- Partnership with: John REID
Marriage: 20 NOV 1739, Bellie,Moray,Scotland
- Child: Isobel REID Birth: 13 APR 1739, Aberlady, East Lothian, Scotland
Descendants of Anna HENDERSON
1 Anna HENDERSON
=John REID Marriage: 20 NOV 1739, Bellie,Moray,Scotland
2 Isobel REID
=John WATSON Marriage: 7 JUL 1763, Burntisland, Fifeshire, Scotland Marriage: 1768, Aberlady, East Lothian, Scotland
3 James WATSON
3 Margaret WATSON
=William TAYLOR Marriage: 16 JUL 1793, Associate Congregation Church, Dunfermline, Fifeshire, Scotland
3 Martha WATSON
=John FLEMING Marriage: 4 JUN 1790, Govan,Lanark,Scotland
3 David WATSON
=Elizabeth CHALMERS Marriage: 3 JUN 1791, Crichton,Midlothian,Scotland Marriage: 1795, Aberlady, East Lothian, Scotland Marriage: 25 AUG 1798, Farnell, Angus, Scotland
3 Ann WATSON
3 John WATSON
- Birth: 1425, Devon, England
- Death: 1470, Devon, England
- Partnership with: William HAYDON
Marriage: ABT 1447, Woodbury with Exton, Devon, England
- Child: Richard HAYDEN Birth: 1446, Woodbury with Exton, Devon, England, UK
- Child: Jeffery HAYDON Birth: ABT 1448, Woodbury with Exton, Devon, England
- Child: John HAYDON Birth: ABT 1450, Woodbury with Exton, Devon, England
- Child: Richard HAYDON Sr Birth: 1452, Woodbury, Devon, England
- Child: Boughwood et Ebford Haydon SIR RICHARD DEVON Birth: 1452, Woodbury, Devon, England
- Child: William HAYDON Birth: ABT 1454, Woodbury with Exton, Devon, England
- Child: Thomas HAYDON Birth: 1456, Woodbury with Exton, Devon, England
Descendants of Susan HENRY
1 Susan HENRY
=William HAYDON Marriage: ABT 1447, Woodbury with Exton, Devon, England
2 Richard HAYDEN
2 Jeffery HAYDON
2 John HAYDON
2 Richard HAYDON Sr
=Elizabeth Radcliff KIMBER Marriage: ABT 1475, Woodbury with Exton, Devon, England Marriage: ABT 1480
3 Richard Kimbre HAYDON Jr.
=Joane TRENT Marriage: 1507, Woodbury with Exton, Devon, England, United Kingdom
=Agnes MERIFIELD Marriage: 1516, Woodbury with Exton, Devon, England
=Elizabeth AUBREY
2 Boughwood et Ebford Haydon SIR RICHARD DEVON
2 William HAYDON
2 Thomas HAYDON
- Birth: 1269, Atcham, Shropshire, England
- Christening: 1270, Brompton, Hereford, England, Great Britian
- Also known as: Eleanor De Hereford
- Also known as: Lady Alianora Hereford
- Also known as: Lady Alianora Hereford
- NFS ID: L4Y8-4KF
- Death: 1298, England
- Partnership with: Brian BRAMPTON of Kinlet
Marriage: 1285, Herefordshire, England
Marriage: 1290, , , , England
- Child: Brian DE BRAMPTON Birth: 1287, Brampton Bryan, Herefordshire, England
- Child: Margaret De BRAMPTON Birth: 27 OCT 1293, Brampton Castle, Shropshire
- Child: Maud BRAMPTON Birth: 27 OCT 1293, Brampton Bryan, Herefordshire, England
- Child: Elizabeth BRAMPTON Birth: 16 DEC 1294, Brampton Bryan, Herefordshire, England
Descendants of Eleanor de HEREFORD
1 Eleanor de HEREFORD
=Brian BRAMPTON of Kinlet Marriage: 1285, Herefordshire, England Marriage: 1290, , , , England
2 Brian DE BRAMPTON
2 Margaret De BRAMPTON
2 Maud BRAMPTON
2 Elizabeth BRAMPTON
- Father: Erispoë 1 DE BROËEC of Poher
- Mother: Jordan PROBST OF BRITTANY
- Birth: 790, Rennes, Ille-et-Vilaine, Brittany, France
- Also known as: Nomenoe
- Also known as: Nominde of Bretagne
- Also known as: Nominoë (de Bretagne) Bretagne
- Also known as: Nominoe DeBretagne
- Also known as: Nominoe fitz Frodales Desponsyni
- Also known as: to Breton nationalists he is known as Tad ar Vro ("father of the country")
- Also known as: Nominoe Brittany
- Also known as: Nominoë de Bretagne King of Brittany
- Also known as: Nominoe or Nomenoe
- Also known as: Breton: Nevenoe
- Also known as: French: Nominoë
- Also known as: Nominoe Desposyni King of Britain BRETAGNE
- Title Of Nobility: Duke, 826, Brittany
- Alternate Death Date: (Date and Place unknown)
- He was the second son of Count Erispoë I of Poher, King of the Browaroch (775 - 812),: and younger brother of Count Riwallon or Rivallon III of Poher (? - 857).
- LifeSketch: Nominoë was the first Duke of Brittany from 846 to his death. He is the Breton "pater patriae" and to Breton nationalists he is known as "Tad ar Vro" ("father of the country"). Origins He was the second son of Count Erispoë I of Poher, King of the Browaroch (775 - 812), and younger brother of Count Riwallon or Rivallon III of Poher (? - 857). Rise and titulature under Louis the Pious After a general rebellion which had enveloped the entire Carolingian Empire was put down, a general assembly was held at Ingelheim in May 831. It was probably there that the emperor Louis the Pious appointed Nominoe, a Breton, to rule the Bretons (which corresponded to "almost all" of Brittany). Regino of Prüm in his famous "Chronicon" writes, inaccurately for the year 837, that: "Murmanus rex Brittonum moritur et Numenoio apud Ingelheim ab imperator ducatus ipsius gentis traditur. Morman, king of the Bretons, died and Numenoi [Nominoe] was created duke of that same people by the emperor at Ingelheim." Nominoe was a staunch ally of Louis the Pious until the emperor's death in 840. He supported Louis in the several civil wars of the 830s and he supported the monastery of Redon Abbey, even ordering the monks to pray for Louis in light of the emperor's "strife." Nominoe's power base was in the Vannetais and two charters refer to him as Count of Vannes, though it is unknown when that title was held, be it as early as 819 or as late as 834. Nominoe may not have possessed any land outside Vannes and his ability to gather revenue in Breton-speaking territories was probably no greater than any other aristocrat of those regions. His chief source of income after he broke with his overlord was plunder from raids into Frankish territory and from the despoliation of churches. He did have the political authority to exact payment (wergild) in the form of land from a man who had murdered his follower Catworet. The title Duke of Brittany is primarily a chronicler's invention of the tenth century. Nominoe never held a title from the emperor, who refers to him in charters as merely "fidelis," "faithful one," or as "missus imperatoris," "imperial emissary," which probably was the title he was granted at Ingelheim. In Breton charters, Nominoe was known inconsistently by several titles from February 833 until his death: "Nominoe magistro in Britanniam" ("Nominoe, master in Brittany") "Nominoe possidente Brittanniam" ("Nominoe, possessing Brittany") "gubernante Nominoe totam Brittanniam" ("Nominoe, governing all Brittany") "Nominoe principe in Brittannia" ("Nominoe, prince in Brittany") "regnante Nominoe in Brittannia" ("Nominoe, reigning in Brittany") "Nominoe duce in Britannia" ("Nominoe, duke in Brittany") "Nomenoius dux" ("duke Nominoe") "Nominoius princeps" ("prince Nominoe") "Nomenogius Britto" ("Breton Nominoe") Loyalty and falling out with Charles the Bald The relations between Nominoe and Charles the Bald, Louis's successor after 840, were initially amicable. In the midst of a revolt of his men in Neustria, Charles sent from Le Mans to see if Nominoe would submit to him in the spring of 841 and Nominoe agreed to do so. It is clear from the wording of the account of this event in Nithard that Nominoe was too powerful to be compelled to submit; later in 841 he rebuffed the overtures of the new emperor, Lothair I, who claimed Neustria. Nominoe remained loyal to Charles throughout the next year, even making a donation "in alms for the king" to the abbey of Redon on 25 January 842. Breton soldiers, as well as Gascons, certainly took part in the military show of the Oaths of Strasbourg. In the summer of 843, Lothair or perhaps his supporter Lambert II of Nantes succeeded in persuading Nominoe to abandon Charles and go over to the emperor. Nominoe was thereafter a constant enemy of Charles and his authority in Neustria, often acting in concert with Lothair, Lambert, and Pepin II of Aquitaine. Breton troops fought under Lambert in Neustria and when, in June 844, Charles was besieging Toulouse, Nominoe raided into Maine and plundered the territory. In November 843, Charles had marched as far as Rennes to compel Breton submission, but to no effect. At the synod of Yutz in October 844, presided over by Charles' uncle Drogo of Metz, the bishops sent orders to Nominoe, Lambert, and Pepin commanding them to renew their fealty to Charles or be prepared to accept military consequences. Lambert and Pepin complied, but Nominoe ignored the Frankish bishops. However, some Bretons had connived against him with Charles and the king tried to enter Brittany in support of the defectors, but without success: he was defeated at the Battle of Ballon just north of Redon across the Vilaine on 22 November 845. It is probable that in the Vannetais Nominoe's authority had been weakened after his split with Charles in 843 and Lupus of Ferrières reports "unrest" in Brittany during this period. In 844 and 847 according to the "Annales Bertiniani," Nominoe made war on the Vikings. Renewed loyalty and second rebellion In Summer 846, Charles marched on Brittany and again took no military action, instead coming to peace with Nominoe and exchanging oaths. The details of the peace arrangements are unknown, but Prudentius of Troyes uses the title "duke" ("dux") for the first time in this context and this may indicate that Nominoe was created Duke of the Bretons in return for recognising Charles' lordship. As another part of the agreement, Nominoe had Charles remove Lambert from Nantes and put him in power in Sens further away. By Christmas time, Nominoe's Bretons were raiding Neustria, this time near Bayeux, again. This was probably instigated by Lothair, for he, Charles, and their brother Louis the German met at Meerssen in February 847 and agreed to send orders to Nominoe and Pepin II to desist from making war on Charles. Nominoe, probably being paid by Lothair, did not in fact desist; neither did Pepin. In two campaigns in the spring and then fall of 849, Charles was in Aquitaine and Nominoe took the opportunity to raid Neustria. Charles reestablished Lambert in Nantes after Nominoe invaded Anjou. In 850, Lambert (and his brother Warnar) had renewed their friendship with Nominoe and together were raiding Maine "with unspeakable fury" according to the "Chronicon Fontanellense." In August, Charles marched on Rennes, again avoided fighting, and installed garrisons there and at Nantes. Immediately after he left, Lambert and Nominoe defeated the garrisons and captured the new Count of Nantes, Amalric. On 7 March 851, Nominoe died near Vendôme while ravaging the Nantais and Anjou; he was buried at Redon Abbey. By his wife Argentaela, Nominoe left a son named Erispoe, who succeeded him. Nominoe was thus the founder of a political tradition in Brittany which had not thitherto existed; though his charters did not mimic Carolingian ones, his successors would imitate the legitimizing Carolingian language in theirs. Deposition of the bishops In 849 at a place called Coitlouh, Nominoe held a synod whereat he deposed the five Breton bishops of Alet, Saint-Pol, Vannes, Quimper, and Dol. The charges he levelled against them are unknown. Pope Leo IV sent a letter to Nominoe and the bishops (whether before or after the deposition is unknown) informing him that the depositions could only be enacted by a panel of twelve bishops with seventy-two witnesses. The later popes Benedict II and Nicholas I believed that Nominoe had forced the bishops to admit to crimes they had not committed and that their depositions were thus invalid. A Frankish synod of 850 held at either Angers or Tours accused Nominoe of simony by unlawfully removing bishops and replacing them with "mercenarii" (mercenaries of his own). These mercenarii were excommunicated, as indicated by an epistle of the synod of Savonnières in 859 sent to what remained of the Breton church in communion with the Archdiocese of Tours. Nominoe sacked Rennes and Nantes, replacing the new Frankish bishop of the latter with his own nominee. Susannus was deposed in Vannes and replaced by Courantgen. Salocon was deposed in Dol, but his replacement is unknown. At Quimper, Felix was replaced by Anaweten and at Saint-Pol, Clutwoion replaced Garnobrius. The two bishops of Alet, first Rethwalatr and then Mahen are very obscure figures. The bishop of Nantes whom Nominoe succeeded in removing for about a year was Actard. His replacement was the obscure Gislard. In the end the synod of Coitlouh and the bringing of the bishoprics of Rennes and Nantes into the Breton fold meant that the church of Brittany was an actively independent ecclesiastic polity from its nominal metropolitan, the Metropolitan of Tours. Succession At his death Nominoe was succeeded by his son Erispoe. Nominoe was buried at Redon Abbey. -- Wikiwand: Nominoe
- Title Of Nobility: Duke of Britagne
- Title Of Nobility: Duke of Brittany
- Title Of Nobility: first Duke of Brittany, from 846 until his death in 851, Brittany, France
- Death: 27 MAR 851, Vendôme, Loir-et-Cher, Centre-Val de Loire, France
- Burial: Abbaye Saint-Sauveur de Redon, Redon, Ille-et-Vilaine, Bretagne, France
Ancestors of Nominoe HERISPOE
/-Budic II BRETAGNE
/-Hoël Mawr I AP BUDIC of Brittany, De Cornwall
| \-Elaine TINTAGEL
/-Hoël Fychan AP HOËL II
| | /-Riotham ap Deroch DE DOMNONEE
| \-Alma Pompea verch RIATHAM de Dumnonée
| \-Unknown Spouse of Riotham ap Deroch of DOMNONEE
/-Alain blanc FYCHAN
| | /-Rhun GWYNEDD
| \-Rimo verch Maelgwyn Princess of Wales de GWYNEDD
| | /-Rhun Ryfedd Mawr ab Einon EBRAUC
| \-Perfawr verch Rhun EBRAUC
/-King Hoël Judhael AP ALAIN DE BRETAGNE III
| \-Azenor DE BREST
/-Rhiwallon POHER I
| | /-Urien AP CYNCARCH
| | /-Owain AP RHEGED de Leon de l’Acqs
| | | \-Morgaine VERCH AFALLACH d'Avallon del Acqs
| | /-Withur D'ACQS II de Leon
| | | | /-Buidic Emyr Llydaw KING OF THE BRETONS I
| | | \-Alienor VERCH BUDIC de Cornouaille
| | | \-Elaine VERCH GWYRLYS of Garlot
| | /-Ausoch del Acqs WITHUR Leon
| | | | /- LLEUDDUN
| | | \-Ddenyw ferch Lleudd
| \-Fratelle Pritelle QUEEN of Domnonia
| \-Aliénor DE CORNOUAILLES
/-Waroch I DE POHER
| | /-Budic II BRETAGNE
| | /-Hoël Mawr I AP BUDIC of Brittany, De Cornwall
| | | \-Elaine TINTAGEL
| | /-Hoël Fychan AP HOËL II
| | | | /-Riotham ap Deroch DE DOMNONEE
| | | \-Alma Pompea verch RIATHAM de Dumnonée
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Riotham ap Deroch of DOMNONEE
| | /-Alain blanc FYCHAN
| | | | /-Rhun GWYNEDD
| | | \-Rimo verch Maelgwyn Princess of Wales de GWYNEDD
| | | | /-Rhun Ryfedd Mawr ab Einon EBRAUC
| | | \-Perfawr verch Rhun EBRAUC
| | /-King Hoël Judhael AP ALAIN DE BRETAGNE III
| | | \-Azenor DE BREST
| \-Pritelle D'ACQS
| | /-Urien AP CYNCARCH
| | /-Owain AP RHEGED de Leon de l’Acqs
| | | \-Morgaine VERCH AFALLACH d'Avallon del Acqs
| | /-Withur D'ACQS II de Leon
| | | | /-Buidic Emyr Llydaw KING OF THE BRETONS I
| | | \-Alienor VERCH BUDIC de Cornouaille
| | | \-Elaine VERCH GWYRLYS of Garlot
| | /-Ausoch del Acqs WITHUR Leon
| | | | /- LLEUDDUN
| | | \-Ddenyw ferch Lleudd
| \-Fratelle Pritelle QUEEN of Domnonia
| \-Aliénor DE CORNOUAILLES
/-Riwallon de Poher, II
| | /-Galains DE ESPOSYNI
| | /-Johaans DE ESPOSYNI
| | /-Lancelot BORS DE ESPOSYNI
| | /-Bors DE ESPOSYNI
| | | \-Vivian D'AQCS
| | /-Lionel DE BRETAGNE
| | /-Oreguen DE BRETAGNE
| \-Vrouw DE BRETAGNE
| \-Meurig DE GWENTI
/-Daniel Dremrud BRETAGNE
| \-Gerwenn CORNOUAILLES
/-Budic De Poher, King Of Bretagne (Britanny)
| \-Hadeloge HERSTAL
/-Erispoë 1 DE BROËEC of Poher
| | /-David DE FRAMLING
| \-Marmoëc Miriam FRAMLING of Brittany
Nominoe HERISPOE
\-Jordan PROBST OF BRITTANY
- Mother: Oda DE SUAVIA
- Birth: 586, Saxony, Germany
- Death: 615, Trier, Rheinland-Pfalz, Germany
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Doda Clothilde Oda HERISTAL SAVOY TREVES
Doda Clothilde Oda HERISTAL SAVOY TREVES
| /-Hermenerico II DE SUAVIA
| | \- OF THE OSTROGOTHS
| | | /-Theodimir Magnus Riparian FRANKS
| | | /-Clodius VI King of the Franks DE COLOGNE
| | | | \-Flavia Galla Western VALENTINIANUS
| | | /-Merovech of the Salian Franks
| | | | \-Ildegonde DE COLOGNE
| | | /-Childeric OF THE SALIAN FRANKS
| | | | | /-Pharamond KING OF THE FRANKS
| | | | | /-Chlodio KING OF FRANKS AT TOXANDRIE
| | | | | | \-Argotta Rosemund Queen of the Franks
| | | | \-Chlodeswinthe Verica of Cologne
| | | | | /-Marcouris DE COLOGNE
| | | | \-Hildegonde DE COLOGNE
| | | | \-Hildegonde DE LOMBARDIE
| | \-Audofleda OF THE OSTROGOTHS
| | | /-Pharamond DES FRANCS
| | | /-Chlodion II DES FRANCS
| | | | \-Blesinde DES FRANCS RHENANS
| | | /-Chlodwig I Medelphus DES FRANCS
| | | | | /-Marcomir DES FRANCS
| | | | \-Hildegone Hildegarde DE COLOGNE
| | | | \-Aldegonde Hildegonde DE LOMBARDIE
| | \-Basina of Thuringia
| | | /-Widelphe DE SAXE
| | \-Basine DE SAXE
| | \-Amalaberge DES OSTROGOTHS
| /-Rechila DE SUAVIA
| /-Reciario II DE SUAVIA
| /-Theodomiro DE SUAVIA
\-Oda DE SUAVIA
Descendants of Doda Clothilde Oda HERISTAL SAVOY TREVES
1 Doda Clothilde Oda HERISTAL SAVOY TREVES
=(Unknown)
2 Walechise DE VERDUN
=Valtrude Waldrada OF NEUSTRIA
3 Valtrude DE VERDUN
=(Unknown)
3 Wandregisis of Neustria
- Birth: 1297, Northumberland, England
- Christening: ABT 1297, Northumberland, England
- Also known as: John de Harling
- Also known as: John Herle
- Alt. Birth: 1315, East Harling, , Norfolk, England
- Death: 1340, England
- Partnership with: Joan DE HARLEY
Marriage: 1318, Worcestershire, England
- Child: Thomas HERLE Birth: ABT 1328, Northumberland, England
Descendants of John HERLE
1 John HERLE
=Joan DE HARLEY Marriage: 1318, Worcestershire, England
2 Thomas HERLE
- Father: John HERLE
- Mother: Joan DE HARLEY
- Birth: ABT 1328, Northumberland, England
- Christening: ABT 1328, Northumberland, England
- Death: 1358, Devonshire, England
Ancestors of Thomas HERLE
/-John HERLE
Thomas HERLE
| /-John DE HARLEY
| /-William DE HARLEY
| | | /-Thomas DE LEIGHTON
| | \-Alice DE LEIGHTON
| | \-Letitia spouse of Thomas DE LEIGHTON
| /-Nicholas DE HARLEY
| | | /-Bernard DE CROFT
| | | /-Jasper DE CROFT
| | | /-Jasper DE CROFT
| | \-Katherine DE CROFT
| | | /-Richard DE LA BERE I
| | | /-John DE LA BERE I
| | \-Maud DE LA BERE
| | | /-Steven de HEVEN
| | \-Joan DE HEVEN
| | \-Enid DE HEVEN
| /-William DE HARLEY
| | | /-Warren DE BOSTOCK
| | \-Margaretha DE BOSTOCK
| /-Nicholas DE HARLEY
| | | /-Richard DE LA BERE I
| | | /-John DE LA BERE I
| | | /-Richard DE LA BERE I
| | | | | /-Steven de HEVEN
| | | | \-Joan DE HEVEN
| | | | \-Enid DE HEVEN
| | | /-John DE LA BERE I
| | \-Joan de LA BERE
| | | /-Stephen DE HEVER
| | \-Joan DE HEVER
| /-Robert DE HARLEY
| | \-Isabella DE MYTTON
| /-Richard DE HARLEY
| | | /-Robert DE PYVELESDON
| | | /-Eudo DE PYVELESDON
| | | /-Hamo DE PYVELESDON
| | | /-Roger DE PYVELESDON
| | | /-Richard de PULESDON
| | | /-Roger DE PULESTON
| | \-Alice DE PULESTON
| | \-Agnes MONTHERMER
| /-Robert DE HARLEY
| | | /-Warnerius DE WILLEY
| | | /-Hugo DE WILLEY
| | | /-William DE WILLEY
| | | /-William DE WILLEY
| | | /-William DE WILLEY
| | | | \-Unknown Spouse of William DE WILLEY
| | | /-Warrin DE WILLEY
| | | /-Andreas DE WILLEY
| | | | | /-Odonis Odo DE KENLEY
| | | | | /-Roger FITZ ODO DE KENLEY
| | | | \-Petronella Fitz Odo DE KENLEY
| | \-Burga DE WILLEY
| | \-Grace HUNGERFORD
\-Joan DE HARLEY
| /-John DE BRAMPTON
| /-Brian DE BRAMPTON III
| | | /-Edmund MORTIMER DE WIGMORE
| | | /-Ralph MORTIMER
| | | | \-Margaret DE FIENNES
| | | /-Hugh DE MORTIMER
| | | | \-Maud LONGSPREE
| | | /-Roger DE MORTIMER
| | | | | /-Ranulf LE MESCHINES I
| | | | | /-Ranulf DE BRIQUESSART
| | | | | | \-Alice FitzRichard DE NORMANDIE
| | | | | /-William LE MESCHIN
| | | | | | \-Margaret LE GOZ d'Avranches
| | | | \-Maud LE MESCHIN
| | | | \-Cecily DE RUMILLY
| | \-Matilda MORTIMER
| | \-Isabella de Ferrieres of OAKHAM
| /-Walter DE BRAMPTON
| | \-Emma DE CORBET
| /-Brian BRAMPTON of Kinlet
| | \-Johanna DE EWILLEY
\-Margaret BRAMPTON
\-Elizabeth LE STRANGE
Ancestors of Fridlief Sceldwa HERMOD I
/-Hwala BEDWIGSSON King of Troy
/-Hathra ben Hwala of Asgard
/-Itermon ben Hathra of Asgard
| \-Freothalaf Queen of Troy
/-Heremod DER GOTHEN, Rey of Troy
| \-Iterman VON SACHSEN
/-Scealdea Skjold Ben Heremod King of Troy ASGARD
| \- SCEAF
Fridlief Sceldwa HERMOD I
\-Scyld SCELDWA
- Father: Nero GENERAL OF GAUL, GAVERNOR OF ROME
- Mother: Antonia AUGUSTA Minor
- Birth: 11 BC, Judea, Roman Empire
- Also known as: Herod Agrippa, also known as Herod II or Agrippa I
- Also known as: Agrippa the Great
- Also known as: Agrippa the Great
- Title Of Nobility: King of Judaea, BET 41 AND 44, Judea, Roman Empire
- LifeSketch: Herod Agrippa, also known as Herod or Agrippa I (Hebrew: אגריפס; 11 BC – 44 AD), was a King of Judea from 41 to 44 AD. He was the last ruler with the royal title reigning over Judea and the father of Herod Agrippa II, the last king from the Herodian dynasty. The grandson of Herod the Great and son of Aristobulus IV and Berenice,[1] He is the king named Herod in the Acts of the Apostles 12:1: "Herod (Agrippa)" (Ἡρῴδης Ἀγρίππας). Agrippa's territory comprised most of modern Israel, including Judea, Galilee, Batanaea and Perea[citation needed]. From Galilee his territory extended east to Trachonitis. Rome He was born Marcus Julius Agrippa, so named in honour of Roman statesman Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa. Josephus informs us that, after the execution of his father, young Agrippa was sent by his grandfather, Herod the Great, to the imperial court in Rome. There, Tiberius conceived a great affection for him, and had him educated alongside his son Drusus, who also befriended him, and future emperor Claudius.[1] On the death of Drusus, Agrippa, who had been recklessly extravagant and was deeply in debt, was obliged to leave Rome, fleeing to the fortress of Malatha in Idumaea. There, it was said, he contemplated suicide.[2] After a brief seclusion, through the mediation of his wife Cypros and his sister Herodias, Agrippa was given a sum of money by his brother-in-law and uncle, Herodias' husband, Herod Antipas, Tetrarch of Galilee and Perea, and was allowed to take up residence in Tiberias, and received the rank of aedile in that city, with a small yearly income. But having quarrelled with Antipas, he fled to Lucius Pomponius Flaccus, governor of Syria. Soon afterwards he was convicted, through the information of his brother Aristobulus, of having received a bribe from the Damascenes, who wished to purchase his influence with the proconsul, and was again compelled to flee. He was arrested as he was about to sail for Italy, for a sum of money which he owed to the treasury of Caesar, but made his escape, and reached Alexandria, where his wife succeeded in procuring a supply of money from Alexander the Alabarch. He then set sail, and landed at Puteoli. He was favorably received by Tiberius, who entrusted him with the education of his grandson Tiberius Gemellus. He also formed an intimacy with Caligula, then a popular favorite. Agrippa was one day overheard by his freedman Eutyches expressing a wish for Tiberius's death and the advancement of Caligula, and for this he was cast into prison.[1] Caligula and Claudius Realm of Herod Agrippa I as given to him by Caligula. Following Tiberius' death and the ascension of Agrippa's friend Caligula in 37, Agrippa was set free and made king of the territories of Gaulanitis (the Golan Heights), Auranitis, Batanaea, and Trachonitis, which his uncle Philip the Tetrarch had held, with the addition of Abila. Agrippa was also awarded the ornamenta praetoria and could use the title amicus caesaris ("friend of Caesar"). Caligula also presented him with a gold chain equal in weight to the iron one he had worn in prison, which Agrippa dedicated to the Temple of Jerusalem on his return to his ancestral homeland. In 39, Agrippa returned to Rome, and brought about the banishment of his uncle, Herod Antipas; he was then granted his uncle's tetrarchy, consisting of Galilee and Peraea. This created a Jewish kingdom which did not include Judea at its center.[3][4] After the assassination of Caligula in 41, Agrippa was involved in the struggle over the accession between Claudius, the Praetorian Guard, and the Senate. How big a part Agrippa played is uncertain; the various sources differ. Cassius Dio simply writes that Agrippa cooperated with Claudius in seeking rule. Flavius Josephus gives us two versions. In The Jewish War, Agrippa is presented as only a messenger to a confident and energetic Claudius. But in The Antiquities of the Jews, Agrippa's role is central and crucial: he convinces Claudius to stand up to the Senate and the Senate to avoid attacking Claudius.[3] After becoming Emperor, Claudius gave Agrippa dominion over Judea and Samaria and granted him the ornamenta consularia, and at his request gave the kingdom of Chalcis in Lebanon to Agrippa's brother Herod of Chalcis. Thus Agrippa became one of the most powerful kings of the east. His domain more or less equaled that which was held by his grandfather Herod the Great.[5] In the city of Berytus, he built a theatre and amphitheatre, baths, and porticoes. He was equally generous in Sebaste, Heliopolis and Caesarea. Agrippa began the building of the third and outer wall of Jerusalem, but Claudius was not thrilled with the prospect of a strongly fortified Jerusalem, and he prevented him from completing the fortifications.[6] His friendship was courted by many of the neighboring kings and rulers,[1] some of whom he housed in Tiberias, which also caused Claudius some displeasure.[4] Coin of Herod of Chalcis, showing Herod of Chalcis with brother Agrippa I crowning Roman Emperor Claudius I. Agrippa returned to Judea and governed it to the satisfaction of the Jews. His zeal, private and public, for Judaism is recorded by Josephus, Philo of Alexandria and the rabbis.[5] Perhaps because of this, his passage through Alexandria in the year 38[7] instigated anti-Jewish riots.[4] At the risk of his own life, or at least of his liberty, he interceded with Caligula on behalf of the Jews, when that emperor was attempting to set up his statue in the Temple at Jerusalem shortly before his death in 41. Agrippa's efforts bore fruit and persuaded Caligula to temporarily rescind his order thus prevented the Temple's desecration.[8] However, Philo of Alexandria recounts that Caligula issued a second order to have his statue erected in the Temple[9], which was prevented by Caligula's death. The Acts of the Apostles, chapter 12 (Acts 12:1–23), where Herod Agrippa is called "King Herod"[10], report that he persecuted the Jerusalem church, having James son of Zebedee killed and imprisoning Peter around the time of a Passover. Blastus is mentioned in Acts as Herod's chamberlain (Acts 12:20). After Passover in 44, Agrippa went to Caesarea, where he had games performed in honor of Claudius. In the midst of his speech to the public a cry went out that he was a god, and Agrippa did not publicly react. At this time he saw an owl perched over his head. During his imprisonment by Tiberius a similar omen had been interpreted as portending his speedy release and future kingship, with the warning that should he behold the same sight again, he would die.[5] He was immediately smitten with violent pains, scolded his friends for flattering him and accepted his imminent death. He experienced heart pains and a pain in his abdomen, and died after five days. [11] Josephus then relates how Agrippa's brother, Herod of Chalcis, and Helcias sent Aristo to kill Silas.[12} (Article continues in Notes) By his wife Cypros he had a son and three daughters. They were: Herod Agrippa II [b. 27/28 AD?-d. 93 AD?] became the eighth and final ruler from the Herodian family, but without any control of Judea. Berenice [b. 28-after 81 AD], who first married Marcus Julius Alexander, son of Alexander the Alabarch around 41 AD. After Marcus Julius died, she married her uncle Herod, king of Chalcis. She later lived with her brother Agrippa II, reputedly in an incestuous relationship. Finally, she married Polamo, king of Cilicia as alluded to by Juvenal.[16] Berenice also had a relationship with the Roman emperor Titus.[17] Mariamne [b. 34-], who married Gaius Julius Archelaus Antiochus Epiphanes; they had a daughter Berenice (daughter of Mariamne) [b. 50 AD] who lived with her mother in Alexandria, Egypt after her parents' divorce Drusilla [38–79 AD], who married first to Gaius Julius Azizus, King of Emesa and then to Antonius Felix, the procurator of Judaea.[18][19][20][21] Drusilla and her son Marcus Antonius Agrippa died in Pompeii during the eruption of Vesuvius. A daughter, Antonia Clementiana, became a grandmother to a Lucius Anneius Domitius Proculus. Two possible descendants from this marriage are Marcus Antonius Fronto Salvianus (a quaestor) and his son Marcus Antonius Felix Magnus, a high priest in 225.
- Clan Name: House of Herod - Herodians
- Immigration: 6 BC, Roma, Roman Empire
- Death: 44, Caesarea Maritima, Israel
Ancestors of HEROD AGRIPPA I OF JUDEA
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
/-Tiberius Claudius NERO
/-Publius Claudius Nero CLAUDIUS
/-Appius Claudius NERO (praetor 195)
/-Tiberius Claudius Nero
/-Appius Claudius NERO
/-Tibetius Claudius ELDER’
| | /-Cornelius Cinna LUCIUS
| | /-Lucius Cornelius CINNA
| | | | /-Annius Pupius
| | | \-Annia spouse of Cornelius Cinna LUCIUS
| \-Cornelia CINNAE Major
/-Tiberius Claudius NERO Quastor of Rome
/-Nero GENERAL OF GAUL, GAVERNOR OF ROME
| | /-Quintus Servilius CAEPIO
| | /-Quintus Servilius CAEPIO
| | | \-Caecilia METALLA
| | /-Marcus Livius Drusus III DE ROME
| | | | /-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 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 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
| | /-Marcus Livius Drusus Claudianus Emporer Appius Claudius PULCHER
| | | | /-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 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 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
| \-Livia Julia Drusilla Augusta III of Rome
| | /-Marcus Aufidius LURCO
| \-Aufidia LURCO
HEROD AGRIPPA I OF JUDEA
| /-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 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
\-Antonia AUGUSTA Minor
| /-Gaius Octavius IV EMPIRE
\-Octavia Empress of ROME
| /-Attius
| /-Marcus Atius Balbus DE ROME
| | \-Pompiea STRABO
| /-Marcus ATIUS BALBUS
| | | /-Gnaeus Pompeius MAGNUS
| | | /-Sextus X POMPEIUS STRABO
| | | | \-Mucia TERTIA
| | \-Pompeia LUCILLA BEN SEXTUS
| | | /-Gaius Lucilius PUPINIA
| | | /-Gaius Lucilius HIRRUS
| | | | \-Pupinia PUPINIA
| | \-Lucilia Hira di Roma X LUCILIUS
| | \-Aurelia Cornelia HIRRIS
\-Atia BALBA CAESONIA
| /-Gaius Julius CAESAR II
| /-Gaius Julius CAESAR III
| | \-Marcia Quinta REGINA
\-Julia CAESARIUS
| /-Lucius Aurelius Cotta AURELIUS
| /-Lucius Aurelius COTTA
\-Aurelia COTTA VAN ROME
| /-Públius RUTÍLIUS RUFO
| /-Publius Rutilius RUFUS I
\-Rutilia Rufa DIROMA
\-Livia Julia DRUSILLA AUGUSTA Rome
- Birth: 28, Jerusalem, Roman Judea
- Also known as: Julia Berenice or Berenice of Cilicia
- Consort of Titus Flavius Vespasianus: Judea and Rome, Roman Empire, BET 70 AND 79, Roman Empire
- LifeSketch: From Wikipedia - Berenice of Cilicia, also known as Julia Berenice and sometimes spelled Bernice (Greek: Βερενίκη, Bereníkē; 28 AD – after 81), was a Jewish client queen of the Roman Empire during the second half of the 1st century. Berenice was a member of the Herodian Dynasty that ruled the Roman province of Judaea between 39 BC and 92 AD. She was the daughter of King Herod Agrippa I and Cypros. What little is known about her life and background comes mostly from the early historian Flavius Josephus, who detailed a history of the Jewish people and wrote an account of the Jewish Rebellion of 67. Suetonius, Tacitus, Dio Cassius, Aurelius Victor and Juvenal, also tell about her. She is also mentioned in the Acts of the Apostles (25:13, 23; 26:30). However, it is for her tumultuous love life that she is primarily known from the Renaissance. Her reputation was based on the bias of the Romans to the Eastern princesses, like Cleopatra or later Zenobia. After a number of failed marriages throughout the 40s, she spent much of the remainder of her life at the court of her brother Herod Agrippa II, amidst rumors the two were carrying on an incestuous relationship. During the First Jewish-Roman War, she began a love affair with the future emperor Titus Flavius Vespasianus. However, her unpopularity among the Romans compelled Titus to dismiss her on his accession as emperor in 79. When he died two years later, she disappeared from the historical record. Early life Berenice was born in 28[1] to Herod Agrippa and Cypros, as granddaughter to Aristobulus IV and great-granddaughter to Herod the Great. Her elder brother was Agrippa II (b. 27), and her younger sisters were Mariamne (b. 34) and Drusilla (b. 38).[2][3] According to Josephus, there was also a younger brother called Drusus, who died before his teens.[2] Her family constituted part of what is known as the Herodian Dynasty, who ruled the Judaea Province between 39 BCE and 92 CE. Berenice depicted with her brother Agrippa II during the trial of St. Paul. From a stained glass window in St Paul's Cathedral, Melbourne. Josephus records three short-lived marriages in Berenice's life, the first which took place sometime between 41 and 43, to Marcus Julius Alexander, brother of Tiberius Julius Alexander and son of Alexander the Alabarch of Alexandria.[4][5] On his early death in 44, she was married to her father's brother, Herod of Chalcis,[3] with whom she had two sons, Berenicianus and Hyrcanus.[6] After her husband died in 48, she lived with her brother Agrippa for several years and then married Polemon II of Pontus, king of Cilicia, whom she subsequently deserted.[7] According to Josephus, Berenice requested this marriage to dispel rumors that she and her brother were carrying on an incestuous relationship, with Polemon being persuaded to this union mostly on account of her wealth.[7] However the marriage did not last and she soon returned to the court of her brother. Josephus was not the only ancient writer to suggest incestuous relations between Berenice and Agrippa. Juvenal, in his sixth satire, outright claims that they were lovers.[8] Whether this was based on truth remains unknown.[9] Berenice indeed spent much of her life at the court of Agrippa, and by all accounts shared almost equal power. Popular rumors may also have been fueled by the fact that Agrippa himself never married during his lifetime.[9] Like her brother, Berenice was a client ruler of the parts of the Roman Empire that lie in the present-day Israel. The Acts of the Apostles records that during this time, Paul the Apostle appeared before their court at Caesarea.[10] Jewish-Roman wars Great Jewish revolt Map of 1st century Judaea. In 64 emperor Nero appointed Gessius Florus as procurator of the Judaea Province. During his administration, the Jews were systematically discriminated against in favour of the Greek population of the region.[11] Tensions quickly rose to civil unrest when Florus plundered the treasury of the Temple of Jerusalem under the guise of imperial taxes.[11] Following riots, the instigators were arrested and crucified by the Romans. Appalled at the treatment of her countrymen, Berenice travelled to Jerusalem in 66 to personally petition Florus to spare the Jews. Not only did he refuse to comply with her requests, Berenice herself was nearly killed during skirmishes in the city.[12] Likewise a plea for assistance to the legate of Syria, Cestius Gallus, met with no response.[13] To prevent Jewish violence from further escalating, Agrippa assembled the populace and delivered a tearful speech to the crowd in the company of his sister,[13] but the Jews alienated their sympathies when the insurgents burned down their palaces.[14] They fled the city to Galilee where they later gave themselves up to the Romans. Meanwhile, Cestius Gallus moved into the region with the Twelfth legion, but was unable to restore order and suffered defeat at the battle of Beth-Horon, forcing the Romans to retreat from Jerusalem.[15] Emperor Nero then appointed Vespasian to put down the rebellion; he landed in Judaea with Fifth and Tenth legions in 67.[16] He was later joined at Ptolemais by his son Titus, who brought with him the Fifteenth legion.[17] With a strength of 60,000 professional soldiers, the Romans quickly swept across Galilee and by 69 marched on Jerusalem.[17] Affair with Titus It was during this time that Berenice met and fell in love with Titus, who was eleven years her junior.[18] The Herodians sided with the Flavians during the conflict, and later in 69, the Year of the Four Emperors—when the Roman Empire saw the quick succession of the emperors Galba, Otho and Vitellius—Berenice reportedly used all her wealth and influence to support Vespasian on his campaign to become emperor.[19] When Vespasian was declared emperor on 21 December 69, Titus was left in Judaea to finish putting down the rebellion. The war ended in 70 with the destruction of the Second Temple and the sack of Jerusalem, with approximately 1 million dead, and 97,000 taken captive by the Romans.[20] Triumphant, Titus returned to Rome to assist his father in the government, while Berenice stayed behind in Judaea. It took four years until they reunited, when she and Agrippa came to Rome in 75. The reasons for this long absence are unclear, but have been linked to possible opposition to her presence by Gaius Licinius Mucianus, a political ally of emperor Vespasian who died sometime between 72 and 78.[21] Agrippa was given the rank of praetor, while Berenice resumed her relationship with Titus, living with him at the palace and reportedly acting in every respect as his wife.[22] The ancient historian Cassius Dio writes that Berenice was at the height of her power during this time,[22] and if it can be any indication as to how influential she was, Quintilian records an anecdote in his Institutio Oratoria where, to his astonishment, he found himself pleading a case on Berenice's behalf where she herself presided as the judge.[23] The Roman populace however perceived the Eastern Queen as an intrusive outsider, and when the pair was publicly denounced by Cynics in the theatre, Titus caved in to the pressure and sent her away.[22] Upon the accession of Titus as emperor in 79, she returned to Rome, but was quickly dismissed amidst a number of popular measures of Titus to restore his reputation with the populace.[24] It is possible that he intended to send for her at a more convenient time.[21] However, after reigning barely two years as emperor, he suddenly died on 13 September 81.[25] It is not known what happened to Berenice after her final dismissal from Rome.[21] Her brother Agrippa died around 92, and with him the Herodian Dynasty came to an end. In modern history, her aspirations as a potential empress of Rome have led to her being described as a 'miniature Cleopatra'.[26]
- Clan Name: House of Herod - Herodians
- Death: 79
Descendants of Bérénice II HERODIENS of Cilicia
1 Bérénice II HERODIENS of Cilicia
=Titus Flavius DOMITIANUS
- Birth: 1040, Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, England
- Death: AFT 1064
- Partnership with: Roger de MUSCHAMP
- Child: Hugh DE MUSKHAM Birth: ABT 1060, Muskham, Nottinghamshire, England
- Child: Roger DE MUSCHAMP Birth: 1064, Normandy, Plouigneau, Brittany, France
- Child: Robert DE MUSCHAMP Birth: ABT 1067, Ilkeston, Derbyshire, England
Descendants of Beatrice HERRERA
1 Beatrice HERRERA
=Roger de MUSCHAMP
2 Hugh DE MUSKHAM
2 Roger DE MUSCHAMP
2 Robert DE MUSCHAMP
=Unknown Spouse of Robert DE MUSCHAMP
3 Cecily DE MUSCHAMP
=Stephen DE BULMER I Marriage: 1160, Wilton, Cleveland, Yorkshire, England
- Birth: 725
- Death: DECEASED
Descendants of Hadeloge HERSTAL
1 Hadeloge HERSTAL
=Daniel Dremrud BRETAGNE
2 Budic De Poher, King Of Bretagne (Britanny)
=Marmoëc Miriam FRAMLING of Brittany
3 Erispoë 1 DE BROËEC of Poher
=Melior dite La Flatteuse d'Avalon DES PICTES
=Jordan PROBST OF BRITTANY Marriage: 784, , Dukedom of Brittany, West Francia
3 Morvan OF BRITTANY de Leon
3 Wiomarch DE BRETAGNE
3 AP BUDIC
3 Hoel III DE POHER
Ancestors of Alaric I King of HERULI
/-Vitilaus KING
Alaric I King of HERULI
\-Anarnia of the GOTHS
Descendants of Alaric I King of HERULI
1 Alaric I King of HERULI
=Bella of COLN
2 Deiterick King of VERULI
=Diana of TRIERS
3 Teneric of HERULI
=Biogonna of THURINGIA
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Alberic I of HERULI
/-Vitilaus KING
/-Alaric I King of HERULI
| \-Anarnia of the GOTHS
/-Deiterick King of VERULI
| \-Bella of COLN
/-Teneric of HERULI
| \-Diana of TRIERS
Alberic I of HERULI
\-Biogonna of THURINGIA
Descendants of Alberic I of HERULI
1 Alberic I of HERULI
=(Unknown)
2 Wisimar King of HERULI
=Amalasunta of SAXONY
3 Miecislaus I.
=Belga Queen of the HERULI
- Birth: 300, Sachsen, Germany
- Also known as: Belga of the Vandals
- Also known as: Belga of Sachsen
- Title Of Nobility: Queen of the Heruli
- Death: 388, Denmark
Descendants of Belga Queen of the HERULI
1 Belga Queen of the HERULI
=Miecislaus I.
2 Radagaisus King Of The Vandals
=Cella
3 Godegisel DER VANDALEN Koning der Vandalen
=Elisa OF GRANADA
3 Corsicus King of the HERULII
Ancestors of Teneric of HERULI
/-Vitilaus KING
/-Alaric I King of HERULI
| \-Anarnia of the GOTHS
/-Deiterick King of VERULI
| \-Bella of COLN
Teneric of HERULI
\-Diana of TRIERS
Descendants of Teneric of HERULI
1 Teneric of HERULI
=Biogonna of THURINGIA
2 Alberic I of HERULI
=(Unknown)
3 Wisimar King of HERULI
=Amalasunta of SAXONY
Ancestors of Wisimar King of HERULI
/-Vitilaus KING
/-Alaric I King of HERULI
| \-Anarnia of the GOTHS
/-Deiterick King of VERULI
| \-Bella of COLN
/-Teneric of HERULI
| \-Diana of TRIERS
/-Alberic I of HERULI
| \-Biogonna of THURINGIA
Wisimar King of HERULI
Descendants of Wisimar King of HERULI
1 Wisimar King of HERULI
=Amalasunta of SAXONY
2 Miecislaus I.
=Belga Queen of the HERULI
3 Radagaisus King Of The Vandals
=Cella
Ancestors of Corsicus King of the HERULII
/-Vitilaus KING
/-Alaric I King of HERULI
| \-Anarnia of the GOTHS
/-Deiterick King of VERULI
| \-Bella of COLN
/-Teneric of HERULI
| \-Diana of TRIERS
/-Alberic I of HERULI
| \-Biogonna of THURINGIA
/-Wisimar King of HERULI
/-Miecislaus I.
| \-Amalasunta of SAXONY
/-Radagaisus King Of The Vandals
| \-Belga Queen of the HERULI
Corsicus King of the HERULII
\-Cella
- Birth: 520, España
- Also known as: dans la chanson de geste des lorrai de genève de Septimanie,
- LifeSketch: Perceval´s mother
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
- Partnership with: Pellinore Godogisel de Geneve
- Child: Hervis GENÈVE Birth: 560, Narbonne-Sud, Narbonne, Aude, Languedoc-Roussillon, Francia
- Child: Estha Héloïse DE GENÈVE, DE PÉVIERS dans la Chanson de Geste de Lorraine Birth: 570, Narbonne, Saône-et-Loire, Bourgogne-Franche-Comté, Francia
Descendants of Eglise Alice HERZELYDE de Lorraine
1 Eglise Alice HERZELYDE de Lorraine
=Pellinore Godogisel de Geneve
2 Hervis GENÈVE
=Béatrix DE TYR ET DE METZ de Genève Marriage: 568, Narbonne, Septimanie, France
3 Garin LE LOHERAIN /DE MONGLANE de Lorraine
=Aélis DE LORRAINE Marriage: ABT 620, Septimanie, Languedoc-Roussillon, Occitanie, France
3 Né Ysaure De GENÈVE
3 Dandrane Gyritha ALFSDOTTIR de Genève
3 Bégon DE GENÈVE
3 Mara DE GENÈVE
3 Méora Béatrice DANS LA CHANSON DE GESTE DES LORRAINS "ASTRE" EN DE GALLES [de genève]
3 Martha de GENÈVE
3 Agloval de GENÈVE
3 LOHENGRIN
3 Magdala DE GENÈVE
3 Hénée Hélène DE GENÈVE
2 Estha Héloïse DE GENÈVE, DE PÉVIERS dans la Chanson de Geste de Lorraine
- Father: Houching von Alamannien
- Birth: 710, Alemannien, Ostfränkisches Reich
- Also known as: Nebi de Huoching
- Also known as: Hnabi Count In Alemania
- Also known as: Nebi Houchingz of Alemania Count in Alemania
- Also known as: Hnabi Count In Alemania
- Also known as: Nebi Houchingz of Alemania Count in Alemania
- Also known as: Hnabi Count In Alemania
- Also known as: Nebi Houchingz of Alemania Count in Alemania
- Occupation: he was one of the joint founders of the monastery of Reichenau., 722
- Occupation: Duke of Alemannia, comte en Linzgau, Duc d'Alémanie (17e, -746), , Hertig, Herzog von Alamannien, Duke of Alamannia, Roi d'Alémanie, hertog van Allemannie, hertog der Allemannen
- Occupation: Duke of Alemannia, comte en Linzgau, Duc d'Alémanie (17e, -746), , Hertig, Herzog von Alamannien, Duke of Alamannia, Roi d'Alémanie, hertog van Allemannie, hertog der Allemannen
- Occupation: Duke of Alemannia, comte en Linzgau, Duc d'Alémanie (17e, -746), , Hertig, Herzog von Alamannien, Duke of Alamannia, Roi d'Alémanie, hertog van Allemannie, hertog der Allemannen
- Title Of Nobility: Duke of Alemannia
- LifeSketch: Hnabi or Nebi (c. 710-789) was an Alemannian duke. He was a son of Huoching and perhaps a grandson of the duke Gotfrid, which would make him a scion of the Agilolfing dynasty of Bavaria. He was the founder of the "old" line of the Ahalolfings. Around 724 he was one of the joint founders of the monastery of Reichenau. By his wife Hereswind, Hnabi left at least two children, Ruadbert (Rodbert, Robert), who was count in the Hegau, and Imma or Emma (died c. 785), who married Gerold of Vintzgau and was the mother of Eric of Friuli and Hildegard, wife of Charlemagne. Rodbert son of Hnabi is mentioned in a St. Gall document dated 770. Imma is mentioned in documents of Lorsch, Fulda and St. Gall between 779 and 804. The genealogy of Hildegard is recorded in the ninth-century Vita Hiudowici by Thegan of Trier: "the duke Gotfrid begat Huoching, Huoching begat Hnabi, Hnabi begat Emma, Emma herself the most blessed queen Hildegard". Scholars have cast doubt on Huoching being the son of Gotfrid, comparing the father-and-son pair of Huoching and Hnabi to that of Hoc and Hnaef in Anglo-Saxon tradition. «b»By his wife Hereswind, Hnabi left at least two children: «/b» 1.) Ruadbert (Rodbert, Robert), who was count in the Hegau. Rodbert is mentioned in a St. Gall document dated 770. 2.) Imma or Emma (died c. 785), who married Gerold of Vintzgau and was the mother of Eric of Friuli and Hildegard, wife of Charlemagne. Imma is mentioned in documents of Lorsch, Fulda and St. Gall between 779 and 804.
- Death: 788, Alemannien, Ostfränkisches Reich
- Burial: Baden-Württemberg, Germany
- Partnership with: Herswinde
Marriage: ABT 730
Ancestors of Hnabi Alamannischer HERZOG
/-Gotfrid Herzog der Alamannen
/-Houching von Alamannien
| \-Unknown VON BAYERN
Hnabi Alamannischer HERZOG
Descendants of Hnabi Alamannischer HERZOG
1 Hnabi Alamannischer HERZOG
=Herswinde Marriage: ABT 730
2 Imma Gräfin im Kraichgau
=Gérold VOM ANGLACHGAU Graf im Kraichgau und Anglachgau Marriage: BEF 754
3 Megingoz von Alemannien
3 Roadbert Graf in den Bodenseegrafschaften
3 Udo VOM ANGLACHGAU
3 Erbio
3 Gerold II Fränkischer Präfekt in Bayern
3 Adrien D'ORLÉANS Comte d'Orléans, comte palatin
=Waldrada D'AUTUN
3 Udalrich I im BREISGAU
=(Unknown)
3 Hildegard VON VINZGAU Fränkische Königin
=Karolus Magnus Rex Francorum Imperator ROMANORUM Marriage: 772
2 Robert Graf im Hegau
2 Theutbold DER ALEMANNEN M
Descendants of Living HESTER
1 Living HESTER
=Janice Irene WILKINSON
Ancestors of Andrew de HEVEN
/-Steven de HEVEN
Andrew de HEVEN
\-Enid DE HEVEN
Ancestors of Gilbert de HEVEN
/-Steven de HEVEN
Gilbert de HEVEN
\-Enid DE HEVEN
Ancestors of Richard de HEVEN
/-Steven de HEVEN
Richard de HEVEN
\-Enid DE HEVEN
Ancestors of Stephen de HEVEN
/-Steven de HEVEN
Stephen de HEVEN
\-Enid DE HEVEN
- Birth: 1050, England
- LifeSketch: Steven de Heven Birth: Abt 1035 death: Unknown _Marriage 1 Spouse Unknown Children Joan de Heven b: 1070 ---- : Steven de Heven Birth: Abt 1035 Death: Unknown _Marriage 1 Spouse Unknown Children Joan de Heven b: 1070
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Descendants of Steven de HEVEN
1 Steven de HEVEN
=Enid DE HEVEN Marriage: 1063, England
2 Joan DE HEVEN
=John DE LA BERE I Marriage: 1087, Harley, Shropshire, England
3 Stephen DE LA BERE
3 Richard DE LA BERE I
=(Unknown)
3 Maud DE LA BERE
=Jasper DE CROFT
2 Gilbert de HEVEN
2 Andrew de HEVEN
2 Stephen de HEVEN
2 William de HEVEN
2 Richard de HEVEN
Ancestors of William de HEVEN
/-Steven de HEVEN
William de HEVEN
\-Enid DE HEVEN
Ancestors of Jonathan HEYDEN
/-John Lawyer HEYDON
/-Henry HEYDON
| \-Eleanor WYNTER
/-William HAYDON
| \-Anne Elizabeth BOLEYN
/-Richard HAYDON Sr
| \-Susan HENRY
/-Richard Kimbre HAYDON Jr.
| \-Elizabeth Radcliff KIMBER
/-Thomas Trent HAYDON
| \-Joane TRENT
/-Thomas HAYDEN
| \-Joan WEEKS
/-Robert HAYDON Esquire
| \-Christiana TIDERSLEIGH
/-Gideon HAYDEN Esq
| \-Joan PAULET
/-John HAYDEN
| \-Margaret DAVEY
/-Samuel HAYDEN
| \-Susannah PULLEN
Jonathan HEYDEN
\-Hannah Flint THAYER
- Father: Henry HEYDON
- Mother: Anne Elizabeth BOLEYN
- Birth: ABT 1469, Baconsthorpe, Norfolk, England
- LifeSketch: iv. Amy Heydon: married to Sir Roger L’Estrange, of Hunstanton, Knight. -"The Hayday of the Heydons"
- Death: Hunston, Suffolk, England
- Burial: 1510, Old Hunstanton, Kings Lynn and West Norfolk Borough, Norfolk, England
Ancestors of Amy HEYDON
/-Samuel de HAYDON
/-Thomas DE HAYDON
| \-Ann BULWER
/-William de HAYDON
| \-Constance FURRE
/-William HEYDON
| | /-John MOORE
| \-Isabelle MOORE
/-David de HEYDON
/-Hugh de HEYDON
| \-Margarette BARONESS
/-William de HEYDON
| | /-Roger LOVERD
| \-Alice LOVERD
| \-Unknown Spouse of Roger LOVERD
/-Robert HEYDON
| | /-John MURE of Norwich
| \-Isabel MOORE
| \-Joan MOORE
/-William Baxter DE HEYDON
| \-Cecily OULTON
/-John Lawyer HEYDON
| | /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD III
| | /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD IV
| | | | /-Alured I SOLNEY
| | | | /-William SULNEY
| | | | /-Alfred SULNEY
| | | | | | /-Simon DE BAGOT
| | | | | | /-Hugh BAGGOTT
| | | | | | /-Richard BAGOT of Bagot's Bromley
| | | | | | | | /-Roger Bigod of NORFOLK
| | | | | | | \-Alicia BIGOD
| | | | | | | \-Ida DE TOSNY Countess of Norfolk
| | | | | | /-William BAGOT
| | | | | | | \-Christiana MAUVESLIN
| | | | | \-Sibilia DE BAGOT
| | | | | \-Hawyse DE LOUVAIN
| | | \-Margery SULNEY
| | | \-Margaret DE TRUSSELL
| \-Joan LONGFORD
| \-Margaret de APPLEBY
/-Henry HEYDON
| \-Eleanor WYNTER
Amy HEYDON
\-Anne Elizabeth BOLEYN
Ancestors of Amy HEYDON
/-Gilbert DE HAYDON
/-Samuel de HAYDON
| \-Margery de VESCI
/-Thomas DE HAYDON
| | /-Stephen DE BULMER I
| \-Ann BULWER
| \-Cecily DE MUSCHAMP
/-William de HAYDON
| \-Constance FURRE
/-William HEYDON
| | /-John MOORE
| \-Isabelle MOORE
/-David de HEYDON
/-Hugh de HEYDON
| \-Margarette BARONESS
/-William de HEYDON
| | /-Roger LOVERD
| \-Alice LOVERD
| \-Unknown Spouse of Roger LOVERD
/-Robert HEYDON
| | /-John MURE of Norwich
| \-Isabel MOORE
| \-Joan MOORE
/-William Baxter DE HEYDON
| \-Cecily OULTON
/-John Lawyer HEYDON
| | /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD III
| | /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD IV
| | | | /-Alured I SOLNEY
| | | | /-William SULNEY
| | | | /-Alfred SULNEY
| | | | | | /-William BAGOT I
| | | | | | /-Simon DE BAGOT
| | | | | | | \-Ivetta of Bramshall
| | | | | | /-Hugh BAGGOTT
| | | | | | /-Richard BAGOT of Bagot's Bromley
| | | | | | | | /-Hugh Bigod of NORFOLK
| | | | | | | | /-Roger Bigod of NORFOLK
| | | | | | | | | \-Juliana de Vere of NORFOLK
| | | | | | | \-Alicia BIGOD
| | | | | | | \-Ida DE TOSNY Countess of Norfolk
| | | | | | /-William BAGOT
| | | | | | | \-Christiana MAUVESLIN
| | | | | \-Sibilia DE BAGOT
| | | | | \-Hawyse DE LOUVAIN
| | | \-Margery SULNEY
| | | \-Margaret DE TRUSSELL
| \-Joan LONGFORD
| \-Margaret de APPLEBY
Amy HEYDON
\-Eleanor WYNTER
Ancestors of Anne HEYDON
/-Samuel de HAYDON
/-Thomas DE HAYDON
| \-Ann BULWER
/-William de HAYDON
| \-Constance FURRE
/-William HEYDON
| | /-John MOORE
| \-Isabelle MOORE
/-David de HEYDON
/-Hugh de HEYDON
| \-Margarette BARONESS
/-William de HEYDON
| | /-Roger LOVERD
| \-Alice LOVERD
| \-Unknown Spouse of Roger LOVERD
/-Robert HEYDON
| | /-John MURE of Norwich
| \-Isabel MOORE
| \-Joan MOORE
/-William Baxter DE HEYDON
| \-Cecily OULTON
/-John Lawyer HEYDON
| | /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD III
| | /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD IV
| | | | /-Alured I SOLNEY
| | | | /-William SULNEY
| | | | /-Alfred SULNEY
| | | | | | /-Simon DE BAGOT
| | | | | | /-Hugh BAGGOTT
| | | | | | /-Richard BAGOT of Bagot's Bromley
| | | | | | | | /-Roger Bigod of NORFOLK
| | | | | | | \-Alicia BIGOD
| | | | | | | \-Ida DE TOSNY Countess of Norfolk
| | | | | | /-William BAGOT
| | | | | | | \-Christiana MAUVESLIN
| | | | | \-Sibilia DE BAGOT
| | | | | \-Hawyse DE LOUVAIN
| | | \-Margery SULNEY
| | | \-Margaret DE TRUSSELL
| \-Joan LONGFORD
| \-Margaret de APPLEBY
/-Henry HEYDON
| \-Eleanor WYNTER
Anne HEYDON
\-Anne Elizabeth BOLEYN
- Father: Henry HEYDON
- Mother: Anne Elizabeth BOLEYN
- Birth: 1479, Baconsthorpe, Norfolk, England
- Also known as: Bridgett Heydon
- LifeSketch: The Heydons of Norfolk Genealogy viii. Bridget Heydon: who married Sir Wm. Paston, Knight of Paston. He was steward of the house of Cecilia, a Duchess of York, widow of Richard, Duke of York, father and mother of King Edward IV); and made by her supervisor of her will, with orders to see her buried in Foderhey Collegiate Church by the side of her husband. He was also chief bailiff of the honor of Eye. In 1497, an exchange was made between him and William Burdwell, Jr. Esq’, who settled Witchingham Manor, in Salthouse and Kelling, on Sir Henry Heydon, which he gave to Burdwell in return his manor of Drayton Hall in Searnington and Dillington. He was Lord of Dorkethye-in Snoring Parva. (In Latin, means Little Snoring)
- Death: Paston, Norfolk, England
- Burial: Paston, Norfolk, England
Ancestors of Bridget HEYDON
/-Samuel de HAYDON
/-Thomas DE HAYDON
| \-Ann BULWER
/-William de HAYDON
| \-Constance FURRE
/-William HEYDON
| | /-John MOORE
| \-Isabelle MOORE
/-David de HEYDON
/-Hugh de HEYDON
| \-Margarette BARONESS
/-William de HEYDON
| | /-Roger LOVERD
| \-Alice LOVERD
| \-Unknown Spouse of Roger LOVERD
/-Robert HEYDON
| | /-John MURE of Norwich
| \-Isabel MOORE
| \-Joan MOORE
/-William Baxter DE HEYDON
| \-Cecily OULTON
/-John Lawyer HEYDON
| | /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD III
| | /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD IV
| | | | /-Alured I SOLNEY
| | | | /-William SULNEY
| | | | /-Alfred SULNEY
| | | | | | /-Simon DE BAGOT
| | | | | | /-Hugh BAGGOTT
| | | | | | /-Richard BAGOT of Bagot's Bromley
| | | | | | | | /-Roger Bigod of NORFOLK
| | | | | | | \-Alicia BIGOD
| | | | | | | \-Ida DE TOSNY Countess of Norfolk
| | | | | | /-William BAGOT
| | | | | | | \-Christiana MAUVESLIN
| | | | | \-Sibilia DE BAGOT
| | | | | \-Hawyse DE LOUVAIN
| | | \-Margery SULNEY
| | | \-Margaret DE TRUSSELL
| \-Joan LONGFORD
| \-Margaret de APPLEBY
/-Henry HEYDON
| \-Eleanor WYNTER
Bridget HEYDON
\-Anne Elizabeth BOLEYN
Ancestors of Christopher HEYDON
/-Thomas DE HAYDON
/-William de HAYDON
| \-Constance FURRE
/-William HEYDON
| | /-John MOORE
| \-Isabelle MOORE
/-David de HEYDON
/-Hugh de HEYDON
| \-Margarette BARONESS
/-William de HEYDON
| | /-Roger LOVERD
| \-Alice LOVERD
| \-Unknown Spouse of Roger LOVERD
/-Robert HEYDON
| | /-John MURE of Norwich
| \-Isabel MOORE
| \-Joan MOORE
/-William Baxter DE HEYDON
| \-Cecily OULTON
/-John Lawyer HEYDON
| | /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD III
| | /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD IV
| | | | /-Alured I SOLNEY
| | | | /-William SULNEY
| | | | /-Alfred SULNEY
| | | | | | /-Hugh BAGGOTT
| | | | | | /-Richard BAGOT of Bagot's Bromley
| | | | | | | \-Alicia BIGOD
| | | | | | /-William BAGOT
| | | | | | | \-Christiana MAUVESLIN
| | | | | \-Sibilia DE BAGOT
| | | | | \-Hawyse DE LOUVAIN
| | | \-Margery SULNEY
| | | \-Margaret DE TRUSSELL
| \-Joan LONGFORD
| \-Margaret de APPLEBY
/-Henry HEYDON
| \-Eleanor WYNTER
/-William HAYDON
| \-Anne Elizabeth BOLEYN
Christopher HEYDON
\-Anne WOODHOUSE
- Father: William HEYDON
- Birth: 1292, Heydon, Norfolk, England
- Death: 1370, France
Ancestors of David de HEYDON
/-William Heydon DE CARDON
/-William DE HEYDON
| \-Adelise PEVERAL
/-Simon DE HAYDON
| \-Adelise FITZWALTER
/-Gilbert DE HAYDON
/-Samuel de HAYDON
| | /-John DE BURGH
| | /-Eustace DE BURGH
| | | \-Eustice DE COMYN
| | /-John DE BURGH
| | | \-Goda de Eustace DE BURGH
| | /-Eustace FITZJOHN Constable Of Knaresborough And Cheshire, Lord of Alnwick
| | | | /-Oberto I Obizzo Count of LUNI
| | | | /-Oberto II COUNT OF LUNI
| | | | | \-Guilla DI SPOLETO
| | | | /-Alberto Azzo OBERTENGHI
| | | | | | /-Riprando DI PIACENZA
| | | | | \-Railinde RIPONDO of Como
| | | | | \-Bertha DI PARMA
| | | | /-Alberto Azzo II D'MILANO
| | | | | | /-Oberto DI AUCIA
| | | | | \-Adela DI AUCIA of Milan
| | | \-Magdalena Cecily Fitznigel DE BLOIS
| | | | /-Hugues DU MAINE II
| | | | /-Hugues DU MAINE III
| | | | | \-Agnès DE RAZÈS OF LORRAINE
| | | | /-Heribert Eveille Chien DE MAINE II
| | | | | | /-Conan Ier DE BRETAGNE Duc de Bretagne
| | | | | \-Ermengarde DE RENNES
| | | | | \-Ermengarde D'ANJOU Duchesse de Bretagne
| | | \-Gersende DU MAINE
| | | | /-Effroy DE PREUILLY
| | | | /-Gosbert ou Gaudebert DE PREUILLY
| | | | | \-Béatrix D'ISSOUDUN
| | | \-Paula DE PREUILLY II
| | | \-Adèle du Bouchet de Marselle D'ARLES
| \-Margery de VESCI
| | /-Yvo DE VESCI I
| | /-Yvo DE VESCI II
| | /-Yves DE VESCI Lord of Alnwick and Malton, Yorkshire
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Yvo DE VESCI
| \-Beatrix DE VESCI
| | /-Gilbert DE TYSON
| \-Ada Jane DE TYSON
| \-Beatrix Normanica DE MALTON
/-Thomas DE HAYDON
| | /-Alan de BULMER
| | /-Anketel de BULMER
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Alan DE BULMER
| | /-Henry DE BULMER
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Anketel DE BULMER
| | /-Alan DE BULMER
| | | \-Anhetel POWTHER
| | /-Ansketil DE BULMER
| | | | /-John DE POWTHER
| | | \-Joan POWTHER
| | /-Ralph de BULMER
| | | | /-Robert DE HUMET
| | | | /-Peter DE HUMETZ
| | | \-Sybilla HUMETZ
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Peter DE HUMEZ
| | /-Stephen DE BULMER I
| | | | /-Robert FOSSARD
| | | | /-William FOSSARD
| | | | | \-Osceria MULGRAVE
| | | | /-Nigel FOSSARD I
| | | | /-Nele FOSSARD
| | | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Nigel FOSSARD
| | | | /-Stephen FOSSARD
| | | | | \-Osceria DE ROTHERHAM
| | | \-Aufrida FOSSARD
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Stephen FOSSARD
| \-Ann BULWER
| | /-Rogier DE MUSCHAMP
| | /-Roger de MUSCHAMP
| | /-Robert DE MUSCHAMP
| | | \-Beatrice HERRERA
| \-Cecily DE MUSCHAMP
| \-Unknown Spouse of Robert DE MUSCHAMP
/-William de HAYDON
| \-Constance FURRE
/-William HEYDON
| | /-John MOORE
| \-Isabelle MOORE
David de HEYDON
Descendants of David de HEYDON
1 David de HEYDON
=Margarette BARONESS
2 Hugh de HEYDON
=Alice LOVERD Marriage: BEF 1329, England
3 William de HEYDON
=Isabel MOORE
- Father: Henry HEYDON
- Mother: Anne Elizabeth BOLEYN
- Birth: 1470, Baconthorpe, Norfolk, England
- Also known as: Baroness Dorothy Heydon
- Alt. Birth: 1470, Baconsthorpe, Norfolk, England
- Title Of Nobility: Lady
- LifeSketch: The Hayday of the Heydons: Dorothy Heydon: (b 1484-d.1507) married to Sir Thomas Brooke, (b.abt 1470, d. July-year?) son and heir of Lord Cobham. Their daughter, Elizabeth Brooke b.1500/07 died Oct 1542, Sherborn, Dorset. She married Sir Thomas Wyatt, Knight, born abt. 1503,Allington Castle, Allington, Maidstone, Kent (A future great grandson, Haute Wyatt, no dates, emigrated to America. Wyatt descendants living in Lawrence County, Ohio, year 2001.) ********************************** Our royal, noble, titled and commoner ancestors: Dorothy Heydon was born circa 1475 at of Baconsthorpe, Norfolk, England.1,2 She married Sir Thomas Brooke, 8th Lord Cobham, son of Sir John Brooke, 7th Lord Cobham and Margaret Neville, circa 1495; They had 7 sons (including John; Sir George, 9th Lord Cobham; Thomas; William; & Edward) and 6 daughters (including Margaret, wife of Sir John Fogge; Anne; Faith, wife of William Ockenden; & Elizabeth, wife of Sir Thomas Wyatt, & of Sir Edward Warner).1,2,3,4,5,6 Dorothy Heydon died before 1518.4,6 Family Sir Thomas Brooke, 8th Lord Cobham d. 19 Jul 1529 Children Sir George Brooke, 9th Lord Cobham+7,2 b. c 1497, d. 29 Sep 1558 Elizabeth Brooke+8,3,4,6 b. c 1505, d. 1560
- Title Of Nobility: Baroness of Cobham
- Death: 29 MAR 1566, Cobham, Kent, England
- Burial: Tower of London, Middlesex, England, United Kingdom
Ancestors of Dorothy HEYDON
/-Samuel de HAYDON
/-Thomas DE HAYDON
| \-Ann BULWER
/-William de HAYDON
| \-Constance FURRE
/-William HEYDON
| | /-John MOORE
| \-Isabelle MOORE
/-David de HEYDON
/-Hugh de HEYDON
| \-Margarette BARONESS
/-William de HEYDON
| | /-Roger LOVERD
| \-Alice LOVERD
| \-Unknown Spouse of Roger LOVERD
/-Robert HEYDON
| | /-John MURE of Norwich
| \-Isabel MOORE
| \-Joan MOORE
/-William Baxter DE HEYDON
| \-Cecily OULTON
/-John Lawyer HEYDON
| | /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD III
| | /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD IV
| | | | /-Alured I SOLNEY
| | | | /-William SULNEY
| | | | /-Alfred SULNEY
| | | | | | /-Simon DE BAGOT
| | | | | | /-Hugh BAGGOTT
| | | | | | /-Richard BAGOT of Bagot's Bromley
| | | | | | | | /-Roger Bigod of NORFOLK
| | | | | | | \-Alicia BIGOD
| | | | | | | \-Ida DE TOSNY Countess of Norfolk
| | | | | | /-William BAGOT
| | | | | | | \-Christiana MAUVESLIN
| | | | | \-Sibilia DE BAGOT
| | | | | \-Hawyse DE LOUVAIN
| | | \-Margery SULNEY
| | | \-Margaret DE TRUSSELL
| \-Joan LONGFORD
| \-Margaret de APPLEBY
/-Henry HEYDON
| \-Eleanor WYNTER
Dorothy HEYDON
\-Anne Elizabeth BOLEYN
- Father: Henry HEYDON
- Mother: Anne Elizabeth BOLEYN
- Birth: ABT 1479, Baconsthorpe, Norfolk, England, United Kingdom
- LifeSketch: vi. Elizabeth Heydon: married to Walter Hobart, of Hale’s Hall, Esq. "the Hayday of the Heydons"
- Death: JUL 1516, Norwich, Norfolk, England
Ancestors of Elizabeth HEYDON
/-Samuel de HAYDON
/-Thomas DE HAYDON
| \-Ann BULWER
/-William de HAYDON
| \-Constance FURRE
/-William HEYDON
| | /-John MOORE
| \-Isabelle MOORE
/-David de HEYDON
/-Hugh de HEYDON
| \-Margarette BARONESS
/-William de HEYDON
| | /-Roger LOVERD
| \-Alice LOVERD
| \-Unknown Spouse of Roger LOVERD
/-Robert HEYDON
| | /-John MURE of Norwich
| \-Isabel MOORE
| \-Joan MOORE
/-William Baxter DE HEYDON
| \-Cecily OULTON
/-John Lawyer HEYDON
| | /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD III
| | /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD IV
| | | | /-Alured I SOLNEY
| | | | /-William SULNEY
| | | | /-Alfred SULNEY
| | | | | | /-Simon DE BAGOT
| | | | | | /-Hugh BAGGOTT
| | | | | | /-Richard BAGOT of Bagot's Bromley
| | | | | | | | /-Roger Bigod of NORFOLK
| | | | | | | \-Alicia BIGOD
| | | | | | | \-Ida DE TOSNY Countess of Norfolk
| | | | | | /-William BAGOT
| | | | | | | \-Christiana MAUVESLIN
| | | | | \-Sibilia DE BAGOT
| | | | | \-Hawyse DE LOUVAIN
| | | \-Margery SULNEY
| | | \-Margaret DE TRUSSELL
| \-Joan LONGFORD
| \-Margaret de APPLEBY
/-Henry HEYDON
| \-Eleanor WYNTER
Elizabeth HEYDON
\-Anne Elizabeth BOLEYN
- Father: John Lawyer HEYDON
- Mother: Eleanor WYNTER
- Birth: Baconthorpe, Norfolk, England
- Also known as: Henry Heydon
- Also known as: Henry Sir Heydon van Baconsthorpe
- Also known as: Henry Sir Heydon van Baconsthorpe
- Also known as: Henry Sir Heydon van Baconsthorpe
- Title Of Nobility: Sir Knight
- LifeSketch: Sir Henry Heydon, Knight, of Baconsthorpe, (b-abt 1425, died in 1503) His will was dated Feb. 20, 1503. Sir Henry Heydon, Knight.- - “My synfull carkeys,” If I die in Norfolk, to be buried in the Cathedral of the same shire, in the chapel where my father is buried; but if I die in London, then to be buried in the Grey Friars of London, in the chapel of our Lady. Bequests for religious services and various orders of Friars and sisters of Normans in Norwich and various other bequests. He lists ownership of 43 properties and manors. (-Not included here by me, but which covered a good bit of England) The old Jabez Hayden “gospel” genealogy of 1887 says Henry was born in 1468, which is not possible because Henry and wife Elizabeth Ann Boleyn were in real estate much earlier in 1443. (Read on) Henry's father, Sir John was born about 1410, so somewhere in that time frame, #12-Sir John has to grow up, get married and have this son #13 Henry also grow to maturity and marry and both of them in the space of just 33 years, that is from John born in 1410 to Henry married and in real estate in 1443. (Yes, a lot of them did indeed marry at age of 14 or 15 and have babies. Due to so many diseases, very few lived past the age of 30.) . (Here's the conflict with the 1468 birth date). "In 1443 the moiety,” means a portion or part, “of Hyde Manor, in Pangborn, Berkshire, the moiety of Nutfield, in Surrey, and the moiety of Shipton Solery Manor in Gloucestershire were settled by John Armstrong on the said Sir Henry Heydon and Ann, his wife as her inheritance." -(So he could not have been born in 1468.) #13- Sir Henry married Ann Boleyn, by whom he had 8 children, (three sons and five daughters), Ann was the daughter of Sir Jeffrey Boleyn, Knight, and the future Lord Mayor of London; consequently she was aunt to the Anne Boleyn, (1507-1536) who was King Henry VIII's second queen and mother of Queen Elizabeth. The seven living children named in his will are: John, William, Henry, Kateryn, Dorothe, Bridgett, and Anne. Amy is not listed as surviving. #13- Sir Henry finished building the hall or manor house at Baconsthorpe, (see photos) a spacious, "sumptuous pile" entirely from the ground, except the tower, which was built by his father, in the space of six years; also the church and noble house in West Wickham, in Kent, which place he had purchased before the death of his father and dwelt there; and it continued in the family till the reign of Queen Elizabeth when a lot of the Heydon property was seized and/or sold. (I’ll tell you why later on.) Sir Henry Heydon also built the church at Salthouse, between 1497 and 1503 and the causeway between Thursford and Walsingham was made at his expense. His will is dated Feb. 20, 1503 and he died in 1503, and was buried beside his father in Heydon chapel, in Norwich Cathedral. (There are well over 15 Heydons entombed in Norwich Cathedral.) In the “Norfolk Tour” vol., p.1042, in relation to the above two gentlemen; in the Norwich Cathedral, below, amongst the other celebrated persons whose place of sepulture (burial) is in this church, may be noticed #12 John Haydon, Esq. a great favorite of Edward V, and #13 Sir Henry Heydon, Knight, who built at his own expense, Salthouse Church, in the beginning of the reign of Henry VII”. In Salthouse Church, the arms of #13 Henry Heydon with his wife Ann Boleyn are above the arches on the south arcade.The 8 children of #13 Sir Henry and Elizabeth Ann Boleyn are as follows: i. John Heydon: eldest and heir: See his next generation #14 report. ii. Henry Heydon, Esq.: (no info.) iii. William Heydon: He was slain in Kett’s Insurrection in 1549,and buried in St. Peter's Church, Mancroft, Norwich; Looking into the quaint old church, St Michael’s at Pleas, in Norwich, where John de Heydon was rector in 1349, there are some rich old tapestry hangings placed there in 1573. “We attended service (1887 report) both in the Cathedral and in St. Peter’s Mancroft where William Heydon, killed by the rebels in Kett’s insurrection in 1549 was buried." Kett's Rebellion: July 12, 1549, Robert Kett (a Norfolk tanner and landowner) and his followers camp near Norwich in protest against enclosures and exploitation. They also expressed problems with the clergy but adopted the new Prayer Book. The rebellion was defeated at the Battle of Dussindale on 27 August.) iv. Amy Heydon: married to Sir Roger L’Estrange, of Hunstanton, Knight v. Dorothy Heydon: (b 1484-d.1507) married to Sir Thomas Brooke, (b.abt 1470, d. July-year?) son and heir of Lord Cobham. Their daughter, Elizabeth Brooke b.1500/07 died Oct 1542, Sherborn, Dorset. She married Sir Thomas Wyatt, Knight, born abt. 1503,Allington Castle, Allington, Maidstone, Kent (A future great grandson, Haute Wyatt, no dates, emigrated to America. Wyatt descendants living in Lawrence County, Ohio, year 2001.) vi. Elizabeth Heydon: married to Walter Hobart, of Hale’s Hall, Esq. vii. Ann Heydon: wife of William Gurney, Esq. Of West Barsham viii. Bridget Heydon: who married Sir Wm. Paston, Knight of Paston. He was steward of the house of Cecilia, a Duchess of York, widow of Richard, Duke of York, father and mother of King Edward IV); and made by her supervisor of her will, with orders to see her buried in Foderhey Collegiate Church by the side of her husband. He was also chief bailiff of the honor of Eye. In 1497, an exchange was made between him and William Burdwell, Jr. Esq’, who settled Witchingham Manor, in Salthouse and Kelling, on Sir Henry Heydon, which he gave to Burdwell in return his manor of Drayton Hall in Searnington and Dillington. He was Lord of Dorkethye-in Snoring Parva. (In Latin, means Little Snoring) Ref: HAYDAY OF THE HEYDONS. THE NORFOLK FAMILY AND DESCENDANTS AT BACONSTHORPE HALL "CASTLE" https://sites.google.com/site/haydonhaydenkeysgenealogy/OLIVER-HAYDEN-WITH-2ND-WIFE-ELIZA-FUNK-AND-THEIR-OHIO-DESCENDANTS/rev-coleman-green-keys--branch/HEYDON-HAYDON-HAYDEN-KEYS-FAMILY-HISTORY/HEYDONS-OF-NORFOLK-GENEALOGY Extracted 11 Feb 2019
- Will: (Date and Place unknown)
- Death: 22 MAY 1504, Bromley, Kent, England
- Burial: 23 MAY 1504, Norwich Cathedral, Norfolk, England
- Partnership with: Anne Elizabeth BOLEYN
Marriage: 1461, Blickling, Norfolk, England
- Child: John HAYDON Birth: 1468, Baconthorpe, England
- Child: Amy HEYDON Birth: ABT 1469, Baconsthorpe, Norfolk, England
- Child: Henry HEYDON Birth: 1470
- Child: Dorothy HEYDON Birth: 1470, Baconthorpe, Norfolk, England
- Child: William HAYDON Birth: ABT 1472, Baconsthorpe, Norfolk, England
- Child: Robert John HEYDON (ADAMS) Birth: 1474, Somerset, England, United Kingdom
- Child: Bridget HEYDON Birth: 1479, Baconsthorpe, Norfolk, England
- Child: Elizabeth HEYDON Birth: ABT 1479, Baconsthorpe, Norfolk, England, United Kingdom
- Child: Margery HEYDON Birth: ABT 1484, Baconsthorpe, Norfolk, England
- Child: Anne HEYDON Birth: ABT 1530, Thorpe, Norfolk, England
Ancestors of Henry HEYDON
/-Gilbert DE HAYDON
/-Samuel de HAYDON
| \-Margery de VESCI
/-Thomas DE HAYDON
| | /-Stephen DE BULMER I
| \-Ann BULWER
| \-Cecily DE MUSCHAMP
/-William de HAYDON
| \-Constance FURRE
/-William HEYDON
| | /-John MOORE
| \-Isabelle MOORE
/-David de HEYDON
/-Hugh de HEYDON
| \-Margarette BARONESS
/-William de HEYDON
| | /-Roger LOVERD
| \-Alice LOVERD
| \-Unknown Spouse of Roger LOVERD
/-Robert HEYDON
| | /-John MURE of Norwich
| \-Isabel MOORE
| \-Joan MOORE
/-William Baxter DE HEYDON
| \-Cecily OULTON
/-John Lawyer HEYDON
| | /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD III
| | /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD IV
| | | | /-Alured I SOLNEY
| | | | /-William SULNEY
| | | | /-Alfred SULNEY
| | | | | | /-William BAGOT I
| | | | | | /-Simon DE BAGOT
| | | | | | | \-Ivetta of Bramshall
| | | | | | /-Hugh BAGGOTT
| | | | | | /-Richard BAGOT of Bagot's Bromley
| | | | | | | | /-Hugh Bigod of NORFOLK
| | | | | | | | /-Roger Bigod of NORFOLK
| | | | | | | | | \-Juliana de Vere of NORFOLK
| | | | | | | \-Alicia BIGOD
| | | | | | | \-Ida DE TOSNY Countess of Norfolk
| | | | | | /-William BAGOT
| | | | | | | \-Christiana MAUVESLIN
| | | | | \-Sibilia DE BAGOT
| | | | | \-Hawyse DE LOUVAIN
| | | \-Margery SULNEY
| | | \-Margaret DE TRUSSELL
| \-Joan LONGFORD
| \-Margaret de APPLEBY
Henry HEYDON
\-Eleanor WYNTER
Descendants of Henry HEYDON
1 Henry HEYDON
=Anne Elizabeth BOLEYN Marriage: 1461, Blickling, Norfolk, England
2 John HAYDON
2 Amy HEYDON
2 Henry HEYDON
2 Dorothy HEYDON
2 William HAYDON
=Anne WOODHOUSE Marriage: ABT 1445, England, United Kingdom
3 Christopher HEYDON
=Susan HENRY Marriage: ABT 1447, Woodbury with Exton, Devon, England
3 Richard HAYDEN
3 Jeffery HAYDON
3 John HAYDON
3 Richard HAYDON Sr
=Elizabeth Radcliff KIMBER Marriage: ABT 1475, Woodbury with Exton, Devon, England Marriage: ABT 1480
=Elizabeth AUBREY
3 Boughwood et Ebford Haydon SIR RICHARD DEVON
3 William HAYDON
3 Thomas HAYDON
=Joane WYNDOUT Marriage: 1498, Hertfordshire, England
2 Robert John HEYDON (ADAMS)
2 Bridget HEYDON
2 Elizabeth HEYDON
2 Margery HEYDON
2 Anne HEYDON
Ancestors of Henry HEYDON
/-Samuel de HAYDON
/-Thomas DE HAYDON
| \-Ann BULWER
/-William de HAYDON
| \-Constance FURRE
/-William HEYDON
| | /-John MOORE
| \-Isabelle MOORE
/-David de HEYDON
/-Hugh de HEYDON
| \-Margarette BARONESS
/-William de HEYDON
| | /-Roger LOVERD
| \-Alice LOVERD
| \-Unknown Spouse of Roger LOVERD
/-Robert HEYDON
| | /-John MURE of Norwich
| \-Isabel MOORE
| \-Joan MOORE
/-William Baxter DE HEYDON
| \-Cecily OULTON
/-John Lawyer HEYDON
| | /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD III
| | /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD IV
| | | | /-Alured I SOLNEY
| | | | /-William SULNEY
| | | | /-Alfred SULNEY
| | | | | | /-Simon DE BAGOT
| | | | | | /-Hugh BAGGOTT
| | | | | | /-Richard BAGOT of Bagot's Bromley
| | | | | | | | /-Roger Bigod of NORFOLK
| | | | | | | \-Alicia BIGOD
| | | | | | | \-Ida DE TOSNY Countess of Norfolk
| | | | | | /-William BAGOT
| | | | | | | \-Christiana MAUVESLIN
| | | | | \-Sibilia DE BAGOT
| | | | | \-Hawyse DE LOUVAIN
| | | \-Margery SULNEY
| | | \-Margaret DE TRUSSELL
| \-Joan LONGFORD
| \-Margaret de APPLEBY
/-Henry HEYDON
| \-Eleanor WYNTER
Henry HEYDON
\-Anne Elizabeth BOLEYN
Ancestors of Hugh de HEYDON
/-William Heydon DE CARDON
/-William DE HEYDON
| \-Adelise PEVERAL
/-Simon DE HAYDON
| \-Adelise FITZWALTER
/-Gilbert DE HAYDON
/-Samuel de HAYDON
| | /-John DE BURGH
| | /-Eustace DE BURGH
| | | \-Eustice DE COMYN
| | /-John DE BURGH
| | | \-Goda de Eustace DE BURGH
| | /-Eustace FITZJOHN Constable Of Knaresborough And Cheshire, Lord of Alnwick
| | | | /-Oberto II COUNT OF LUNI
| | | | /-Alberto Azzo OBERTENGHI
| | | | | \-Railinde RIPONDO of Como
| | | | /-Alberto Azzo II D'MILANO
| | | | | | /-Oberto DI AUCIA
| | | | | \-Adela DI AUCIA of Milan
| | | \-Magdalena Cecily Fitznigel DE BLOIS
| | | | /-Hugues DU MAINE III
| | | | /-Heribert Eveille Chien DE MAINE II
| | | | | \-Ermengarde DE RENNES
| | | \-Gersende DU MAINE
| | | | /-Gosbert ou Gaudebert DE PREUILLY
| | | \-Paula DE PREUILLY II
| | | \-Adèle du Bouchet de Marselle D'ARLES
| \-Margery de VESCI
| | /-Yvo DE VESCI I
| | /-Yvo DE VESCI II
| | /-Yves DE VESCI Lord of Alnwick and Malton, Yorkshire
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Yvo DE VESCI
| \-Beatrix DE VESCI
| | /-Gilbert DE TYSON
| \-Ada Jane DE TYSON
| \-Beatrix Normanica DE MALTON
/-Thomas DE HAYDON
| | /-Anketel de BULMER
| | /-Henry DE BULMER
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Anketel DE BULMER
| | /-Alan DE BULMER
| | | \-Anhetel POWTHER
| | /-Ansketil DE BULMER
| | | | /-John DE POWTHER
| | | \-Joan POWTHER
| | /-Ralph de BULMER
| | | | /-Robert DE HUMET
| | | | /-Peter DE HUMETZ
| | | \-Sybilla HUMETZ
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Peter DE HUMEZ
| | /-Stephen DE BULMER I
| | | | /-William FOSSARD
| | | | /-Nigel FOSSARD I
| | | | /-Nele FOSSARD
| | | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Nigel FOSSARD
| | | | /-Stephen FOSSARD
| | | | | \-Osceria DE ROTHERHAM
| | | \-Aufrida FOSSARD
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Stephen FOSSARD
| \-Ann BULWER
| | /-Rogier DE MUSCHAMP
| | /-Roger de MUSCHAMP
| | /-Robert DE MUSCHAMP
| | | \-Beatrice HERRERA
| \-Cecily DE MUSCHAMP
| \-Unknown Spouse of Robert DE MUSCHAMP
/-William de HAYDON
| \-Constance FURRE
/-William HEYDON
| | /-John MOORE
| \-Isabelle MOORE
/-David de HEYDON
Hugh de HEYDON
\-Margarette BARONESS
Descendants of Hugh de HEYDON
1 Hugh de HEYDON
=Alice LOVERD Marriage: BEF 1329, England
2 William de HEYDON
=Isabel MOORE
3 Isabel de HEYDON
3 William DE HEYDON
3 Robert HEYDON
=Cecily OULTON
Ancestors of Isabel de HEYDON
/-William Heydon DE CARDON
/-William DE HEYDON
| \-Adelise PEVERAL
/-Simon DE HAYDON
| \-Adelise FITZWALTER
/-Gilbert DE HAYDON
/-Samuel de HAYDON
| | /-Eustace DE BURGH
| | /-John DE BURGH
| | | \-Goda de Eustace DE BURGH
| | /-Eustace FITZJOHN Constable Of Knaresborough And Cheshire, Lord of Alnwick
| | | | /-Alberto Azzo II D'MILANO
| | | \-Magdalena Cecily Fitznigel DE BLOIS
| | | \-Gersende DU MAINE
| \-Margery de VESCI
| | /-Yvo DE VESCI II
| | /-Yves DE VESCI Lord of Alnwick and Malton, Yorkshire
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Yvo DE VESCI
| \-Beatrix DE VESCI
| | /-Gilbert DE TYSON
| \-Ada Jane DE TYSON
| \-Beatrix Normanica DE MALTON
/-Thomas DE HAYDON
| | /-Alan DE BULMER
| | /-Ansketil DE BULMER
| | | \-Joan POWTHER
| | /-Ralph de BULMER
| | | | /-Peter DE HUMETZ
| | | \-Sybilla HUMETZ
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Peter DE HUMEZ
| | /-Stephen DE BULMER I
| | | | /-Nele FOSSARD
| | | | /-Stephen FOSSARD
| | | | | \-Osceria DE ROTHERHAM
| | | \-Aufrida FOSSARD
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Stephen FOSSARD
| \-Ann BULWER
| | /-Rogier DE MUSCHAMP
| | /-Roger de MUSCHAMP
| | /-Robert DE MUSCHAMP
| | | \-Beatrice HERRERA
| \-Cecily DE MUSCHAMP
| \-Unknown Spouse of Robert DE MUSCHAMP
/-William de HAYDON
| \-Constance FURRE
/-William HEYDON
| | /-John MOORE
| \-Isabelle MOORE
/-David de HEYDON
/-Hugh de HEYDON
| \-Margarette BARONESS
/-William de HEYDON
| | /-Roger LOVERD
| \-Alice LOVERD
| \-Unknown Spouse of Roger LOVERD
Isabel de HEYDON
| /-John MURE of Norwich
\-Isabel MOORE
\-Joan MOORE
- Father: Robert HAYDON Esquire
- Mother: Joan PAULET
- Birth: 2 NOV 1605, Ottery St Mary, Devon, England
- Christening: 2 NOV 1605, Ottery St Mary, Devon, England
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Ancestors of John HEYDON
/-William de HEYDON
/-Robert HEYDON
| \-Isabel MOORE
/-William Baxter DE HEYDON
| \-Cecily OULTON
/-John Lawyer HEYDON
| | /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD III
| | /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD IV
| | | \-Margery SULNEY
| \-Joan LONGFORD
| \-Margaret de APPLEBY
/-Henry HEYDON
| \-Eleanor WYNTER
/-William HAYDON
| \-Anne Elizabeth BOLEYN
/-Richard HAYDON Sr
| \-Susan HENRY
/-Richard Kimbre HAYDON Jr.
| \-Elizabeth Radcliff KIMBER
/-Thomas Trent HAYDON
| \-Joane TRENT
/-Thomas HAYDEN
| \-Joan WEEKS
/-Robert HAYDON Esquire
| \-Christiana TIDERSLEIGH
John HEYDON
\-Joan PAULET
Ancestors of John HEYDON
/-William HEYDON
/-David de HEYDON
/-Hugh de HEYDON
| \-Margarette BARONESS
/-William de HEYDON
| | /-Roger LOVERD
| \-Alice LOVERD
| \-Unknown Spouse of Roger LOVERD
/-Robert HEYDON
| | /-John MURE of Norwich
| \-Isabel MOORE
| \-Joan MOORE
/-William Baxter DE HEYDON
| \-Cecily OULTON
/-John Lawyer HEYDON
| | /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD III
| | /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD IV
| | | | /-Alured I SOLNEY
| | | | /-William SULNEY
| | | | /-Alfred SULNEY
| | | | | | /-William BAGOT
| | | | | \-Sibilia DE BAGOT
| | | | | \-Hawyse DE LOUVAIN
| | | \-Margery SULNEY
| | | \-Margaret DE TRUSSELL
| \-Joan LONGFORD
| \-Margaret de APPLEBY
/-Henry HEYDON
| \-Eleanor WYNTER
/-William HAYDON
| \-Anne Elizabeth BOLEYN
/-Richard HAYDON Sr
| \-Susan HENRY
/-Richard Kimbre HAYDON Jr.
| \-Elizabeth Radcliff KIMBER
John HEYDON
\-Joane TRENT
- Father: William Baxter DE HEYDON
- Mother: Joan LONGFORD
- Birth: 1416, Baconsthorpe, Norfolk, England, United Kingdom
- Also known as: John Haydon
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia John Heydon Died 1479 Buried Norwich Cathedral Spouse(s) Eleanor Winter Issue Sir Henry Heydon Father William Baxter John Heydon alias Baxter (died 1479) of Baconsthorpe, Norfolk, was of humble origins, the son of a yeoman, William Baxter of Heydon. He became a successful lawyer, and is known, through the Paston Letters, as one of the principal agents in East Anglia of William de la Pole, 1st Duke of Suffolk, and one of the chief opponents of the Paston family. Career[edit] John was the son of a yeoman, William Baxter of Heydon, Norfolk. Legal records from as late as 1450 refer to him as 'John Heydon of Baconsthorpe alias John Baxter of Heydon'. His mother's name was Jane, daughter and heiress of John Warren, of Lincolnshire, whose arms, Chequey or and azure, on a canton gules, a lion rampant argent, is also quartered by the Heydons family;[1] William was the first of his family that settled at Baconsthorpe, having purchased a moiety of the manor of Woodhall in this town, and was buried in the chapel in the north isle, with this epitaph, now lost: O Jesu tolle a me quod feci Et remaneat mihi quod tu fecisti, Ne pereat quod sanguine tuo redemisti.[1] John was educated at the Inns of Court, and by 1428 was acting on behalf of Edmund Winter of Town Barningham, Norfolk, likely in connection with Winter's dispute with the Paston family over the manor of East Beckham.[2][3][4][1] In 1431 he was appointed Recorder of Norwich,[1] but was unpopular with the townsmen, and was dismissed from the position before May 1437. Many years later, in 1450, it was alleged that during his tenure as Recorder he had informed Norwich Cathedral priory of information concerning the City of Norwich's dispute with the priory. By the mid-1430s he was acting as legal counsel for the priory, and by 1445 was the priory's chief steward. From 1438 on, he served on numerous commissions in Norfolk, was a Justice of the Peace from 1441 to 1450, and in 1445 a Knight of the Shire for Norfolk. By 1447 he was steward of the East Anglian estates of Henry Stafford, 2nd Duke of Buckingham. Among his numerous legal clients were Lord Bardolf, Lord Cromwell, Lord Willoughby and Sir John Clifton (d.1447).[2][5][6] However Heydon chiefly owed his prominence in East Anglia to his service with William de la Pole, 1st Duke of Suffolk (d.1450), with whom he had become associated by 1435.[5] Through his influence with Henry VI, Suffolk is said to have ousted John Mowbray, 3rd Duke of Norfolk, from his rightful position as the dominant magnate in East Anglia. Two of his agents in particular, Heydon and Sir Thomas Tuddenham, from 1443 jointly held the 'powerful and lucrative' stewardship of the Duchy of Lancaster,[5] and are said to have terrorised the East Anglian gentry, including the Paston family.[7] The conflict between the Pastons and Heydon over the years is recorded in the Paston Letters. In 1448 it centred on the manor of Gresham, which William Paston had purchased from Thomas Chaucer. In February of that year, 'almost certainly on Heydon's initiative', Robert Hungerford, 3rd Baron Hungerford, asserted his wife's claim to Gresham, then in the hands of William Paston's son, John. Paston attempted to recover the manor through negotiation and legal action; both proved fruitless, and in October 1448 Paston asserted possession by sending his wife, Margaret, to reside in a house in Gresham. In the following January Hungerford's servants assaulted and damaged the house, forcing Margaret Paston to leave; Hungerford remained in possession of Gresham for the next three years. In a letter in 1448 Margaret referred to Heydon as a 'false shrew'.[7][5][8] Suffolk fell from power at the beginning of 1450, and Heydon and Tuddenham immediately found themselves under attack by their principal opponents in East Anglia. Sir John Fastolf, a kinsman of John Paston's wife, Margaret, immediately requested a servant to provide him with a list of the wrongs which Heydon had done to him over the previous thirteen years, and in October 1450, a commission was empowered to inquire into complaints in East Anglia. Indictments were drawn up which provided details of Heydon's and Tuddenham's actions during the previous fifteen years; according to Richmond, these allegations were perhaps biased, since Fastolf, John Paston, and the City of Norwich were among the principal informants, but it is 'likely that much of the shire was hostile to the pair of them'. During the years 1450–51 the Duke of Norfolk, John de Vere, 12th Earl of Oxford, and Fastolf also exerted efforts to remove Suffolk's former agents from positions of local power. These efforts were ultimately unsuccessful, however. By the spring of 1451 Suffolk's widow, Alice (d.1475), and Thomas Scales, 7th Baron Scales, had regained Suffolk's former dominance in East Anglia.[7][9][2][10] After this setback, Heydon was never again as influential in East Anglia, although he retained his offices and stewardships, and was a member of various commissions from 1452 on. When the Lancastrian regime was overthrown in 1460–61, the Pastons hoped that Heydon would be destroyed. However although Tuddenham was executed in 1462, Heydon was not. He had continued to enjoy the patronage of Suffolk's widow, Alice, and was able to obtain a pardon from the Yorkists in April 1462 on payment of 500 marks.[11] During the Readeption of Henry VI he attempted to gain the favour of John de Vere, 13th Earl of Oxford, a Lancastrian, and was appointed to two commissions, but thereafter, for the remaining eighteen years of his life he was not prominent in public affairs, although he continued to practice law and to administer his clients' estates as well as his own.[11][2] Heydon died in 1479, leaving more than sixteen manors to his son and heir Sir Henry Heydon, purchased with the wealth acquired during his career. Among them was his seat at Baconsthorpe, where he had rebuilt the manor house, a project perhaps begun about 1446 when the King granted him forty oak trees from the forest at Gimingham.[5] His will, which he made in March 1478, makes no reference to his wife or to any child other than his son, Henry. In addition to numerous charitable bequests, he left £200 towards the marriages of his granddaughters, and £20 towards his burial in the Heydon chapel in Norwich Cathedral.[2] Marriage and issue[edit] Heydon married Eleanor Winter,[1] the daughter of his first patron, Edmund Winter (d.1448) of Barningham, by whom he had a son and heir, Sir Henry Heydon.[12][2] He disputed the parentage of a second child born to his wife Eleanor. In a letter written in July 1444, Margaret Paston claimed that Heydon would have nothing to do with either his wife or the child, and that he had threatened to cut off his wife's nose and kill the child.[13][2]
- Death: Baconsthorpe, Kent, England
- Burial: 1479, Norwich, Norfolk, England, United Kingdom
- Partnership with: Eleanor WYNTER
Marriage: Woodbury with Exton, Devon, England
Marriage: Woodbury, Devon, England
Ancestors of John Lawyer HEYDON
/-Simon DE HAYDON
/-Gilbert DE HAYDON
/-Samuel de HAYDON
| | /-Eustace FITZJOHN Constable Of Knaresborough And Cheshire, Lord of Alnwick
| \-Margery de VESCI
| \-Beatrix DE VESCI
/-Thomas DE HAYDON
| | /-Ralph de BULMER
| | /-Stephen DE BULMER I
| | | \-Aufrida FOSSARD
| \-Ann BULWER
| | /-Robert DE MUSCHAMP
| \-Cecily DE MUSCHAMP
| \-Unknown Spouse of Robert DE MUSCHAMP
/-William de HAYDON
| \-Constance FURRE
/-William HEYDON
| | /-John MOORE
| \-Isabelle MOORE
/-David de HEYDON
/-Hugh de HEYDON
| \-Margarette BARONESS
/-William de HEYDON
| | /-Roger LOVERD
| \-Alice LOVERD
| \-Unknown Spouse of Roger LOVERD
/-Robert HEYDON
| | /-John MURE of Norwich
| \-Isabel MOORE
| \-Joan MOORE
/-William Baxter DE HEYDON
| \-Cecily OULTON
John Lawyer HEYDON
| /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD III
| /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD IV
| | | /-Alured I SOLNEY
| | | /-William SULNEY
| | | /-Alfred SULNEY
| | | | | /-Hervey FITZBAGOT II
| | | | | /-William BAGOT I
| | | | | | \-Millicent DE STAFFORD
| | | | | /-Simon DE BAGOT
| | | | | | \-Ivetta of Bramshall
| | | | | /-Hugh BAGGOTT
| | | | | /-Richard BAGOT of Bagot's Bromley
| | | | | | | /-Roger Bigod of East ANGLIA
| | | | | | | /-Hugh Bigod of NORFOLK
| | | | | | | | \-Adeliza de Toeni of BELVOIR
| | | | | | | /-Roger Bigod of NORFOLK
| | | | | | | | | /-Aubrey II DE VERE
| | | | | | | | \-Juliana de Vere of NORFOLK
| | | | | | | | \-Adeliza FITZGILBERT DE CLARE
| | | | | | \-Alicia BIGOD
| | | | | | \-Ida DE TOSNY Countess of Norfolk
| | | | | /-William BAGOT
| | | | | | \-Christiana MAUVESLIN
| | | | \-Sibilia DE BAGOT
| | | | \-Hawyse DE LOUVAIN
| | \-Margery SULNEY
| | \-Margaret DE TRUSSELL
\-Joan LONGFORD
\-Margaret de APPLEBY
Descendants of John Lawyer HEYDON
1 John Lawyer HEYDON
=Eleanor WYNTER Marriage: Woodbury with Exton, Devon, England Marriage: Woodbury, Devon, England
2 Henry HEYDON
=Anne Elizabeth BOLEYN Marriage: 1461, Blickling, Norfolk, England
3 John HAYDON
3 Amy HEYDON
3 Henry HEYDON
3 Dorothy HEYDON
3 William HAYDON
=Anne WOODHOUSE Marriage: ABT 1445, England, United Kingdom
=Susan HENRY Marriage: ABT 1447, Woodbury with Exton, Devon, England
=Joane WYNDOUT Marriage: 1498, Hertfordshire, England
3 Robert John HEYDON (ADAMS)
3 Bridget HEYDON
3 Elizabeth HEYDON
3 Margery HEYDON
3 Anne HEYDON
2 Anne HEYDON AKA GURNEY
2 Lady Dorothea COBHAM
2 Amy HEYDON
Ancestors of Margery HEYDON
/-Samuel de HAYDON
/-Thomas DE HAYDON
| \-Ann BULWER
/-William de HAYDON
| \-Constance FURRE
/-William HEYDON
| | /-John MOORE
| \-Isabelle MOORE
/-David de HEYDON
/-Hugh de HEYDON
| \-Margarette BARONESS
/-William de HEYDON
| | /-Roger LOVERD
| \-Alice LOVERD
| \-Unknown Spouse of Roger LOVERD
/-Robert HEYDON
| | /-John MURE of Norwich
| \-Isabel MOORE
| \-Joan MOORE
/-William Baxter DE HEYDON
| \-Cecily OULTON
/-John Lawyer HEYDON
| | /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD III
| | /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD IV
| | | | /-Alured I SOLNEY
| | | | /-William SULNEY
| | | | /-Alfred SULNEY
| | | | | | /-Simon DE BAGOT
| | | | | | /-Hugh BAGGOTT
| | | | | | /-Richard BAGOT of Bagot's Bromley
| | | | | | | | /-Roger Bigod of NORFOLK
| | | | | | | \-Alicia BIGOD
| | | | | | | \-Ida DE TOSNY Countess of Norfolk
| | | | | | /-William BAGOT
| | | | | | | \-Christiana MAUVESLIN
| | | | | \-Sibilia DE BAGOT
| | | | | \-Hawyse DE LOUVAIN
| | | \-Margery SULNEY
| | | \-Margaret DE TRUSSELL
| \-Joan LONGFORD
| \-Margaret de APPLEBY
/-Henry HEYDON
| \-Eleanor WYNTER
Margery HEYDON
\-Anne Elizabeth BOLEYN
Ancestors of Mary HEYDON
/-William de HEYDON
/-Robert HEYDON
| \-Isabel MOORE
/-William Baxter DE HEYDON
| \-Cecily OULTON
/-John Lawyer HEYDON
| | /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD III
| | /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD IV
| | | \-Margery SULNEY
| \-Joan LONGFORD
| \-Margaret de APPLEBY
/-Henry HEYDON
| \-Eleanor WYNTER
/-William HAYDON
| \-Anne Elizabeth BOLEYN
/-Richard HAYDON Sr
| \-Susan HENRY
/-Richard Kimbre HAYDON Jr.
| \-Elizabeth Radcliff KIMBER
/-Thomas Trent HAYDON
| \-Joane TRENT
/-Thomas HAYDEN
| \-Joan WEEKS
/-Robert HAYDON Esquire
| \-Christiana TIDERSLEIGH
Mary HEYDON
\-Joan PAULET
Ancestors of Richard HEYDON
/-William de HEYDON
/-Robert HEYDON
| \-Isabel MOORE
/-William Baxter DE HEYDON
| \-Cecily OULTON
/-John Lawyer HEYDON
| | /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD III
| | /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD IV
| | | \-Margery SULNEY
| \-Joan LONGFORD
| \-Margaret de APPLEBY
/-Henry HEYDON
| \-Eleanor WYNTER
/-William HAYDON
| \-Anne Elizabeth BOLEYN
/-Richard HAYDON Sr
| \-Susan HENRY
/-Richard Kimbre HAYDON Jr.
| \-Elizabeth Radcliff KIMBER
/-Thomas Trent HAYDON
| \-Joane TRENT
/-Thomas HAYDEN
| \-Joan WEEKS
/-Robert HAYDON Esquire
| \-Christiana TIDERSLEIGH
Richard HEYDON
\-Joan PAULET
- Father: William HEYDON
- Birth: ABT 1251, Heydon, Norfolk, England
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Ancestors of Richard HEYDON
/-William Heydon DE CARDON
/-William DE HEYDON
| \-Adelise PEVERAL
/-Simon DE HAYDON
| \-Adelise FITZWALTER
/-Gilbert DE HAYDON
/-Samuel de HAYDON
| | /-John DE BURGH
| | /-Eustace DE BURGH
| | | \-Eustice DE COMYN
| | /-John DE BURGH
| | | \-Goda de Eustace DE BURGH
| | /-Eustace FITZJOHN Constable Of Knaresborough And Cheshire, Lord of Alnwick
| | | | /-Oberto I Obizzo Count of LUNI
| | | | /-Oberto II COUNT OF LUNI
| | | | | \-Guilla DI SPOLETO
| | | | /-Alberto Azzo OBERTENGHI
| | | | | | /-Riprando DI PIACENZA
| | | | | \-Railinde RIPONDO of Como
| | | | | \-Bertha DI PARMA
| | | | /-Alberto Azzo II D'MILANO
| | | | | | /-Oberto DI AUCIA
| | | | | \-Adela DI AUCIA of Milan
| | | \-Magdalena Cecily Fitznigel DE BLOIS
| | | | /-Hugues DU MAINE II
| | | | /-Hugues DU MAINE III
| | | | | \-Agnès DE RAZÈS OF LORRAINE
| | | | /-Heribert Eveille Chien DE MAINE II
| | | | | | /-Conan Ier DE BRETAGNE Duc de Bretagne
| | | | | \-Ermengarde DE RENNES
| | | | | \-Ermengarde D'ANJOU Duchesse de Bretagne
| | | \-Gersende DU MAINE
| | | | /-Effroy DE PREUILLY
| | | | /-Gosbert ou Gaudebert DE PREUILLY
| | | | | \-Béatrix D'ISSOUDUN
| | | \-Paula DE PREUILLY II
| | | \-Adèle du Bouchet de Marselle D'ARLES
| \-Margery de VESCI
| | /-Yvo DE VESCI I
| | /-Yvo DE VESCI II
| | /-Yves DE VESCI Lord of Alnwick and Malton, Yorkshire
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Yvo DE VESCI
| \-Beatrix DE VESCI
| | /-Gilbert DE TYSON
| \-Ada Jane DE TYSON
| \-Beatrix Normanica DE MALTON
/-Thomas DE HAYDON
| | /-Alan de BULMER
| | /-Anketel de BULMER
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Alan DE BULMER
| | /-Henry DE BULMER
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Anketel DE BULMER
| | /-Alan DE BULMER
| | | \-Anhetel POWTHER
| | /-Ansketil DE BULMER
| | | | /-John DE POWTHER
| | | \-Joan POWTHER
| | /-Ralph de BULMER
| | | | /-Robert DE HUMET
| | | | /-Peter DE HUMETZ
| | | \-Sybilla HUMETZ
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Peter DE HUMEZ
| | /-Stephen DE BULMER I
| | | | /-Robert FOSSARD
| | | | /-William FOSSARD
| | | | | \-Osceria MULGRAVE
| | | | /-Nigel FOSSARD I
| | | | /-Nele FOSSARD
| | | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Nigel FOSSARD
| | | | /-Stephen FOSSARD
| | | | | \-Osceria DE ROTHERHAM
| | | \-Aufrida FOSSARD
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Stephen FOSSARD
| \-Ann BULWER
| | /-Rogier DE MUSCHAMP
| | /-Roger de MUSCHAMP
| | /-Robert DE MUSCHAMP
| | | \-Beatrice HERRERA
| \-Cecily DE MUSCHAMP
| \-Unknown Spouse of Robert DE MUSCHAMP
/-William de HAYDON
| \-Constance FURRE
/-William HEYDON
| | /-John MOORE
| \-Isabelle MOORE
Richard HEYDON
Ancestors of Robert HEYDON
/-William Heydon DE CARDON
/-William DE HEYDON
| \-Adelise PEVERAL
/-Simon DE HAYDON
| \-Adelise FITZWALTER
/-Gilbert DE HAYDON
/-Samuel de HAYDON
| | /-Eustace DE BURGH
| | /-John DE BURGH
| | | \-Goda de Eustace DE BURGH
| | /-Eustace FITZJOHN Constable Of Knaresborough And Cheshire, Lord of Alnwick
| | | | /-Alberto Azzo II D'MILANO
| | | \-Magdalena Cecily Fitznigel DE BLOIS
| | | \-Gersende DU MAINE
| \-Margery de VESCI
| | /-Yvo DE VESCI II
| | /-Yves DE VESCI Lord of Alnwick and Malton, Yorkshire
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Yvo DE VESCI
| \-Beatrix DE VESCI
| | /-Gilbert DE TYSON
| \-Ada Jane DE TYSON
| \-Beatrix Normanica DE MALTON
/-Thomas DE HAYDON
| | /-Alan DE BULMER
| | /-Ansketil DE BULMER
| | | \-Joan POWTHER
| | /-Ralph de BULMER
| | | | /-Peter DE HUMETZ
| | | \-Sybilla HUMETZ
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Peter DE HUMEZ
| | /-Stephen DE BULMER I
| | | | /-Nele FOSSARD
| | | | /-Stephen FOSSARD
| | | | | \-Osceria DE ROTHERHAM
| | | \-Aufrida FOSSARD
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Stephen FOSSARD
| \-Ann BULWER
| | /-Rogier DE MUSCHAMP
| | /-Roger de MUSCHAMP
| | /-Robert DE MUSCHAMP
| | | \-Beatrice HERRERA
| \-Cecily DE MUSCHAMP
| \-Unknown Spouse of Robert DE MUSCHAMP
/-William de HAYDON
| \-Constance FURRE
/-William HEYDON
| | /-John MOORE
| \-Isabelle MOORE
/-David de HEYDON
/-Hugh de HEYDON
| \-Margarette BARONESS
/-William de HEYDON
| | /-Roger LOVERD
| \-Alice LOVERD
| \-Unknown Spouse of Roger LOVERD
Robert HEYDON
| /-John MURE of Norwich
\-Isabel MOORE
\-Joan MOORE
Descendants of Robert HEYDON
1 Robert HEYDON
=Cecily OULTON
2 William Baxter DE HEYDON
=Elizabeth DE SAY Marriage: ABT 1404, Heydon, Norfolk, England
=Jane WARREN Marriage: 1406, Linconshire, England
=Joan LONGFORD
3 John Lawyer HEYDON
=Eleanor WYNTER Marriage: Woodbury with Exton, Devon, England Marriage: Woodbury, Devon, England
Ancestors of Sara HEYDON
/-William de HEYDON
/-Robert HEYDON
| \-Isabel MOORE
/-William Baxter DE HEYDON
| \-Cecily OULTON
/-John Lawyer HEYDON
| | /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD III
| | /-Nicholas DE LONGFORD IV
| | | \-Margery SULNEY
| \-Joan LONGFORD
| \-Margaret de APPLEBY
/-Henry HEYDON
| \-Eleanor WYNTER
/-William HAYDON
| \-Anne Elizabeth BOLEYN
/-Richard HAYDON Sr
| \-Susan HENRY
/-Richard Kimbre HAYDON Jr.
| \-Elizabeth Radcliff KIMBER
/-Thomas Trent HAYDON
| \-Joane TRENT
/-Thomas HAYDEN
| \-Joan WEEKS
/-Robert HAYDON Esquire
| \-Christiana TIDERSLEIGH
Sara HEYDON
\-Joan PAULET
- Father: William HEYDON
- Birth: ABT 1253, Heydon, Norfolk, England
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Ancestors of Thomas HEYDON
/-William Heydon DE CARDON
/-William DE HEYDON
| \-Adelise PEVERAL
/-Simon DE HAYDON
| \-Adelise FITZWALTER
/-Gilbert DE HAYDON
/-Samuel de HAYDON
| | /-John DE BURGH
| | /-Eustace DE BURGH
| | | \-Eustice DE COMYN
| | /-John DE BURGH
| | | \-Goda de Eustace DE BURGH
| | /-Eustace FITZJOHN Constable Of Knaresborough And Cheshire, Lord of Alnwick
| | | | /-Oberto I Obizzo Count of LUNI
| | | | /-Oberto II COUNT OF LUNI
| | | | | \-Guilla DI SPOLETO
| | | | /-Alberto Azzo OBERTENGHI
| | | | | | /-Riprando DI PIACENZA
| | | | | \-Railinde RIPONDO of Como
| | | | | \-Bertha DI PARMA
| | | | /-Alberto Azzo II D'MILANO
| | | | | | /-Oberto DI AUCIA
| | | | | \-Adela DI AUCIA of Milan
| | | \-Magdalena Cecily Fitznigel DE BLOIS
| | | | /-Hugues DU MAINE II
| | | | /-Hugues DU MAINE III
| | | | | \-Agnès DE RAZÈS OF LORRAINE
| | | | /-Heribert Eveille Chien DE MAINE II
| | | | | | /-Conan Ier DE BRETAGNE Duc de Bretagne
| | | | | \-Ermengarde DE RENNES
| | | | | \-Ermengarde D'ANJOU Duchesse de Bretagne
| | | \-Gersende DU MAINE
| | | | /-Effroy DE PREUILLY
| | | | /-Gosbert ou Gaudebert DE PREUILLY
| | | | | \-Béatrix D'ISSOUDUN
| | | \-Paula DE PREUILLY II
| | | \-Adèle du Bouchet de Marselle D'ARLES
| \-Margery de VESCI
| | /-Yvo DE VESCI I
| | /-Yvo DE VESCI II
| | /-Yves DE VESCI Lord of Alnwick and Malton, Yorkshire
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Yvo DE VESCI
| \-Beatrix DE VESCI
| | /-Gilbert DE TYSON
| \-Ada Jane DE TYSON
| \-Beatrix Normanica DE MALTON
/-Thomas DE HAYDON
| | /-Alan de BULMER
| | /-Anketel de BULMER
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Alan DE BULMER
| | /-Henry DE BULMER
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Anketel DE BULMER
| | /-Alan DE BULMER
| | | \-Anhetel POWTHER
| | /-Ansketil DE BULMER
| | | | /-John DE POWTHER
| | | \-Joan POWTHER
| | /-Ralph de BULMER
| | | | /-Robert DE HUMET
| | | | /-Peter DE HUMETZ
| | | \-Sybilla HUMETZ
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Peter DE HUMEZ
| | /-Stephen DE BULMER I
| | | | /-Robert FOSSARD
| | | | /-William FOSSARD
| | | | | \-Osceria MULGRAVE
| | | | /-Nigel FOSSARD I
| | | | /-Nele FOSSARD
| | | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Nigel FOSSARD
| | | | /-Stephen FOSSARD
| | | | | \-Osceria DE ROTHERHAM
| | | \-Aufrida FOSSARD
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Stephen FOSSARD
| \-Ann BULWER
| | /-Rogier DE MUSCHAMP
| | /-Roger de MUSCHAMP
| | /-Robert DE MUSCHAMP
| | | \-Beatrice HERRERA
| \-Cecily DE MUSCHAMP
| \-Unknown Spouse of Robert DE MUSCHAMP
/-William de HAYDON
| \-Constance FURRE
/-William HEYDON
| | /-John MOORE
| \-Isabelle MOORE
Thomas HEYDON