberht united his own territory of Kent and that of his brother Wessex under his rule. He did not appoint a sub-king and Wessex and Kent were fully united for the first time.
- Acceded: Throne of Wessex
- Reign as King of Wessex and King of Kent: BET 865 AND 871
- LifeSketch: ÆTHELRED I KING OF WESSEX, ALSO ÆTHELRED THE PIOUS **NOT** ÆTHELRED EALDORMAN OF GAINSBUROUGH **NOT** ÆTHELRED MUCEL **NOT** ÆTHELRED OF MERCIA Æthelred I (or Aethelred, Ethelred, Æthel-ræd) was the 4th son of King Æthelwulf of Wessex and his first wife Osberga. He was King of Wessex from 865 until his death. He was the fourth of five sons of King Æthelwulf of Wessex, four of whom in turn became king. He succeeded his elder brother Æthelberht and was followed by his youngest brother, Alfred the Great. Æthelred had two sons, Æthelhelm and Æthelwold, who were passed over for the kingship on their father's death because they were still infants. Alfred was succeeded by his son, Edward the Elder, and Æthelwold unsuccessfully disputed the throne with him. Æthelred's accession coincided with the arrival of the Viking Great Heathen Army in England. Over the next five years the Vikings conquered Northumbria and East Anglia, and at the end of 870 they launched a full-scale attack on Wessex. In early January 871 Æthelred was defeated at the Battle of Reading. Four days later he scored a victory in the Battle of Ashdown, but this was followed by two defeats at Basing and Meretun. He died shortly after Easter. Alfred was forced to buy off the Vikings, but he scored a decisive victory over them seven years later at the Battle of Edington. Æthelred's reign was important numismatically. Wessex and Mercia were close allies when he became king, and he carried the alliance further by adopting the Mercian Lunettes design, thus creating a unified coinage design for southern England for the first time. The common design foreshadowed the unification of England over the next sixty years and the reform coinage of King Edgar I a century later. Æthelred succeeded to the throne on Æthelberht's death in 865, and he married Wulfthryth at an unknown date. West Saxon kings' wives had a low status in the ninth century and very little is known about them. They were not usually given the title of regina (queen), an omission which Alfred the Great justified on the ground of the misconduct of a queen at the beginning of the ninth century. The name of Æthelred's wife is only known because she was recorded as a witness to one charter, S 340 of 868, where she is shown as Wulfthryth regina, suggesting that she had a higher status than other kings' wives. Wulfthryth and Æthelred had two known sons: - Æthelhelm - Æthelwold. Wulfthryth is believed to have been mercian and may have been a daughter of Ealdorman Wulfhere of Wiltshire. Wulfhere forfeited his lands in 878 after being charged with deserting King Alfred for the Danes, perhaps because he attempted to secure Viking support for his oldest grandson Æthelhelm's claim to the throne in opposition to Alfred. Alfred records in the preamble to his will that Æthelwulf had left property jointly to three of his sons, Æthelbald, Æthelred and Alfred, with the proviso that the brother who lived longest would succeed to all of it. When Æthelbald died in 860, Æthelred and Alfred, who were still young, agreed to entrust their share to the new king, Æthelberht, on a promise that he would return it to them intact. When Æthelred succeeded to the throne, Alfred asked him at a meeting of the witan to give him his share of the property. However, Æthelred said that he had attempted many times to divide it but had found it too difficult, and he would instead leave the whole to Alfred on his death. When Alfred succeeded, the supporters of Æthelred's infant sons complained that Alfred should have shared the property with them, and Alfred had his father's will read to a meeting of the witan to prove his right to keep the whole of the property. Alfred rarely witnessed Æthelred's charters, and this together with the argument over their father's will suggests that they may not have been on good terms. The historian Pauline Stafford suggests that Æthelred may have chosen to highlight his wife's status as queen in a charter in order to assert his own sons' claims to the succession. Æthelred died shortly after Easter, 15 April 871, "having vigorously and honourably ruled the kingdom in good repute, amid many difficulties, for five years" according to Asser. He was buried at the royal minster at Wimborne in Dorset. The Vikings defeated the West Saxons at Reading while Alfred was in attendance of his brothers funeral. Æthelred had two sons, and if he had lived until they were adults it is unlikely that Alfred would ever have become king, but as they were still young children Alfred succeeded.[61] Æthelhelm died before Alfred, and Æthelwold unsuccessfully disputed the throne with Edward the Elder after Alfred's death in 899.[62] One of the two places where Æthelwold launched his rebellion was Wimborne, which was symbolically important as his father's burial place.[63] Æthelred's descendants played an important role in governing the country in the late tenth and early eleventh centuries.[64] They include Ealdorman Æthelweard, who recorded in his Latin version of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle that he was Æthelred's great-great-grandson. King Eadwig was forced to accept annulment of his marriage to Ælfgifu due to consanguinity; she may have been Æthelweard's sister, which would make her Eadwig's third cousin once removed due to her descent from Æthelred, and thus within the forbidden degrees of relationship according to the church.[65] Æthelweard and his son Æthelmær were leading magnates who governed west Wessex as ealdormen of the western provinces. The family lost their positions and property after Cnut conquered England in 1016, and one of Æthelmær's sons was executed by Cnut in 1017, while a son-in-law was banished in 1020.[66] Another son, Æthelnoth, was Archbishop of Canterbury, and he lived until 1038. **This Æthelred was never an Ealdorman of Gainsborough, son's of royalty were not made Ealdormen, they already held a position higher than that.
- Death: 23 APR 871, Witchampton, Dorset, England
- Burial: APR 871, Wimborne Minster, Dorset, England
Ancestors of Æthelred of WESSEX
/-Ceawlin 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
| | /-Eormenric of KENT
| | /-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
/-Æthelwulf of WESSEX
| \-Rædburhg of Francia
Æthelred of WESSEX
\-Osburhga of Wessex
- Father: Æthelwulf of WESSEX
- Mother: Osburhga of Wessex
- Birth: 838, Wessex
- EXILED TO ITALY: Driven from their kingdom in 874 by Vikings; Æthelswith and Burgred fled to Rome. He died shortly after. Æthelswith lived on in Italy, to be buried at Pavia in 888., 874, Rome, Rome, Lazio, Italy
- LifeSketch: Æthelswith (c. 838–888) was the only known daughter of King Æthelwulf of Wessex. She married King Burgred of Mercia in 853. The couple had no known issue. Her marriage probably signaled the subordination of Burgred to his father-in-law and the Saxon kingdom at a time when both Wessex and Mercia were suffering Danish (Viking) raids. Burgred also had ongoing problems with the Kingdom of Powys on his western border and in 853 Æthelwulf subjugated the Welsh state on Burgred's behalf. Repeated Danish incursions over the years gradually weakened Mercia militarily and in 868 Burgred was forced to call upon Æthelswith's brother King Æthelred of Wessex to assist him in confronting an entrenched Danish army at Nottingham. This was the last time the Saxons came to the aid of the Mercians and is also notable as the occasion on which Alfred the Great, another brother of Æthelswith's, married his Mercian wife Ealhswith. Burgred's reign lasted till 874 when the Vikings drove him from the kingdom and he fled to Rome with Æthelswith. He died shortly after. Æthelswith lived on in Italy, to be buried at Pavia in 888.
- Death: 888, Pavia, Lombardia, Italy
- Burial: 888, Pavia, Lombardia, Italy
Ancestors of Æthelswith daughter of Æthelwulf of WESSEX
/-Ceawlin 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
| | /-Eormenric of KENT
| | /-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
/-Æthelwulf of WESSEX
| \-Rædburhg of Francia
Æthelswith daughter of Æthelwulf of WESSEX
\-Osburhga of Wessex
- Father: Ecgberht of WESSEX
- Mother: Rædburhg of Francia
- Birth: 806
- Christening: 23 AUG 806, Wessex
- Also known as: Aethelwulf King of England
- Also known as: Ethelwulf, King of Wessex, King of Essex, Sussex and Kent
- Also known as: Æþelwulf (Noble Wolf)
- Also known as: Æthelwulf Ecgberhtsson
- Also known as: Ethelwulf, King of Wessex, King of Essex, Sussex and Kent
- Also known as: Æþelwulf (Noble Wolf)
- Also known as: Æthelwulf Ecgberhtsson
- Also known as: Ethelwulf, King of Wessex, King of Essex, Sussex and Kent
- Also known as: Æþelwulf (Noble Wolf)
- Also known as: Æthelwulf Ecgberhtsson
- KING OF MERCIA: After the defeat of King Beornwulf of Mercia, Æthelwulf's father King Egbert appointed Æthelwulf sub-king of Mercia.
- SUCCEEDED HIS FATHER AS KING OF WESSEX: Upon the death of his father Ecgberht in 839, Æthelwulf became King of Wessex. He reigned until his death in 858, at which time he was succeeded by his own son., BET 839 AND 858, Wessex
- LifeSketch: Æthelwulf was the son of King Ecgberht of Wessex. Ecgberht was from Wessex but was in exile in Francia until 802 when he returned and took control of the throne of Wessex. Æthelwulf was likely born in Wessex sometime after Ecgberht's return, between 802 and 810, but Æthelwulf was first recorded in 825, when Egbert sent Æthelwulf with Eahlstan, Bishop of Sherborne, and Wulfheard, Ealdorman of Hampshire, and a large army into Kent to expel sub-king Baldred. The name of Æthelwulf's mother is not known, and he had no recorded siblings. He is known to have had two wives in succession, and so far as is known, Osburh, the senior of the two, was the mother of all his children. She was the daughter of Oslac, described by Asser, biographer of their son Alfred the Great, as "King Æthelwulf's famous butler", a man who was descended from Jutes who had ruled the Isle of Wight. Æthelwulf and Osburh had six known children: - Æthelstan (c 820-c850) - Æthelbald (c835 -860) married Judith of France after his father's death - Æthelswith (c 838 - 888) Married King Burgred of Mercia, became Queen of Mercia - Æthelberht (c839 - 865) - Æthelred (c 845 - 871) - Alfred (848/849 – 26 October 899) His eldest son, Æthelstan, was old enough to be appointed King of Kent in 839, so he must have been born by the early 820s, and he died in the early 850s.The second son, Æthelbald, is first recorded as a charter witness in 841, and if, like Alfred, he began to attest when he was around six, he would have been born around 835; he was King of Wessex from 858 to 860. Æthelwulf's third son, Æthelberht, was probably born around 839 and was king from 860 to 865. The only daughter, Æthelswith, married Burgred, King of Mercia, in 853. The other two sons were much younger: Æthelred was born around 848 and was king from 865 to 871, and Alfred was born around 849 and was king from 871 to 899. Osburh probably died by 855, although it is possible that she was repudiated. In 856 Æthelwulf married Judith, daughter of Charles the Bald, King of West Francia and future Holy Roman Emperor, and his wife Ermentrude. There were no children from Æthelwulf's marriage to Judith, and after his death she married his eldest surviving son and successor, Æthelbald.
- 6 children of King Æthelwulf and Osburhga:: Æthelstan, Æthelswith, Æthelbald, Æthelbert, Æthelred, Alfred
- Title Of Nobility: King of Wessex, King of Essex, Sussex and Kent
- Death: Steyning, Wessex
- Burial: Steyning Church, Steyning, Wessex
- Partnership with: Osburhga of Wessex
Marriage: ABT 830
Marriage: ABT 826, Mercia, Wessex
- Child: Æthelstan of KENT Birth: ABT 827, Wantage, Berkshire, Kingdom of Wessex
- Child: Æthelswith daughter of Æthelwulf of WESSEX Birth: 838, Wessex
- Child: Æthelberht OF WESSEX Birth: ABT 836, Wantage, Wessex
- Child: Æthelred of WESSEX Birth: BET 834 AND 848, Wantage, Berkshire, Kingdom of Wessex
- Child: Alfred of WESSEX Birth: 849, Wantage, Berkshire, Kingdom of Wessex
- Child: Æthelbald of WESSEX Birth: 834, Wantage, Berkshire, England
- Partnership with: Judith DE FRANCE
Marriage: 856
Ancestors of Æthelwulf of WESSEX
/-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
Æthelwulf of WESSEX
\-Rædburhg of Francia
Descendants of Æthelwulf of WESSEX
1 Æthelwulf of WESSEX
=Osburhga of Wessex Marriage: ABT 830 Marriage: ABT 826, Mercia, Wessex
2 Æthelstan of KENT
2 Æthelswith daughter of Æthelwulf of WESSEX
2 Æthelberht OF WESSEX
2 Æthelred of WESSEX
2 Alfred of WESSEX
=Ealhswith of Mercia Marriage: 868, Gainsborough, Lincolnshire, Kingdom of Mercia
3 Edward the ELDER
=Eadgifu OF KENT Marriage: 919, Wessex, England
=Ecgwynn spouse of Edward the ELDER Marriage: 893, Wessex
=Ælfflæd OF WILTSHIRE Marriage: ABT 900, Kingdom of Wessex
3 Æthelgifu of WESSEX
3 Ælfthryth of WESSEX
3 Æthelflæd of the MERCIANS
3 Æthelweard OF WESSEX
3 Edmund of WESSEX
=Ettielswitha spouse of Alfred of WESSEX
3 Ælfthryth of FLANDERS
2 Æthelbald of WESSEX
=Judith DE FRANCE Marriage: 856
- Father: Æthelwulf of WESSEX
- Mother: Osburhga of Wessex
- Birth: 849, Wantage, Berkshire, Kingdom of Wessex
- Christening: 23 APR 849, Surrey, England
- Also known as: Alfred the Great King of the Anglo-Saxons
- Also known as: St. Alfred The Great
- Also known as: King Alfred
- Also known as: Aelfred Rex Saxonum
- Also known as: Ælfrēd
- Also known as: Aelfred Æthelwulfsson
- Also known as: Elf Counsel
- Also known as: Wise Elf
- SECUNDARIUS: When his 18-year-old brother Æthelred ascended to the throne in 865, 16-year old Alfred was given the title Secundarius by Bishop Asser, to designate he was the successor should Æthelred fall in battle., 865, Wessex
- Chr (adult): 23 APR 871, Kingston Upon Thames, Surrey, Kingdom of Wessex
- AGREEMENT AT SWINBEORG: Æthelred and Alfred agreed that whichever of them outlived the other would inherit the personal property that King Æthelwulf had left jointly to his sons in his will. The deceased's sons would receive only whatever property and riches their father had settled upon them. The unstated premise was that the surviving brother would be king., 871, Swinbeorg, Wessex
- Title Of Nobility: King of the West Saxons, 871, Wessex
- KING OF WESSEX: With the death of his brother King Æthelred in April 871, Alfred acceded to the throne of Wessex. In 886 he expanded his kingdom to all of the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms, which he ruled until his death in 899, BET 23 APR 871 AND 886, Wessex
- KING OF THE ANGLO-SAXONS: In 886 King Alfred expanded his dominion from just Wessex to the entire Heptarchy, all 7 kingdoms of Anglo-Saxon England, BET 886 AND 26 OCT 899, Wessex
- SECOND AND THIRD REINTEREMENT: Alfred was originally buried at the Old Minster in Winchester in 899, 4 years later in 903 he was moved to the New Minster. Then in 1110 Alfred's body was interred before the high altar at Hyde Abbey, also in Winchester. The bodies of Alfred's wife and children were also moved., 1110, Hyde Abbey, Hampshire, England
- FIRST ENGLISH MONARCH: Alfred styled himself King of the Anglo-Saxons from about 886, and while he was not the first king to claim to rule all of the English, his rule represents the start of the first unbroken line of kings to rule the whole of England, the House of Wessex
- MEANING OF NAME 'Elf-counsel' or 'Wise-elf': (Date and Place unknown)
- Possible cause of death- Crohns Disease: (Date and Place unknown)
- Affiliation: House of Wessex, House of Cerdic, Cerdicingas
- ALFRED AND EALHSWITH HAD 5 CHILDREN: Their only known children are: Æthelflæd, Edward the Elder, Æthelgifu, Ælfthryth, Æthelweard
- LifeSketch: "Alfred the Great was King of Wessex from 871 to ca. 886, and King of the Anglo-Saxons from ca. 886 to 899. He was the youngest son of King Æthelwulf of Wessex and his first wife Osburh, daughter of Oslac" "Alfred was born in the royal estate of Wantage, historically in Berkshire but now in Oxfordshire, between 847 and 849. He was the youngest of six children, five sons and a daughter, born to King Æthelwulf of Wessex by his first wife, Osburh." "In 868, Alfred married Ealhswith, daughter of Æthelred Mucel and Eadburh. They had five children: - Æthelflæd - Edward - Æthelgifu - Æthelweard - Ælfthryth Alfred the Great (848/49 – 26 October 899) was king of the West Saxons from 871 to c. 886 and king of the Anglo-Saxons from c. 886 to 899 [therefore king in total from 871 to his death in 899; 28 years]. He was the youngest son of King Æthelwulf, who died when Alfred was young. Three of Alfred's brothers, Æthelbald, Æthelberht and Æthelred, reigned in turn before him. After ascending the throne, Alfred spent several years fighting Viking invasions. He won a decisive victory in the Battle of Edington in 878 and made an agreement with the Vikings, creating what was known as the Danelaw in the North of England. Alfred also oversaw the conversion of Viking leader Guthrum to Christianity. He defended his kingdom against the Viking attempt at conquest, becoming the dominant ruler in England. Details of his life are described in a work by 9th-century Welsh scholar and bishop Asser. Alfred had a reputation as a learned and merciful man of a gracious and level-headed nature who encouraged education, proposing that primary education be conducted in Old English rather than Latin and improving the legal system and military structure and his people's quality of life. He was given the epithet "the Great" in the 16th century. During his lifetime he was known as "King Alfred" as documented by Asser. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_the_Great
- Title Of Nobility: King of the Anglo-Saxons, 886, England
- Death: 26 OCT 899, Winchester, Wiltshire, Wessex
- Burial: OCT 899, Old Minster, Winchester, Hampshire, Wessex
- Partnership with: Ealhswith of Mercia
Marriage: 868, Gainsborough, Lincolnshire, Kingdom of Mercia
- Child: Edward the ELDER Birth: 870, Wantage, Oxfordshire, England
- Child: Æthelgifu of WESSEX Birth: 871, Wessex, England
- Child: Ælfthryth of WESSEX Birth: ABT 872, Wessex, England
- Child: Æthelflæd of the MERCIANS Birth: ABT 869, Wessex, England
- Child: Æthelweard OF WESSEX Birth: ABT 879, Wessex, England
- Child: Edmund of WESSEX Birth: ABT 868, Wantage, Berkshire, England
- Partnership with: Ettielswitha spouse of Alfred of WESSEX
Ancestors of Alfred of WESSEX
/-Ceawlin 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
| | /-Eormenric of KENT
| | /-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
/-Æthelwulf of WESSEX
| \-Rædburhg of Francia
Alfred of WESSEX
\-Osburhga of Wessex
Descendants of Alfred of WESSEX
1 Alfred of WESSEX
=Ealhswith of Mercia Marriage: 868, Gainsborough, Lincolnshire, Kingdom of Mercia
2 Edward the ELDER
=Eadgifu OF KENT Marriage: 919, Wessex, England
3 Edmund the MAGNIFICENT
=Ælfgifu OF SHAFTESBURY Marriage: 940
3 Edburh of ENGLAND
3 Eadred of ENGLAND
3 Edgiva of ENGLAND
=Ecgwynn spouse of Edward the ELDER Marriage: 893, Wessex
3 Edith of WESSEX
3 Æthelstan of the ANGLO-SAXONS
3 Alfred OF WESSEX
=Ælfflæd OF WILTSHIRE Marriage: ABT 900, Kingdom of Wessex
3 Ælfweard of WESSEX
3 Aethelhild OF WESSEX
3 Edgitha OF WESSEX
3 Eadwige DE WESSEX
3 Ælfgifu OF WESSEX
3 Eadgifu of WESSEX
3 Edwin of WESSEX
3 Eadflæd of WESSEX
2 Æthelgifu of WESSEX
2 Ælfthryth of WESSEX
2 Æthelflæd of the MERCIANS
2 Æthelweard OF WESSEX
2 Edmund of WESSEX
=Ettielswitha spouse of Alfred of WESSEX
2 Ælfthryth of FLANDERS
- Birth: ABT 471, A., Northern Germany
- Also known as: cerdric
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Descendants of Anafleda spouse of Cerdic of WESSEX
1 Anafleda spouse of Cerdic of WESSEX
=Cerdic of WESSEX
2 Creoda Cerdicsson of WESSEX
=Hengist WESSEX
3 Cynric of WESSEX
=Unknown Spouse of Cynric of WESSEX Marriage: Wessex, England
3 Chetwulf CERDICING
- Father: Cynric of WESSEX
- Mother: Unknown Spouse of Cynric of WESSEX
- Birth: 547, Wessex
- Also known as: Ceolin
- Also known as: Caelin
- Also known as: Ceaulin
- Also known as: Ceawlin Cynricsson
- Also known as: King Ceawlin of Wessex
- Also known as: King Ceawlin of Wessex
- Also known as: Ceawlin Cynricsson
- Also known as: Ceaulin
- Also known as: Caelin
- Also known as: Ceawlin Cynricsson
- Also known as: King Ceawlin of Wessex
- Also known as: Caelin
- Also known as: Ceaulin
- Construction of Wansdyke: ABT 577, between Wiltshire and Bristol
- DEPOSED BY NEPHEW CEOL: 592, Wessex
- Affiliation: House of Cerdic, House of Wessex
- Title Of Nobility: King of Wessex, King of the West Saxons, Bretwalda of southern Britain
- LifeSketch: Ceawlin (also spelled Ceaulin and Caelin, died ca. 593) was a King of Wessex. He may have been the son of Cynric of Wessex and the grandson of Cerdic of Wessex, whom the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle represents as the leader of the first group of Saxons to come to the land which later became Wessex. Ceawlin was active during the last years of the Anglo-Saxon expansion, with little of southern England remaining in the control of the native Britons by the time of his death. The chronology of Ceawlin's life is highly uncertain. The historical accuracy and dating of many of the events in the later Anglo-Saxon Chronicle have been called into question, and his reign is variously listed as lasting seven, seventeen, or thirty-two years.[1] The Chronicle records several battles of Ceawlin's between the years 556 and 592, including the first record of a battle between different groups of Anglo-Saxons, and indicates that under Ceawlin Wessex acquired significant territory, some of which was later to be lost to other Anglo-Saxon kingdoms. Ceawlin is also named as one of the eight "bretwaldas", a title given in the Chronicle to eight rulers who had overlordship over southern Britain, although the extent of Ceawlin's control is not known. Ceawlin died in 593, having been deposed the year before, possibly by his successor, Ceol. He is recorded in various sources as having two sons, Cutha and Cuthwine, but the genealogies in which this information is found are known to be unreliable. The annal for the year 592 in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle reads: "Here there was a great slaughter at Woden's Barrow, and Ceawlin was driven out." Excerpt from Wikipedia-article is extensive; https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ceawlin_of_Wessex --------------- Ceawlin, (died 593), king of the West Saxons, or Wessex, from 560 to 592, who drove the Britons from most of southern England and carved out a kingdom in the southern Midlands. Ceawlin helped his father, King Cynric, defeat the Britons at Beranbyrg (Barbury) in 556. In 568, eight years after he assumed the West Saxon kingship, Ceawlin and his brother Cutha severely defeated King Aethelberht I of Kent. Ceawlin’s victory over the Britons at Deorham (Dyrham) in 577 led to the capture of Gloucester, Cirencester, and Bath. The valley of the lower Severn River was thereby opened to West Saxon colonists, and the Britons of Wales were cut off from their kinsmen on England’s southwestern peninsula. Nevertheless, a king named Ceol seized at least part of Ceawlin’s lands in 591. After being defeated by Ceol at Woddesbeorg (or Wodnesbeorg; now Adam’s Grave in Wiltshire) in 592, Ceawlin was driven into exile. He was killed the next year. The 8th-century historian Bede included him in his list of seven successive rulers who were overlords (bretwaldas) of all the lands south of the Humber. https://www.britannica.com/biography/Ceawlin
- Other: 1 APR 1925, World Misc
- Other: 1 APR 1925, World Misc
- Title Of Nobility: King of Wessex
- Title Of Nobility: King of Wessex
- Title Of Nobility: King of Wessex
- Death: 593, Wessex
- Burial: 647, Wessex
Ancestors of Ceawlin of WESSEX
/-Beldeg Odinsson DE WESTPHALIA
/-Brand of West SAXONY
| \-Nanna Verch GEWARSDATTER DESAXONY DENORWAY DESCANDINAVIA of Norway
/-Frithugar Deira SAXONY
| | /-Nep GEWAR
| \-Nanna of SCANDINAVIA
| \-Baldar GEWAR
/-Frewin VAN SAKSEN
| \-Unknown Spouse of Frithugar Deira SAXONY
/-Uvigg FREAWINEASSON
| \-Unknown Spouse of Frewin VAN SAKSEN
/-Gewis VON SAXON
| \-Wig SAXON
/-Esla GEWISSON
| | /-Brendius of SCANDINAVIA
| | /-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
Descendants of Ceawlin of WESSEX
1 Ceawlin of WESSEX
=Unknown Spouse of Ceawlin of WESSEX Marriage: 560, Wessex
2 Cuthwine of WESSEX
=Unknown Spouse of Cuthwine of WESSEX
3 Cuthwulf de Clarede of WESSEX
=Gwynhafar of DUMNONIA Marriage: ABT 620, Wessex
3 Ceadda PRINCE of Wessex
3 Cynebald OF WESSEX
Ancestors of Cenberht of WESSEX
/-Beldeg Odinsson DE WESTPHALIA
/-Brand of West SAXONY
| \-Nanna Verch GEWARSDATTER DESAXONY DENORWAY DESCANDINAVIA of Norway
/-Frithugar Deira SAXONY
| | /-Nep GEWAR
| \-Nanna of SCANDINAVIA
| \-Baldar GEWAR
/-Frewin VAN SAKSEN
| \-Unknown Spouse of Frithugar Deira SAXONY
/-Uvigg FREAWINEASSON
| \-Unknown Spouse of Frewin VAN SAKSEN
/-Gewis VON SAXON
| \-Wig SAXON
/-Esla GEWISSON
| | /-Brendius of SCANDINAVIA
| | /-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
Cenberht of WESSEX
\-Unknown Spouse of Cynric of WESSEX
- Father: Ceolwald of WESSEX
- Mother: Fafertach INGEN FIGUINE
- Birth: 644, Wessex
- Also known as: Cenred Of West Saxons
- Also known as: Cenred Ceolwaldsson
- Also known as: Cenred fitz Ceolwald
- Also known as: Cenred Ceolwaldsson
- Also known as: Cenred fitz Ceolwald
- Also known as: Cenred Ceolwaldsson
- Also known as: Cenred fitz Ceolwald
- Also known as: Cenred Ceolwaldsson
- Also known as: Cenred fitz Ceolwald
- Other: 680, Wessex,, England
- LifeSketch: Cenred of Wessex was a member of the House of Wessex and a member of the direct male line from Cynric to Egbert. It is possible that Cenred ruled alongside his son Ine for a period. There is weak evidence for joint kingships, and stronger evidence of subkings reigning under a dominant ruler in Wessex, not long before his time. Ine acknowledges his father's help in his code of laws, and there is also a surviving land-grant that indicates Cenred was still reigning in Wessex after Ine's accession. His father was Ceolwald of Wessex. Cenred had at least four children. - Ine, king of Wessex and married Æthelburg of Wessex - Ingild, the great-grandfather of Ealhmund of Kent, and the great-great grandfather of Egbert - Cuthburh, who married Aldfrith of Northumbria, and became abbess of Wimborne - Cwenburh, who may have succeeded her sister as abbess at Wimborne.
- Title Of Nobility: Under-King of Somerset
- Affiliation: Royal House of Cerdic, Royal House of Wessex
- Death: 694, Wessex
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Cenred of WESSEX
/-Uvigg FREAWINEASSON
/-Gewis VON SAXON
| \-Wig SAXON
/-Esla GEWISSON
| | /-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
/-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
Descendants of Cenred of WESSEX
1 Cenred of WESSEX
=(Unknown)
2 Ingild OF WESSEX
=Nothgyth of SUSSSX Marriage: ABT 695, Wessex
3 Eoppa OF WESSEX
=Edwina OF KENT Marriage: ABT 730, Wessex
2 Cuthburh of Wessex
2 Cwenburh of Wimborne
- Father: Cuthwulf de Clarede of WESSEX
- Mother: Gwynhafar of DUMNONIA
- Birth: 622, Wessex
- Also known as: Ceoweald of West Saxons
- Also known as: Ceolwald of Wessex
- Also known as: Ceolwald of Wessex
- Also known as: Ceolwald of Wessex
- Also known as: Ceolwald of Wessex
- Also known as: Ceolwald of Wessex
- LifeSketch: Ceolwald of Wessex was a member of the House of Wessex (see House of Wessex family tree). Although a member of the direct male line from Cynric to Egbert, Ceolwald was never king. His birth and death dates are unknown. His father was Cuthwulf and his child Coenred of Wessex. Nothing more of him is known for certain. Some sites list him as married to Fafertach (620-644), daughter of Prince Finguine of Mumhan (603-644). Several list him as son of Princess Gwynhafar of Dumnonia (daughter of King Clemen ap Bledric).
- Affiliation: House of Wessex, House of Cerdic, also Cerdicingas or Cerdicing (all names for the same Royal House)
- Title Of Nobility: Prince
- Death: AFT 688, Wessex
Ancestors of Ceolwald of WESSEX
/-Frewin VAN SAKSEN
/-Uvigg FREAWINEASSON
| \-Unknown Spouse of Frewin VAN SAKSEN
/-Gewis VON SAXON
| \-Wig SAXON
/-Esla GEWISSON
| | /-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
/-Cuthwulf de Clarede of WESSEX
| \-Unknown Spouse of Cuthwine of WESSEX
Ceolwald of WESSEX
| /-Clemen AP BLEDRIC of Dumnonia
\-Gwynhafar of DUMNONIA
Descendants of Ceolwald of WESSEX
1 Ceolwald of WESSEX
=Fafertach INGEN FIGUINE
2 Cenred of WESSEX
=(Unknown)
3 Ingild OF WESSEX
=Nothgyth of SUSSSX Marriage: ABT 695, Wessex
3 Cuthburh of Wessex
3 Cwenburh of Wimborne
- Father: Aelle Ella of ELISENS
- Mother: Elesa WEST SAXON
- Birth: 2 MAY 467, Saxony
- Also known as: Caradoc Vreichvras
- Also known as: Cerdic of the Gewissae
- Also known as: King Cerdic of West Saxons
- Also known as: Cerdic Elesasson
- Also known as: Cerdic of the Gewissae
- Also known as: Cerdic Elesasson
- Also known as: King Cerdic of West Saxons
- Also known as: Cerdic Elesasson
- Also known as: King Cerdic of West Saxons
- Also known as: Cerdic of the Gewissae
- Also known as: Cerdic Elesasson
- Also known as: King Cerdic of West Saxons
- Also known as: Cerdic of the Gewissae
- According to the "Anglo-Saxon Chronicle," Cerdic landed with his son Cynric, in: what today is Hampshire, in a convoy of five ships.
- Title Of Nobility: First King of Wessex, BET 519 AND 534, He is cited in the "Anglo-Saxon Chronicle" as a leader and founder of the Anglo-Saxon settlement of Britain, being the first king of Saxon Wessex.
- Affiliation: Progenitor of the House of Cerdic, also known as the House of Wessex, House of Cerdicingas, and Cerdicing Dynasty
- LifeSketch: Cerdic, (died 534), founder of the West Saxon kingdom, or Wessex. All the sovereigns of England except Canute, Hardecanute, the two Harolds, and William the Conqueror are said to be descended from him. A Continental ealdorman who in 495 landed in Hampshire, Cerdic was attacked at once by the Britons. Nothing more is heard of him until 508, when he defeated the Britons with great slaughter. Strengthened by fresh arrivals of Saxons, he gained another victory in 519 at Certicesford, a spot which has been identified with the modern Charford, and in this year took the title of king. Turning westward, Cerdic appears to have been defeated by the Britons in 520 at Badbury or Mount Badon, in Dorset, and in 527 yet another fight with the Britons is recorded. His last work was the conquest of the Isle of Wight, probably in the interest of some Jutish allies. ------------------------- The first of the Saxons to come across the sea from Germany. He landed with his son and 5 ships in 495, fighting a battle on the same day. Cerdic (tʃɛrdɪtʃ) is cited in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle as a leader of the Anglo-Saxon settlement of Britain, being the founder and first king of Saxon Wessex, reigning from 519 to 534. Subsequent kings of Wessex all had some level of descent claimed in the Chronicle from Cerdic. (See House of Wessex family tree) Life According to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, Cerdic landed in Hampshire in 495 with his son Cynric in five ships. He is said to have fought a Brittonic king named Natanleod at Natanleaga and killed him thirteen years later (in 508), and to have fought at Cerdicesleag in 519. Natanleaga is commonly identified as Netley Marsh in Hampshire and Cerdicesleag as Charford (Cerdic's Ford). The conquest of the Isle of Wight is also mentioned among his campaigns, and it was later given to his kinsmen, Stuf and Wihtgar (who had supposedly arrived with the West Saxons in 514). Cerdic is said to have died in 534 and was succeeded by his son Cynric. The early history of Wessex in the Chronicle has been considered unreliable, with duplicate reports of events and seemingly contradictory information. David Dumville has suggested that Cerdic's true regnal dates are 538–554. Some scholars suggest that Cerdic was the Saxon leader defeated by the Britons at the Battle of Mount Badon, which was probably fought in 490 (and possibly later, but not later than 518). This cannot be the case if Dumville is correct, and others assign this battle to Ælle or another Saxon leader, so it appears likely that the origins of the kingdom of Wessex are more complex than the version provided by the surviving traditions. Some scholars have gone so far as to suggest that Cerdic is purely a legendary figure, and had no actual existence, but this is a minority view. However, the earliest source for Cerdic, the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, was put together in the late ninth century; though it probably does record the extant tradition of the founding of Wessex, the intervening four hundred years mean that the account cannot be assumed to be accurate. Descent from Cerdic became a necessary criterion for later kings of Wessex, and Egbert of Wessex, progenitor of the English royal house and subsequent rulers of England and Britain, claimed him as an ancestor. His name is British, though there is no evidence to explain why.
- National Identification: Anglo Saxon.
- Alt. Burial: Tradition states that Cerdic was buried at Cerdicesbeorg, a former barrow at Stoke near Hurstbourne in the north west corner of Hampshire, which is mentioned in an 11th century charter.
- Cerdic is identified as the son of Elessa and Isaive: (Date and Place unknown)
- Death: 11 SEP 534, Wessex
- Burial: SEP 534, Cerdicesbeorg, Hampshire, England
Ancestors of Cerdic of WESSEX
/-Beldeg Odinsson DE WESTPHALIA
/-Brand of West SAXONY
| | /-Nep GEWAR
| \-Nanna Verch GEWARSDATTER DESAXONY DENORWAY DESCANDINAVIA of Norway
| \-Baldar GEWAR
/-Frithugar Deira SAXONY
| | /-Nep GEWAR
| \-Nanna of SCANDINAVIA
| \-Baldar GEWAR
/-Frewin VAN SAKSEN
| \-Unknown Spouse of Frithugar Deira SAXONY
/-Uvigg FREAWINEASSON
| \-Unknown Spouse of Frewin VAN SAKSEN
/-Gewis VON SAXON
| \-Wig SAXON
/-Esla GEWISSON
| | /-Brendius of SCANDINAVIA
| | /-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
Descendants of Cerdic of WESSEX
1 Cerdic of WESSEX
=Anafleda spouse of Cerdic of WESSEX
2 Creoda Cerdicsson of WESSEX
=Hengist WESSEX
3 Cynric of WESSEX
=Unknown Spouse of Cynric of WESSEX Marriage: Wessex, England
3 Chetwulf CERDICING
Ancestors of Chelwald son of Cuthwulf de Clarede of WESSEX
/-Frewin VAN SAKSEN
/-Uvigg FREAWINEASSON
| \-Unknown Spouse of Frewin VAN SAKSEN
/-Gewis VON SAXON
| \-Wig SAXON
/-Esla GEWISSON
| | /-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
/-Cuthwulf de Clarede of WESSEX
| \-Unknown Spouse of Cuthwine of WESSEX
Chelwald son of Cuthwulf de Clarede of WESSEX
| /-Clemen AP BLEDRIC of Dumnonia
\-Gwynhafar of DUMNONIA
- Father: Cerdic of WESSEX
- Mother: Anafleda spouse of Cerdic of WESSEX
- Birth: 493, Wessex, England
- Also known as: Prince Creoda Crioda of Wessex
- Also known as: Prince Creoda Crioda of Wessex
- LifeSketch: Creoda of Wessex, identified by some sources as the son of Cerdic and father of Cynric. Unfortunately he is not mentioned in all sources, and sources that do identify him often contradict themselves. This makes his existence questionable. As a result most modern sources simply omit Creoda and identify Cynric as the son of Cerdic. ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Creoda (? died 534) is a shadowy figure from early Wessex history whose existence is disputed. The name Creoda appears in the Genealogical Regnal List that serves as preface to some manuscripts of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, where he is stated to have been the son of Cerdic and father to Cynric. However, the main annalistic section of the Chronicle omits any mention of Creoda, and describe Cynric as the son of Cerdic. Similar contradiction occurs in surviving copies of the now-lost The Life of King Alfred, which Asser commenced with a paternal ancestry of Alfred the Great that includes the name Creoda between Cerdic and Cynric,[1] but the following section relating Alfred's maternal ancestry calls Cynric the son of Cerdic. If he existed, he may have ruled Wessex for a short period of time immediately after Cerdic's death. Conflicting theories If the historical existence of Creoda is admitted, there are a number of theories as to his identity and why he appears in some primary sources, but not others. His inclusion in the genealogies was original, and his name was removed from some lists at a late date for dynastic and political reasons.[2] He was a contemporary of Cerdic and Cynric, but ruled the Thames Valley Saxons, while they ruled the Hampshire Saxons. He is seen as the ancestor of the later kings: Ceawlin, Caedwalla and Ine. At some late date Creoda was inserted into the Cerdicing line as the son of Cerdic, when descent from Cerdic became necessary for any king of Wessex.[3] Creoda has been confused with Cerdic and some of Cerdic's later activities have been misassigned in the texts, and were originally those of Creoda and Cynric.[4] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Creoda_of_Wessex
- Death: 534, Wessex, England
Ancestors of Creoda Cerdicsson of WESSEX
/-Beldeg Odinsson DE WESTPHALIA
/-Brand of West SAXONY
| | /-Nep GEWAR
| \-Nanna Verch GEWARSDATTER DESAXONY DENORWAY DESCANDINAVIA of Norway
| \-Baldar GEWAR
/-Frithugar Deira SAXONY
| | /-Nep GEWAR
| \-Nanna of SCANDINAVIA
| \-Baldar GEWAR
/-Frewin VAN SAKSEN
| \-Unknown Spouse of Frithugar Deira SAXONY
/-Uvigg FREAWINEASSON
| \-Unknown Spouse of Frewin VAN SAKSEN
/-Gewis VON SAXON
| \-Wig SAXON
/-Esla GEWISSON
| | /-Brendius of SCANDINAVIA
| | /-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
Descendants of Creoda Cerdicsson of WESSEX
1 Creoda Cerdicsson of WESSEX
=Hengist WESSEX
2 Cynric of WESSEX
=Unknown Spouse of Cynric of WESSEX Marriage: Wessex, England
3 Ceawlin of WESSEX
=Unknown Spouse of Ceawlin of WESSEX Marriage: 560, Wessex
3 Cutha AP CYNRIC of Wessex
3 Cenberht of WESSEX
2 Chetwulf CERDICING
- Father: Ceawlin of WESSEX
- Mother: Unknown Spouse of Ceawlin of WESSEX
- Birth: 564, Wessex, Gloucestershire, England
- Also known as: Cuthwine Ceawlinsson
- Also known as: Cuthwine ap Ceawlin of Wessex
- Also known as: Cuthwine ap Ceawlin of Wessex
- Also known as: Cuthwine ap Ceawlin of Wessex
- FATHER KING CEAWLIN DEPOSED BY CEOL AND WHOLE FAMILY EXILED FROM WESSEX: In 592 Cuthwine's cousin attacked Wessex, overtook the throne and forced Cuthwin's father King Ceawlin and their entire branch of the family into exile., 592, Woden's Barrow, Wessex
- NEGOTIATION OF PENDA AND CENWALH: Cuthwine and his sons are recorded as having been present at the negotiations of King Penda of Mercia and King Cenwalh of Wessex in 648, it is believed Curhwine likely helped facilitate Cenwalh's return to the throne., 648, Wessex
- Affiliation: House of Cerdic, House of Wessex
- Title Of Nobility: Prince of Wessex
- NOT TO BE CONFUSED WITH CUTHWINE BISHOP OF DUNWICH: Not the same parson, same given name but one was a prince the other a bishop, lived about 100 years apart.
- LifeSketch: Cuthwine was the son of King Ceawlin of Wessex, born in 565, five years into his fathers reign of the West Saxons. He was a grandson of Cynric, the son of Cerdic, the first of the Saxons to come across the sea from Germany. A prince of the House of Wessex. Cuthwine is sometimes identified as Cutha but should not be confused with his Uncle Cutha, brother of Ceawlin. In his princely years, before the death of his father, Cuthwine was a commander of his fathers armies. During this time he had at least 3 sons: - Cynebald, born about 585 - Cedda, born about 590 - Cuthwulf, born about 592 The name of their mother is not recorded, it is possible that she died in the tumult surrounding his family's flight into exile. In 592, when Cuthwine was 27, his cousin Ceol attacked the Kingdom of Wessex. The Battle of Woden's Barrow was described as a great slaughter. Ceol deposed his uncle King Ceawlin, and drove Ceawlin's entire family out of Wessex into exile. Cuthwine and his young sons were among those forced to flee. Cuthwine was the rightful heir of King Ceawlin, had he not been deposed by Ceol, Cuthwine would have eventually become King of Wessex. Cuthwine's father Ceawlin, and his uncles Cwichelm and Crida all died in exile in 593, under unclear circumstances, possibly eradicated by Ceol. Although not king, Cuthwine remained a powerful leader of his people and protector of his family. Ceol died in 597 and the throne of Wessex passed to his brother Ceolwulf who ruled until 611 when he was succeeded by Cynegils who was in turn succeeded by his son Cenwalh. Cuthwine survived Ceol, Ceolwulf and Cynegils and appears to have been at peace with Cenwalh. In 645 King Penda of Mercia evicted Cenwalh from Wessex and ruled there as king for 3 years. It is believed that during this time Cuthwine possibly acted as a member of the ruling body of Wessex, subservient to Penda. And in 648 Cuthwine and his sons were present at the negotiations between Penda and Cenwalh and aided Cenwalh in regaining his throne. It is not known when exactly Cuthwine died, he became a legendary figure and continued to be mentioned in Wessex long passed the time when he could have lived. While Cuthwine never became king his great-grandsons: Caedwalla and Ine both became kings of Wessex.
- Other: 1 APR 1925, World Misc
- Other: 1 APR 1925, World Misc
- Death: 593, Barberry Hill, Gloucestershire, England
- Burial: Barbary Hill, Falmouth, Cornwall, England
Ancestors of Cuthwine of WESSEX
/-Brand of West SAXONY
/-Frithugar Deira SAXONY
| \-Nanna of SCANDINAVIA
/-Frewin VAN SAKSEN
| \-Unknown Spouse of Frithugar Deira SAXONY
/-Uvigg FREAWINEASSON
| \-Unknown Spouse of Frewin VAN SAKSEN
/-Gewis VON SAXON
| \-Wig SAXON
/-Esla GEWISSON
| | /-Brendius of SCANDINAVIA
| | /-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
Descendants of Cuthwine of WESSEX
1 Cuthwine of WESSEX
=Unknown Spouse of Cuthwine of WESSEX
2 Cuthwulf de Clarede of WESSEX
=Gwynhafar of DUMNONIA Marriage: ABT 620, Wessex
3 Ceolwald of WESSEX
=Fafertach INGEN FIGUINE
3 Chelwald son of Cuthwulf de Clarede of WESSEX
2 Ceadda PRINCE of Wessex
2 Cynebald OF WESSEX
- Father: Cuthwine of WESSEX
- Mother: Unknown Spouse of Cuthwine of WESSEX
- Birth: 584, England
- Also known as: Cutha of Wessex
- Also known as: Cuthwulf Cuthwinesson
- Also known as: Cutha Cuthwinesson
- Also known as: Cuthwulf ap Cuthwine
- Also known as: Cuthwulf of the West Saxons
- Also known as: Cathwulf
- Also known as: Clarke CLERKE De Clarede
- Also known as: Clarke CLERKE De Clarede
- Also known as: Cathwulf
- Also known as: Cuthwulf of the West Saxons
- Also known as: Cuthwulf ap Cuthwine
- Also known as: Cutha Cuthwinesson
- Also known as: Cuthwulf Cuthwinesson
- Also known as: Clarke CLERKE De Clarede
- Also known as: Cuthwulf of the West Saxons
- Also known as: Cathwulf
- Also known as: Cutha Cuthwinesson
- Also known as: Cuthwulf Cuthwinesson
- Also known as: Cuthwulf ap Cuthwine
- Also known as: Clarke CLERKE De Clarede
- Also known as: Cuthwulf of the West Saxons
- Also known as: Cathwulf
- Also known as: Cutha Cuthwinesson
- Also known as: Cuthwulf Cuthwinesson
- Also known as: Cuthwulf ap Cuthwine
- GRANDFATHER DETHRONED AND FAMILY FLED WESSEX: In June 592 Cuthwulf's grandfather Ceawlin, King of Wessex, lost the throne and the entire family fled into exile. Cuthwulf is believed to have been born shortly before this and would have been but a newborn infant at the time. It is believed that his mother possibly died in the tumult surrounding the loss of the throne and the family's flight into exile.
- Affiliation: House of Cerdic, House of Wessex
- NOT THE SAME AS CUTHA SON OF CYNRIC: Cutha(Cuthwulf) son of Cynric, was his great-uncle, brother of his grandfather, he was probably named after him.
- LifeSketch: Cuthwulf also sometimes Cutha (fl. 592-648) was the third son of Cuthwine and consequently a member of the House of Wessex. Although a member of the direct male line from Cynric to Egbert, (see House of Wessex family tree), Cathwulf was never king. He is said to have been born in c. 592 and his death date is unknown. His brothers were Cynebald and Cedda; his son was Ceolwald of Wessex; nothing more of his life is known. Due to the similarity of his name to his father's name, and the shadowy nature of early Anglo-Saxon genealogies, it appears that he was often confused with his father Cuthwine. For example, Caedwalla was said to be the son of Cedda and the grandson of Cutha, where Cutha here presumably refers to Cuthwine, since Cedda is also said to be the brother of Cuthwulf. Early life Edit Cuthwulf was born in tumultuous times. He was the third son of Cuthwine, son of Ceawlin, son of Cynric, the son of Cerdic, the first of the Saxons to come across the sea from Germany; and he and his people were still relatively out of place in a world dominated by the Britons. He was born in the final year of his father's time as prince of the Saxons. Ceawlin lost the throne of Wessex in June 592. The annal for that year in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle reads, at least in part: “Here there was great slaughter at Woden’s Barrow, and Ceawlin was driven out.” Woden’s Barrow is a tumulus, now called Adam’s Grave, at Alton Priors, Wiltshire. His opponent was Ceol, the next king of Wessex, who ruled for six years. The origins of the battle are unclear; it is probable that nothing more than greed and a lust for power motivated Ceol. Cuthwine, then twenty-seven, was a commander in the fateful battle; but upon defeat, as the rightful heir to the throne, he fled the place along with his young sons. The following year (593) saw the deaths of Ceawlin and all his brothers in unclear circumstances, although most likely in another battle. Cuthwine escaped from this defeat also, and went into exile to the east with his young family. If Ceol and Ceolwulf made efforts to eradicate the members of the original branch of the ruling family, they were unsuccessful. At any rate the Cuthwines remained at large during this period, far from fugitives after the first few years of their supposed exile. Ceol, described as a ruthless leader, was a son of another prince called Cutha (the brother of Ceawlin and a son of Cynric) and hence a cousin of Cuthwine; and Ceolwulf, his brother, reigned for seventeen years after him. Great fragmentation of control among the West Saxons occurred at this time: Ceol and Ceolwulf were in control of Wiltshire, as opposed to the upper Thames valley where Cuthwine and his household were almost certainly based. Cuthwulf had two brothers; Cynebald, born 585, and Cedda, born 590. The name of their mother is not recorded, but it is possible that she died in the tumult surrounding Cuthwine's flight into exile given that Cuthwine had no more children after that time. Later life Edit Details about the activities of Cuthwulf during most of his life in exile are very hard to come by. He and his brothers remained in a powerful position throughout the reign of Cynegils, son of Ceol; and then Cenwalh, son of Cynegils, became king. In the year 645 Penda of Mercia overran the kingdom (in return for Cenwalh's repudiation of Penda's sister) and was for three years king, sending Cenwalh into exile in East Anglia. Cuthwulf is recorded as having been present at the negotiations along with his brothers (although some sources say it was Cuthwine, which could of course mean his father), but little more is known of his activities. Nevertheless, much can be deduced. If this experienced prince was not the sole ruler of Wessex during the years of Cenwalh's exile (naturally in a subservient position to Penda) then it is likely that he was a member of the ruling body; but, given the tangled diplomacy of the times and his eastern power base, it is equally likely that he aided Cenwalh in his successful attempt to regain the throne in 648. After this, he appears infrequently as a shadowy figure, apparently already passing into legend among the common people as a result of his long-held position against the (at times) brutal role of Ceol and his family. He probably died sometime during the second period of Cenwalh's reign, as he would have been past eighty by the year 672 when Cenwalh died, and there are no records of him doing anything in the turbulent times succeeding Cenwalh's death. It seems inconceivable that he would have lived to see the reinstatement of his line to the throne of Wessex. This enigmatic prince and his long roster of descendants were not forgotten by the West Saxons, however. When the line of Ceol finally became extinct, first Caedwalla of Wessex and then Ine of Wessex became king; the first a great-nephew, and the second a grandson of Cuthwulf. Nowadays he occurs in many places simply as one of a long list of names in the descent from Egbert back to the dawn of time, but it is thanks to him that this continuous descent can be traced at all. Family and move to Devon Edit In about the year 620 it appears that the upper Thames valley where the household of Cuthwulf was based became too small to comfortably hold the three brothers. As the youngest, Cuthwulf was the one who was forced to move - at any rate this is a sensible deduction given that he later turns up in what is now east Devon, on the western marches of Wessex and in constant conflict with Dumnonia. This was a Celtic tribe that inhabited Cornwall, although in Cuthwulf's time their sphere of influence was much greater, extending over most of what is now Devon as well. The chronology of English dominance over Cornwall is unclear, but inevitably at about this time Cornwall came into conflict with the westerly-expanding kingdom of Wessex. There are no recorded charters or legal agreements showing Cornwall as part of Wessex. Furthermore, there is little economic, military, social, cultural or archaeological evidence that Wessex established control over Cornwall, certainly not in those early days. The Britons in Dumnonia were cut off from their allies in Wales by Ceawlin of Wessex's victory at Dyrham in 577, but since sea travel was easier than land, the blow may not have been severe. Clemen ap Bledric is thought to have been king when the Britons fought the Battle of Beandun (possibly Bindon near Axmouth in east Devon) in 614. The battle site suggests that the Dumnonian army was invading Wessex using the Roman road eastward from Exeter to Dorchester and was intercepted by a West Saxon garrison marching south. The Flores Historiarum, attributed incorrectly to Matthew of Westminster, states that the Britons were still in possession of Exeter in 632, when it was bravely defended against Penda of Mercia until relieved by Cadwallon, who engaged and defeated the Mercians with "great slaughter to their troops". Geoffrey of Monmouth also details an account of the siege in his pseudo-historic Historia Brittonum, stating that Cadwallon made an alliance with the British nobility. From this circumstantial evidence comes further consolidation that the boundary between Wessex and Dumnonia ran through east Devon, more or less where Cuthwulf was based. A theory can thus be deduced; that Cuthwulf, unwelcome in the lands of his brothers or in the land closely controlled by the king Cynegils, was forced to move to the very edges of the kingdom. He and his people may even have been sent there in the hope that they would be killed by the Dumnonians. The date of the move is unclear, although if it was before 614 then Cuthwulf would have been the West Saxon commander at the Battle of Beandun mentioned above. This seems likely. It is known that Cuthwulf married a Dumnonian princess Gwynhafar, almost certainly a daughter of Clemen ap Bledric, as part of a (temporary, at least) alliance - probably the one mentioned above by Geoffrey of Monmouth, or maybe an earlier one. The marriage was perhaps unsuccessful, as he is believed to only have had one son, Ceolwald of Wessex.
- Death: 679, Kingdom of Wessex, England
Ancestors of Cuthwulf de Clarede 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
Cuthwulf de Clarede of WESSEX
\-Unknown Spouse of Cuthwine of WESSEX
Descendants of Cuthwulf de Clarede of WESSEX
1 Cuthwulf de Clarede of WESSEX
=Gwynhafar of DUMNONIA Marriage: ABT 620, Wessex
2 Ceolwald of WESSEX
=Fafertach INGEN FIGUINE
3 Cenred of WESSEX
=(Unknown)
2 Chelwald son of Cuthwulf de Clarede of WESSEX
- Father: Creoda Cerdicsson of WESSEX
- Mother: Hengist WESSEX
- Birth: 514, Wessex, England
- Also known as: King of West Saxons Cynric
- Also known as: King Cynric
- Also known as: Cynric Cerdicsson
- Also known as: Cynric ap Cerdic
- Also known as: Cynric Cerdicsson
- Also known as: King Cynric
- Also known as: Cynric ap Cerdic
- Also known as: Cynric ap Cerdic
- Also known as: King Cynric
- Also known as: Cynric Cerdicsson
- ARRIVED IN 495: Cerdic, and his son Cynric, landed with 5 ships in 495 at what is today Hampshire., 495, Hampshire, England
- Other: 520, Wessex,, England
- Title Of Nobility: King of Wessex, King of the Gewisse, King of the West Saxons
- Affiliation: House of Wessex, House of Cerdic, Cerdicingas, Cerdicing dynasty
- LifeSketch: Cynric /ˈkɪnˌrɪtʃ/ was King of Wessex from 534 to 560. Everything known about him comes from the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. There, he is stated to have been(both the son and/or grandson) of Cerdic, who is considered the founder of the kingdom of Wessex.[2] Some accounts cite that Cynric was (in the regnal list in the preface) the son of Cerdic's son, Creoda.[3] (This makes some sense in that Cynric would have been a one year old at the time the ships arrived in Anglia) Conquest The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle describes Cerdic and Cynric with five ships landing in the area around Southampton in 495.[4][5] According to the chronicle, the two are described as aristocratic "ealdormen" but only assumed rule over the Gewissae (as the West Saxons were known before the late 7th century) in 519.[6] This implies that Cynric was not a royal leader, and he and his father were only elevated to kingship when they allegedly conquered the heartlands of the future Wessex. Rule During his reign, as described in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, the Saxons expanded into Wiltshire against strong resistance and captured Searobyrig, or Old Sarum, near Salisbury, in 552. In 556, he and his son Ceawlin won a battle against the Britons at Beranburh, now identified as Barbury Castle.[7] If these dates are accurate, then it is unlikely that the earlier entries in the Chronicle, starting with his arrival in Britain with his father Cerdic in 495, are correct. David Dumville has suggested that his true regnal dates are 554–581.[8] Some note that Ceawlin's origin and his relationship with Cynric are obscure and that chroniclers merely suggested that they were relatives or that he was Cynric's son to legitimize the later Wessex lineage.[5] Etymology The name Cynric has a straightforward Old English etymology meaning "Kin-ruler". However, as some scholars have proposed that both his predecessor, Cerdic, and successor, Ceawlin, had Celtic names,[6] an alternative etymology has been postulated, deriving the name from Brittonic "Cunorix", meaning "Hound-king" (which developed into Cinir in Old Welsh, Kynyr in Middle Welsh).[9][10][11] He was succeeded by his son Ceawlin. Part of the House of Wessex. Not a royal leader. He was only elevated to kingship when he and his father conquered the heartlands of the future Wessex. Cynric means King-Ruler in Old English. The name could also derive from the Brittonic 'Cunorix' meaning 'Hound-King'. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cynric#Rule
- Death: 560, Kingdom of Wessex, Anglo-Saxon England
Ancestors of Cynric of WESSEX
/-Beldeg Odinsson DE WESTPHALIA
/-Brand of West SAXONY
| | /-Nep GEWAR
| \-Nanna Verch GEWARSDATTER DESAXONY DENORWAY DESCANDINAVIA of Norway
| \-Baldar GEWAR
/-Frithugar Deira SAXONY
| | /-Nep GEWAR
| \-Nanna of SCANDINAVIA
| \-Baldar GEWAR
/-Frewin VAN SAKSEN
| \-Unknown Spouse of Frithugar Deira SAXONY
/-Uvigg FREAWINEASSON
| \-Unknown Spouse of Frewin VAN SAKSEN
/-Gewis VON SAXON
| \-Wig SAXON
/-Esla GEWISSON
| | /-Brendius of SCANDINAVIA
| | /-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
Descendants of Cynric of WESSEX
1 Cynric of WESSEX
=Unknown Spouse of Cynric of WESSEX Marriage: Wessex, England
2 Ceawlin of WESSEX
=Unknown Spouse of Ceawlin of WESSEX Marriage: 560, Wessex
3 Cuthwine of WESSEX
=Unknown Spouse of Cuthwine of WESSEX
2 Cutha AP CYNRIC of Wessex
2 Cenberht of WESSEX
- Father: Edward the ELDER
- Mother: Ælfflæd OF WILTSHIRE
- Birth: ABT 901, Wessex, Devon, England
- Also known as: Edfleda
- Also known as: Ælfielda of Wessex
- Also known as: Princess Eadfled Wessex
- Occupation: Nun, Wilton Abbey, Wiltshire, Kingdom of Wessex
- LifeSketch: Eadflæd, oldest daughter and oldest child of King Edward the Elder and his second wife Ælfflæd. Eadflæd never married, she became a nun at Wilton Abbey as did her sister Æthelhild. "Around 919-920, Edward set aside Aelflaed and she became a nun at Wilton where she was joined by two of her daughters." - https://thefreelancehistorywriter.com/2014/03/07/eadgifu-anglo-saxon-queen/ --------------- The Foundation for Medieval Genealogy identifies her as the oldest daughter and oldest child of Edward the Elder and his second wife Ælfflæd King Edward "the Elder" & his second wife had [nine] children: 4. EDFLEDA (-bur Wilton Abbey, Wiltshire[1658]). William of Malmesbury names (in order) "Edfleda, Edgiva, Ethelhilda, Ethilda, Edgitha, Elfgiva" as the six daughters of King Eadweard & his wife "Elfleda", specifying that Edfleda became a nun[1659]. A manuscript which recounts the founding of Wilton Monastery, records that “rex Alrudus” (referring to Alfred King of Wessex) installed “Elfledæ infantis, et filiæ principis Edwardi senioris” at Wilton abbey[1660]. It is not known whether this refers to King Eadweard’s daughter Edfleda, but in any case the report must be anachronistic considering the date of death of King Alfred and the likely dates of birth of King Eadweard’s children. Nun, maybe at Winchester[1661]. https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ENGLAND,%20AngloSaxon%20&%20Danish%20Kings.htm#Edwarddied924B
- Oldest of Edward and Ælfflæd's 6 daughters: William of Malmesbury names (in order) "Edfleda, Edgiva, Ethelhilda, Ethilda, Edgitha, Elfgiva" as the six daughters of King Eadweard & his wife "Elfleda".
- NoCoupleRelationships: (Date and Place unknown)
- NoChildren: (Date and Place unknown)
- PLEASE BE CAREFUL WHEN MERGING!: Had 8 sisters, all with very similar names. Do not confuse them.
- Death: 927, Winchester, Hampshire, England
- Burial: 927, Wilton Abbey, Wilton, Wiltshire, England
Ancestors of Eadflæd of WESSEX
/-Cuthwulf de Clarede of WESSEX
/-Ceolwald of WESSEX
| \-Gwynhafar of DUMNONIA
/-Cenred of WESSEX
| | /-Figuine mac Laoghaire of MUMHAN
| \-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
| | /-Eadbeald Oiscingas 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
/-Æthelwulf of WESSEX
| \-Rædburhg of Francia
/-Alfred of WESSEX
| \-Osburhga of Wessex
/-Edward the ELDER
| \-Ealhswith of Mercia
Eadflæd of WESSEX
\-Ælfflæd OF WILTSHIRE
- Father: Edward the ELDER
- Mother: Ælfflæd OF WILTSHIRE
- Birth: 902, Wessex, England
- Also known as: Eadgifu, Eadgyfu, Edgiva or Ogive of Wessex
- FIRST MARRIAGE TO KING CHARLES III OF FRANCE: 919
- CHARLES II DEPOSED AS KING OF FRANCE: JUN 922
- HUSBAND CHARLES III CAPTURED AND IMPRISONED: Charles III was taken prisoner by Count Herbert II of Vermandois in 923 and imprisoned until his death., ABT JUL 923, Château-Thierry, Aisne, Picardie, France
- FLED TO ENGLAND: After her husband King Charles III of France was deposed in 922, Eadgifu took her infant son Louis, and the other royal children, to England in 923, to the protection of her half-brother, King Æthelstan of England, ABT JUL 923, Wessex
- CHARLES III DIED IN CAPTIVITY: 7 OCT 929, Péronne, Péronne, Somme, Picardie, France
- ACCOMPANIED LOUIS IV IN HIS RETURN TO FRANCE TO BECOME KING: Louis IV was recalled to France in 936 by Hugh the Great to become King, his mother Eadgifu accompanied him and witnessed his coronation.
- AFTER LOUIS MARRIED, EADGIFU RETIRED TO CONVENT IN LAON: Louis IV married Gerberga of Saxony in 939, sometime after that Eadgifu retired from court and took up residence at a convent in Laon., AFT 939, Laon-Nord, Laon, Aisne, Picardie, France
- SECOND MARRIAGE TO HERBERT III COUNT OF OMOIS: Married the son of the man that imprisoned her husband and caused her to flee France in 923
- ABDUCTED FOR LOVE: In 951, Heribert the Old, Count of Omois, abducted and married her, to the great anger of her son Louis IV of France, 951, Laon-Nord, Laon, Aisne, Picardie, France
- 2nd of Edward and Ælfflæd's 6 daughters: William of Malmesbury names (in order) "Edfleda, Edgiva, Ethelhilda, Ethilda, Edgitha, Elfgiva" as the six daughters of King Eadweard & his wife "Elfleda".
- Title Of Nobility: Princess of Wessex, Queen of the West Franks, Dowager Queen Mother of the West Franks, Countess of Omois.
- LifeSketch: Ēadgifu (also Edgifu, Edgiva or Ogive) was daughter of Edward the Elder, King of the Anglo-Saxons, and his second wife Ælfflæd. She was born in Wessex about 902. Eadgifu married King Charles III "le Simple" King of the Franks in 919, becoming his second wife. Eadgifu and Charles had one child, Charles' only legitimate son, Louis IV of France. In 922 King Charles III was deposed, after being defeated at the Battle of Soissons in 923, he was taken prisoner by Count Herbert II of Vermandois, an ally of the then current King Robert I. To protect her son's safety, Eadgifu took Louis and the rest of the royal children to England in 923 to the court of her half-brother, King Æthelstan of England. Because of this, Louis IV of France became known as Louis d'Outremer and Louis Transmarinus of France, both names meaning "from overseas". Eadgifu became a widow in 929 when her husband, former king Charles III of France, died still in captivity. Eadgifu's son Louis stayed in Wessex until 936, when he was called back to France by his uncle Hugh the Great to be crowned King. Eadgifu accompanied him. Eadgifu remained part of her son's court until Louis married Gerberga of Saxony in 939. After the marriage Eadgifu turned royal responsibilities over to Louis's wife and retired to a convent in Laon. In 951, Herbert the Old, Count of Omois, 'abducted' and married Eadgifu, to the great anger of her son. Ironically Herbert was the son of the man who captured and caused the death of Eadgifu's first husband Charles. Herbert and Eadgifu remained married until death parted them. They had no children together. Herbert survived her and lived until about 985. The Foundation for Medieval Genealogy records: EADGIFU ([902/05]-26 Sep after 951, bur Abbaye de Saint-Médard de Soissons). William of Malmesbury names (in order) "Edfleda, Edgiva, Ethelhilda, Ethilda, Edgitha, Elfgiva" as the six daughters of King Eadweard & his wife "Elfleda", specifying that Edgiva married "king Charles"[1663]. The Book of Hyde names "Edgivam" as second of the six daughters of King Eadweard by his first wife "Elfelmi comitis filia Elfleda", specifying that she married "Karolo regi Francorum filio Lodowyci"[1664]. Her birth date range is estimated from the birth of Eadgifu's son in [920/21]. If this is correct, Eadgifu must have been one of King Edward's oldest children by his second marriage. She fled with her two-year-old son to England in 923 after her first husband was deposed. She returned to France in 936. Abbess of Notre Dame de Laon, until 951. Flodoard records in 951 that “Ottogeba regina mater Ludowici regis” married “Heriberti...Adalberti fratris” and that “rex Ludowicus iratus” confiscated “abbatiam sanctæ Mariæ...Lauduni” from her and donated it to “Gerbergæ uxori suæ”[1665]. Married firstly ([917/19]) as his second wife, CHARLES III "le Simple" King of the Franks, son of LOUIS II "le Bègue" King of the West Franks & his second wife Adélaïde [d'Angoulême] (posthumously 17 Sep 879-Péronne 7 Oct 929, bur Péronne St Fursy). Married secondly (951) HERIBERT [III] Comte "le Vieux" [de Vermandois], son of HERIBERT [II] Comte de Vermandois & his wife Adela [Capet] ([910/15]-[980/984]). He succeeded his brother Robert in 967 as Comte de Meaux et de Troyes. https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ENGLAND,%20AngloSaxon%20&%20Danish%20Kings.htm#Eadgifudiedafter951
- Death: AFT 955, Soissons, Picardie, Aisne, France
- Burial: AFT 955, Abbaye de Saint-Médard de Soissons, Picardie, Aisne, France
Ancestors of Eadgifu of WESSEX
/-Cuthwulf de Clarede of WESSEX
/-Ceolwald of WESSEX
| \-Gwynhafar of DUMNONIA
/-Cenred of WESSEX
| | /-Figuine mac Laoghaire of MUMHAN
| \-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
| | /-Eadbeald Oiscingas 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
/-Æthelwulf of WESSEX
| \-Rædburhg of Francia
/-Alfred of WESSEX
| \-Osburhga of Wessex
/-Edward the ELDER
| \-Ealhswith of Mercia
Eadgifu of WESSEX
\-Ælfflæd OF WILTSHIRE
- Father: Eoppa OF WESSEX
- Mother: Edwina OF KENT
- Birth: 732, Wessex Kingdom, England
- Also known as: Eaba
- Also known as: Eaffa
- Also known as: Eaffa
- Also known as: Eaffa
- Also known as: Eaffa
- Other: 770, Wessex,, England
- Title Of Nobility: Ealdorman of Wessex
- EFFA OF WESSEX NOT THE SAME AS OFFA, KING OF MERCIA: Effa was an Ealdorman from Kent, the son of Eoppa and father of Ealhmund. Oppa was a King of Mercia, son of Thingfrith and father of Ecgfrith.
- LifeSketch: Eafa was an Ealdorman of Wessex who lived 732 to 790 in Anglo-Saxon England. Eafa was the son of Eoppa, who was son of Ingild, who was brother of King Ine, King of Wessex, and both were sons of Cenred. Eafa himself was not ever king, he was of royal descent from Cerdic (of Wessex) and it is believed his wife was of the Royal House of Kent, which enabled his son Ealhmund to become King of Kent after King Ecgberht II and King Heaberht, who ruled jointly. The name of Eafa's wife, the princess of Kent, is not known with certainty. Eafa is not listed among the monarchs of Kent https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_monarchs_of_Kent He is also not listed among the monarchs of Wessex https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_monarchs_of_Wessex Eafa's family tree and how he descends from Cerdic can be seen at the above link to the Monarchs of Wessex. IT IS IMPORTANT TO NOTE: EAFA/EFFA IS NOT THE SAME AS OPPA, KING OF MERCIA. Effa was of Wessex, the son of Eoppa, father of Ealhmund, grandfather of Ecgberht. While Oppa was KING of MERCIA, he was the son of Thingfrith, and the father of Ecgfrith. ----------------- Eafa's son Ealhmund was King of Kent in 784. He is believed to have been deposed by King Offa of Mercia by 785. Later the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle states that "the Kentishmen … formerly … had been wrongly forced away from their allegiance to [Ecgberht King of Wessex's] kinsmen". This kinsman presumably being his father Ealhmund. In 789 Ealhmund's son Ecgberht (Eafa's grandson) challenged Beorhtric for rulership of Wessex but was defeated. Beorhtric with the help of King Offa of Mercia (his father in law) forced Ecgberht into exile in Francia for 3 or 13 years (the records are unclear). It is likely that Ealhmund died in 785 or before when Offa took control of Kent. It is possible that Ealhmund fled with his son Ecgberht to France in 789 but there is no mention of him after 784 so he likely died sometime in 784. There is also no mention of Eafa in either of their records, except as their ancestor. It is therefore likely that Eafa died before 784 when Ealhmund became king. 13 years after his exile, after the death of both Offa (in 796) and Beorhtric (in 802) Ecgberht returned and became king of the West Saxons (Wessex), probably in 802. In 825, Ecgberht defeated king Beornwulf of Mercia in battle, and his army (in the command of his son) drove out king Baldred of Kent. Ecgberht then became King of Kent, Sussex, Surrey, and Essex. Finally in 829 Ecgberht conquered King Wiglaf of Mercia and became King of Mercia, he also received the submission of Northumbria. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle names him as "Brytenwealda" meaning "Wide Ruler". Ecgberht began a period of West Saxon supremacy and the kingdom of the West Saxons gradually became the kingdom of England. Eafa's descendants would rule Wessex and the Kingdom of England until the death of King Edward the Confessor in 1066. His bloodline continued on in Queen Margaret of Scotland, wife of Malcolm III, and he is a distant ancestor of todays British Royal Family, the House of Windsor.
- Death: Wessex, Berkshire, England
- Burial: Wessex
Ancestors of Eafa Ealdorman of WESSEX
/-Aelle Ella of ELISENS
/-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
/-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
Descendants of Eafa Ealdorman of WESSEX
1 Eafa Ealdorman of WESSEX
=Unknown Spouse of Eafa Ealdorman of WESSEX Marriage: ABT 750, Wessex
2 Ealhmund of KENT
=Unknown Spouse of Ealhmund of KENT
3 Ecgberht of WESSEX
=Rædburhg of Francia Marriage: ABT 795, Wessex
3 Æthelburh OF WILTON
- Father: Ealhmund of KENT
- Mother: Unknown Spouse of Ealhmund of KENT
- Birth: ABT 775, Wessex
- Also known as: Ecgbert "the Great" King of Wessex
- Also known as: Ecgberht Ealhmundsson
- Also known as: Ecgberht fitz Ealhmund
- Also known as: Ecgbert
- Also known as: Ecgbriht
- Also known as: Ecgbeorht
- Also known as: Ecgbeorht
- Also known as: Ecgbriht
- Also known as: Ecgberht fitz Ealhmund
- Also known as: Ecgberht Ealhmundsson
- Also known as: Ecgberht fitz Ealhmund
- Also known as: Ecgberht Ealhmundsson
- Also known as: Ecgbeorht
- Also known as: Ecgbriht
- FATHER KING OF KENT: In 784 Ecgberht's father was King of Kent, by 785 he had been dethroned by King Offa of Mercia., 784, Kent
- FLED FROM KENT TO WESSEX.: When Offa annexed the Kingdom of Kent circa 785, Ecgberht most likely was forced to flee to Wessex., 785, Wessex
- CHALLENGED THE THRONE OF WESSEX: King Cynewulf was murdered in 786. His succession was contested by Ecgberht, but he was defeated by Beorhtric., 786, Wessex
- EXILED FROM WESSEX: In 789 Ecgberht was forced out of Wessex by King Beorhtric of Wessex and King Offa of Mercia. Ecgberht went to Francia and the court of Charlemagne, where he learned the Art of Governing.
- Title Of Nobility: King of Wessex, 802, Wessex
- Bretenanwealda: After conquering Mercia Ecgberht was given the title of Bretenanwealda or 'Britain-ruler' wide -ruler of Britain, only the 8th to be given the title.
- Alt. Death: Winchester Castle, Winchester, Hampshire, England
- LifeSketch: Ecgberht (also Egbert, Ecgbert, Ecgbriht, Ecgbeorht) Bretwalda and King of Wessex and Kent, was the son of King Ealhmund of Kent. The name of his mother is not known but he was likely born about 770 in Kent. Ecgberht's father, Ealhmund, King of Kent in 784, was dethroned by Offa of Mercia in 785, and Ecgberht likely fled to Wessex. In 786 Cynewulf, King of Wessex, was murdered and Beorhtric became king. Ecgberht contested the succession but was defeated by Beorhtric. In 789 Beorhtric, and his father in law, Offa of Mercia, drove Ecgberht out of Wessex completely, into exile in Francia at the court of Charlemagne. Charlemagne was also an enemy of Offa. Ecgberht spent 3 or 13 years there (experts do not agree) and while there learned how to govern from Charlemagne. While in France he is also believed to have married. A fifteenth-century chronicle identifies Ecgberht's wife as Redburga, a relative of Charlemagne. Other scholars dispute this. Regardless of her name, Ecgberht and his wife had 2, possibly 3** children: - Æthelwulf, who eventually succeeded his father as King of Wessex. - Edith, who became abbess of Polesworth Abbey. Her existence is confirmed by monastery records which name her as daughter of Ecgberht and sister of Æthelwulf. ** A 3 child, a son Æthelstan (fl. 839-851) is sometimes identified as Ecgberht's son and at others as his grandson, the son of Æthelwulf. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle versions A, B, and C identify Æthelstan as a son of Æthelwulf (therefore Ecgberht's grandson), while versions D, E, and F make Æthelstan the "other" son of Ecgberht. The chronicler Æthelweard clearly states that Æthelstan was a son of Æthelwulf, as does William of Malmesbury and John of Worcester. Æthelstan appears in charters from 839 to 850. Most of those charters do not identify his paternity, but the few that do identify him as the son of Æthelwulf. Historians and scholars currently agree that he was more likely to have been the son of Æthelwulf and Ecgberht's grandson. ** In 802, 13 years after his exile, after the death of both Offa (in 796) and Beorhtric (in 802) Ecgberht returned and became king of the West Saxons (Wessex). It is believed Charlemagne assisted him in this. Upon the day of his succession, Wessex was attacked by the Hwicce, lead by an ealdorman named Æthelmund. Hwicce was at that time part of Mercia. Ecgberht's brother in law Wulfstan, husband of his sister Alburga, rode out to oppose them with an army of Wiltshiremen. The Hwicce were defeated and Æthelmund was killed, unfortunately, Wulfstan was killed as well. Ecgberth's sister Alburga, now widowed, turned the college of canons that her husband had established in 773, Wilton Abbey, into a Benedictine convent and retired there as Abbess. Not much is known of the 1st 20 years of Ecgberht's reign. Cenwulf King of Mercia had overlordship of the rest of southern England, but apparently this did not include Wessex. It is believed Wessex maintained its independence. In 825, Ecgberht defeated king Beornwulf of Mercia in battle. This is considered one of the most important battles in Anglo-Saxon history, for it marks the end of the Mercian Supremacy in southern England. Next Ecgberht's army, in the command of his son Æthelwulf, drove King Baldred of Kent out of his kingdom, and the men of Kent, Essex, Surrey and Sussex then all submitted to Æthelwulf "because earlier they were wrongly forced away from his relatives." 40 years after Ecgberht's father Ealhmund lost the throne of Kent, his son Ecgberht and grandson Æthelwulf regained control of the Kentish kingdom, plus so much more. In addition to Wessex, Ecgberht became King of Kent, Sussex, Surrey, and Essex, with Æthelwulf as sub-king in Kent. Finally in 829 Ecgberht conquered King Wiglaf of Mercia, becoming King of Mercia. This gave Ecgberht control of the London Mint, and he issued coins as the King of Mercia. Lastly he forced Northumbria into submission. After this the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle names him as "Brytenwealda" meaning "Wide Ruler" "Controller of Britain". With his widespread control of the entire region, Ecgberht began a period of West Saxon supremacy, a unification of kingdoms under the rule of the West Saxons that eventually became the kingdom of England. His control of Mercia did not last long, Wiglaf returned from exile in 830 and regained the throne of Mercia. However, Wessex retained control of the rest. In 838 at a council at Kingston upon Thames, Ecgberht and Æthelwulf granted land to the Sees of Winchester and Canterbury in return for the promise that they would support Æthelwulf's claim to the throne. Ecgberht died in 839, and Æthelwulf succeeded him. Ecgberht was buried in Winchester, what is now known as the Old Minster. His bone are today purported to be contained in a 16th-century mortuary chest in Winchester Cathedral. Ecgberht's will, according to the account of it found in the will of his grandson, Alfred the Great, left land only to male members of his family, so that the estates should not be lost to the royal house through marriage. Ecgberht's descendants would rule Wessex and the Kingdom of England until the death of King Edward the Confessor in 1066. His bloodline continued on in Queen Margaret of Scotland, wife of Malcolm III, and he is a distant ancestor of todays British Royal Family, the House of Windsor. ----------------------------------------------------- ** The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that Ecgberht spent three years in Francia before he was king, exiled by Beorhtric and Offa. The text says "iii" for three, but this may have been a scribal error, with the correct reading being "xiii", that is, thirteen years. Beorhtric's reign lasted sixteen years, and not thirteen; and all extant texts of the Chronicle agree on "iii", but many modern accounts assume that Ecgberht did indeed spend thirteen years in Francia. This requires assuming that the error in transcription is common to every manuscript of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle; many historians make this assumption but others have rejected it as unlikely, given the consistency of the sources. In either case Ecgberht was probably exiled in 789, when Beorhtric, his rival, married the daughter of Offa of Mercia **The chronicle (Hardy, Vol III, No. 326) describes Ecgberht's wife as "Redburga regis Francorum sororia" (sister or sister-in-law of the Frankish Emperor). Some nineteenth-century historians cited the manuscript to identify Redburga as Ecgberht's wife, such W. G. Searle in his 1897 Onomasticon Anglo-Saxonicum and (as Rædburh) in his 1899 Anglo-Saxon Bishops, Kings and Nobles. Other historians of that time were sceptical, such as William Hunt, who did not mention Redburga in his article about Ecgberht in the original Dictionary of National Biography in 1889 (Hunt, "Egbert", pp. 619–620). In the twentieth century, popular genealogists and historians have followed Searle in naming Redburga as Ecgberht's wife, but academic historians ignore her when discussing Ecgberht, and Janet Nelson's 2004 article on his son Æthelwulf in the Online Oxford Dictionary of National Biography states that his mother's name is unknown. ** Another Ecgberht, Ecgberht II of Kent, ruled Kent throughout the 770s; he is last mentioned in 779, in a charter granting land at Rochester. In 784 a new king of Kent, Ealhmund, appears in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. According to a note in the margin, "this king Ealhmund was Egbert's father [i.e. Ecgberht of Wessex], Egbert was Æthelwulf's father." This is supported by the genealogical preface from the A text of the Chronicle, which gives Ecgberht's father's name as Ealhmund without further details. The preface probably dates from the late ninth century; the marginal note is on the F manuscript of the Chronicle, which is a Kentish version dating from about 1100. ** The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle places Ecgbeorht's death in 836, but the chronicle's chronology is three years off at this point ["Her Ecgbryht cyning forþferde, ... & se Ecgbryht ricsode .xxxvii. wint. [&] .vii. monaþ." ASC(A) s.a. 836(=839)]. The Annals of St. Neots, which appear to be free of this chronological error, place his death in 839 ["mortuo Ecgbrychto rege nobili, ..." Ann. S. Neots, s.a. 839]. Ecgbeorht was still alive on 19 November 838. At a council of bishops at Astran in 839, Æthelwulf is stated to be in his first year after the death of his father ["Anno ab Incarnatione Christi DCCC.XXX.VIIII., Indictione II., primo videlicet anno regni Ethelwlfi regis post obitum patris sui, ..." Haddan-Stubbs (1869-78), 3: 624; Cart. Sax. 1: 594 (#421)]. This confirms directly that Ecgbeorht died in 838 or 839. The date can be refined further by calculating back from the eighteen and a half years which is given as the length of Æthelwulf's reign by the West Saxon Genealogical Regnal List and the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle ["... þa feng Æðelwulf his sunu to & heold .xviiii. healf gear" Dumville (1986), 24; "... & he ricsode nigonteoþe healf gear." ASC(A) 1: 66]. Æthelwulf died in 858 [Ann. Bertin., s.a. 858, p. 49; AU, s.a. 857 (=858)], so the beginning of his reign did not reach as early as 838, or even as early as the early part of 839. If John of Worcester is correct in placing Æthelwulf's death on 13 January, then Ecgbeorht probably died in the middle of the year 839. This information comes primarily from : The Henry Project: The Ancestors of King Henry II of England -Ecgbeorht https://fasg.org/projects/henryproject/data/egber000.htm and from Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecgberht,_King_of_Wessex
- Title Of Nobility: König von Wessex
- Title Of Nobility: King of Kent, 825, Kent, England
- Title Of Nobility: König von Mercia
- Title Of Nobility: King of Mercia
- Title Of Nobility: King of Wessex, Bretenanwealda
- Title Of Nobility: König von Wessex
- Title Of Nobility: King of Kent, 825, Kent, England
- Title Of Nobility: König von Mercia
- Title Of Nobility: King of Mercia
- Title Of Nobility: King of Wessex, Bretenanwealda
- Title Of Nobility: König von Wessex
- Title Of Nobility: King of Kent, 825, Kent, England
- Title Of Nobility: König von Mercia
- Title Of Nobility: King of Mercia
- Title Of Nobility: King of Wessex, Bretenanwealda
- Death: Winchester, Kingdom of Wessex
- Burial: 839, Winchester Abbey, Winchester, Kingdom of Wessex
Ancestors of Ecgberht of WESSEX
/-Creoda Cerdicsson of WESSEX
/-Cynric of WESSEX
| \-Hengist WESSEX
/-Ceawlin of WESSEX
| \-Unknown Spouse of Cynric of WESSEX
/-Cuthwine of WESSEX
| \-Unknown Spouse of Ceawlin of WESSEX
/-Cuthwulf de Clarede of WESSEX
| \-Unknown Spouse of Cuthwine of WESSEX
/-Ceolwald of WESSEX
| | /-Clemen AP BLEDRIC of Dumnonia
| \-Gwynhafar of DUMNONIA
/-Cenred of WESSEX
| | /-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
| | /-Oeirc HENGESTING
| | /-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
Descendants of Ecgberht of WESSEX
1 Ecgberht of WESSEX
=Rædburhg of Francia Marriage: ABT 795, Wessex
2 Æthelwulf of WESSEX
=Osburhga of Wessex Marriage: ABT 830 Marriage: ABT 826, Mercia, Wessex
3 Æthelstan of KENT
3 Æthelswith daughter of Æthelwulf of WESSEX
3 Æthelberht OF WESSEX
3 Æthelred of WESSEX
3 Alfred of WESSEX
=Ealhswith of Mercia Marriage: 868, Gainsborough, Lincolnshire, Kingdom of Mercia
=Ettielswitha spouse of Alfred of WESSEX
3 Æthelbald of WESSEX
=Judith DE FRANCE Marriage: 856
2 Edith PRINCESS OF WESSEX (Abbess Of Pellesworth)
2 Aethelwulf 0F WESSEX
- Father: Edward the ELDER
- Mother: Ecgwynn spouse of Edward the ELDER
- Birth: 898, Wessex, Devon, England
- Also known as: Edith Princess of England
- Also known as: Orgiue
- Also known as: Eadgyth
- Also known as: Ecgwynsdatter
- Also known as: Editha
- Also known as: Eadgyth Wessex
- Also known as: Mrs Sithric Queen Of Dublin And Northumberland
- Also known as: Edith, Abbess of Tamworth
- Also known as: Saint Eadgyth Of England
- Also known as: Saint Edith of Polesworth
- Title Of Nobility: Princess of Wessex
- LifeSketch: Edith was the daughter of King Edward the Elder and his first wife Ecgwynn. She was born about 898 in Wessex and had an older brother Æthelstan, King of England. She also had many younger half-siblings from her fathers additional marriages. She is believed to have married Sihtric, Viking King of York in 926, who died in 927. It is also believed by many that she is Saint Edith of Polesworth. Her name is also sometimes written as Eadgyth, Eadgifu and Origue. DO NOT CONFUSE HER WITH HER YOUNGER 1/2 SISTER EADGYTH/EDITH WHO MARRIED OTTO I, HOLY ROMAN EMPEROR Britain's Royal Families: The Complete Genealogy By Alison Weir, identifies her as the daughter of "King Edward, known as 'the Elder' and his first wife Egwina. The sister of King Athelstan " Names her as "St Edith" and says "She married Sihtric Coach, King of Northumbria (d 927), on 30 January, 925/6, at Tamworth, Statffordshire. After her widowhood, she became a nun at Polesworth Abbey, Warwickshire, in 927. That same year, she was transferred to Tamworth Abbey, Gloucestershire, where she was immediately elected Abbess. She died in c. 927. After her death, she was canonised, and her Feast Day in 15 July." The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle also records her marriage to Sitric in 926. Because of the way in which the calendar was then calculated January 30 925 is actually what we now call January 30 926. The year did not change then until March 25. So March 24th was then written as 925 but March 25th was 926. Therefore the dates January 1 through March 23th are often written as a double year, January 30 925/26. Some sources identify Edith as childless others state she is the likely mother of Amlaíb mac Sitric (also known as Olaf Sitricsson). If he was born after Sitric's marriage to Edith she is likely his mother. If born prior to 926 she is not. As his exact date of birth is not known with certainty, we do not know with certainty if Edith was or was not his mother.
- Canonised as St Edith of Polesworth: (Date and Place unknown)
- Death: Tamworth, Staffordshire, England
- Burial: 927, Tamworth Abbey, Gloucestershire, England
Ancestors of Edith of WESSEX
/-Cuthwulf de Clarede of WESSEX
/-Ceolwald of WESSEX
| \-Gwynhafar of DUMNONIA
/-Cenred of WESSEX
| | /-Figuine mac Laoghaire of MUMHAN
| \-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
| | /-Eadbeald Oiscingas 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
/-Æthelwulf of WESSEX
| \-Rædburhg of Francia
/-Alfred of WESSEX
| \-Osburhga of Wessex
/-Edward the ELDER
| \-Ealhswith of Mercia
Edith of WESSEX
\-Ecgwynn spouse of Edward the ELDER
- Father: Edgar the PEACEFUL
- Mother: Ælfthryth OF DEVON
- Birth: 966, Wessex
- Also known as: Edmund "clito legitimus" of Wessex
- Also known as: Prince Edmund of Wessex
- "CLITO LEGITIMUS": In the face of legitimacy questions regarding his previous children, King Edgar felt it necessary to make it well understood that his son Edmund, born to his marriage with Ælfthryth, was his legitimate ætheling and had him officially named as "clito legitimus", 966, Wessex
- Title Of Nobility: Prince
- NoCoupleRelationships: (Date and Place unknown)
- NoChildren: (Date and Place unknown)
- LifeSketch: Prince Edmund of Wessex was the oldest son of King Edgar the Peaceful and his 3rd wife Ælfthryth. He was born in 966 and that same year was identified as "clito legitimus" (legitimate ætheling) in a charter (S 745) regranting privileges to New Minster, Winchester. Although but an infant Edmund's name appears before that of his older 1/2 brother, Edward, in the list of witnesses. Edmund was the older, full brother of Æthelred, who was born in 968. Edmund died young, about 970, at the age of 3 or 4. "Ego Eadmund clito legitimus prefati regis filius crucis signaculum infantili florens etate propria indidi manu " - charter S745 https://esawyer.lib.cam.ac.uk/charter/745.html#
- Death: 970, Wessex
Ancestors of Edmund Ætheling Prince of WESSEX
/-Cenred of WESSEX
/-Ingild OF WESSEX
/-Eoppa OF WESSEX
| \-Nothgyth of SUSSSX
/-Eafa Ealdorman of WESSEX
| \-Edwina OF KENT
/-Ealhmund of KENT
| | /-Egbert 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
/-Æthelwulf of WESSEX
| \-Rædburhg of Francia
/-Alfred of WESSEX
| \-Osburhga of Wessex
/-Edward the ELDER
| \-Ealhswith of Mercia
/-Edmund the MAGNIFICENT
| \-Eadgifu OF KENT
/-Edgar the PEACEFUL
| \-Ælfgifu OF SHAFTESBURY
Edmund Ætheling Prince of WESSEX
\-Ælfthryth OF DEVON