Sir William de Hastings Knt.1,2
M, #10801, b. circa 1175, d. 1224
Father | William de Hastings3,4,5 b. c 1130, d. 1 Apr 1182 |
Mother | Maud Banaster (Basset)3 d. b 17 Jun 1222 |
Reference | GAV23 EDV21 |
Last Edited | 23 Sep 2020 |
Sir William de Hastings Knt. married Margaret Bigod, daughter of Roger II Bigod Baron Bigod, 2nd Earl of Norfolk and Ida (Isabella) de Toeni.6,7,1,2
Sir William de Hastings Knt. was born circa 1175 at Ashill, co. Norfolk, England.3
Sir William de Hastings Knt. died in 1224.2
GAV-23 EDV-21 GKJ-25. He was King's steward, hereditary steward of the Abey of Bury St. Edmunds, Suffolk.2
; Weis [AR7] 93-27.6
Sir William de Hastings Knt. was born circa 1175 at Ashill, co. Norfolk, England.3
Sir William de Hastings Knt. died in 1224.2
GAV-23 EDV-21 GKJ-25. He was King's steward, hereditary steward of the Abey of Bury St. Edmunds, Suffolk.2
; Weis [AR7] 93-27.6
Family | Margaret Bigod |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S757] Compiled by Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans: Many of the English Ancestral Lines Prior to 1300 of those Colonial Americans with known Royal Ancestry but Fully Developed in all Possible Lines (PO Box 220333, Santa Clarita, CA 91322-0333: Carl Boyer 3rd, 2001), p. 110, HASTINGS 1. Hereinafter cited as Boyer [2001] Med English Ancestors.
- [S2292] Douglas Richardson, "Richardson email 13 Dec 2008: "Hastings Family Pedigree"," e-mail message from e-mail address (unknown address) to e-mail address, 13 Dec 2008. Hereinafter cited as "Richardson email 13 Dec 2008."
- [S812] e-mail address, online http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=bferris, Jr. William R. Ferris (unknown location), downloaded updated 4 Apr 2002, http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=bferris&id=I2360
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, William de Hastings: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00140353&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ENGLISHNOBILITYMEDIEVAL3D-K.htm#WilliamHastingsdied1182B. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.
Baltimore, 1992, unknown publish date), line 93-27, p. 90. Hereinafter cited as Weis AR-7. - [S757] Compiled by Carl Boyer 3rd, Boyer [2001] Med English Ancestors, p. 30, BIGOD 3:vi.
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Mowbray, Segrave and Stourton Family Page. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
Isabel Avenal1
F, #10802
Father | Robert de Avenel of Eksdale2,3 d. 8 Mar 1184 |
Mother | Sibyl (?) |
Reference | GAV22 EDV22 |
Last Edited | 18 Nov 2007 |
; Leo van de Pas cites: Burke's Guide to the Royal Family London, 1973 , Reference: page 316.3 GAV-22 EDV-22.
.4
.4
Family | William I "The Lion" (?) Earl of Northumberland, King of Scotland b. 1143, d. 4 Dec 1214 |
Child |
Citations
- [S633] With additions and corrections by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr. and William R. Beall Frederick Lewis Weis, The Magna Charta Sureties, 1215: The Barons Named in the Magna
Charta, 1215 and Some of Their Descendants Who Settled in America
During the Early Colonial Years, 5th Edition (Baltimore, MD, USA: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., unknown publish date), line 116-1, p. 152. Hereinafter cited as Weis MCS-5. - [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Dunkeld page (The House of Dunkeld): http://genealogy.euweb.cz/brit/dunkeld.html
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, NN Avenal: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00002891&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.
Baltimore, 1992, unknown publish date), line 170-25, p. 148: "...a dau. of Richard Avenal". Hereinafter cited as Weis AR-7. - [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Isabella of Scotland: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00002892&tree=LEO
Anne Morgan1
F, #10803
Father | Sir Thomas Morgan of Arkeston, co. Hereford1 |
Mother | Anne Whitney1 |
Last Edited | 19 Aug 2008 |
Anne Morgan married Henry Carey Viscount Hunsdon, son of Henry VIII (?) King of England and Mary Boleyn, circa 11 March 1545
; date of license.1
; per Higgins: "The currrent thread on the recent Whitney article on the October 2006 isssue of TAG caused me to look again into another Whitney matter.
The wife of Henry Carey, 1st Baron Hunsdon (and perhaps son of King Henry VIII), was Anne Morgan, said by CP 6:629 to be "apparently da. of Sir Thomas Morgan, of Arkeston, co. Hereford, by Anne, dau. of Sir Robert Whitney, of Whitney, co. Gloucester". In a long footnote on the same page, CP gives more information on Lady Hunsdon's ancestry, as follows:
"In a vol. (marked with a star, pp. 137-8) among Philpot's MSS in the Coll. of Arms, Lady Hunsdon's parentage (as in the text) and her ancestry on both sides are fully set out, her father being s. and h. of William Morgan, of Arkeston, who was s. and h. of David Morgan, by Mary, da. and coh. of (---) Delahey, of Arkeston afsd., while her mother was da. and h. of Sir Robert Whitney (by Sibell, sister of Sir James Baskerville), which Robert was s. and h. of James Whitney, by Blanche, da. and coh. of Simon Milborne, of Tillington, Co. Hereford. This, probably, is her correct pedigree, and not that in the Visitation of Gloucester (as printed by the Harl. Soc.), where Lord Hunsdon's wife is made out to be da. of James Whitney, by Blanche, da. of Simon Milborne, both abovenamed." END OF QUOTE
The last point in the CP footnote is apparently correct, that Anne, Lady Hunsdon was not herself a Whitney and was not dau. of James Whitney and Blanche Milborne, as at least one visitation pedigree erroneously indicates. However, based on most published Whitney materials (some of which are cited in the TAG article and many of which are collected on the excellent website of the Whitney Research Group), Anne's Whitney mother was named Elizabeth, not Anne, and it was Elizabeth (not Anne) who was the dau. of James Whitney and Blanche MIlborne.
Chronologically, Anne Morgan could not have been the granddaughter of Sir Robert Whitney and Sibell Baskerville, as her license to marry Lord Hunsdon was dated 11 March 1545, while Sir Robert was himself still a minor at the time of his father's death in 1540/1. In addition, it's now accepted (as in the TAG article) that Sir Robert was the grandson, not son, of James Whitney and Blanche Milborne, being son of Robert and Margaret, dau. of Robert Wye of Gloucestershire. So Anne Morgan was a cousin, and not daughter, of the Sir Robert Whitney who mar. Sibell Baskerville.
It appears that the compilers of CP were confused by one or another of the conflicting and not always accurate pedigrees of the Whitney family. Comments are welcomed.1
; date of license.1
; per Higgins: "The currrent thread on the recent Whitney article on the October 2006 isssue of TAG caused me to look again into another Whitney matter.
The wife of Henry Carey, 1st Baron Hunsdon (and perhaps son of King Henry VIII), was Anne Morgan, said by CP 6:629 to be "apparently da. of Sir Thomas Morgan, of Arkeston, co. Hereford, by Anne, dau. of Sir Robert Whitney, of Whitney, co. Gloucester". In a long footnote on the same page, CP gives more information on Lady Hunsdon's ancestry, as follows:
"In a vol. (marked with a star, pp. 137-8) among Philpot's MSS in the Coll. of Arms, Lady Hunsdon's parentage (as in the text) and her ancestry on both sides are fully set out, her father being s. and h. of William Morgan, of Arkeston, who was s. and h. of David Morgan, by Mary, da. and coh. of (---) Delahey, of Arkeston afsd., while her mother was da. and h. of Sir Robert Whitney (by Sibell, sister of Sir James Baskerville), which Robert was s. and h. of James Whitney, by Blanche, da. and coh. of Simon Milborne, of Tillington, Co. Hereford. This, probably, is her correct pedigree, and not that in the Visitation of Gloucester (as printed by the Harl. Soc.), where Lord Hunsdon's wife is made out to be da. of James Whitney, by Blanche, da. of Simon Milborne, both abovenamed." END OF QUOTE
The last point in the CP footnote is apparently correct, that Anne, Lady Hunsdon was not herself a Whitney and was not dau. of James Whitney and Blanche Milborne, as at least one visitation pedigree erroneously indicates. However, based on most published Whitney materials (some of which are cited in the TAG article and many of which are collected on the excellent website of the Whitney Research Group), Anne's Whitney mother was named Elizabeth, not Anne, and it was Elizabeth (not Anne) who was the dau. of James Whitney and Blanche MIlborne.
Chronologically, Anne Morgan could not have been the granddaughter of Sir Robert Whitney and Sibell Baskerville, as her license to marry Lord Hunsdon was dated 11 March 1545, while Sir Robert was himself still a minor at the time of his father's death in 1540/1. In addition, it's now accepted (as in the TAG article) that Sir Robert was the grandson, not son, of James Whitney and Blanche Milborne, being son of Robert and Margaret, dau. of Robert Wye of Gloucestershire. So Anne Morgan was a cousin, and not daughter, of the Sir Robert Whitney who mar. Sibell Baskerville.
It appears that the compilers of CP were confused by one or another of the conflicting and not always accurate pedigrees of the Whitney family. Comments are welcomed.1
Family | Henry Carey Viscount Hunsdon b. 4 Feb 1526 |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S2161] John Higgins, "Higgins email 16 July 2007: "CP correction? - Anne Morgan, wife of Henry Carey, Baron Hunsdon"," e-mail message from e-mail address (unknown address) to e-mail address, 16 July 2007. Hereinafter cited as "Higgins email 16 July 2007."
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Hon. Philadelphia Carey: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00056493&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
Ralph Fitz Hugh
M, #10804
Father | Hugh Fitz Ralph |
Mother | Agnes de Greasley |
Reference | GAV22 EDV20 |
Last Edited | 3 Aug 2006 |
Family | |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.
Baltimore, 1992, unknown publish date), line 170-27, p. 148. Hereinafter cited as Weis AR-7. - [S1637] John P. Ravilious, "Ravilious email 13 May 2004: "Possible Identification of Juliana, wife of Robert de Chaucombe"," e-mail message from e-mail address (https://groups.google.com/g/soc.genealogy.medieval/c/fVGUjhV53I8/m/txhvX4TJk2oJ) to e-mail address, 13 May 2004. Hereinafter cited as "Ravilious email 13 May 2004."
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Eustache FitzHugh: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00287523&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
Hugh Fitz Ralph
M, #10805
Reference | GAV23 EDV21 |
Last Edited | 3 Aug 2006 |
Hugh Fitz Ralph married Agnes de Greasley, daughter of Ralph de Greasley.
GAV-23 EDV-21 GKJ-21.
; Weis [AR7] 170-27.1
GAV-23 EDV-21 GKJ-21.
; Weis [AR7] 170-27.1
Family | Agnes de Greasley |
Child |
Citations
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.
Baltimore, 1992, unknown publish date), line 170-27, p. 148. Hereinafter cited as Weis AR-7.
Agnes de Greasley
F, #10806
Father | Ralph de Greasley |
Reference | GAV23 EDV21 |
Last Edited | 20 Aug 2019 |
Family | Hugh Fitz Ralph |
Child |
Citations
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.
Baltimore, 1992, unknown publish date), line 170-27, p. 148. Hereinafter cited as Weis AR-7.
Ralph de Greasley
M, #10807
Reference | GAV24 EDV22 |
Last Edited | 20 Aug 2019 |
Family | |
Child |
Citations
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.
Baltimore, 1992, unknown publish date), line 170-27, p. 148. Hereinafter cited as Weis AR-7.
Alice La Zouche1,2,3
F, #10808, d. 1256
Father | Roger I La Zouche4,3,5 b. c 1175, d. b 14 May 1238 |
Mother | Margaret Bisset4,3,5 d. bt 1220 - 1232 |
Reference | GAV20 GKJ24 |
Last Edited | 4 Sep 2017 |
Alice La Zouche married Sir William de Harcourt of Stanton Harcourt, son of Sir Richard de Harcourt of Stanton Harcourt and Ellenhall and Arabella/Orabella de Quincy, in January 1250
; his 1st wife.6,7,4,8,9,10,11,2,3
Alice La Zouche died in 1256.7
; Leo van de Pas cites: Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag Marburg., Detlev Schwennicke, Editor, Reference: X 139.2 GAV-20 GKJ-24.
.6
; his 1st wife.6,7,4,8,9,10,11,2,3
Alice La Zouche died in 1256.7
; Leo van de Pas cites: Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag Marburg., Detlev Schwennicke, Editor, Reference: X 139.2 GAV-20 GKJ-24.
.6
Family | Sir William de Harcourt of Stanton Harcourt b. 1227, d. 1270 |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S757] Compiled by Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans: Many of the English Ancestral Lines Prior to 1300 of those Colonial Americans with known Royal Ancestry but Fully Developed in all Possible Lines (PO Box 220333, Santa Clarita, CA 91322-0333: Carl Boyer 3rd, 2001), p. 108, de HARCOURT 3. Hereinafter cited as Boyer [2001] Med English Ancestors.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Alice La Zouche: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00029005&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Rohan 1 page - Family de Rohan: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/rohan/rohan1.html
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Zouche Family Page. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
- [S2071] John P. Ravilious, "Ravilious email 25 May 2006: "Eudes la Zouche, senior and junior: a conjecture"," e-mail message from e-mail address (unknown address) to e-mail address, 25 May 2006. Hereinafter cited as "Ravilious email 25 May 2006."
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.
Baltimore, 1992, unknown publish date), line 56-29, p. 60. Hereinafter cited as Weis AR-7. - [S633] With additions and corrections by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr. and William R. Beall Frederick Lewis Weis, The Magna Charta Sureties, 1215: The Barons Named in the Magna
Charta, 1215 and Some of Their Descendants Who Settled in America
During the Early Colonial Years, 5th Edition (Baltimore, MD, USA: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., unknown publish date), line 111-3, p. 145. Hereinafter cited as Weis MCS-5. - [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Vernon, Baron Family Page.
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, updated 15 May 2003, Harcourt 1 page (Harcourt family): http://genealogy.euweb.cz/harcourt/harcourt1.html
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir William Harcourt, of Stanton Harcourt: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00029004&tree=LEO
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, updated 15 May 2003, Harcourt 7 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/harcourt/harcourt7.html
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Arabella Harcourt: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00029009&tree=LEO
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Margaret Harcourt: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00029007&tree=LEO
Orabella de Harcourt1,2
F, #10809, d. 1279
Father | Sir William de Harcourt of Stanton Harcourt3,4,5,2 b. 1227, d. 1270 |
Mother | Alice La Zouche3,2,6 d. 1256 |
Reference | GAV23 GKJ23 |
Last Edited | 3 Sep 2017 |
Orabella de Harcourt married Fulk de Pembrugge.7
Orabella de Harcourt married Sir John Digby.2
Orabella de Harcourt died in 1279.8
She was heiress of Tong, co. Salop and Aylestone, co. Leicester.8
; Leo van de Pas cites: 1. Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag Marburg., Detlev Schwennicke, Editor, Reference: X 139
2. Americans of Royal Descent 7th edition, Baltimore, 1969. , Charles H. Browning, Reference: 308.2
.7 GAV-23 GKJ-23.
Orabella de Harcourt married Sir John Digby.2
Orabella de Harcourt died in 1279.8
She was heiress of Tong, co. Salop and Aylestone, co. Leicester.8
; Leo van de Pas cites: 1. Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag Marburg., Detlev Schwennicke, Editor, Reference: X 139
2. Americans of Royal Descent 7th edition, Baltimore, 1969. , Charles H. Browning, Reference: 308.2
.7 GAV-23 GKJ-23.
Family 1 | Sir John Digby d. 1267 |
Family 2 | Fulk de Pembrugge d. 1272 |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S757] Compiled by Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans: Many of the English Ancestral Lines Prior to 1300 of those Colonial Americans with known Royal Ancestry but Fully Developed in all Possible Lines (PO Box 220333, Santa Clarita, CA 91322-0333: Carl Boyer 3rd, 2001), p. 108, de HARCOURT 3:i. Hereinafter cited as Boyer [2001] Med English Ancestors.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Arabella Harcourt: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00029009&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Vernon, Baron Family Page. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir William Harcourt, of Stanton Harcourt: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00029004&tree=LEO
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Harcourt 7 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/harcourt/harcourt7.html
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Alice La Zouche: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00029005&tree=LEO
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.
Baltimore, 1992, unknown publish date), line 56-29, p. 60. Hereinafter cited as Weis AR-7. - [S633] With additions and corrections by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr. and William R. Beall Frederick Lewis Weis, The Magna Charta Sureties, 1215: The Barons Named in the Magna
Charta, 1215 and Some of Their Descendants Who Settled in America
During the Early Colonial Years, 5th Edition (Baltimore, MD, USA: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., unknown publish date), line 111-4, p. 145. Hereinafter cited as Weis MCS-5. - [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Fulk de Pembrugge: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00385608&tree=LEO
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Fulke de Pembrugge: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00385608&tree=LEO
Margaret/Margery de Harcourt1,2,3
F, #10810, d. before 1279
Father | Sir William de Harcourt of Stanton Harcourt4,5,3 b. 1227, d. 1270 |
Mother | Alice La Zouche3,6 d. 1256 |
Last Edited | 23 Mar 2004 |
Margaret/Margery de Harcourt married Sir John De Cauntelo.7,1,2,3
Margaret/Margery de Harcourt died before 1279; dsp.1
; Leo van de Pas cites: Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag Marburg., Detlev Schwennicke, Editor, Reference: X 139.3
.7
Margaret/Margery de Harcourt died before 1279; dsp.1
; Leo van de Pas cites: Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag Marburg., Detlev Schwennicke, Editor, Reference: X 139.3
.7
Family | Sir John De Cauntelo d. b 1279 |
Citations
- [S757] Compiled by Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans: Many of the English Ancestral Lines Prior to 1300 of those Colonial Americans with known Royal Ancestry but Fully Developed in all Possible Lines (PO Box 220333, Santa Clarita, CA 91322-0333: Carl Boyer 3rd, 2001), p. 108, de HARCOURT 3:ii. Hereinafter cited as Boyer [2001] Med English Ancestors.
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Vernon, Baron Family Page. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Margaret Harcourt: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00029007&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir William Harcourt, of Stanton Harcourt: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00029004&tree=LEO
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Harcourt 7 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/harcourt/harcourt7.html
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Alice La Zouche: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00029005&tree=LEO
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.
Baltimore, 1992, unknown publish date), line 56-29, p. 60. Hereinafter cited as Weis AR-7.
Sir John De Cauntelo1
M, #10811, d. before 1279
Last Edited | 23 Mar 2004 |
Sir John De Cauntelo married Margaret/Margery de Harcourt, daughter of Sir William de Harcourt of Stanton Harcourt and Alice La Zouche.2,3,4,1
Sir John De Cauntelo died before 1279.3
; Leo van de Pas cites: Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag Marburg., Detlev Schwennicke, Editor, Reference: X 139.1
.2 Sir John De Cauntelo was also known as Sir John Cantelupe.4,1
Sir John De Cauntelo died before 1279.3
; Leo van de Pas cites: Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag Marburg., Detlev Schwennicke, Editor, Reference: X 139.1
.2 Sir John De Cauntelo was also known as Sir John Cantelupe.4,1
Family | Margaret/Margery de Harcourt d. b 1279 |
Citations
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Margaret Harcourt: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00029007&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.
Baltimore, 1992, unknown publish date), line 56-29, p. 60. Hereinafter cited as Weis AR-7. - [S757] Compiled by Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans: Many of the English Ancestral Lines Prior to 1300 of those Colonial Americans with known Royal Ancestry but Fully Developed in all Possible Lines (PO Box 220333, Santa Clarita, CA 91322-0333: Carl Boyer 3rd, 2001), p. 108, de HARCOURT 3:ii. Hereinafter cited as Boyer [2001] Med English Ancestors.
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Vernon, Baron Family Page. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
Fulk de Pembrugge1
M, #10812, d. 1272
Reference | GAV23 GKJ23 |
Last Edited | 3 Sep 2017 |
Fulk de Pembrugge married Orabella de Harcourt, daughter of Sir William de Harcourt of Stanton Harcourt and Alice La Zouche.2
Fulk de Pembrugge died in 1272; van de Pas says d. bef 25 Jan 1279.3,1
Fulk de Pembrugge lived at Leigh, Worcestershire, England.3
; Leo van de Pas cites: 1. Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag Marburg., Detlev Schwennicke, Editor, Reference: X 139
2. Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists who came to Amercia bef.1700 7th Edition, Frederick Lewis Weis, Reference: 60.1
Fulk de Pembrugge lived at Weston Sub Edge, Gloucestershire, England.3 GAV-23 GKJ-23.
Fulk de Pembrugge died in 1272; van de Pas says d. bef 25 Jan 1279.3,1
Fulk de Pembrugge lived at Leigh, Worcestershire, England.3
; Leo van de Pas cites: 1. Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag Marburg., Detlev Schwennicke, Editor, Reference: X 139
2. Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists who came to Amercia bef.1700 7th Edition, Frederick Lewis Weis, Reference: 60.1
Fulk de Pembrugge lived at Weston Sub Edge, Gloucestershire, England.3 GAV-23 GKJ-23.
Family | Orabella de Harcourt d. 1279 |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir Fulk Pembrugge: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00029010&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.
Baltimore, 1992, unknown publish date), line 56-29, p. 60. Hereinafter cited as Weis AR-7. - [S633] With additions and corrections by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr. and William R. Beall Frederick Lewis Weis, The Magna Charta Sureties, 1215: The Barons Named in the Magna
Charta, 1215 and Some of Their Descendants Who Settled in America
During the Early Colonial Years, 5th Edition (Baltimore, MD, USA: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., unknown publish date), line 111-4, p. 145. Hereinafter cited as Weis MCS-5. - [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Fulke de Pembrugge: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00385608&tree=LEO
Sir William de Harcourt of Stanton Harcourt1,2,3,4
M, #10813, d. 6 April 1223
Father | Sir Robert de Harcourt of Stanton-Harcourt, co. Oxford5,2,3,4 b. c 1152, d. 1202 |
Mother | Isabelle/Millicent de Camville2,6,3,4 b. c 1152 |
Reference | GAV25 GKJ25 |
Last Edited | 21 Mar 2004 |
Sir William de Harcourt of Stanton Harcourt married Alice Noel, daughter of Thomas Noel of Ronton and Ellenhall, Staffs and Margaret le Strange, in 1201.2,7,3,4,8
Sir William de Harcourt of Stanton Harcourt died on 6 April 1223; Genealogy.EU (Harcourt 1 page) says d. 1223; Leo van de Pas says d. 6 Apr 1223; Weis (MCS) line 111-2 says d. 1228.9,3,4
; Leo van de Pas cites: 1. Histoire et Genealogie de la Maison de Harcourt 1974, Georges Martin, Reference: 221
2. Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag Marburg., Detlev Schwennicke, Editor, Reference: X 139.4
; Sir WILLIAM de HARCOURT, of Stanton Harcourt; m Alice, est dau of Sir Thomas Noel (see GAINSBOROUGH, E), of Ronton and Ellenhall, Staffs, which latter manor he thus acquired, and had an er son Sir RICHARD de HARCOURT.10 GAV-25 GKJ-25.
.11
Sir William de Harcourt of Stanton Harcourt lived at Stanton Harcourt, Oxfordshire, England.9,3 He was Governor of Tamworth Castle, co. Warwick in 1218.11,9 He was Crusader in 1219 at Damietta, Egypt.9
Sir William de Harcourt of Stanton Harcourt died on 6 April 1223; Genealogy.EU (Harcourt 1 page) says d. 1223; Leo van de Pas says d. 6 Apr 1223; Weis (MCS) line 111-2 says d. 1228.9,3,4
; Leo van de Pas cites: 1. Histoire et Genealogie de la Maison de Harcourt 1974, Georges Martin, Reference: 221
2. Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag Marburg., Detlev Schwennicke, Editor, Reference: X 139.4
; Sir WILLIAM de HARCOURT, of Stanton Harcourt; m Alice, est dau of Sir Thomas Noel (see GAINSBOROUGH, E), of Ronton and Ellenhall, Staffs, which latter manor he thus acquired, and had an er son Sir RICHARD de HARCOURT.10 GAV-25 GKJ-25.
.11
Sir William de Harcourt of Stanton Harcourt lived at Stanton Harcourt, Oxfordshire, England.9,3 He was Governor of Tamworth Castle, co. Warwick in 1218.11,9 He was Crusader in 1219 at Damietta, Egypt.9
Family | Alice Noel |
Children |
Citations
- [S757] Compiled by Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans: Many of the English Ancestral Lines Prior to 1300 of those Colonial Americans with known Royal Ancestry but Fully Developed in all Possible Lines (PO Box 220333, Santa Clarita, CA 91322-0333: Carl Boyer 3rd, 2001), p. 107, de HARCOURT 1. Hereinafter cited as Boyer [2001] Med English Ancestors.
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Vernon, Baron Family Page. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Harcourt 1 page (Harcourt family): http://genealogy.euweb.cz/harcourt/harcourt1.html
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir William Harcourt, of Stanton Harcourt: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00028893&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir Robert Harcourt, of Stanton Harcourt: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00028888&tree=LEO
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Isabelle/Millicent de Camville: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00028889&tree=LEO
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Gainsborough Family Page.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Alice Noël: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00028997&tree=LEO
- [S633] With additions and corrections by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr. and William R. Beall Frederick Lewis Weis, The Magna Charta Sureties, 1215: The Barons Named in the Magna
Charta, 1215 and Some of Their Descendants Who Settled in America
During the Early Colonial Years, 5th Edition (Baltimore, MD, USA: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., unknown publish date), line 111-2, p. 145. Hereinafter cited as Weis MCS-5. - [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Vernon, Baron Family Page (see GAINSBOROUGH, E).
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.
Baltimore, 1992, unknown publish date), line 56-28, p. 60. Hereinafter cited as Weis AR-7. - [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, William Harcourt: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00028999&tree=LEO
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir Richard Harcourt, of Stanton Harcourt: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00029002&tree=LEO
Alice Noel1,2,3
F, #10814
Father | Thomas Noel of Ronton and Ellenhall, Staffs4,1,3,5 d. 1206 |
Mother | Margaret le Strange6,1 |
Reference | GAV25 GKJ25 |
Last Edited | 21 Mar 2004 |
Alice Noel married Sir William de Harcourt of Stanton Harcourt, son of Sir Robert de Harcourt of Stanton-Harcourt, co. Oxford and Isabelle/Millicent de Camville, in 1201.7,1,2,8,3
GAV-25 GKJ-25.
; Alice; m Sir William de Harcourt (see VERNON, B) and had Ellenhall and other estates as her share of her father's property.1
; Leo van de Pas cites: Histoire et Genealogie de la Maison de Harcourt 1974, Georges Martin, Reference: 221.3 Alice Noel was also known as Alice Noell.9
; Weis (AR7) line 56-28.10
GAV-25 GKJ-25.
; Alice; m Sir William de Harcourt (see VERNON, B) and had Ellenhall and other estates as her share of her father's property.1
; Leo van de Pas cites: Histoire et Genealogie de la Maison de Harcourt 1974, Georges Martin, Reference: 221.3 Alice Noel was also known as Alice Noell.9
; Weis (AR7) line 56-28.10
Family | Sir William de Harcourt of Stanton Harcourt d. 6 Apr 1223 |
Children |
Citations
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Gainsborough Family Page. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Harcourt 1 page (Harcourt family): http://genealogy.euweb.cz/harcourt/harcourt1.html
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Alice Noël: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00028997&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Vernon, Baron Family Page (see GAINSBOROUGH, E).
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Thomas Noël, of Ellenhall: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00028998&tree=LEO
- [S812] e-mail address, online http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=bferris, Jr. William R. Ferris (unknown location), downloaded updated 4 Apr 2002, http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=bferris&id=I40595
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Vernon, Baron Family Page.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir William Harcourt, of Stanton Harcourt: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00028893&tree=LEO
- [S812] e-mail address, updated 4 Apr 2002, http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=bferris&id=I6083
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.
Baltimore, 1992, unknown publish date), line 56-28, p. 60. Hereinafter cited as Weis AR-7. - [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, William Harcourt: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00028999&tree=LEO
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Sir Richard Harcourt, of Stanton Harcourt: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00029002&tree=LEO
Thomas Noel of Ronton and Ellenhall, Staffs1,2,3
M, #10815, d. 1206
Father | Robert fitz Noel Feudal Lord of Ellenhall2 |
Reference | GAV26 GKJ26 |
Last Edited | 20 Mar 2004 |
Thomas Noel of Ronton and Ellenhall, Staffs married Margaret le Strange, daughter of Guy le Strange and Mary (?).4,2
Thomas Noel of Ronton and Ellenhall, Staffs died in 1206.5
GAV-26 GKJ-26.
; Thomas (Sir); Sheriff Staffs seven years temp HENRY II, also 1189; m Margaret, dau of Guy Le Strange (see SAINT DAVIDS, V.)2
; Leo van de Pas cites: Histoire et Genealogie de la Maison de Harcourt 1974, Georges Martin, Reference: 221.3
Thomas Noel of Ronton and Ellenhall, Staffs lived at Ronton and Ellenhall, Staffordshire, England.6
Thomas Noel of Ronton and Ellenhall, Staffs died in 1206.5
GAV-26 GKJ-26.
; Thomas (Sir); Sheriff Staffs seven years temp HENRY II, also 1189; m Margaret, dau of Guy Le Strange (see SAINT DAVIDS, V.)2
; Leo van de Pas cites: Histoire et Genealogie de la Maison de Harcourt 1974, Georges Martin, Reference: 221.3
Thomas Noel of Ronton and Ellenhall, Staffs lived at Ronton and Ellenhall, Staffordshire, England.6
Family | Margaret le Strange |
Children |
Citations
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Vernon, Baron Family Page (see GAINSBOROUGH, E). Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Gainsborough Family Page.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Thomas Noël, of Ellenhall: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00028998&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S812] e-mail address, online http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=bferris, Jr. William R. Ferris (unknown location), downloaded updated 4 Apr 2002, http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=bferris&id=I40595
- [S757] Compiled by Carl Boyer 3rd, Medieval English Ancestors of Certain Americans: Many of the English Ancestral Lines Prior to 1300 of those Colonial Americans with known Royal Ancestry but Fully Developed in all Possible Lines (PO Box 220333, Santa Clarita, CA 91322-0333: Carl Boyer 3rd, 2001), p. 107, de HARCOURT 1. Hereinafter cited as Boyer [2001] Med English Ancestors.
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.
Baltimore, 1992, unknown publish date), line 56-28, p. 60. Hereinafter cited as Weis AR-7. - [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Alice Noël: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00028997&tree=LEO
Salomea (?) of Krakow1
F, #10816, b. between 1211 and 1212, d. 10 November 1268
Father | Leszek V/I "the Wise/Bialy" (?) Duke of Sandomierz and Krakow2,3 b. 1186, d. 15 Nov 1227 |
Mother | Gremislawa Ingvarovna (?)1 d. 8 Nov 1258 |
Last Edited | 28 Aug 2004 |
Salomea (?) of Krakow was born between 1211 and 1212 at Kraków, Miasto Kraków, Malopolskie, Poland.1,3 She married Koloman/Kalman (?) Duke of Croatia, Halicz and Carinthia, son of Andras II (Andrew) (?) King of Hungary and Croatia and Gertrude (?) von Andechs-Meran, in 1214
; Leo van de Pas says m. 1215.1,3,4
Salomea (?) of Krakow died on 10 November 1268 at Skala, near Krakow, Mazovia, Poland; Leo van de Pas says d. 1267.1,3
; Leo van de Pas cites: Stammtafeln zur Geschichte der Europäischen Staaten, 4 volumes, Marburg, 1953, 1975., W. K. Prinz von Isenburg, Reference: II 83.3
; Salomea, *1211/12, +Skala, nr Krakow 10.11.1268; m.1214 Pr Koloman of Halicz (+1241.)1
; Leo van de Pas says m. 1215.1,3,4
Salomea (?) of Krakow died on 10 November 1268 at Skala, near Krakow, Mazovia, Poland; Leo van de Pas says d. 1267.1,3
; Leo van de Pas cites: Stammtafeln zur Geschichte der Europäischen Staaten, 4 volumes, Marburg, 1953, 1975., W. K. Prinz von Isenburg, Reference: II 83.3
; Salomea, *1211/12, +Skala, nr Krakow 10.11.1268; m.1214 Pr Koloman of Halicz (+1241.)1
Family | Koloman/Kalman (?) Duke of Croatia, Halicz and Carinthia b. 1208, d. 1241 |
Citations
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Piast 3 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/piast/piast3.html
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Leszek V "the Wise": http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00020781&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Salome of Poland: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00020779&tree=LEO
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, updated 15 May 2003, Arpad 2 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/arpad/arpad2.html
Count Adelhelm (?) Grundherr im Wormsgau1
M, #10817
Reference | GAV35 EDV35 |
Last Edited | 28 Jun 2020 |
Family | |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FRANCONIA.htm#Robertdiedbefore764B. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.
Baltimore, 1992, unknown publish date), line 48-13, p. 50. Hereinafter cited as Weis AR-7. - [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Capet 1 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/capet/capet1.html
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Williswint: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00020379&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
Hugues III 'le Méfiant' (?) Comte de Tours1,2
M, #10818, b. circa 780, d. 4 November 839
Father | Luitfride II (?) Count of Alsace3 d. 780 |
Mother | Hiltrude (?)3 |
Reference | GAV31 EDV31 |
Last Edited | 23 Jul 2020 |
Hugues III 'le Méfiant' (?) Comte de Tours married Ava/Bava (?) Countess Sundgau (Upper Alsace), Countess of Tours, daughter of Guerri I (?) Cte de Morvois and Eve (?) of Roussillon.4,5,1
Hugues III 'le Méfiant' (?) Comte de Tours was born circa 780.1
Hugues III 'le Méfiant' (?) Comte de Tours died on 4 November 839; Genealogics says d. 04 Nov 0839; Med Lands says d. 20 Oct 837.4,1,2
Reference: Genealogics cites: Caroli Magni Progenies Neustadt an der Aisch, 1977. , Siegfried Rosch, Reference: 76.1 GAV-31 EDV-31 GKJ-32.
; This is the same person as ”Hugh of Tours” at Wikipedia, as ”Hugues de Tours” at Wikipédia (FR), and as ”Hugo von Tours” at Wikipedia (DE).6,7,8
; Per Genealogics:
“Hugues was born about 780, possibly a son of Haicho of the house of the Etichonen, which claimed descent from the Merovingian kings and rose to dominate the region of Alsace in the Early Middle Ages from the seventh to the tenth centuries. He was the count of Tours and Sens during the reigns of Charlemagne and his son Louis 'the Pious', until Hugues' disgrace in February 828. By his wife Ada he had two daughters, Irmgard and Aelis, who would have progeny.
“Hugues had many possessions in Alsace, including Sens. He also held the convent of Saint-Julien-d'Auxerre. He appeared in 811 as an envoy to Constantinople with Haido, bishop of Basel, and Aio, duke of Friuli, to renew the _Pax Nicephori._ In 821 he allied himself by marriage to the royal family; his daughter Irmgard married Louis' son Lothar. In 824 he took part in an expedition in Brittany, and in 826 he accompanied the Empress Judith to the baptism of Harald 'Klak' Halfdansson in Ingelheim. His other daughter Aelis married first Konrad I, Graf in Argengau und Linzgau, then Rutpert IV, Graf in Wormsgau.
“In 827 Hugues, along with Matfrid of Orléans was commissioned by Emperor Louis 'the Pious' to recruit an army with his son Pippin I, king of Aquitaine, and repel the invasion of the _Marca Hispanica_ by the Moslem general Abu Marvan. Hugues and Matfrid delayed until the threat had passed. For this he was given the nickname 'Timidus' (the Timid). Barcelona being the greatest military accomplishment of Louis' career, the Spanish March meant much to him and Hugues and Matfried found themselves greatly disfavoured at court. They were deposed in February of the next year.
“Nevertheless Hugues remained very influential as the father-in-law of Lothar. He joined Matfrid in inciting Lothar to rebellion, and in consequence he had all his lands in Gaul confiscated. He remained highly influential in Italy, where Lothar created him 'duke of Locate' _(dux de Locate).
“Hugues died on 4 November 839.”.1
Reference: Stone [2000], Chart 30-3.9
; Per Med Lands:
"HUGUES (-20 Oct 837, bur Monza). Thegan refers to the wife of Emperor Lothar as "filiam Hugi comitis, qui erat de stirpe cuiusdam ducis nomine Etih" and in the following paragraph names her "Irmingarda"[139]. "Karolus…augustus…imperator Romanum…rex Francorum et Langobardorum" donated property "in pago Andegavino in loco Laniaco…et in pago Rodonico" to Kloster Prüm by charter dated 28 Apr 807 which names "Hugo comes"[140]. Comte de Tours: Einhard names "Haido episcopus Baslensus et Hugus comes Toronicus et Aio Langobardus de Foroiluii" as imperial missi who met the missi from Constantinople in 811[141]. The Annales Fuldenses record that the emperor sent "Haitonem Basilensem episcopus et Hug comitem Turonicum et Aio Langobardum de Aquileia" as missi to Constantinople in 811 to confirm the peace "cum Niceforo"[142]. The Gesta Francorum names "Hug comitem Turonicum" in 811[143]. Timiolus and abbot of St Julien d'Auxerre 811. The extensive interests of Hugues in Alsace are confirmed by the following document: a charter confirms imperial agreement to an exchange of property agreed 2 Sep 820 between “Huc quondam comes” and “monasterium...Wizunburg” which specifies numerous places in Alsace[144]. The reference “quondam” is unexplained unless the document was prepared later than the date specified, either during the period which followed Hugues’s asset confiscations in [828] or after he died. Thegan's Vita Hludowici Imperatoris records that Emperor Louis was met at "Compendium" by "Pippinus filius eius cum magnatis primis patris sui…Hug et Matfrido…Gotefrido"[145]. The Vita Hludowici Imperatoris names "Hugonem et Mathfridum comites" as missi of Pepin King of Aquitaine [in 827][146]. Wilsdorf highlights the likelihood that the failure of their campaign against the Moors in the march of Spain at this time was due to delay in Hugues and Matfried arriving with their army in time to prevent the devastation of areas around Barcelona and Girona[147]. This appears confirmed by the Vita Hludowici Imperatoris which records that the affair was submitted to an assembly at Aachen in Feb 828 which recommended the confiscation of their assets as punishment[148]. This presumably included the county of Tours, in the case of Hugues who, as noted below, was called “timidus” by Thegan. Wilsdorf highlights the probable involvement of Hugues in the plots in [830/36], resulting from the rivalry between Emperor Louis (and his wife Judith) and the emperor’s eldest son Lothaire, which resulted in further periods of successive rehabilitation and disgrace for Hugues, culminating in his exile to northern Italy[149]. Thegan's Vita Hludowici Imperatoris records that "Hlutharius" submitted to his father Emperor Louis I [in 836] followed by "socer eius Hug timidus"[150]. The Vita Hludowici Imperatoris records that "Wala Corbeiensis abbas, Matfridus, Hugo, Lantbertus, Godefridus, itemque filius eius Godefridus, Agimbertus comes Pertensis…sed et Richardus" died between "Kal Sep usque ad missam sancti Martini" [in 836][151]. The Gesta Francorum records that "Lantbertus et Hugus" were among the "plureo ex primoribus Italiæ" who were killed at Ticino "837 III Kal Ian noctu octies" when "tremuisse perhibetur"[152]. The Annales Fuldenses also record the earthquake at Ticino in Italy "837 III Kal Ian" in which "plures ex primoribus Italiæ" were killed including "Lantbertus et Hugus"[153].
"m AVA, daughter of --- (-4 Sep 839, bur Monza). Her marriage is inferred from the testament of her supposed son-in-law "Gerardus [comes]" who names "coniugis meæ…Berthæ…genitoribus atque parentibus…Luthardi et Grimildis atque…Hugonis et Bavæ…filiis et filiabus ipsorum"[154]."
Med Lands cites:
Hugues III 'le Méfiant' (?) Comte de Tours was born circa 780.1
Hugues III 'le Méfiant' (?) Comte de Tours died on 4 November 839; Genealogics says d. 04 Nov 0839; Med Lands says d. 20 Oct 837.4,1,2
Reference: Genealogics cites: Caroli Magni Progenies Neustadt an der Aisch, 1977. , Siegfried Rosch, Reference: 76.1 GAV-31 EDV-31 GKJ-32.
; This is the same person as ”Hugh of Tours” at Wikipedia, as ”Hugues de Tours” at Wikipédia (FR), and as ”Hugo von Tours” at Wikipedia (DE).6,7,8
; Per Genealogics:
“Hugues was born about 780, possibly a son of Haicho of the house of the Etichonen, which claimed descent from the Merovingian kings and rose to dominate the region of Alsace in the Early Middle Ages from the seventh to the tenth centuries. He was the count of Tours and Sens during the reigns of Charlemagne and his son Louis 'the Pious', until Hugues' disgrace in February 828. By his wife Ada he had two daughters, Irmgard and Aelis, who would have progeny.
“Hugues had many possessions in Alsace, including Sens. He also held the convent of Saint-Julien-d'Auxerre. He appeared in 811 as an envoy to Constantinople with Haido, bishop of Basel, and Aio, duke of Friuli, to renew the _Pax Nicephori._ In 821 he allied himself by marriage to the royal family; his daughter Irmgard married Louis' son Lothar. In 824 he took part in an expedition in Brittany, and in 826 he accompanied the Empress Judith to the baptism of Harald 'Klak' Halfdansson in Ingelheim. His other daughter Aelis married first Konrad I, Graf in Argengau und Linzgau, then Rutpert IV, Graf in Wormsgau.
“In 827 Hugues, along with Matfrid of Orléans was commissioned by Emperor Louis 'the Pious' to recruit an army with his son Pippin I, king of Aquitaine, and repel the invasion of the _Marca Hispanica_ by the Moslem general Abu Marvan. Hugues and Matfrid delayed until the threat had passed. For this he was given the nickname 'Timidus' (the Timid). Barcelona being the greatest military accomplishment of Louis' career, the Spanish March meant much to him and Hugues and Matfried found themselves greatly disfavoured at court. They were deposed in February of the next year.
“Nevertheless Hugues remained very influential as the father-in-law of Lothar. He joined Matfrid in inciting Lothar to rebellion, and in consequence he had all his lands in Gaul confiscated. He remained highly influential in Italy, where Lothar created him 'duke of Locate' _(dux de Locate).
“Hugues died on 4 November 839.”.1
Reference: Stone [2000], Chart 30-3.9
; Per Med Lands:
"HUGUES (-20 Oct 837, bur Monza). Thegan refers to the wife of Emperor Lothar as "filiam Hugi comitis, qui erat de stirpe cuiusdam ducis nomine Etih" and in the following paragraph names her "Irmingarda"[139]. "Karolus…augustus…imperator Romanum…rex Francorum et Langobardorum" donated property "in pago Andegavino in loco Laniaco…et in pago Rodonico" to Kloster Prüm by charter dated 28 Apr 807 which names "Hugo comes"[140]. Comte de Tours: Einhard names "Haido episcopus Baslensus et Hugus comes Toronicus et Aio Langobardus de Foroiluii" as imperial missi who met the missi from Constantinople in 811[141]. The Annales Fuldenses record that the emperor sent "Haitonem Basilensem episcopus et Hug comitem Turonicum et Aio Langobardum de Aquileia" as missi to Constantinople in 811 to confirm the peace "cum Niceforo"[142]. The Gesta Francorum names "Hug comitem Turonicum" in 811[143]. Timiolus and abbot of St Julien d'Auxerre 811. The extensive interests of Hugues in Alsace are confirmed by the following document: a charter confirms imperial agreement to an exchange of property agreed 2 Sep 820 between “Huc quondam comes” and “monasterium...Wizunburg” which specifies numerous places in Alsace[144]. The reference “quondam” is unexplained unless the document was prepared later than the date specified, either during the period which followed Hugues’s asset confiscations in [828] or after he died. Thegan's Vita Hludowici Imperatoris records that Emperor Louis was met at "Compendium" by "Pippinus filius eius cum magnatis primis patris sui…Hug et Matfrido…Gotefrido"[145]. The Vita Hludowici Imperatoris names "Hugonem et Mathfridum comites" as missi of Pepin King of Aquitaine [in 827][146]. Wilsdorf highlights the likelihood that the failure of their campaign against the Moors in the march of Spain at this time was due to delay in Hugues and Matfried arriving with their army in time to prevent the devastation of areas around Barcelona and Girona[147]. This appears confirmed by the Vita Hludowici Imperatoris which records that the affair was submitted to an assembly at Aachen in Feb 828 which recommended the confiscation of their assets as punishment[148]. This presumably included the county of Tours, in the case of Hugues who, as noted below, was called “timidus” by Thegan. Wilsdorf highlights the probable involvement of Hugues in the plots in [830/36], resulting from the rivalry between Emperor Louis (and his wife Judith) and the emperor’s eldest son Lothaire, which resulted in further periods of successive rehabilitation and disgrace for Hugues, culminating in his exile to northern Italy[149]. Thegan's Vita Hludowici Imperatoris records that "Hlutharius" submitted to his father Emperor Louis I [in 836] followed by "socer eius Hug timidus"[150]. The Vita Hludowici Imperatoris records that "Wala Corbeiensis abbas, Matfridus, Hugo, Lantbertus, Godefridus, itemque filius eius Godefridus, Agimbertus comes Pertensis…sed et Richardus" died between "Kal Sep usque ad missam sancti Martini" [in 836][151]. The Gesta Francorum records that "Lantbertus et Hugus" were among the "plureo ex primoribus Italiæ" who were killed at Ticino "837 III Kal Ian noctu octies" when "tremuisse perhibetur"[152]. The Annales Fuldenses also record the earthquake at Ticino in Italy "837 III Kal Ian" in which "plures ex primoribus Italiæ" were killed including "Lantbertus et Hugus"[153].
"m AVA, daughter of --- (-4 Sep 839, bur Monza). Her marriage is inferred from the testament of her supposed son-in-law "Gerardus [comes]" who names "coniugis meæ…Berthæ…genitoribus atque parentibus…Luthardi et Grimildis atque…Hugonis et Bavæ…filiis et filiabus ipsorum"[154]."
Med Lands cites:
[139] Thegani Vita Hludowici Imperatoris 28 and 29, MGH SS II, p. 597.
[140] DD Kar. 1, 205, p. 274.
[141] Einhardi Annales 811, MGH SS I, p. 198.
[142] Annales Fuldenses 811 MGH SS I, p. 355.
[143] Gesta quorundam regum Francorum 811, MGH SS I, p. 355.
[144] Zeuss, C. (1842) Traditiones possessionesque Wizenburgenses (Speier), LXIX, p. 73.
[145] Thegani Vita Hludowici Imperatoris 36, MGH SS II, p. 597.
[146] Vita Hludowici Imperatoris 41, MGH SS II, p. 630.
[147] Wilsdorf ‘Les Etichonides’ 1964, p. 12.
[148] Vita Hludowici Imperatoris 42, MGH SS II, p. 631.
[149] Wilsdorf ‘Les Etichonides’ 1964, pp. 16-19.
[150] Thegani Vita Hludowici Imperatoris 55, MGH SS II, p. 602.
[151] Vita Hludowici Imperatoris 56, MGH SS II, p. 642.
[152] Gesta quorundam regum Francorum 837, MGH SS I, p. 360.
[153] Annales Fuldenses 837, MGH SS I, p. 360.
[154] RHGF XII, p. 317.2
[140] DD Kar. 1, 205, p. 274.
[141] Einhardi Annales 811, MGH SS I, p. 198.
[142] Annales Fuldenses 811 MGH SS I, p. 355.
[143] Gesta quorundam regum Francorum 811, MGH SS I, p. 355.
[144] Zeuss, C. (1842) Traditiones possessionesque Wizenburgenses (Speier), LXIX, p. 73.
[145] Thegani Vita Hludowici Imperatoris 36, MGH SS II, p. 597.
[146] Vita Hludowici Imperatoris 41, MGH SS II, p. 630.
[147] Wilsdorf ‘Les Etichonides’ 1964, p. 12.
[148] Vita Hludowici Imperatoris 42, MGH SS II, p. 631.
[149] Wilsdorf ‘Les Etichonides’ 1964, pp. 16-19.
[150] Thegani Vita Hludowici Imperatoris 55, MGH SS II, p. 602.
[151] Vita Hludowici Imperatoris 56, MGH SS II, p. 642.
[152] Gesta quorundam regum Francorum 837, MGH SS I, p. 360.
[153] Annales Fuldenses 837, MGH SS I, p. 360.
[154] RHGF XII, p. 317.2
Family | Ava/Bava (?) Countess Sundgau (Upper Alsace), Countess of Tours b. 769, d. a 839 |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Hugues 'le Méfiant': https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00020433&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ALSACE.htm#_Toc508299222. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.
Baltimore, 1992, unknown publish date), p. 156, Line 181-5. Hereinafter cited as Weis AR-7. - [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Weis AR-7, line 181-5, 156.
- [S2374] Find a Grave, online http://www.findagrave.com/, Find A Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com : accessed 11 October 2019), memorial page for Ava de Morvois de Tours (769–4 Nov 839), Find A Grave Memorial no. 146961315, ; Maintained by Memerizion (contributor 48072664) Unknown, at: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/146961315/ava-de_tours. Hereinafter cited as Find a Grave.
- [S1953] Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia, online http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_of_Tours. Hereinafter cited as Wikipedia.
- [S4742] Wikipédia - L'encyclopédie libre, online https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikip%C3%A9dia:Accueil_principal, Hugues de Tours: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugues_de_Tours. Hereinafter cited as Wikipédia (FR).
- [S4759] Wikipedia - Die freie Enzyklopädie, online https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Hauptseite, Hugo von Tours: https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugo_von_Tours. Hereinafter cited as Wikipédia (DE).
- [S737] Compiler Don Charles Stone, Some Ancient and Medieval Descents (n.p.: Ancient and Medieval Descents Project
2401 Pennsylvania Ave., #9B-2B
Philadelphia, PA 19130-3034
Tel: 215-232-6259
e-mail address
or e-mail address
copyright 1995, 1998, 1999, 2000, unknown publish date), chart 30-3. - [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ALSACE.htm#Bertadied844
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Irmgard de Tours: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00020432&tree=LEO
- [S1217] e-mail address, online http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=:1590432, Sue Cary (unknown location), downloaded updated 25 Aug 2001, http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=:1590432&id=I09454
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Welf 1 page - The House of Welfen: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/welf/welf1.html
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Aelis de Tours: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00020389&tree=LEO
Ava/Bava (?) Countess Sundgau (Upper Alsace), Countess of Tours1,2
F, #10819, b. 769, d. after 839
Father | Guerri I (?) Cte de Morvois3 |
Mother | Eve (?) of Roussillon3 |
Reference | GAV31 EDV31 |
Last Edited | 23 Jul 2020 |
Ava/Bava (?) Countess Sundgau (Upper Alsace), Countess of Tours married Hugues III 'le Méfiant' (?) Comte de Tours, son of Luitfride II (?) Count of Alsace and Hiltrude (?).4,2,5
Ava/Bava (?) Countess Sundgau (Upper Alsace), Countess of Tours was born in 769 at Tours, Departement d'Indre-et-Loire, Centre, France (now).2
Ava/Bava (?) Countess Sundgau (Upper Alsace), Countess of Tours died after 839 at Tours, Departement d'Indre-et-Loire, Centre, France (now);
Genealogics says d. aft 839, Find A Grave says d. 4 Nov 839.6,2
; Per Med Lands:
"HUGUES (-20 Oct 837, bur Monza). Thegan refers to the wife of Emperor Lothar as "filiam Hugi comitis, qui erat de stirpe cuiusdam ducis nomine Etih" and in the following paragraph names her "Irmingarda"[139]. "Karolus…augustus…imperator Romanum…rex Francorum et Langobardorum" donated property "in pago Andegavino in loco Laniaco…et in pago Rodonico" to Kloster Prüm by charter dated 28 Apr 807 which names "Hugo comes"[140]. Comte de Tours: Einhard names "Haido episcopus Baslensus et Hugus comes Toronicus et Aio Langobardus de Foroiluii" as imperial missi who met the missi from Constantinople in 811[141]. The Annales Fuldenses record that the emperor sent "Haitonem Basilensem episcopus et Hug comitem Turonicum et Aio Langobardum de Aquileia" as missi to Constantinople in 811 to confirm the peace "cum Niceforo"[142]. The Gesta Francorum names "Hug comitem Turonicum" in 811[143]. Timiolus and abbot of St Julien d'Auxerre 811. The extensive interests of Hugues in Alsace are confirmed by the following document: a charter confirms imperial agreement to an exchange of property agreed 2 Sep 820 between “Huc quondam comes” and “monasterium...Wizunburg” which specifies numerous places in Alsace[144]. The reference “quondam” is unexplained unless the document was prepared later than the date specified, either during the period which followed Hugues’s asset confiscations in [828] or after he died. Thegan's Vita Hludowici Imperatoris records that Emperor Louis was met at "Compendium" by "Pippinus filius eius cum magnatis primis patris sui…Hug et Matfrido…Gotefrido"[145]. The Vita Hludowici Imperatoris names "Hugonem et Mathfridum comites" as missi of Pepin King of Aquitaine [in 827][146]. Wilsdorf highlights the likelihood that the failure of their campaign against the Moors in the march of Spain at this time was due to delay in Hugues and Matfried arriving with their army in time to prevent the devastation of areas around Barcelona and Girona[147]. This appears confirmed by the Vita Hludowici Imperatoris which records that the affair was submitted to an assembly at Aachen in Feb 828 which recommended the confiscation of their assets as punishment[148]. This presumably included the county of Tours, in the case of Hugues who, as noted below, was called “timidus” by Thegan. Wilsdorf highlights the probable involvement of Hugues in the plots in [830/36], resulting from the rivalry between Emperor Louis (and his wife Judith) and the emperor’s eldest son Lothaire, which resulted in further periods of successive rehabilitation and disgrace for Hugues, culminating in his exile to northern Italy[149]. Thegan's Vita Hludowici Imperatoris records that "Hlutharius" submitted to his father Emperor Louis I [in 836] followed by "socer eius Hug timidus"[150]. The Vita Hludowici Imperatoris records that "Wala Corbeiensis abbas, Matfridus, Hugo, Lantbertus, Godefridus, itemque filius eius Godefridus, Agimbertus comes Pertensis…sed et Richardus" died between "Kal Sep usque ad missam sancti Martini" [in 836][151]. The Gesta Francorum records that "Lantbertus et Hugus" were among the "plureo ex primoribus Italiæ" who were killed at Ticino "837 III Kal Ian noctu octies" when "tremuisse perhibetur"[152]. The Annales Fuldenses also record the earthquake at Ticino in Italy "837 III Kal Ian" in which "plures ex primoribus Italiæ" were killed including "Lantbertus et Hugus"[153].
"m AVA, daughter of --- (-4 Sep 839, bur Monza). Her marriage is inferred from the testament of her supposed son-in-law "Gerardus [comes]" who names "coniugis meæ…Berthæ…genitoribus atque parentibus…Luthardi et Grimildis atque…Hugonis et Bavæ…filiis et filiabus ipsorum"[154]."
Med Lands cites:
Reference: Leo van de Pas cites: Caroli Magni Progenies Neustadt an der Aisch, 1977. , Siegfried Rosch, Reference: 76.1 Ava/Bava (?) Countess Sundgau (Upper Alsace), Countess of Tours was also known as Ava (?) Countess of Alsace.
Reference: Weis [1992:156], Line 181-5.4 Ava/Bava (?) Countess Sundgau (Upper Alsace), Countess of Tours was also known as Ava de Morvois.3
Ava/Bava (?) Countess Sundgau (Upper Alsace), Countess of Tours was born in 769 at Tours, Departement d'Indre-et-Loire, Centre, France (now).2
Ava/Bava (?) Countess Sundgau (Upper Alsace), Countess of Tours died after 839 at Tours, Departement d'Indre-et-Loire, Centre, France (now);
Genealogics says d. aft 839, Find A Grave says d. 4 Nov 839.6,2
; Per Med Lands:
"HUGUES (-20 Oct 837, bur Monza). Thegan refers to the wife of Emperor Lothar as "filiam Hugi comitis, qui erat de stirpe cuiusdam ducis nomine Etih" and in the following paragraph names her "Irmingarda"[139]. "Karolus…augustus…imperator Romanum…rex Francorum et Langobardorum" donated property "in pago Andegavino in loco Laniaco…et in pago Rodonico" to Kloster Prüm by charter dated 28 Apr 807 which names "Hugo comes"[140]. Comte de Tours: Einhard names "Haido episcopus Baslensus et Hugus comes Toronicus et Aio Langobardus de Foroiluii" as imperial missi who met the missi from Constantinople in 811[141]. The Annales Fuldenses record that the emperor sent "Haitonem Basilensem episcopus et Hug comitem Turonicum et Aio Langobardum de Aquileia" as missi to Constantinople in 811 to confirm the peace "cum Niceforo"[142]. The Gesta Francorum names "Hug comitem Turonicum" in 811[143]. Timiolus and abbot of St Julien d'Auxerre 811. The extensive interests of Hugues in Alsace are confirmed by the following document: a charter confirms imperial agreement to an exchange of property agreed 2 Sep 820 between “Huc quondam comes” and “monasterium...Wizunburg” which specifies numerous places in Alsace[144]. The reference “quondam” is unexplained unless the document was prepared later than the date specified, either during the period which followed Hugues’s asset confiscations in [828] or after he died. Thegan's Vita Hludowici Imperatoris records that Emperor Louis was met at "Compendium" by "Pippinus filius eius cum magnatis primis patris sui…Hug et Matfrido…Gotefrido"[145]. The Vita Hludowici Imperatoris names "Hugonem et Mathfridum comites" as missi of Pepin King of Aquitaine [in 827][146]. Wilsdorf highlights the likelihood that the failure of their campaign against the Moors in the march of Spain at this time was due to delay in Hugues and Matfried arriving with their army in time to prevent the devastation of areas around Barcelona and Girona[147]. This appears confirmed by the Vita Hludowici Imperatoris which records that the affair was submitted to an assembly at Aachen in Feb 828 which recommended the confiscation of their assets as punishment[148]. This presumably included the county of Tours, in the case of Hugues who, as noted below, was called “timidus” by Thegan. Wilsdorf highlights the probable involvement of Hugues in the plots in [830/36], resulting from the rivalry between Emperor Louis (and his wife Judith) and the emperor’s eldest son Lothaire, which resulted in further periods of successive rehabilitation and disgrace for Hugues, culminating in his exile to northern Italy[149]. Thegan's Vita Hludowici Imperatoris records that "Hlutharius" submitted to his father Emperor Louis I [in 836] followed by "socer eius Hug timidus"[150]. The Vita Hludowici Imperatoris records that "Wala Corbeiensis abbas, Matfridus, Hugo, Lantbertus, Godefridus, itemque filius eius Godefridus, Agimbertus comes Pertensis…sed et Richardus" died between "Kal Sep usque ad missam sancti Martini" [in 836][151]. The Gesta Francorum records that "Lantbertus et Hugus" were among the "plureo ex primoribus Italiæ" who were killed at Ticino "837 III Kal Ian noctu octies" when "tremuisse perhibetur"[152]. The Annales Fuldenses also record the earthquake at Ticino in Italy "837 III Kal Ian" in which "plures ex primoribus Italiæ" were killed including "Lantbertus et Hugus"[153].
"m AVA, daughter of --- (-4 Sep 839, bur Monza). Her marriage is inferred from the testament of her supposed son-in-law "Gerardus [comes]" who names "coniugis meæ…Berthæ…genitoribus atque parentibus…Luthardi et Grimildis atque…Hugonis et Bavæ…filiis et filiabus ipsorum"[154]."
Med Lands cites:
[139] Thegani Vita Hludowici Imperatoris 28 and 29, MGH SS II, p. 597.
[140] DD Kar. 1, 205, p. 274.
[141] Einhardi Annales 811, MGH SS I, p. 198.
[142] Annales Fuldenses 811 MGH SS I, p. 355.
[143] Gesta quorundam regum Francorum 811, MGH SS I, p. 355.
[144] Zeuss, C. (1842) Traditiones possessionesque Wizenburgenses (Speier), LXIX, p. 73.
[145] Thegani Vita Hludowici Imperatoris 36, MGH SS II, p. 597.
[146] Vita Hludowici Imperatoris 41, MGH SS II, p. 630.
[147] Wilsdorf ‘Les Etichonides’ 1964, p. 12.
[148] Vita Hludowici Imperatoris 42, MGH SS II, p. 631.
[149] Wilsdorf ‘Les Etichonides’ 1964, pp. 16-19.
[150] Thegani Vita Hludowici Imperatoris 55, MGH SS II, p. 602.
[151] Vita Hludowici Imperatoris 56, MGH SS II, p. 642.
[152] Gesta quorundam regum Francorum 837, MGH SS I, p. 360.
[153] Annales Fuldenses 837, MGH SS I, p. 360.
[154] RHGF XII, p. 317.7
GAV-31 EDV-31 GKJ-31. [140] DD Kar. 1, 205, p. 274.
[141] Einhardi Annales 811, MGH SS I, p. 198.
[142] Annales Fuldenses 811 MGH SS I, p. 355.
[143] Gesta quorundam regum Francorum 811, MGH SS I, p. 355.
[144] Zeuss, C. (1842) Traditiones possessionesque Wizenburgenses (Speier), LXIX, p. 73.
[145] Thegani Vita Hludowici Imperatoris 36, MGH SS II, p. 597.
[146] Vita Hludowici Imperatoris 41, MGH SS II, p. 630.
[147] Wilsdorf ‘Les Etichonides’ 1964, p. 12.
[148] Vita Hludowici Imperatoris 42, MGH SS II, p. 631.
[149] Wilsdorf ‘Les Etichonides’ 1964, pp. 16-19.
[150] Thegani Vita Hludowici Imperatoris 55, MGH SS II, p. 602.
[151] Vita Hludowici Imperatoris 56, MGH SS II, p. 642.
[152] Gesta quorundam regum Francorum 837, MGH SS I, p. 360.
[153] Annales Fuldenses 837, MGH SS I, p. 360.
[154] RHGF XII, p. 317.7
Reference: Leo van de Pas cites: Caroli Magni Progenies Neustadt an der Aisch, 1977. , Siegfried Rosch, Reference: 76.1 Ava/Bava (?) Countess Sundgau (Upper Alsace), Countess of Tours was also known as Ava (?) Countess of Alsace.
Reference: Weis [1992:156], Line 181-5.4 Ava/Bava (?) Countess Sundgau (Upper Alsace), Countess of Tours was also known as Ava de Morvois.3
Family | Hugues III 'le Méfiant' (?) Comte de Tours b. c 780, d. 4 Nov 839 |
Children |
Citations
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Ava: http://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00020434&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S2374] Find a Grave, online http://www.findagrave.com/, Find A Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com : accessed 11 October 2019), memorial page for Ava de Morvois de Tours (769–4 Nov 839), Find A Grave Memorial no. 146961315, ; Maintained by Memerizion (contributor 48072664) Unknown, at: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/146961315/ava-de_tours. Hereinafter cited as Find a Grave.
- [S4742] Wikipédia - L'encyclopédie libre, online https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikip%C3%A9dia:Accueil_principal, Hugues de Tours: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugues_de_Tours. Hereinafter cited as Wikipédia (FR).
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.
Baltimore, 1992, unknown publish date), line 181-5, 156. Hereinafter cited as Weis AR-7. - [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Hugues 'le Méfiant': https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00020433&tree=LEO
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Ava: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00020434&tree=LEO
- [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ALSACE.htm#_Toc508299222. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
- [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ALSACE.htm#Bertadied844
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Irmgard de Tours: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00020432&tree=LEO
- [S1217] e-mail address, online http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=:1590432, Sue Cary (unknown location), downloaded updated 25 Aug 2001, http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=:1590432&id=I09454
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Aelis de Tours: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00020389&tree=LEO
Luitfride II (?) Count of Alsace
M, #10820, d. 780
Father | Luitfride I (?) Duke of Alsace1 b. b 720, d. 750 |
Reference | GAV32 EDV32 |
Last Edited | 23 Jul 2020 |
Luitfride II (?) Count of Alsace married Hiltrude (?)2
Luitfride II (?) Count of Alsace died in 780.2
GAV-32 EDV-32 GKJ-33.
Luitfride II (?) Count of Alsace died in 780.2
GAV-32 EDV-32 GKJ-33.
Family | Hiltrude (?) |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.
Baltimore, 1992, unknown publish date), p. 156, Line 181-4. Hereinafter cited as Weis AR-7. - [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Weis AR-7, line 181-4, 156.
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Weis AR-7, p. 156, Line 181-5.
Hiltrude (?)
F, #10821
Reference | GAV32 EDV32 |
Last Edited | 23 Jul 2020 |
Hiltrude (?) married Luitfride II (?) Count of Alsace, son of Luitfride I (?) Duke of Alsace.1
GAV-32 EDV-32 GKJ-33.
.1
GAV-32 EDV-32 GKJ-33.
.1
Family | Luitfride II (?) Count of Alsace d. 780 |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.
Baltimore, 1992, unknown publish date), line 181-4, 156. Hereinafter cited as Weis AR-7. - [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Weis AR-7, p. 156, Line 181-5.
Luitfride I (?) Duke of Alsace
M, #10822, b. before 720, d. 750
Father | Adalbert (?) Duc d'Alsace1,2 b. c 665, d. bt 720 - 722 |
Mother | Ingina (?)3 b. 679 |
Reference | GAV33 EDV33 |
Last Edited | 23 Jul 2020 |
Luitfride I (?) Duke of Alsace was born before 720.4
Luitfride I (?) Duke of Alsace died in 750.4
GAV-33 EDV-33 GKJ-34. He was Count of alsace between 720 and 750.5
Luitfride I (?) Duke of Alsace died in 750.4
GAV-33 EDV-33 GKJ-34. He was Count of alsace between 720 and 750.5
Family | |
Child |
Citations
- [S4742] Wikipédia - L'encyclopédie libre, online https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikip%C3%A9dia:Accueil_principal, Adalbert d'Alsace: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adalbert_d%27Alsace. Hereinafter cited as Wikipédia (FR).
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.
Baltimore, 1992, unknown publish date), p. 156, Line 181-3. Hereinafter cited as Weis AR-7. - [S1217] e-mail address, online http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=:1590432, Sue Cary (unknown location), downloaded updated 25 Aug 2001, http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=:1590432&id=I09753
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Weis AR-7, line 181-3, 156.
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Weis AR-7, p. 156, Line 181-4.
Adalbert (?) Duc d'Alsace
M, #10823, b. circa 665, d. between 720 and 722
Father | Eticho I (?) Duc d'Alsace1,2,3 b. b 662, d. 20 Feb 690 |
Mother | Bereswinde (?) of France2 b. 650 |
Reference | GAV34 EDV34 |
Last Edited | 23 Jul 2020 |
Adalbert (?) Duc d'Alsace married Ingina (?)
;
His 2nd wife.2,4 Adalbert (?) Duc d'Alsace married Gerlinda (?)
;
His 1st wife.4 Adalbert (?) Duc d'Alsace was born circa 665 at Alsace-Lorraine, France.5
Adalbert (?) Duc d'Alsace died between 720 and 722; Weis [1992:156] says d. 720; Wikipédia (Fr.) says d. 11.6,5
; Per Wikipedia:
"Adalbert (died 723) was the Duke of Alsace beginning after 683 and probably until his death. He was the second duke of the family of the Etichonids and the first to inherit the duchy from his father.[1]
"The son of Adalrich and Berswinda,[1] Adalbert was created Count of the Sundgau by his father circa 683. It is unknown if Adalbert appointed another count to succeed him after taking over the ducal office, exercised the comital powers himself, or left the office vacant. Under Adalbert, Etichonid control of the offices of the duchy of Alsace and of the monasteries of the region became entrenched.
"Adalbert seems to have concentrated his power in northern Alsace (the later Nordgau) around the Diocese of Strasbourg. He founded the convent of Saint Stephen at Strasbourg and installed his daughter Attala as its first abbess. In 722 he established a monastery in honour[1] of the Saint Michael the Archangel on an island in the Rhine north of Strasbourg. This last establishment was co-founded by a group of monks from Ireland led by the first abbot, Benedict. Honau passed to King Theuderic IV on Adalbert's death.
"Adalbert's first wife was Gerlinda (perhaps of Aquitaine); his second wife was Ingina,[1] a wealthy woman of Alsace. Adalbert had three daughters: Eugenia, Gundlinda and Attala.[1] The first two entered the nunnery of their aunt Odilia at Hohenburg, where Eugenia eventually succeeded as abbess. Gundlinda was later abbess of Niedermünster. In 845 the Emperor Lothair I confirmed all the charters which Adalbert had granted to his foundation at Strasbourg. Some attribute the daughters to Gerlinda while others attribute them to Ingina. Adalbert had two sons: Liutfrid and Eberhard.[1] Liutfrid made Eberhard a count as early as the 720s. The sons are consistently attributed to Ingina.[1]
References
1. Bouchard 2015, p. 181.
Sources
** Bouchard, Constance Brittain (2015). Rewriting Saints and Ancestors: Memory and Forgetting in France, 500-1200. University of Pennsylvania Press.
** Hummer, Hans J. Politics and Power in Early Medieval Europe: Alsace and the Frankish Realm 600 – 1000. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005. See mainly pp 46–55.
** Dunbar, A. P. C. A Dictionary of Saintly Women, vol 1. London: 1904."4
; Per Wikipédia (Fr.):
"Adalbert d'Alsace, ou Adelbert ou bien encore Adelberg2 est né vers 665 dans la région d'Obernai et mort vers 722, peut-être en sa villa de Koenigshoffen.
"Après la mort d’Etichon-Adalric d'Alsace, certainement en 690, son fils, le duc Adalbert d'Alsace, lui succède. Il était déjà comte de Sundgau avant ce décès. Adalbert construit la résidence royale de Koenigshoffen et les abbayes de Honau et de Église Saint-Étienne de Strasbourg, mais aussi de Wissembourg3. L’Alsace est alors un duché très puissant au sein de l’Austrasie. Il épouse Gerlinde de Pfalzel, fille d’Odon qui est peut-être une des petites-filles d’Hugobert.
Sa famille
"Adalbert d'Alsace est le fils d'Etichon-Adalric d'Alsace duc d'Alsace et le reste de 662 à 689, fondateur de la dynastie des Étichonides et le frère de sainte Odile, sainte patronne de l'Alsace. Il est aussi très certainement l'ancêtre de l'illustre famille de Habsbourg. Les biens des Étichonides, maîtres absolus de l’Alsace du Haut Moyen Âge, se retrouveront en effet, aux mains des Habsbourg quelques siècles plus tard. Sa mère, Berswinde est la nièce de saint Léger d'Autun, évêque et saint, et peut-être belle-sœur de Sigebert III.
Biographie
Sa jeunesse
"Adalbert d'Alsace est peut-être né à Oberehnheim, dans la villa royale de ses parents ou au château d’Hohenbourg, où il passe une bonne partie de son enfance. Son père le fait comte du Sundgau en 683.
"Le territoire que tient Adalbert d'Alsace ne semble pas avoir été amputé ou agrandi par rapport au duché de son père. Il est situé à l’est des crêtes des Vosges, de l’abbaye de Surbourg, au sud de la Sauer (rivière), jusqu’au sud de l’abbaye de Moutier-Grandval, située dans le nord du Jura. Il inclut le Brisgau et une partie de la plaine rhénane de l’autre côté du Rhin.
Son mariage
"Adalbert d'Alsace se marie avec Gerlinde de Pfalzel, fille d’Odon et probablement d’Adèle, abbesse de Pfalzel. Adèle de Pfazel est très certainement la fille d’Hugobert (645-698), sénéchal de Clovis III (en 693), comte du palais de Childebert IV (en (697) et d'Irmina d'Oeren.
Koenigshoffen
"Au viie siècle, à Koenigshoffen, le silence de la solitude avait succédé au bruit du camp romain. Les habitants étaient rares sur cette colline où se dressait le gibet pour les malfaiteurs condamnés par le juge de la ville. Non loin de là, saint Arbogast bâtit une cellule au bord de l’Ill, dans un lieu désert, où il aimait à se retirer, quand il voulait fuir le monde. On dit que Dagobert II y construisit pour l’évêque qu'il vénérait un monastère avec un oratoire. Par un mouvement d’humilité, Arbogast voulut être enterré sur la colline des supplices, la présence de son tombeau effaçant l’infamie du lieu. On en fit disparaître le gibet et à sa place on érigea une chapelle dédiée à saint Michel, que l’évêque Remi (+ 783). Remi donna au couvent d’Eschau, fondé par lui en 776. Autour de cette chapelle se groupèrent peu à peu des colons attirés par la fertilité des environs. Les prairies furent converties en champs, il s’éleva des habitations rustiques qui, dès le commencement du viiie siècle, furent assez nombreuses pour former un faubourg suburbium de la ville. Le duc d’Alsace, Adalbert, frère de sainte Odile et fondateur de l’abbaye de Saint-Étienne y bâtit une villa royale qui donnera à la banlieue entière avec ses fermes le nom de Koenigshoffen. C’est pour cette nouvelle agglomération d’habitants qu’on érige l’église de Sainte-Aurélie4.
L’abbaye Saint-Étienne (717)
"Comme Etichon-Adalric d'Alsace, son père il fonde des monastères dont l’abbaye Saint-Étienne en (717), à Strasbourg. L'église Saint-Étienne se situe à l'intérieur du collège épiscopal Saint-Étienne, à Strasbourg. La crypte présente les vestiges de la basilique romaine du ve siècle. Cependant l'édifice a été réalisé au viiie siècle par le duc Adalbert d'Alsace. L'abside est mérovingienne. C’est dans cette abbaye qu’il va être inhumé comme d’ailleurs des deux femmes et deux de ses filles. Une autre de ses filles, Attale, y est première abbesse.
Abbaye de Honau (721)
"Le duc Adalbert fonde le monastère de Honau, sur une île du Rhin, au nord de Strasbourg, en l'honneur de l'archange saint Michel. C’est un monastère bénédictin fondé au début du viiie siècle par des moines irlandais. Toutefois des sources plus sérieuses nous donnent la date : 7215. Parmi les noms qui en ressortent, on connaît celui de Tuban, fondateur avec le dénommé Benedictus, de ce monastère, qui sert de halte et de base de repos pour les Irlandais partant en direction de la Hesse et de Mayence. Adalbert d'Alsace se qualifie d’Adelbertus dux dans une charte de cette abbaye. Le duc Adalbert augmente la dotation première du monastère de Honau en y ajoutant des biens et des revenus en juin 7226. Il meurt la même année, avant 11 décembre 722, et est inhumé dans le cœur de l’abbaye Saint-Étienne
Descendance
"Adalbert d'Alsace épouse Gerlinde de Pfalzel, qui à sa mort est inhumée dans l’abbaye Saint-Étienne. Ils ont au moins six enfants :
"Après la mort de sainte Odile, les chanoinesses élisent pour lui succéder dans l’administration ses deux nièces, filles d’Adalbert :
"Adalbert d'Alsace se remarie avec Bathilde10, une riche femme d'Alsace. Ils ont deux filles :
Notes et références
1. Cette dernière date est à vérifier.
2. L'art de vérifier les dates ..., par David Baillie Warden, Jean-Baptiste-Pierre Jullien de Courcelles, Nicolas Vigton de Saint-Allais, p.158.
3. Politics and Power in Early Medieval EuropeAlsace and the Frankish Realm ..., par Hans J. Hummer, p.53.
4. Histoire du chapitre de Saint-Thomas de Strasbourg pendant le moyen âge ..., par Charles Guillaume Adolphe Schmid, p.212.
5. L'art de vérifier les dates ... Par David Baillie Warden, Jean Baptiste Pierre Jullien Courcelles, Nicolas Vigton de Saint-Allais, p.463. [archive]
6. Francia Sigmaringen. 3.1975, publié par Deutsches Historisches Institut, p.4.
7. Politics and Power in Early Medieval Europe Alsace and the Frankish Realm ..., par Hans J. Hummer, p.53.
8. L'art de vérifier les dates ..., par David Baillie Warden, Jean Baptiste Pierre Jullien Courcelles, Nicolas Vigton de Saint-Allais, p.464. [archive]
9. Histoire des saints d'Alsace; par l'abbé Hunckler, par Théodore François X. Hunkler, p.380.
10. Ou Ingina selon d'autres sources
11. L'art de vérifier les dates ... par David Baillie Warden, Jean Baptiste Pierre Jullien Courcelles, Nicolas Vigton de Saint-Allais, p.464. [archive]
Sources
** Guy Perny, Adalric, duc d'Alsace, ascendants et descendants, J.Do Bentzinger, 2004
** Lucien Sittler L'Alsace Terre d'Histoire Éditions Alsatia 1988 réédition 1994 (ISBN 978-2703200826).
Articles connexes
** Etichon-Adalric d'Alsace: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Etichon-Adalric_d%27Alsace
** Étichonides: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89tichonides
** Liste des comtes puis ducs d'Alsace: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liste_des_comtes_et_ducs_d%27Alsace
** Eugénie d'Alsace: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eug%C3%A9nie_d%27Alsace."7
; Per Weis: “Adelbert, Duke of Alsave, d. 720 (brother of St. Odile, patron saint of Alsace, d. 5 Dec. 720).”.3 GAV-34 EDV-34 GKJ-35.
; Per Med Lands:
"ADALBERT, son of ETICHO [Adalrico] Duke in Alsace & his wife Berswinda --- . A 15th century genealogy included in the cartulary of Honau names "Adelbertum, Battichonem, Hugonem, Hechonem" as the four sons of "Adalrici ducis vel alio nomine Hettichonis"[56]. Duke in Alsace. He is named "ducis Adelberti" in the Annales Murbacenses as father of Eberhard[57].
"m INGINA, daughter of ---. Her name is confirmed by the charter dated 5 Feb 737 under which “Liutfrudus…dux” sold property “in Aunulfouuilare quicquid Ingina genitore meo”[58]."
Med Lands cites:
Per Wikipédia (Fr.): v.680 : Adalbert d'Alsace (v.665 - v.722), duc d'Alsace, fils d'Etichon Ier Adalric Ier circa 680.5 He was Comte de Sundgau
Per Wikipédia (Fr.): 683 - v.722 : Adalbert d'Alsace (v.665 - v.722), duc d'Alsace, fils d'Etichon Ier Adalric Ier between 683 and 722.5
;
His 2nd wife.2,4 Adalbert (?) Duc d'Alsace married Gerlinda (?)
;
His 1st wife.4 Adalbert (?) Duc d'Alsace was born circa 665 at Alsace-Lorraine, France.5
Adalbert (?) Duc d'Alsace died between 720 and 722; Weis [1992:156] says d. 720; Wikipédia (Fr.) says d. 11.6,5
; Per Wikipedia:
"Adalbert (died 723) was the Duke of Alsace beginning after 683 and probably until his death. He was the second duke of the family of the Etichonids and the first to inherit the duchy from his father.[1]
"The son of Adalrich and Berswinda,[1] Adalbert was created Count of the Sundgau by his father circa 683. It is unknown if Adalbert appointed another count to succeed him after taking over the ducal office, exercised the comital powers himself, or left the office vacant. Under Adalbert, Etichonid control of the offices of the duchy of Alsace and of the monasteries of the region became entrenched.
"Adalbert seems to have concentrated his power in northern Alsace (the later Nordgau) around the Diocese of Strasbourg. He founded the convent of Saint Stephen at Strasbourg and installed his daughter Attala as its first abbess. In 722 he established a monastery in honour[1] of the Saint Michael the Archangel on an island in the Rhine north of Strasbourg. This last establishment was co-founded by a group of monks from Ireland led by the first abbot, Benedict. Honau passed to King Theuderic IV on Adalbert's death.
"Adalbert's first wife was Gerlinda (perhaps of Aquitaine); his second wife was Ingina,[1] a wealthy woman of Alsace. Adalbert had three daughters: Eugenia, Gundlinda and Attala.[1] The first two entered the nunnery of their aunt Odilia at Hohenburg, where Eugenia eventually succeeded as abbess. Gundlinda was later abbess of Niedermünster. In 845 the Emperor Lothair I confirmed all the charters which Adalbert had granted to his foundation at Strasbourg. Some attribute the daughters to Gerlinda while others attribute them to Ingina. Adalbert had two sons: Liutfrid and Eberhard.[1] Liutfrid made Eberhard a count as early as the 720s. The sons are consistently attributed to Ingina.[1]
References
1. Bouchard 2015, p. 181.
Sources
** Bouchard, Constance Brittain (2015). Rewriting Saints and Ancestors: Memory and Forgetting in France, 500-1200. University of Pennsylvania Press.
** Hummer, Hans J. Politics and Power in Early Medieval Europe: Alsace and the Frankish Realm 600 – 1000. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005. See mainly pp 46–55.
** Dunbar, A. P. C. A Dictionary of Saintly Women, vol 1. London: 1904."4
; Per Wikipédia (Fr.):
"Adalbert d'Alsace, ou Adelbert ou bien encore Adelberg2 est né vers 665 dans la région d'Obernai et mort vers 722, peut-être en sa villa de Koenigshoffen.
"Après la mort d’Etichon-Adalric d'Alsace, certainement en 690, son fils, le duc Adalbert d'Alsace, lui succède. Il était déjà comte de Sundgau avant ce décès. Adalbert construit la résidence royale de Koenigshoffen et les abbayes de Honau et de Église Saint-Étienne de Strasbourg, mais aussi de Wissembourg3. L’Alsace est alors un duché très puissant au sein de l’Austrasie. Il épouse Gerlinde de Pfalzel, fille d’Odon qui est peut-être une des petites-filles d’Hugobert.
Sa famille
"Adalbert d'Alsace est le fils d'Etichon-Adalric d'Alsace duc d'Alsace et le reste de 662 à 689, fondateur de la dynastie des Étichonides et le frère de sainte Odile, sainte patronne de l'Alsace. Il est aussi très certainement l'ancêtre de l'illustre famille de Habsbourg. Les biens des Étichonides, maîtres absolus de l’Alsace du Haut Moyen Âge, se retrouveront en effet, aux mains des Habsbourg quelques siècles plus tard. Sa mère, Berswinde est la nièce de saint Léger d'Autun, évêque et saint, et peut-être belle-sœur de Sigebert III.
Biographie
Sa jeunesse
"Adalbert d'Alsace est peut-être né à Oberehnheim, dans la villa royale de ses parents ou au château d’Hohenbourg, où il passe une bonne partie de son enfance. Son père le fait comte du Sundgau en 683.
"Le territoire que tient Adalbert d'Alsace ne semble pas avoir été amputé ou agrandi par rapport au duché de son père. Il est situé à l’est des crêtes des Vosges, de l’abbaye de Surbourg, au sud de la Sauer (rivière), jusqu’au sud de l’abbaye de Moutier-Grandval, située dans le nord du Jura. Il inclut le Brisgau et une partie de la plaine rhénane de l’autre côté du Rhin.
Son mariage
"Adalbert d'Alsace se marie avec Gerlinde de Pfalzel, fille d’Odon et probablement d’Adèle, abbesse de Pfalzel. Adèle de Pfazel est très certainement la fille d’Hugobert (645-698), sénéchal de Clovis III (en 693), comte du palais de Childebert IV (en (697) et d'Irmina d'Oeren.
Koenigshoffen
"Au viie siècle, à Koenigshoffen, le silence de la solitude avait succédé au bruit du camp romain. Les habitants étaient rares sur cette colline où se dressait le gibet pour les malfaiteurs condamnés par le juge de la ville. Non loin de là, saint Arbogast bâtit une cellule au bord de l’Ill, dans un lieu désert, où il aimait à se retirer, quand il voulait fuir le monde. On dit que Dagobert II y construisit pour l’évêque qu'il vénérait un monastère avec un oratoire. Par un mouvement d’humilité, Arbogast voulut être enterré sur la colline des supplices, la présence de son tombeau effaçant l’infamie du lieu. On en fit disparaître le gibet et à sa place on érigea une chapelle dédiée à saint Michel, que l’évêque Remi (+ 783). Remi donna au couvent d’Eschau, fondé par lui en 776. Autour de cette chapelle se groupèrent peu à peu des colons attirés par la fertilité des environs. Les prairies furent converties en champs, il s’éleva des habitations rustiques qui, dès le commencement du viiie siècle, furent assez nombreuses pour former un faubourg suburbium de la ville. Le duc d’Alsace, Adalbert, frère de sainte Odile et fondateur de l’abbaye de Saint-Étienne y bâtit une villa royale qui donnera à la banlieue entière avec ses fermes le nom de Koenigshoffen. C’est pour cette nouvelle agglomération d’habitants qu’on érige l’église de Sainte-Aurélie4.
L’abbaye Saint-Étienne (717)
"Comme Etichon-Adalric d'Alsace, son père il fonde des monastères dont l’abbaye Saint-Étienne en (717), à Strasbourg. L'église Saint-Étienne se situe à l'intérieur du collège épiscopal Saint-Étienne, à Strasbourg. La crypte présente les vestiges de la basilique romaine du ve siècle. Cependant l'édifice a été réalisé au viiie siècle par le duc Adalbert d'Alsace. L'abside est mérovingienne. C’est dans cette abbaye qu’il va être inhumé comme d’ailleurs des deux femmes et deux de ses filles. Une autre de ses filles, Attale, y est première abbesse.
Abbaye de Honau (721)
"Le duc Adalbert fonde le monastère de Honau, sur une île du Rhin, au nord de Strasbourg, en l'honneur de l'archange saint Michel. C’est un monastère bénédictin fondé au début du viiie siècle par des moines irlandais. Toutefois des sources plus sérieuses nous donnent la date : 7215. Parmi les noms qui en ressortent, on connaît celui de Tuban, fondateur avec le dénommé Benedictus, de ce monastère, qui sert de halte et de base de repos pour les Irlandais partant en direction de la Hesse et de Mayence. Adalbert d'Alsace se qualifie d’Adelbertus dux dans une charte de cette abbaye. Le duc Adalbert augmente la dotation première du monastère de Honau en y ajoutant des biens et des revenus en juin 7226. Il meurt la même année, avant 11 décembre 722, et est inhumé dans le cœur de l’abbaye Saint-Étienne
Descendance
"Adalbert d'Alsace épouse Gerlinde de Pfalzel, qui à sa mort est inhumée dans l’abbaye Saint-Étienne. Ils ont au moins six enfants :
** Luitfrid Ier d'Alsace (700 - 767), duc d'Alsace est à l'origine des monastères de Honau, Wissembourg, et de l'abbaye de Murbach7.
** Eberhard d'Eguisheim, comte, cité dans la charte de fondation de l’abbaye de Murbach en 728. Il est aussi à l'origine des monastères de Remiremont, Honau et de Wissembourg7. Saint Pirmin fonde en 724 le monastère de Reichenau, dans l'île du même nom, sur le lac de Constance, puis un grand nombre d'autres abbayes entre les Vosges et la Forêt-Noire, telles que Gengenbach en 725, dans la vallée de la Kinzig, avec le comte franc Eberhard d'Eguisheim, et Murbach en 728, avec le même Eberhard, le dotant de domaines jusqu'en Suisse.
** Sainte Attale (+ 3 décembre 741) est formée par sainte Odile, elle est première abbesse du monastère de Saint-Étienne.
** Mason de Sundgau, comte, fondateur de l’abbaye de Masevaux ou Masmunster3.. Le diplôme de Louis le Débonnaire (778-840) le qualifie pour ce monastère de princeps vir nobilis maso, frater ducis Luidfredi et Eberhardi8.
** Eberhard d'Eguisheim, comte, cité dans la charte de fondation de l’abbaye de Murbach en 728. Il est aussi à l'origine des monastères de Remiremont, Honau et de Wissembourg7. Saint Pirmin fonde en 724 le monastère de Reichenau, dans l'île du même nom, sur le lac de Constance, puis un grand nombre d'autres abbayes entre les Vosges et la Forêt-Noire, telles que Gengenbach en 725, dans la vallée de la Kinzig, avec le comte franc Eberhard d'Eguisheim, et Murbach en 728, avec le même Eberhard, le dotant de domaines jusqu'en Suisse.
** Sainte Attale (+ 3 décembre 741) est formée par sainte Odile, elle est première abbesse du monastère de Saint-Étienne.
** Mason de Sundgau, comte, fondateur de l’abbaye de Masevaux ou Masmunster3.. Le diplôme de Louis le Débonnaire (778-840) le qualifie pour ce monastère de princeps vir nobilis maso, frater ducis Luidfredi et Eberhardi8.
"Après la mort de sainte Odile, les chanoinesses élisent pour lui succéder dans l’administration ses deux nièces, filles d’Adalbert :
** Eugénie d'Alsace (+ 16 décembre 735) est nommée seconde abbesse de Hohenbourg
** Gundelina (en) est nommée abbesse de l’abbaye Sainte-Marie de Niedermunster9.
** Gundelina (en) est nommée abbesse de l’abbaye Sainte-Marie de Niedermunster9.
"Adalbert d'Alsace se remarie avec Bathilde10, une riche femme d'Alsace. Ils ont deux filles :
** Luitgarde est inhumée dans l’abbaye Saint-Étienne.
** Sabine est inhumée dans l’abbaye Saint-Étienne11.
** Sabine est inhumée dans l’abbaye Saint-Étienne11.
Notes et références
1. Cette dernière date est à vérifier.
2. L'art de vérifier les dates ..., par David Baillie Warden, Jean-Baptiste-Pierre Jullien de Courcelles, Nicolas Vigton de Saint-Allais, p.158.
3. Politics and Power in Early Medieval EuropeAlsace and the Frankish Realm ..., par Hans J. Hummer, p.53.
4. Histoire du chapitre de Saint-Thomas de Strasbourg pendant le moyen âge ..., par Charles Guillaume Adolphe Schmid, p.212.
5. L'art de vérifier les dates ... Par David Baillie Warden, Jean Baptiste Pierre Jullien Courcelles, Nicolas Vigton de Saint-Allais, p.463. [archive]
6. Francia Sigmaringen. 3.1975, publié par Deutsches Historisches Institut, p.4.
7. Politics and Power in Early Medieval Europe Alsace and the Frankish Realm ..., par Hans J. Hummer, p.53.
8. L'art de vérifier les dates ..., par David Baillie Warden, Jean Baptiste Pierre Jullien Courcelles, Nicolas Vigton de Saint-Allais, p.464. [archive]
9. Histoire des saints d'Alsace; par l'abbé Hunckler, par Théodore François X. Hunkler, p.380.
10. Ou Ingina selon d'autres sources
11. L'art de vérifier les dates ... par David Baillie Warden, Jean Baptiste Pierre Jullien Courcelles, Nicolas Vigton de Saint-Allais, p.464. [archive]
Sources
** Guy Perny, Adalric, duc d'Alsace, ascendants et descendants, J.Do Bentzinger, 2004
** Lucien Sittler L'Alsace Terre d'Histoire Éditions Alsatia 1988 réédition 1994 (ISBN 978-2703200826).
Articles connexes
** Etichon-Adalric d'Alsace: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Etichon-Adalric_d%27Alsace
** Étichonides: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89tichonides
** Liste des comtes puis ducs d'Alsace: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liste_des_comtes_et_ducs_d%27Alsace
** Eugénie d'Alsace: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eug%C3%A9nie_d%27Alsace."7
; Per Weis: “Adelbert, Duke of Alsave, d. 720 (brother of St. Odile, patron saint of Alsace, d. 5 Dec. 720).”.3 GAV-34 EDV-34 GKJ-35.
; Per Med Lands:
"ADALBERT, son of ETICHO [Adalrico] Duke in Alsace & his wife Berswinda --- . A 15th century genealogy included in the cartulary of Honau names "Adelbertum, Battichonem, Hugonem, Hechonem" as the four sons of "Adalrici ducis vel alio nomine Hettichonis"[56]. Duke in Alsace. He is named "ducis Adelberti" in the Annales Murbacenses as father of Eberhard[57].
"m INGINA, daughter of ---. Her name is confirmed by the charter dated 5 Feb 737 under which “Liutfrudus…dux” sold property “in Aunulfouuilare quicquid Ingina genitore meo”[58]."
Med Lands cites:
[56] Wilsdorf, C. ´Le "monasterium Scottorum" de Honau´, p. 17.
[57] Grandidier, P. A. (1900) Annales Murbacenses (Paris) I, p. 7.
[58] Traditiones Wizenburgenses CLXII, p. 151.2
He was Comte de Nordgau[57] Grandidier, P. A. (1900) Annales Murbacenses (Paris) I, p. 7.
[58] Traditiones Wizenburgenses CLXII, p. 151.2
Per Wikipédia (Fr.): v.680 : Adalbert d'Alsace (v.665 - v.722), duc d'Alsace, fils d'Etichon Ier Adalric Ier circa 680.5 He was Comte de Sundgau
Per Wikipédia (Fr.): 683 - v.722 : Adalbert d'Alsace (v.665 - v.722), duc d'Alsace, fils d'Etichon Ier Adalric Ier between 683 and 722.5
Family 1 | Gerlinda (?) |
Family 2 | Ingina (?) b. 679 |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ALSACE.htm#Etichodiedafter677. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
- [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ALSACE.htm#AdalbertsonEtichoB
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.
Baltimore, 1992, unknown publish date), p. 156, Line 181-2. Hereinafter cited as Weis AR-7. - [S1953] Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia, online http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adalbert,_Duke_of_Alsace. Hereinafter cited as Wikipedia.
- [S4742] Wikipédia - L'encyclopédie libre, online https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikip%C3%A9dia:Accueil_principal, Liste des comtes et ducs d'Alsace: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liste_des_comtes_et_ducs_d%27Alsace. Hereinafter cited as Wikipédia (FR).
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Weis AR-7, line 181-2, 156.
- [S4742] Wikipédia (FR), online https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikip%C3%A9dia:Accueil_principal, Adalbert d'Alsace: https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adalbert_d%27Alsace
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Weis AR-7, p. 156, Line 181-3.
John La Zouche1,2
M, #10824
Father | Sir William La Zouche Knt., 1st Lord Zouche of Haryngworth1,2 b. c 21 Dec 1276, d. 11 Mar 1351/52 |
Mother | Maud Lovel1,2 b. c 1276, d. bt 1313 - 1324 |
Last Edited | 7 Sep 2004 |
John La Zouche was living in 1326.2
Citations
- [S1396] Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site, online http://www.burkes-peerage.net/sites/peerageandgentry/sitepages/home.asp, Zouche Family Page. Hereinafter cited as Burke's Peerage & Gentry Web Site.
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Rohan 1 page - Family de Rohan: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/rohan/rohan1.html
Bereswinde (?) of France1,2
F, #10825, b. 650
Reference | GAV35 EDV35 |
Last Edited | 23 Jul 2020 |
Bereswinde (?) of France married Eticho I (?) Duc d'Alsace, son of Leudesius (?) Major Domo.3,4,5
Bereswinde (?) of France was born in 650 at Metz, Departement de la Moselle, Lorraine, France (now).6
; Per Med Lands:
"BERSWINDA . The Cronica Hohenburgensis records the marriage of "Athicum seu Adalricum" and "Berswindam…filiam sororis sancti Leodegarii, sororem videlicet regina"[511]. The Chronicon Ebersheimense names "Berswindam, filiam sororis Leodegarii episcopi…et Garini comitis Pictavensis, sororem videlicet regina" as the wife of Athicus[512].
"m ADALRICUS [Athicus], son of LEUDESIUS maior domus & his wife ---."
Med Lands cites:
Reference: Weis [1992:156], Line 181-1.3
; Per Med Lands:
"ETICHO [Chadicho/Adalrico], son of LEUDESIUS maior domus & his wife --- (-after 4 Sep 677, maybe after 25 Jun 692). "Childericus rex Francorum, Chadicho duce, Rodeberto comite" donated property to the monastery of St Gregory in Alsace by charter dated 4 Mar 673, the editor of the compilation identifying "Chadicho duce" with Eticho Duke in Alsace, commenting that he had succeed Boniface as duke in 666[9]. Wilsdorf explains the etymological connection between the names “Eticho” and “Chadich/Adalrico”[10]. Duke in Alsace. The Vita Germani records that "Chatalrichus sive Chaticus" succeeded on the deaths of "Gundoinus dux et Bonifacius dux", commenting in the next paragraph that he "cum Ericho comite" was responsible for the martyrdom of Germanus "in basilica sancti Mauricii"[11]. The Passio Leudegarii records that "Desideratus…cognomento Deidoni…cum Bobone et cum Chadalrico duce" campaigned against Lyon[12], presumably dated to the late 660s or early 670s. "Dagobertus rex Francorum" donated property confiscated from "Adalricus dux" to the monastery of "Fontis Besuæ" by charter dated 4 Sep 677[13]. "Chlodovius rex Francorum" with "Aerico duci et Charievio comiti" confirmed a donation to the monastery of Stablo and Malmedy by charter dated 25 Jun 692[14]. It is assumed that "Aerico duci" in this last charter refers to Eticho although this is not certain.
"m BERSWINDA, daughter of ---. The Cronica Hohenburgensis records the marriage of "Athicum seu Adalricum" and "Berswindam…filiam sororis sancti Leodegarii, sororem videlicet regina"[15]. The Chronicon Ebersheimense names "Berswindam, filiam sororis Leodegarii episcopi…et Garini comitis Pictavensis, sororem videlicet regina" as the wife of Athicus[16]."
Med Lands cites:
Bereswinde (?) of France was born in 650 at Metz, Departement de la Moselle, Lorraine, France (now).6
; Per Med Lands:
"BERSWINDA . The Cronica Hohenburgensis records the marriage of "Athicum seu Adalricum" and "Berswindam…filiam sororis sancti Leodegarii, sororem videlicet regina"[511]. The Chronicon Ebersheimense names "Berswindam, filiam sororis Leodegarii episcopi…et Garini comitis Pictavensis, sororem videlicet regina" as the wife of Athicus[512].
"m ADALRICUS [Athicus], son of LEUDESIUS maior domus & his wife ---."
Med Lands cites:
[511] Cronica Hohenburgensis 664, Annales Marbacenses, MGH SS in Usum Scholarum [9], p. 3.
[512] Chronicon Ebersheimense 6, MGH SS XXIII, p. 434.7
GAV-35 EDV-35 GKJ-36. Bereswinde (?) of France was also known as Berswinda (?)7 [512] Chronicon Ebersheimense 6, MGH SS XXIII, p. 434.7
Reference: Weis [1992:156], Line 181-1.3
; Per Med Lands:
"ETICHO [Chadicho/Adalrico], son of LEUDESIUS maior domus & his wife --- (-after 4 Sep 677, maybe after 25 Jun 692). "Childericus rex Francorum, Chadicho duce, Rodeberto comite" donated property to the monastery of St Gregory in Alsace by charter dated 4 Mar 673, the editor of the compilation identifying "Chadicho duce" with Eticho Duke in Alsace, commenting that he had succeed Boniface as duke in 666[9]. Wilsdorf explains the etymological connection between the names “Eticho” and “Chadich/Adalrico”[10]. Duke in Alsace. The Vita Germani records that "Chatalrichus sive Chaticus" succeeded on the deaths of "Gundoinus dux et Bonifacius dux", commenting in the next paragraph that he "cum Ericho comite" was responsible for the martyrdom of Germanus "in basilica sancti Mauricii"[11]. The Passio Leudegarii records that "Desideratus…cognomento Deidoni…cum Bobone et cum Chadalrico duce" campaigned against Lyon[12], presumably dated to the late 660s or early 670s. "Dagobertus rex Francorum" donated property confiscated from "Adalricus dux" to the monastery of "Fontis Besuæ" by charter dated 4 Sep 677[13]. "Chlodovius rex Francorum" with "Aerico duci et Charievio comiti" confirmed a donation to the monastery of Stablo and Malmedy by charter dated 25 Jun 692[14]. It is assumed that "Aerico duci" in this last charter refers to Eticho although this is not certain.
"m BERSWINDA, daughter of ---. The Cronica Hohenburgensis records the marriage of "Athicum seu Adalricum" and "Berswindam…filiam sororis sancti Leodegarii, sororem videlicet regina"[15]. The Chronicon Ebersheimense names "Berswindam, filiam sororis Leodegarii episcopi…et Garini comitis Pictavensis, sororem videlicet regina" as the wife of Athicus[16]."
Med Lands cites:
[9] MGH DD Mer (1872), Diplomata Regum Francorum, no. 30, p. 29, footnote 42.
[10] Wilsdorf ‘Les Etichonides’ 1964, p. 1.
[11] Vita Germani Abbati Grandivallensis 10 and 11, MGH SS rer Merov V, pp. 37-8.
[12] Passio Leudegarii Episcopi Augustodunensis I, 26, MGH SS rer Merov V, p. 307.
[13] MGH DD Mer (1872), Diplomata Regum Francorum, no. 46, p. 43.
[14] MGH DD Mer (1872), Diplomata Regum Francorum, no. 62, p. 55.
[15] Cronica Hohenburgensis 664, Annales Marbacenses, MGH SS in Usum Scholarum [9], p. 3.
[16] Chronicon Ebersheimense 6, MGH SS XXIII, p. 434.5
[10] Wilsdorf ‘Les Etichonides’ 1964, p. 1.
[11] Vita Germani Abbati Grandivallensis 10 and 11, MGH SS rer Merov V, pp. 37-8.
[12] Passio Leudegarii Episcopi Augustodunensis I, 26, MGH SS rer Merov V, p. 307.
[13] MGH DD Mer (1872), Diplomata Regum Francorum, no. 46, p. 43.
[14] MGH DD Mer (1872), Diplomata Regum Francorum, no. 62, p. 55.
[15] Cronica Hohenburgensis 664, Annales Marbacenses, MGH SS in Usum Scholarum [9], p. 3.
[16] Chronicon Ebersheimense 6, MGH SS XXIII, p. 434.5
Family | Eticho I (?) Duc d'Alsace b. b 662, d. 20 Feb 690 |
Children |
|
Citations
- [S812] e-mail address, online http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=bferris, Jr. William R. Ferris (unknown location), downloaded updated 4 Apr 2002, http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=bferris&id=I32125
- [S1953] Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia, online http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adalrich,_Duke_of_Alsace. Hereinafter cited as Wikipedia.
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.
Baltimore, 1992, unknown publish date), line 181-1, 156. Hereinafter cited as Weis AR-7. - [S1217] e-mail address, online http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?db=:1590432, Sue Cary (unknown location), downloaded updated 25 Aug 2001, http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=:1590432&id=I03869
- [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ALSACE.htm#Etichodiedafter677. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
- [S1217] e-mail address, updated 25 Aug 2001, http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=:1590432&id=I03870
- [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FRANKSMaiordomi.htm#BerswindaMAthicus
- [S1454] Catholic Encyclopedia on the New Advent Website of Catholic Resources, online http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/, Catholic Encyclopedia: St. Odilia at http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/11207b.htm. Hereinafter cited as Catholic Encyclopedia.
- [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ALSACE.htm#AdalbertsonEtichoB
Saint Odile (?)1
F, #10826, d. 5 December 720
Father | Eticho I (?) Duc d'Alsace1,2 b. b 662, d. 20 Feb 690 |
Mother | Bereswinde (?) of France1 b. 650 |
Last Edited | 14 Apr 2020 |
Saint Odile (?) died on 5 December 720.3
; Per Catholic Encyclopia:
"St. Odilia - Patroness of Alsace, born at the end of the seventh century; died about 720. According to a trustworthy statement, apparently taken from an earlier life, she was the daughter of the Frankish lord Adalrich (Aticus, Etik) and his wife Bereswinda, who had large estates in Alsace. She founded the convent of Hohenburg (Odilienberg) in Alsace, to which Charlemagne granted immunity, confirmed 9 March, 837 by Louis the Pious who endowed the foundation (Böhmer-Muhlbacher, "Regesta Imperii", I, 866, 933). A tenth-century "Vita" has been preserved, written at the close of the century. According to this narrative she was born blind, miraculously receiving her sight at baptism. A shorter text, probably independent of this, is contained in a manuscript of the early eleventh century. Internal evidences point to an original eighth-century biography. A further "Vita", that J. Vignier claimed to have discovered, has been proved to be a forgery by this historian. Her feast is celebrated 13 December; her grave is in a chapel near the convent church on the Odilienberg. She is represented with a book on which lie two eyes.
"PFISTER, La vie de Ste Odile in Anal. Boll., XIII (1894), 5-3; SEPET, Observations sur la legende de Ste Odile in Bibliotheqe de l'ecole des Chartes, LXIII (1902), 517-36; HAVET, Vignier: Vie de Ste Odile in OE'uvres de Julien Havet, I (Paris, 196), 72-8; POTTHAST, Bibliotheca historica medii aevi, II, 1497 sq., Bibliotheca hagiographica latina, ed. BOLL., II, 906 sq; PFISTER, le duche merovingien d'Alsace et la vie de Ste Odile (Paris and Nancy, 1892); WINTERED, Hist. de Ste Odile ou l'Alsace chretienne au VII et VIII siecles (5th ed. Gebweiler, 1895); WELSCHINGER, Ste Odile in Les Saints (Paris, 1901); WEHRMEISTER, Die hl. Odilia, ihre Legende u. ihre Verehrung (Augsburg, 1902).
J.P. KIRSCH
"Transcribed by Michael T. Barrett
"Dedicated to Judy Van Horn.1'
; Weis AR7 181-2.4
; Per Catholic Encyclopia:
"St. Odilia - Patroness of Alsace, born at the end of the seventh century; died about 720. According to a trustworthy statement, apparently taken from an earlier life, she was the daughter of the Frankish lord Adalrich (Aticus, Etik) and his wife Bereswinda, who had large estates in Alsace. She founded the convent of Hohenburg (Odilienberg) in Alsace, to which Charlemagne granted immunity, confirmed 9 March, 837 by Louis the Pious who endowed the foundation (Böhmer-Muhlbacher, "Regesta Imperii", I, 866, 933). A tenth-century "Vita" has been preserved, written at the close of the century. According to this narrative she was born blind, miraculously receiving her sight at baptism. A shorter text, probably independent of this, is contained in a manuscript of the early eleventh century. Internal evidences point to an original eighth-century biography. A further "Vita", that J. Vignier claimed to have discovered, has been proved to be a forgery by this historian. Her feast is celebrated 13 December; her grave is in a chapel near the convent church on the Odilienberg. She is represented with a book on which lie two eyes.
"PFISTER, La vie de Ste Odile in Anal. Boll., XIII (1894), 5-3; SEPET, Observations sur la legende de Ste Odile in Bibliotheqe de l'ecole des Chartes, LXIII (1902), 517-36; HAVET, Vignier: Vie de Ste Odile in OE'uvres de Julien Havet, I (Paris, 196), 72-8; POTTHAST, Bibliotheca historica medii aevi, II, 1497 sq., Bibliotheca hagiographica latina, ed. BOLL., II, 906 sq; PFISTER, le duche merovingien d'Alsace et la vie de Ste Odile (Paris and Nancy, 1892); WINTERED, Hist. de Ste Odile ou l'Alsace chretienne au VII et VIII siecles (5th ed. Gebweiler, 1895); WELSCHINGER, Ste Odile in Les Saints (Paris, 1901); WEHRMEISTER, Die hl. Odilia, ihre Legende u. ihre Verehrung (Augsburg, 1902).
J.P. KIRSCH
"Transcribed by Michael T. Barrett
"Dedicated to Judy Van Horn.1'
; Weis AR7 181-2.4
Citations
- [S1454] Catholic Encyclopedia on the New Advent Website of Catholic Resources, online http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/, Catholic Encyclopedia: St. Odilia at http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/11207b.htm. Hereinafter cited as Catholic Encyclopedia.
- [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ALSACE.htm#Etichodiedafter677. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.
Baltimore, 1992, unknown publish date), line 181-2, 156. Hereinafter cited as Weis AR-7. - [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Weis AR-7, line 181-2, 156: "...Patron Saint of Alsace."
(?) Ferreolus
M, #10827
Reference | GAV42 EDV43 |
Last Edited | 31 May 2020 |
(?) Ferreolus married NN Syagria Clarissima femina, daughter of Flavius Afranius Syagrius.1,2
(?) Ferreolus was Ferreolus, Tribune of Gaul, Roman Senator.3
Reference: Genealogics cites: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists who came to America bef. 1700, Baltimore, 1995, Weis, Frederick Lewis; Sheppard, Walter. 156.1 GAV-42 EDV-43 GKJ-43.
(?) Ferreolus was Ferreolus, Tribune of Gaul, Roman Senator.3
Reference: Genealogics cites: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists who came to America bef. 1700, Baltimore, 1995, Weis, Frederick Lewis; Sheppard, Walter. 156.1 GAV-42 EDV-43 GKJ-43.
Family | NN Syagria Clarissima femina |
Child |
|
Citations
- [S1490] Genealogics Website (oiginated by Leo van de Pas, continued by Ian Fettes), online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Ferreolus: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00294140&tree=LEO. Hereinafter cited as Genealogics Website.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, NN Clarissima femina: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00294141&tree=LEO
- [S1953] Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia, online http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tonantius_Ferreolus_(prefect). Hereinafter cited as Wikipedia.
- [S1490] Genealogics Website, online http://www.genealogics.org/index.php, Tonantius Ferreolus: https://www.genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00294142&tree=LEO
Lantfrid (?) Duke of Alemannia1
M, #10828, d. 730
Father | GodefroyGodfried (?) Duke of Alemannia2,3 b. c 630, d. bt 708 - 709 |
Last Edited | 25 Aug 2020 |
Lantfrid (?) Duke of Alemannia died in 730.1
; Per Wikipedia:
"Lantfrid (also Landfrid or Lanfred, Latinised Lantfridus or Lanfredus) (died 730) was duke of Alamannia under Frankish sovereignty from 709 until his death. He was the son of duke Gotfrid. Lantfrid's brother was Theudebald.
"Following Gotfrid's death in 709 and the accession of Lantfrid and his brother Theudebald, the Frankish maior domus Pepin of Herstal invaded Alamannia and fought against yet another duke, Willehari, whose territory was restricted to the Ortenau in western Alamannia.[1] This campaign can be seen as an attempt by Pepin to impose royal authority on the duchy following the death of Gotfrid and also to assert his right to influence or even control the succession within the duchy. Pepin’s campaign against Willehari might therefore have taken place to assist Lantfrid and Theudebald in their claim to the duchy.[2] However, both Lantfrid and Theudebald were hostile to Pepin’s successor.
"After Pipin’s death in 714, Lantfrid dissolved all links with the royal court and its new maior domus Charles Martell.[3]
"Alamannic resistance against Frankish supremacy was tenacious. In 722 Charles Martel forcefully subdued the duchies of Alamannia and Bavaria but in the following year both duchies again rose against Carolingian supremacy.[4]
"In 724 Pirmin founded the Reichenau Abbey under the protection of Charles Martel, Lantfrid and Theudebald considered this a provocation and in 727 Theudebald ob odium Karoli ("out of hatred against Charles") evicted first Pirmin and, in 732, his successor Heddo from Reichenau. The Abbey of St. Gall, however, founded 719 by the Alamannic monk Otmar, was favoured by the dukes of Alamannia and the regional aristocracy.[5]
"Between 724 and 730 Lantfrid usurped the right to issue a law-code whereas up until then law-giving had been one of the major activities of the Merovingian kings.[6] He instigated a revision of the Laws of the Alamans (Lex Alamannorum Lantfridus),[7] a sign and an expression of his claim to be an independent ruler. Even though in the law-code the king is mentioned as dominus, there is no reference to the role of the maior domus, which is an indication of Lantfrid’s loyalty towards the Merovingian dynasty.[8]
"In 730 Charles Martell invaded the duchy with an army once again. Lantfrid's death is recorded for the same year. Whether this occurred as a result of the fighting is not clear.[4] His brother Theudebald succeeded to the duchy as sole ruler.
References
1. E. Ewig, Die Merowinger und das Frankenreich, p. 197
2. D. Geuenich, Geschichte der Alemannen, p. 105
3. R. Kaiser, Das römische Erbe und das Merowingerreich, p.43
4. R. Schieffer, Die Karolinger, p. 42
5. D. Geuenich, Geschichte der Alemannen, p. 106
6. I. Wood, The Merovingian Kingdoms 450 751, p. 118
7. D. Geuenich, Geschichte der Alemannen, p.108
8. J. M. Wallace-Hadrill, The Long-Haired Kings, p. 239
Bibliography
** E. Ewig (2001). Die Merowinger und das Frankenreich. 4th ed., Kohlhammer: Köln. ISBN 3-17-017044-9.
** D. Geuenich (1997). Geschichte der Alemannen. Kohlhammer: Köln. ISBN 3-17-012095-6.
** R. Kaiser (1993). Das römische Erbe und das Merowingerreich. Oldenbourg: München. ISBN 3-486-53691-5.
** R. Schieffer (2000). Die Karolinger. 3rd ed., Kohlhammer: Köln. ISBN 3-17-016480-5.
** J. M. Wallace-Hadrill (1993). The Long-Haired Kings. Orig. publ. 1962, University of Toronto Press: Toronto. ISBN 0-8020-6500-7.
** I. Wood (1994). The Merovingian Kingdoms 450-751. Longman: Harlow. ISBN 0-582-49372-2."1
.4 Lantfrid (?) Duke of Alemannia was also known as Lentfroy (?) Duke of Alamannia. He was Duke of Alamannia between 709 and 730.
; Per Wikipedia:
"Lantfrid (also Landfrid or Lanfred, Latinised Lantfridus or Lanfredus) (died 730) was duke of Alamannia under Frankish sovereignty from 709 until his death. He was the son of duke Gotfrid. Lantfrid's brother was Theudebald.
"Following Gotfrid's death in 709 and the accession of Lantfrid and his brother Theudebald, the Frankish maior domus Pepin of Herstal invaded Alamannia and fought against yet another duke, Willehari, whose territory was restricted to the Ortenau in western Alamannia.[1] This campaign can be seen as an attempt by Pepin to impose royal authority on the duchy following the death of Gotfrid and also to assert his right to influence or even control the succession within the duchy. Pepin’s campaign against Willehari might therefore have taken place to assist Lantfrid and Theudebald in their claim to the duchy.[2] However, both Lantfrid and Theudebald were hostile to Pepin’s successor.
"After Pipin’s death in 714, Lantfrid dissolved all links with the royal court and its new maior domus Charles Martell.[3]
"Alamannic resistance against Frankish supremacy was tenacious. In 722 Charles Martel forcefully subdued the duchies of Alamannia and Bavaria but in the following year both duchies again rose against Carolingian supremacy.[4]
"In 724 Pirmin founded the Reichenau Abbey under the protection of Charles Martel, Lantfrid and Theudebald considered this a provocation and in 727 Theudebald ob odium Karoli ("out of hatred against Charles") evicted first Pirmin and, in 732, his successor Heddo from Reichenau. The Abbey of St. Gall, however, founded 719 by the Alamannic monk Otmar, was favoured by the dukes of Alamannia and the regional aristocracy.[5]
"Between 724 and 730 Lantfrid usurped the right to issue a law-code whereas up until then law-giving had been one of the major activities of the Merovingian kings.[6] He instigated a revision of the Laws of the Alamans (Lex Alamannorum Lantfridus),[7] a sign and an expression of his claim to be an independent ruler. Even though in the law-code the king is mentioned as dominus, there is no reference to the role of the maior domus, which is an indication of Lantfrid’s loyalty towards the Merovingian dynasty.[8]
"In 730 Charles Martell invaded the duchy with an army once again. Lantfrid's death is recorded for the same year. Whether this occurred as a result of the fighting is not clear.[4] His brother Theudebald succeeded to the duchy as sole ruler.
References
1. E. Ewig, Die Merowinger und das Frankenreich, p. 197
2. D. Geuenich, Geschichte der Alemannen, p. 105
3. R. Kaiser, Das römische Erbe und das Merowingerreich, p.43
4. R. Schieffer, Die Karolinger, p. 42
5. D. Geuenich, Geschichte der Alemannen, p. 106
6. I. Wood, The Merovingian Kingdoms 450 751, p. 118
7. D. Geuenich, Geschichte der Alemannen, p.108
8. J. M. Wallace-Hadrill, The Long-Haired Kings, p. 239
Bibliography
** E. Ewig (2001). Die Merowinger und das Frankenreich. 4th ed., Kohlhammer: Köln. ISBN 3-17-017044-9.
** D. Geuenich (1997). Geschichte der Alemannen. Kohlhammer: Köln. ISBN 3-17-012095-6.
** R. Kaiser (1993). Das römische Erbe und das Merowingerreich. Oldenbourg: München. ISBN 3-486-53691-5.
** R. Schieffer (2000). Die Karolinger. 3rd ed., Kohlhammer: Köln. ISBN 3-17-016480-5.
** J. M. Wallace-Hadrill (1993). The Long-Haired Kings. Orig. publ. 1962, University of Toronto Press: Toronto. ISBN 0-8020-6500-7.
** I. Wood (1994). The Merovingian Kingdoms 450-751. Longman: Harlow. ISBN 0-582-49372-2."1
.4 Lantfrid (?) Duke of Alemannia was also known as Lentfroy (?) Duke of Alamannia. He was Duke of Alamannia between 709 and 730.
Citations
- [S1953] Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia, online http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lantfrid. Hereinafter cited as Wikipedia.
- [S1953] Wikipedia, online http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gotfrid
- [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/SWABIA.htm#_Toc359919994. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.
Baltimore, 1992, unknown publish date), line 182-2, 156. Hereinafter cited as Weis AR-7.
Thibaud (?) Duke of Alamannia
M, #10829
Father | GodefroyGodfried (?) Duke of Alemannia1,2 b. c 630, d. bt 708 - 709 |
Last Edited | 25 Aug 2020 |
Thibaud (?) Duke of Alamannia lived at an unknown place ; Per Wikipedia:
"Theudebald or Theutbald was the Duke of Alamannia from 730 until his deposition. He was a son of Gotfrid and brother and co-ruler with Lantfrid from 709.
"In 727, Theudebald expelled Pirmin, the founder of Reichenau Abbey, out of a hatred for Charles Martel (ob odium Karoli), whose influence in Alamannia he detested. During a military campaign in 730, Lantfrid was killed and Theudebald became sole duke. In 732, Theudebald was chased out of Alemannia by Charles Martel, but upon Charles' death in 741 he returned to claim his dukedom.
"In 742, Theudebald rebelled against the nominal authority of the Merovingian monarchy which was then being exercised by the two mayors of the palace Pepin the Short and Carloman; the Basques, Bavarii, and Saxons all revolted simultaneously. That same year Theudebald invaded the Duchy of Alsace, then ruled by Duke Liutfrid. The Alsatian duke was probably killed alongside his son fighting for the mayors. In 744, Pepin invaded the Swabian Jura and chased Theudebald from his mountain redoubt. He was defeated in Alsace by Pepin's select band of warriors. In 745, Carloman had to march on the duke again, this time defeating him and executing many at the blood court of Cannstatt. Alamannia was subjected once and for all. Its subsequent history was much affected by the violence with which its ducal independence was snuffed out.
Sources
** Reuter, Timothy. Germany in the Early Middle Ages 800–1056. New York: Longman, 1991.
** Hummer, Hans J. Politics and Power in Early Medieval Europe: Alsace and the Frankish Realm 600 – 1000. Cambridge University Press: 2005.
** Bachrach, Bernard S. Merovingian Military Organization, 481–751. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1971.
** Alemanni: https://web.archive.org/web/20070929092803/http://www.marcopolovr.it/progetti/barbari/Alemanni.htm.3 "
.4 Thibaud (?) Duke of Alamannia was also known as Theudebald (?) Duke of Alemannia.3 He was Duke of Alamannia between 727 and 744.4 He was Duke of Alamannia between 730 and 746.3
"Theudebald or Theutbald was the Duke of Alamannia from 730 until his deposition. He was a son of Gotfrid and brother and co-ruler with Lantfrid from 709.
"In 727, Theudebald expelled Pirmin, the founder of Reichenau Abbey, out of a hatred for Charles Martel (ob odium Karoli), whose influence in Alamannia he detested. During a military campaign in 730, Lantfrid was killed and Theudebald became sole duke. In 732, Theudebald was chased out of Alemannia by Charles Martel, but upon Charles' death in 741 he returned to claim his dukedom.
"In 742, Theudebald rebelled against the nominal authority of the Merovingian monarchy which was then being exercised by the two mayors of the palace Pepin the Short and Carloman; the Basques, Bavarii, and Saxons all revolted simultaneously. That same year Theudebald invaded the Duchy of Alsace, then ruled by Duke Liutfrid. The Alsatian duke was probably killed alongside his son fighting for the mayors. In 744, Pepin invaded the Swabian Jura and chased Theudebald from his mountain redoubt. He was defeated in Alsace by Pepin's select band of warriors. In 745, Carloman had to march on the duke again, this time defeating him and executing many at the blood court of Cannstatt. Alamannia was subjected once and for all. Its subsequent history was much affected by the violence with which its ducal independence was snuffed out.
Sources
** Reuter, Timothy. Germany in the Early Middle Ages 800–1056. New York: Longman, 1991.
** Hummer, Hans J. Politics and Power in Early Medieval Europe: Alsace and the Frankish Realm 600 – 1000. Cambridge University Press: 2005.
** Bachrach, Bernard S. Merovingian Military Organization, 481–751. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1971.
** Alemanni: https://web.archive.org/web/20070929092803/http://www.marcopolovr.it/progetti/barbari/Alemanni.htm.3 "
.4 Thibaud (?) Duke of Alamannia was also known as Theudebald (?) Duke of Alemannia.3 He was Duke of Alamannia between 727 and 744.4 He was Duke of Alamannia between 730 and 746.3
Citations
- [S1953] Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia, online http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gotfrid. Hereinafter cited as Wikipedia.
- [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/SWABIA.htm#_Toc359919994. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
- [S1953] Wikipedia, online http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theudebald,_Duke_of_Alamannia.
- [S632] Frederick Lewis Weis, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700: The Lineage of Alfred the Great, Charlemagne, Malcolm of Scotland, Robert the Strong, and Some of Their Descendants, 7th edition (n.p.: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.
Baltimore, 1992, unknown publish date), line 182-2, 156. Hereinafter cited as Weis AR-7.
Odilo (?) Duke of Bavaria1
M, #10830, d. 18 January 748
Father | NN (?) of Bavaria2 |
Last Edited | 15 Sep 2020 |
Odilo (?) Duke of Bavaria married Hiltrude/Chiltrudis (?), daughter of Charles Martel "the Hammer" (?) King of the Franks and Chrotrud/Rotrou/Rotrude (?) of Austrasia, in 741.3,1,2,4
Odilo (?) Duke of Bavaria died on 18 January 748.1,2
Odilo (?) Duke of Bavaria was buried after 18 January 748 at Friedhof Ortenberg, Ortenberg, Ortenaukreis, Baden-Württemberg, Germany; From Find A Grave:
BIRTH unknown
DEATH unknown
Born: ?
Died: 18 Jan 748
Duke of Bavaria. Son of Gotfrid, Duke of Alemannia and a daughter of Theodo of Bavaria. Married Hiltrud (Hiltrude) Martel daughter of Charles the Hammer Martel and Chrotrude Rotrude de Tréves.
BURIAL Friedhof Ortenberg, Ortenberg, Ortenaukreis, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
Created by: YankeeGraver
Added: 14 Apr 2017
Find A Grave Memorial 178402665.5
; This is the same person as ”Odilo, Duke of Bavaria” at Wikipedia and as ”Odilo (Bayern)” at Wikipedia (DE).1,6 Odilo (?) Duke of Bavaria was also known as Odilo I (?) of Bavaria.3 Odilo (?) Duke of Bavaria was also known as Oatillo (?) Count of Thurgau.
; Per Med Lands:
"ODILO, son of --- (-18 Jan 748, bur Hostenhoven, Kloster Gengenbach). The parentage of Odilo is not known. Einhard names "Swannhilde neptem Odilonis ducis Baioariorum" as the mother of Grifo[87]. The Continuator of Fredegar names "matrona quondam…Beletrude et nepta sua Sunnichilde"[88]. Reading these two sources together, the impression is that Odilo may have been a brother of Dukes Grimoald and Theodald. However, as shown above, all sources so far identified only name the latter two as the sons of Duke Theodo. It is assumed that Odilo was not the brother or son of Duke Hugobert, whom he succeeded, as such a relationship is not mentioned in any of the contemporary sources so far identified. It appears more likely that Odilo was related more remotely to his predecessors, but the precise relationship can only be guessed at. He succeeded in 739 as ODILO Duke of Bavaria. The Salzburg Annals record that Odilo succeeded as Duke of Bavaria in 739 following the death of "Hucbertus dux Bawarie"[89]. The Annales Ducum Bavariæ also record that "Oudilo dux" succeeded "Hucpertus dux"[90]. He married his wife without the permission of her brothers[91]. His brother-in-law Carloman invaded Bavaria, and Odilo was forced to recognise Frankish suzerainty in 744. The Annales Metenses record the death in 749 of "dux Odilo"[92]. The necrology of Regensburg St Emmeram records the death "XV Kal Feb" of "Otilo dux"[93].
"m (741) CHILTRUDIS [Hiltrude], daughter of CHARLES "Martel" maiordomus of Austrasia and Neustria [Carolingian] & his first wife Chrothrudis --- (-754, bur Hostenhoven, Kloster Gengenbach). The Continuator of Fredegar names "Chiltrudis" as daughter of Charles "Martel", stating that her "wicked stepmother" incited her to joined Odilo of Bavaria whom she married without the permission of her brothers[94]. After the death of her husband, she was captured by Grifo who usurped the throne from her son[95]. After her son was restored, Hiltrude became regent in Bavaria during his minority."
Med Lands cites:
; Per Med Lands:
"CHILTRUDIS [Hiltrude] (-754, bur Hostenhoven, Kloster Gengenbach). The Continuator of Fredegar names "Chiltrudis" as daughter of Charles "Martel", stating that her "wicked stepmother" incited her to joined Odilo of Bavaria whom she married without the permission of her brothers[222]. After the death of her husband, she was regent in Bavaria for her son Duke Tassilo III. The continuator of the Annales Petaviani record the death in 754 of "Chiltrudis"[223]. The Annales Moselleni record the death in 754 of "Hildtrud"[224].
"m (741) ODILO Duke of Bavaria [Agilolfinger], son of --- (-18 Jan 748, bur Hostenhoven, Kloster Gengenbach). His brother-in-law Carloman invaded Bavaria, and Odilo was forced to recognise Frankish suzerainty in 744."
Med Lands cites:
Odilo (?) Duke of Bavaria died on 18 January 748.1,2
Odilo (?) Duke of Bavaria was buried after 18 January 748 at Friedhof Ortenberg, Ortenberg, Ortenaukreis, Baden-Württemberg, Germany; From Find A Grave:
BIRTH unknown
DEATH unknown
Born: ?
Died: 18 Jan 748
Duke of Bavaria. Son of Gotfrid, Duke of Alemannia and a daughter of Theodo of Bavaria. Married Hiltrud (Hiltrude) Martel daughter of Charles the Hammer Martel and Chrotrude Rotrude de Tréves.
BURIAL Friedhof Ortenberg, Ortenberg, Ortenaukreis, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
Created by: YankeeGraver
Added: 14 Apr 2017
Find A Grave Memorial 178402665.5
; This is the same person as ”Odilo, Duke of Bavaria” at Wikipedia and as ”Odilo (Bayern)” at Wikipedia (DE).1,6 Odilo (?) Duke of Bavaria was also known as Odilo I (?) of Bavaria.3 Odilo (?) Duke of Bavaria was also known as Oatillo (?) Count of Thurgau.
; Per Med Lands:
"ODILO, son of --- (-18 Jan 748, bur Hostenhoven, Kloster Gengenbach). The parentage of Odilo is not known. Einhard names "Swannhilde neptem Odilonis ducis Baioariorum" as the mother of Grifo[87]. The Continuator of Fredegar names "matrona quondam…Beletrude et nepta sua Sunnichilde"[88]. Reading these two sources together, the impression is that Odilo may have been a brother of Dukes Grimoald and Theodald. However, as shown above, all sources so far identified only name the latter two as the sons of Duke Theodo. It is assumed that Odilo was not the brother or son of Duke Hugobert, whom he succeeded, as such a relationship is not mentioned in any of the contemporary sources so far identified. It appears more likely that Odilo was related more remotely to his predecessors, but the precise relationship can only be guessed at. He succeeded in 739 as ODILO Duke of Bavaria. The Salzburg Annals record that Odilo succeeded as Duke of Bavaria in 739 following the death of "Hucbertus dux Bawarie"[89]. The Annales Ducum Bavariæ also record that "Oudilo dux" succeeded "Hucpertus dux"[90]. He married his wife without the permission of her brothers[91]. His brother-in-law Carloman invaded Bavaria, and Odilo was forced to recognise Frankish suzerainty in 744. The Annales Metenses record the death in 749 of "dux Odilo"[92]. The necrology of Regensburg St Emmeram records the death "XV Kal Feb" of "Otilo dux"[93].
"m (741) CHILTRUDIS [Hiltrude], daughter of CHARLES "Martel" maiordomus of Austrasia and Neustria [Carolingian] & his first wife Chrothrudis --- (-754, bur Hostenhoven, Kloster Gengenbach). The Continuator of Fredegar names "Chiltrudis" as daughter of Charles "Martel", stating that her "wicked stepmother" incited her to joined Odilo of Bavaria whom she married without the permission of her brothers[94]. After the death of her husband, she was captured by Grifo who usurped the throne from her son[95]. After her son was restored, Hiltrude became regent in Bavaria during his minority."
Med Lands cites:
[87] Annales Einhardi 741, MGH SS I, p. 135.
[88] Fredegar (Continuation), 12, MGH SS rer Merov II, p. 175.
[89] Annales Sancti Rudberti Salisburgenses 739, MGH SS IX, p. 768.
[90] Annales Ducum Bavariæ 735, MGH SS XVII, p. 365.
[91] Fredegar (Continuator), 25, MGH SS rer Merov II, p. 180.
[92] Annales Metenses 749, MGH SS I, p. 330.
[93] Necrologium Monasterii S Emmerammi Ratisbonensis, Regensburg Necrologies, p. 301.
[94] Fredegar (Continuator), 25, MGH SS rer Merov II, p. 180.
[95] Scholz, B. W. with Rogers, B. (2000) Carolingian Chronicles: Royal Frankish Annals and Nithard's Histories (University of Michigan Press) (“RFA”) 748, p. 39.2
[88] Fredegar (Continuation), 12, MGH SS rer Merov II, p. 175.
[89] Annales Sancti Rudberti Salisburgenses 739, MGH SS IX, p. 768.
[90] Annales Ducum Bavariæ 735, MGH SS XVII, p. 365.
[91] Fredegar (Continuator), 25, MGH SS rer Merov II, p. 180.
[92] Annales Metenses 749, MGH SS I, p. 330.
[93] Necrologium Monasterii S Emmerammi Ratisbonensis, Regensburg Necrologies, p. 301.
[94] Fredegar (Continuator), 25, MGH SS rer Merov II, p. 180.
[95] Scholz, B. W. with Rogers, B. (2000) Carolingian Chronicles: Royal Frankish Annals and Nithard's Histories (University of Michigan Press) (“RFA”) 748, p. 39.2
; Per Med Lands:
"CHILTRUDIS [Hiltrude] (-754, bur Hostenhoven, Kloster Gengenbach). The Continuator of Fredegar names "Chiltrudis" as daughter of Charles "Martel", stating that her "wicked stepmother" incited her to joined Odilo of Bavaria whom she married without the permission of her brothers[222]. After the death of her husband, she was regent in Bavaria for her son Duke Tassilo III. The continuator of the Annales Petaviani record the death in 754 of "Chiltrudis"[223]. The Annales Moselleni record the death in 754 of "Hildtrud"[224].
"m (741) ODILO Duke of Bavaria [Agilolfinger], son of --- (-18 Jan 748, bur Hostenhoven, Kloster Gengenbach). His brother-in-law Carloman invaded Bavaria, and Odilo was forced to recognise Frankish suzerainty in 744."
Med Lands cites:
[222] Fredegar (Continuator), 25, MGH SS rer Merov, Tome II, p. 180.
[223] Annalium Petavianorum Continuatio 754, MGH SS I, p. 11.
[224] Annales Moselleni 754, MGH SS XVI, p. 495.4
He was Herzog von Bayern between 736 and 748 at Bavaria (Bayern), Germany (now).6 He was Dukeof Bavaria between 736 and 748.1[223] Annalium Petavianorum Continuatio 754, MGH SS I, p. 11.
[224] Annales Moselleni 754, MGH SS XVI, p. 495.4
Family | Hiltrude/Chiltrudis (?) d. 754 |
Child |
Citations
- [S1953] Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia, online http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Odilo,_Duke_of_Bavaria. Hereinafter cited as Wikipedia.
- [S2203] Foundation for Medieval Genealogy (FMG): MEDIEVAL LANDS - A prosopography of medieval European noble and royal families, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/BAVARIA.htm#Odilo. Hereinafter cited as FMG Medieval Lands Website.
- [S1438] Miroslav Marek, online http://genealogy.euweb.cz/index.html, unknown author (e-mail address), downloaded updated 15 May 2003, Carolin 2 page: http://genealogy.euweb.cz/carolin/carolin2.html
- [S2203] FMG Medieval Lands Website, online http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/index.htm, https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/FRANKSMaiordomi.htm#ChiltrudisMOdiloBavariadied748
- [S2374] Find a Grave, online http://www.findagrave.com/, Find A Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com : accessed 06 November 2019), memorial page for Odilo Duke of Bavaria (unknown–unknown), Find A Grave Memorial no. 178402665, citing Friedhof Ortenberg, Ortenberg, Ortenaukreis, Baden-Württemberg, Germany ; Maintained by YankeeGraver (contributor 47149312), at: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/178402665/odilo-duke_of_bavaria. Hereinafter cited as Find a Grave.
- [S4759] Wikipedia - Die freie Enzyklopädie, online https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Hauptseite, Odilo (Bayern): https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Odilo_(Bayern). Hereinafter cited as Wikipédia (DE).