Wednesday, May 22, 2013

de Perche, de LAcy, Fitton, Downes, Mobberly, Hulse, Troutbeck (79-91)

79) Maud de Perche
80) Robert de Lacy
81) Maud de Lacy
81) Lord Richard Fitton
82) Sir Richard Fitton
83) Lord Hugh Fitton
84) Margaret Fitton
85) Maude Downs
86) Cecily Mobberly
87) Margery DeDomville m. Hugh Sir Raby Hulse
88) Thomas Hulse
89) Margery Hulse m. Troutbeck
90) Sir Knight William Troutbeck (1425-1459)
91) Joan Troutbeck


Saturday, May 18, 2013

77) Routrou (Robert) I Viscount de Chateaudun

1014-1079, Chateaudun, France

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lords,_counts_and_dukes_of_Perche#House_of_Ch.C3.A2teaudun_2

76) Geoffrey de Chateaudun

Chateaudun Castle, France
Chateaudun COA


b. 1005-d. 1031

75) Hermengarde deVergy


Vergy COA

944-1023 Vergy, France
m. Geoffroi, Vicomte de Chateaudun II

74) Elizabeth de Chalons

b. 958, Chalons
d. 1016, Somme, France
Ancestral File Number 9HQL-5X
http://www.genes2.com/scanda/b345.html

73) Lambert Comte d'Autun

924-977

72) Robert Vicomte d'Autun

898-958, Autun, France

71) Raoul deDijon

870-899, Dijon, France
Comte de Dijon
m. Raingarde de Dijon

Wandilmode Von Worms

b. 829 Worms, Germany
d. 912, France
m. Eudes deTroyes

69) Aleran I de Worms I

b. 800, Wormsgau, Germany
d. France
occupation: Comte de Troyes

http://www.geni.com/people/Aleran-de-Worms/6000000004533630730

68) Guiguin deSoissons

810-844, Soissons (France)
d. India ?

67) Dau V DeOrleans (Wiltrud of Orleans)

b. 799 in Orleans
d. 861 in Dijon (France)

source:
http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/h/a/r/Robert-R-Harshbarger/WEBSITE-0001/UHP-1396.html
http://www.geni.com/people/Wiltrud-Gräfin-im-Wormsgau-fl-825/6000000002005822557

66) Hadrian de Allemania, Count of Orleans von Wormsgau

b. 15 Feb 769, Worms, Rhineland, Germany
d. 15 Feb 822 Orleans, France

sources:
http://www.deloriahurst.com/deloriahurst%20page/1913.html
http://www.mathematical.com/allemaniahadrian.html

66a) Hildegarde of Vinzgouw, Empress of the West


Hildegard (758 – 30 April 783) was the Germanic daughter of count Gerold of Vinzgouw and Emma of Alamannia, daughter of Hnabi, Duke of Alamannia. She was the second wife of Charlemagne,[1] who married her about 771. They had the following children:

1. Pepin, King Of Italy, (The Hunchback),   b. 769, Aachen, Rhineland, Prussia ,   d. 811, Milan, , Italy

2. Charles, Emperor Of The Holy Roman Empire,   b. 772, Of, Aachen, Rhineland, Prussia ,   d. 4 Dec 811

3. Pepin (Carloman), King Of The Longobards,   b. Apr 773, Of, Aachen, Rhineland, Prussia ,   d. 8 Jul 810, , Milan, Milan, Italy

4. Adelheid, Princess Of Holy Roman Empire,   b. 774, Of, Pavie, , Italy ,   d. Aug 774

5. Rotrude, Princess Of Holy Roman Empire,   b. Aug 774, Of, Aachen, Rhineland, Prussia ,   d. 6 Jun 810

6. Bertha Carolingien, Princess Of Holy Roman Empire,   b. 775, Of, Aachen, Rhineland, Prussia ,   d. 11 Mar 826

7. Louis I 'The Pious' Le Debonaire, King Of France, Emperor Of The Holy Roman Empire,   b. Aug 778, Casseneuil, Lot-Et-Garonne, France ,   d. 20 Jun 840, Near, Ingelheim, Rhinehessen, Hesse

8. Lothaire, Prince Of Holy Roman Empire,   b. Aug 778, Casseneuil, Lot-Et-Garonne, France ,   d. Aug 778

9. Gisele, Princess Of The Holy Roman Empire,   b. 781, Milano, Lombardy, Italy ,   d. Yes, date unknow

10. Hildegarde, Princess Of The Holy Roman Empire,   b. 782, Of, Aachen, Rhineland, Prussia ,   d. 9 Jun 783

11. Aupals Alpais,   b. 765, Aachen, Rhineland, Prussia,   d. 23 Jul 852

source 1 source 2 

65) Gerold I Vinzgau, Duke of Swabia and Allemania, Count of Linzgau

b. 710, Rhineland, Prussia
d. 779, Rhineland

(source)

64) Gerold, Bishop of Mayenne

b. 697, Mayenne, France
d. 744 Mayenne France

(source)

63) Queen Dobzogera Von Wendenb.

b. 683 Sachsen, d. 740 Germany
married to King Dietrick Of Saxons

62) Billug von Wenden, Count of the Saxons

Billug von Wenden, Count of the Saxons, Kingdom of Wenden
b. 680 Westphalia, Germany

source 1 source 2 source 3

61) Aethelbert von Sachsen

b. 650 Saxony
d. 665 France

(source)

60) Eormenred

b. Kent, d. France
In the Kentish royal legend, Eormenred is described as a son of Eadbald, who was King of Kent from 616 to 640, and his second wife Emma, who may have been a Frankish princess. (source)

Thursday, May 16, 2013

59) King Eadbald of Kent

King Eadbald was the son of King Æthelberht and his wife Bertha, a daughter of the Merovingian King Charibert. The Merovingian kingdom included Rheims and Paris in which they had controlled for centuries which had momentarily ended with the Carolingian line. (source)

54-58) Queen Bertha of Kent

Bertha was a Frankish princess, the daughter of Charibert I, Merovingian King of Paris[1] and his wife Ingoberga.

Charibert I (c. 517 - December 567) was the Merovingian King of Paris, the second-eldest son of Chlothar I and Ingund. His elder brother was Gunthar, who died sometime before their father's death.

Chlothar I[1] (c. 497 – 29 November 561), called the Old (le Vieux), King of the Franks, was one of the four sons of Clovis, of the Merovingian dynasty.

Clovis (French pronunciation: ​[klÉ”.vis]; c. 466 – 511), or Chlodowech (Latin Chlodovechus), was the first king of the Franks to unite all of the Frankish tribes under one ruler, changing the form of leadership from a group of royal chieftains to rule by a single king and ensuring that the kingship was passed down to his heirs.[1] He was also the first Christian king to rule Gaul, known today as France.

Clovis was the son of Childeric I, a Merovingian king of the Salian Franks, and Basina, Queen of Thuringia. He succeeded his father in 481, at the age of fifteen.[2] He is considered the founder of the Merovingian dynasty, which ruled the Franks for the next two centuries.

Childeric I (c. 440 – 481/82) was a Merovingian king of the Salian Franks and the father of Clovis I, who would unite the Franks and found the Merovingian dynasty.

Merovech (Latin: Meroveus or Merovius) (d. 453/457) is the semi-legendary founder of the Merovingian dynasty of the Salian Franks.

The legend about Merovech's conception was adapted in 1982 by authors Henry Lincoln and Richard Leigh in their book Holy Blood Holy Grail, as the seed of a new idea. They hypothesized that this "descended from a fish" legend was actually referring to the concept that the Merovingian line had married into the bloodline of Jesus Christ, since the symbol for early Christians had also been a fish. This theory, with no other basis than Lincoln and Leigh's hypothesis, was further popularized in 2003 via Dan Brown's bestselling novel, The Da Vinci Code.[7][8]

Chlodio (c. 392/395[1]–445[1]/448; also spelled Clodio, Clodius, Clodion, Cloio or Chlogio) was a king of the Salian Franks from the Merovingian dynasty. He was known as the Long-Haired King and lived in Thuringian territory, at the castle of Duisburg. He became chief of the Thérouanne area in 414 AD. From there, he invaded the Roman Empire in 428, defeating a Roman force at Cambrai, and settled in Northern Gaul, where other groups of Salians were already settled. Although he was attacked by the Romans, he was able to maintain his position and, 3 years later in 431, he extended his kingdom south to the Somme River in the future Francia. In AD 448, 20 years after his reign began, Chlodio was defeated at an unidentified place called Vicus Helena by Flavius Aëtius, the commander of the Roman army in Gaul.

53) Meroveus of the Franks

b. 420, Cologne
birth of the Merovingian dynasty (Bistea Neptunis)

52) Clodion

b. 395, Germany
d. 448, France
siblings: Fredemendus, Frotmund

King of the Salian Franks from the Merovingian dynasty
Known as the Long-Haired King
Invaded the Roman Empire in 428, settled in Northern Gaul
Defeated by Roman commander Flavius Aëtius
The Liber Historiae Francorum says his father was Pharamond.

References:
Chlodio
Gardner, Bloodline

51) Pharamond (Faramund) of Franks

b. 370, Germany
d. 427, India
m. Argotta (Sicambrian descent); dual desposynic line

Historical sources (see Pharamond)First referred to in the anonymous 8th century Carolingian text Liber Historiae Francorum
Gregory of Tours, in his Annales Francici notes in 420 "Pharamond reigns in France" ("Pharamundus regnat in Francia" - Annales Francici, page 151)
Sigebert of Gembloux names him as King of the Franks between Marcomer and Chlodio

50) Frotmund Desposyni De Frimutel

Frotmund was the daughter of Boaz
She was married to Clodius Duke of East Franks
350-371, Sachsen, Germany

49) Boaz Anfortas De Briton

288-360, Britton
married to Orgeluse Queen Egre head of the Goddess Boaz DeBriton

48) Frimutel

see Gardner, Bloodline

47) Titurel "The Grail King" De Briton

247-300, Britton
see Gardner, Bloodline

46) Manael Castellors deBriton

b. 207, France
d. 286, Britton
in Gardner, 'Manael'

45) Manael Catheloys Castellors de Briton

b. 193, France
d. 257 in Britton, France
in Gardner, listed as 'Catheloys (Castellors)'

44) King Aminadab Gan (5th Grandmaster of the Holy Grail)

b. 100, d. 187
see Gardner, Bloodline

The daughter of King Lucius, Eurgen, forged the first link between the Davidic successions from Joshua and Joseph of Arimathea, when she married Aminadab, the great-grandson of Joshua and Miriam..

43) Josue II Bishop of the Grail King

b. 65, d. 140
see Gardner, Bloodline

42) Joseph ha Rama Theo (Grail King Josephes)

The following is based on Gardner, The Bloodline of the Holy Grail:

According to Gardner, Joshua and Miriam had three children: Tamar (b. 33), Joshua (37), and Joseph (44). In 53, Joshua Jr. was proclaimed Crown Prince at the synagogue in Corinth and received the Davidic Crown Prince's title 'the Righteous'. He also gained entitlement to the black robe of the Chief Nazarite as worn by the priests of Isis. Meanwhile, Joseph had finished education at a druidic college and settled in Gaul with Miriam.

On the purposeful eradication of Messianic documentation, Africanus describes the royal inheritors as the Desposyni (belonging to the Lord).

Mary Magdaelene died in 63 in St. Baume in southern France. The existence of their son Joseph was concealed in the West, and he was portrayed as a son or nephew of his uncle.

When Joshua the eldest became the David, Joseph became the designated Crown Prince ha Rama Theo. 

The firstborn son of Joshua was Alain. The legacy of the Davidic kingship and Lordship of the Grail was promised to Alain, but Alain became a committed celibate  and had no descendents. Hence the Grail heritage reverted to Joseph's line and was inherited by his son Josue from whom the Fisher Kings of Gaul descended.

Abraham to Jesus

According to the Book of Matthew:

Thus there were fourteen generations in all from Abraham to David, fourteen from David to the exile to Babylon, and fourteen from the exile to the Messiah. (1:17)

  1. Abraham
  2. Isaac
  3. Jacob
  4. Judah (Tamar)
  5. Perez
  6. Hezron
  7. Ram
  8. Aminadav
  9. Nachshon
  10. Salmon (Rahab)
  11. Boaz (Ruth)
  12. Oved
  13. Yishai
  14. David (Oriah)
  15. Shlomo
  16. Rechavam
  17. Aviya
  18. Assa
  19. Yehoshafat
  20. Yehoram
  21. Uziyah
  22. Yotam
  23. Achaz
  24. Hizkiyahu 
  25. Menashe 
  26. Amon
  27. Josiah
  28. Yechoniya
  29. Shealtiel
  30. Zerubbabel
  31. Abihud
  32. Elyakim
  33. Azor
  34. Zadok
  35. Akim
  36. Elihud
  37. Eleazar
  38. Mattan
  39. Jacob
  40. Joseph (Mary)
  41. Jesus