Famouskin.Com Relationship Chart of Rollo of Normandy (C0870 - C0932) 29Th Great-Grandfather of John Dos Passos American Novelist

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Famouskin.Com Relationship Chart of Rollo of Normandy (C0870 - C0932) 29Th Great-Grandfather of John Dos Passos American Novelist FamousKin.com Relationship Chart of Rollo of Normandy (c0870 - c0932) 29th Great-grandfather of John Dos Passos American Novelist Rollo of Normandy Poppa of Bayeux Adele of Normandy William III of Aquitaine Adelaide of Aquitaine Hugh Capet Robert II, King of France Constance of Arles Henry I, King of France Anne of Kiev Philip I, King of France Berthe of Holland Louis VI, King of France Adelaide de Savoy Louis VII, King of France Adèle of Champagne FamousKin.comA © 2010-2021 FamousKin.com Page 1 of 4 01 Oct 2021 FamousKin.com Relationship Chart of Rollo of Normandy to John Dos Passos A Philip II Auguste, King of France Isabella of Hainault Louis VIII, King of France Blanche of Castile Robert I, Count of Artois Matilda of Brabant Blanche of Artois Edmund Plantagenet Henry Plantagenet Maud de Chaworth Eleanor Plantagenet Richard FitzAlan Sir Richard FitzAlan Elizabeth de Bohun Elizabeth FitzAlan Sir Robert Goushill Joan Goushill Sir Thomas Stanley Katherine Stanley FamousKin.comSir John Savage B © 2010-2021 FamousKin.com Page 2 of 4 01 Oct 2021 FamousKin.com Relationship Chart of Rollo of Normandy to John Dos Passos B Dulcia Savage Sir Henry Bold Maud Bold Thomas Gerard Jennet Gerard Richard Eltonhead William Eltonhead Anne Bowers Richard Eltonhead Anne Sutton Alice Eltonhead Henry Corbin Laetitia Corbin Richard Lee Philip Lee Elizabeth - - - - - - Hannah Lee Joseph Sprigg Osborn Sprigg FamousKin.comSarah Cresap C © 2010-2021 FamousKin.com Page 3 of 4 01 Oct 2021 FamousKin.com Relationship Chart of Rollo of Normandy to John Dos Passos C Michael Cresap Sprigg Mary Lamar James Cresap Sprigg Lucy E. Addison Lucy Addison Sprigg John Randolph Dos Passos John Dos Passos American Novelist FamousKin.com © 2010-2021 FamousKin.com Page 4 of 4 01 Oct 2021 .
Recommended publications
  • Count of Westphalia, Dietrich Saint Matilda of Ringleheim Reinhild Of
    Count of Westphalia, Dietrich Reinhild of Ringleheim Birth 858 Birth 858 Westphalia, Germany Germany Death 3 Feb 917 Death 917 Westphalia, Germany Goslar, Braunschweig, Niedersachsen, Germany King of Germany, Henry I Saint Matilda of Ringleheim Birth 876 Birth 895 Nordhaussen, Saxon, Germany Rigleheim, Goslar, Hannover, Germany Marriage 909 Death 14 Mar 968 Death 27 Jun 936 Memleben, Germany King of France Hugh "The Great" Birth 0898 Hedwiga of Saxony Paris, Isle de France, France Birth 0915 Christening Saxony, Germany Peronne, Somme, France Death 24 Feb 965 Marriage 09 Sep 938 Aix-la-Chapelle, France Mainz Oder, Ingelheim, Rhineland, Germany Death 11 Jun 956 Deurdan, Dourdan, France King of France, Hugh Capet Birth 941 Adelaide of Aquitaine of Paris, Isle De France Birth 945 Christening Guinna Paris (Département), France Marriage 970 Death 19 Oct 996 Death 1006 Paris, Seine, District of the Paris Region, France Constance of Aries King of France, Robert II Birth 986 Toulouse, France Birth 16 Mar 972 Christening 998 Orléans, Centre (Région), France Auquitania-Princess Death 14 Jul 1031 Marriage 1000 Melun, Seine-et-Marne, France Death 19 Jul 1032 Melun, France Duke of Burgundy, Robert I Birth 1011 Death 21 Mar 1076 Hildegarde of Burgundy Duke of Aquitaine, William VIII Birth 1056 Birth 1025 Death 1104 Death 25 Sep 1086 Duke of Aquitaine, William IX Countess of Toulouse, Philippa Birth 22 Oct 1071 Birth 1073 Death 10 Feb 1126 Death 28 Nov 1118 Duke of Aquitaine, William X Aenor de Châtellerault Birth 1099 Birth 1103 Death 9 Apr 1137 Death
    [Show full text]
  • Heineman Royal Ancestors Medieval Europe
    HERALDRYand BIOGRAPHIES of the HEINEMAN ROYAL ANCESTORS of MEDIEVAL EUROPE HERALDRY and BIOGRAPHIES of the HEINEMAN ROYAL ANCESTORS of MEDIEVAL EUROPE INTRODUCTION After producing numerous editions and revisions of the Another way in which the royal house of a given country familiy genealogy report and subsequent support may change is when a foreign prince is invited to fill a documents the lineage to numerous royal ancestors of vacant throne or a next-of-kin from a foreign house Europe although evident to me as the author was not clear succeeds. This occurred with the death of childless Queen to the readers. The family journal format used in the Anne of the House of Stuart: she was succeeded by a reports, while comprehensive and the most popular form prince of the House of Hanover who was her nearest for publishing genealogy can be confusing to individuals Protestant relative. wishing to trace a direct ancestral line of descent. Not everyone wants a report encumbered with the names of Unlike all Europeans, most of the world's Royal Families every child born to the most distant of family lines. do not really have family names and those that have adopted them rarely use them. They are referred to A Royal House or Dynasty is a sort of family name used instead by their titles, often related to an area ruled or by royalty. It generally represents the members of a family once ruled by that family. The name of a Royal House is in various senior and junior or cadet branches, who are not a surname; it just a convenient way of dynastic loosely related but not necessarily of the same immediate identification of individuals.
    [Show full text]
  • Charlemagne Descent
    Selected descendants of Charlemagne to the early 16th century (1 of 315) Charlemagne King of the Franks Hildegard of Vinzgau b: 742 d: 28 January 813/14 Irmengard of Hesbain Louis I "The Pious" Emperor of the West Judith of Bavaria Pepin of Italy b: 778 in Casseneuil, France d: 810 d: 20 June 840 Lothair I Holy Roman Emperor Irmengard Comtesse de Tours Louis II "The German" King of the East Emma von Bayern Gisela Eberhard Duke of Fruili Cont. p. 2 Cont. p. 3 d: 29 September 855 in Pruem, Franks b: 821 b: Abt. 815 Rheinland, Germany d: 28 August 876 d: 16 December 866 Ermengarde Princesse des Francs Giselbert II Graf von Maasgau Carloman König von Bayern Cont. p. 4 Anscar I Duke of Ivrea b: 825 b: 829 d: March 901/02 d: 14 June 877 d: 880 Reginar I Comte de Hainaut Herzog von Alberade von Kleve Adalbert I Duke of Ivrea Gisela of Fruili Lothringen d: Aft. 28 February 928/29 b: 850 d: 915 in Meerssen, The Netherlands Cont. p. 5 Cont. p. 6 Selected descendants of Charlemagne to the early 16th century (2 of 315) Louis I "The Pious" Emperor of the West b: 778 in Casseneuil, France Judith of Bavaria d: 20 June 840 Cont. p. 1 Charles II King of the West Franks Ermentrude of Orléans b: 13 June 823 b: 27 September 823 d: 6 October 877 d: 6 October 869 Judith (Princess) Baldwin I Count of Flanders Louis II King of the West Franks Adelaide de Paris b: 844 d: 858 b: 1 November 846 d: 870 d: 10 April 879 Baldwin II Count of Flanders Æfthryth Ermentrude of France Cont.
    [Show full text]
  • 35Th Generation B 68719476736
    /Users/giovanni/Documents/Gen/CousinObummer/cousinObummer68719476736.rtf 35th Generation B 68719476736. ... ////B 42983228156. Rainier iii count of Mons/Reginar iv count of Mons (s of Reginar ii count of Hainaut & Adelaide of Burgundy) b: c. 920 in Brabant d: 973 in Bohemia [https:// en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reginar_III,_Count_of_Hainaut] () m: 42983228157. Adela () [] () B 85966456312. Reginar ii count of Hainaut (s of Reginar duke of Lorraine & Hersinda/Hersent of France) b: c. 890 d: c. 932 [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reginar_II,_Count_of_Hainaut] () m: 85966456313. Adelaide of Burgundy (d of Richard duke of Burgundy & Adelaide of Auxerre) [] () B 85966456314. [parents of Adela] ////B 42983228158. Hugh Capet king of France/Hugues de Paris roi de France (s of Hugues of Neustria comte de Paris/Hugh the great & Hedwig von Sachsen/Hewige of Saxony) b: c. 938 d: 996-10-24 buried: basilica St. Denis, Ile de France, France [http:// www.thepeerage.com/10311.htm#i103103][https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_Capet] () m: 42983228159. Adeliaide of Poitou/Adelaide de Poitou/Adelaide of Aquitaine/ Abdelahide of Poitiers (d of Guillaume iii duc d'Aquitaine/William iii of Aquitaine & ??Adele of Normandy??; gd of ??Rollo of Normandy??) b: c. 945 d: 1004 or 1005 [http:// www.thepeerage.com/p10520.htm#i105197][https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Adelaide_of_Aquitaine] () B 85966456316. Hugues of Neustria comte de Paris/Hugh the great/Hugues Magnus (s of Robert i of France & Beatrice of Vermandois) b: c. 898 at Paris d: 956-06-16 at Dourdan [https:// en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_the_Great] () m: 85966456317. Hedwig von Sachsen/ Hewige of Saxony (d of Henry i the fowler & Matilda; sister of HRE Otto i) b: c.
    [Show full text]
  • Henrietta Maria and Marie Antoinette
    Henrietta Maria and Marie Antoinette: Queenship and Revolution in Early Modern Europe By Carolyn Harris A thesis submitted to the Graduate Program in History in conformity with the requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Queen’s University Kingston, Ontario, Canada May 2012 Copyright © Carolyn Harris 2012 Abstract: Henrietta Maria and Marie Antoinette: Queenship and Revolution in Early Modern Europe analyzes Henrietta Maria and Marie Antoinette in a thematic framework, focussing on the dialogue between their perceptions of themselves as heads of households, wives, and mothers and the expectations of their husbands’ subjects concerning the Queen Consort’s performance of these roles. The public nature of the Queen Consort’s position transformed the choices Henrietta Maria and Marie Antoinette made as wives and mothers into political acts with lasting implications for their respective royal houses. Both Queens approached their roles in a manner that ultimately contributed to the collapse of monarchical government. The question of the Queen’s actual activities and her contribution to popular discourse has been particularly neglected as the symbolism of Henrietta Maria, and especially Marie Antoinette has received more recent scholarly attention while discussion of each Queen’s actual motives has been relegated to popular biographies. The juxtaposition of the Queen’s own intentions with the expectations of her husband’s subjects provides a more complete picture of the ideological conflicts centering on the consort. These points of similarity and the comparative structure deepen the understanding of Henrietta Maria’s impeachment and Marie Antoinette’s trial because the juxtaposition of the two events reveals the continuous presence of the Queen Consort as a divisive figure throughout the Early Modern period.
    [Show full text]
  • The Southworth Genealogy
    cs n\ ftT3 The Southworth Genealogy. ROYAL DESCENTS OF MRS. CHARLES HATHAWAY, NEE CORA SOUTHWORTH ROUNTREE, OF EAST ORANGE, N. J. PEDIGREE I. Royal Descent of jB|@KBSSBBIS@HPSBHS99BSBBEK@p[' from the Saxon Kings of England, and their ancestors, Cerdic and Odin. I. WODIN, or ODIN (Roman, Othinus), whom some antiquarians claim to have descended from the eldest son of the patriarch Noah, made himself master of a considerable part of the North of Europe in the third century, and died in what is now Sweden. By his wife, Frea, or Frigga, he had six sons, the fifth of whom was, II. BELDEG, sometimes called Balder, who married JVanna, a daugh­ ter of Gewar, and had son III. BRANDIUS, or BRANDO, who had son IV. FROODIGARIUS, or FROETHGAR, who had son V. WIGGA, who had son VI. GEWESIUS, or GEWISCH, who had son i The Southworth Genealogy VII. EFFA, or ESTA, who had son VIII. EFFA, (the second) who had son IX. ELISEUS, who had son X. CERDIC, the first King of the West Saxons; died in 534, after having reigned about thirty-three years. He had two Sons, Chelwolf, who died during the life time of his father, and whose great-grandson, Kentwin, was the seventh King of the West Saxons, and XI. KENRIC, or CYNRIC, who succeeded to the Crown in 534 upon the death of his father. He died in 560, having reigned twenty- six years. He had two sons, the second of whom Cuthwulf, (died 572) left son, Cearlik, who wrested the Kingdom from Cheaulin, his uncle, in 592, and was fourth king of West Saxons.
    [Show full text]
  • Family Tree Maker
    Ancestors of Elizabeth Windsor Generation No. 1 1. Elizabeth Windsor, born 1465 in Bradenlove (Bucks.) ENG. She was the daughter of 2. Thomas Windsor and 3. Elizabeth Andrews. She married (1) Richard Fowler Abt. 1509. He was born 1460 in Rycot, Great Haseley (Oxfordshire) ENG, and died 1528. He was the son of Sir Richard Fowler and Joan Danvers. Generation No. 2 2. Thomas Windsor, born 1440 in Stanwell (Middlesex) ENG; died September 29, 1485 in Stanwell (Middlesex) ENG. He was the son of 4. Miles Windsor and 5. Joan Green. He married 3. Elizabeth Andrews. 3. Elizabeth Andrews, born 1444 in Baylham (Suffolk) ENG; died Abt. 1485. She was the daughter of 6. John Andrews and 7. Elizabeth Stratton. Children of Thomas Windsor and Elizabeth Andrews are: 1 i. Elizabeth Windsor, born 1465 in Bradenlove (Bucks.) ENG; married Richard Fowler Abt. 1509. ii. Andrew Windsor, born February 1466/67 in Stanwell (Middlesex) ENG; died March 20, 1542/43 in Hounslow (Middlesex) ENG; married Elizabeth Blount; born Abt. 1469 in Rock (Worcestershire) ENG. Generation No. 3 4. Miles Windsor, born 1410 in Stanwell (Middlesex) ENG; died September 30, 1451 in Colbrook (Bucks.) ENG. He was the son of 8. Richard de Windsor, III and 9. Christian Faulkner. He married 5. Joan Green Abt. 1443. 5. Joan Green, born 1414 in Bridgenorth, ENG. She was the daughter of 10. Walter Green. Child of Miles Windsor and Joan Green is: 2 i. Thomas Windsor, born 1440 in Stanwell (Middlesex) ENG; died September 29, 1485 in Stanwell (Middlesex) ENG; married Elizabeth Andrews. 6.
    [Show full text]
  • Name Generation Third Generation from William R. Wilson, Jr. Deirdre D Griffith 20-3+ Romulus Riggs Griffith VI 20-3+ Dorsey
    Name Generation Third Generation from William R. Wilson, Jr. Deirdre D Griffith 20-3+ Romulus Riggs Griffith VI 20-3+ Dorsey Meriweather Griffith 20-3+ Lesley Alsentzer 20-3+ Michele Alsentzer 20-3+ Benjamin Harry Collins 20-3+ Laura Cecelia Collins 20-3+ Erin Louise Wilson 20-3+ Second Generation from William R. Wilson, Jr. Romulus Riggs Griffith V 20-2+ Sarah Wilson Griffith 20-2+ Ruth Wilson 20-2+ Eric Daniel Wilson 20-2+ Karen Quinn 20-2+ Kathy Quinn 20-2+ Cindi Quinn 20-2+ Jeffrey Quinn 20-2+ Sean Quinn 20-2+ First Generation from William R. Wilson, Jr. Evelyn Fell Wilson 20-1+ Harry Tinney Wilson 20-1+ Jane Wilson 20-1+ Starting Generation (1) William R. Wilson, Jr 19-0 TZ-338 Generation 1 (2) William R. Wilson, Sr. 19-1 TZ-338; HIJ-217 Adelaide L. Hyland 19-1 HIJ-217; TZ-338 Generation 2 (4) John Alexander Wilson 19-2 TZ-338 Sabella Baker 19-2 TZ-338 Washington Hyland 19-2 HIJ-217 Anna Eliza Ellis 19-2 HIJ-217 Generation 3 (4) Alexander Wilson 18-3 TZ-338; HIJ-211 Mary Ann Hyland 18-3 HIJ-211; TZ-338 Jacob Hyland 18-3 HIJ-217 Elizabeth Thackery 18-3 HIJ-217 Generation 4 (4) Edward Hyland 18-4 HIJ-210; A-171 Julia Arrants 18-4 A-171; HIJ-210 Stephen Hyland 18-4 HIJ-216; HIJ-50 Araminta Hamm 18-4 HIJ-50; HIJ-216 Generation 5 (8) John Hyland 18-5 HIJ-210 Mary Juliustra/Johnson 18-5 HIJ-210 Johannes Arrants 18-5 A-171; TZ-153 Elizabeth Veazey 18-5 TZ-153; A-171 John Hyland 18-5 HIJ-210; HIJ-216; TZ-35 Martha Tilden 18-5 TZ-35; HIJ-216 Thomas Hamm 18-5 HIJ-50; TZ-15 Ann Thompson 18-5 TZ-15; HIJ-50 Generation 6 (12) Nicholas Hyland, Jr.
    [Show full text]
  • ROBERT II KING of FRANCE (Pg
    pg 1/2 Robert Capet II King of France Born: 27 Mar 972 FRA Married: Constance de Toulouse Died: 20 July 1031 FRA Parents: Hugues Capet & Adelaide of Aquitaine Robert II (27 March 972 – 20 July 1031), called the Pious or the Wise, was King of France from 996 until his death. The second reigning member of the House of Capet, he was born in Orléans to Hugh Capet and Adelaide of Aquitaine. Co-rule with father Immediately after his own coronation, Robert's father Hugh began to push for the coronation of Robert. "The essential means by which the early Capetians were seen to have kept the throne in their family was through the association of the eldest surviving son in the royalty during the father's lifetime," Andrew W. Lewis has observed, in tracing the phenomenon in this line of kings who lacked dynastic legitimacy.[1] Hugh's claimed reason was that he was planning an expedition against the Moorish armies harassing Borrel II of Barcelona, an invasion which never occurred, and that the stability of the country necessitated a co-king, should he die while on expedition.[2] Ralph Glaber, however, attributes Hugh's request to his old age and inability to control the nobility.[3] Modern scholarship has largely imputed to Hugh the motive of establishing a dynasty against the claims of electoral power on the part of the aristocracy, but this is not the typical view of contemporaries and even some modern scholars have been less sceptical of Hugh's "plan" to campaign in Spain.[4] Robert was eventually crowned on 30 December 987.
    [Show full text]
  • Atlantic Crossings: Race, Gender, and the Construction of Families in Eighteenth-Century La Rochelle
    ATLANTIC CROSSINGS: RACE, GENDER, AND THE CONSTRUCTION OF FAMILIES IN EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY LA ROCHELLE By Jennifer L. Palmer A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (History and Women’s Studies) in The University of Michigan 2008 Doctoral Committee: Professor Dena Goodman, Chair Professor Susan L. Siegfried Associate Professor Joshua H. Cole Associate Professor Martha S. Jones © Jennifer L. Palmer 2008 Dedication For Amy… still shining. ii Acknowledgements I have accrued many debts on my intellectual journey to eighteenth-century La Rochelle. This project has received funding support from a number of institutions. The Council for European Studies and the University of Michigan International Institute funded pre-dissertation research. A Bourse Châteaubriand enabled me to spend a year in the archives in La Rochelle. The Michigan Society of Fellows and the Michigan Institute for the Humanities provided support, invaluable critique, and intellectual community while I wrote the dissertation. The Women’s Studies Department at the University of Michigan offered summer support, funding for conferences, and encouragement throughout this process, and the History Department offered fellowship and teaching support. I thank both departments for the diverse academic communities they fostered. I also appreciate the willingness of archivists to share their expertise. In France, archivists at the Archives départementales de la Charente Maritime and the Archives municipales de La Rochelle made every effort to help me in what occasionally seemed a futile search for people of color in the eighteenth century. The Musée du Nouveau Monde kindly opened its collection to me, and gave me permission to reproduce images from it.
    [Show full text]
  • Charlemagne to William
    Selected descendants of Charlemagne to the 13th century (1 of 62) Charlemagne King of the Hildegard of Vinzgau Franks b: 742 d: 28 January 813/14 Irmengard of Hesbain Louis I "The Pious" Judith of Bavaria Pepin of Italy Emperor of the West d: 810 b: 778 in Casseneuil, France d: 20 June 840 Lothair I Holy Roman Irmengard Comtesse de Louis II "The German" Emma von Bayern Gisela Eberhard Duke of Fruili Cont. p. 2 Bernard King of the Cunigunde Emperor Tours King of the East Franks b: 821 b: Abt. 815 Lombards d: 29 September 855 in d: 28 August 876 d: 16 December 866 b: 797 in Vermandois, Pruem, Rheinland, Picardy Germany d: 17 April 818 in Milan, Lombardy Ermengarde Princesse Giselbert II Graf von Cont. p. 3 Anscar I Duke of Ivrea Cont. p. 4 des Francs Maasgau d: March 901/02 b: 825 d: 14 June 877 Cont. p. 5 Cont. p. 6 The blue line shows William "the Lion", King of Scotland's descent from Charlemagne. Selected descendants of Charlemagne to the 13th century (2 of 62) Louis I "The Pious" Emperor of the West b: 778 in Casseneuil, France Judith of Bavaria d: 20 June 840 Cont. p. 1 Charles II King of the Ermentrude of Orléans West Franks b: 27 September 823 b: 13 June 823 d: 6 October 869 d: 6 October 877 Judith (Princess) Baldwin I Count of Louis II King of the Adelaide de Paris b: 844 Flanders West Franks d: 870 d: 858 b: 1 November 846 d: 10 April 879 Baldwin II Count of Æfthryth Cont.
    [Show full text]
  • 2015 National History Bowl High School Championships Round 11 First Quarter
    2015 National History Bowl High School Championships Round 11 First Quarter 1. A ruler of this city built the fortress of Ortygia. During a festival to Artemis, this city was captured by Marcus Claudius Marcellus after a protracted siege. A general from this city named Hicetas took control of this city, only to be removed from power by Timoleon. Two tyrants name Dionysius ruled this city, which was home to a scientist who supposedly built a giant claw and heat ray to defend it. For 10 points, name this home of Archimedes, a city on Sicily. ANSWER: Syracuse <JL> {II} 2. This scandal was initially prosecuted by General John Brooks Henderson, who was later dismissed. A trial stemming from this scandal forced the St. Louis courtroom to be expanded to fit all the reporters. It involved General Orville Babcock, who was eventually exposed by Secretary of the Treasury Benjamin Bristow. For 10 points, name this scandal for the Grant administration in which federal tax revenues on liquor were illegally diverted. ANSWER: Whiskey Ring <MC> {II} 3. This king drove back attempts by another nation's Henry III to invade France, including at the Battle of Taillebourg. This king's brother Robert of Artois was killed during a battle at Al- Mansurah, which was fought after the capture of Damietta. This king commissioned the construction of the Sainte-Chapelle, in which he placed the Crown of Thorns. This son of Blanche of Castile participated in the Seventh and Eighth Crusades. For 10 points, name this canonized French king. ANSWER: Louis IX [or Saint Louis] <JL> {II} 4.
    [Show full text]