Phyllis Ann Boutwell and Eric Gordon Dearborn

Person Page 136

Pedigree

Grimhilde Grimaldis of Aquitaine1

F, #3376, b. 784

Events

  • 784
    Birth
    784 | France
  • 791~7
    Marriage | Leotaud
    791
    Age: ~13
    Birth: 778 | Paris, Ile-de-France, France
Last Edited5 January 2023 07:20:47

Citations

  1. [S979] Our Royal, Titled, Noble and Commoner Ancestors
Pedigree

Otto I & von ("The Illustrious") Saxony1,2,3

M, #3377, b. 836, d. 3 November 912

Parents

FatherLiudolf & ("The Great") (b. 806, d. 12 March 866)
MotherOda & of Germany (b. 806, d. 17 May 913)

Family 1: Haithui & of Babenberg (b. 853, d. 24 December 903)

SonHenry I & ("Heinrich the Fowler")+ (b. 2 July 876, d. 2 July 936)
SonThankmar (b. estimated 880)
DaughterOda & of Saxony+ (b. estimated 880, d. 2 July 952)
SonLiudolf (b. estimated 885)

Family 2:

DaughterUnknown & of Saxony+ (b. estimated 910)

Events

  • Burial
    Eastphalian, Germany
  • Note
    Question about mother - shown as either Hatwige von Friaul or Oda of Germany -.
    Citation: 2
  • 836
    Birth
    836 | Saxony, Germany
    Citation: 1
  • 869~33
    869 | Germany
    Age: ~16
    Birth: 853 | Aachen, Rheinland, Prussia
    Death: 24 December 903 | Gandersheim, Lower Saxony, Germany
  • Title
    From 880 to 3 November 912
    Otto I & von ("The Illustrious") Saxony held the title Duke of Saxony.
    Citation: 2
  • 912~76
    Death
    3 November 912 | Memleben, Burgenlandkreis, Sachsen-Anhalt, Germany
    Citation: 2
Last Edited9 June 2024 05:34:23

Citations

  1. [S979] Our Royal, Titled, Noble and Commoner Ancestors
  2. [S487] The Peerage.com
  3. [S993] Maurice G. Boddy, The Boddy Family
Pedigree

Haithui & of Babenberg1

F, #3378, b. 853, d. 24 December 903

Parents

FatherHenry I & von Babenberg (b. about 825, d. 28 August 886)
MotherIngeltrud & von Friaul (b. about 837, d. 2 April 870)

Family: Otto I & von ("The Illustrious") Saxony (b. 836, d. 3 November 912)

SonHenry I & ("Heinrich the Fowler")+ (b. 2 July 876, d. 2 July 936)
SonThankmar (b. estimated 880)
DaughterOda & of Saxony+ (b. estimated 880, d. 2 July 952)
SonLiudolf (b. estimated 885)

Events

  • Name Hedwig of Germany
    Citation: 1
  • Name Hadwig von Babenberg
    Citation: 2
  • Title
    Haithui & of Babenberg held the title Duchess of Saxony.
  • 853
    Birth
    853 | Aachen, Rheinland, Prussia
  • 869~16
    869 | Germany
    Age: ~33
    Birth: 836 | Saxony, Germany
    Death: 3 November 912 | Memleben, Burgenlandkreis, Sachsen-Anhalt, Germany
  • 903~50
    Death
    24 December 903 | Gandersheim, Lower Saxony, Germany
    Citation: 1
Last Edited28 February 2025 06:49:01

Citations

  1. [S979] Our Royal, Titled, Noble and Commoner Ancestors
  2. [S487] The Peerage.com
Pedigree

Judith & of Bavaria1

F, #3379, b. about 805, d. 19 April 843

Parents

FatherGuelph I & (b. about 776, d. 3 September 825)
MotherHeilwig & von Sachsen (b. estimated 780, d. 833)

Family: Louis I & ("Louis the Pious") (b. between 16 April 778 and September 778, d. 20 June 840)

DaughterGisela & of the Holy Roman Empire+ (b. 820, d. 1 July 874)
SonCharles II & ("The Bald")+ (b. 13 June 823, d. 6 October 877)
Judith of Bavaria

Events

  • 805
    Birth
    About 805 | Altdorf, Bavaria
    Citation: 1
  • 819~14
    February 819 | Aix-la-Chapelle, Austria
    Birth: between 16 April 778 and September 778 | Casseneuil, France
    Death: 20 June 840 | Ingelheim, Rhinehessen, Hesse
    Citation: 1
  • 843~38
    Death
    19 April 843 | Tours, Indre-et-Loire, France
    Citation: 1
Last Edited9 June 2024 05:34:23

Citations

  1. [S979] Our Royal, Titled, Noble and Commoner Ancestors
Pedigree

Arnulf &1

M, #3380, b. about 850, d. 29 November 899

Parents

FatherCarloman & (b. about 829, d. 2 March 880)
MotherLitwinde & of Carinthia (b. 835)

Family 1: Oda & of Bavaria (b. estimated 860)

DaughterBertha & of Germany+ (b. estimated 865, d. 938)
SonLouis (b. 893, d. 24 November 911)

Family 2:

SonZwentibold (b. 870, d. 13 August 900)
Arnulf Holy Roman Empire

Events

  • Name Arnoul
    Citation: 2
  • Burial
    Ratisbone, Bavaria
    Citation: 1
  • Note
    Arnulf of Carinthia (850 – December 8, 899) was the Carolingian King of East Francia[1] from 887, the disputed King of Italy from 894 and the disputed Holy Roman Emperor from February 22, 896 until his death.

    Birth and IllegitimacyArnulf was, according to most sources,[2][3][4] the illegitimate son of Carloman, King of Bavaria,[5] and his concubine Liutswind,[6] perhaps of Carantanian origin, and possibly the sister of Ernst, Count of the Bavarian Nordgau Margraviate in the area of the Upper Palatinate, or perhaps the burgrave of Passau, as some sources say. After Arnulf's birth, Carloman married, before 861, a daughter of that same Count Ernst, who died after August 8, 879. As it is mainly West-Franconian historiography [7] that speaks of Arnulf's illegitimacy, it is quite feasible that the two females are one and the same person and that Carloman later on actually married Liutswind, thus legitimizing his son.[8]

    [edit] Early YearsArnulf was granted the Duchy of Carinthia, a Frankish vassal state and successor of the ancient Principality of Carantania, by his father Carloman, after Carloman had become reconciled with his own father Louis the German and was created King of Bavaria. Arnulf spent his childhood on the Mosaburch or Mosapurc, which is widely believed to be Moosburg in Carinthia, only a few miles away from one of the imperial residences, the Carlovingian Kaiserpfalz at Karnburg, which before as Krnski grad had been the residence of the Carantanian princes. Arnulf kept his seat here and from later events it may be inferred that the Carantanians, from an early time, treated him as their own Duke. Later, after he had been crowned King of East Francia, Arnulf turned his old territory of Carinthia into the March of Carinthia, a part of the Duchy of Bavaria.

    After Carloman was incapacitated by a stroke in 879, Louis the Younger inherited Bavaria, Charles the Fat was given the Kingdom of Italy and Arnulf was confirmed in Carinthia by an agreement with Carloman. Bavaria, however, was ruled more or less by Arnulf.[9] Arnulf had in fact ruled Bavaria during the summer and autumn of 879 while his father arranged his succession and he himself was granted "Pannonia," in the words of the Annales Fuldenses,[10] or "Carantanum," in the words of Regino of Prüm.[11] The division of the realm was confirmed in 880 on Carloman’s death.

    When, in 882, Engelschalk II rebelled against the Margrave of Pannonia, Aribo, and ignited the so-called Wilhelminer War, Arnulf supported him and even accepted his and his brother's homage. This ruined Arnulf's relationship with his uncle the emperor and put him at war with Svatopluk of Moravia. Pannonia was invaded, but Arnulf refused to give up the young Wilhelminers. Arnulf did not make peace with Svatopluk until late 885, by which time the Moravian was a man of the emperor. Some scholars see this war as destroying Arnulf's hopes at succeeding Charles.

    [edit] King of East FranciaArnulf took the leading role in the deposition of his uncle, the Emperor Charles the Fat. With the support of the nobles, Arnulf held a Diet at Tribur and deposed Charles in November 887, under threat of military action.[2][3] Charles peacefully went into his involuntary retirement, but not without first chastising his nephew for his treachery and asking only for a few royal villas in Swabia, which Arnulf mercifully granted him,[12] on which to live out his final months.[5] Arnulf, having distinguished himself in the war against the Slavs was elected by the nobles of the realm (only the eastern realm, though Charles had ruled the whole of the Frankish lands) and assumed his title of King of East Francia.[13]

    Arnulf took advantage of the problems in West Francia upon the death of Charles The Fat to secure the territory of Lorraine, which he converted into a kingdom for his son, Zwentibold.[14] In addition, in 889, Arnulf supported the claim of Louis the Blind to the kingdom of Provence, after receiving a personal appeal from Louis’ mother, Ermengard, who came to see Arnulf at Forchheim in May 889.[15] Recognising the superiority of Arnulf’s position, in 888 Odo of France formally admitted the suzerainty of Arnulf.[16] In 893, Arnulf switched his support from Odo to Charles the Simple after being persuaded by Fulk (Archbishop of Reims) that it was in his best interests.[17] Arnulf then took advantage of the fighting that followed between Odo and Charles in 894, taking territory from West Francia and transferring it to his dominion.[18] At one point, Charles was forced to flee to Arnulf and ask for his protection.[19] His intervention forced Pope Formosus to get involved, as he was worried that a divided and war weary West Francia would be easy prey for the Normans.[18]

    In 895, Arnulf summoned both Charles and Odo to his presence at Worms. Charles’s advisers convinced him not to go, and he sent a representative in his place. Odo, on the other hand, personally attended, together with a large retinue, bearing many gifts for Arnulf.[20] Angered by the non-appearance of Charles, he welcomed Odo at the Diet of Worms in May 895, and again supported Odo's claim to the West Francian throne.[20] In this same assembly, he bestowed upon his illegitimate son Zwentibold, a crown as the King of Lotharingia.[20]

    Arnulf was not a negotiator, but a fighter. In 890 he was successfully battling the Slavs in Pannonia.[21] In 891, the Danes invaded Lotharingia,[22] and crushed a East Frankish army at Maastricht.[23] At the decisive Battle of Leuven in September 891, he defeated an invading force of the Northmen, or Vikings,[23] essentially ending their invasions on that front.[5] The Annales Fuldenses report that the bodies of dead Northmen blocked the run of the river. After his victory, Arnulf built a new castle on an island in the Dijle river (Dutch: Dijle, English and French: Dyle).[24]

    As early as 880, Arnulf had designs on Great Moravia, and had the Frankish bishop Wiching of Nitra interfere with the missionary activities of Methodius, with the aim of preventing any potential for creating a unified Moravian nation.[25] In 893 or 894, Great Moravia probably lost a part of its territory — present-day Western Hungary — to him. As a reward, Wiching became Arnulf’s chancellor in 892.[26] Arnulf, however, failed to conquer the whole of Great Moravia when he attempted it in 892, 893, and 899. Yet Arnulf did achieve some successes, in particular in 895, when Bohemia broke away from Great Moravia and became his vassal. An accord was made between him and the Bohemian Duke Borivoj I (reigned 870-95); Bohemia was thus freed from the dangers of invasion. However, in his attempts to conquer Moravia, in 899 Arnulf invited across the Magyars who had settled in Pannonia, and with their help he imposed a measure of control on Moravia.[27][28] While Arnulf remained alive, the Magyars refrained from any overt acts of pillage, but with Arnulf’s death, they proceeded to invade Italy in 900.[27]

    Like all early Germanic rulers, he was heavily involved in ecclesiastical disputes; in 895, at the Diet of Tribur, he presided over a dispute between the Episcopal sees of Bremen, Hamburg and Cologne over jurisdictional authority, which saw Bremen and Hamburg remain a combined see, independent of the see of Cologne.[29]

    [edit] King of Italy and Holy Roman EmperorIn Italy, the Iron Crown of Lombardy was being fought over between Guy III of Spoleto and Berengar of Friuli. Berengar had been crowned king in 887, but Guy was in his turn crowned in 889. While Pope Stephen V supported Guy, crowning him Roman Emperor in 891, Arnulf threw his support behind Berengar.[30]

    In 893, a new pope, Formosus, not trusting the newly crowned co-emperors Guy and Lambert, sent an embassy to Omuntesberch, where Arnulf was holding a Diet with Svatopluk,[31] to request Arnulf come and liberate Italy,[32] where he would be crowned in Rome. Arnulf met the Primores of the Kingdom of Italy, dismissed them with gifts and promised to enter Italy.[33] Arnulf sent his son Zwentibold with a Bavarian army to join Berengar of Friuli. They defeated Guy, but were bought off and left in autumn. Arnulf then personally led an army across the Alps early in 894. In January 894 Bergamo fell, and Count Ambrose, Guy’s representative in the city, was hung from a tree by the city’s gate.[34] Conquering all of the territory north of the Po, he forced the surrender of Milan and then drove Guy out of Pavia, where he was crowned King of Italy,[16] but went no further before Guy died suddenly in late autumn, and fever incapacitated his troops.[33] His march northward through the Alps was interrupted by Rudolph, king of Transjurane Burgundy, and it was only with great difficulty that Arnulf crossed the mountain range.[34] In retaliation, Arnulf ordered his illegitimate son Zwentibold to ravage Burgundy.[34] In the meantime, Lambert and his mother Ageltrude travelled to Rome to receive papal confirmation of his imperial succession, but Formosus, still desiring to crown Arnulf, was imprisoned in Castel Sant'Angelo.

    In September 895, a new embassy arrived in Regensburg beseeching Arnulf's aid. In October, Arnulf undertook his second campaign into Italy.[33] He crossed the Alps quickly and took Pavia, but then he continued slowly, garnering support among the nobility of Tuscany. First Maginulf, Count of Milan, and then Walfred, Count of Pavia, joined him. Eventually even the Margrave Adalbert II abandoned Lambert. Finding Rome locked against him and held by Ageltrude,[33] he had to take the city by force on 21 February 896, freeing the pope.[35] Arnulf was greeted at the Ponte Milvio by the Roman Senate who escorted him into the Leonine City, where he was received by Pope Formosus on the steps of the Santi Apostoli.[35] On February 22, 896, Formosus led the king into the church, anointed and crowned him, and saluted him as Augustus.[36] Arnulf then proceeded to the Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls, where he received the homage of the Roman people,[35] who swore “never to hand over the city to Lambert or his mother Ageltrude”.[37] Arnulf then proceeded to exile to Bavaria two leading senators, Constantine and Stephen, who had helped Ageltrude seize the city.[38] Leaving one of his vassals, Farold, to hold Rome, Arnulf marched on Spoleto, where Ageltrude had fled to join Lambert.[37] On his way down, Arnulf suffered a stroke, forcing him to call off his campaign and return to Bavaria.[5]

    Arnulf only retained power in Italy as long as he was personally there.[4][39] On his way north, he stopped at Pavia where he crowned his illegitimate son Ratold, sub-King of Italy, after which he left Ratold in Milan in an attempt to preserve his hold on Italy.[40] That same year, Formosus died, leaving Lambert once again in power, and both he and Berengar killed any officials who had been put in place by Arnulf, as Ratold also fled from Milan to Bavaria.[41] Rumours of the time made Arnulf's condition to be a result of poisoning at the hand of Ageltrude.[37] On his return to Germany, he exercised very little further control in Italy for the rest of his life, although his agents in Rome did not prevent the accession of Pope Stephen VI in 896.[42] Although he eventually became a supporter of the claims of Lambert, he initially gave his support to Arnulf.[43]

    [edit] Final YearsWith his return to Germany in 896, Arnulf found that his physical ill health meant he was unable to deal with the problems besetting his reign. Italy was lost,[40] raiders from Moravia and Hungary were continually raiding his lands, and Lotharingia was in revolt against Zwentibold.[44] He was also plagued by escalating violence and power struggles between the lower German nobility.[45]

    On Arnulf's death in 899, he was succeeded as a king of the East Franks by his son by his wife Ota (died 903), Louis the Child.[46] Arnulf had the nobility also recognise the rights of his illegitimate sons Zwentibold and Ratold as his successors. Zwentibold, whom he had made King of Lotharingia in 895, continued to rule there until the next year (900).

    He is entombed in St. Emmeram's Basilica at Ratisbon, which is now known as Schloss Thurn und Taxis, the palace of the Princes of Thurn and Taxis.
  • Person Source
    Citations: 3,4,5,6,7
  • 850
    Birth
    About 850 | Germany
    Citation: 1
  • Title
    From 887 to 899
    Arnulf & held the title King of East Francia.
  • Title
    From 894 to 899
    He held the title King of Italy.
  • Title
    From 896 to 899
    He held the title Emperor of the Eastern Roman Empi.
  • 899~49
    Death
    29 November 899 | Ratisbone, Bavaria
    Citation: 2
Last Edited9 June 2024 05:34:23

Citations

  1. [S68] Wikipedia
  2. [S979] Our Royal, Titled, Noble and Commoner Ancestors
  3. [S217] Alexander Canduci, Triumph and Tragedy: the Rise and Fall of Rome's Immortal Emperors
  4. [S218] Eleanor Duckett, Death and Life in the Tenth Century
  5. [S219] Robert Comyn, History of the Western Empire, from its Restoration by Charlemagne to the Accession of Charles V
  6. [S220] James Bryce, The Holy Roman Empire
  7. [S221] Horace K Mann, The Lives of the Popes in the Early Middle Ages
Pedigree

Carloman &1,2

M, #3382, b. about 829, d. 2 March 880

Parents

FatherLouis II & ("Louis the German") (b. 806, d. 28 August 876)
MotherEmma & of Bavaria (b. 810, d. 31 January 876)

Family: Litwinde & of Carinthia (b. 835)

SonArnulf &+ (b. about 850, d. 29 November 899)
DaughterGisele of Bavaria (b. 854)
Carloman

Events

  • Burial
    Otting, Bavaria
    Citation: 1
  • Marriage Status | Litwinde & of Carinthia
  • 829
    Birth
    About 829 | Bavaria
    Citation: 2
  • 856~27
    Title
    856
    Carloman & held the title Governor of Carantania.
    Citation: 1
  • 876~47
    Title
    876
    He held the title King of Bavaria.
    Citation: 1
  • 880~51
    Death
    2 March 880
    Citation: 2
Last Edited9 June 2024 05:34:23

Citations

  1. [S68] Wikipedia
  2. [S979] Our Royal, Titled, Noble and Commoner Ancestors
Pedigree

Litwinde & of Carinthia1

F, #3383, b. 835

Family: Carloman & (b. about 829, d. 2 March 880)

SonArnulf &+ (b. about 850, d. 29 November 899)
DaughterGisele of Bavaria (b. 854)

Events

  • Name Liutswind & of Corinthia
    Citation: 2
  • Marriage Status | Carloman &
  • 835
    Birth
    835 | Corinth, Greece
Last Edited9 June 2024 05:34:23

Citations

  1. [S979] Our Royal, Titled, Noble and Commoner Ancestors
  2. [S68] Wikipedia
Pedigree

Louis II & ("Louis the German")1,2,3

M, #3384, b. 806, d. 28 August 876

Parents

FatherLouis I & ("Louis the Pious") (b. between 16 April 778 and September 778, d. 20 June 840)
MotherErmengarde & von Haspengau (b. 778, d. 3 October 818)

Family: Emma & of Bavaria (b. 810, d. 31 January 876)

DaughterHildegardis of Germany (b. 828)
SonCarloman &+ (b. about 829, d. 2 March 880)
SonLouis (b. estimated 831, d. 882)
SonCharles II (b. 13 June 839, d. 13 January 888)
DaughterBertha of Germany (b. 840)
DaughterErnengarde of Germany (b. 842)

Events

  • Name Ludwig II &
  • Burial
    Prussia
  • 806
    Birth
    806 | France
    Citation: 1
  • 827~21
    827
    Age: ~17
    Birth: 810 | Altdorf, Bavaria
    Death: 31 January 876 | Cereme, Saxony
  • Title
    From 843 to 876
    Louis II & ("Louis the German") held the title King of Bavaria.
    Citations: 1,3
  • 876~70
    Death
    28 August 876 | Frankfurt am Main, Hessen-Nassau, Prussia
Last Edited9 June 2024 05:34:23

Citations

  1. [S979] Our Royal, Titled, Noble and Commoner Ancestors
  2. [S487] The Peerage.com
  3. [S68] Wikipedia
Pedigree

Emma & of Bavaria1

F, #3385, b. 810, d. 31 January 876

Parents

FatherGuelph I & (b. about 776, d. 3 September 825)
MotherHeilwig & von Sachsen (b. estimated 780, d. 833)

Family: Louis II & ("Louis the German") (b. 806, d. 28 August 876)

DaughterHildegardis of Germany (b. 828)
SonCarloman &+ (b. about 829, d. 2 March 880)
SonLouis (b. estimated 831, d. 882)
SonCharles II (b. 13 June 839, d. 13 January 888)
DaughterBertha of Germany (b. 840)
DaughterErnengarde of Germany (b. 842)
Emma of Bavaria

Events

Last Edited9 June 2024 05:34:23

Citations

  1. [S979] Our Royal, Titled, Noble and Commoner Ancestors
Pedigree

Conrad I &1,2

M, #3388, b. 800, d. 16 February 863

Parents

FatherGuelph I & (b. about 776, d. 3 September 825)
MotherHeilwig & von Sachsen (b. estimated 780, d. 833)

Family: Adelaide & of Tours (b. 805, d. 15 September 866)

SonGuelph I von Bayern (b. about 818, d. 876)
SonHugo (b. estimated 821, d. 12 May 886)
SonConrad (b. estimated 822, d. 16 February 863)
SonConrad II &+ (b. 825, d. 887)
SonGuelf I of Argengau (b. 835, d. 876)
DaughterUnknown de Bourgogne+ (b. estimated 840)

Events

  • Name Eticho I
    Citation: 1
  • Title
    Conrad I & held the title Count of Auxerre.
  • Title
    He held the title Count of Bourgogne.
    Citation: 1
  • Title
    He held the title Count of Paris.
    Citation: 1
  • Title
    He held the title Count of Schussengau.
    Citation: 1
  • 800
    Birth
    800
  • 820~20
    About 820
    Age: ~15
    Birth: 805 | Tours, Centre, France
    Death: 15 September 866
    Citation: 1
  • 863~63
    Death
    16 February 863
    Citation: 1
Last Edited9 June 2024 05:34:23

Citations

  1. [S979] Our Royal, Titled, Noble and Commoner Ancestors
  2. [S487] The Peerage.com
Pedigree

Robert II & ("The Pious")1

M, #3390, b. 27 March 972, d. 20 July 1031

Parents

FatherHugh II & Capet (b. December 941, d. 24 October 996)
MotherAdelaide & of Aquitaine (b. 945, d. before 15 June 1005)

Family: Constance & d' Arles (b. 985, d. 25 July 1032)

DaughterAdvisa (b. 1003, d. 1063)
SonHugh Magnus of France+ (b. 24 August 1007, d. 17 September 1025)
SonHenry I &+ (b. April 1008, d. 4 August 1060)
DaughterAdela & ("the Holy") Capet+ (b. 1009, d. 8 January 1079)
SonRobert I & de The Old (the Old) Bourgogne+ (b. 1011, d. 18 March 1076)
SonEudes (b. 1013)
DaughterConstance & of France+ (b. estimated 1014, d. 1042)
Robert II

Events

Last Edited9 June 2024 05:34:23

Citations

  1. [S993] Maurice G. Boddy, The Boddy Family
  2. [S487] The Peerage.com
  3. [S979] Our Royal, Titled, Noble and Commoner Ancestors
  4. [S68] Wikipedia
Pedigree

Constance & d' Arles1,2,3

F, #3391, b. 985, d. 25 July 1032

Parents

FatherWilliam III & of Taillefer (b. 947, d. October 1037)
MotherArsinde & d' Anjou (b. 955, d. 986)

Family: Robert II & ("The Pious") (b. 27 March 972, d. 20 July 1031)

DaughterAdvisa (b. 1003, d. 1063)
SonHugh Magnus of France+ (b. 24 August 1007, d. 17 September 1025)
SonHenry I &+ (b. April 1008, d. 4 August 1060)
DaughterAdela & ("the Holy") Capet+ (b. 1009, d. 8 January 1079)
SonRobert I & de The Old (the Old) Bourgogne+ (b. 1011, d. 18 March 1076)
SonEudes (b. 1013)
DaughterConstance & of France+ (b. estimated 1014, d. 1042)
Constance of Arles

Events

  • Name Constance de Taillefer
    Citation: 1
  • Burial
    Paris, Ile-de-France, France
  • 985
    Birth
    985 | Toulouse, Haute-Garonne, Midi-Pyrenees, France
    Citation: 4
  • 1000~15
    1000 | Melun, Aquitane, France
    Age: ~28
    Birth: 27 March 972 | Orleans, Loiret, Centre, France
    Death: 20 July 1031 | Melun, Aquitane, France
  • Title
    From 1001 to 1031
    Constance & d' Arles held the title Queen Consort of the Franks.
  • 1032~47
    Death
    25 July 1032 | Melun, Aquitane, France
    Citation: 4
Last Edited9 June 2024 05:34:23

Citations

  1. [S487] The Peerage.com
  2. [S407] Ancestry
  3. [S993] Maurice G. Boddy, The Boddy Family
  4. [S979] Our Royal, Titled, Noble and Commoner Ancestors
Pedigree

Hugh I & ("Hugh the Great")1

M, #3394, b. 895, d. 24 October 996

Parents

FatherRobert I & (b. 15 August 866, d. 15 June 923)
MotherBeatrice & of Vermandois (b. 880, d. after 26 March 931)

Family: Hedwige & of Saxony (b. 922, d. 1 September 958)

DaughterBeatrice & of Bourgogne+ (b. 939, d. 23 September 1005)
SonHugh II & Capet+ (b. December 941, d. 24 October 996)
DaughterEmma of France (b. 945)
SonHenry I &+ (b. 948, d. 15 October 1002)

Events

  • Title
    Hugh I & ("Hugh the Great") held the title Duke of the Franks.
  • Title
    He held the title Count of Paris.
    Citation: 2
  • Title
    He held the title Count of Orleans.
    Citation: 2
  • Title
    He held the title Count of Vexin.
    Citation: 2
  • Title
    He held the title Count of LeMans.
    Citation: 2
  • Note

    Citation: 3
  • 895
    Birth
    895 | Paris, Ile-de-France, France
    Citation: 2
  • 926~31
    Marriage | Eadhild
    926
    Age: ~23
    Birth: estimated 903
    Death: 938
    Citation: 3
  • 938~43
    17 September 938 | Mainz Oder, Ingelheim, Rheinland, Germany
    Age: ~16
    Birth: 922 | Saxony, Germany
    Death: 1 September 958 | Aachen, Rheinland, Prussia
  • 996~101
    Death
    24 October 996 | Doudan, Ile-de-France, France
    Citation: 2
Last Edited9 June 2024 05:34:23

Citations

  1. [S993] Maurice G. Boddy, The Boddy Family
  2. [S979] Our Royal, Titled, Noble and Commoner Ancestors
  3. [S68] Wikipedia
Pedigree

Hedwige & of Saxony1

F, #3395, b. 922, d. 1 September 958

Parents

FatherHenry I & ("Heinrich the Fowler") (b. 2 July 876, d. 2 July 936)
MotherMathilda & von Ringelheim (b. 892, d. 14 May 968)

Family: Hugh I & ("Hugh the Great") (b. 895, d. 24 October 996)

DaughterBeatrice & of Bourgogne+ (b. 939, d. 23 September 1005)
SonHugh II & Capet+ (b. December 941, d. 24 October 996)
DaughterEmma of France (b. 945)
SonHenry I &+ (b. 948, d. 15 October 1002)
Hedwig of Saxony

Events

  • Name Hedwiga of Germany
    Citation: 2
  • Note

    Citation: 3
  • 922
    Birth
    922 | Saxony, Germany
    Citation: 2
  • 938~16
    17 September 938 | Mainz Oder, Ingelheim, Rheinland, Germany
    Age: ~43
    Birth: 895 | Paris, Ile-de-France, France
    Death: 24 October 996 | Doudan, Ile-de-France, France
  • 958~36
    Death
    1 September 958 | Aachen, Rheinland, Prussia
    Citation: 2
Last Edited9 June 2024 05:34:23

Citations

  1. [S993] Maurice G. Boddy, The Boddy Family
  2. [S979] Our Royal, Titled, Noble and Commoner Ancestors
  3. [S68] Wikipedia
Pedigree

Henry I & ("Heinrich the Fowler")1,2

M, #3396, b. 2 July 876, d. 2 July 936

Parents

FatherOtto I & von ("The Illustrious") Saxony (b. 836, d. 3 November 912)
MotherHaithui & of Babenberg (b. 853, d. 24 December 903)

Family: Mathilda & von Ringelheim (b. 892, d. 14 May 968)

SonBruno von Lothringen (b. estimated 911)
SonOtto I & ("The Great")+ (b. 23 November 912, d. 7 May 973)
DaughterGerberge & von Saxony+ (b. 913, d. 5 May 969)
SonHeinrich II(I)+ (b. 919, d. 1 November 955)
DaughterHedwige & of Saxony+ (b. 922, d. 1 September 958)
Heinrich I (Henry the Fowler)

Events

  • Burial
    Quedlinburg, Germany
  • Title
    Henry I & ("Heinrich the Fowler") held the title Duke of the Saxons.
    Citation: 2
  • Note

    Citation: 3
  • Marriage Status | Hatburg von Merseburg
  • Divorced in 908.
    Citation: 2
  • 876
    Birth
    2 July 876 | Membledon, Saxony, Germany
    Citation: 2
  • 909~33
    909 | Goslar, Lower Saxony, Germany
    Age: ~17
    Birth: 892 | Ringelheim, Goslar, Hannover, Germany
    Death: 14 May 968 | Quedlinburg, Germany
  • Title
    From 912 to 919
    He held the title Herzog von Saxony.
    Citation: 1
  • 919
    Title
    From 919
    He held the title Holy Roman Emperor.
    Citation: 1
  • 919
    Title
    From 24 May 919
    He held the title King of the Saxons.
    Citations: 2,3
  • 93660
    Death
    2 July 936 | Membledon, Saxony, Germany
    Citation: 2
Last Edited9 June 2024 05:34:23

Citations

  1. [S487] The Peerage.com
  2. [S979] Our Royal, Titled, Noble and Commoner Ancestors
  3. [S68] Wikipedia
Pedigree

Mathilda & von Ringelheim1,2

F, #3397, b. 892, d. 14 May 968

Parents

FatherTheodoric & (b. about 872, d. 8 December 917)
MotherReginhilde & von Friesland (b. estimated 875, d. 917)

Family: Henry I & ("Heinrich the Fowler") (b. 2 July 876, d. 2 July 936)

SonBruno von Lothringen (b. estimated 911)
SonOtto I & ("The Great")+ (b. 23 November 912, d. 7 May 973)
DaughterGerberge & von Saxony+ (b. 913, d. 5 May 969)
SonHeinrich II(I)+ (b. 919, d. 1 November 955)
DaughterHedwige & of Saxony+ (b. 922, d. 1 September 958)
Mathilde

Events

  • Burial
    Quedlinburg, Germany
    Citation: 3
  • Title
    Mathilda & von Ringelheim held the title Saint.
    Citation: 3
  • 892
    Birth
    892 | Ringelheim, Goslar, Hannover, Germany
    Citations: 1,2
  • 909~17
    909 | Goslar, Lower Saxony, Germany
    Age: ~33
    Birth: 2 July 876 | Membledon, Saxony, Germany
    Death: 2 July 936 | Membledon, Saxony, Germany
  • 968~76
    Death
    14 May 968 | Quedlinburg, Germany
    Citations: 1,2
Last Edited9 June 2024 05:34:23

Citations

  1. [S487] The Peerage.com
  2. [S979] Our Royal, Titled, Noble and Commoner Ancestors
  3. [S68] Wikipedia
Pedigree

Theodoric &1

M, #3398, b. about 872, d. 8 December 917

Parents

FatherReginhart & von Threkwitigau (b. about 815)
MotherMatilda & von Ittergau (b. 833)

Family: Reginhilde & von Friesland (b. estimated 875, d. 917)

DaughterMathilda & von Ringelheim+ (b. 892, d. 14 May 968)
DaughterFrederuna & von Saxony+ (b. 895, d. 10 February 917)
SonLambert &+ (b. estimated 900)
SonFrederick II (b. estimated 902)
DaughterAmalrada + von Ringelheim+ (b. estimated 905)

Events

  • Name Thiederich
    Citation: 1
  • Name Theudebert
    Citation: 1
  • Name Dietrich
    Citation: 2
  • Title
    Theodoric & held the title Count of Ringelheim.
  • 872
    Birth
    About 872 | Ringelheim, Goslar, Hannover, Germany
    Citation: 1
  • 900~28
    900
    Age: ~25
    Birth: estimated 875
    Death: 917
    Citation: 1
  • 917~45
    Death
    8 December 917
    Citation: 2
Last Edited9 June 2024 05:34:23

Citations

  1. [S979] Our Royal, Titled, Noble and Commoner Ancestors
  2. [S487] The Peerage.com
Pedigree

Reginhart & von Threkwitigau1

M, #3400, b. about 815

Parents

FatherWalpert & (b. 802, d. 856)
MotherAltbergis & of Lesmona (b. 802)

Family: Matilda & von Ittergau (b. 833)

SonTheodoric &+ (b. about 872, d. 8 December 917)

Events

  • Title
    Reginhart & von Threkwitigau held the title Count of Ringelheim.
    Citation: 1
  • 815
    Birth
    About 815 | Ringelheim, Goslar, Hannover, Germany
    Citation: 1
Last Edited9 June 2024 05:34:23

Citations

  1. [S979] Our Royal, Titled, Noble and Commoner Ancestors