Matches 201 to 250 of 2,118
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| 201 | Profession : Roi de Wessex de 871 à 878, Roi des Anglo-Saxons de 878 à 899. King of England, 871-899 ======================= royal_lineage.ged ALFRED THE GREAT (849-899), the most justly celebrated of all Anglo-Saxon rulers, was King of Wessex from 871 until 899. Alfred was born at Wantage in 849, the youngest son of King Ethelwulf of Wessex and his first wife, Osburh. The short reigns and early deaths of his elder brothers Ethelbald (858-850), Ethelbert (860-865) and Ethelred I (865-871) brought Alfred to the throne of Wessex at the age of about twenty-two in 871. Alfred's lifetime was overshadowed by the Danish invasions of England. Between 865 and 870 the Danes had conquered the kingdoms of East Anglia and Northumbria and had forced Mercia into submission. In 870 they decided to move against Wessex and established themselves in winter quarters at Reading. Five battles were fought in the winter and early spring of 870-871, at Englefield, Reading, Ashdown, Basing and the unidentified Meretun. Of these only Ashdown was a West Saxon victory. Shortly after the last battle the Danes were reinforced by another Viking army. At the time of Alfred's accession in April 871 t the advantage lay firmly with the invaders. For the new king the outlook was bleak, and it was to remain so for some time. In May Alfred was defeated again, at Wilton, after which he decided to capitulate as the Mercians had done. A contemporary put the best interpretation on it that he could: "the Saxons made peace with the Vikings on condition that they would leave them; and this they did." What this almost certainly means is that Alfred paid them to go away; whatlater generations were to call paying Danegeld. The Danes kept their word. Between 871 and 875 they busied themselves with Mercia and Northumberland. A second invasion of Wessex occurred in 876-77. Under their leader Guthrum, the Danes struck deeper than ever before into Wessex, and established themselves first at Wareham in Dorset and then at Exeter. Once more Alfred was forced to buy peace from them and they withdrew across the Mercian border in the summer of 877 to a new base at Gloucester. A third invasion followed soon. In January 878 the Danes entered Wessex, settled at Chippenham and subjected large areas of the kingdom to their authority. With only a small following Alfred fled to the west and found refuge at Athelney in Somerset, in ththe marshy country of the Parrett valley. (The episode of Alfred and the cakes, first committed to writing about a century after his death, was located during the retreat at Athelney.) Had the king died at this point he would be remembered, if at all, only as a failure. But Alfred survived and prospered. During the spring of 878 he quietly mustered troops and from the fortress which he had constructed at Athelney he waged guerilla war upon the Danes. By May he was ready to challenge them openly. He advanced eastwards, gathering support from the county levies of Somerset, Wiltshire and Hampshire as he went. They encountered Guthrum's army at Edington in Wiltshire and decisively defeated it, pursuing the survivors as far as theheir stronghold at Chippenham. After a fortnight the Danes surrendered. Their leader Guthrum was baptized a Christian in June and they swore to leave Wessex in peace, a promise which they carried out later in the year. Alfred had won the struggle for survival. Towards the end of 884 part of a Viking army which had been campaigning in Francia crossed the Channel to Kent and laid siege to Rochester. Alfred relieved the town and eventually managed to chase the intruders back to the Continent. Guthrum's followers, settled in East Anglia since 880, had assisted the Vikings from the Continent, and it was in an attempt to neutralise them that Alfred sent a naval force against East Anglia in the summer of 885, which had mixed success, and in 886 occupied London. Shortly afterwards he made a peace-treaty with Guthrum. Apart from these events, during the fourteen years between 878 and 892 Wessex was unmolested. These were the creative years in which Alfred initiated his progrgramme of military reform and cultural revival. In 892 the Danes returned in force and Alfred's defensive measures were put to the test. The war of 892-96 is reported at considerable length in the contemporary record of the Anglo-Saxon Chroniclee. Without following the campaigns in detail we may say that once more the Danish strategy rested upon the occupation of bases from which raids could be launched. However, there were contrasts with the earlier crises of 870-71 and 875-78. Whereaas the earlier invaders had repeatedly penetrated into the heart of Alfred's kingdom (e.g. Wilton 871, Wareham 876) those of 892-96 got into Wessex only once, in 893. Whereas the earlier invaders had won victory after victory, particularly in the years 870-71, the Danes who broke into Wessex in 893 were defeated by the king's son Edward at Fareham before they had got very far. Furthermore, although the Danes were difficult to pin down and bring to battle, the English forces could on occasion do this. They matched the mobility of the Danes, pursuing them right up the valley of the Severn in 893. They could dislodge them from their bases, as at Chester in 894 and in the valley of the river Lea near London in 895. They could sometimes corner and defeat them, as Ealdorman Ethelred of Mercia, Alfred's son-in-law, did at Buttington in 893. They could also by now engage the Danes by sea as well as on land, as in 896, with at least fair success. By the summer of 896 the Danish leaders had realised that Wessex was too well-defended for them. Their army dispersed, some to East Anglia or Northumbria, some to further campaigning across the Channel in Francia. The remaining three years of Alfred's reign are ill-documented but were apparently peaceful. He died on 27 October 899, aged about fifty, and was buried at Winchester. Alfred was probably a good deal more aware of the continent of Europe than have been at least some nineteenth and twentieth-century historians who have devoted their attention to him. He had visited Rome as a boy in the company of his father. He regularly sent alms to Rome and received at least one letter from Pope John VIII. His sister Aethelswith, the wife of King Burgred of M Mercia who was deposed by the Danes in 874, spent her later years in Italy until her death in 888. Alfred's father Ethelwulf had had a Frankish secretary and had married as his second wife a Frankish princess. Alfred's wife Ealhswith---they were married in 868---was English, a noblewoman descended from the Mercian royal dynasty. Of the five children of their marriage who lived to maturity, one of the daughters, Elftrudis, married Baldwin II, Duke of Flanders, between 893 and 899. Alfrred corresponded with Archbishop Fulk of Rheims, and attracted scholars from Francia such as Grimbald and John to his court. The compiler of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle was knowledgeable about Frankish affairs. We can sense a web of contact between Alfred's Wessex and the western European continent that may have been a good deal more dense than the surviving evidence allows us to see. It was not only in the military field that Alfred may have been indebted to his Frankish neighbors. There is the code of laws which was probably drawn up about 890. We cannot be certain that any English ruler had issued laws since King Ine of Wessex nearly two centuries earlier. Frankish rulers of the ninth century, especially Charles the Bald (d.d.877) whose court Alfred had visited, had been tireless, one might almost say frenzied legislators. Some of the individual clauses in Alfred's laws betray the influence of Frankish practice, the requirement, for example, that his subjects should swear an oath of loyalty to him. During the 880s, in all probability, the town of Winchester was comprehensively replanned inside its refurbished Roman defenses. A new grid-pattern of streets was laid down, bounded by a road which ran round the inside of the walls. This operation involved the laying of at least five miles of road and their surfacing with nearly 8000 tons of flint cobbles. Only a king could have mobilised the resources for such a task: the initiative must have been AlAlfred's. Winchester included a royal palace, a cathedral and its community, a new monastery probably planned by Alfred although not completed until after his death, and a nunnery founded by Queen Ealhswith. It also housed a royal mint, merchants on whose services the court depended, and residences for the counsellors in attendance on the King. Alfred's Winchester was not exactly a capital city in our sense of the term, but it was the closest thing to one in Wessex---a favoured royal r residence, a place of ceremonial, prayer and liturgy, a fit setting for solemn acts of state and a mausoleum where kings would rest and be remembered after their deaths. Surely its inspiration was, at least in part, Frankish. Alfred's Winchester was to Wessex what Charlemagne's Aachen was to the kingdom of the Franks. Like Frankish rulers such as Charlemagne or Charles the Bald, though on a more modest scale, Alfred was a patron of learning. Unlike them, he personally contributed to the intellectual revival which he sponsored and it is this activity which is his most enduring claim to fame. Alfred regarded his attempts to rehabilitate English learning as part and parcel of his kingly responsibilities. To this end Alfred recrcruited a number of learned men, Plegmund, a native of Mercia who became Archbishop of Canterbury in 890; the Welshman Asser, who became Bishop of Sherborne; another Mercian, Bishop Werferth of Worcester; a Flemish monk, Grimbald of St. Bertin's; and a monk from continental Saxony named John who was made Abbot of Alfred's monastic foundation at Athelney. Through the efforts of these five men, and doubtless of others whose names we do not know, the ground was prepared for the intellectuual achievements of the tenth century. Alfred's own contribution to the revival of learning was to translate from Latin into Old English 'certain books,' in his own words, 'which are the most necessary for all men to know.' He had learned to read the vernacular as a child and went on to learn Latin as a grown man. Alfred personally translated three books, the Liber Regulae Pastoralis (Book of Pastoral Rule) of Pope Gregory I, the Soliloquies of St. Augustine of Hippo, and the Consolation of Philosophy by Boethius. It was Asser who rendered unforgettably in his biography those aspects of Alfred's character which so appealed to the Victorians: his moral uprightness, his warm family life, his struggles against ill health, his earnest self-improvement. Alfred was a man of robustly traditional tastes---a warrior, a hunter, a ring-giver---as well as the scholar and seeker after knowledge revealed in his writings. He was a man of his time, like everyone else. His achievements rested in some degree on foundations laid by his father Ethelwulf and on lessons learned from his Frankish neighbours. He had an orderly mind and he was fertile in practical expedient, whether in the construction of ships or of lantern-clocks. He was also endowed with a speculative mind, charged with intellectual vitality. How many kings have taught themselves Latin at the age of thirty eight? "He stood, I believe, head and shoulders above all the kings of England who came before and after him." This was the verdict of an Anglo-Norman historian writing in about 1120. =========================== . "The course of English history would have been very different had it not been for King Alfred. He won renown both as a statesman and as a warrior and is justly called "the Great." The England of Alfred s time was a country of four small Saxon kingdoms. The strongest was Wessex, in the south. Born in about 848, Alfred was the youngest son of Ethelwulf, king of Wessex. Each of Alfred s three older brothers, in turn, ruled the kingdom. Alfred was by temperament a scholar, and his health was never robust. Nevertheless in his early youth he fought with his brother Ethelred against Danish invaders. Alfred was 23 when Ethelred died, but he had already won the confidence of the army and was at once acclaimed king in 871. By this time the Danes, or Vikings, had penetrated to all parts of the island. Three of the Saxon kingdoms--Northumbria, Mercia, and East Anglia--had one after another fallen to the Danish invaders. Under Alfred s leadership, the Saxons again found courage." (See "Ethel" in Saxon means "of high birth", and four of Alfred's siblings had that prefix in their name; however, Alfred meant "elf counsel." It is thus speculated that his mother Osburga named him, as her name refers to "nature pixies." Alfred, the youngest son of Ethelwulf was age 4 years when he was sent with a "large retinue" to Rome and was received by Pope Leo IV. (See "RoyaList Online, link below.) _______________________________________________________________________ SOURCES: LDS FHL Ancestral File # (familysearch.org) WEB: "Ancestors/Descendants of Royal Lines" (Contributors: F. L. Jacquier (History of Charlemagne by Christian Settipani); L. Orlandini, Manuel Abranches de Soveral, Reynaud de Paysac, F.L. J P de Palmas (Aurejac et Tournemire; Frankish line; The Complete Peerage}, Jacquier (Genealogy of Lewis Carroll, Justin Swanstrom, The Royal Families of England Scotland & Wales by Burkes Peerage; Debrett's Peerage & Baronage; Table of descendants French Canadian Genealogical Society; Families of Monfnfort-sur-Risle & Bertrand de Bricquebec; The Dukes of Normandy, XXXXI), A. Brabant ("Dynastie Montmorency, Michel d'Herbigny), Paul Leportier, Claude Barret, H.R. Moser (Burke Peerage), O.Guionneau, L.B. de Rouge, E. Polti, N. Danican (Britain''s Royal Families; Buthlaw, Succession of Strathclyde, the Armorial 1961-62) A.Terlinden (Genealogy of the existing British Peerage, 1842), L. Gustavsson, C. Cheneaux, E. Lodge, S. Bontron (Brian Tompsett), R. Dewkinandan, H. de la Villarmois, C. Donadello; Scevole de Livonniere, H. de la Villarmois, I. Flatmoen, P. Ract Madoux (History of Morhange; Leon Maujean; Annuaire de Lorraine, 1926; La Galissonniere: Elections d'Arques et Rouen), Jean de Villoutreys (ref: Georges Poull), E. Wilkerson-Theaux (Laura Little), O. Auffray, A. Brabant (Genealogy of Chauvigny of Blot from "Chanoine Prevost Archiviste du Diocese de Troyes Union Typographique Domois Cote-d'Or 1925), Emmanuel Arminjon (E Levi-Provencal Histoire de l'Espagne Andalouse), Y. Gazagnes-Gazanhe, R. Sekulovich and J.P. de Palmas ("notes pierfit et iconographie Insecula", Tournemire), H de Riberolles (Base Tournemire), Franck Veillon; ,(Histoire Généalogique de la Maison de Hornes, Bruxelles 1848; Notice Historique Sur L'Ancien Comté de Hornes, Gand 1850; Europäische Stammtafeln, Marburg 1978); E.Driant / "La Maison de Damas" par Hubert Lamant, 1977 (Bibliothèque municipale d'Eaubonne) ........... http://geneastar.org. NOTE: (Narrative above is credited to this web site). RoyaList Online AWTP: "The Ancestry Of Overmire Tifft Richardson Bradford Reed" Larry Overmire larryover@worldnet.att.net "Holler & Hartman Ancestors" Michael Holler mgholler@hotmail.com | WESSEX, Alfred I 'the great' of King of England, 871-899 (I27566)
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| 202 | Profession : Roi des Rugiens. de Rugie s:hg79.368; Auréjac | RÜGEN, Gundelhard von (I27719)
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| 203 | Profession : Roi des Saxons. ============ Warnechin d'Engern ==================== Nb: Engeren: De Saksen kozen bij loting hun krijgsheren (Satrapen). Het gebied der Saksen was in drie (Westfalen, Engeren, Oostfalen) militaire gebieden (pagus) gedeeld waar een der voornoemde krijgsheren de leiding kreeg. ============= Warnechin d'Engern | ENGERN, Warnechin von (I27709)
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| 204 | Profession : Seigneur de Gouy en Arrouaise et d'Amiens, Comte de Valois & d'Ostrevant. Source : Héraldique.&.Généalogie n 91.202. | VALOIS, Raoul II (Wulfran) de de Cambrai (I27654)
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| 205 | Profession : Seigneur de Ham. | HAM, Evrard I de (I27672)
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| 206 | Profession : Vicomte de Cotentin. SOURCES: LDS FHL Ancestral File # (familysearch.org) AWTP: "The Ancestry of Overmire Tifft Richardson Bradford Reed" Larry Overmire larryover@worldnet.att.net | SAINT SAUVEUR, Néel I de Vicomte de Cotentin (I27641)
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| 207 | Puîné. Profession : Comte de Ternois en 937 & Montreuil en 945. ===================== fils puîné s:ds03.635; Auréjac | MONTREUIL, Roger I ou Rotgaire de (I27674)
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| 208 | s:Auréjac | ROBERTIEN, Liegarde (=Hildebrand, Adele?) (I27626)
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| 209 | s:Auréjac | Family: Bego, Marquis of Septimania, Comte de Paris / Alpaide (Alpais) Princess Of The HOLY ROMAN EMPIRE (F5409)
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| 210 | s:Auréjac | Family: Widikind I 'de grote', Graf von SACHSEN, Chief of the Saxons / Svatana van SACHSEN (F9772)
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| 211 | s:Auréjac; hg92.92 | KAROLINGEN, Rotrude van Duitsland (I27501)
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| 212 | s:ds01.200a; Auréjac | Family: Hugh II, Comte de Tours, Ambassadeur à Constantinople / Ava (F1505)
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| 213 | s:ds01.200a; Auréjac | Family: Hugues III de TOURS, Count of Bourges / Bava d' OSTREVANT, (Bava N..) (F9657)
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| 214 | s:ds01.200a; Auréjac | Family: Girard II ou Guerry de FÉZENSAC, Ct of Paris, Duke of Vienne / Bertha de TOURS (F9719)
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| 215 | s:ds01.200a; ds02.10 | Family: Robert IV ROBERTIEN, Comte d'Anjou,Tours, Blois & Orléans / Adelheid de TOURS, Countess of Tours (F9655)
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| 216 | s:ds01.200a; ds03.736; MJ Delrieu | Family: Conrad I, Count of Auxerre / Adelheid de TOURS, Countess of Tours (F12421)
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| 217 | s:ds01.4 | Family: Lambert III de NANTES, Comte d'Herbauges / Rotrude van Duitsland KAROLINGEN (F9662)
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| 218 | s:ds01.4; ds02.1; ds03.02.189N; webpark | Family: Charles KAROLINGEN, Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire / Richilde de PROVENCE, de Metz (F9679)
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| 219 | s:ds01.4; webpark | Family: Lodewijk III 'de jonge' [karolingen] van Italie LOTHARINGEN, Roi d'Italie, Emperor of the West 855 / Ingelbert (Angilberga, Angelberga, Engelberga) van ELZAS, Römische Kaiserin, Königin von Italien (F9660)
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| 220 | s:ds01.7 | Family: Robert I de VERMANDOIS, Comte de Meaux, d'Auxerre et de Châlons / Adelaide (Wéra) de BOURGOGNE, Dame de Châlon (F9731)
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| 221 | s:ds01.7 et 236; ds03.49 | Family: Albert I 'le Pieux' de VERMANDOIS, Comte de Beaune & de Vermandois / Gerberga van de MAASGOUW, van Lotharingen, Princess (F9735)
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| 222 | s:ds01.7; ds02.10; ds03.49 | Family: Herbert I de VERMANDOIS, Count of Vermandois / Liegarde (=Hildebrand, Adele?) ROBERTIEN (F9712)
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| 223 | s:ds01.7; ds02.46; webpark | Family: Thibaut II 'le Tricheur' de BLOIS, Comte de Tours, Blois (5ème du titre à partir de 9 / Leutgarde de VERMANDOIS, Duchess Of Normandy (F9734)
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| 224 | s:ds01.7; ds02.5; généalogie de Catherine de Baillon; webpark | Family: Arnoul (=Arnulf) I 'le vieux, de grote' van VLAANDEREN, 3rd Count of Flanders / Adèle (=Alix) de VERMANDOIS (F9674)
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| 225 | s:ds01.7; ds02.78; ds03.49; Auréjac | Family: Herbert III 'de oude' de VERMANDOIS, de Meaux / Edgive (Eadgyfu Hedwig Ogive) of WESSEX, Queen of France (F9737)
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| 226 | s:ds01.7; ds02.79 | Family: Guillaume I 'Longue Epée (=longsword)' de NORMANDIE, 2nd Duc de Normandie de 933 à 942 / Leutgarde de VERMANDOIS, Duchess Of Normandy (F9733)
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| 227 | s:ds02.03.186N; ds03.590; Auréjac | Family: Théodebald 'le Riche' d' ARLES, Cte d'Arles (879-895) / Bertha (F9672)
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| 228 | s:ds02.104 | Family: Harald V, 2nd King of Haithabu, Jutland / Imhilde van ENGERN (F9639)
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| 229 | s:ds02.104 | Family: Widikind I 'de grote', Graf von SACHSEN, Chief of the Saxons / Geva Eijsteijnsdr van VESTFOLD, aka Westfold, Westarfolda (F9773)
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| 230 | s:ds02.10; webpark | Family: Robert III, Count of Worms and Rheingau / Waldrada (F8890)
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| 231 | s:ds02.10; webpark | Family: Robert IV ROBERTIEN, Comte d'Anjou,Tours, Blois & Orléans / Agane ? (F9670)
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| 232 | s:ds02.76 | Family: Gerard I d' AUVERGNE, Count d'Auvergne / Mathilda (Rotrud) KAROLINGEN, de Francie (F9650)
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| 233 | s:ds03.02.188bN | Family: Lambert II de NANTES / Rotrude van Duitsland KAROLINGEN (F9663)
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| 234 | s:ds03.736 | Family: Conrad II, Count of Auxerre / Waldrada (F1501)
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| 235 | s:O. Vital.2.61 | Family: Ingernulphe (Engenulf) de l' AIGLE / Richeveride ? (F9761)
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| 236 | s:O.Vital.2.20 | Family: Guillaume GIROIE / Hiltrude de BEINES (F9760)
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| 237 | s:Pomer | Family: Rathier de LIMOGES / Mathilda (Rotrud) KAROLINGEN, de Francie (F9651)
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| 238 | Sarah, sister of William de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick. [Burke's Peerage] ----------------------- He [Richard Talbot] is said to have married, after 7 January 1268/9,Sarah, sister of William (DE BEAUCHAMP), EARL OF WARWICK, daughter ofWilliam DE BEAUCHAMP, of Elmley, co. Worcester, by ISABEL, sister andheir of William (MAUDUIT), EARL OF WARWICK, daughter of William MAUDUIT,of Hanslope, Bucks. He died shortly before 3 September 1306. SarahTalbot, probably his widow, was living, July 1317. [Complete PeerageXII/1:609-10, (transcribed by Dave Utzinger)] _____________________ /euweb/beauchamp01.htm#link2 ========== Volgens genealogy.ged is zij een kind van William (1210-1269) & Isabel Mauduit (1214-b1268) | BEAUCHAMP, Sarah de (I27337)
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| 239 | Saxon King of England Profession : Roi des Anglo-Saxons de 901 à 924. euweb.dir/cerdic1.html D2. Edward "the Elder", King of Wessex (899-924), cr Kingston-upon-Thames 31.5/8.6.900, *ca 871/2, +Farndon-on-Dee 17.7.924, bur Winchester Cathedral; 1m: Egwina (+ca 901/2), dau.of a Wessex nobleman; 2m: ca 901/2 Elfleda (+920, bur Winchester Cathedral), dau.of Ealdorman Ethelhelm; 3m: ca 920 Edgiva (*ca 905, +25.8.968, bur Canterbury Cathedral), dau.of Sigehelm, Ealdorman of Kent ============================= . SOURCES: LDS FHL Ancestal File # 9GB3-CL (familysearch.org) WEB: "Ancestors/Descendants of Royal Lines" (Contributors: F. L. Jacquier (History of Charlemagne by Christian Settipani); L. Orlandini, Manuel Abranches de Soveral, Reynaud de Paysac, F.L. J P de Palmas (Aurejac et Tournemire; Frankish line; The Complete Peerage}, Jacquier (Genealogy of Lewis Carroll, Justin Swanstrom, The Royal Families of England Scotland & Wales by Burkes Peerage; Debrett's Peerage & Baronage; Table of descendants French Canadian Genealogical Society; Families of Monfnfort-sur-Risle & Bertrand de Bricquebec; The Dukes of Normandy, XXXXI), A. Brabant ("Dynastie Montmorency, Michel d'Herbigny), Paul Leportier, Claude Barret, H.R. Moser (Burke Peerage), O.Guionneau, L.B. de Rouge, E. Polti, N. Danican (Britain''s Royal Families; Buthlaw, Succession of Strathclyde, the Armorial 1961-62) A.Terlinden (Genealogy of the existing British Peerage, 1842), L. Gustavsson, C. Cheneaux, E. Lodge, S. Bontron (Brian Tompsett), R. Dewkinandan, H. de la Villarmois, C. Donadello; Scevole de Livonniere, H. de la Villarmois, I. Flatmoen, P. Ract Madoux (History of Morhange; Leon Maujean; Annuaire de Lorraine, 1926; La Galissonniere: Elections d'Arques et Rouen), Jean de Villoutreys (ref: Georges Poull), E. Wilkerson-Theaux (Laura Little), O. Auffray, A. Brabant (Genealogy of Chauvigny of Blot from "Chanoine Prevost Archiviste du Diocese de Troyes Union Typographique Domois Cote-d'Or 1925), Emmanuel Arminjon (E Levi-Provencal Histoire de l'Espagne Andalouse), Y. Gazagnes-Gazanhe, R. Sekulovich and J.P. de Palmas ("notes pierfit et iconographie Insecula", Tournemire), H de Riberolles (Base Tournemire), Franck Veillon; ,(Histoire Généalogique de la Maison de Hornes, Bruxelles 1848; Notice Historique Sur L'Ancien Comté de Hornes, Gand 1850; Europäische Stammtafeln, Marburg 1978); E.Driant / "La Maison de Damas" par Hubert Lamant, 1977 (Bibliothèque municipale d'Eaubonne) ........... http://geneastar.org. AWTP: "Updated -02/2004-Family Ancestry Tree For Weaver and Sanders" David Weaver dave@satcover.com "Stimpson Family", Cory Stimpson cbstimpson@hotmail.com "Holler & Hartman Ancestors" Michael Holler mgholler@hotmail.com | WESSEX, Edward I 'de oude' [Cerdic] of King of Wessex (899-924) (I27583)
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| 240 | Seigneur de l'Aigle ============= E:\E-S009\genealogy\!downloads\Companions of Duke William.htm ... Engenoulf de l'Aigle ... | AIGLE, Ingernulphe (Engenulf) de l' (I27696)
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| 241 | Senhor da Honra de Bergonte SOURCES: LDS FHL Ancestal File # (familysearch.org) "Ancestors/Descendants of Royal Lines" (Contributors: Manuel Abranches de Soveral, Reynaud de Paysac, F.L. Jacquier | VALADARES, Rui Pais, Señor da Honra de Bergonte de (I27420)
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| 242 | Sheriff of Gloucestershire Governor of Cardiff Richard Talbot; born c1250; Custodian of Cardiff 1297, Sheriff of Gloucester 1299-1301; allegedly married after 7 Jan 1268/9 Sarah, sister of William de Beauchamp, Earl of Warwick, and died just before 3 Sep 1306, leaving [Sir Gilbert], with a younger son (Richard, of Richard's Castle, Herefs, whose line appears to have expired on the death without issue of his ggs in 1388). [Burke's Peerage] Name Suffix: Ancestral File Number: | TALBOT, Richard IV lord of Eccleswall, Sheriff of Gloucester (I27338)
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| 243 | Sheriff of Hampshire file:///E:/E-S009/genealogy/Grab_A_Site_downloads/euweb/herbert01.htm b. Reynold FitzPiers (Reginald FitzPeter) FitzHerbert of Alcester and Blenlevenny, Sheriff of Hampshire (d 04/5.05.1286) m1. Alice (1) John FitzReynold FitzHerbert of Wolverton, etc, 1st Lord FitzReynold (d before 10.02.1309/10) m. Agnes BE18883 (Fitz-Herbert) suggests that the barony was not inherited by his (unnamed) successors who bore the surname of Fitz-Herbert. However, TCP (FitzReynold) identifies the following successors ... (B) Sir Herbert FitzJohn of Wolverton, etc, 2nd Lorord FitzReynold (d 25.06.1321) m. (29.04.1291) Alianore (dau of Sir Roger le Rous of Harescombe) (i) Sir Matthew FitzHerbert of Wolverton, etc, 3rd Lord FitzReynold (dsp 12.1356) m. (c06.1325) Margaret de Cobham (d 21.07.1357) dau of Sir Henry de Cobham, 1st Lord) (ii) Sir Reynold FitzHerbert of Stanford (d 10.1348) m. Julienne (a)+ issue - Margaret (b c1342), Elizabeth (b c1347) (2) Alice FitzPiers m. Sir John de St. John of Basing (b 1225, d 29.09.1301-2) | FITZPIERS, Reginald (Reunold) Sheriff of Hampshire (I27366)
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| 244 | Sheriff of Hereford 1272 /euweb/sudeley1.htm#link2 _____________________ Bartholomew (Sir); knighted by 1269; Sheriff of Herefs 1272; married Joan and died by 29 June 1280. [Burke's Peerage] ------------------------------------ This feudal lord, Bartholomew de Sudeley, was sheriff of Herefordshire and governor of the castle of Hereford in the latter end of the reign of Henry III. He m. Joane, dau. of William de Beauchamp, of Elmley, and sister of William, 1st Earl of Warwick, and dying in 1274, was s. by his son John de Sudeley. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, England, 1883, p. 520, Sudeley, Barons Sudeley] Ancestral File Number: Ancestral File Number: | SUDELEY, Bartholomew de Sheriff of Herefordshire 1272 (I27327)
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| 245 | sister of Gerard's other wife: Mathilde (Rotrud) SOURCES: LDS FHL Ancestral File # (familysearch.org) WEB: "Ancestors/Descendants of Royal Lines" (Contributors: F. L. Jacquier (History of Charlemagne by Christian Settipani); L. Orlandini, Manuel Abranches de Soveral, Reynaud de Paysac, F.L. J P de Palmas (Aurejac et Tournemire; Frankish line; The Complete Peerage}, Jacquier (Genealogy of Lewis Carroll, Justin Swanstrom, The Royal Families of England Scotland & Wales by Burkes Peerage; Debrett's Peerage & Baronage; Table of descendants French Canadian Genealogical Society; Families of Monfnfort-sur-Risle & Bertrand de Bricquebec; The Dukes of Normandy, XXXXI), A. Brabant ("Dynastie Montmorency, Michel d'Herbigny), Paul Leportier, Claude Barret, H.R. Moser (Burke Peerage), O.Guionneau, L.B. de Rouge, E. Polti, N. Danican (Britain''s Royal Families; Buthlaw, Succession of Strathclyde, the Armorial 1961-62) A.Terlinden (Genealogy of the existing British Peerage, 1842), L. Gustavsson, C. Cheneaux, E. Lodge, S. Bontron (Brian Tompsett), R. Dewkinandan, H. de la Villarmois, C. Donadello; Scevole de Livonniere, H. de la Villarmois, I. Flatmoen, P. Ract Madoux (History of Morhange; Leon Maujean; Annuaire de Lorraine, 1926; La Galissonniere: Elections d'Arques et Rouen), Jean de Villoutreys (ref: Georges Poull), E. Wilkerson-Theaux (Laura Little), O. Auffray, A. Brabant (Genealogy of Chauvigny of Blot from "Chanoine Prevost Archiviste du Diocese de Troyes Union Typographique Domois Cote-d'Or 1925), Emmanuel Arminjon (E Levi-Provencal Histoire de l'Espagne Andalouse), Y. Gazagnes-Gazanhe, R. Sekulovich and J.P. de Palmas ("notes pierfit et iconographie Insecula", Tournemire), H de Riberolles (Base Tournemire), Franck Veillon; ,(Histoire Généalogique de la Maison de Hornes, Bruxelles 1848; Notice Historique Sur L'Ancien Comté de Hornes, Gand 1850; Europäische Stammtafeln, Marburg 1978); E.Driant / "La Maison de Damas" par Hubert Lamant, 1977 (Bibliothèque municipale d'Eaubonne) ........... http://geneastar.org. AWTP: "Stimpson Family", Cory Stimpson cbstimpson@hotmail.com | KAROLINGEN, Hildegarde+ sister of Gerard's other wife: Mathilde (Rotrud) (I27482)
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| 246 | Source : Héraldique.&.Généalogie n 88.451 & Schwennicke n 02.10. s:hg88.451 | Ida (I13981)
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| 247 | Source : Régine Le.Jan. Profession : dernier Comte du Maine de sa famille, qui se le fait confisquer par Charles II le Chauve, au bénéfice de Robert le Fort, ancêtre des Capétiens. Décès : ou bien encore 914. | MAINE, Gozlin III du Comte of Maine (I27545)
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| 248 | Sources 1. [S00104 ====================== http://www.thepeerage.com/p11863.htm Robert Beauchamp1 (M) b. before 1233, #118621 Last Edited=6 Apr 2004 Robert Beauchamp was born before 1233.1 Robert Beauchamp lived in Hatch, Somerset, England Child of Robert Beauchamp and Alice de Mohun John Beauchamp Citations [S6 Alice de Mohun1 (F) #118622 Pedigree < > Last Edited=6 Apr 2004 Alice de Mohun is the daughter of Reynold de Mohun.1 Child of Alice de Mohun and Robert Beauchamp John Beauchamp Citations [S6 ________________________________ Of the feudal lord, Robert de Beauchamp, nothing is known beyond his being engaged against the Welsh with Henry III, and his founding the priory of Frithelstoke, in the co. Devon. He was yet living in 1257, and was s. by his son, John de Beauchamp. [Sir Bernard Burke, Dormant and Extinct Peerages, Burke's Peerage, Ltd., London, 1883, p. 33, Beauchamp, Barons Beauchamp, of Hache, in the co. Somerset] | BEAUCHAMP, Robert IV de (I27354)
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| 249 | SOURCES: "Ancestors/Descendants of Randall Brereton" http://www.geneastar.org | HARO, Diego Lopez de 11th Soberano de Vizcaya (I27405)
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| 250 | SOURCES: "Ancestors/Descendants of Royal Lines" (Contributors: Manuel Abranches de Soveral, Reynaud de Paysac, F.L. Jacquier AWTP: "Neuman-Smith-Goodale Family and Ancestors" Michael R. Neuman michaelneuman@earthlink.net. ______________________________________________ Common Ancestor of Robert McKinsey (* through Amicia de Clopton abt 1256) and Valerie Pippi (+ through William de Clopton abt 1259)) | JUTLAND, Hemming of (I27465)
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