- Birth: 95, Roma, Lazio, Italy
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Descendants of Manilia
1 Manilia
=Marcus Nonius Mucianus Publius Delpius PEREGRINUS
2 Marcus Nonius DE ROME
=Arria Caesennia PAULINA
3 Arria Sextia PAULINA
=Lucius Junius Rufinus Proculianus Proculianus
=Servius Cornelius Scipio SALVIDIENUS ORFITUS
3 Marcus DE ROME
- Birth: ABT 234 BC, Rôman, Eure, Haute-Normandie, France
- Death: Rôman, Eure, Haute-Normandie, France
Descendants of Manogan Capoir Digueillus ap Eneid of the Druids
1 Manogan Capoir Digueillus ap Eneid of the Druids
=Unknown Spouse of Manogan Capoir Digueillus ap Eneid of The Druids MRS
2 Crydon of Cornwall
=Cerwyd of The Druids KING
3 Capuir of The Britons KING
=Penardin of The Druids PRINCESS
3 Eneid Capior Digueil AP CERWYD King of Druids
3 Moruran CERWYD
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Mantineus
/-Lycaon
Mantineus
\-Cyllene
Descendants of Mantineus
1 Mantineus
=(Unknown)
2 Aglaea
=Abas
3 Proetus of Argos and TIRYNS
=Danae of ARGOS
- Father: Huna ben KAHANA VII
- Mother: Havah HA-DAVID
- Birth: 460, Babylonia
- Title Of Nobility: Resh Pirka
- LifeSketch: Mar-Zutra II fue un exilarca judío que lideró una revuelta contra los gobernantes sasanianos en 495 CE y logró siete años de independencia política en Mahoza . English translation: Mar-Zutra II was a Jewish exilarca who led a revolt against the Sasanian rulers in 495 CE and achieved seven years of political independence in Mahoza. RESEARCH: The Exilarch was the leader of the Jewish community in Babylon during the era of the Parthians, Sassanids and Abbasids up until the Mongol invasion of Baghdad in 1258, with intermittent gaps due to political developments. The Exilarch was the equivalent of the Katholikos of the Christian Church of the East (Nestorian), and was thus responsible for community-specific organizational tasks such as running courts, collecting taxes, supervising and providing financing for the Talmudic Academies in Babylonia, and the redistribution and financial assistance to needy members of the community. The position was hereditary in a family that traced its descent from the royal Davidic line. The first historical documents referring to it date from the time when Babylon was part of the Parthian Empire. The office first lasted to the middle of the 6th century, under different regimes (the Parthians and Sassanids). During the end of 5th century and the beginning of 6th century CE, Mar-Zutra II formed a politically independent state where he ruled from Mahoza for about seven years. He was eventually defeated by Kavadh I, King of Persia. The position was restored in the 7th century, under Arab rule. Exilarchs continued to be appointed through the 11th century. Under Arab rule, Muslims treated the exilarch with great pomp and circumstance. The Exilarch's authority came under considerable challenge in 825 CE during the reign of al-Ma'mun who issued a decree permitting a group of ten men from any religious community to organize separately, which allowed the Gaon of the Talmudic academies of Sura and Pumbedita to compete with the Exilarch for power and influence, later contributing to the wider schism between Karaites and Rabbinic Jewry. Although there is no mention about the office before the 2nd century BCE, the traditional view is that the office of Exilarch was established following the deportation of King Jeconiah and his court into Babylonian exile after the first fall of Jerusalem in 597 BCE and augmented after the further deportations following the destruction of the kingdom of Judah in 587 BCE.//////// Based on the account of Benjamin of Tudela:Binyamin al-Tutayli; Tudela in the Kingdom of Navarre, 1130 – Castile, 1173) was a medieval Jewish traveler. SEE LINK BELOW FOR STORY AND RESEARCH. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benjamin_of_Tudela Transcript by: Carolle Nolet
- Death: 520, Babylonia
Ancestors of Mar Zutra II
/-Huna Ben Shaphat ha DAVID
/-Hanan Exilarch at BABYLON
| \-No Name bat Abba Arikha HA-DAVID
/-Nathan I UKNA ben Hanan
| | /-Rav
| \-Abba Arika Daughter of RAV
/-Nehemiah BEN NATHAN
/-Nathan Ukba Exilarch at Babylon
/-Abba Mar ben UKBA
/-Nathan II BEN ABBA Exilarca
| | /-Khamma BEN NACHUM II
| | /-Yosef bar KHAMMA
| | /-Yosef bar YOSEF
| | | \-Peninah ben DA'UD
| | /-Abba bar Yosef bar KHAMMA
| | | | /-Anani
| | | \-P'nina bat ANANI
| | /-Musa bar YOSEF
| \-Tsaina bat Musa bar YOSEF
/-Kahana Ben Nathan HA-DAVID
/-Zutra ben KAHANA the Pious 25th Exilarch
| | /-Huna Ben Shaphat ha DAVID
| | /-Hanan Exilarch at BABYLON
| | | \-No Name bat Abba Arikha HA-DAVID
| | /-Nathan I UKNA ben Hanan
| | | | /-Rav
| | | \-Abba Arika Daughter of RAV
| | /-Nehemiah BEN NATHAN
| | /-Nathan Ukba Exilarch at Babylon
| | /-Abba Mar ben UKBA
| | /-Kahana BEN ABBA MARI, 23RD EXILARCH MAR KAHANA I MP
| | | | /-Khamma BEN NACHUM II
| | | | /-Yosef bar KHAMMA
| | | | /-Yosef bar YOSEF
| | | | | \-Peninah ben DA'UD
| | | | /-Abba bar Yosef bar KHAMMA
| | | | | | /-Anani
| | | | | \-P'nina bat ANANI
| | | | /-Musa bar YOSEF
| | | \-Tsaina bat Musa bar YOSEF
| \-Unknown HA-KAHANA
/-Kahana ben MAR ZUTRA II
| \-Unknown Spouse of Zutra ben Kahana the Pious 25th EXILARCH
/-Huna ben KAHANA VII
| \-Unknown Spouse of Kahana ben Mar ZUTRA II
Mar Zutra II
\-Havah HA-DAVID
Descendants of Mar Zutra II
1 Mar Zutra II
=Unknown bint MERIMA Marriage: 519, Baghdad, Iraq
2 Ahunaï Judah Zakkai
=Sussan bat HANINAI BAR ADAI
3 Eustache King of Tyr
=Unknown Spouse of Eustache ap AHUNAI
3 Hofnai Haninai ben Ahunai HA-DAVID
Ancestors of Marcellinus
/-Flavius Julius EUCHARIUS Consul of Rome
Marcellinus
- Father: Gallienus Quiriacus ap NASCIEN II Prefect of Provinciae
- Mother: Unknown Spouse of Gallienus QUIRIACUS
- Birth: ABT 360, England
- LifeSketch: Marche, according to the "Prose Lancelot" (Micha V:XCII.7, Lacy "Lancelot" VI.163) was the wife of Lancelot the elder and grandmother of Lancelot of the Lake. The Quest of the Holy Grail tells how Lancelot the Elder left Gaul and came to Britain where he married the daughter of the King of Ireland. This is repeated at the end of the History of the Holy Grail where the account claims that Lancelot held the land that had belonged to his/her father. But nowhere else is there even a hint that Lancelot might have been King of Ireland and so it should probably be understood to mean “his” father. When Lancelot the elder was murdered by his cousin, the Duke of the White Fortress, the Duke buried his headless body near to where he was slain. When Queen Marche heard of Lancelot the elder’s death, she wished to remove his body from the tomb and rebury it in a nearby chapel, but no man was able to remove the body from the grave and so they erected a tomb above the body. Queen Marche, before her own death, arranged to be buried in a tomb in front of the altar in the chapel and requested that when, in the future, a knight would come who could take her husband’s body from his tomb, that it would be then laid next to her body in the same tomb. Thus was done. Queen Marche was buried in the tomb in front of the altar and when Lancelot of the Lake came to the White Land, he was able to recover his grandfather’s body. By the advice of a hermit, Lancelot broke open the tomb before the altar and saw the body of his grandmother miraculously uncorrupt. Lancelot placed his grandfather’s head and body next to his grandmother’s body, and then reclosed the tomb. Marche was the mother of King Ban of Benwick, of King Bohort the elder of Gaunes and other children attributed to King Lancelot the elder. -- http://kingarthur.wikia.com/wiki/Marche
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Ancestors of Marche, Queen of Brittany
/-Ya'acov ben MATTHAN
/-Yusuf ben YA'ACOV
/-James of JERUSALEM
| | /-Joachim ben MATTHAN
| \-Mary bat JOACHIM
| \-Hannah of JUDEA
/-Jude ap JAMES
| \-Unknown Spouse of James of JERUSALEM
/-Elzasus AP JUDE
/-Nahshon Nascien AP ELZASUS Desposini
/-Cyleddon Celedoin Desposyni AP NAHSHON Desposini
| \-Flegetine spouse of NAHSHON
/-Narpus Warpus AP CYLEDDON CELEDOIN of Desposyni
| \-Unknown Spouse of Sarrasinte ap Nahshon DESPOSINI
/-Nascien II AP NARPUS WARPUS Prefect of Provinciae Narbonensis
/-Gallienus Quiriacus ap NASCIEN II Prefect of Provinciae
Marche, Queen of Brittany
\-Unknown Spouse of Gallienus QUIRIACUS
Descendants of Marche, Queen of Brittany
1 Marche, Queen of Brittany
=Lancelot SIR 'the Elder'
2 Ivoire VERCH LLANCELOD (Fictional)
=Constantine the First AP SOLOMON High King of Britan
3 Ygerne D'ARMORIQUE
=(Unknown)
3 Digain ap Custennin [Saint]
3 Aurelius Ambrosius Ab Custennin King Of BRITAIN
3 Constant ap Custennin Pendragon LE MOINE
3 Meirchion ap Custennin [King of Cernyw]
3 Uther Pendragon KING
3 Erbin OF CUSTENNIN
=Anie Daughter OF ANIEL
2 Lancelot DE BENOIC
- Father: Quintus Faustus ANICIUS
- Mother: Asinia Juliana Faustus Paulinus of Rome
- Birth: 220, Tongeren, Duchy of Lower Lorraine, Gaul, Roman Empire
- Also known as: Marcomir V of Toxandria
- Also known as: Marcomir van Toxandrie
- Also known as: Marcomir Arthemius Balthes de Toxandrie
- Occupation: Koning Der Franken, Chef Franc, roi des Francs, Chef des Francs, Dog i Frankrike, Roy des Franks
- LifeSketch: Chief Marcomir de Toxandrie 0227 – 0281 The Toxandrie (or Toxandrians etc.) were a people living at the time of the Roman empire. Their territory was called Toxandria, a name which survived into the Middle Ages. It was roughly equivalent to the modern Campine (Dutch Kempen) geographical region of northeastern Flanders and southern Netherlands. In modern terms this covered all or most of North Brabant, the east of Antwerp Province, and the north of Belgian Limburg. -- His parentage is in dispute -- dozens of different possibilities and combinations here on Family Search and on the internet.
- Title Of Nobility: King of The Franks
- Death: 281, Cordemais, Duchy of Lower Lorraine, Gaul, Roman Empire
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Marcomir de Toxandría, Frankish chief
/-Servius Cornelius SALVIDIENUS
/-Cornelius Scipio Salvidienus Orfitus Major of ROME
| | /-Lucius Calpurnius Piso Frugi Licinianus OF ROME
| | /-Licinus Crassus Frugi OF ROME
| | | | /-Consul Suffectus SERVIUS SULPICIUS CAMERINUS RUFUS
| | | | /-Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
| | | | /-Quintus Sulpicius Camerinus Peticus CONSUL
| | | \-Verania Gemina OF ROME
| \-Calpurina LEPIDA
| \-Cornelia Lepida OF ROME
/-Sextius Cocceius Serverianus
| | /-Lucius Calpurnius Piso Frugi Licinianus OF ROME
| | /-Licinus Crassus Frugi OF ROME
| | | | /-Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
| | | | /-Consul Suffectus SERVIUS SULPICIUS CAMERINUS RUFUS
| | | | /-Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
| | | | /-Quintus Sulpicius Camerinus Peticus CONSUL
| | | \-Verania Gemina OF ROME
| \-Calpurina LEPIDA
| \-Cornelia Lepida OF ROME
/-Sextus Anicius Saturninus
| | /-Claudius Babillus DE ROME
| | /-Claudius Capitolinus I DE ROME
| | /-Cassius Statilius Severus Hadrianus DE ROME
| | | \-Macrinia DE ROME
| \-Caesonia de Rome
| | /-Jeventius Celsus DE ROME
| | /-Juventius Celsus Aufidius Hoenius Severus DE ROME
| | | \-Hoenia Severilla DE ROME
| \-Juventia Maxime DE ROME
/-Quintus Anicius Faustus of Tunisia
/-Quintus Faustus ANICIUS
| | /-Dagobert ROI des Francs De Cologne I
| | /-Genebald Duke Of The Eastern FRANKS
| | | | /-Germain
| | | | /-Bructere KING
| | | | | \- INCONNUE
| | | \-Ragnetrude DUCHESS Of Austrasia of the East Franks
| | | \- INCONNUE
| | /-Ascyllius of The Eastern FRANKS
| \-Juliana Asinia V of The Roman EMPIRE
Marcomir de Toxandría, Frankish chief
| /-Servius Cornelius SALVIDIENUS
| /-Cornelius Scipio Salvidienus Orfitus Major of ROME
| | | /-Lucius Calpurnius Piso Frugi Licinianus OF ROME
| | | /-Licinus Crassus Frugi OF ROME
| | | | | /-Quintus Sulpicius Camerinus Peticus CONSUL
| | | | \-Verania Gemina OF ROME
| | \-Calpurina LEPIDA
| | \-Cornelia Lepida OF ROME
| /-Sextius Cocceius Serverianus
| | | /-Lucius Calpurnius Piso Frugi Licinianus OF ROME
| | | /-Licinus Crassus Frugi OF ROME
| | | | | /-Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
| | | | | /-Quintus Sulpicius Camerinus Peticus CONSUL
| | | | \-Verania Gemina OF ROME
| | \-Calpurina LEPIDA
| | \-Cornelia Lepida OF ROME
| /-Sextus Anicius Saturninus
| | | /-Claudius Babillus DE ROME
| | | /-Claudius Capitolinus I DE ROME
| | | /-Cassius Statilius Severus Hadrianus DE ROME
| | | | \-Macrinia DE ROME
| | \-Caesonia de Rome
| | | /-Jeventius Celsus DE ROME
| | | /-Juventius Celsus Aufidius Hoenius Severus DE ROME
| | | | \-Hoenia Severilla DE ROME
| | \-Juventia Maxime DE ROME
| /-Quintus Anicius Faustus Sextus VAN ROMA
| /-Anicius Faustus Paulinus of ROME
| | \-Sergia Paulla Lucius VAN ROMA
| /-Quintus Anicius Paulinus II
| | | /-Gaius Octavius Laenas I of ROME
| | | /-Gaius Octavius LAENAS
| | | | | /-Lucius Aemilius Lepidus PAULLUS, Roman Consul
| | | | | /-Lucius Aemilius PAULLUS aka Aimibus Paulius “the Censor”
| | | | | | \-Cornelia SCIPIONIS
| | | | \-Julia of the Roman EMPIRE
| | | | | /-Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa of Arpino
| | | | \-Vipsania Julia Agrippina MINOR
| | | | \-Julia Caesaris MAJOR
| | | /-Lænus Lucius OCTAVIUS
| | | | | /-Lucius RUBELLIUS BLANDUS
| | | | | /-Rubelius Blandus
| | | | \-Rubellia BASSA
| | | | | /-Tiberius Julius CEASAR AUGUSTUS Emperor of Rome
| | | | | /-Drusus Julius Caesar The YOUNGER
| | | | | | \-Vipsania AGRIPPINA
| | | | \-Julia Livia DRUSUS FILIA
| | | | | /-Nero GENERAL OF GAUL, GAVERNOR OF ROME
| | | | \-Claudia Livillia JULIA of Rome
| | | | \-Antonia AUGUSTA Minor
| | | /-Sergius Octavius Laenas PONTIANNUS of Pisidian Antioch
| | | | \-Pontia
| | | /-Paullus Lucius SERGIUS
| | | | \-Paullus PAULLA
| | | /-Paullus Lucius SERGIUS
| | \-Paulla SERGIA
\-Asinia Juliana Faustus Paulinus of Rome
| /-Gaius Asinius Nichomachus Julianus V of Rome
| /-Gaius Asinius Quadratus Protimus of Rome
| | | /-Sergius Octavius Laenas PAULINUS
| | | /-Lucius Sergius Paullus IV of Pisidian Antioch
| | | | \-Paulla PAULLUS
| | \-Julia QUADRATILLA
| | | /-Gnaeus Asinius of Rome
| | | /-Gaius Assinius Pollio I of Chieti
| | | /-Gaius Assinius Gallus Saloninus of Rome
| | | | | /-Lucius Quinctius
| | | | \-Quinctia
| | | /-Marcus Asinius AGRIPPA
| | | | | /-Lucius VIPSANIUS
| | | | | /-Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa of Arpino
| | | | \-Vipsania AGRIPPINA
| | | | | /-Titus Pomponius Atticus
| | | | | /-Titus Pomponius Caecillius Atticus
| | | | | | \-Caecilia Metella
| | | | \-Pomponia Caecilia Attica of Rome
| | | | \-Caecilia Pilea
| | \-Julia Vipsania of Rome
| /-Gaius Asinius Nicomachus Julianus Asinii of The Roman Empire
| | \-Claudia Antonia Lepida CLAUDIUS
\-Asinia Juliana Nicomacha of Rome
| /-Sergius Octavius Laenas PAULINUS
| /-Lucius Sergius Paullus IV of Pisidian Antioch
| | \-Paulla PAULLUS
\-Cæsonia Paulla of The Roman Empire
| /-Gnaeus Asinius of Rome
| /-Gaius Assinius Pollio I of Chieti
| /-Gaius Assinius Gallus Saloninus of Rome
| | | /-Lucius Quinctius
| | \-Quinctia
| /-Marcus Asinius AGRIPPA
| | | /-Lucius VIPSANIUS
| | | /-Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa of Arpino
| | \-Vipsania AGRIPPINA
| | | /-Titus Pomponius Atticus
| | | /-Titus Pomponius Caecillius Atticus
| | | | \-Caecilia Metella
| | \-Pomponia Caecilia Attica of Rome
| | \-Caecilia Pilea
\-Julia Vipsania of Rome
Descendants of Marcomir de Toxandría, Frankish chief
1 Marcomir de Toxandría, Frankish chief
=(Unknown)
2 Chrocus KING OF THE ALAMANNI I
=Priaros DE TER BEEK
3 Wadomaire ALEMANIA
=Gibica Inconuu DE BOURGOGNE
3 Chroca D'ALEMANIE
=Blesindre DES ALAMANS
3 Blesinde DE TOXANDRIE
=Frank RAGAISE
3 Blesinde D'ALEMANIE
=Antsart of The Ménappes KING
=Ragaise DE TOXANDRIE KING OF THE FRANKS
3 Chroca D`ALEMANIE
=Fritigern II DE THURINGEN
- Father: Clodius V MAGNUS King of West Franks
- Birth: ABT 360, Germany
- Title Of Nobility: last King of the West Franks
- NoChildren: (Date and Place unknown)
- Death: 393, slain in battle by Roman Empire
Ancestors of Marcomir V King of the West Franks
/-Clodius V MAGNUS King of West Franks
Marcomir V King of the West Franks
- Father: Dagobert III DESPOSYNI King of The East Franks
- Mother: Frotmund Desposynl DE FRIMUTEL
- Birth: 360, France
- Also known as: Marcomeres, Marchomer, Marchomir
- Title Of Nobility: Duke of the Western Franks
- LifeSketch: Marcomer (Marcomeres, Marchomer, Marchomir) was a Frankish leader (dux) in the late 4th century who invaded the Roman Empire in the year 388, when the usurper and leader of the whole of Roman Gaul, Magnus Maximus was surrounded in Aquileia by Theodosius I. The invasion is documented by Gregory of Tours who cited the now lost work of Sulpicius Alexander. According to this account Marcomer, Sunno and Genobaud invaded the Roman provinces Germania Inferior and Gallia Belgica in Gaul. They broke through the lines, killed many people, destroyed the most fruitful lands and made the city of Cologne panic. After this raid, the main body of the Franks moved back over the Rhine with their booty. Some of the Franks remained in the Belgian woods. When the Roman generals Magnus Maximus, Nanninus and Quintinus heard the news in Trier, they attacked those remaining Frankish forces and killed many of them. After this engagement, Quintinus crossed the Rhine to punish the Franks in their own country, however his army was surrounded and beaten. Some Roman soldiers drowned in the marshes, others were killed by Franks; few made it back to their Empire. Nanninus and Quintinus were replaced by Charietto and Syrus, who were again confronted by an attack of unidentified Franks. Later, after the fall of Magnus Maximus, Marcomer and Sunno held a short meeting about the recent attacks with the Frank Arbogastes, who was a general (magister militum) in the Roman army. The Franks delivered hostages as usual, and Arbogastes returned to his winter quarters in Trier. A couple of years later when Arbogastes had seized power and the West Roman army was nearly completely in the hands of Frankish mercenaries, he crossed the Rhine with a Roman army into Germania, because he hated his own kin. Marcomer was seen as leader with Chatti and Ampsivarii but the two did not engage. Later we hear from the poet Claudian that Marcomer was arrested by Romans and banished to a villa in Tuscany. His brother Sunno crossed the Rhine and tried to settle himself as leader of the band of Marchomir, however he was killed by his own people. According to the later Liber Historiae Francorum, Marcomer tried to unite the Franks after the death of Sunno. He proposed that the Franks should live under one king and proposed his own son Pharamond (whose earliest mention is in this work, and who is considered mythological by scholars) for the kingship. This source does not relate whether Marcomer succeeded, but from other later sources that recall the account of Liber Historiae Francorum, the impression may be gained that Pharamond was regarded as the first king of the Franks. However, modern scholars, such as Edward James, do not accept this account in the Liber Historiae Francorum as historical, because Marcomer is called the son of the Trojan king Priam. Traditionally Marcomer is also known as Marcomir VI, and made a descendant of King Priam Podarces of Troy by Priam's son Helenus, from whom the Kings of Cimmerian Bosporus were said to descend.
- Death: 414
Ancestors of Marcomir VI Duke of the Western Franks
/-Clodius V MAGNUS King of West Franks
/-Dagobert III DESPOSYNI King of The East Franks
Marcomir VI Duke of the Western Franks
| /-Odomar DESPONYI DE MOSELLE IV
| /-Marcomir DESPONYI DE SICAMBRIE IV
| | \-Athidis II of the Franks
| /-Chlodomir MAGNUS IV
| | | /-Colius Marius
| | \-Athildis DE COLCHESTER Queen of Britain
| | \-Ystdrawl CATUVELLAUNI
| /-Farabert OF THE DESPOSYNI
| | \-Hasilda Basilda PRINCESS OF THE RUGJI
| /-Sunno Huano VAN SICAMBRIE King of the West Franks
| | \-Hasilda Basilda PRINCESS OF THE RUGJI
| /-Hildéric DE SICAMBRIE of the Desposyni
| | \-Basilda OF RUGIJ of Austrasia
| /-Bartherus DE SICAMBRIE de Toxandrie
| | \-Hastila KARANA of the Franks
| /-Clodius III KING of the East Franks
| | \-Hermentude Queen of the West Franks
| /-Titurel DESPOSYNI 8th Grail King
| | \-Eurgen BAR AMINADAB
| /-Boaz Enfertez ANFORTAS DESPOSYNI 9th Grail King
| | \-Queen Egre DEBRITON
\-Frotmund Desposynl DE FRIMUTEL
\-Orgeluse RICHONDE of The Britons
Ancestors of Marcus de Lyon
/-Decime Janius RUSTIQUE Prefect of GAUL
Marcus de Lyon
| /-Jamblique EMESE
| /-Sopater Imperial Counsellor to Constantine PHILOSOPHER disciple of Iamblichus
| /-Himerius III D'APAMAEA
| | | /-Gaius Julius Sulpicius Of EMESA
| | | /-Lucius Julius Aurelius Sulpicius Severus Uranius Antoninus Of EMESA
| | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Gaius Sulpicius of EMESA
| | | /-Iamblichus D'EMESA (OF CHALCIS)
| | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Julius Sulpicius of CHALCIS
| | \-Urania of CHALCIS
| | \-Unknwon Spouse of Iambilicus of CHALCIS
| /-Lamblichus II D'APAMEA
| | | /-Iamblichus of CHALCIS
| | | /-Ariston of CHALCIS
| | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Iamblichus of CHALCIS
| | | /-Son of Ariston CHALCIS
| | | | | /-Titus Flavius Lysandros DE THESPIES
| | | | | | \-Flavia Dorcylis DE THESPIES
| | | | | /-Flavius Lysander DE THESPIES
| | | | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Titus Flavius Lysandros DE THESPIES
| | | | | /-Flavius PHILINOS III
| | | | | | \-Flavia DAMOCLEA
| | | | | /-Flavius AMPHICLEA
| | | | | | | /-Flavius DE THESPIES
| | | | | | | /-Flavius II AMPHICLEA
| | | | | | | | \-(Miss) of CHALCIS
| | | | | | \-Flavia AMPHICLEA
| | | | | | | /-Theodotos of Greece THERA
| | | | | | | /-Aulus Plotius Leonides PLOTIUS
| | | | | | | | \-Agesicrita of Greece THERA
| | | | | | \-Plotia Agesicrita PLOTIUS
| | | | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Aulus Plotius Leonides PLOTIUS
| | | | \-Amphiclea FLAVIUS
| | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Flavius AMPHICLEA
| | \-Granddaughter of Ariston of CHALCIS
| /-Tetradius of Clermont-Ferrand BISHOP
| | \-Urania CHALCIS
\-Arthemia of CLERMONT-FERRAND
\-Arthemia DE CLERMONT
Ancestors of Marcus Annias Veras Caesar
/-Marcus Aurelius CLAUDIUS II
/-Marcus Aurelius Quintille CLAUDIUS
/-Dom AURELIEN
/-Marcus Annius VERUS II
/-Marcus Annius Veras III Praetor of Rome
| | /-Decimus RUPILIUS
| | /-Lucius Vibius Sabinus Scribonius LIBO FRUGI RUPILIUS
| | | | /-Marcus Licinius Crassus FRUGI
| | | \-Licinia LUCINANUS
| \-Rupilla Faustina I, de Rome
| | /-Gaius Salonius Matidius PATRUINUS
| \-Salonia Matidia Augusta Major
| | /-Marcus Ulpius Traianus the Elder
| \-Ulpia Marciara Traiana
| | /-Marcus Junius BRUTUS
| | /-Roman Senator Quintus Marcius Barea SORANUS
| | | | /-Quintus Servilius CAEPIO
| | | | /-Quintus Servilius CAEPIO
| | | | | \-Caecilia METALLA
| | | \-Servilia Caepia MAJOR
| | | | /-Marcus Livius DRUSUS
| | | \-Livia Augusta DRUSILLA
| | | \-Cornelia Scipionis DRUSUS II
| | /-Quintus Marcius BAREA SURA, SENATOR
| \-Marcia FURNILLA Wife of Roman Emperor Titus
| | /-Aulus Antonius Rufus VON ROM
| \-Antonia FURNILLA
/-Marcus Aurelius Antonius Augustus Roman Emperor
| | /-Publius SERVILIUS
| | /-Publius Domitius CALVISIUS TULLUS RUSO
| \-Domitia Lucilla Calvilla Minor
| | /-Sextus Curvius TULLUS
| | /-Domitus Lucillus CURVIUS
| | | \-Titia MARCELLIA
| \-Domitia Lucilla Major
| | /-Titus Curtilius MANCIA
| \-Curtilia MANCIA
| | /-Domitius OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE
| | | \-Domitia Lepida
| \-Domitia spouse of Titus Curtilius MANCIA
Marcus Annias Veras Caesar
| /-Titus Aurelius Elder FULVUS
| /-Antoninus Pius of The Roman EMPIRE
| | | /-Gnaeus Arrius Antoninus Calpernius ANTONINUS
| | | | \-Mariamne Caecina Arria PISO
| | \-Arria Fadilla
| | | /-Plotius father of Plotius and BOLONIA
| | \-Boionia Procilla Servilla ANTONINUS
| | | /-Marcus SERVILIUS
| | | /-Gaius Servilius VATIA
| | | /-Publius Servilius Vatia ISAURICUS Triumvir
| | | | | /-Quintus Caecilius Metellus Macedonicus
| | | | \-Caecilia Metella MAIOR
| | | /-Publius Servilius ISAURICUS
| | | /-Publius Servilius Vatia ISAURICUS
| | | | | /-Decimus Junius SILANUS
| | | | \-Junia SILANA Prima
| | | | | /-Quintus Servilius CAEPIO
| | | | | /-Quintus Servilius CAEPIO
| | | | | | \-Caecilia METALLA
| | | | \-Servilia MAJOR concubine of Julius Caesar
| | | | | /-Marcus Livius DRUSUS
| | | | \-Livia Augusta DRUSILLA
| | | | \-Cornelia Scipionis DRUSUS II
| | | /-Publius Servilius Vatia ISAURICUS
| | | | | /-Mamercus Aemillus Lepidus LIVIANUS
| | | | | /-Quintus Aemilius Lepidus
| | | | | /-Marcus Aemilius Lepidus PAULLUS
| | | | | /-Marcus Aemilius LEPIDUS
| | | | | | | /-Lucius Appuleius Saturninus de Rome Tribune of the PLEBE
| | | | | | | /-Lucius Appuleius Saturninus NEAR ROME II; Tribune
| | | | | | \-Appulia SATURNINA
| | | | \-Aemilia LEPIDA
| | | | | /-Decimus Junius SILANUS
| | | | \-Junia SECUNDA
| | | | | /-Quintus Servilius CAEPIO
| | | | | /-Quintus Servilius CAEPIO
| | | | | | \-Caecilia METALLA
| | | | \-Servilia MAJOR concubine of Julius Caesar
| | | | | /-Marcus Livius DRUSUS
| | | | \-Livia Augusta DRUSILLA
| | | | \-Cornelia Scipionis DRUSUS II
| | \-Servilia spouse of PLOTIUS
\-Annia Galeria Faustina MINOR Roman Empress
| /-Marcus Aurelius CLAUDIUS II
| /-Marcus Aurelius Quintille CLAUDIUS
| /-Dom AURELIEN
| /-Marcus Annius VERUS II
\-Annia Galeria Faustina I of ROME
| /-Decimus RUPILIUS
| /-Lucius Vibius Sabinus Scribonius LIBO FRUGI RUPILIUS
| | | /-Marcus Licinius Crassus FRUGI
| | \-Licinia LUCINANUS
\-Rupilla Faustina I, de Rome
| /-Gaius Salonius Matidius PATRUINUS
\-Salonia Matidia Augusta Major
| /-Marcus Ulpius Traianus the Elder
\-Ulpia Marciara Traiana
| /-Marcus Junius BRUTUS
| /-Roman Senator Quintus Marcius Barea SORANUS
| | | /-Quintus Servilius CAEPIO
| | | /-Quintus Servilius CAEPIO
| | | | \-Caecilia METALLA
| | \-Servilia Caepia MAJOR
| | | /-Marcus Livius DRUSUS
| | \-Livia Augusta DRUSILLA
| | \-Cornelia Scipionis DRUSUS II
| /-Quintus Marcius BAREA SURA, SENATOR
\-Marcia FURNILLA Wife of Roman Emperor Titus
| /-Aulus Antonius Rufus VON ROM
\-Antonia FURNILLA
- Father: Marcus Annius VERUS II
- Mother: Rupilla Faustina I, de Rome
- Birth: BET 100 AND 105, Roma, Roman Empire
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia Marcus Annius Verus (died 124 AD) was a distinguished Roman politician who lived in the 2nd century, served as a praetor and was the father of the Emperor Marcus Aurelius. Marcus Annius Verus from "Promptuarii Iconum Insigniorum" He was the son of Roman Senator Marcus Annius Verus and noblewoman Rupilia Faustina. His brother was the consul Marcus Annius Libo and his sister was Faustina the Elder, wife of Antoninus Pius. He married Domitia Lucilla, the heiress of a wealthy family which owned a tile factory. They had two children, Marcus Aurelius (born in 121, and who was also originally named Marcus Annius Verus), and Annia Cornificia Faustina (born in 123). Annius Verus died young while he held the office of praetor.[1] Both his children were still young. The likeliest year of his death is 124.[2] In his Meditations, Marcus Aurelius, who was only about 3 years old when his father died, says of him: "From what I heard of my father and my memory of him, modesty and manliness."[3]
- Death: 124, Caelian Hill, Rome, Italy, Roman Empire
Ancestors of Marcus Annius Veras III Praetor of Rome
/-Marcus Aurelius CLAUDIUS II
/-Marcus Aurelius Quintille CLAUDIUS
/-Dom AURELIEN
/-Marcus Annius VERUS II
Marcus Annius Veras III Praetor of Rome
| /-Decimus RUPILIUS
| /-Lucius Vibius Sabinus Scribonius LIBO FRUGI RUPILIUS
| | | /-Marcus Licinius Crassus FRUGI
| | \-Licinia LUCINANUS
\-Rupilla Faustina I, de Rome
| /-Gaius Salonius Matidius PATRUINUS
\-Salonia Matidia Augusta Major
| /-Marcus Ulpius Traianus the Elder
\-Ulpia Marciara Traiana
| /-Marcus Junius BRUTUS
| /-Roman Senator Quintus Marcius Barea SORANUS
| | | /-Quintus Servilius CAEPIO
| | | /-Quintus Servilius CAEPIO
| | | | \-Caecilia METALLA
| | \-Servilia Caepia MAJOR
| | | /-Marcus Amelius DRUSUS AEMILIANUS
| | | /-Gaius Livius DRUSUS
| | | /-Marcus Livius DRUSUS
| | | | \-Cornelia spouse of Gaius Livius DRUSUS
| | \-Livia Augusta DRUSILLA
| | | /-Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA CORCULUM Triumvir
| | | /-Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA SERAPIO
| | | | \-Cornelia AFRICANA
| | \-Cornelia Scipionis DRUSUS II
| | \-Unknown Spouse of Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica Serapo of ROME
| /-Quintus Marcius BAREA SURA, SENATOR
\-Marcia FURNILLA Wife of Roman Emperor Titus
| /-Aulus Antonius Rufus VON ROM
\-Antonia FURNILLA
Descendants of Marcus Annius Veras III Praetor of Rome
1 Marcus Annius Veras III Praetor of Rome
=Domitia Lucilla Calvilla Minor Marriage: 120, Roma, Italy, Roma Empire
2 Marcus Aurelius Antonius Augustus Roman Emperor
=Annia Galeria Faustina MINOR Roman Empress Marriage: 147, Roma, Lazio, Italien
3 Lucius Aurelius Antoninus Commodus Imperador, Caesar
=Bruttia Crispina ROMAN EMPIRE Marriage: 176, Roma, Roma, Lazio, Italy
=Marcia THE CONCUBINE
3 Annia Aurelia Fadilla
3 Marcus Annias Veras Caesar
3 Annia Cornificius Faustina Minor
3 Domitia Faustina
3 Annia Galeria Aurelia Faustina
3 Titus Aeilus Antoninus
3 Annia Aurelia Galeria LUCILLA Empress Of The Roman Empire
3 Domitia Faustina The YOUNGER
3 Titus Aurelius Fulvus Antoninus
3 Unattested child
3 Bruttius CRISPINE
3 Hadrianus ROME
3 Tiberius Aelius Antoninus
=Ceionia Plautia
2 Annia Cornificia Faustina
- Father: Marcus Antonius II CRETICUS Octavia
- Mother: Julia Antonia CAESARIA , Mother of Mark Antony
- Birth: 14 JAN 83 BC, Rome, Roma, Lazio, Italy
- Also known as: Mark Antony or Marcus Antonius III
- Occupation: People's Tribune of the Roman Republic, BET 1 AND 7 JAN 49 BC
- Occupation: Military commander and politician
- Occupation: Consul of the Roman Republic, with Julius Caesar, 44 BC
- Occupation: Consul of the Roman Republic, with Julius Caesar, 44 BC
- Occupation: Consul of the Roman Republic, served with Lucius Scribonius Libo, 34 BC
- Occupation: Triumvir of the Roman Republic, served with Octavian and Marcus Aemilius Lepidus, BET 43 BC AND 33 BC
- Occupation: Consul of the Roman Republic, with Julius Caesar, 44 BC
- Occupation: Triumvir of the Roman Republic, served with Octavian and Marcus Aemilius Lepidus, BET 43 BC AND 33 BC
- Occupation: Consul of the Roman Republic, served with Lucius Scribonius Libo, 34 BC
- Occupation: Military commander and politician
- Occupation: Consul of the Roman Republic, served with Lucius Scribonius Libo, 34 BC
- Occupation: Triumvir of the Roman Republic, served with Octavian and Marcus Aemilius Lepidus, BET 43 BC AND 33 BC
- Occupation: Consul of the Roman Republic, served with Lucius Scribonius Libo, 34 BC
- Occupation: Military commander and politician
- Occupation: Military commander and politician
- Occupation: Military commander and politician
- Occupation: Triumvir of the Roman Republic, served with Octavian and Marcus Aemilius Lepidus, BET 43 BC AND 33 BC
- Occupation: Consul of the Roman Republic, with Julius Caesar, 44 BC
- Occupation: Consul of the Roman Republic, with Julius Caesar, 44 BC
- Occupation: Triumvir of the Roman Republic, served with Octavian and Marcus Aemilius Lepidus, BET 43 BC AND 33 BC
- Occupation: Consul of the Roman Republic, served with Lucius Scribonius Libo, 34 BC
- Occupation: Consul of the Roman Republic, with Julius Caesar, 44 BC
- Occupation: Triumvir of the Roman Republic, served with Octavian and Marcus Aemilius Lepidus, BET 43 BC AND 33 BC
- Occupation: Consul of the Roman Republic, served with Lucius Scribonius Libo, 34 BC
- Occupation: Military commander and politician
- LifeSketch: Spouses : Fadia (dates unknown) Antonia Hybrida (?–47 BC) Fulvia (46–40 BC) Octavia Minor (40–32 BC) Cleopatra VII (32–30 BC) Children : Antonia Prima (Hybrida) Marcus Antonius Antyllus (Fulvia) Iullus Antonius (Fulvia) Antonia Major (Octavia Minor) Antonia Minor (Octavia Minor) Alexander Helios (Cleopatra VII) Cleopatra Selene II (Cleopatra VII) Ptolemy Philadelphus (Cleopatra VII) Senator of Rome, Consort to Queen Cleopatra of Egypt Death • 1 August 0030 BC age 53, Killed Self By Falling On His Sword During A Battle at Alexandria, Egypt Military career Allegiance : Roman Republic, Julius Caesar, Populares Years : 54–30 BC Battles/wars : . Gallic Wars . Caesar's Civil War . Battle of Forum Gallorum . Battle of Mutina . Liberators' civil war . Antony's Parthian War . Battle of Actium . Battle of Alexandria Known for his rivalry with Octavian for the full control of Rome and its territories. -- Wikiwand: Mark Antony
- Title Of Nobility: Consort of Queen Cleopatra
- National Identification: Roman Republic
- Affiliation: Political party: Populares
- Title Of Nobility: Triumvir de Rome
- Title Of Nobility: Triumvir de Rome
- Title Of Nobility: Triumvir de Rome
- Title Of Nobility: Triumvir de Rome
- Title Of Nobility: Triumvir de Rome
- Title Of Nobility: Triumvir de Rome
- Death: 1 AUG 30 BC, Alexandria, Egypt
Ancestors of Marcus Antonius III
/-Quintus ANTONIUS
/-Aulus ANTONIUS
/-Marcus ANTONIUS
/-Gaius ANTONIUS
| \-Pasquala Maria
/-Marcus Antonius Praetor of ROME
/-Marcus Antonius II CRETICUS Octavia
Marcus Antonius III
| /-Numerius Julius CAESAR
| /-Lucius Julius Caesar I
| /-Sextus Julius Caesar I
| | | /-Marcus II Flaccus OF ROME
| | \-Cornelia Cinna MINOR
| | \-Rutilia ROME
| /-Sextus Julius CAESAR II
| | \-Aurelia CORNELIA
| /-Lucius Julius Caesar II of ROME
| | \-Unknown Spouse ofSextus Julius Caesar SEXTUS
| /-Lucius Julius CAESAR III Governor of Macedonia
| | | /-Pompillus LAENAS
| | \-Popilia LAENATES
\-Julia Antonia CAESARIA , Mother of Mark Antony
| /-Lucius Fulvius, I
| /-Lucius Fulvius, II
| /-Lucius Fulvius Bruttius Praesens DIROMA
| /-Marcus CURVUS
| /-Cassus CURVUS
| /-Marcus Flaccus I
| /-Quintus Flaccus OF ROME
| /-Marcus Fulvius Flaccus II
| | | /-Quintus Sulpicius PATERCULUS
| | | /-Servius Sulpicius Paterculus
| | \-Sulpicia Sulpicuia of ROME
| /-Marcus Fulvius Flaccus Bambalus III
\-Cossutia Fulvia
| /-Sempronius Tuditanus
\-Sempronia Tuditania DE ROME
\-Licinia Crassa DE ROME
Descendants of Marcus Antonius III
1 Marcus Antonius III
=Octavia Empress of ROME Marriage: BET 40 BC AND 32 BC
2 Lucius Aimibus PAULIUS
2 Antonia Major "THE ELDER"
2 Antonia AUGUSTA Minor
=Nero GENERAL OF GAUL, GAVERNOR OF ROME Marriage: 16 BC
3 Claudia Livillia JULIA of Rome
=Drusus Julius Caesar The YOUNGER Marriage: 4, Rome, Roma, Lazio, Italy
=Gaius Julius CAESAR Of Rome
3 Germanicus Julius CAESAR
3 HEROD AGRIPPA I OF JUDEA
3 Emperor Claudius I TIBERIUS DRESUS NERO,CAESAR OF ROME
=Agrippina
=Aemilia LEPIDA
=Antonia HYBRIDA Minor Marriage: BET 50 BC AND 47 BC
2 Antonia THRYPHAENA
=Cotys VIII VAN TRACIE
3 Gepaepirus VAN THRACIE
=Aspurgus VAN BOSPORUS
- Father: Marcus Arrecinus ARRECINUS
- Mother: Tertulla TERTULLUS
- Occupation: Marcus Arrecinus Clemens (fl 1st century) was a prefect of the Roman imperial bodyguard, known as the Praetorian Guard.
- LifeSketch: Marcus Arrecinus Clemens (fl 1st century) was a prefect of the Roman imperial bodyguard, known as the Praetorian Guard. Born in Pisaurum, Italy, Clemens came from obscure origins and according to the historian Suetonius, his family were of Equestrian rank. He was the son of Arrecinus and wife Tertulla. His wife is usually identified as Julia, the sister of Julius Lupus; Clemens' sister was Arrecina Clementina, also born in Pisaurum, Italy, c. 12, who became the wife of Titus Flavius Sabinus.[1] His children were Marcus Arrecinus Clemens and Arrecina Tertulla, who became the first wife of the future Emperor Titus. [2] There is a possibility that Clemens was related to the paternal side of Vespasian. Vespasian's paternal grandmother bore the cognomen Tertulla and this cognomen was also borne by both his daughter and his mother. Clemens served as prefect in the reign of Emperor Caligula, from 38 until 41, which he had honourably commanded. On 27 January 41, however, he became one of his Emperor's murderers, also taking part in the murder of the Empress Caesonia and their daughter, as well as in the proclamation of the next Emperor Claudius.
- National Identification: Allegiance: Roman Empire
- Death: Rome
Ancestors of Marcus Arrecinus Clemens, Prefect of the Roman Praetorian Guard
/-Marcus Arrecinus ARRECINUS
Marcus Arrecinus Clemens, Prefect of the Roman Praetorian Guard
| /-Tertullus DI ROMA
\-Tertulla TERTULLUS
| /-Marcus Junius BRUTUS
\-Alfridia DI ROMA
| /-Quintus Servilius CAEPIO
| /-Quintus Servilius CAEPIO
| | \-Caecilia METALLA
\-Servilia Caepia MAJOR
| /-Marcus Amelius DRUSUS AEMILIANUS
| /-Gaius Livius DRUSUS
| /-Marcus Livius DRUSUS
| | \-Cornelia spouse of Gaius Livius DRUSUS
\-Livia Augusta DRUSILLA
| /-Lucius CORNELIUS SCIPIO
| /-Publius CORNELIUS SCIPIO
| /-Publius CORNELIUS SCIPIO Africanus Major
| | | /-Manius Pomponius MATHO DI ROMA
| | \-Pomponia DIROMA
| /-Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA CORCULUM Triumvir
| | | /-Marcus Aemilius I PAULLUS
| | | /-Marcus Aemilius PAULLUS
| | | /-Lucius Aemilius PAULLUS
| | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Marcus Aemilius Paullus AEMILIUS
| | \-Amelia TERTIA
| | \-Unknown Spouse of Lucius Aemilius Paullus AEMILIUS
| /-Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA SERAPIO
| | | /-Lucius CORNELIUS SCIPIO
| | | /-Publius CORNELIUS SCIPIO
| | | /-Publius CORNELIUS SCIPIO Africanus Major
| | | | | /-Manius Pomponius MATHO DI ROMA
| | | | \-Pomponia DIROMA
| | \-Cornelia AFRICANA
| | | /-Marcus Aemilius I PAULLUS
| | | /-Marcus Aemilius PAULLUS
| | | /-Lucius Aemilius PAULLUS
| | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Marcus Aemilius Paullus AEMILIUS
| | \-Amelia TERTIA
| | \-Unknown Spouse of Lucius Aemilius Paullus AEMILIUS
\-Cornelia Scipionis DRUSUS II
\-Unknown Spouse of Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica Serapo of ROME
Descendants of Marcus Arrecinus Clemens, Prefect of the Roman Praetorian Guard
1 Marcus Arrecinus Clemens, Prefect of the Roman Praetorian Guard
=Julia JULIUS
2 Arrencina Clementina ARRECINUS
=Titus Flavius Sabinus, Roman Consul
3 Titus Flavius SABINUS V
=Julia Sabina FLAVIA
=Cocceia
3 Saint Publius Flavius Sabinus Clemens DE ROME
3 Flavia Sabina
3 Gnaeus Arulenus Caelius SABINUS
=Julia LUPUS
- Father: Marcus Annius Veras III Praetor of Rome
- Mother: Domitia Lucilla Calvilla Minor
- Birth: 26 APR 121, Rome, Italy, Roman Empire
- Also known as: Marcus Aurelius Antoninus Augustus
- Title Of Nobility: Emperor of Rome
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia: (translation has been moved to sources) Marcus Aurelius (/ɔːˈriːliəs/; Latin: Marcus Aurelius Antoninus Augustus;[1][notes 1] Espejo, 26 April 121 AD – Vienna, 17 March 180 AD) was Roman Emperor from 161 to 180. He ruled with Lucius Verus as co-emperor from 161 until Verus' death in 169. He was the last of the Five Good Emperors, and is also considered one of the most important Stoic philosophers. During his reign, the Empire defeated a revitalized Parthian Empire in the East; Aurelius' general Avidius Cassius sacked the capital Ctesiphon in 164. In central Europe, Aurelius fought the Marcomanni, Quadi, and Sarmatians with success during the Marcomannic Wars, with the threat of the Germanic tribes beginning to represent a troubling reality for the Empire. A revolt in the East led by Avidius Cassius failed to gain momentum and was suppressed immediately. Marcus Aurelius' Stoic tome Meditations, written in Greek while on campaign between 170 and 180, is still revered as a literary monument to a philosophy of service and duty, describing how to find and preserve equanimity in the midst of conflict by following nature as a source of guidance and inspiration. Early life and career of Marcus Aurelius Marcus' family originated in Ucubi, a small town southeast of Córdoba in Iberian Baetica. The family rose to prominence in the late 1st century AD. Marcus' great-grandfather Marcus Annius Verus (I) was a senator and (according to the Historia Augusta) ex-praetor; in 73–74, his grandfather, Marcus Annius Verus (II), was made a patrician.[11][notes 2] Verus' elder son—Marcus Aurelius' father—Marcus Annius Verus (III) married Domitia Lucilla.[14] Lucilla was the daughter of the patrician P. Calvisius Tullus Ruso and the elder Domitia Lucilla. The elder Domitia Lucilla had inherited a great fortune (described at length in one of Pliny's letters) from her maternal grandfather and her paternal grandfather by adoption.[15] The younger Lucilla would acquire much of her mother's wealth, including a large brickworks on the outskirts of Rome—a profitable enterprise in an era when the city was experiencing a construction boom.[16] Lucilla and Verus (III) had two children: a son, Marcus, born on 26 April 121, and a daughter, Annia Cornificia Faustina, probably born in 122 or 123.[18] Verus (III) probably died in 124, during his praetorship, when Marcus was only three years old.[19][notes 3] Though he can hardly have known him, Marcus Aurelius wrote in his Meditations that he had learned "modesty and manliness" from his memories of his father and from the man's posthumous reputation.[21] Lucilla did not remarry.[19] Lucilla, following prevailing aristocratic customs, probably did not spend much time with her son. Marcus was in the care of "nurses".[22] Even so, Marcus credits his mother with teaching him "religious piety, simplicity in diet" and how to avoid "the ways of the rich".[23] In his letters, Marcus makes frequent and affectionate reference to her; he was grateful that, "although she was fated to die young, yet she spent her last years with me".[24] After his father's death, Aurelius was adopted by his paternal grandfather Marcus Annius Verus (II).[25] Another man, Lucius Catilius Severus, also participated in his upbringing. Severus is described as Marcus' "maternal great-grandfather"; he is probably the stepfather of the elder Lucilla.[25] Marcus was raised in his parents' home on the Caelian Hill, a district he would affectionately refer to as "my Caelian".[26] It was an upscale region, with few public buildings but many aristocratic villas. Marcus' grandfather owned his own palace beside the Lateran, where Marcus would spend much of his childhood.[27] Marcus thanks his grandfather for teaching him "good character and avoidance of bad temper".[28] He was less fond of the mistress his grandfather took and lived with after the death of Rupilia Faustina, his wife.[29] Marcus was grateful that he did not have to live with her longer than he did.[30] Marcus was taught at home, in line with contemporary aristocratic trends;[31] Marcus thanks Catilius Severus for encouraging him to avoid public schools.[32] One of his teachers, Diognetus, a painting-master, proved particularly influential; he seems to have introduced Marcus to the philosophic way of life.[33] In April 132, at the behest of Diognetus, Marcus took up the dress and habits of the philosopher: he studied while wearing a rough Greek cloak, and would sleep on the ground until his mother convinced him to sleep on a bed.[34] A new set of tutors—Alexander of Cotiaeum, Trosius Aper and Tuticius Proculus[notes 4]—took over Marcus' education in about 132 or 133.[36] Little is known of the latter two (both teachers of Latin), but Alexander was a major littérateur, the leading Homeric scholar of his day.[37] Marcus thanks Alexander for his training in literary styling.[38] Alexander's influence—an emphasis on matter over style, on careful wording, with the occasional Homeric quotation—has been detected in Marcus' Meditations.[39] Marcus and his cousin-wife Faustina had at least 13 children during their 30-year marriage,[126][306] including two sets of twins.[126][307] One son and four daughters outlived their father.[308] Their children included: Domitia Faustina (147–151)[126][138][309] Titus Aelius Antoninus (149)[129][307][310] Titus Aelius Aurelius (149)[129][307][310] Annia Aurelia Galeria Lucilla (150[132][309]–182[311]), married her father's co-ruler Lucius Verus,[138] then Tiberius Claudius Pompeianus, had issue from both marriages Annia Galeria Aurelia Faustina (born 151),[134] married Gnaeus Claudius Severus, had a son Tiberius Aelius Antoninus (born 152, died before 156)[134] Unknown child (died before 158)[136] Annia Aurelia Fadilla (born 159[309][136]),[138] married Marcus Peducaeus Plautius Quintillus, had issue Annia Cornificia Faustina Minor (born 160[309][136]),[138] married Marcus Petronius Sura Mamertinus, had a son Titus Aurelius Fulvus Antoninus (161–165), elder twin brother of Commodus[310] Lucius Aurelius Commodus Antoninus (Commodus) (161–192),[312] twin brother of Titus Aurelius Fulvus Antoninus, later emperor,[310][313] married Bruttia Crispina, no issue Marcus Annius Verus Caesar (162[260]–169[306][314])[138] Hadrianus[138] Vibia Aurelia Sabina (170[310]– died before 217[315]),[138] married Lucius Antistius Burrus, no issue
- Death: Sirmium, Pannonia, Roman Empire
- Burial: Mausoleum of Hadrian, Rome, Italy, Roman Empire
- Partnership with: Annia Galeria Faustina MINOR Roman Empress
Marriage: 147, Roma, Lazio, Italien
- Child: Lucius Aurelius Antoninus Commodus Imperador, Caesar Birth: 31 AUG 161, Lanuvio, Rome, Lazio, Italy
- Child: Annia Aurelia Fadilla Birth: 159
- Child: Marcus Annias Veras Caesar Birth: 162, Roma, Roman Empire
- Child: Annia Cornificius Faustina Minor Birth: 160, Roma, Roman Empire
- Child: Domitia Faustina Birth: 147, Roma, Roman Empire
- Child: Annia Galeria Aurelia Faustina Birth: 151, Roma, Roman Empire
- Child: Titus Aeilus Antoninus Birth: 149, Roma, Roman Empire
- Child: Annia Aurelia Galeria LUCILLA Empress Of The Roman Empire Birth: ABT 150, Rome, Roma, Lazio, Italy
- Child: Domitia Faustina The YOUNGER Birth: 150, Rome, Roma, Lazio, Italy
- Child: Titus Aurelius Fulvus Antoninus Birth: 161
- Child: Unattested child Birth: 158
- Child: Bruttius CRISPINE Birth: Rome, Roma, Lazio, Italy
- Child: Hadrianus ROME Birth: 152, Italy
- Child: Tiberius Aelius Antoninus Birth: 152, Roma, Roman Empire
- Partnership with: Ceionia Plautia
Ancestors of Marcus Aurelius Antonius Augustus Roman Emperor
/-Marcus Aurelius CLAUDIUS II
/-Marcus Aurelius Quintille CLAUDIUS
/-Dom AURELIEN
/-Marcus Annius VERUS II
/-Marcus Annius Veras III Praetor of Rome
| | /-Decimus RUPILIUS
| | /-Lucius Vibius Sabinus Scribonius LIBO FRUGI RUPILIUS
| | | | /-Marcus Licinius Crassus FRUGI
| | | \-Licinia LUCINANUS
| \-Rupilla Faustina I, de Rome
| | /-Gaius Salonius Matidius PATRUINUS
| \-Salonia Matidia Augusta Major
| | /-Marcus Ulpius Traianus the Elder
| \-Ulpia Marciara Traiana
| | /-Marcus Junius BRUTUS
| | /-Roman Senator Quintus Marcius Barea SORANUS
| | | | /-Quintus Servilius CAEPIO
| | | | /-Quintus Servilius CAEPIO
| | | | | \-Caecilia METALLA
| | | \-Servilia Caepia MAJOR
| | | | /-Gaius Livius DRUSUS
| | | | /-Marcus Livius DRUSUS
| | | | | \-Cornelia spouse of Gaius Livius DRUSUS
| | | \-Livia Augusta DRUSILLA
| | | | /-Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA SERAPIO
| | | \-Cornelia Scipionis DRUSUS II
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica Serapo of ROME
| | /-Quintus Marcius BAREA SURA, SENATOR
| \-Marcia FURNILLA Wife of Roman Emperor Titus
| | /-Aulus Antonius Rufus VON ROM
| \-Antonia FURNILLA
Marcus Aurelius Antonius Augustus Roman Emperor
| /-Publius SERVILIUS
| /-Publius Domitius CALVISIUS TULLUS RUSO
\-Domitia Lucilla Calvilla Minor
| /-Sextus Curvius TULLUS
| /-Domitus Lucillus CURVIUS
| | \-Titia MARCELLIA
\-Domitia Lucilla Major
| /-Titus Curtilius MANCIA
\-Curtilia MANCIA
| /-Domitius OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE
| | \-Domitia Lepida
\-Domitia spouse of Titus Curtilius MANCIA
Descendants of Marcus Aurelius Antonius Augustus Roman Emperor
1 Marcus Aurelius Antonius Augustus Roman Emperor
=Annia Galeria Faustina MINOR Roman Empress Marriage: 147, Roma, Lazio, Italien
2 Lucius Aurelius Antoninus Commodus Imperador, Caesar
=Bruttia Crispina ROMAN EMPIRE Marriage: 176, Roma, Roma, Lazio, Italy
3 Flavia Claudia Crispina EMPRESS OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE
=Flavius Titus Eutropius of the Gordiani of Dardania, EMPEROR OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE Marriage: 230, Eboracum, England
=Marcia THE CONCUBINE
2 Annia Aurelia Fadilla
2 Marcus Annias Veras Caesar
2 Annia Cornificius Faustina Minor
2 Domitia Faustina
2 Annia Galeria Aurelia Faustina
2 Titus Aeilus Antoninus
2 Annia Aurelia Galeria LUCILLA Empress Of The Roman Empire
2 Domitia Faustina The YOUNGER
2 Titus Aurelius Fulvus Antoninus
2 Unattested child
2 Bruttius CRISPINE
2 Hadrianus ROME
2 Tiberius Aelius Antoninus
=Ceionia Plautia
- Father: Titus Flavius SABINUS I
- Mother: Antonia Gordiana Balba Jun II
- Birth: 10 MAY 213, Illyria, Roman Empire
- Also known as: Germanicus Maximus
- Also known as: Claudius Gothicus
- Also known as: Claudius Gothicus
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia - Early life and origin The most significant source for Claudius II is the biography written by Trebellius Pollio as part of the collection of imperial biographies called the Historia Augusta. However, his story is riddled with fabrications and obsequious praises. This is due to the fact that in the 4th century, Claudius was declared a relative of Constantine the Great's father, Constantius I Chlorus, and, consequently, of the ruling dynasty. Thus, this biography should be used with extreme caution. The future emperor Marcus Aurelius Claudius was born on May 10, 213 or 214.[3] At the time of his death Claudius was 56 years old.[5][6] Claudius came from Dalmatia or Illyricum, although it is possible that his place of birth was the region of Dardania in Moesia Superior.[3] Before coming to power, Claudius served with the Roman army, where he made a good career and secured appointment to the highest military posts. During the reign of Decius (249–251), he served as a military tribune.[10] In this post, Claudius was sent to defend Thermopylae, in connection with which the governor of Achaea was ordered to send him 200 Dardanian soldiers, 60 horsemen, 60 Cretan archers, and a thousand well-armed recruits. However, there is no evidence that the Goths who invaded at that time threatened the region, since their invasion did not extend beyond the middle Balkans. Most likely the message of the "History of the Augustus" is an anachronism, since it is known that the garrison at Thermopylae appeared in 254. Historian François Pashau offers a version that this passage was invented in order to contrast the successful pagan commander Claudius and the unlucky Christian generals who allowed the ruin of Greece by the Gothic leader Alaric I in 396.[11] In addition, Trebellius Pollio reveals that Decius rewarded Claudius after he demonstrated his strength while fighting another soldier at the Games of Mars.[12] His troops then proclaimed him emperor[13] amid charges, never proven, that he murdered his predecessor Gallienus.[14] However, he soon proved to be less than bloodthirsty, as he asked the Roman Senate to spare the lives of Gallienus' family and supporters. He was less magnanimous toward Rome's enemies, however, and it was to this that he owed his popularity.[15] It is possible Claudius gained his position and the respect of the soldiers by being physically strong and especially cruel. A legend tells of Claudius knocking out a horse's teeth with one punch. When Claudius performed as a wrestler in the 250s, he supposedly knocked out the teeth of his opponent when his genitalia had been grabbed in the match.[16] Claudius, like Maximinus Thrax before him, was of barbarian birth. After an interlude of failed aristocratic Roman emperors since Maximinus' death, Claudius was the first in a series of tough "soldier emperors" who would eventually restore the Empire after the Crisis of the Third Century.[17][18] Downfall of Gallienus[edit] During the 260s, the breakup of the Roman Empire into three distinct governing entities (the core Roman Empire, the Gallic Empire and the Palmyrene Empire) placed the whole Roman imperium into a precarious position. Gallienus was seriously weakened by his failure to defeat Postumus in the West, and the ability of Odaenathus to live with his arrangement with Gallienus in the East. By 268, however, the situation had changed, as Odaenathus was assassinated, most likely due to court intrigue, and Gallienus fell victim to a mutiny in his own ranks. Upon the death of Odaenathus, power fell to his younger son, who was dominated by his mother, Zenobia.[19] Under threat of invasion by multiple tribes, Gallienus' troubles primarily lay with Postumus, whom he could not attack because his attention was required in dealing with Macrianus and the invading Scythians. After four years of delay, Postumus had established power, but in 265, when Gallienus and his men crossed the Alps, they defeated and besieged Postumus in an (unnamed) Gallic city. When victory appeared to be near, Gallienus made the mistake of approaching the city walls too closely and was gravely injured, compelling him to withdraw the campaign. In the next three years, Gallienus' troubles would only get worse. The Scythians successfully invaded the Balkans in the early months of 268, and Aureolus, a commander of the cavalry, declared himself an ally of Postumus and the new emperor in Milan.[19] At this time, another invasion was taking place. A group called the Herulians navigated through Asia Minor and then into Greece on a naval expedition. Details of these invasions are abstract, as it is nearly impossible to reconstruct the happenings, due to the chain of conflicts initiated by the Herulians in 268. Scholars assume Gallienus' efforts were focused on Aureolus, the officer who betrayed him, and the defeat of the Herulians was left to his successor, Claudius Gothicus.[20] The death of Gallienus is surrounded by conspiracy and betrayal, as were many emperors' deaths. Different accounts of the incident are recorded, but they agree that senior officials wanted Gallienus dead. According to two accounts, the prime conspirator was Aurelius Heraclianus, the Praetorian Prefect. One version of the story tells of Heraclianus bringing Claudius into the plot while the account given by the Historia Augusta exculpates the would-be emperor and adds the prominent general Lucius Aurelius Marcianus into the plot. The removal of Claudius from the conspiracy is due to his later role as the progenitor of the house of Constantine, a fiction of Constantine's time, and may serve to guarantee that the original version from which these two accounts spring was current prior to the reign of Constantine. It is written that while sitting down at dinner, Gallienus was told that Aureolus and his men were approaching the camp. Gallienus rushed to the front lines, ready to give orders, when he was struck down by a commander of his cavalry. In a different and more controversial account, Aureolus forges a document in which Gallienus appears to be plotting against his generals and makes sure it falls into the hands of the emperor's senior staff. In this plot, Aurelian is added as a possible conspirator. The tale of his involvement in the conspiracy might be seen as at least partial justification for the murder of Aurelian himself under circumstances that seem remarkably similar to those in this story.[21] Whichever story is true, Gallienus was killed in the summer of 268, and Claudius was chosen by the army outside of Milan to succeed him. Accounts tell of people hearing the news of the new emperor, and reacting by murdering Gallienus' family members until Claudius declared he would respect the memory of his predecessor. Claudius had the deceased emperor deified and buried in a family tomb on the Appian Way. The traitor Aureolus was not treated with the same reverence, as he was killed by his besiegers after a failed attempt to surrender.[21] The Campaigns of Claudius At the time of Claudius' accession, the Roman Empire was in serious danger from several incursions, both within and outside its borders. The most pressing of these was an invasion of Illyricum and Pannonia by the Goths.[15] Although Gallienus had already inflicted some damage on them at the Battle of Nestus,[22] Claudius, not long after being named emperor, followed this up by winning his greatest victory, and one of the greatest in the history of Roman arms.[20] The Roman Empire in 268 A.D. At the Battle of Naissus, Claudius and his legions routed a huge Gothic army.[2] Together with his cavalry commander, the future Emperor Aurelian, the Romans took thousands of prisoners, destroyed the Gothic cavalry as a force, and stormed their laager (a circular alignment of wagons long favored by the Goths).[dubious – discuss] The victory earned Claudius his surname of "Gothicus" (conqueror of the Goths), and that is how he is known to this day. More importantly, the Goths were soon driven back across the Danube River by Aurelian, and nearly a century passed before they again posed a serious threat to the empire.[20] At the same time, the Alamanni had crossed the Alps and attacked the empire. Claudius responded quickly, routing the Alamanni at the Battle of Lake Benacus in the late fall of 268, a few months after the Battle of Naissus.[23] For this he was awarded the title of "Germanicus Maximus."[2] He then turned on the Gallic Empire, ruled by a pretender for the past eight years and encompassing Britain, Gaul, and the Iberian Peninsula. He won several victories and soon regained control of Hispania and the Rhone river valley of Gaul.[22] This set the stage for the ultimate destruction of the Gallic Empire under Aurelian.[2] Claudius did not live long enough to fulfill his goal of reuniting all the lost territories of the empire. Late in 269 he had traveled to Sirmium[13] and was preparing to go to war against the Vandals, who were raiding in Pannonia.[23] However, he fell victim to the Plague of Cyprian (possibly smallpox), and died early in January 270.[24] Before his death, he is thought to have named Aurelian as his successor, though Claudius' brother Quintillus briefly seized power.[15] The Senate immediately deified Claudius as "Divus Claudius Gothicus".[25]
- Death: 270, Sirmium, Pannonia, Roman Empire
Ancestors of Marcus Aurelius Claudius
/-Titus Flavius PETRONIUS
/-Titus Flavius Sabinus CONSUL SUFFECTUS
| | /- TERTULLUS
| \-Tertulla
/-Titus Flavius Sabinus, Roman Consul
| | /-Herodes II POLLIO VESPASIUS
| \-Vespasia POLLA
| \-Julia Berenice RAINHA DE ROMA
/-Titus Flavius SABINUS V
| | /-Marcus Arrecinus ARRECINUS
| | /-Marcus Arrecinus Clemens, Prefect of the Roman Praetorian Guard
| | | | /-Tertullus DI ROMA
| | | \-Tertulla TERTULLUS
| | | | /-Marcus Junius BRUTUS
| | | \-Alfridia DI ROMA
| | | | /-Quintus Servilius CAEPIO
| | | | /-Quintus Servilius CAEPIO
| | | | | \-Caecilia METALLA
| | | \-Servilia Caepia MAJOR
| | | | /-Marcus Amelius DRUSUS AEMILIANUS
| | | | /-Gaius Livius DRUSUS
| | | | /-Marcus Livius DRUSUS
| | | | | \-Cornelia spouse of Gaius Livius DRUSUS
| | | \-Livia Augusta DRUSILLA
| | | | /-Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA CORCULUM Triumvir
| | | | /-Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA SERAPIO
| | | | | \-Cornelia AFRICANA
| | | \-Cornelia Scipionis DRUSUS II
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica Serapo of ROME
| \-Arrencina Clementina ARRECINUS
| | /-Tiberius Julius LUPUS
| | /-Tiberius Julius Lupus JULIUS
| | /-Tiberius Julius Lupus JULIUS
| \-Julia JULIUS
/-Titus Flavius SABINUS I
| | /-Titus Flavius PETRONIUS
| | /-Titus Flavius Sabinus CONSUL SUFFECTUS
| | | | /- TERTULLUS
| | | \-Tertulla
| | /-Imperator Caesar Titus Vespasianus Flavius AUGUSTUS
| | | | /-Herodes II POLLIO VESPASIUS
| | | \-Vespasia POLLA
| | | \-Julia Berenice RAINHA DE ROMA
| | /-Titus Flavius DOMITIANUS
| | | | /-Flavius LIBERALIS
| | | \-Flavia DOMITILIA
| \-Julia Sabina FLAVIA
| | /-Marcus Junius BRUTUS
| | /-Roman Senator Quintus Marcius Barea SORANUS
| | | | /-Quintus Servilius CAEPIO
| | | | /-Quintus Servilius CAEPIO
| | | | | \-Caecilia METALLA
| | | \-Servilia Caepia MAJOR
| | | | /-Marcus Amelius DRUSUS AEMILIANUS
| | | | /-Gaius Livius DRUSUS
| | | | /-Marcus Livius DRUSUS
| | | | | \-Cornelia spouse of Gaius Livius DRUSUS
| | | \-Livia Augusta DRUSILLA
| | | | /-Publius CORNELIUS SCIPIO Africanus Major
| | | | /-Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA CORCULUM Triumvir
| | | | | \-Amelia TERTIA
| | | | /-Publius Cornelius SCIPIO NASICA SERAPIO
| | | | | | /-Publius CORNELIUS SCIPIO Africanus Major
| | | | | \-Cornelia AFRICANA
| | | | | \-Amelia TERTIA
| | | \-Cornelia Scipionis DRUSUS II
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasica Serapo of ROME
| | /-Quintus Marcius BAREA SURA, SENATOR
| \-Marcia FURNILLA Wife of Roman Emperor Titus
| | /-Aulus Antonius Rufus VON ROM
| \-Antonia FURNILLA
Marcus Aurelius Claudius
| /-Iunius Licinius BALBUS
| /-Junius Licinius BALBUS II
| | \-Servilia Prudens of Rome
\-Antonia Gordiana Balba Jun II
\-Maecia Faustinia Antonia GORDIANA
Descendants of Marcus Aurelius Claudius
1 Marcus Aurelius Claudius
=Claudia Crispina Julia ILLYRIA
2 Flavius Galerius Valerius LICIANIANUS
=Empress Flavia Julia Constantina ROMA
3 Gratianus Funarius of the Roman Empire
=(Unknown)
2 Constantius Chlorus EMPEROR OF ROME
- Birth: ABT 250, Sremska, Mitrovica, Serbia
- Also known as: Marcus Aurelius Valerius Maximianus Herculius
- Also known as: Maximian
- Also known as: Emperor Marcus Aurelius Valerius Maximianus Herculeus of Rome
- Also known as: Maximian Herculius
- Title Of Nobility: Emperor
- Fact: https://www.geni.com/people/Maximian-Western-Roman-Emperor/6000000000930944231?through=6000000008211661175
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia Maximian (Latin: Marcus Aurelius Valerius Maximianus; c. 250 – c. July 310), nicknamed Herculius,[9] was Roman emperor from 286 to 305. He was Caesar[3][4] from 285 to 286, then Augustus from 286[1] to 305.[2] He shared the latter title with his co-emperor and superior, Diocletian, whose political brain complemented Maximian's military brawn. Maximian established his residence at Trier but spent most of his time on campaign. In late 285, he suppressed rebels in Gaul known as the Bagaudae. From 285 to 288, he fought against Germanic tribes along the Rhine frontier. Together with Diocletian, he launched a scorched earth campaign deep into Alamannic territory in 288, temporarily relieving the Rhine provinces from the threat of Germanic invasion. The man he appointed to police the Channel shores, Carausius, rebelled in 286, causing the secession of Britain and northwestern Gaul. Maximian failed to oust Carausius, and his invasion fleet was destroyed by storms in 289 or 290. Maximian's subordinate, Constantius, campaigned against Carausius' successor, Allectus, while Maximian held the Rhine frontier. The rebel leader was ousted in 296, and Maximian moved south to combat piracy near Hispania and Berber incursions in Mauretania. When these campaigns concluded in 298, he departed for Italy, where he lived in comfort until 305. At Diocletian's behest, Maximian abdicated on 1 May 305, gave the Augustan office to Constantius, and retired to southern Italy. In late 306, Maximian took the title of Augustus again and aided his son Maxentius' rebellion in Italy. In April 307, he attempted to depose his son, but failed and fled to the court of Constantius' successor, Constantine (Maximian's step-grandson and son-in-law), in Trier. At the Council of Carnuntum in November 308, Diocletian and his successor, Galerius, forced Maximian to renounce his imperial claim again. In early 310, Maximian attempted to seize Constantine's title while the emperor was on campaign on the Rhine. Few supported him, and he was captured by Constantine in Marseille. Maximian killed himself in mid-310 on Constantine's orders. During Constantine's war with Maxentius, Maximian's image was purged from all public places. However, after Constantine ousted and killed Maxentius, Maximian's image was rehabilitated, and he was deified. Maximian was born near Sirmium (modern Sremska Mitrovica, Serbia) in the province of Pannonia, around 250 into a family of shopkeepers.[10][11] Beyond that, the ancient sources contain vague allusions to Illyricum as his homeland,[12] to his Pannonian virtues,[13] and to his harsh upbringing along the war-torn Danube frontier.[14] Maximian joined the army, serving with Diocletian under the emperors Aurelian (r. 270–275) and Probus (r. 276–282). He probably participated in the Mesopotamian campaign of Carus in 283 and attended Diocletian's election as emperor on November 20, 284 at Nicomedia.[15] Maximian's swift appointment by Diocletian as Caesar is taken by the writer Stephen Williams and historian Timothy Barnes to mean that the two men were longterm allies, that their respective roles were pre-agreed and that Maximian had probably supported Diocletian during his campaign against Carinus (r. 283–285) but there is no direct evidence for this.[16] With his great energy, firm aggressive character and disinclination to rebel, Maximian was an appealing candidate for imperial office. The fourth-century historian Aurelius Victor described Maximian as "a colleague trustworthy in friendship, if somewhat boorish, and of great military talents".[17] Despite his other qualities, Maximian was uneducated and preferred action to thought. The panegyric of 289, after comparing his actions to Scipio Africanus' victories over Hannibal during the Second Punic War, suggested that Maximian had never heard of them.[18] His ambitions were purely military; he left politics to Diocletian.[19] The Christian rhetor Lactantius suggested that Maximian shared Diocletian's basic attitudes but was less puritanical in his tastes, and took advantage of the sensual opportunities his position as emperor offered.[20] Lactantius charged that Maximian defiled senators' daughters and traveled with young virgins to satisfy his unending lust, though Lactantius' credibility is undermined by his general hostility towards pagans.[21] Maximian had two children with his Syrian wife, Eutropia: Maxentius and Fausta. There is no direct evidence in the ancient sources for their birthdates. Modern estimates of Maxentius' birth year have varied from c. 276 to 283,[22] and most date Fausta's birth to c. 289 or 290.[23] Theodora, the wife of Constantius Chlorus, is often called Maximian's stepdaughter by ancient sources, leading to claims by Otto Seeck and Ernest Stein that she was born from an earlier marriage between Eutropia and Afranius Hannibalianus.[24] Barnes challenges this view, saying that all "stepdaughter" sources derive their information from the partially unreliable work of history Kaisergeschichte, while other, more reliable, sources refer to her as Maximian's natural daughter.[25] Barnes concludes that Theodora was born no later than c. 275 to an unnamed earlier wife of Maximian, possibly one of Hannibalianus' daughters.[26]
- Title Of Nobility: Emperor
- Death: JUL 310, Massilia (Marseille) France
Descendants of Marcus Aurelius Valerius "Maximianus" Emperor of Roman Empire
1 Marcus Aurelius Valerius "Maximianus" Emperor of Roman Empire
=Eutropia Empress of Rome Marriage: ABT 280, Pannonia, Illyria, Roman Empire
2 Flavia Maxima FAUSTA Empress of The Roman Empire
=Flavia Valerius Aurelius Constantinus 1 AUGUSTUS THE GREAT
3 Flavia Actia EMPRESS
=Julius Honorius FLAVIUS of Gallaecia
2 Maxentius EMPEROR West Roman Empire
2 Flavia Maximiana Theodora
=Constantius Flavius VALERIUS Emperor of Rome Marriage: ABT 289, Roma, Roman Empire
3 Julius Constantius FLAVIUS Patricius of the Roman Empire
=Basilina Marriage: ABT 331
=Flavia Galla Marriage: ABT 314, Roman Empire
3 Anastasia CONSTANTIA CHLORUS
3 Flavia Julia CONSTANTIA CHLORUS
3 Constantine I "the Great" Emperor Of Roman Empire
3 Eutropia CONSTANTIUS CHLORUS
3 Flavius Dalmatius CONSTANTIUS CHLORUS
3 Constantina
3 Hannibalianus CONSTANTIUS CHLORUS
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Marcus Claudius Marcellus
/-Marcus Claudius Marcellus
/-Marcus Claudius Marcellus
/-Marcus Claudius Marcellus
/-Marcus Claudius Marcellus
/-Marcus Claudius Marcellus
/-Marcus Claudius Marcellus
Marcus Claudius Marcellus
Descendants of Marcus Claudius Marcellus
1 Marcus Claudius Marcellus
=(Unknown)
2 Gaius Claudius Marcus MARCELLUS
=Junia BRUTA
3 Gaius Claudius MARCELLUS Minor
=Octavia Empress of ROME
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Marcus Claudius Marcellus
/-Marcus Claudius Marcellus
/-Marcus Claudius Marcellus
/-Marcus Claudius Marcellus
/-Marcus Claudius Marcellus
/-Marcus Claudius Marcellus
Marcus Claudius Marcellus
Descendants of Marcus Claudius Marcellus
1 Marcus Claudius Marcellus
=(Unknown)
2 Marcus Claudius Marcellus
=(Unknown)
3 Gaius Claudius Marcus MARCELLUS
=Junia BRUTA
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Marcus Claudius Marcellus
/-Marcus Claudius Marcellus
/-Marcus Claudius Marcellus
/-Marcus Claudius Marcellus
/-Marcus Claudius Marcellus
Marcus Claudius Marcellus
Descendants of Marcus Claudius Marcellus
1 Marcus Claudius Marcellus
=(Unknown)
2 Marcus Claudius Marcellus
=(Unknown)
3 Marcus Claudius Marcellus
=(Unknown)
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Marcus Claudius Marcellus
/-Marcus Claudius Marcellus
/-Marcus Claudius Marcellus
/-Marcus Claudius Marcellus
Marcus Claudius Marcellus
Descendants of Marcus Claudius Marcellus
1 Marcus Claudius Marcellus
=(Unknown)
2 Marcus Claudius Marcellus
=(Unknown)
3 Marcus Claudius Marcellus
=(Unknown)
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Marcus Claudius Marcellus
/-Marcus Claudius Marcellus
/-Marcus Claudius Marcellus
Marcus Claudius Marcellus
Descendants of Marcus Claudius Marcellus
1 Marcus Claudius Marcellus
=(Unknown)
2 Marcus Claudius Marcellus
=(Unknown)
3 Marcus Claudius Marcellus
=(Unknown)
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Marcus Claudius Marcellus
/-Marcus Claudius Marcellus
Marcus Claudius Marcellus
Descendants of Marcus Claudius Marcellus
1 Marcus Claudius Marcellus
=(Unknown)
2 Marcus Claudius Marcellus
=(Unknown)
3 Marcus Claudius Marcellus
=(Unknown)
- Birth: 370 BC
- Death: 327 BC
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Descendants of Marcus Claudius Marcellus
1 Marcus Claudius Marcellus
=(Unknown)
2 Marcus Claudius Marcellus
=(Unknown)
3 Marcus Claudius Marcellus
=(Unknown)
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Marcus Flaccus I
/-Lucius Fulvius, I
/-Lucius Fulvius, II
/-Lucius Fulvius Bruttius Praesens DIROMA
/-Marcus CURVUS
/-Cassus CURVUS
Marcus Flaccus I
Descendants of Marcus Flaccus I
1 Marcus Flaccus I
=(Unknown)
2 Quintus Flaccus OF ROME
=Sulpicia Sulpicuia of ROME
3 Marcus Fulvius Flaccus II
=(Unknown)
Ancestors of Marcus Fulvius Flaccus Bambalus III
/-Lucius Fulvius, I
/-Lucius Fulvius, II
/-Lucius Fulvius Bruttius Praesens DIROMA
/-Marcus CURVUS
/-Cassus CURVUS
/-Marcus Flaccus I
/-Quintus Flaccus OF ROME
/-Marcus Fulvius Flaccus II
| | /-Quintus Sulpicius PATERCULUS
| | /-Servius Sulpicius Paterculus
| \-Sulpicia Sulpicuia of ROME
Marcus Fulvius Flaccus Bambalus III
Descendants of Marcus Fulvius Flaccus Bambalus III
1 Marcus Fulvius Flaccus Bambalus III
=Sempronia Tuditania DE ROME
2 Cossutia Fulvia
=Lucius Julius CAESAR III Governor of Macedonia
3 Julia Antonia CAESARIA , Mother of Mark Antony
=Marcus Antonius II CRETICUS Octavia Marriage: ABT 88 BC, Rome, Roma, Lazio, Italy
=Publius Cornelius LENTULUS SURA
3 Lucius Julius CEASAR IV of Rome
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Marcus Fulvius Flaccus II
/-Lucius Fulvius, I
/-Lucius Fulvius, II
/-Lucius Fulvius Bruttius Praesens DIROMA
/-Marcus CURVUS
/-Cassus CURVUS
/-Marcus Flaccus I
/-Quintus Flaccus OF ROME
Marcus Fulvius Flaccus II
| /-Quintus Sulpicius PATERCULUS
| /-Servius Sulpicius Paterculus
\-Sulpicia Sulpicuia of ROME
Descendants of Marcus Fulvius Flaccus II
1 Marcus Fulvius Flaccus II
=(Unknown)
2 Marcus Fulvius Flaccus Bambalus III
=Sempronia Tuditania DE ROME
3 Cossutia Fulvia
=Lucius Julius CAESAR III Governor of Macedonia
- Birth: 240, Rome, Italy
- Death: 299, Rome,Italy
- Burial: 299, Rome, Italy
Descendants of Marcus Iunius Caesonius Nicomachus Anicius Faustus Paulinus
1 Marcus Iunius Caesonius Nicomachus Anicius Faustus Paulinus
=Amnia DEMETRIAS
2 Betitius Perpetuus Arzygius ARZYGUIS
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Marcus Junius Brutus
/-Marcus Junius Brutus
/-Lucius Junius Brutus
| | /-Lucius Tarquinius Priscus of ROME
| \-Tarquinia
| \-Tanaquil Queen of Rome
/-Titus JUNIUS BRUTUS
| \-Vitellia
/-Junius Brutus
/-Gaius Junius Brutus
/-Gaius Junius Brutus
/-Gaius Junius Brutus
/-Decimus Junius Brutus Scaeva
/-Decimus Junius Brutus Scaeva
/-Lucius Junius Brutus
Marcus Junius Brutus
Descendants of Marcus Junius Brutus
1 Marcus Junius Brutus
=(Unknown)
2 Marcus Lunius Brutus
=(Unknown)
3 Decimus Junius BRUTUS
=Clodia MARCELLA
- Birth: 570 BC
- Death: 509 BC
Descendants of Marcus Junius Brutus
1 Marcus Junius Brutus
=Tarquinia
2 Lucius Junius Brutus
=Vitellia
3 Titus JUNIUS BRUTUS
=(Unknown)
3 Tiberius IUNIUS BRUTUS
3 Lucius IUNIUS BRUTUS Damasippus
2 Marcus IUNIUS BRUTUS
2 Tullia MAIOR
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Marcus Lunius Brutus
/-Marcus Junius Brutus
/-Lucius Junius Brutus
| \-Tarquinia
/-Titus JUNIUS BRUTUS
| \-Vitellia
/-Junius Brutus
/-Gaius Junius Brutus
/-Gaius Junius Brutus
/-Gaius Junius Brutus
/-Decimus Junius Brutus Scaeva
/-Decimus Junius Brutus Scaeva
/-Lucius Junius Brutus
/-Marcus Junius Brutus
Marcus Lunius Brutus
Descendants of Marcus Lunius Brutus
1 Marcus Lunius Brutus
=(Unknown)
2 Decimus Junius BRUTUS
=Clodia MARCELLA
3 Junia BRUTA
=Gaius Claudius Marcus MARCELLUS
- Father: Flavius Julius Agricola Praetorian Prefect of Gaul
- Mother: Magna MAJOR
- Birth: 4 AUG 384, Clermont, Aquitaine, Gaul, Roman Empire
- Residence: 440, Clermont, Alpes-Maritimes, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, France
- Also known as: Marcus Maecillius Flavius Eparchius Avitus
- Also known as: Emperor Eparchius Avitus
- Also known as: Emperor Eparchius Avitus
- Occupation: Praetorian prefecture of Gaul, 439, Gaul, Roman Empire
- Title Of Nobility: Vir illustris, 437, Gaul, Roman Empire
- Clan Name: House of Avitas
- LifeSketch: From Wikipedia - Marcus Maecilius Flavius Eparchius Avitus[i] c. 380/395[1] – after 17 October 456 or in 457) was Western Roman Emperor from 8 or 9 July 455 to 17 October 456. He was a senator and a high-ranking officer both in the civil and military administration, as well as Bishop of Piacenza. A Gallo-Roman aristocrat, he opposed the reduction of the Western Roman Empire to Italy alone, both politically and from an administrative point of view. For this reason, as Emperor he introduced several Gallic senators in the Imperial administration; this policy, however, was opposed by the Senatorial aristocracy and by the people of Rome, who had suffered from the sack of the city by the Vandals in 455. Avitus had a good relationship with the Visigoths, in particular with their king Theodoric II, who was a friend of his and who acclaimed Avitus Emperor. The possibility of a strong and useful alliance between the Visigoths and Romans faded, however, when Theodoric invaded Hispania at Avitus' behest, which rendered him unable to help Avitus against the rebel Roman generals who deposed him. Origins and early career Avitus was born in Clermont to a family of the Gallo-Roman nobility. His father was possibly Flavius Julius Agricola, consul in 421. Avitus had two sons, Agricola (fl 455 – living 507, a vir illustris) and Ecdicius Avitus (later patricius and magister militum under Emperor Julius Nepos) and a daughter Papianilla; she married Sidonius Apollinaris, whose letters and panegyrics remain an important source for Avitus' life and times. Avitus followed a course of study typical for a young man of his rank, including law. Before 421 he was sent to the powerful patricius Flavius Constantius (briefly Emperor in 421) to ask for a tax reduction for his own country; this embassy was successful. His relative Theodorus was hostage at the court of the King of Visigoths, Theodoric I. In 425/426 Avitus went and met him and the King, who let Avitus enter his own court. Here, around 439, Avitus met the son of Theodoric, Theodoric II, who later became King. Avitus inspired the young Theodoric to study Latin poets. He then started a military career serving under the magister militum Aetius in his campaign against the Juthungi and the Norics (430–431) and against the Burgundians (436). In 437, after being elevated to the rank of vir illustris, he returned to Avernia, where he held a high office, probably magister militum per Gallias. In the same year he defeated a group of Hunnic raiders near Clermont and obliged Theodoric to lift the siege of Narbonne. In 439 he became Praetorian prefect of Gaul and renewed the friendship treaty with the Visigoths. Before the summer of 440, he retired to private life at his estate, Avitacum, near Clermont. Here he lived until 451 when the Huns, led by Attila, invaded the Western Roman Empire; Avitus persuaded Theodoric into an alliance with Rome, and the combined forces of Theodoric and Aetius defeated Attila in the Battle of Châlons; Theodoric died in the battle. Rise to the throne Petronius Maximus, who obtained the throne at the death of Valentinian III, recalled Avitus from his private life and sent him to ask for support to the Visigoths, but, at the death of Maximus, they acclaimed Avitus Emperor In the late spring of 455, Avitus was recalled to service by emperor Petronius Maximus and was elevated to the rank of magister militum, probably praesentalis; Maximus sent Avitus in an embassy to the court of Theodoric II, who had succeeded to his father, at Toulouse. This embassy probably confirmed the new king and his people as foederati of the Empire and asked for their support for the new Emperor.[2] While Avitus was at Theodoric's court, news came of the death of Petronius Maximus (31 May) and of the sack of Rome by the Vandals of Gaiseric. Theodoric acclaimed Avitus Emperor in Toulouse; on 9 July,[3] the new Emperor was acclaimed by the Gallic chiefs gathered in Viernum,[4] near Arelate (Arles), and later, around 5 August, before Avitus reached Rome, he received the recognition of the Roman Senate.[5] Avitus stayed in Gaul for three months, to consolidate his power in the region that was the center of his support, and later went to Italy with a Gallic army, probably reinforced with a Gothic force. He probably travelled to Noricum to restore the imperial authority in that province, and then passed through Ravenna, where he left a Gothic force under the new patricius and magister militum Remistus, a Visigoth. On 21 September, finally, he entered Rome.[6] Consolidation of power The effective power of Avitus depended on the support of all the major players in the Western Roman Empire in the mid-5th century. The new Emperor needed the support of both the civil institutions, the Roman senate and the Eastern Roman Emperor Marcian, as well as that of the army and its commanders (the generals Majorian and Ricimer) and the Vandals of Gaiseric. On 1 January 456, Avitus took the consulate,[7] as traditionally the Emperors held the consulate in the first year upon assuming the purple. However, his consulate sine collega (without a second Consul) was not recognised by the Eastern court, which nominated two consuls, Iohannes and Varanes. The fact that the two courts did not agree on a couple of consuls but each nominated its own means that despite the efforts of Avitus to receive the recognition of the Eastern Emperor,[8] the relationship between the two halves of the Empire was not optimal. Foreign policy Treaties under Marcian and a treaty of 442 between emperor Valentinian III and the Vandal king Gaiseric had failed to reduce Vandal incursions and raids along the Italian coast. Avitus' own efforts secured a temporary winter truce with them; but in March 456, Vandals destroyed Capua. Avitus sent Ricimer to defend Sicily, and the Romans defeated the Vandals twice, once in a land battle near Agrigento and another in a naval battle off Corsica.[9] During the reign of Avitus, the Visigoths expanded into Hispania, nominally under Roman authorisation but actually to promote their own interests. In 455 Avitus had sent an ambassador, comes Fronto, to the Suebi and then to Theodoric II to ask them to formally recognise Roman rule. When the Suebi invaded the Roman province of Hispania Tarraconensis, the Visigoths attacked and defeated them 5 October 456 at the Campus Paramus, twelve miles from Astorga, on the banks of the Órbigo (Urbicus),[10] subsequently occupying the province as nominal foederati of the Empire. Fall Majorian, comes domesticorum of Avitus, and Ricimer, a general of barbaric descent, rebelled against their Emperor, defeated him near Piacenza, and obliged him to become Bishop of the city. It was Majorian who succeeded Avitus on the throne. In the meantime, resentment amongst the population of Italy against the foreigner Avitus grew. The Gallo-Roman Emperor had given to other members of the Gallo-Roman aristocracy many key offices of the public administration usually filled by Romans. Furthermore, the population of Rome, devastated by the sack of Rome, suffered from food shortages due to the Vandal control of the naval routes, aggravated by the requirements of the foreign troops that had arrived with Avitus. The imperial treasury was almost empty and, after disbanding his Visigoth guard because of popular pressure, Avitus was obliged to pay their huge wages by melting down and selling the bronze of some statues.[11] Counting on the popular discontent, on the disbandment of the imperial guard, and on the prestige gained through their victories, Ricimer and the comes domesticorum Majorian rebelled against Avitus; the Emperor was obliged to leave Rome in early autumn and to move north. Ricimer had the Roman Senate depose Avitus and ordered the murder of the magister militum Remistus in the Palatium at Classe, ancient port of Ravenna, on 17 September 456.[12] Avitus decided to react. First he chose Messianus, one of his collaborators in his embassy to the Visigoths ordered by Petronius Maximus, as the new magister militum; then he probably went to Gaul (Hydatius says to Arelate)[13] to collect all the available forces, probably the Visigoth guard he had just disbanded; finally he led his forces against the troops of Ricimer, near Piacenza. The Emperor and his army entered the city and attacked the huge army led by Ricimer, but after a great massacre of his men, including Messianus, Avitus fled on 17 or 18 October 456. In the immediate aftermath Ricimer spared his life, but forced him to become Bishop of Piacenza.[14] Death Avitus' Gallic supporters may still have recognised him as emperor, despite his deposition. Sidonius Apollinaris tells of a failed coup d'état in Gaul organised by one Marcellus[15] and probably aimed at bringing Avitus back on the throne.[16] The contemporary historian Hydatius, who lived in Spain, considered the year 457 the third of Avitus' reign;[17] Avitus' own intentions are not known, nor are the manner and date of his death, of which there are several versions. In some, he was told that the Roman Senate had condemned him to death, and so he tried to flee to Gaul, officially travelling there to bring donations to the basilica of Saint Julian in Avernia, his homeland; according to Gregory of Tours, he died during this journey.[18] Other sources have him strangled or starved to death, by order of his successor. Avitus died in 457, or late 456.
- Title Of Nobility: Roman emperor of the West
- Title Of Nobility: Roman emperor of the West
- Death: AFT 17 OCT 456, Brioude, Aquitaine, Gaul, Roman Empire
- Burial: OCT 456, Basilica of Saint Julian, Auvergne, Gaul, Roman Empire
Ancestors of Marcus Maecillius Flavius Eparchius Avitus Emperor of Western Rome
/-Flavius Philagrius
/-Flavius Eparchius Philagrius Comes Orientus, Bishop of Cyprus
/-Flavius Julius Agricola Praetorian Prefect of Gaul
| | /-Egnatius Lollianus Of Rome
| | /-Quintus Flavius Maesius Egnatius Lollianus Mavortius
| | | | /-Quintus FLAVIUS
| | | \-Flavia (QUINTUS FLAVIUS)
| | | | /-Gaius Maesius Picatianus MAESIUS
| | | | /-Gaius Maesius Aquilius Fabius MAESIUS
| | | | | | /-Quintus Fabius TITANUS
| | | | | \-Fabia TITANIA
| | | | | \-Aquilia
| | | | /-Gaius Maecius Fabius TITIANUS
| | | | /-Gaius Maecius Aquilius Fabius TITANUS
| | | | /-Gaius Maesius Fabius TITIANUS
| | | | | | /-Decimus FONTEIUS
| | | | | | /-Fonteius MAXIMUS
| | | | | \-Fonteia FRONTINA
| | | \-Maesia
| | | | /-Gaius Iulius Asper IULIUS
| | | | /-Gaius Ilius Camilius ASPER
| | | \-Iulia IULUS
| \-Egnatia Avita SEVERA
| | /-Servius Cornelius Scipio SALVIDIENUS ORFITUS
| | /-Gnaeus Cornelius Aquilius Niger
| | | | /-Quintus Aquilius Niger
| | | \-Aquilia
| | /-Gnaeus Cornelius AQUILIUS ORFITUS
| | | \-Cornelia CORNELIUS
| | /-Gnaeus Cornelius SEVERUS
| | | | /-Tarrutenius PATERNUS
| | | \-Tarrutenia TARRUTENIUS
| | /-Cornelius SEVERUS I
| | /-Cornelius Severus of ROME II
| | /-Cornelius Severus of ROME III
| \-Cornelia SEVERA
| | /-Gaius Memmius CAECILIANUS
| | /-Gaius Memmius Caecilianus Placidus
| | | \-Placidus Baburia
| | /-Gaius Memmius Orfitus MEMMIUS
| | | | /-Fundanius VITRASIUS
| | | | /-Vitrasius PRETEXTUS
| | | | | | /-Gaius Asinius Frugi ASINIUS
| | | | | | /-Gaius Asinius Nicomachus ASINIUS
| | | | | | | \-Gaia Asinis Frugilla ASINIS
| | | | | | /-Gaius Asinius Lepidus ASINIUS
| | | | | | | \-Claudia Antonia Lepida CLAUDIUS
| | | | | \- ASINIA
| | | | | \-Cornelia Orfita Salvidiena ORFITUS
| | | \-Pupiena Rufina PUPIENUS
| | | \-Vitrasius Pretextus VITRASIUS
| \-Placida Placidus MEMMIUS
| | /-Maecius DE ROME
| | /-Marcus DE ROME
| | | \-Appia DE MARATHON
| | /-Marcus Maecius Probus Major DE ROME
| | | \-Manlia Minor DE ROME
| | /-Marcus Pomponius Maecius PROBUS
| | | | /-Aulus Lunius Rufus DE ROME
| | | | /-Lucius Junius Rufinus Proculianus Proculianus
| | | | | \-Triaria Vibiana Pomponia Pomponia
| | | \-Pomponia Arria DE ROME
| | | | /-Marcus Nonius DE ROME
| | | \-Arria Sextia PAULINA
| | | \-Arria Caesennia PAULINA
| | /-Marcus Maecius PROBUS
| | | | /-Marcus Pupienus Africanus DE ROME
| | | | | \-Pupienia Sextia Paulina CETHEGILLA
| | | \-Pupienia Sextia Paulina CETHEGILLA
| | | | /-Lucius Cossonius Eggius Marullus
| | | | /-Lucius Cossonius Scipio Orfitus
| | | | | \-Cornelia NEGRINA
| | | \-Cornelia Marullina LUCIA
| | /-Marcus Aurelus Probus DE ROME
| \-Maecia CETHEGILLA
| | /-Titus Flavius Sabinus CONSUL SUFFECTUS
| | /-Titus Flavius Sabinus, Roman Consul
| | | \-Vespasia POLLA
| | /-Titus Flavius SABINUS V
| | | | /-Marcus Arrecinus Clemens, Prefect of the Roman Praetorian Guard
| | | \-Arrencina Clementina ARRECINUS
| | | \-Julia JULIUS
| | /-Titus Flavius SABINUS I
| | | | /-Imperator Caesar Titus Vespasianus Flavius AUGUSTUS
| | | | /-Titus Flavius DOMITIANUS
| | | | | \-Flavia DOMITILIA
| | | \-Julia Sabina FLAVIA
| | | | /-Quintus Marcius BAREA SURA, SENATOR
| | | \-Marcia FURNILLA Wife of Roman Emperor Titus
| | | \-Antonia FURNILLA
| | /-Marcus Antonius GORDIANUS
| | | | /-Iunius Licinius BALBUS
| | | | /-Junius Licinius BALBUS II
| | | | | \-Servilia Prudens of Rome
| | | \-Antonia Gordiana Balba Jun II
| | | \-Maecia Faustinia Antonia GORDIANA
| \-Faustina Furia DE ROME
| | /-Gaius Vettius Sabianus DE ROME
| | /-Gaius Furius Sabinus Aquila Timesitheus DE ROME
| | | \-Grata DE ROME
| \-Furia Sabina TRANQUILLINA
| | /-Furius DE ROME
| \-Fura DE ROME
| | /-Titus Aurelius Fulvus Boionus Antoninus Antonin le Pieux DE ROME
| | /-Pontius PONTII
| | | \-Annia Galeria Faustina Faustine L'Ancienne DE ROME
| \-Pontia PONTII
| \-Flava DE ROME
Marcus Maecillius Flavius Eparchius Avitus Emperor of Western Rome
| /-Magnus Maximus “Constantine III” EMPEROR
\-Magna MAJOR
\-Placida Of Rome
Ancestors of Marcus Maecius Memmius Furius Baburius Caecilianus Placidus
/-Gaius Memmius CAECILIANUS
/-Gaius Memmius Caecilianus Placidus
| \-Placidus Baburia
/-Gaius Memmius Orfitus MEMMIUS
| | /-Fundanius VITRASIUS
| | /-Vitrasius PRETEXTUS
| | | | /-Gaius Asinius RUFUS
| | | | /-Gaius Asinius Frugi ASINIUS
| | | | | \-Julia Rufus CHARAX
| | | | /-Gaius Asinius Nicomachus ASINIUS
| | | | | \-Gaia Asinis Frugilla ASINIS
| | | | | \-Gaia Asinis Iulia ASINIS
| | | | /-Gaius Asinius Lepidus ASINIUS
| | | | | \-Claudia Antonia Lepida CLAUDIUS
| | | \- ASINIA
| | | \-Cornelia Orfita Salvidiena ORFITUS
| \-Pupiena Rufina PUPIENUS
| \-Vitrasius Pretextus VITRASIUS
Marcus Maecius Memmius Furius Baburius Caecilianus Placidus
| /-Metilus DE ROME
| /-Metilus DE ROME
| | | /-Marcus Acillius Memmius Glabrio DE ROME
| | \-Acilia DE ROME
| /-Maecius DE ROME
| | | /-Aquilius DE ROME
| | \-Aquilia DE ROME
| /-Marcus DE ROME
| | | /-Polycarpe DE MARATHON
| | | /-Tiberius DE MARATHON
| | | /-Tiberius DE MARATHON
| | | | | /-Claudius DE SPARTE
| | | | \-Claudia DE SPARTE
| | | | \-Claudia TYNDAREUS
| | | /-Herode DE MARATHON
| | | | | /-Lucius DE CORINTHE
| | | | | /-Rufus DE CORINTHE
| | | | \-Aggripine D'ATHÈNES
| | | | | /-Tiberius DE MARATHON
| | | | \-Claudia DE MARATHON
| | | | \-Claudia DE SPARTE
| | \-Appia DE MARATHON
| | | /-Marcus Bradua DE ROME
| | | /-Marcus Bradua DE ROME
| | | | | /-Metilus DE ROME
| | | | \-Metilia DE ROME
| | | | \-Acilia DE ROME
| | \-Appia Bradua DE ROME
| | | /-Caucilius DE ROME
| | | /-Caucilius DE ROME
| | | | \-Atria DE ROME
| | \-Caucidia TERTULLA
| | | /-Bellicus DE ROME
| | \-Bellica DE ROME
| /-Marcus Maecius Probus Major DE ROME
| | \-Manlia Minor DE ROME
| /-Marcus Pomponius Maecius PROBUS
| | | /-Aelius Afer DE ROME
| | | /-Aulus Gallus Larcius DE ROME
| | | | \-Ulpia Trainus
| | | /-Aulus Larcius Quirinus Lepidus Sulpicianus DE ROME
| | | | | /-Sulpicius Camerinus DE ROME
| | | | \-Sulpicia Telero DE ROME
| | | | \-Postumia FESTA DE ROME
| | | /-Aulus Iunius Rufin DE ROME
| | | | | /-Lucius Arrius DE ROME
| | | | | /-Lucius Arrius Plarianus AUFIDIUS TURBO
| | | | | | \-Plaria Vera DE ROME
| | | | \-Arria Sabina
| | | | | /-Aulus Gallus Larcius DE ROME
| | | | \-Atilia Sabina DE ROME
| | | | \-Sulpicia Telero DE ROME
| | | /-Aulus Lunius Rufus DE ROME
| | | | | /-Quintus Plarius
| | | | | /-Quintus Plarius
| | | | | /-Aulus Egrilius RUFUS II
| | | | \-Egrilla DE ROME
| | | | \-Placia Vera
| | | /-Lucius Junius Rufinus Proculianus Proculianus
| | | | \-Triaria Vibiana Pomponia Pomponia
| | \-Pomponia Arria DE ROME
| | | /-Marcus Nonius MUCIANUS
| | | /-Marcus Nonius Mucianus Publius Delpius PEREGRINUS
| | | | | /-Publius Delphinus PEREGRINUS
| | | | \-Delpia
| | | | \-Alfia
| | | /-Marcus Nonius DE ROME
| | | | \-Manilia
| | \-Arria Sextia PAULINA
| | | /-Lucius Junius Caessenius PAETUS
| | | /-Lucius Junius Caessennius ANTONINUS
| | | | | /-Gnaeus Arrius Antoninus Calpernius ANTONINUS
| | | | | | \-Mariamne Caecina Arria PISO
| | | | \-Arria ANTONIA
| | | | \-Plotia ISAURICA
| | \-Arria Caesennia PAULINA
| /-Marcus Maecius PROBUS
| | | /-Marcus Pupienus Africanus DE ROME
| | | | \-Pupienia Sextia Paulina CETHEGILLA
| | \-Pupienia Sextia Paulina CETHEGILLA
| | | /-Lucius Eggius Marullus
| | | /-Lucius Eggius Ambibulus Pomponius Longinus
| | | | | /-Marcus POMPONIUS Bassulus
| | | | \-Pomponia
| | | | \-Cantria LONGINA
| | | /-Lucius Eggius Marullus
| | | /-Lucius Cossonius Eggius Marullus
| | | | | /-Lucius Cossonius Gallus Vecilius CRISPINUS
| | | | \-Cossonia
| | | | | /-Lucius DOMITIUS
| | | | | /-Lucius DOMITIUS
| | | | | | \- ANNAEA
| | | | \-Clodia PATRUINA
| | | | \-Clodia DECMINA
| | | /-Lucius Cossonius Scipio Orfitus
| | | | | /-Servius Cornelius Scipio SALVIDIENUS ORFITUS
| | | | \-Cornelia NEGRINA
| | | | | /-Marcus Nonius MUCIANUS
| | | | | /-Marcus Nonius Mucianus Publius Delpius PEREGRINUS
| | | | | | \-Delpia
| | | | | /-Marcus Nonius DE ROME
| | | | | | \-Manilia
| | | | \-Arria Sextia PAULINA
| | | | | /-Lucius Junius Caessenius PAETUS
| | | | | /-Lucius Junius Caessennius ANTONINUS
| | | | | | \-Arria ANTONIA
| | | | \-Arria Caesennia PAULINA
| | \-Cornelia Marullina LUCIA
| /-Marcus Aurelus Probus DE ROME
\-Maecia CETHEGILLA
| /-Titus Flavius PETRONIUS
| /-Titus Flavius Sabinus CONSUL SUFFECTUS
| | | /- TERTULLUS
| | \-Tertulla
| /-Titus Flavius Sabinus, Roman Consul
| | | /-Herodes II POLLIO VESPASIUS
| | \-Vespasia POLLA
| | \-Julia Berenice RAINHA DE ROMA
| /-Titus Flavius SABINUS V
| | | /-Marcus Arrecinus ARRECINUS
| | | /-Marcus Arrecinus Clemens, Prefect of the Roman Praetorian Guard
| | | | | /-Tertullus DI ROMA
| | | | \-Tertulla TERTULLUS
| | | | | /-Marcus Junius BRUTUS
| | | | \-Alfridia DI ROMA
| | | | | /-Quintus Servilius CAEPIO
| | | | \-Servilia Caepia MAJOR
| | | | \-Livia Augusta DRUSILLA
| | \-Arrencina Clementina ARRECINUS
| | | /-Tiberius Julius LUPUS
| | | /-Tiberius Julius Lupus JULIUS
| | | /-Tiberius Julius Lupus JULIUS
| | \-Julia JULIUS
| /-Titus Flavius SABINUS I
| | | /-Titus Flavius PETRONIUS
| | | /-Titus Flavius Sabinus CONSUL SUFFECTUS
| | | | | /- TERTULLUS
| | | | \-Tertulla
| | | /-Imperator Caesar Titus Vespasianus Flavius AUGUSTUS
| | | | | /-Herodes II POLLIO VESPASIUS
| | | | \-Vespasia POLLA
| | | | \-Julia Berenice RAINHA DE ROMA
| | | /-Titus Flavius DOMITIANUS
| | | | | /-Flavius LIBERALIS
| | | | \-Flavia DOMITILIA
| | \-Julia Sabina FLAVIA
| | | /-Marcus Junius BRUTUS
| | | /-Roman Senator Quintus Marcius Barea SORANUS
| | | | | /-Quintus Servilius CAEPIO
| | | | | /-Quintus Servilius CAEPIO
| | | | | | \-Caecilia METALLA
| | | | \-Servilia Caepia MAJOR
| | | | | /-Marcus Livius DRUSUS
| | | | \-Livia Augusta DRUSILLA
| | | | \-Cornelia Scipionis DRUSUS II
| | | /-Quintus Marcius BAREA SURA, SENATOR
| | \-Marcia FURNILLA Wife of Roman Emperor Titus
| | | /-Aulus Antonius Rufus VON ROM
| | \-Antonia FURNILLA
| /-Marcus Antonius GORDIANUS
| | | /-Iunius Licinius BALBUS
| | | /-Junius Licinius BALBUS II
| | | | \-Servilia Prudens of Rome
| | \-Antonia Gordiana Balba Jun II
| | \-Maecia Faustinia Antonia GORDIANA
\-Faustina Furia DE ROME
| /-Gaius Vettius Sabianus DE ROME
| /-Gaius Furius Sabinus Aquila Timesitheus DE ROME
| | \-Grata DE ROME
\-Furia Sabina TRANQUILLINA
| /-Furius DE ROME
\-Fura DE ROME
| /-Titus Aurelius Fulvus Boionus Antoninus Antonin le Pieux DE ROME
| /-Pontius PONTII
| | \-Annia Galeria Faustina Faustine L'Ancienne DE ROME
\-Pontia PONTII
\-Flava DE ROME
Descendants of Marcus Maecius Memmius Furius Baburius Caecilianus Placidus
1 Marcus Maecius Memmius Furius Baburius Caecilianus Placidus
=Fabia Paulina Placidus TITIANIA
2 Maecia Avienus PLACIDA
=Postumius Rufius Festus Avienus
3 Rufius Maecius Placidus
=Valeria
=Adeodata MAGNA
=Rogatus DE NICOPOLIS
3 (Sainte) Paula DE ROME DE NICOPOLIS-PLACIDUS DE ROME
- Birth: 1 JUN 30, Italica, Seville, Andalucia, Spain
- LifeSketch: Marcus Ulpius Trajanus was born on 18 September at Italica near Seville, most likely in the year AD 52. His Spanish origin made him the first emperor not to come from Italy. Although he was from an old Umbrian family from Tuder in northern Italy which had chosen to settle in Spain. So his family was not a purely provincial one. His father, also called Marcus Ulpius Trajanus, was the first of the to reach the office of senator, commanded the Tenth Legion 'Fretensis' in the Jewish War of AD 67-68, and became consul in around AD 70. And in about AD 75, he became governor of Syria, one of the key military provinces in the empire. Later he also was to be governor of the provinces of Baetica and Asia. Trajan served in Syria as a military tribune during the governorship of his father. He enjoyed a thriving career, gaining the office of praetorship in AD 85. Soon after he won command of the Seventh Legion 'Gemina' based at Legio (Leon) in northern Spain. It was in AD 88/89 that he marched this legion into Upper Germany help in suppressing the rebellion of Saturninus against Domitian. Trajan's army arrived too late to play any part in crushing the revolt. Though Trajan's swift actions on the emperor's behalf won him the goodwill of Domitian and so he was elected as consul in AD 91. Such close ties to Domitian naturally became a source of some embarassment after the loathed Domitian's murder. Domitian's successor Nerva though was not a man to hold a grudge and in AD 96 Trajan was made governor of Upper Germany. Then, late in the year AD 97 Trajan received a handwritten note from Nerva, informing him of his adoption. If Trajan had any form of advance knowledge of his impending adoption is not known. His supporters in Rome may well been lobbying on his behalf. Trajan's adoption was naturally pure politics. Nerva required a powerful and popular heir in order to prop up his severly shaken imperial authority. Trajan was highly respected within the army and his adoption was the best possible remedy against the resentment much of the army felt against Nerva. But Trajan didn't come speeding back to Rome in order to help restore Nerva's authority. Rather than going to Rome he summoned the leaders of the earlier mutiny by the praetorians to Upper Germany. But instead of receiving a promised promotion, they were executed on arrival. Such ruthless actions made it quite clear that with Trajan as part of it, Rome's government was not to be messed with. Nerva died on 28 January AD 98. But Trajan once more felt no need for hasty, potentially undignified, action. Far more he went on a tour of inspection to see the legions long the Rhine and Danube frontiers.With Domitian's memory still held dear by the legions it was a wise move by Trajan to bolster his support among the soldiers with a personal visit to their frontier strongholds. Trajan's eventual entry at Rome in AD 99 was a triumph. Jubilant crowds rejoiced at his arrival. The new emperor entered the city on foot, he embraced each of the senators and even walked among the ordinary people. This was unlike any other Roman emperor and perhaps grants us a glimpse of Trajan's true greatness. Such modesty and openess easily helped the new emperor gain yet more support during the first years of his reign. Such humility and respect for the senate as well as for the simple people showed when Trajan promised that he would always keep the senate informed about the affairs of government and when he declared that the emperor's right to rule was to be compatible with the freedom of the people who were ruled. Trajan was an educated but not an especially learned man, who no doubt was a powerful, very masculine figure. He loved hunting, ranging through forests and even climbing mountains. Further he possessed a true sense of dignity and humility which in the eyes of the Romans made him an emperor of true virtue. Under Trajan the programme of public works was enlarged substantially. Thoughout Trajan's reign there was an ever-increasing programme of public works. The roads network in Italy was renovated, sections which passed through wetlands being paved or placed on embankments and many bridges were built. Also provisions for the poor were made, especially for children. Special imperial funds (alimenta) were created for their upkeep. (This system would still be in use 200 years later!) But with all his virtues, emperor Trajan was not perfect. He tended to overindulge on wine and had a liking for young boys. More still he seemed to truly enjoy war. Much of his passion for war came from the simple fact that he was very good at it. He was a brilliant general, as shown by his military achievements. Quite naturally he was very popular with the troops, especially due to his willingness to share in the hardships of his soldiers. Trajan's most famous campaign is undoubtedly that against Dacia, a powerful kingdom north of the Danube in modern Romania. Two wars were fought against it, resulting in its destruction and annexation as a Roman province in AD 106. The story of the Dacian Wars is illustrated in a the impressive relief carvings which spiral upwards around 'Trajan's Column', a monumental pillar standing Trajan's Forum in Rome. Much of the great treasure conquered in Dacia was used to build public works, including a new harbour at Ostia, and Trajan's Forum. But Trajan's passion for military life and warfare would grant him no rest. In AD 114 he was at war again. And he should spend the rest of his life campaigning in ths east against the Parthian empire. He annexed Armenia and spectacularly conquered the whole of Mesopatamia, including the Parthian capital Ctesiphon. But Trajan's star then began to fade. Revolts among the Jews in the middle east and the recently conquered Mesopotamians weakened his position to continue the war and military setbacks tarnished his air of invincibility. Trajan withdrew his troops to Syria and set out back to Rome. But he should not see his capital again. Already suffering from circulatory problems, which Trajan suspected were due to poison, he suffered a stroke which partially paralyzed him. The end came shortly after when he died in Selinus in Cilicia on 9 August AD 117. He body was taken to Seleucia where it was cremated. His ashes were then carried back to Rome and were placed in a golden urn into the base of 'Trajan's Colum'. Trajan's fame as the near perfect Roman ruler was remembered for time to come. His example was what later emperors at least aspired to live up to. And during the fourth century the senate still prayed for any new emperor to be 'More fortunate than Augustus and better than Trajan' ('felicior Augusto, melior Traiano'). http://www.roman-empire.net/highpoint/trajan.html
- Death: 9 AUG 100, Selinus, Cilicia, Turkey
- Partnership with: Marcia FURNILLA Wife of Roman Emperor Titus
- Child: UPIA Marciara TRAIANA Birth: AUG 48
- Child: Marcus Ulpius Traianus II of ROME Birth: 18 SEP 53, Italica, Seville, Andalucia, Spain
- Child: Marcus Ulpius Nerva Emperor Trajan OF TRAIANUS Birth: 18 SEP 56, Italica, Ancient Hispania
- Child: Ulpia Marciara Traiana Birth: ABT 50, Italica - Santiponce, Seville, Andalusia, Spain
Descendants of Marcus Ulpius Traianus the Elder
1 Marcus Ulpius Traianus the Elder
=Marcia FURNILLA Wife of Roman Emperor Titus
2 UPIA Marciara TRAIANA
2 Marcus Ulpius Traianus II of ROME
2 Marcus Ulpius Nerva Emperor Trajan OF TRAIANUS
2 Ulpia Marciara Traiana
=Gaius Salonius Matidius PATRUINUS
3 Salonia Matidia Augusta Major
=Lucius Vibius Sabinus Scribonius LIBO FRUGI RUPILIUS
=Publius Coelius
3 Publius Coelius Apollinaris
- Father: Lucius VIPSANIUS
- Birth: 63 BC, Arpino, Rome, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Praetor Urbanis, 40 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Consul of Rome, 37 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: curule Aedile, 33 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Consul of Rome, BET 28 BC AND 27 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Tribunicia potestas, 18 BC, Roma, Roman Empire
- Military: Participated in Caesar's Civil War, BET 49 BC AND 45 BC, Hispania, Graeca, Italia, Illyria...
- Awarded the Golden Crown: For his naval victory at Mylae and Naulochus over Sextus Pompeius, 36 BC, Puteoli, Naples, Roman Republic
- Fact: He was a close friend, son-in-law and lieutenant of Emperor Gaius Julius Caesar Augustus Octavianus., BET 44 BC AND 12 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia - Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa (64/62 BC – 12 BC) was a Roman consul, statesman, general and architect. He was a close friend, son-in-law, and lieutenant to Emperor Gaius Julius Caesar Augustus Octavianus. Was sent by Julius Caesar to Apolonia with Octavius and Maecenas to continue their studies. He was responsible for the construction of some of the most notable buildings in the history of Rome and for important military victories, most notably at the Battle of Actium in 31 BC against the forces of Mark Antony and Cleopatra. As a result of these victories, Octavianus became the first Roman Emperor, adopting the name of Augustus. Agrippa assisted Augustus in making Rome "a city of marble" and renovating aqueducts to give all Romans, from every social class, access to the highest quality public services. He was responsible for the creation of many baths, porticoes and gardens, as well as the original Pantheon. Agrippa was also husband to Julia the Elder (who later married the second Emperor Tiberius), maternal grandfather to Caligula, and maternal great-grandfather to the Emperor Nero. Virtually nothing is known of his early life until he is found with Maecenas as the companions of Octavian (the future emperor Augustus) at Apollonia, in Illyria, at the time of Julius Caesar’s murder in 44. Octavian, the adopted son of Caesar, returned with Agrippa to Italy to make his political claim as Caesar’s heir. In 43 Agrippa is thought to have held the office of tribune of the plebs; presumably in this capacity he prosecuted the tyrannicide Cassius, then absent in the East. In the struggle for power after Julius Caesar’s death, Agrippa served as one of Octavian’s key military commanders. In 41–40 he fought against Mark Antony’s brother Lucius. In 40 he held the post of praetor urbanus (magistrate mainly in charge of administration of justice at Rome) and was a major figure in negotiating a settlement between Octavian and Antony at Brundisium. During the next two years he was away on campaigns in Aquitania and on the Rhine River. When he returned to Italy, he conspicuously refused to celebrate a triumph for his successes in the north, but in 37 he held the office of consul. In the spring of 37 Octavian and Antony came to an agreement at Tarentum, and it must have been then that Antony arranged the marriage of Agrippa to the daughter of Titus Atticus, a wealthy friend of Cicero. Octavian’s efforts to resist at sea the son of the republican general Gnaeus Pompey, Sextus Pompeius, had not met with success. Agrippa therefore took charge of the operations. He constructed a fine harbour at Puteoli in the Bay of Naples and then won, in 36, two decisive naval victories (at Mylae and Naulochus), ending the threat from Pompeius. For this achievement Agrippa was awarded a golden crown. In 35–34 Octavian waged a vigorous campaign in Dalmatia, and in this Agrippa had a distinguished military role. In 33 Agrippa served as curule aedile (magistrate of public buildings and works) at Rome, even though it was a much lower post than the consulate that he had already held. He used the opportunity to win favour for Octavian by spending his own funds lavishly on building baths, cleaning sewers, and improving the water supply. When Octavian and Antony finally came into direct conflict at the Battle of Actium in 31, Agrippa commanded the fleet and was primarily responsible for Octavian’s victory. During Octavian’s absence from Rome after Actium, Agrippa managed affairs in the city together with Maecenas, the great patron of poets. In 29–28 Agrippa and Octavian jointly conducted a census and carried out a purge of the Senate; in 28 and 27 Agrippa held the consulate again, both times with Octavian (from 27, Augustus) as his colleague. In 23, a year of constitutional crisis, Augustus fell ill and presented his signet ring to Agrippa, who seemed thus to be designated the emperor’s successor. Agrippa took Augustus’ daughter Julia as his wife after divorcing a niece of Augustus (Marcella the Elder), who had replaced Atticus’ daughter as his wife some four or five years previously. Agrippa went immediately to Mytilene on the island of Lesbos, from which he administered affairs in the East. The nature of Agrippa’s constitutional power (imperium) at this time is controversial. It has been argued whether the Senate in 23 gave him an imperium greater than that of any other provincial governor in the East (imperium majus). After Augustus’ death Roman historians claimed that Agrippa’s sojourn at Mytilene was a kind of exile as a result of Augustus’ preference for his own nephew Marcellus. This appears implausible. Agrippa was soon back in Rome to act on behalf of the emperor, who himself left for the East in 22. Before Augustus’ return, in 19, Agrippa had left for Gaul and Spain. In Spain he finally subdued the recalcitrant Cantabrians. Returning to Rome in 18, Agrippa received the power of a tribune (tribunicia potestas), which Augustus also possessed. Perhaps, too, he received an imperium majus, if he had not been granted it in 23. He participated in Augustus’ celebration of the Secular Games at Rome in 17, after which he returned to the East as vicegerent of the emperor. In 15 he accepted an invitation from Herod I the Great to visit Judaea; while in the East, he established colonies of veterans at Berytus and Heliopolis, in Lebanon. He next settled an uprising in the Bosporan kingdom on the Black Sea and set up the cultivated dynast Polemo as king. Herod led a fleet to support Agrippa in the Bosporan affair, and, when it was over, the two traveled together along the coast of western Asia Minor. In 13 Agrippa’s tribunicia potestas was renewed, and at this time without doubt he received (or had renewed) a grant of imperium majus. Troubles in Pannonia required his presence, but the rigours of the winter of 13–12 caused a fatal illness; he died in March of 12 BC. Augustus delivered a funeral oration in honour of his colleague; a fragment of that oration, in Greek translation, has recently come to light. Agrippa deserved the honours Augustus heaped upon him. It is conceivable that without Agrippa, Octavian would never have become emperor. Rome remembered him for his generosity in attending to aqueducts, sewers, and baths; and in the mid-20s he completed the celebrated Pantheon. One of Agrippa’s five children by Julia, Agrippina the Elder, was the mother of one emperor (Caligula) and the grandmother of another (Nero). Agrippa’s autobiography is lost, but an extensive geographical commentary that he wrote influenced the extant works of the geographer Strabo and of Pliny the Elder.
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Munda, 17 MAR 45 BC, Andalusia, Hispania
- Military: Participated in the Liberators' civil war -The Liberators' civil war (43–42 BC) was started by the Second Triumvirate to avenge Julius Caesar's assassination.[1] The war was fought by the forces of Mark Antony and Octavian (the Second Triumvirate members) against the forces of Caesar's assassins,[2] led by Marcus Junius Brutus and Gaius Cassius Longinus, also called the Liberatores. The latter were defeated by the Triumvirs at the Battle of Philippi[3] in October 42 BC,[4][5] and committed suicide.[6] Brutus would also commit suicide after the second part of the battle.[7][8][9], BET 43 BC AND 42 BC, Philippi, Macedonia, Greece
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Mutina -Around one year after Julius Caesar's murder, negotiations between the Roman Senate and Antony broke off. Antony gathered his legions and marched against one of the assassins Decimus Junius Brutus Albinus, who was governor of Cisalpine Gaul. Mark Antony had Decimus Brutus confined around Mutina (modern Modena), just south of the Padus (Po) River on the via Aemilia. Pansa was sent north from Rome to link with Hirtius and Octavian in order to provide Brutus with aid., BET 44 BC AND 30 BC, Mutina, Italia, Roman Empire
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Alexandria -The Battle of Alexandria was fought on July 1 to July 30, 30 BC between the forces of Octavian and Mark Antony during the Last war of the Roman Republic. It was the final battle of the Roman Republic. In the Battle of Actium, Antony had lost the majority of his fleet and had been forced to abandon the majority of his army in Greece, where without supplies they eventually surrendered., 30 JUL 30, Alexandria, Egypt
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Actium- The Battle of Actium was the decisive naval battle in the Last war of the Roman Republic, fought between the fleet of Octavian and the combined fleet of Mark Antony and Queen Cleopatra of Egypt. It took place on 2 September 31 BC in the Ionian Sea near the promontory of Actium in Greece., 2 SEP 31, Actium, Greece
- Military: He was a General in the Roman Army, serving from 45 BC to 12 BC
- LifeSketch: Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa (64/62 BC – 12 BC) was a Roman consul, statesman, general and architect. He was a close friend, son-in-law, and lieutenant to Emperor Gaius Julius Caesar Augustus Octavianus. Was sent by Julius Caesar to Apolonia with Octavius and Maecenas to continue their studies. He was responsible for the construction of some of the most notable buildings in the history of Rome and for important military victories, most notably at the Battle of Actium in 31 BC against the forces of Mark Antony and Cleopatra. As a result of these victories, Octavianus became the first Roman Emperor, adopting the name of Augustus. Agrippa assisted Augustus in making Rome "a city of marble" and renovating aqueducts to give all Romans, from every social class, access to the highest quality public services. He was responsible for the creation of many baths, porticoes and gardens, as well as the original Pantheon. Agrippa was also husband to Julia the Elder (who later married the second Emperor Tiberius), maternal grandfather to Caligula, and maternal great-grandfather to the Emperor Nero. Virtually nothing is known of his early life until he is found with Maecenas as the companions of Octavian (the future emperor Augustus) at Apollonia, in Illyria, at the time of Julius Caesar’s murder in 44. Octavian, the adopted son of Caesar, returned with Agrippa to Italy to make his political claim as Caesar’s heir. In 43 Agrippa is thought to have held the office of tribune of the plebs; presumably in this capacity he prosecuted the tyrannicide Cassius, then absent in the East. In the struggle for power after Julius Caesar’s death, Agrippa served as one of Octavian’s key military commanders. In 41–40 he fought against Mark Antony’s brother Lucius. In 40 he held the post of praetor urbanus (magistrate mainly in charge of administration of justice at Rome) and was a major figure in negotiating a settlement between Octavian and Antony at Brundisium. During the next two years he was away on campaigns in Aquitania and on the Rhine River. When he returned to Italy, he conspicuously refused to celebrate a triumph for his successes in the north, but in 37 he held the office of consul. In the spring of 37 Octavian and Antony came to an agreement at Tarentum, and it must have been then that Antony arranged the marriage of Agrippa to the daughter of Titus Atticus, a wealthy friend of Cicero. Octavian’s efforts to resist at sea the son of the republican general Gnaeus Pompey, Sextus Pompeius, had not met with success. Agrippa therefore took charge of the operations. He constructed a fine harbour at Puteoli in the Bay of Naples and then won, in 36, two decisive naval victories (at Mylae and Naulochus), ending the threat from Pompeius. For this achievement Agrippa was awarded a golden crown. In 35–34 Octavian waged a vigorous campaign in Dalmatia, and in this Agrippa had a distinguished military role. In 33 Agrippa served as curule aedile (magistrate of public buildings and works) at Rome, even though it was a much lower post than the consulate that he had already held. He used the opportunity to win favour for Octavian by spending his own funds lavishly on building baths, cleaning sewers, and improving the water supply. When Octavian and Antony finally came into direct conflict at the Battle of Actium in 31, Agrippa commanded the fleet and was primarily responsible for Octavian’s victory. During Octavian’s absence from Rome after Actium, Agrippa managed affairs in the city together with Maecenas, the great patron of poets. In 29–28 Agrippa and Octavian jointly conducted a census and carried out a purge of the Senate; in 28 and 27 Agrippa held the consulate again, both times with Octavian (from 27, Augustus) as his colleague. In 23, a year of constitutional crisis, Augustus fell ill and presented his signet ring to Agrippa, who seemed thus to be designated the emperor’s successor. Agrippa took Augustus’ daughter Julia as his wife after divorcing a niece of Augustus (Marcella the Elder), who had replaced Atticus’ daughter as his wife some four or five years previously. Agrippa went immediately to Mytilene on the island of Lesbos, from which he administered affairs in the East. The nature of Agrippa’s constitutional power (imperium) at this time is controversial. It has been argued whether the Senate in 23 gave him an imperium greater than that of any other provincial governor in the East (imperium majus). After Augustus’ death Roman historians claimed that Agrippa’s sojourn at Mytilene was a kind of exile as a result of Augustus’ preference for his own nephew Marcellus. This appears implausible. Agrippa was soon back in Rome to act on behalf of the emperor, who himself left for the East in 22. Before Augustus’ return, in 19, Agrippa had left for Gaul and Spain. In Spain he finally subdued the recalcitrant Cantabrians. Returning to Rome in 18, Agrippa received the power of a tribune (tribunicia potestas), which Augustus also possessed. Perhaps, too, he received an imperium majus, if he had not been granted it in 23. He participated in Augustus’ celebration of the Secular Games at Rome in 17, after which he returned to the East as vicegerent of the emperor. In 15 he accepted an invitation from Herod I the Great to visit Judaea; while in the East, he established colonies of veterans at Berytus and Heliopolis, in Lebanon. He next settled an uprising in the Bosporan kingdom on the Black Sea and set up the cultivated dynast Polemo as king. Herod led a fleet to support Agrippa in the Bosporan affair, and, when it was over, the two traveled together along the coast of western Asia Minor. In 13 Agrippa’s tribunicia potestas was renewed, and at this time without doubt he received (or had renewed) a grant of imperium majus. Troubles in Pannonia required his presence, but the rigours of the winter of 13–12 caused a fatal illness; he died in March of 12 BC. Augustus delivered a funeral oration in honour of his colleague; a fragment of that oration, in Greek translation, has recently come to light. Agrippa deserved the honours Augustus heaped upon him. It is conceivable that without Agrippa, Octavian would never have become emperor. Rome remembered him for his generosity in attending to aqueducts, sewers, and baths; and in the mid-20s he completed the celebrated Pantheon. One of Agrippa’s five children by Julia, Agrippina the Elder, was the mother of one emperor (Caligula) and the grandmother of another (Nero). Agrippa’s autobiography is lost, but an extensive geographical commentary that he wrote influenced the extant works of the geographer Strabo and of Pliny the Elder.
- Fact: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marcus_Vipsanius_Agrippa
- Fact: He was the right hand man and the best friend of emperor Augustus
- Fact: He was the right hand man and the best friend of emperor Augustus
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Philippi
- Military: Participated in Caesar's Civil War
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Munda
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Philippi
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Mutina
- Military: Participated in the Liberators' civil war
- Military: Participated in the final War of the Roman Republic
- Military: Participated in the post-Caesarian civil war
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Alexandria
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Alexandria
- Military: Participated in the final War of the Roman Republic
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Actium
- Military: Participated in the Liberators' civil war
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Mutina
- Military: Participated in the post-Caesarian civil war
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Munda
- Military: Participated in Caesar's Civil War
- Military: Participated in the Battle of Actium
- Death: MAR 12 BC, Roma, Roman Empire
- Burial: 12 BC, Rome, Italy, Roman Empire
Ancestors of Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa of Arpino
/-Lucius VIPSANIUS
Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa of Arpino
Descendants of Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa of Arpino
1 Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa of Arpino
=Julia Caesaris MAJOR
2 Vipsania Julia Agrippina MINOR
=Lucius Aemilius PAULLUS aka Aimibus Paulius “the Censor”
3 Julia of the Roman EMPIRE
=Gaius Octavius Laenas I of ROME
3 Ameilia Caesia LEPIDA
3 Dominia Lepida Ahenobartus DE ROME
3 Aemilia LEPIDA
3 Lepida Paetina of Roma
3 Marcus Aemillus LEPIDUS
=Pomponia Caecilia Attica of Rome Marriage: ABT 37 BC
2 Vipsania AGRIPPINA
=Tiberius Julius CEASAR AUGUSTUS Emperor of Rome Marriage: BET 19 BC AND 11 BC
3 Drusus Julius Caesar The YOUNGER
=Claudia Livillia JULIA of Rome Marriage: 4, Rome, Roma, Lazio, Italy
3 Marcus Vipsanius AGRIPPA of Rome
3 Drusus Julius CAESAR
3 "Tiberillus" SON DIED IN INFANCY
3 Gneus ASINIUS SALONINUS
3 Gaius Assinius Pollio II of Rome
3 Gaius Assinius SALONINUS
3 Lucius Assinius GALLUS
3 Servius Asinius CELER
3 ASSINIA
3 Marcus Asinius AGRIPPA
3 Asinius GALLUS
=Gaius Assinius Gallus Saloninus of Rome Marriage: 11 BC
3 Marcus Asinius AGRIPPA
=(Unknown)
3 Servius Asinius CELER
2 Vipsania ATTICA
=Claudia MARCELLA Major
2 Vipsania Marcelina
=Marcus Aemilius LEPIDUS
3 Aemilia LEPIDA
=Emperor Claudius I TIBERIUS DRESUS NERO,CAESAR OF ROME
=Drusus Julius CAESAR
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Marericus Aemilius IV Lepidus
/-Mamericus
| | /-Titus Tatius, King of the Sabines
| \-Tatia
/-Mamericus Aemilius I
/-Mamericus Aemilius II
/-Mamericus Aemilius III
Marericus Aemilius IV Lepidus
Descendants of Marericus Aemilius IV Lepidus
1 Marericus Aemilius IV Lepidus
=(Unknown)
2 Marcus Aemilius MAMERCUS
=(Unknown)
3 Lucius Aemilius Mamercus
=(Unknown)
- Partnership with: Richard HADLEY
Marriage: 28 JUN 1579, Saint Nicholas,Durham,Durham,England
- Child: Aneisha HEDLEY Birth: 1592, Little Plumstead, Norfolk, Englan. Baptized in Durham, England
Descendants of Margaret
1 Margaret
=Richard HADLEY Marriage: 28 JUN 1579, Saint Nicholas,Durham,Durham,England
2 Aneisha HEDLEY
=Edmund LUDHAM Marriage: ABT 1605, Norfolk, England Marriage: 7 AUG, Norfolk, England
3 Susan LUDDEN
3 Edmund LUDDEN
3 James Henry LUDDEN
=Mary Alice JOHNSON Marriage: 10 FEB 1631, Weymouth, Norfolk, Massachusetts, United States Marriage: 10 FEB 1631, Weymouth, Norfolk, Mass Marriage: 1636, New England, USA Marriage: Married by Capt. Torrey Marriage: Weymouth, Massachusetts Bay, British Colonial America Marriage: Weymouth, Massachusetts Bay, British Colonial America
=Alice KINHAM Marriage: 1655, Weymouth, Suffolk, Massachusetts, United States
3 Lelirs LUDHAM
3 Anne LUDDEN
3 Susan LUDDEN
3 Anne Ane LUDDEN
- Birth: 5 FEB 615, Soissons Nord, Aisne, Picardie, France
- Death: 4 AUG 677, Soissons Nord, Aisne, Picardie, France
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Descendants of Marie
1 Marie
=(Unknown)
2 Warin PARIS
=(Unknown)
3 Théodrade
=Chrodobertus II DE NEUSTRIA
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Descendants of Marina Severa
1 Marina Severa
=Valentinian I Emperor of ROME
2 GRATIAN
- Birth: 320, Sirmium, Pannonia
- Title Of Nobility: Empress of the Roman Empire
- LifeSketch: First wife. Died some time after giving birth to first son.
- Death: BEF 375
Descendants of Marina Severa, Empress of the Roman Empire
1 Marina Severa, Empress of the Roman Empire
=Flavius Valentinian I Emperor of the Western Roman Empire Marriage: ABT 340, Pannonia, Roman Empire
2 Gratian Emperor of the Western Roman Empire
Ancestors of Marta bar Abba
/-Shila Ish KFAR TAMARTA
/-Acha
/-Abba bar Acha bar Sallah AL-KAFRI
Marta bar Abba
Ancestors of Maso vom Elsaß
/-Adalrich Heticho VON ELSASS
/-Adalbert Herzog im Elsaß
| | /-Clodius VI King of the Franks DE COLOGNE
| | /-Merovech of the Salian Franks
| | | \-Ildegonde DE COLOGNE
| | /-Childeric OF THE SALIAN FRANKS
| | | | /-Chlodio KING OF FRANKS AT TOXANDRIE
| | | \-Chlodeswinthe Verica of Cologne
| | | \-Hildegonde DE COLOGNE
| | /-Clovis King of the FRANKS
| | | | /-Chlodion II DES FRANCS
| | | | /-Chlodwig I Medelphus DES FRANCS
| | | | | \-Hildegone Hildegarde DE COLOGNE
| | | \-Basina of Thuringia
| | | | /-Widelphe DE SAXE
| | | \-Basine DE SAXE
| | | \-Amalaberge DES OSTROGOTHS
| | /-Clothaire King of the Franks of NEUSTRIA
| | | \-Clotilde SAINT de Bourgogne
| | /-Chilperic I King of the Franks at Soissons
| | | \-Aregund of Thuringia
| | /-Chlothar II King of NEUSTRIA
| | | \-Fredegond,The Slave DE CAMBRAI ,D`ARDENNES
| | /-Austrasia and Bourgogne Dagobert King of NEUSTRIA I
| | | \-Bertrude DE BURGONDIE
| | /-Sigebert III King of Austrasia
| | | \-Ragnetrude THE CONCUBINE of Bourgogne
| \-Berswinde D'AUSTRASIE
| \- MONACHILDE
Maso vom Elsaß
\-Gerelind von Pfalzel
- Birth: ABT 835
- Alt. Death: AFT 911
- Death: AFT 911
Descendants of Mathilde Gräfin im Graingau und Threcwithi
1 Mathilde Gräfin im Graingau und Threcwithi
=Reginbern Graf in Sachsen
2 Thiadrich Graf in Westfalen
=Reinhild Marriage: BEF 892
3 Mathilde Königin des Ostfränkischen REICH
=Heinrich VON SACHSEN König des Ostfrankenreiches Marriage: 909, Wallhausen, , Saxony-
3 Bia
3 Amalrada
3 Immed
- Birth: 990, Sarthe, Pays de la Loire, Co. of Anjou, France
- Also known as: Maud
- Also known as: Mathide de Condé-sur-Noireau
- Also known as: Mathilda de Galelon Hildeburg
- Also known as: Mehault du lignaige de Guennelon
- Also known as: Hildeburge daughter of Arnoulf
- Also known as: Hildeburge du Maine
- Alt. Birth Place: 970, Condé-sur-Noireau, Calvados, Normandy, France
- LifeSketch: HER MOTHER/FAM: Mathilde de Ganelon Hildeburg (de Condé-sur-Noireau) Also Known As: "Mehault du lignaige de Guennelon", "Maud", "Matilda", "/Hildeburg/" Birthdate: 983 Birthplace: Conde, Calvados, Basse Normandie, France Death: Died 1024 in Bellême, Orne, Lower Normandy, France Immediate Family: Daughter of Arnulf de Ganelon and Gisia de Ganelon Wife of Guillaume I, 'Talvas' de Belleme, seigneur d'Alençon Mother of Guillaume II "Talvas" de Bellême, seigneur d'Alençon; Yves de Bellême; Warinus de Bellême, seigneur de Domfront; Foulques de Bellême; Benoit de Bellême and 1 other Occupation: Dame, de Condé-sur-Noireau
- Death: 1067, Alençon, Orne, Normandy, France
Descendants of Mathilde de Ganelon Hildeburg
1 Mathilde de Ganelon Hildeburg
=Yves de Creil DE BELLEME
- Father: William the Conqueror of ENGLAND
- Mother: Matilda OF FLANDERS, Queen Consort of England
- Birth: 1061, Falaise Castle, Falaise, Calvados, Normandy
- She fell in love with Edwin of England at the coronation of her mother as the new Queen: William refused Edwin's request for her hand in marriage much to the dismay of both Edwin and Matilda, ABT 1068, Winchester, England
- She was forcibly betrothed to Alphonse "the Valiant", VII of Leon, Spain, by her father against her will: En route to the presumptive marriage, she died, 1086, Meulan, Normandy, France
- Title Of Nobility: Princess of England
- LifeSketch: Matilda was born around 1061, died perhaps about 1086. Mentioned in Domesday Book as a daughter of William. MAUD OF ENGLAND. In 1086 Geoffrey held Hatch Warren, Hampshire of the king for the service which he performed for Maud the king's daughter. She died 26 April, year unknown.
- Death: 26 APR 1086, Saint-Nicaise de Meulan, Meulan, Normandy, France
- Burial: 1086, Saint-Nicaise de Meulan, Meulan, Normandy, France
Ancestors of Matilda de Normandie
/-Rollo DE NORMANDIE
/-Guillaume I DE NORMANDIE
| \-Poppa DE BAYEUX
/-Richard I Duc DE NORMANDIE
| \-Sprota of Bretagne
/-Richard II, LE BON Duc de Normandie
| | /-Harold BLUETOOTH
| \-Gunnora Haroldsdottir DE CRÉPON
/-Robert I NORMANDIE
| | /-Riwallon OF POHER III
| | /-Salomon OF BRITTANY
| | /-Ridoredh DE VANNES
| | /-Alain I DE BRETAGNE
| | | | /-Gaerwant DE BRITTANY
| | | \-Aremburge DE POHER
| | | | /-Pépin II Comte de Vermandois
| | | | /-Herbert I de Vermandois
| | | \-Wembrit Sporte of Nantes
| | | \-Beatrice de Morvois
| | /-Pascweten DE RENNES
| | | | /-Daniel Dremrud BRETAGNE
| | | | /-Budic De Poher, King Of Bretagne (Britanny)
| | | | | \-Hadeloge HERSTAL
| | | | /-Erispoë 1 DE BROËEC of Poher
| | | | | | /-David DE FRAMLING
| | | | | \-Marmoëc Miriam FRAMLING of Brittany
| | | | /-Gurvant DE RENNES Seigneur de Bretagne
| | | | | | /-Angus II Fergus des Pictes des Scots de Loch ABER
| | | | | | /-Enist des Pictes DE LORN
| | | | | | | \-Deagone de Lorn DES SCOTS
| | | | | \-Melior dite La Flatteuse d'Avalon DES PICTES
| | | \-Oreguen de Rennes
| | | \-Marianne of France PRINCESS
| | /-Juhel BÉRENGER comte de Rennes
| | | | /-Bérengar II of Neustria
| | | \-Judith Bérenger DE BAYEAUX
| | /-Conan Ier DE BRETAGNE Duc de Bretagne
| \-Judith de BRETAGNE Duchesse de Normandie
| | /-Hugh D' ALSACE III
| | /-Tertulle Comte d'Anjou
| | | | /-Hugh Tours D' ALSACE
| | | \-Torquat DE RENNES
| | | \-Ava DE MORVOIS
| | /-Ingelger vicomte d’Angers
| | | \-Petronilla
| | /-Foulques I D'ANJOU
| | | \-Adelais DE BUZANÇAIS
| | /-Foulques II D'ANJOU
| | | | /-Garnier DE NANTES
| | | | /-Adalhard DE LOCHES
| | | | | \-Ingeltrude Ruthildis VON HESSEN
| | | | /-Garnier DE LOCHES
| | | | | | /-Torquat de Rennes DE TOUR
| | | | | \-Adelaide Aelinde DE GATINAIS
| | | \-Roscille DE LOCHES
| | | \-Tescenda ou Tecandra
| | /-Geoffrey I D'ANJOU
| | | \-Gerberge DE GÂTINAIS
| \-Ermengarde D'ANJOU Duchesse de Bretagne
| | /-Pippin VON ITALIEN
| | /-Bernhard König in Italien und König der Langobarden
| | /-Pépin II Comte de Vermandois
| | | | /-Heribert DE GELLONE comte carolingien
| | | \-Cunegonde DE GELLONE
| | /-Herbert I de Vermandois
| | /-Herbert II DE VERMANDOIS
| | /-Robert II DE VERMANDOIS
| | | | /-Robert II Graf im Oberrheingau und im Wormsgau
| | | | /-Robert III Graf im Oberrheingau und im Wormsgau
| | | | | \- WILLASWINDE
| | | | /-Robert IV Comte DE PARIS
| | | | | | /-Adrien D'ORLÉANS Comte d'Orléans, comte palatin
| | | | | \-Waldrada von Orléans
| | | | | \-Waldrada D'AUTUN
| | | | /-Robert I, ROI DES FRANCS
| | | | | | /-Luitfrid II DE SUNDGAU
| | | | | | /-Hugo Graf von Tours
| | | | | | | \-Hiltrude DE WORMSGAU
| | | | | \-Adélaïde DE TOURS
| | | | | \-Ava HUGO Graf von Tours
| | | \-Adela ROBERTIEN
| | | \-Aélis DU MAINE
| \-Adele DE VERMANDOIS
| \-Adelaide DE CHALON
/-William the Conqueror of ENGLAND
| \-Herleva DE FALAISE
Matilda de Normandie
\-Matilda OF FLANDERS, Queen Consort of England
- Birth: ABT 1021
- Death: ABT 1102, Normandy, France
Descendants of Matilda Maud
1 Matilda Maud
=Eudo of St James Marriage: ABT 1040, Normandy, France
- Also known as: King of the Benjamite Tribe Cyrus of Magdala
- Also known as: King Cyrus of Magdala
- Also known as: Hérode I Le Grand Roi d'Israël
- Also known as: King Herod "The Great" Cyrus (La Tour) of Magdala
- Matthew Syro Levi Alphaeus Syrus Ben Jairus: https://www.genealogieonline.nl/en/genealogy-heynen/P6783.php
- Possible Son of Annas, the Chief Priest: https://www.geni.com/people/Matthias-ben-Ananus-High-Priest-of-Iudaea/6000000021729702967
- Title Of Nobility: (Priest Jairus)
- Title Of Nobility: Saint Lazarus
- Title Of Nobility: King of the Bengamite Tribe
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Descendants of Matthew Syro
1 Matthew Syro
=Eucharia MENAHEM Essene
2 Mary MAGDELENE
=Jesus CHRIST ben Elohim
3 Sarah Damaris BAT YESHUAH
=Antenor KING OF THE WEST FRANKS IV
3 Joseph Rama Theo BEN JESUS Bishop of Saraz
Ancestors of Mechthilde of Ireland
/-Witte VON SACHSEN der Jüte
/-Witta VON SACHSEN
| | /-Vecta von den Jutten DER SACHSE
| \-Gunhilde VON RÜGEN von Sachsen
| \-Waldo KRANGLI I
/-Wihtgils of Jütland
| | /-Vultwulf D`OSTROGOTHIE
| | /-Waldorans D'OSTROGOTHIE
| \-Valdamerca DES OSTROGOTHS
| | /-Clodius Celsinus ADELPHIUS of the Roman Senate
| \-Claudia Adelphia DE ROME
| \-Faltonia Betitia The Poetess PROBA
/-Hengist KING OF KENT
/-Oeric OF KENT
/-Octa King of Kent
| \-Unknown Spouse of Oeric of KENT
/-Eormenric KING OF KENT
/-Æthelberht of KENT
| | /-Criomthann of MUMHAN
| | /-Aodh OF MUMHAN
| | /-Failbe FLANN OF MUMHAN
| | /-Colgan of MUMHAN
| | | \-Snedghusa IERLAND
| | /-Natfraich KING OF MUMHAN
| | | | /-Nath Í mac Fiachrach
| | | \- QUEEN OF MUMHAN
| | /-Snedghus Prince Mumhan Mac NATFRAICH
| | | | /-Freothalaf (Frealaf) LORD OF THE ANGLO SAXONS
| | | \-Failbe Flann QUEEN OF MUMHAN
| | /-Donnghus of MUMHAN
| | | | /-Ainmuire, High King OF IRELAND - FOUNDED THE CHURCH
| | | \-Sabilla of MUMHAN of Ireland
| | | \-Sabhdh, PRINCESS OF ALBA
| \-Urchada QUEEN of Kent
| \-Unknown Spouse ofDonnghal de Mumhan of KENT
/-Eadbald of KENT
| | /-Richimir DE TOXANDRIE
| | /-Theodimir Magnus Riparian FRANKS
| | | \-Ascyla Queen of Lombardy DE ASCYLLIUS
| | /-Clodius VI King of the Franks DE COLOGNE
| | | | /-Valentinian I Emperor of ROME
| | | \-Flavia Galla Western VALENTINIANUS
| | | \-Flavia Justinia Iustina ROME
| | /-Merovech of the Salian Franks
| | | \-Ildegonde DE COLOGNE
| | /-Childeric OF THE SALIAN FRANKS
| | | | /-Flavius Richomeres DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | /-Pharamond KING OF THE FRANKS
| | | | | \-Hatilde DE FRANCIE
| | | | /-Chlodio KING OF FRANKS AT TOXANDRIE
| | | | | | /-Genebald II Duke of the West Franks
| | | | | \-Argotta Rosemund Queen of the Franks
| | | | | \-Blesinda of The Sicambrian Franks PRINCESS
| | | \-Chlodeswinthe Verica of Cologne
| | | | /-Marcouris DE COLOGNE
| | | \-Hildegonde DE COLOGNE
| | | | /-Richomer DES FRANCS
| | | \-Hildegonde DE LOMBARDIE
| | | \-Ascyla DE FRANCE
| | /-Clovis King of the FRANKS
| | | | /-Richomer Flavius Richomeres DES FRANCS
| | | | /-Pharamond DES FRANCS
| | | | | \-Ascyla I Ascille DES FRANCS
| | | | /-Chlodion II DES FRANCS
| | | | | | /-ChlodioI Clodio DES FRANCS RHENANS
| | | | | \-Blesinde DES FRANCS RHENANS
| | | | | \-Blesinde II D`ALEMANIE
| | | | /-Chlodwig I Medelphus DES FRANCS
| | | | | | /-ChlodioI Clodio DES FRANCS RHENANS
| | | | | | /-Marcomir DES FRANCS
| | | | | | | \-Blesinde II D`ALEMANIE
| | | | | \-Hildegone Hildegarde DE COLOGNE
| | | | | | /-Aldeoch DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | | \-Aldegonde Hildegonde DE LOMBARDIE
| | | \-Basina of Thuringia
| | | | /-Widelphe DE SAXE
| | | \-Basine DE SAXE
| | | \-Amalaberge DES OSTROGOTHS
| | /-Clothaire King of the Franks of NEUSTRIA
| | | \-Clotilde SAINT de Bourgogne
| | /-Charibert l King of The Franks at Paris
| | | \-Queen Ingonde Ingunde Radegond Von Franks VONTHURINGIA
| \-Bertha MEROVINGIAN
| \-Ingoberga of Paris
| \-Carathene VAN ZWABEN
/-Eorcenberht of KENT
| | /-Richimir DE TOXANDRIE
| | /-Theodimir Magnus Riparian FRANKS
| | | \-Ascyla Queen of Lombardy DE ASCYLLIUS
| | /-Clodius VI King of the Franks DE COLOGNE
| | | | /-Valentinian I Emperor of ROME
| | | \-Flavia Galla Western VALENTINIANUS
| | | \-Flavia Justinia Iustina ROME
| | /-Merovech of the Salian Franks
| | | \-Ildegonde DE COLOGNE
| | /-Childeric OF THE SALIAN FRANKS
| | | | /-Flavius Richomeres DE TOXANDRIE
| | | | /-Pharamond KING OF THE FRANKS
| | | | | \-Hatilde DE FRANCIE
| | | | /-Chlodio KING OF FRANKS AT TOXANDRIE
| | | | | | /-Genebald II Duke of the West Franks
| | | | | \-Argotta Rosemund Queen of the Franks
| | | | | \-Blesinda of The Sicambrian Franks PRINCESS
| | | \-Chlodeswinthe Verica of Cologne
| | | | /-Marcouris DE COLOGNE
| | | \-Hildegonde DE COLOGNE
| | | | /-Richomer DES FRANCS
| | | \-Hildegonde DE LOMBARDIE
| | | \-Ascyla DE FRANCE
| | /-Clovis King of the FRANKS
| | | | /-Richomer Flavius Richomeres DES FRANCS
| | | | /-Pharamond DES FRANCS
| | | | | \-Ascyla I Ascille DES FRANCS
| | | | /-Chlodion II DES FRANCS
| | | | | | /-ChlodioI Clodio DES FRANCS RHENANS
| | | | | \-Blesinde DES FRANCS RHENANS
| | | | | \-Blesinde II D`ALEMANIE
| | | | /-Chlodwig I Medelphus DES FRANCS
| | | | | | /-ChlodioI Clodio DES FRANCS RHENANS
| | | | | | /-Marcomir DES FRANCS
| | | | | | | \-Blesinde II D`ALEMANIE
| | | | | \-Hildegone Hildegarde DE COLOGNE
| | | | | | /-Aldeoch DE LOMBARDIE
| | | | | \-Aldegonde Hildegonde DE LOMBARDIE
| | | \-Basina of Thuringia
| | | | /-Widelphe DE SAXE
| | | \-Basine DE SAXE
| | | \-Amalaberge DES OSTROGOTHS
| | /-Clothaire King of the Franks of NEUSTRIA
| | | \-Clotilde SAINT de Bourgogne
| | /-Chilperic I King of the Franks at Soissons
| | | \-Aregund of Thuringia
| | /-Chlothar II King of NEUSTRIA
| | | \-Fredegond,The Slave DE CAMBRAI ,D`ARDENNES
| \-Emma MEROVINGIAN
| \-Adeltrudis OF SOISSONS
Mechthilde of Ireland
| /-Tytmon of The North Lands
| /-Tyrgils of The Angles
| /-Hroðmund of the Angles
| /-Hryþ of East Anglia
| /-Wilhelm of East Anglia
| /-Wehha of East Anglia KING
| | \-Onbekende
| /-Wuffa of East Anglia KING
| | \-Unknown Spouse of Wehha of East ANGLIA
| /-Tytila of East Anglia KING
| | \-Wilhelmia of East Anglia
| /-Ennius KING of East Anglia
| | \-Ostensdotter of Essex PRINCESS
| /-Anna KING OF EAST ANGLIA
| | | /-Aodh OF MUMHAN
| | | /-Failbe FLANN OF MUMHAN
| | | /-Colgan of MUMHAN
| | | | \-Snedghusa IERLAND
| | | /-Natfraich KING OF MUMHAN
| | | | | /-Nath Í mac Fiachrach
| | | | \- QUEEN OF MUMHAN
| | | /-Snedghus Prince Mumhan Mac NATFRAICH
| | | | | /-Freothalaf (Frealaf) LORD OF THE ANGLO SAXONS
| | | | \-Failbe Flann QUEEN OF MUMHAN
| | | /-Donnghus of MUMHAN
| | | | | /-Ainmuire, High King OF IRELAND - FOUNDED THE CHURCH
| | | | \-Sabilla of MUMHAN of Ireland
| | | | \-Sabhdh, PRINCESS OF ALBA
| | | /-Donnghus II OF MUHMAN
| | | | \-Unknown Spouse ofDonnghal de Mumhan of KENT
| | | /-Donnghal PRINCE DE MUHMAN II
| | | | | /-Comgal MC DOMANGART
| | | | | /-Conail I, King of Alba
| | | | | | | /-Constantine KING of Briton
| | | | | | \-Alda VERCH CONSTANTINE
| | | | \-Sabilla de Ireland Princess of Mumhan
| | | | | /-High King of Ireland Niall Mor Naoighiallach mac ECHACH
| | | | | /-Eóghan MAC NIALL - 1st King of Tyrone, King of Ailech
| | | | | | \-Roighneach INGEN MEADAIB Queen of Connaught
| | | | | /-Muireadach MAC EÓGAIN King of Aileach and Chief of Cenél nEóghan
| | | | | | \-Indorb Finn "the White" INGEN OR DAUGHER OF LAORN
| | | | | /-Muirchertach MAC MUIREDAIG High King of Ireland
| | | | | | \-Erca INGEN LOARN of Dál Riata
| | | | | /-Domnall Ilchelgach MAC MUIRCHERTAIG High King of Ireland
| | | | | | | /-Duach Galach MAC BRIUIN
| | | | | | | /-Eóghan Sreabh MAC DUACH
| | | | | | | /-Dauí Tenga Uma MAC FEARGUS King of Connacht
| | | | | | | | \-Queen Indorb the White FINN
| | | | | | \-Duinseach ingen DUACH
| | | | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Dui Tenga UMA
| | | | \-Sabhdha INGEN MUIRCHERTAIG of Alba
| | | | | /-Cobthaigson OF OILIOLLA
| | | | \-Bridget NIC COBTHAIGSON
| | \-Osbyd MUMHAN
| | \-Frigida I OF MUMHAIN
\-Seaxburh QUEEN OF KENT
\-Saewara QUEEN OF EAST ANGLIA
\-Saethryth
- Birth: 595 BC
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Descendants of Megabignes
1 Megabignes
=Orontid VAN HYCARNIA
2 Hydarnes I of ARMENIA
=(Unknown)
3 Hydarnes II of ARMENIA
=(Unknown)
Ancestors of Megingoz von Alemannien
/-Gérold VOM ANGLACHGAU Graf im Kraichgau und Anglachgau
Megingoz von Alemannien
| /-Gotfrid Herzog der Alamannen
| /-Houching von Alamannien
| | \-Unknown VON BAYERN
| /-Hnabi Alamannischer HERZOG
\-Imma Gräfin im Kraichgau
\-Herswinde