- Mother: Postumius
- Birth: 125, Roma, Lazio, Itália
- Death: 160, Roma, Lazio, Itália
Ancestors of Marcus POSTUMIUS FESTUS
Marcus POSTUMIUS FESTUS
\-Postumius
Descendants of Marcus POSTUMIUS FESTUS
1 Marcus POSTUMIUS FESTUS
=Vibia FESTUS
2 Postumia Titianus TITIANUS
=Flavius Titus TITIANUS
3 Flavius Postumius Syagrius Of ROMAN EMPIRE
=Flavia Postumia Varia
3 Titus Flavius Postumius I OF ROME
3 Titus Flavius
2 Vibia SALVINA SALVIA VARIA
- Father: Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa of Arpino
- Mother: Julia Caesaris MAJOR
- Birth: 26 JUN 12 BC, Rome, Italy, Roma Empire
- Also known as: Marcus Julius Caesar Agrippa Postumus
- He was banished to the island of Planasia by his grandfather in 0007 CE; his mother was banished in 0008 CE and her husband executed for plotting against Augustus: His erratic and brutish behavior resulted in his exile to an island where he was kept under guard and his adoption by his grandfather was nullified, BET 7 AND 14, Planasia, Italy, Roman Empire
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia Marcus Agrippa Postumus (12 BC – AD 14),[note 1] later named Agrippa Julius Caesar,[1] was a Roman nobleman who was the youngest son of Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa and Julia the Elder, the daughter and only biological child of the Roman Emperor Augustus. Augustus initially considered Postumus as a potential successor and formally adopted him as his heir, but banished him from Rome in AD 6 on account of his ferocia ("beastly nature").[2] In effect (though not in law), this action cancelled his adoption and virtually assured Tiberius' emplacement as Augustus' sole heir. Postumus was ultimately executed by his own guards shortly after Augustus' death in AD 14. Postumus was a member of the Julio-Claudian dynasty, the first imperial family of the Roman Empire. His maternal grandparents were Augustus and Scribonia, Augustus' second wife. He was also a maternal uncle of the emperor Caligula, who was the son of Postumus' sister Agrippina the Elder, as well as a great-uncle of Nero, the last Julio-Claudian emperor, whose mother Agrippina the Younger was Caligula's sister. Early life and family A bust of Postumus' father Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa Agrippa Postumus was born in 12 BC, seemingly three months after his father's death (mid-March 12 BC, Dio 54.28.3) and probably after 26 June.[6] He was born a member of the equestrian gens Vipsania. His father was Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa, one of Augustus' leading generals, and his mother was Julia the Elder, the daughter of Augustus and his second wife Scribonia.[7] Postumus was the third son and last child of Agrippa and Julia; his older siblings were Gaius Caesar, Julia the Younger, Lucius Caesar, and Agrippina the Elder. His brothers, Gaius and Lucius, were both adopted by Augustus following the birth of Lucius in 17 BC.[8] Before his brother Gaius left Rome for Asia, Gaius and Lucius were given the authority to consecrate the Temple of Mars Ultor (1 August 2 BC), and they managed the games held to celebrate the Temple's dedication. Postumus was still a schoolboy, and participated in the Lusus Troiae ("Trojan Games") with the rest of the equestrian youth.[9] At these games, according to Cassius Dio, 260 lions were slaughtered in the Circus Maximus, there was gladiatorial combat and a naval battle between the "Persians" and the "Athenians", and 36 crocodiles were slaughtered in the Circus Flaminius.[10] Adoption At first Augustus opted not to adopt Postumus so that Agrippa would have at least one son to carry on his family name. However, the untimely deaths of principes Lucius (d. AD 2) and Gaius (d. AD 4) forced Augustus to adopt Postumus (his only remaining biological grandson) and Tiberius (the eldest son of Augustus' third wife Livia) on 26 June AD 4 to secure the succession. He agreed to adopt Tiberius on condition that Tiberius first adopt Germanicus. Upon his adoption into the Julii Caesares, Postumus assumed the name "Marcus Julius Caesar Agrippa Postumus". Following the adoptions of AD 4, in the event of Augustus' death, the title of princeps would pass first to Tiberius and then from Tiberius to Germanicus.[11][12] It was not intended that Postumus receive the emperorship; instead, he was meant to be the heir to Augustus' bloodline. Postumus would receive Augustus' name, property, and bloodline, but not the title of princeps. Indeed, Postumus was not given any special schooling or treatment following his adoption. In AD 5, he received the toga virilis at the age of 15, and his name was added to the list of aristocratic youth eligible for training as military officers.[13] This differed greatly from the honors received by his brothers, who were both conducted into the Forum by Augustus himself to commemorate their adoptions, given the title Princeps Iuventutis ("Leader of the Youth"), and promised the consulship five years in advance, to be held when they reached nineteen.[14] Exile In AD 6, an uprising began in the Roman province of Illyricum. Augustus sent Tiberius to crush the revolt with his army, and after a year of delayed results, he sent Germanicus in his capacity as quaestor to assist in bringing the war to a swift end.[15] The reason, Dio says, that Germanicus was chosen over Postumus is because Postumus was of an "illiberal nature".[16] Postumus was known for being brutish, insolent, stubborn, and potentially violent. He possessed great physical strength and reportedly showed little interest in anything other than fishing. He resisted all efforts to improve his behavior, forcing Augustus to "abdicate" him from the Julii in AD 6 and banish him to a villa at Surrentum, near Pompeii.[4][13] As an abdicated adoptee (adoptatus abdicatus) he lost the Julian name and returned to the gens Vipsania.[17] The ancient historian Velleius Paterculus had this to say of the banishment: Hoc fere tempore Agrippa... mira pravitate animi atque ingenii in praecipitia conversus patris atque eiusdem avi sui animum alienavit sibi, moxque crescentibus in dies vitiis dignum furore suo habuit exitum. About this time Agrippa...alienated from himself the affection of his father who was also his grandfather, falling into reckless ways by an amazing depravity of attitude and intellect; and soon, as his vices increased daily, he met the end which his madness deserved. —Velleius Paterculus 2.112.7 —Pettinger 2012, p. 103 The following year, Augustus had the Senate make Postumus' banishment permanent and had him moved to Planasia (modern Pianosa, Italy), a small island between Italy and Corsica. Augustus bolstered the natural inaccessibility of the rocky island by having an armed guard installed there. The Senate was ordered to never allow his release.[4][18] No consensus has emerged as to why Augustus banished Postumus in AD 7. Tacitus suggests that Augustus' wife Livia had always disliked and shunned Postumus, as he stood in the way of her son Tiberius succeeding to power after Augustus, given that Postumus was a direct biological descendant of Augustus and Tiberius was not. Some modern historians theorise that Postumus may have become involved in a conspiracy against Augustus.[19] Alternatively, it has been speculated that Postumus may have had learning difficulties. Postumus was held under intense security.[20] Postumus' sister Julia the Younger was banished around the same time (AD 8) and her husband Lucius Aemilius Paullus was executed for allegedly plotting a conspiracy against Augustus. There was later a conspiracy to rescue Julia and Postumus by Lucius Audasius and Asinius Epicadus. Audasius was an accused forger of advanced age and Asinius was half-Illyrian. According to Suetonius, Audasius and Epicadus had planned to take Julia and Postumus by force to the armies. It is unclear what their exact plan was, or even which armies Suetonius was referring to, because the conspiracy was discovered early in its planning, possibly before they had even left Rome.[21][22] Death of Augustus Augustus made no effort to contact Postumus until AD 14. In the summer of that year, Augustus left Rome, never to see the capital again. The main ancient sources of information about this period, Tacitus and Cassius Dio, suggest that Augustus left Rome in the company of only one trusted friend, the senator Paullus Fabius Maximus. The two left for Planasia to pay Augustus' banished grandson a highly controversial visit.[23] Fabius and then Augustus himself died on their return, without revealing what they had been doing.[23] Tacitus reports their visit to Planasia as a rumor, although Dio reports it as fact. According to the historian Robin Lane Fox, the alleged visit has sometimes been dismissed by modern scholars. However, it has been shown that Augustus and Fabius were absent from Rome in mid-May of AD 14. At this date, Augustus' adopted grandson, Drusus the Younger, was being admitted into the Arval Brethren, and an inscription (ILS, 5026) shows that both Augustus and Fabius voted in absentia to admit him into the priesthood.[24] There was much gossip over the outcome of their expedition. Tacitus recounts the rumor that Augustus had decided to reverse his decision and make Postumus his successor. In his account, Fabius indiscreetly told his wife what had occurred during the trip, and it cost him his life. Augustus' wife Livia, too, was said to have poisoned her husband in order to prevent Postumus becoming the successor and thus supplanting her son Tiberius. While modern historians, including Fox, agree that such stories are highly unlikely, there is evidence that Augustus' journey was historical. "It is the last act in Augustus' long marathon of finding and keeping an heir to the new Empire".[25] Accession of Tiberius Augustus died on 19 August AD 14. Despite being banished, Postumus had not legally been disinherited, and so could claim a share in Augustus' inheritance. According to Augustus' will, sealed on 3 April AD 13, Tiberius would inherit two-thirds of his estate, and Livia one-third. There is no mention of Postumus in the document.[26] Tiberius gave the eulogy at Augustus' funeral and made a show of reluctantly accepting the title of princeps.[17] Execution At almost the same time as Augustus' death, Postumus was killed by centurion Gaius Sallustius Crispus, the great-nephew and adopted son of the historian Sallust. When Crispus reported to Tiberius that "his orders have been carried out", Tiberius threatened to bring the matter before the Senate, professing that he had given no such orders. Tiberius denied any involvement, arguing that he had been en route to Illyricum when he was recalled to Rome, and later issued a statement that it was his father who gave the order that Agrippa Postumus not survive him. It is not clear if the killing was carried out before or after Tiberius became emperor.[25][17][27]
- Death: 20 AUG 14, Planasia, Italy, Roman Empire
Ancestors of Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa POSTUMUS d.s.p.
/-Lucius VIPSANIUS
/-Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa of Arpino
Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa POSTUMUS d.s.p.
| /-Gnaeus OCTAVIUS RUFUS II
| /-Gaius I Octavius
| | \-Wife Of Gnaeus Octavius RUFUS II
| /-Gaius II OCTAVIUS
| | \-Octavius spouse of Gaius I OCTAVIUS
| /-Gaius Octavius III Magistrate of VELITRAE
| | \-Servilia WIFE OF GAIUS II OCTAVIUS
| /-Gaius Octavius
| | \-Aurelia COTTA
| /-Gaius Octavius of ROME
| | | /-Attius father of Marcus Atius Balbus de Rome gens ATII
| | | /-Marcus Atius Balbus de Rome gens ATII
| | | | \-Pompiea STRABO
| | | /-Marcus ATIUS BALBUS
| | | | \-Pompeia LUCILLA BEN SEXTUS
| | \-Atia Balba CAESONIA
| | | /-Gaius Julius CEASAR
| | | /-Julius CAESAR II
| | | /-Gaius Julius CAESAR III
| | | | | /-Consul Quintus II MARCIUS REX
| | | | | /-Quintus MARCIUS Rex
| | | | \-Marcia Quinta REGINA
| | \-Julia CAESARIUS
| | | /-Lucius Aurelius Cotta I
| | | /-Lucius Aurelius Cotta AURELIUS
| | | /-Lucius Aurelius COTTA
| | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Lucius Aurelius Cotta AURELIUS
| | \-Aurelia COTTA VAN ROME
| | | /-Públius RUTÍLIUS RUFO
| | | /-Publius Rutilius RUFUS I
| | \-Rutilia Rufa DIROMA
| | \-Livia Julia DRUSILLA AUGUSTA Rome
\-Julia Caesaris MAJOR
| /-Lucius Scribonius LIBO
\-Scribonia AUGUSTUS LIBO
\-Sentia DE ROME
- Father: Gnaeus Cornelius LENTULUS MARCELLINUS
- Mother: Scribonia AUGUSTUS LIBO
- Birth: 26 JUN 12 BC, Rome, Italy, Roma Empire
- Also known as: Marcus Julius Caesar Agrippa Postumus
- He was banished to the island of Planasia by his grandfather in 0007 CE; his mother was banished in 0008 CE and her husband executed for plotting against Augustus: His erratic and brutish behavior resulted in his exile to an island where he was kept under guard and his adoption by his grandfather was nullified, BET 7 AND 14, Planasia, Italy, Roman Empire
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia Marcus Agrippa Postumus (12 BC – AD 14),[note 1] later named Agrippa Julius Caesar,[1] was a Roman nobleman who was the youngest son of Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa and Julia the Elder, the daughter and only biological child of the Roman Emperor Augustus. Augustus initially considered Postumus as a potential successor and formally adopted him as his heir, but banished him from Rome in AD 6 on account of his ferocia ("beastly nature").[2] In effect (though not in law), this action cancelled his adoption and virtually assured Tiberius' emplacement as Augustus' sole heir. Postumus was ultimately executed by his own guards shortly after Augustus' death in AD 14. Postumus was a member of the Julio-Claudian dynasty, the first imperial family of the Roman Empire. His maternal grandparents were Augustus and Scribonia, Augustus' second wife. He was also a maternal uncle of the emperor Caligula, who was the son of Postumus' sister Agrippina the Elder, as well as a great-uncle of Nero, the last Julio-Claudian emperor, whose mother Agrippina the Younger was Caligula's sister. Early life and family A bust of Postumus' father Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa Agrippa Postumus was born in 12 BC, seemingly three months after his father's death (mid-March 12 BC, Dio 54.28.3) and probably after 26 June.[6] He was born a member of the equestrian gens Vipsania. His father was Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa, one of Augustus' leading generals, and his mother was Julia the Elder, the daughter of Augustus and his second wife Scribonia.[7] Postumus was the third son and last child of Agrippa and Julia; his older siblings were Gaius Caesar, Julia the Younger, Lucius Caesar, and Agrippina the Elder. His brothers, Gaius and Lucius, were both adopted by Augustus following the birth of Lucius in 17 BC.[8] Before his brother Gaius left Rome for Asia, Gaius and Lucius were given the authority to consecrate the Temple of Mars Ultor (1 August 2 BC), and they managed the games held to celebrate the Temple's dedication. Postumus was still a schoolboy, and participated in the Lusus Troiae ("Trojan Games") with the rest of the equestrian youth.[9] At these games, according to Cassius Dio, 260 lions were slaughtered in the Circus Maximus, there was gladiatorial combat and a naval battle between the "Persians" and the "Athenians", and 36 crocodiles were slaughtered in the Circus Flaminius.[10] Adoption At first Augustus opted not to adopt Postumus so that Agrippa would have at least one son to carry on his family name. However, the untimely deaths of principes Lucius (d. AD 2) and Gaius (d. AD 4) forced Augustus to adopt Postumus (his only remaining biological grandson) and Tiberius (the eldest son of Augustus' third wife Livia) on 26 June AD 4 to secure the succession. He agreed to adopt Tiberius on condition that Tiberius first adopt Germanicus. Upon his adoption into the Julii Caesares, Postumus assumed the name "Marcus Julius Caesar Agrippa Postumus". Following the adoptions of AD 4, in the event of Augustus' death, the title of princeps would pass first to Tiberius and then from Tiberius to Germanicus.[11][12] It was not intended that Postumus receive the emperorship; instead, he was meant to be the heir to Augustus' bloodline. Postumus would receive Augustus' name, property, and bloodline, but not the title of princeps. Indeed, Postumus was not given any special schooling or treatment following his adoption. In AD 5, he received the toga virilis at the age of 15, and his name was added to the list of aristocratic youth eligible for training as military officers.[13] This differed greatly from the honors received by his brothers, who were both conducted into the Forum by Augustus himself to commemorate their adoptions, given the title Princeps Iuventutis ("Leader of the Youth"), and promised the consulship five years in advance, to be held when they reached nineteen.[14] Exile In AD 6, an uprising began in the Roman province of Illyricum. Augustus sent Tiberius to crush the revolt with his army, and after a year of delayed results, he sent Germanicus in his capacity as quaestor to assist in bringing the war to a swift end.[15] The reason, Dio says, that Germanicus was chosen over Postumus is because Postumus was of an "illiberal nature".[16] Postumus was known for being brutish, insolent, stubborn, and potentially violent. He possessed great physical strength and reportedly showed little interest in anything other than fishing. He resisted all efforts to improve his behavior, forcing Augustus to "abdicate" him from the Julii in AD 6 and banish him to a villa at Surrentum, near Pompeii.[4][13] As an abdicated adoptee (adoptatus abdicatus) he lost the Julian name and returned to the gens Vipsania.[17] The ancient historian Velleius Paterculus had this to say of the banishment: Hoc fere tempore Agrippa... mira pravitate animi atque ingenii in praecipitia conversus patris atque eiusdem avi sui animum alienavit sibi, moxque crescentibus in dies vitiis dignum furore suo habuit exitum. About this time Agrippa...alienated from himself the affection of his father who was also his grandfather, falling into reckless ways by an amazing depravity of attitude and intellect; and soon, as his vices increased daily, he met the end which his madness deserved. —Velleius Paterculus 2.112.7 —Pettinger 2012, p. 103 The following year, Augustus had the Senate make Postumus' banishment permanent and had him moved to Planasia (modern Pianosa, Italy), a small island between Italy and Corsica. Augustus bolstered the natural inaccessibility of the rocky island by having an armed guard installed there. The Senate was ordered to never allow his release.[4][18] No consensus has emerged as to why Augustus banished Postumus in AD 7. Tacitus suggests that Augustus' wife Livia had always disliked and shunned Postumus, as he stood in the way of her son Tiberius succeeding to power after Augustus, given that Postumus was a direct biological descendant of Augustus and Tiberius was not. Some modern historians theorise that Postumus may have become involved in a conspiracy against Augustus.[19] Alternatively, it has been speculated that Postumus may have had learning difficulties. Postumus was held under intense security.[20] Postumus' sister Julia the Younger was banished around the same time (AD 8) and her husband Lucius Aemilius Paullus was executed for allegedly plotting a conspiracy against Augustus. There was later a conspiracy to rescue Julia and Postumus by Lucius Audasius and Asinius Epicadus. Audasius was an accused forger of advanced age and Asinius was half-Illyrian. According to Suetonius, Audasius and Epicadus had planned to take Julia and Postumus by force to the armies. It is unclear what their exact plan was, or even which armies Suetonius was referring to, because the conspiracy was discovered early in its planning, possibly before they had even left Rome.[21][22] Death of Augustus Augustus made no effort to contact Postumus until AD 14. In the summer of that year, Augustus left Rome, never to see the capital again. The main ancient sources of information about this period, Tacitus and Cassius Dio, suggest that Augustus left Rome in the company of only one trusted friend, the senator Paullus Fabius Maximus. The two left for Planasia to pay Augustus' banished grandson a highly controversial visit.[23] Fabius and then Augustus himself died on their return, without revealing what they had been doing.[23] Tacitus reports their visit to Planasia as a rumor, although Dio reports it as fact. According to the historian Robin Lane Fox, the alleged visit has sometimes been dismissed by modern scholars. However, it has been shown that Augustus and Fabius were absent from Rome in mid-May of AD 14. At this date, Augustus' adopted grandson, Drusus the Younger, was being admitted into the Arval Brethren, and an inscription (ILS, 5026) shows that both Augustus and Fabius voted in absentia to admit him into the priesthood.[24] There was much gossip over the outcome of their expedition. Tacitus recounts the rumor that Augustus had decided to reverse his decision and make Postumus his successor. In his account, Fabius indiscreetly told his wife what had occurred during the trip, and it cost him his life. Augustus' wife Livia, too, was said to have poisoned her husband in order to prevent Postumus becoming the successor and thus supplanting her son Tiberius. While modern historians, including Fox, agree that such stories are highly unlikely, there is evidence that Augustus' journey was historical. "It is the last act in Augustus' long marathon of finding and keeping an heir to the new Empire".[25] Accession of Tiberius Augustus died on 19 August AD 14. Despite being banished, Postumus had not legally been disinherited, and so could claim a share in Augustus' inheritance. According to Augustus' will, sealed on 3 April AD 13, Tiberius would inherit two-thirds of his estate, and Livia one-third. There is no mention of Postumus in the document.[26] Tiberius gave the eulogy at Augustus' funeral and made a show of reluctantly accepting the title of princeps.[17] Execution At almost the same time as Augustus' death, Postumus was killed by centurion Gaius Sallustius Crispus, the great-nephew and adopted son of the historian Sallust. When Crispus reported to Tiberius that "his orders have been carried out", Tiberius threatened to bring the matter before the Senate, professing that he had given no such orders. Tiberius denied any involvement, arguing that he had been en route to Illyricum when he was recalled to Rome, and later issued a statement that it was his father who gave the order that Agrippa Postumus not survive him. It is not clear if the killing was carried out before or after Tiberius became emperor.[25][17][27]
- Death: 20 AUG 14, Planasia, Italy, Roman Empire
Ancestors of Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa POSTUMUS d.s.p.
/-Gnaeus Cornelius LENTULUS MARCELLINUS
Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa POSTUMUS d.s.p.
| /-Lucius Scribonius LIBO
\-Scribonia AUGUSTUS LIBO
\-Sentia DE ROME
Ancestors of Cornelia Arria Sextus PRAETEXTATA
/-Lucius Eggius Marullus
/-Lucius Eggius Ambibulus Pomponius Longinus
| | /-Marcus POMPONIUS
| | /-Marcus POMPONIUS Bassulus
| \-Pomponia spouse of Lucius Eggius MARULLUS
| | /-Publius Cantrius
| \-Cantria LONGINA
/-Lucius Eggius Marullus
/-Lucius Cossonius Eggius Marullus
| | /-Lucius Cossonius Gallus Vecilius CRISPINUS
| \-Cossonia spouse of Lucius Eggius MARULLUS
| | /-Lucius DOMITIUS
| | /-Lucius DOMITIUS
| | | \-Annaea spouse of Lucius DOMITIUS
| \-Clodia PATRUINA
| \-Clodia DECMINA
/-Lucius Cossonius Scipio Orfitus
| | /-Servius Cornelius Scipio SALVIDIENUS ORFITUS
| | /-Servius Cornelius Scipio SALVIDIENUS ORFITUS
| | | | /-Lucius Sergius PAULLUS
| | | \-Sergia PAULLINA
| | | \-Vispania JULIA
| \-Cornelia NEGRINA
| | /-Marcus Nonius MUCIANUS
| | /-Marcus Nonius Mucianus Publius Delpius PEREGRINUS
| | | | /-Publius Delphinus PEREGRINUS
| | | \-Delpia spuse of Marcus Nonius MUCIANUS
| | | \-Alfia spouse of Publius Delphinus PEREGRINUS
| | /-Marcus Nonius DE ROME
| | | \-Manilia spouse of Marcus Nonius Mucianus Publius Delpius PEREGRINUS
| \-Arria Sextia PAULINA
| | /-Lucius Junius Caessenius PAETUS
| | /-Lucius Junius Caessennius ANTONINUS
| | | | /-Gnaeus Arrius ANTONINUS
| | | \-Arria ANTONIA
| | | \-Plotia ISAURICA
| \-Arria Caesennia Paulina CAESENNIUS
Cornelia Arria Sextus PRAETEXTATA
Descendants of Cornelia Arria Sextus PRAETEXTATA
1 Cornelia Arria Sextus PRAETEXTATA
=Marcus Pupienus AFRICANUS MAXIMUS
2 Publius Pupienus MAXIMUS
=(Unknown)
3 Pupiena Rufina
=Gaius Memminus CAECILLIANUS PLACIDUS Marriage: ABT 260, Roma, Italy, Roman Empire
2 Pupiena Sexta Paulina CETHEGILLA
=Marcus Maecius PROBUS
3 Marcus Maecius Orfitus
=Furia spouse of Marcus Maecius ORFITUS
3 Maecius MARULLUS
- Father: Prasutagus de Iceniens
- Mother: Boadicea des Iceniens
- Birth: ABT 55, Britannia
- Also known as: Penardian
- Also known as: Julia ferch Prasutagus of Norfolk
- Also known as: Julia ferch Prasutagus of Norfolk
- Also known as: Julia ferch Prasutagus of Norfolk
- Also known as: Julia ferch Prasutagus of Norfolk
- Death: Icenia, Briania
Ancestors of Julia Victoria Cartismandua verch PRASUTAGUS
/-Prasutagus de Iceniens
Julia Victoria Cartismandua verch PRASUTAGUS
\-Boadicea des Iceniens
Descendants of Julia Victoria Cartismandua verch PRASUTAGUS
1 Julia Victoria Cartismandua verch PRASUTAGUS
=Meurig Cyllin ap GWYRYDD
2 Eurgen Siluria ap Apviragus GWEIRYDD
=Émérita verch Coël de l'Île DE BRETAGNE
3 Claudia DES SILURES
=Llewfer Mawr Lucius de Galles-du-Sud de l'Île de Bretagne DES SILURES
2 Meurig ap Gwyrydd of SILURES
2 Athildis of SILURIA
2 Lleiffer Mawr Good Lucius ap CYLLIN
Ancestors of Atia Balba PRIMA Of Rome
/-Attius father of Marcus Atius Balbus de Rome gens ATII
/-Marcus Atius Balbus de Rome gens ATII
| \-Pompiea STRABO
/-Marcus ATIUS BALBUS
| \-Pompeia LUCILLA BEN SEXTUS
Atia Balba PRIMA Of Rome
| /-Gaius Julius CEASAR
| /-Julius CAESAR II
| /-Gaius Julius CAESAR III
| | | /-Consul Quintus II MARCIUS REX
| | | /-Quintus MARCIUS Rex
| | \-Marcia Quinta REGINA
\-Julia CAESARIUS
| /-Lucius Aurelius Cotta I
| /-Lucius Aurelius Cotta AURELIUS
| /-Lucius Aurelius COTTA
| | \-Unknown Spouse of Lucius Aurelius Cotta AURELIUS
\-Aurelia COTTA VAN ROME
| /-Públius RUTÍLIUS RUFO
| /-Publius Rutilius RUFUS I
\-Rutilia Rufa DIROMA
\-Livia Julia DRUSILLA AUGUSTA Rome
- Father: Cuthwine of WESSEX
- Mother: Unknown Spouse of Cuthwine of WESSEX
- Birth: 590, Wessex
- Also known as: Cedda
- Also known as: Cadda
- Also known as: Chad
- Affiliation: House of Wessex, House of Cerdic, Cerdicingas
- LifeSketch: Cedda, also Ceadda, Cadda and Chad. His name is derived from the Brythonic root 'cat' or 'cad', meaning 'battle'. Cedda was the 2nd son of Prince Cuthwine, son of King Ceawlin of Wessex. Cedda was born in 590 and had 1 older brother Cynebald born in 590, and a younger brother Cuthwulf, born 592, the name of their mother is not recorded. Cedda's grandfather Ceawlin was the King of Wessex, however, in June 592 he lost the throne and the entire family fled into exile. Cynebald would have been no more than 1 or 2 at the time. It is believed that his mother, who gave birth to his youngest brother about this time, possibly died in the tumult surrounding the loss of the throne and the family's flight into exile. The name of Cedda's wife is not known, however, they were the parents of one son: Coenberht, who was the father of King Caedwalla of Wessex. It is not known when Cedda died. Cedda, Prince of Wessex Birthdate: estimated between 552 and 602 Death: Immediate Family: Son of Ceawlin, king of Wessex Brother of Cuthwine and Cenberht, Prince of Wessex
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Ancestors of Ceadda PRINCE of Wessex
/-Frithugar Deira SAXONY
/-Frewin VAN SAKSEN
| \-Unknown Spouse of Frithugar Deira SAXONY
/-Uvigg FREAWINEASSON
/-Gewis VON SAXON
| \-Unknown Spouse of Uvigg FREAWINEASSON
/-Esla GEWISSON
| | /-Fordigarus of SAXONY
| | /-Wigger OF SAXONY
| | /-Gewesius OF SAXONY
| \-Effa of the SAXONS
/-Aelle Ella of ELISENS
| \-Isaive spouse of Esla GEWISSON
/-Cerdic of WESSEX
| \-Elesa of West SAXON
/-Creoda Cerdicsson of WESSEX
| \-Anafleda spouse of Cerdic of WESSEX
/-Cynric of WESSEX
| \-Hengist WESSEX
/-Ceawlin of WESSEX
| \-Unknown Spouse of Cynric of WESSEX
/-Cuthwine of WESSEX
| \-Unknown Spouse of Ceawlin of WESSEX
Ceadda PRINCE of Wessex
\-Unknown Spouse of Cuthwine of WESSEX
- Birth: ABT 830, novgorodskii, novgorodskaya, Russia
- Also known as: Prince Rurik Rurikovich of Novgorod
- Title Of Nobility: Prince of Novgorod, BET 862 AND 879, novgorod, Novgorod Oblast, Russia, Soviet Union
- Prince de Novgorod: BET 862 AND 879
- LifeSketch: -- http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/RUSSIA,%20Rurik.htm#_Toc481496211 -- "Any reconstructed genealogy of the Rurikid dynasty during the early years, as well as all dates and even names, MUST BE VIEWED WITH CAUTION." !! "THE NAME OF RURIK'S WIFE IS NOT KNOWN." !! -- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rurik -- "This LEGENDARY figure was considered by later rulers to be the founder of the Rurik dynasty, which ruled the Kievan Rus' and its successor states." "The idea of identifying Rurik [of the Rus'] with *Rorik of Dorestad* was revived by the anti-Normanists Boris Rybakov and Anatoly H. Kirpichnikov in the mid-20th century, while MODERN SCHOLARS like Alexander Nazarenko OBJECT TO IT. The hypothesis of their identity currently LACKS SUPPORT among scholars, though support for a "Normannic" (i.e., Norse, rather than Slavic) origin of the Rus' has increased." ******* DO NOT CONFUSE THIS RURIK WITH 'RURIK OF DORESTAD'! ******* General Notes: Viking Chief, Varangian Founder of KIEVAN RUS princely dynasty, Grand Duke of NOVGOROD. 8th Great Grandfather of Alexander Nevsky, 15th Great Grandfather of IvanIII the Great, and 17th Great Grandfather of Ivan IV the Terrible. BOOKS Barber Grandparents: 125 Kings, 143 Generations, Ted Butler Bernard and Gertrude Barber Bernard, 1978, McKinney TX, p79: "309R Rurik, early leader of Russia, (Parents not known, F of 321); as a Viking Chief in 875 he was called by the people to be their ruler in Novgorod; found Ladoga on Lake Ladoga where he made his first headquarters; later built a castle in Novgorod and made his headquarters in that city." Wall Chart of World History, Edward Hull, 1988, Studio Editions, Russia, 862: "Ruric, a Varangian Chief, established first government in 862-878, descendants of Ruric ruled amid many vicissitudes for 736, till 1598..." The New Columbia Encyclopedia, 1975, p2375, Rurik: "Died 879, semilegendary Varangian warrior, regarded as the founder of the princely dynasty of medieval Russia. Rurik and his two brothers, at the head of an armed band, apparently seized Novgorod and nearby districts (Abt 862). According to unreliable early accounts, they had been invited by the local Slavs. Rurik's successors founded the powerful Kievan state, which lasted until the 13th century. The house of Rurik also came to rule the grand duchy of Moscow, and later all of Russia, until the death of Feodor I in 1598." p1477, Kievan Russia: "Medieval state of the Eastern Slavs. It was the earliest predecessor of the present-day Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. Flourishing from the 10th to the 13th century, it included nearly all of present-day Ukraine and Belorussia and part of NW European USSR, extending as far N as novgorod and Vladimir. According to the Russian `Primary Chronicle', a medieval history, the Varangian Rurik established himself at Novgorod (Abt 862) and founded a dynasty. His successor, Oleg (Died Abt 912) shifted his attention to the south, seized Kiev (Abt 879), and established the new Kievan state. The Varangians were also known as Rus or Rhos; it is possible that this name was early extended to the Slavs of the Kievan state, which became known as the Kievan Rus..."p2865, Varangians: "Name given by Slavs and Byzantine Greeks to Scandinavians who began to raid the eastern shores of the Baltic and penetrate Eastern Europe by the 9th century. Their leader, Rurik, established himself at Novgorod in 862, thus laying the traditional foundation for Kievan Russia. The Varangians, some of whom were known also as Rus or Rhos, made their way down the Dnepr and established the great trade route from Kiev to Byzantium ... "p1312, Igor: "...Successor of Oleg. According to the Russian `Primary Chronicle', a medieval history, Igor was the son of Rurik, founder of the Russian princely line..." Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1981, Micropaedia, Vol VIII, p720, Rurik: "Also spelled Ryurik, Rorik, or Hrorekr, Died Abt 879, semilegendaryfounder of the Rurik Dynasty of Russia, a Varangian, or Viking, prince. His story is told in `The Russian Primary Chronicle' (compiled at the beginning of the 12th century) but is not accepted at face value by modern historians. According to the chronicle, the people of Vovgorod, tired of political strife, invited the Varangians about AD 862 to establish an orderly and just government there. Rurik came with his two borthers and a large retinue (druzhina) and became ruler of the city and region of Novgorod. "Some historians think that Rurik came from the Scandinavian peninsula or from Jutland (now Denmark) and seized the town of Ladoga, on Lake Ladoga. After establishing a stronghold there (Abt 855), he may have gone southward along the Volknov and captured Novgorod. Another possibility is that Rurik and his army were mercenaries, hired to guard the Volkhov-Dnieper waterway, who turned against their employers." p720-721 Rurik Dynasty: "Princes of Russia who, according to tradition, were descendants of the Varangian Prince Rurik, who had been invited by the people of Novgorod to rule that city (Abt 862); the Rurik princes maintained their control over the Russian lands until 1598...when their male line died out [with Fyodor, and rulership passed to his stepson Boris Godunov.] "Rurik's successor Oleg (died 912) conquered Kiev (Abt 882) and established control of the trade route extending from Novgorod, along the Dnieper River, to the Black Sea..." The Story of Civilization, Will Durant, Vol IV, The Age of Faith, Bk IV, The Dark Ages, Ch XVIII, The Byzantine World, Sec VII, The Birth of Russia, p448: "`The Ancient Chronicle' of Russia (twelfth century) gave personality to this Scandinavian infiltration by its tale of `three princes': the Finnish and Slavic population of Novgorod and its vicinity, having driven out their Varangian overlords, fell to so much quarreling among themselves that they invited the Varangians to send them a ruler or general (862). Three brothers came, says the story- Rurik, Sineus, and Truvor- and established the Russian state. The story may be true, despite latter-day skepticism; or it may be a patriotic gloss on a Scandinavian conquest of Novgorod. The `Chronicle' further relates that Rurik sent two of his aides, Askold and Dir, to take Constantinople; that these Vikings stopped en route to capture Kiev, and then declared themselves independent of both Rurik andthe Khazars. In 860 Kiev was strong enough to send a fleet of 200 vessels to attack Constantinople; the expedition failed, but Kiev remained the commercial and political focus of Russia..." ANCESTRAL FILE Ancestral File Ver 4.10 B6DP-M5 Ryurik Grand Duke of NOVGOROD Born Abt 830 Novgorod Novgorod Russia Mar Abt 876 Novgorod Novgorod Russia Died 879. INTERNATIONAL GENEALOGICAL INDEX IGI Birth T990002-20-1126128NONE Father Ryurik Grand Duke of KIEV.
- Fact: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rurik
- Alt. Birth Place: Sweden or Denmark
- Death: 879, Novgorod, Kievan Rus
Descendants of Rurik PRINCE OF LADOGA AND NOVGOROD
1 Rurik PRINCE OF LADOGA AND NOVGOROD
=Ефанда-Едвина Княгиня НОВГОРОДСКАЯ Marriage: BEF 877, Великий Новгород, Новгородская Русь
2 Igor Rurikovich Ingwar KIEVSKIJ
=Elena Olga of KIEV
3 Sviatislav I Igorevitch SVIATISLAV
=Malusha MALKOVNA LUBECHANKA Marriage: Graz-Umgebung, Steiermark, Austria
=Predslava of Hungary Marriage: ABT 958, Kiyevka, Primorskiy Kray, Rus (Kiev, Ukraine)
2 Oleg de Kiev D'URMAN
2 Jatoslawa of NOVGOROD
2 Oleg of NOVGOROD
Ancestors of Apama PRINCESS IV, Antigonid
/-Antigonus KING II, Gonatas, of Macedon
/-Aetolicus of Macedonia Demetrius II
/-Philip V King of MACEDONIA
| | /-of Epirus Alexander King II
| \-Phthia of EPIEUS
| \-Olympias II of EPIRUS
Apama PRINCESS IV, Antigonid
| /-Polycrates of ARGOS
| /-Mnasiadas of ARGOS
| | \-Zeuxo of CYRENE
\-Polycrateia of ARGOS
\-Unknown Spouse of Mnasiadas of ARGOS
- Birth: 38 BC, Alba
- Also known as: Báine ingen Daire Dorn Mor of Alba
- Also known as: Báine ingen Loich of Alba
- Title Of Nobility: Princess of Alba
- Death: Leinster, Dublin, Ireland
- Burial: Ireland
Descendants of Báine of Alba PRINCESS
1 Báine of Alba PRINCESS
=Crimhthann II Nia Náir mac Lugaid Riab NDERG Marriage: ABT 8
- Father: Carlowig II DE THURINGEN
- Mother: Amalaberge Queen of Thurgia De OSTROGOTHIE
- Birth: 398, Kingdom of Thuringia, Barbarian Empire
- Also known as: Basina Queen of Thuringia
- Title (Nobility): Queen of the Thuringians
- LifeSketch: (Date and Place unknown)
- Clan Name: Father -House of Thuringi; Mother House of Amali Goths
- Title Of Nobility: Princess of the Thuringians
- Death: 438, Kingdom of Thuringia, Barbarian Empire
- Burial: 438, Kingdom of Thuringia, Barbarian Empire
Ancestors of Basina Andovera I PRINCESS of Thuringia
/-Karlwig of THURINGIA
/-Hogar KONING OF THURINGIA
| \-Sif THURINGEN
/-Erpes VON THÜRINGEN
| \-Basina VON BECKON
/-Merwig I KING OF THURINGIA
| \-Uxor VON THURINGEN
/-Carlowig II DE THURINGEN
| \-Orgeluse FIRMUTEL
Basina Andovera I PRINCESS of Thuringia
| /-Walderavans AMAL
\-Amalaberge Queen of Thurgia De OSTROGOTHIE
\-Althildis DE LORRAINE
Ancestors of Cleopatra Tryphaena PRINCESS of Egypt
/-Ptolemy VI Philometor Pharaoh of Egypt
Cleopatra Tryphaena PRINCESS of Egypt
\-Cleopatra III Euergetis Faraó gynaíka tou Aígyptos
Descendants of Cleopatra Tryphaena PRINCESS of Egypt
1 Cleopatra Tryphaena PRINCESS of Egypt
=Antiochus VIII Grypos, KING Philometor of Syria
2 Laodice QUEEN VII, Thea Philadelphus of Commagene
=Mithridates I Callinikos King of COMMAGENE
3 Antiochos KING I, Théos, of Commagene
=Isias Philostorgo of CAPPADOCIA
3 Isias Philostorgos of COMMAGENE
3 Evranduni DE COMMAGENE
=Artavasdes King I of Media ATROPATENE
2 Antiochus XII
2 Demetrius III
2 Philip I
2 Seleucus VI Epiphanes SYRIA
- Father: Coelus of the BRITONS
- Mother: Ystradwl Verch Cynvelyn VAN GLAMORGAN
- Birth: 86, Caerleon, Siluria, Gwent, Wales
- Also known as: Eurgen of Siluria
- Also known as: Eurgain of Siluria
- Also known as: Eugein of Siluria
- Also known as: Beli
- Also known as: Eurgin ferch Coel of Briton
- Title (Nobility): Princess of Britain
- Death: 160, Siluria, Shelby, Wales
Ancestors of Eurgin of Briton PRINCESS
/-Kimbelinus of BRITAIN
/-Arvirargus Gweyrydd ap CUNOBELIN
| \-Unknown Spouse of Kimbelius King of BRITAIN
/-Marius of the British SILURES
| | /-Publius Claudius Nero CLAUDIUS
| | /-Appius Claudius NERO
| | /-Tiberius Claudius Nero
| | /-Appius Claudius NERO
| | /-Tibetius Claudius NERO
| | | | /-Cornelius Cinna LUCIUS
| | | | /-Lucius Cornelius CINNA
| | | | | | /-Annius Pupius
| | | | | \-Annia
| | | \-Cornelia CINNAE Minor
| | /-Tiberius Claudius NERO III
| | /-Nero Claudius DRUSUS
| | | | /-Quintus Servilius CAEPIO
| | | | /-Quintus Servilius Caepio THIRD OF ROME
| | | | | \-Caecilia METALLA
| | | | /-Marcus Livius Drusus III DE ROME
| | | | | \-Livia Drusa DE ROME
| | | | /-Marcus Livius Drusus Claudianus Emporer Appius Claudius PULCHER
| | | | | \-Servilia Caepia MAJOR
| | | \-Livia DRUSILA
| | | | /-Marcus Aufidius LURCO
| | | \-Aufidia LURCO
| | /-Tiberius Claudius NERO GERMANICUS
| | | | /-Marcus ANTONIUS
| | | | /-Gaius Marcus ANTONIUS
| | | | | \-Pasquala Maria
| | | | /-Marcus Antonius of ROME
| | | | /-Marcus Antonius CRETICUS OCTAVIA II
| | | | | \-Julia spouse of Marcus Antonius of ROME
| | | | /-Marcus Antonius III
| | | | | | /-Sextus Julius Caesar I
| | | | | | /-Sextus Julius CAESAR II
| | | | | | | \-Aurelia CORNELIA
| | | | | | /-Lucius Julius Caesar II of ROME
| | | | | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Sextus Julius Caesar SEXTUS
| | | | | | /-Lucius Julius CAESAR III Governor of Macedonia
| | | | | | | | /-Pompillus LAENAS
| | | | | | | \-Popilia LAENATES
| | | | | \-Julia Antonia CAESARIA
| | | | | | /-Quintus Flaccus OF ROME
| | | | | | /-Marcus Fulvius Flaccus II
| | | | | | | \-Sulpicia Sulpicuia OF ROME
| | | | | | /-Marcus Fulvius Flaccus Bambalus III
| | | | | \-Cossutia Fulvia
| | | | | | /-Sempronius Tuditanus
| | | | | \-Sempronia Tuditania DE ROME
| | | | | | /-Publius Licinius Crassus Dives Mucianus DE ROME
| | | | | \-Licinia Crassa DE ROME
| | | | | \-Claudia DE ROME
| | | \-Antonia AUGUSTA Minor
| | | | /-Gnaeus OCTAVIUS RUFUS II
| | | | /-Gaius I Octavius
| | | | | \-Wife Of Gnaeus Octavius RUFUS II
| | | | /-Gaius II OCTAVIUS
| | | | | \-Octavius spouse of Gaius I OCTAVIUS
| | | | /-Gaius Octavius III Magistrate of VELITRAE
| | | | | \-Servilia WIFE OF GAIUS II OCTAVIUS
| | | | /-Gaius Octavius
| | | | | \-Aurelia COTTA
| | | \-Octavia of ROME
| | | | /-Attius father of Marcus Atius Balbus de Rome gens ATII
| | | | /-Marcus Atius Balbus de Rome gens ATII
| | | | | \-Pompiea STRABO
| | | | /-Marcus ATIUS BALBUS
| | | | | \-Pompeia LUCILLA BEN SEXTUS
| | | \-Atia Balba CAESONIA
| | | | /-Gaius Julius CEASAR
| | | | /-Julius CAESAR II
| | | | /-Gaius Julius CAESAR III
| | | | | | /-Quintus MARCIUS Rex
| | | | | \-Marcia Quinta REGINA
| | | \-Julia CAESARIUS
| | | | /-Lucius Aurelius Cotta AURELIUS
| | | | /-Lucius Aurelius COTTA
| | | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Lucius Aurelius Cotta AURELIUS
| | | \-Aurelia COTTA VAN ROME
| | | | /-Publius Rutilius RUFUS I
| | | \-Rutilia Rufa DIROMA
| | | \-Livia Julia DRUSILLA AUGUSTA Rome
| \-Venissa Britannia BRITAIN
| | /-Gneus Domitius AHENOBARBUS VI
| | /-Luciius Domitiius AHENOBARBUS
| | | | /-Marcus Aemilius Lepidus DE ROME
| | | | /-Marcus Aemelius Lepidus DE ROME
| | | | /-Lucius Aemilius LEPIDUS PAULLUS
| | | | | | /-Lucius Appuleius Saturninus NEAR ROME II Tribune
| | | | | \-Appulia SATURNINA
| | | | /-Lucius Aemilius Lepidus PAULLUS
| | | | | | /-Marcus Junius BRUTUS
| | | | | \-Junia Bruta Paullus
| | | | | \-Servilia Caepia MAJOR
| | | | /-Lucius Aemilius PAULLUS
| | | | | \-Cornelia SCIPIONIS
| | | \-Aemilia LEPIDA
| | | | /-Lucius VIPSANIUS
| | | | /-Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa of Arpino
| | | \-Vipsania Julia AGRIPPINA Julia Minor
| | | | /-Gaius Octavius III Magistrate of VELITRAE
| | | | /-Gaius Octavius
| | | | | \-Aurelia COTTA
| | | | /-Gaius Octavius of ROME
| | | | | | /-Marcus ATIUS BALBUS
| | | | | \-Atia Balba CAESONIA
| | | | | \-Julia CAESARIUS
| | | \-Julia Caesaris MAJOR
| | | | /-Lucius Scribonius LIBO
| | | \-Scribonia AUGUSTUS LIBO
| | | \-Sentia DE ROME
| \-Agrippina spouse of Tiberius Claudius Nero GERMANICUS
| | /-Marcus ANTONIUS
| | /-Gaius Marcus ANTONIUS
| | | \-Pasquala Maria
| | /-Marcus Antonius of ROME
| | /-Marcus Antonius CRETICUS OCTAVIA II
| | | \-Julia spouse of Marcus Antonius of ROME
| | /-Marcus Antonius III
| | | | /-Sextus Julius Caesar I
| | | | /-Sextus Julius CAESAR II
| | | | | \-Aurelia CORNELIA
| | | | /-Lucius Julius Caesar II of ROME
| | | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Sextus Julius Caesar SEXTUS
| | | | /-Lucius Julius CAESAR III Governor of Macedonia
| | | | | | /-Pompillus LAENAS
| | | | | \-Popilia LAENATES
| | | \-Julia Antonia CAESARIA
| | | | /-Quintus Flaccus OF ROME
| | | | /-Marcus Fulvius Flaccus II
| | | | | \-Sulpicia Sulpicuia OF ROME
| | | | /-Marcus Fulvius Flaccus Bambalus III
| | | \-Cossutia Fulvia
| | | | /-Sempronius Tuditanus
| | | \-Sempronia Tuditania DE ROME
| | | | /-Publius Licinius Crassus Dives Mucianus DE ROME
| | | \-Licinia Crassa DE ROME
| | | \-Claudia DE ROME
| \-Antonia MAJOR
| | /-Gnaeus OCTAVIUS RUFUS II
| | /-Gaius I Octavius
| | | \-Wife Of Gnaeus Octavius RUFUS II
| | /-Gaius II OCTAVIUS
| | | \-Octavius spouse of Gaius I OCTAVIUS
| | /-Gaius Octavius III Magistrate of VELITRAE
| | | \-Servilia WIFE OF GAIUS II OCTAVIUS
| | /-Gaius Octavius
| | | \-Aurelia COTTA
| \-Octavia of ROME
| | /-Attius father of Marcus Atius Balbus de Rome gens ATII
| | /-Marcus Atius Balbus de Rome gens ATII
| | | \-Pompiea STRABO
| | /-Marcus ATIUS BALBUS
| | | \-Pompeia LUCILLA BEN SEXTUS
| \-Atia Balba CAESONIA
| | /-Gaius Julius CEASAR
| | /-Julius CAESAR II
| | /-Gaius Julius CAESAR III
| | | | /-Quintus MARCIUS Rex
| | | \-Marcia Quinta REGINA
| \-Julia CAESARIUS
| | /-Lucius Aurelius Cotta AURELIUS
| | /-Lucius Aurelius COTTA
| | | \-Unknown Spouse of Lucius Aurelius Cotta AURELIUS
| \-Aurelia COTTA VAN ROME
| | /-Publius Rutilius RUFUS I
| \-Rutilia Rufa DIROMA
| \-Livia Julia DRUSILLA AUGUSTA Rome
/-Coelus of the BRITONS
| | /-Eneid of Cornwall KING
| | /-Manogan ap Eneid Druid King of Britain Mynogian DIGUEILLIUS
| | | \-Penardin of The Druids PRINCESS
| | /-Beli Mawr AP MANOGAN Britons
| | | \-Anna Royal house of Tudor
| | /-Prasutagus Brenin o ICENA
| | | \-Don FERCH MATHONWY
| \-Julia Victoria Penardun verch Prasutagus of the Iceni
| \-Boadicia of BRITAIN
Eurgin of Briton PRINCESS
| /-Rhun Baladr Bras of BRITONS
| /-Bladud Mawr ou Beli Mawr of BRITONS
| /-Llyr Lediaith ap Baran of Siluria King of BRITTANY
| | \-Don FERCH MATHONWY
| /-Bran Fendigaid ap Llyr Liediath of Britons Le Beni King of the BRITONS
| | | /-Llud Llaw Erient ap Beli of BRITONS
| | \-Penarddun Ferch LLUD
| | \-Anna I, Prophetess Armathea ENYGEUS
| /-Caratacos Pendragon Ap Cunobelinos OF TRINOVANTES
| | | /-Joseph BEN MATTATHIAS ha-David
| | | /-Janna or Johanna BEN JOSEPH ha-David
| | | | \-Yulpath bat Simon de Just
| | | /-Melchi Achim BEN JANA ha-David
| | | | | /-Joseph BEN MATTATHIAS ha-David
| | | | \-Joanna BINT JOSEPH Of Israel
| | | | \-Yulpath bat Simon de Just
| | | /-Levi ben Melchi ha-David of Arimathea
| | | | \-Johanna BINT JOSEPH
| | | /-Matthat ben Levi ben Melchi of Arimathea
| | | | | /-Eliud ben Ackim HA DAVID of Judae
| | | | | /-Eleazar BEN ELIUD
| | | | | | \-Awad
| | | | \-Pauline bint Eleazar of Judea
| | | | \-Hayat DE JERUSALEM
| | | /-Joseph ben Matthat of Rameh
| | | | \-Salome of Jerusalem
| | | /-Matthat Ben Joseph D'ISRAEL
| | | | \-Rachel Anna Alyuba BINT SIMON ELEAZOR The Prophetess Of Arimathaea
| | \-Enygeus LEVI
| | \-Anna GRATIENNE
| /-Cyllin OF SILURIA
| | \-Cartismanda DES BRIGANDES
\-Ystradwl Verch Cynvelyn VAN GLAMORGAN
\-Unknown Spouse of Cyllin of SILURIA
- Birth: ABT 150 BC, Wales
- Also known as: Penarddun Llweriadd of Wales
- Death: AFT 5 BC, Britain
- Burial: AFT 5 BC, Britain
Descendants of Penardin of The Druids PRINCESS
1 Penardin of The Druids PRINCESS
=Eneid of Cornwall KING
2 Manogan ap Eneid Druid King of Britain Mynogian DIGUEILLIUS
=Anna Royal house of Tudor
3 Beli Mawr AP MANOGAN Britons
=(Unknown)
=Don FERCH MATHONWY
3 Beli MANOGAN
3 Caswallan Cassivellaunos AP BELI of the Catuvellauni
2 Henwyn Duke of CAMBRIA AND CORNWALL
- Birth: 320 BC, of, Antioch, Syrian Arab Republic
- Death: 268 BC, Macedonia
Descendants of Stratonice PRINCESS I, Antigonid of Macedon
1 Stratonice PRINCESS I, Antigonid of Macedon
=Seleucus of SYRIA I Marriage: Syrian Arab Republic
- Birth: 291, Toxandrie, Duchy of Lower Lorraine, Gaul, Roman Empire
- Also known as: Isabelle de Toxandrie
- Also known as: des Saliens
- Also known as: des Saliens
- Title Of Nobility: Princess de Toxandrie
- Death: 350, Somme, Picardie, France
Descendants of Ysabeau PRINCESS de Toxandrie
1 Ysabeau PRINCESS de Toxandrie
=Gundomad KING der Alamannien
2 Hermerich DE SUEVIE
2 Nebiogaste D'ALÉMANIE
2 Alpheros DE GASCOGNE
=Unknown DE LITUANIE
3 Waltheri DE GASCOGNE DE AQUITAINE
=(Unknown)
3 Waltheri DE GASCOGNE
=Hildegonde DE TOXANDRIE
Ancestors of Andia PRINCESS OF BABYLON
/-Nebuchadnezzar III King of BABYLON
/-Nebuchadnezzar IV OF BABYLON
| | /-Deioces OF MEDES
| | /-Phraortes I VAN MEDINA King of Media
| | /-Cyaxares Uvakhshatra King of the MEDES
| \-Hildita of Babylon
| \-Aryenis Mermnadae of Linda
Andia PRINCESS OF BABYLON
| /-Amyites of Persia V
\-daughter of Amyites of PERSIA V
| /-Belshazzar
\- VASHTI
Ancestors of Laodice PRINCESS OF SYRIA
/-Antiochus of Orestis General of MACEDONIA
/-Seleucus of SYRIA I
| \-Laodice I, of Macedonia
Laodice PRINCESS OF SYRIA
\-Apama OF BACTRIA
Descendants of Laodice PRINCESS OF SYRIA
1 Laodice PRINCESS OF SYRIA
=Leonidas II Agiadai of SPARTA
2 Proaga de Sparte ,Princesse Agiade, De Sparte
=Andromachos SELEUKID
3 Laodice II of SYRIA
=Seleucus II Callinicus Vasiliá tou Arche SELEÚKEIA Marriage: Syrian Arab Republic
3 Achaios SELEUKID
Descendants of Gnaeus Petronius PROBATUS JR. JUSTUS
1 Gnaeus Petronius PROBATUS JR. JUSTUS
=Caecilia spouse of Gnaeus Petronius Probatus JUSTUS Jr.
2 Petronia spouse of Marcus PUBLIUS
=Marcus PUBLIUS
3 Pubilia Probianus
=Gaius Rufius Proculus of Rome
3 Lucius Publius Probatus Iustusde ROME
Ancestors of Proba PROBIA
/-Marcus Nonius MUCIANUS
/-Marcus Nonius Mucianus Publius Delpius PEREGRINUS
| | /-Publius Delphinus PEREGRINUS
| \-Delpia spuse of Marcus Nonius MUCIANUS
| \-Alfia spouse of Publius Delphinus PEREGRINUS
/-Marcus Nonius DE ROME
| \-Manilia spouse of Marcus Nonius Mucianus Publius Delpius PEREGRINUS
/-Marcus Annius Severus DE ROME
| | /-Lucius Junius Caessenius PAETUS
| | /-Lucius Junius Caessennius ANTONINUS
| | | | /-Gnaeus Arrius ANTONINUS
| | | \-Arria ANTONIA
| | | \-Plotia ISAURICA
| \-Arria Caesennia Paulina CAESENNIUS
/-Marcus Maecius Probus
| \-Manlia Minor DE ROME
/-Marcus Pomponius Maecius PROBUS
| | /-Lucius Junius Rufinus Proculianus Proculianus
| \-Pomponia Arria
| | /-Marcus Nonius MUCIANUS
| | /-Marcus Nonius Mucianus Publius Delpius PEREGRINUS
| | | | /-Publius Delphinus PEREGRINUS
| | | \-Delpia spuse of Marcus Nonius MUCIANUS
| | | \-Alfia spouse of Publius Delphinus PEREGRINUS
| | /-Marcus Nonius DE ROME
| | | \-Manilia spouse of Marcus Nonius Mucianus Publius Delpius PEREGRINUS
| \-Arria Sextia PAULINA
| | /-Lucius Junius Caessenius PAETUS
| | /-Lucius Junius Caessennius ANTONINUS
| | | | /-Gnaeus Arrius ANTONINUS
| | | \-Arria ANTONIA
| | | \-Plotia ISAURICA
| \-Arria Caesennia Paulina CAESENNIUS
Proba PROBIA
\-Pupienia Sextia Paulina CETHEGILLA
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Descendants of Gabinius Vettius PROBIANUS
1 Gabinius Vettius PROBIANUS
=(Unknown)
2 Probiana DE ROME
=Rufius Valerius Messala DE ROME
3 Synesius son of Rufius Valerius Messala DE ROME
=Gennadia spouse of SYNESIUS
3 Rufius Probanus DE ROME
=Synesia GENNADIA
- Birth: ABT 785, Nantes, Loire-Atlantique, Pays-de-la-Loire, France
- Title Of Nobility: Countess
- Death: ABT 725, Bretagne, France
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Descendants of Jordan PROBST OF BRITTANY
1 Jordan PROBST OF BRITTANY
=(Unknown)
2 Judicael DE RENNES BAYEAUX I
2 Frotmund DE BRETAGNE
2 Marmohec DE POHER
=Ridoredh OF VANNES Prince of Brittany
3 Alain Ier DE BRETAGNE
=Oreguen Juhel BERENGER Queen of Bretagne Comtesse de Rennes Marriage: 875, Bretagne (Région), France
Ancestors of Maecius Pomponius Maecius PROBUS
/-Marcus Nonius MUCIANUS
/-Marcus Nonius Mucianus Publius Delpius PEREGRINUS
| | /-Publius Delphinus PEREGRINUS
| \-Delpia spuse of Marcus Nonius MUCIANUS
| \-Alfia spouse of Publius Delphinus PEREGRINUS
/-Marcus Nonius DE ROME
| \-Manilia spouse of Marcus Nonius Mucianus Publius Delpius PEREGRINUS
/-Marcus Annius Severus DE ROME
| | /-Lucius Junius Caessenius PAETUS
| | /-Lucius Junius Caessennius ANTONINUS
| | | | /-Gnaeus Arrius ANTONINUS
| | | \-Arria ANTONIA
| | | \-Plotia ISAURICA
| \-Arria Caesennia Paulina CAESENNIUS
/-Marcus Maecius Probus
| \-Manlia Minor DE ROME
/-Marcus Pomponius Maecius PROBUS
| | /-Lucius Junius Rufinus Proculianus Proculianus
| \-Pomponia Arria
| | /-Marcus Nonius MUCIANUS
| | /-Marcus Nonius Mucianus Publius Delpius PEREGRINUS
| | | | /-Publius Delphinus PEREGRINUS
| | | \-Delpia spuse of Marcus Nonius MUCIANUS
| | | \-Alfia spouse of Publius Delphinus PEREGRINUS
| | /-Marcus Nonius DE ROME
| | | \-Manilia spouse of Marcus Nonius Mucianus Publius Delpius PEREGRINUS
| \-Arria Sextia PAULINA
| | /-Lucius Junius Caessenius PAETUS
| | /-Lucius Junius Caessennius ANTONINUS
| | | | /-Gnaeus Arrius ANTONINUS
| | | \-Arria ANTONIA
| | | \-Plotia ISAURICA
| \-Arria Caesennia Paulina CAESENNIUS
Maecius Pomponius Maecius PROBUS
\-Pupienia Sextia Paulina CETHEGILLA
- Father: Marcus Pomponius Maecius PROBUS
- Mother: Pupienia Sextia Paulina CETHEGILLA
- Birth: ABT 220, Roma, Italy, Roman Empire
- LifeSketch: Marcus Pomponius Maecius Probus (c. 195 – after 228) was a Consul in 228. He was the son of Marcus Maecius Probus and his wife Pomponia Arria. In the genealogical reconstruction by C. Settipani, he married and had: Marcus Maecius Probus (born c. 220), married to Pupiena Sextia Paulina Cethegilla (born c. 225), daughter of Marcus Pupienus Africanus and his wife Cornelia Marullina, and had: (Marcus Maecius Orfitus) (born c. 245), married to (Furia) (born c. 244), daughter of Gordian III and his wife Tranquillina, and had: (Maecia Proba) (born c. 270), married to (Faltonius) (born c. 260), son of Faltonius Pinianus, and had issue
- Death: 290, Roma, Italy, Roman Empire
Ancestors of Marcus Maecius PROBUS
/-Marcus Nonius MUCIANUS
/-Marcus Nonius Mucianus Publius Delpius PEREGRINUS
| | /-Publius Delphinus PEREGRINUS
| \-Delpia spuse of Marcus Nonius MUCIANUS
| \-Alfia spouse of Publius Delphinus PEREGRINUS
/-Marcus Nonius DE ROME
| \-Manilia spouse of Marcus Nonius Mucianus Publius Delpius PEREGRINUS
/-Marcus Annius Severus DE ROME
| | /-Lucius Junius Caessenius PAETUS
| | /-Lucius Junius Caessennius ANTONINUS
| | | | /-Gnaeus Arrius ANTONINUS
| | | \-Arria ANTONIA
| | | \-Plotia ISAURICA
| \-Arria Caesennia Paulina CAESENNIUS
/-Marcus Maecius Probus
| \-Manlia Minor DE ROME
/-Marcus Pomponius Maecius PROBUS
| | /-Lucius Junius Rufinus Proculianus Proculianus
| \-Pomponia Arria
| | /-Marcus Nonius MUCIANUS
| | /-Marcus Nonius Mucianus Publius Delpius PEREGRINUS
| | | | /-Publius Delphinus PEREGRINUS
| | | \-Delpia spuse of Marcus Nonius MUCIANUS
| | | \-Alfia spouse of Publius Delphinus PEREGRINUS
| | /-Marcus Nonius DE ROME
| | | \-Manilia spouse of Marcus Nonius Mucianus Publius Delpius PEREGRINUS
| \-Arria Sextia PAULINA
| | /-Lucius Junius Caessenius PAETUS
| | /-Lucius Junius Caessennius ANTONINUS
| | | | /-Gnaeus Arrius ANTONINUS
| | | \-Arria ANTONIA
| | | \-Plotia ISAURICA
| \-Arria Caesennia Paulina CAESENNIUS
Marcus Maecius PROBUS
\-Pupienia Sextia Paulina CETHEGILLA
Descendants of Marcus Maecius PROBUS
1 Marcus Maecius PROBUS
=Pupiena Sexta Paulina CETHEGILLA
2 Marcus Maecius Orfitus
=Furia spouse of Marcus Maecius ORFITUS
3 Maecia Proba CETHEGILLA
=Gaius Memmius Caecilianus Placidus
2 Maecius MARULLUS
- Father: Marcus Maecius Probus
- Mother: Pomponia Arria
- Birth: ABT 195, Roma, Italy, Roman Empire
- Occupation: Consul of Rome, 228, Roma, Italy, Roman Empire
- LifeSketch: Marcus Pomponius Maecius Probus (c. 195 – after 228) was a Consul in 228. He was the son of Marcus Maecius Probus and his wife Pomponia Arria. In the genealogical reconstruction by C. Settipani, he married and had: Marcus Maecius Probus (born c. 220), married to Pupiena Sextia Paulina Cethegilla (born c. 225), daughter of Marcus Pupienus Africanus and his wife Cornelia Marullina, and had: (Marcus Maecius Orfitus) (born c. 245), married to (Furia) (born c. 244), daughter of Gordian III and his wife Tranquillina, and had: (Maecia Proba) (born c. 270), married to (Faltonius) (born c. 260), son of Faltonius Pinianus, and had issue
- Death: ABT 228, Roma, Italy, Roman Empire
Ancestors of Marcus Pomponius Maecius PROBUS
/-Marcus Nonius MUCIANUS
/-Marcus Nonius Mucianus Publius Delpius PEREGRINUS
| | /-Publius Delphinus PEREGRINUS
| \-Delpia spuse of Marcus Nonius MUCIANUS
| \-Alfia spouse of Publius Delphinus PEREGRINUS
/-Marcus Nonius DE ROME
| \-Manilia spouse of Marcus Nonius Mucianus Publius Delpius PEREGRINUS
/-Marcus Annius Severus DE ROME
| | /-Lucius Junius Caessenius PAETUS
| | /-Lucius Junius Caessennius ANTONINUS
| | | | /-Gnaeus Arrius ANTONINUS
| | | \-Arria ANTONIA
| | | \-Plotia ISAURICA
| \-Arria Caesennia Paulina CAESENNIUS
/-Marcus Maecius Probus
| \-Manlia Minor DE ROME
Marcus Pomponius Maecius PROBUS
| /-Lucius Junius Rufinus Proculianus Proculianus
\-Pomponia Arria
| /-Marcus Nonius MUCIANUS
| /-Marcus Nonius Mucianus Publius Delpius PEREGRINUS
| | | /-Publius Delphinus PEREGRINUS
| | \-Delpia spuse of Marcus Nonius MUCIANUS
| | \-Alfia spouse of Publius Delphinus PEREGRINUS
| /-Marcus Nonius DE ROME
| | \-Manilia spouse of Marcus Nonius Mucianus Publius Delpius PEREGRINUS
\-Arria Sextia PAULINA
| /-Lucius Junius Caessenius PAETUS
| /-Lucius Junius Caessennius ANTONINUS
| | | /-Gnaeus Arrius ANTONINUS
| | \-Arria ANTONIA
| | \-Plotia ISAURICA
\-Arria Caesennia Paulina CAESENNIUS
Descendants of Marcus Pomponius Maecius PROBUS
1 Marcus Pomponius Maecius PROBUS
=Pupienia Sextia Paulina CETHEGILLA
2 Marcus Maecius PROBUS
=Pupiena Sexta Paulina CETHEGILLA
3 Marcus Maecius Orfitus
=Furia spouse of Marcus Maecius ORFITUS
3 Maecius MARULLUS
2 Proba PROBIA
2 Maecius Pomponius Maecius PROBUS
2 Dalmatius DE ROME
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Petronius PROBUS
Petronius PROBUS
\-Anicia OF ROME
\-Amnia Demetrias OF ROME
\-Flavia OF THERA
| /-Claudius Capitolinus II DE ROME
| /-Claudius CAPITILINUS DE ROME
| /-Claudius Capitolinus I DE ROME
| /-Claudius CAPITOLINUS II DE ROMA
| | | /-Aelius Afer DE ROME
| | | /-Aulus Gallus Larcius DE ROME
| | | | \-Ulpia Trainus
| | | /-Aulus Larcius Quirinus Lepiodus SULPICIANUS DE ROME
| | | | | /-Sulpicius Camerinus DE ROME
| | | | \-Sulpicia Telero DE ROME
| | | | \-Postumia FESTA DE ROME
| | \-Macrinia DE ROME
| | | /-Lucius Arrius DE ROME
| | | /-Lucius Arrius Plarianus AUFIDIUS TURBO
| | | | \-Plaria Vera DE ROME
| | \-Arria Sabina
| | | /-Aulus Gallus Larcius DE ROME
| | \-Atilia Sabina DE ROME
| | \-Sulpicia Telero DE ROME
| /-Tiberius Claudius Cleobulus DE ROME
| | \-Macrinia DE ROME
| /-Tiberius Claudius CLEOBULUS
| | | /-Gaius Calpurnius Glabrio
| | | /-Manius Acilius Memmius Glabrio
| | | /-Manius Acilius Gabrio
| | | | | /-Marcus Aedius DE ROME
| | | | \-Aedia Servilia DE ROME
| | | | \-Servilia DE ROME
| | | /-Manilius Acilius Glabrio DE ROME
| | | | | /-Lucius Arrius DE ROME
| | | | | /-Lucius Arrius Plarianus AUFIDIUS TURBO
| | | | | | \-Plaria Vera DE ROME
| | | | \-Arria Plania Vera Pricillia DE ROME
| | | | | /-Aulus Gallus Larcius DE ROME
| | | | \-Atilia Sabina DE ROME
| | | | \-Sulpicia Telero DE ROME
| | | /-Manlius Acilius Glabrio Gnaes Cornelius SeverusCornelius Severus DE ROME
| | | | | /-Gnaeus Pinarius Cornelius Severus DE ROME
| | | | \-Cornelia Severa Manliola OF ROME
| | | | \-Sergia Pailina DE ROME
| | \-Priscilla Aciliana DE ROME
| | | /-Gaius Calpurnius Glabrio
| | | /-Manius Acilius Memmius Glabrio
| | | /-Manius Acilius Gabrio
| | | | | /-Marcus Aedius DE ROME
| | | | \-Aedia Servilia DE ROME
| | | | \-Servilia DE ROME
| | | /-Manilius Acilius Glabrio DE ROME
| | | | | /-Lucius Arrius DE ROME
| | | | | /-Lucius Arrius Plarianus AUFIDIUS TURBO
| | | | | | \-Plaria Vera DE ROME
| | | | \-Arria Plania Vera Pricillia DE ROME
| | | | | /-Aulus Gallus Larcius DE ROME
| | | | \-Atilia Sabina DE ROME
| | | | \-Sulpicia Telero DE ROME
| | \-Annia Vibia Faustina DE ROME
| | | /-Gnaeus Pinarius Cornelius Severus DE ROME
| | \-Cornelia Severa Manliola OF ROME
| | \-Sergia Pailina DE ROME
\-Claudia Capitolina OF ROME
\-Numeria Marcella OF ROME
Descendants of Petronius PROBUS
1 Petronius PROBUS
=(Unknown)
2 Petronia Probina
=Rufius Festus Avienus of Rome
3 Postumius Rufius Festus Avienus
=Maecia Avienus PLACIDA
Ancestors of Rufia PROCULA
/-Gaius Rufius Festus
/-Gaius Rufius FESTUS
| \-Postumia Festa
| \-Postumius
/-Gaius Rufius Festus Laelius Firmus
| | /-Marcus LAELIUS
| \-Laelia Firmina
| \-Unknown Spouse of Marcus LAELIUS
/-Gaius Rufius Proculus of Rome
| | /-Quintus Lusius Sabinianus
| \-Lusia Marcella VON BYZANZ
Rufia PROCULA
| /-Marcus PUBLIUS
\-Pubilia Probianus
| /-Gnaeus Petronius PROBATUS JR. JUSTUS
\-Petronia spouse of Marcus PUBLIUS
| /-Sextus Caecilius Crescens
| /-Sextus CAECILIUS VOLUSIANIS
| | \-Fulvia Numisia GAVIANA AEMILIANA
\-Caecilia spouse of Gnaeus Petronius Probatus JUSTUS Jr.
Ancestors of Julius PROCULUS
/-Gaius Julius Lupus Titus Vibius Varus Laevillus I of The Roman Empire
/-Gaius Julius Lupus Titus Vibius Varus Laevillus II of The Roman Empire
| | /-Clodius Vibius Varus of Rome
| | | \-Clodia of Rome
| \-Vibia of Rome
| \-Julia VESTINA de Roma
Julius PROCULUS
| /-Caius Julius Quadratus BASSUS
\-Julia Quadratilla Major Bassa VAN ROME
| /-Antipater I Idumeens of ASCALON
| /-Antipater II THE IDUMAEAN Procurator of Judaea
| | \- IDUMEA
| /- HEROD THE GREAT
| | | /-Malichus I King of the Nabataeans
| | | /-Aretas II King of Nabataea
| | | /-Aretas III King of the Nabataean
| | \-Cypros or Cypris of Nabataea
| | | /-Aretas II King of Nabataea
| | | /-Obodas I King of Nabataea
| | \-Eupatra
| | \-Unknown Spouse of Obodas I of the ARABS
| /-Alexander HERODIENS
| | | /-John Hyrcanus I THASSI
| | | /-Alexander Jannaeus BEN
| | | | \-Maccabaeus ben HASMONEAN
| | | /-Aristobulus II ALEXANDER JANNAEUS 53rd High Priest of Judea
| | | | | /-Shetah BAR YOSSEI (disputed)
| | | | \-Salomé ALEXANDRA HASMONEUS
| | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Setah ben Yossei I of JUDEA
| | | /-Alexander BEN ARISTOBULUS II Maccabean
| | | | | /-John Hyrcanus I THASSI
| | | | | /-Absalom ben John Hyrcanus MACCABAEUS
| | | | | | \-Maccabaeus ben HASMONEAN
| | | | \-Salome OF JUDAEA BAT ABSALOM
| | | | \-unknown Spouse of Absalom Maccabaeus HASMONEAN
| | \-Mariamne BAT ALEXANDER
| | | /-John Hyrcanus I THASSI
| | | /-Alexander Jannaeus BEN
| | | | \-Maccabaeus ben HASMONEAN
| | | /-John Hyrcanus II BEN ALEXANDER JANNAEUS
| | | | | /-Shetah BAR YOSSEI (disputed)
| | | | \-Salomé ALEXANDRA HASMONEUS
| | | | \-Unknown Spouse of Setah ben Yossei I of JUDEA
| | \-Alexandra II BAT HYRCANUS II Queen Of Arimathea
| /-Alexander IV BAR ALEXANDER HERODIAN
| | | /- ARCHELAUS
| | | /-Archelaus I of Comana
| | | /-Archelaus II
| | | | \-unnamed Greek woman 1st wife
| | | /-Archelaus Sisines of Cappadocia
| | | | \-Glaphyra A CAPPADOCIAN GREEK HETAERA
| | \-Glaphyra DE CAPPADOCE
| | \-unknown Armenian Princess
| /-Tigranes VI of ARMENIA
| | \-Unknown Spouse of Alexander IV bar Alexander of JUDEA
| /-Gaius Julius ALEXANDER
| | \-Opgalli D'ARMENIE
\-Julia Iotapa DECILICIA
\-Julia IOTAPA
| /-Samos KÖNIG II, von Kommagene
| /-Mithridates I Callinikos King of COMMAGENE
| /-Antiochos KING I, Théos, of Commagene
| | | /-Antiochus VIII Grypos, KING Philometor of Syria
| | \-Laodice QUEEN VII, Thea Philadelphus of Commagene
| | \-Cleopatra Tryphaena PRINCESS of Egypt
| /-Mithridates II KING
| | | /-Ariobarzanes KING I, Of Cappadocia
| | \-Isias Philostorgo of CAPPADOCIA
| | \-Athenais QUEEN I, Philostorgos , of Cappadocia
| | \-laodice de Pont EUXIN
| /-Mithridates KING III, of Commagene
| | \-Laodice Queen of COMMAGENE
| /-Antiochos III ORONTIDES
| | | /-Ariobarzanes Prince
| | | /-Mithridates I King of Achaemenid Media Atropatene Kingdom of Armenia
| | | /-Ariobarzanes KING I, of Media Atropatene
| | | | | /-Tigranes II King of ARMENIA
| | | | \-Daughter of Tigraes II Wife of Mithradates I of MEDIA
| | | | \-Cleopatra the Elder, Princess of Pontus
| | | /-Artavasdes King I of Media ATROPATENE
| | \-Iotapa Queen Consort of King Mithridates III of COMMAGENE
| | \-Laodice Queen of Parthia of the Parthian EMPIRE
| /-Antiochus Epiphanes IV OF COMMANGENE
| | \-Iotapa DE MEDIE
\-Julia IOTAPA DAUGHTER OF ANTIOCHUS IV of Cetia
\-Iotape IV ORONTIDES
Ancestors of Aulus Julius PROCULUS DE ROME
/-Publius Aelius Hadrianus Marullinus DE ROME
/-Ulpius Plotius DE ROME
| \-Aelia DE ROME
/-Aelius Afer DE ROME
| \-Marciana DE ROME
/-Aulus Gallus Larcius DE ROME
| | /-Ulpius DE ROME
| | /-Marcus Ulpius Traianus DE ROME
| | | | /-Marcus Ulpius DE ROME
| | | | /-Marcus Traius DE ROME
| | | \-Traia DE ROME
| \-Ulpia Trainus
| | /-Plotinus DE ROME
| \-Plotina DE ROME
| \-Plócia spouse of Plotinus DE ROME
/-Aulus Egrillius Rufius DE ROME
| | /-Sulpicius Camerinus DE ROME
| \-Sulpicia Telero DE ROME
| \-Postumia FESTA DE ROME
Aulus Julius PROCULUS DE ROME
| /-Plarius Quintas DE ROME
| /-Quintus Plarius DE ROME
\-Plavis Vera DE ROME
Descendants of Aulus Julius PROCULUS DE ROME
1 Aulus Julius PROCULUS DE ROME
=Claudia BASILO
2 Julia Minor IV VIPSANIA
=Lucius Sergius PAULLUS
3 Seia MAXIMA
=Sextus Anicius Saturninus
Ancestors of Amadeo I of PROVENCE
/-Pepin II D`HERISTAL
/-Charles D`HERISTAL
| | /-Thierry II D`AUSTRASIE
| | /-Childebert D`AUSTRASIE
| | | \-Sichilde DE NEUSTRIE
| | /-Childebrand NOBELUNGEN
| | | \-Alpaida D`ORLEANS
| \-Alpais DE BRUYERES
| \-Clotilde DE REIMS
/-Rimogius VAN ROUEN
| \-Ruodheid DE GELLONE
/-Richard d'Amiens D'AMIENS
/-Buvinus VON METZ
| \-Ingeltude D'AMIENS D'AUTUN
/-Boson DE PROVENCE Roi de Basse-Bourgogne
| | /-Salvius DE VIENNE
| | /-Tribeaut DE VIENNE
| | /-Boso D'ARLES
| \-Richilde D'ARLES
| | /-Matfrid D'ORLEANS
| \-Engeltrude D'ORLEANS
/-Louis III DE BASSE-BOURGOGNE
| \-Ermengarde VON ITALIEN Königin von Burgund
/-Constantine DE VIENNE
| \-Anne DE CONSTANTINOPLE
Amadeo I of PROVENCE
\-Thiberge TEUTBERGE SAVOIE
- Father: Raimund IV BERENGUER
- Mother: Béatrix DE SAVOIE Comtesse de Provence
- Birth: 1220, Aix-en-Provence, , Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, France
- Also known as: Raymond de Provence VI
- AFN: ZNN1-TV
- Title Of Nobility: COUNT OF PROVENCE
- Death: 1220, Aix-en-Provence, , Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, France
Ancestors of Raymond de PROVENCE
/-Suniario DE BARCELONA
/-Borrell II of BARCELONA
| \-Richilde de Rouergue
/-Raimundo Borrell DE BARCELONA
| \-Luitgarde spouse of Borrell II of BARCELONA
/-Berengar Ramón I DE BARCELONA
| \-Ermensinde DE CARCASSONNE
/-Ramon BERENGER I
| \-Sancha Sanchez DE CASTILLE
/-Ramon BERENGUER II
| \-Almodis de la Haute MARCHE
/-Ramon BERENGUER III de Barcelona
| \-Mahalda Guiscard OF APULIA
/-Ramón Berenguer IV DE BARCELONA
| \-Douce DE PROVENCE
/-Alfonso II DE ARAGON
| \-Petronila I Queen of Aragon
/-Alfonso II DE ARAGON
| \-Sancha DE CASTILLA Reina consorte de Aragón
/-Raimund IV BERENGUER
| \-Garsende DE SABRAN
Raymond de PROVENCE
\-Béatrix DE SAVOIE Comtesse de Provence
- Birth: 1450 BC, Makedonía, Greece
- Death: Makedonía, Greece
Descendants of Deucalion PTHIA
1 Deucalion PTHIA
=Pyrrha PTHIA
2 Amphictyon ben Deucalion of ATHENS
=Kranae of ATHENS
3 Ithonus of THESSALY
=Melanippe of THESSALY
- Birth: ABT 1450 BC, Makedonía, Greece
- Death: Makedonía, Greece
Descendants of Pyrrha PTHIA
1 Pyrrha PTHIA
=Deucalion PTHIA
2 Amphictyon ben Deucalion of ATHENS
=Kranae of ATHENS
3 Ithonus of THESSALY
=Melanippe of THESSALY
- Birth: 195
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Descendants of Marcus PUBLIUS
1 Marcus PUBLIUS
=Petronia spouse of Marcus PUBLIUS
2 Pubilia Probianus
=Gaius Rufius Proculus of Rome
3 Rufius Festus
=Furia Gordana DE ROME
3 Rufia Procula DE ROME
3 Rufia PROCULA
2 Lucius Publius Probatus Iustusde ROME
Ancestors of Petronia spouse of Marcus PUBLIUS
/-Gnaeus Petronius PROBATUS JR. JUSTUS
Petronia spouse of Marcus PUBLIUS
| /-Sextus Caecilius Crescens
| /-Sextus CAECILIUS VOLUSIANIS
| | \-Fulvia Numisia GAVIANA AEMILIANA
\-Caecilia spouse of Gnaeus Petronius Probatus JUSTUS Jr.
Descendants of Petronia spouse of Marcus PUBLIUS
1 Petronia spouse of Marcus PUBLIUS
=Marcus PUBLIUS
2 Pubilia Probianus
=Gaius Rufius Proculus of Rome
3 Rufius Festus
=Furia Gordana DE ROME
3 Rufia Procula DE ROME
3 Rufia PROCULA
2 Lucius Publius Probatus Iustusde ROME
- Father: Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
- Mother: Fonteia Claudia
- Birth: 129 BC, Rome, Roman Republic
- Title Of Nobility: Praetor
- He was exiled by Gaius Marius while Sulla, whom he supported, was away in the east.: 88 BC
- He returned to Rome after Lucius Cornelius Cinna died.: 84 BC
- LifeSketch: Appius Claudius Pulcher (c. 129 BC – 76 BC) was a Roman noble, general and politician of the 1st century BC. He was the father of a number of renowned Romans, most notable: the infamous Clodius and Clodia. There is uncertainty about who his father was. It was most probably the Appius Claudius Pulcher who was consul in 143 BC. He was a supporter of Lucius Cornelius Sulla and served as praetor in 88 BC. He was exiled in that year by Gaius Marius while Sulla was away in the east. He returned to Rome after Lucius Cornelius Cinna died in 84 BC, and served as consul in 79 BC and as governor of Roman Macedonia from 78 BC to 76 BC. Appius Claudius Pulcher was likely married to a Caecilia Metella (a daughter of Balearicus), although this is not universally agreed upon, T. P. Wiseman believes that that his wife was a Servilia Caepione (it is known that there was a Servilia around this time that was the wife of a Pulcher, but it is not known who either of them were). Jeffrey Tatum thinks that there is too little information to be sure either way. He had six known children: . Appius Claudius Pulcher (consul of 54 BC) . Gaius Claudius Pulcher . Publius Claudius Pulcher, who changed his name to Clodius . Claudia Tertia, who married Quintus Marcius Rex . Claudia (who changed her name to Clodia), the wife of Quintus Caecilius Metellus Celer . Claudia (c. 90 BC – aft. 66 BC), first wife of Lucius Licinius Lucullus, whom she divorced in 66 BC
- Title Of Nobility: Consul of Rome
- Title Of Nobility: Governor of Roman Macedonia
- Title Of Nobility: Consul of Rome
- Title Of Nobility: Governor of Roman Macedonia
- Title Of Nobility: Consul of Rome
- Title Of Nobility: Governor of Roman Macedonia
- Title Of Nobility: Consul of Rome
- Title Of Nobility: Governor of Roman Macedonia
- Death: 76 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Partnership with: Caecilia Metella BALEARICA
- Child: Gaius Claudius PULCHER
- Child: Claudia PULCHRA Birth: 90 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Child: Publius Claudius PULCHER Birth: ABT DEC 93 BC, Rome, Roman Republic
- Child: Clodia MAIOR Birth: 30 JUN 95 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Child: Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome Birth: 97 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Child: Claudia TERTIA PULCHER Birth: 95 BC, Rome, Lazio, Italy
Ancestors of Appius Claudius PULCHER Counsul of Rome
/-Appius Claudius SABINUS REGILLENSIS OR Inregillensis
/-Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus INREGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
/-Publius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Gaius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
Appius Claudius PULCHER Counsul of Rome
\-Fonteia Claudia
Descendants of Appius Claudius PULCHER Counsul of Rome
1 Appius Claudius PULCHER Counsul of Rome
=Caecilia Metella BALEARICA
2 Gaius Claudius PULCHER
=(Unknown)
3 Claudia DE ROME
=Publius Licinius Crassus Dives Mucianus DE ROME
2 Claudia PULCHRA
2 Publius Claudius PULCHER
2 Clodia MAIOR
2 Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
2 Claudia TERTIA PULCHER
- Father: Gaius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
- Birth: 186 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Title Of Nobility: Consul of Rome
- LifeSketch: Son of Gaius Claudius Pulcher (who was consul in 177 BC), he was elected consul for 143 BC, and, to obtain a pretext for a triumph, attacked the Salassi, an Alpine tribe. He was at first defeated, but afterwards, following the directions of the Sibylline Books, gained a victory. On his return the celebration of the triumph was refused; but he held a triumph at his own expense, and when one of the tribunes attempted to drag him from his car, his daughter Claudia, one of the Vestal Virgins, walked by his side up to the capital. Next year he was an unsuccessful candidate for the censorship, though he afterwards held that office with Quintus Fulvius Nobilior, probably in 136 BC. He allied with Tiberius Gracchus who married his daughter Claudia. Appius backed Tiberius' land reform bill and in 133 BC with Tiberius and Tiberius' brother, Gaius Gracchus, was chosen commissioner for the division of the lands. Their post allowed them to survey the ager publicus, publicly owned land that Tiberius wanted to distribute to citizens who had lost their property. Another faction in the Senate opposed them and Tiberius was assassinated in 133 BC. Appius was the enemy of Scipio Aemilianus. He died shortly after Tiberius Gracchus, probably in 130 BC. He was one of the Salii, an augur, and princeps senatus. Cicero says that his style of speaking was fluent and vehement. He married Antistia. His great-granddaughter was Clodia.
- Title Of Nobility: Censor
- Title Of Nobility: Prêtre salien, Princeps Senatus (-136), Sénateur , Triumvir (-133)
- Title Of Nobility: Censor
- Title Of Nobility: Prêtre salien, Princeps Senatus (-136), Sénateur , Triumvir (-133)
- Title Of Nobility: Censor
- Title Of Nobility: Prêtre salien, Princeps Senatus (-136), Sénateur , Triumvir (-133)
- Title Of Nobility: Censor
- Title Of Nobility: Prêtre salien, Princeps Senatus (-136), Sénateur , Triumvir (-133)
- Death: ABT 130 BC
Ancestors of Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Marcus CLAUSUS
/-Appius Claudius SABINUS REGILLENSIS OR Inregillensis
/-Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus INREGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
/-Publius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Gaius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
Descendants of Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
1 Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
=Fonteia Claudia Marriage: 138 BC
2 Appius Claudius PULCHER Counsul of Rome
=Caecilia Metella BALEARICA
3 Gaius Claudius PULCHER
=(Unknown)
3 Claudia PULCHRA
3 Publius Claudius PULCHER
3 Clodia MAIOR
3 Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
3 Claudia TERTIA PULCHER
2 Gaius Claudius PULCHER
=Antistia VETORUM Marriage: 164 BC
2 Appius Claudius PULCHER
2 Claudia Minor
2 Claudia Vestal Virgin
2 Claudia Tertia
- Father: Appius Claudius PULCHER Counsul of Rome
- Mother: Caecilia Metella BALEARICA
- Birth: 97 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Praetor, 57 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Title Of Nobility: Consul of Rome
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia Appius Claudius Pulcher (97 BC – 49 BC) was a Roman patrician, politician and general in the first century BC. He was consul of the Roman Republic in 54 BC. He was an expert in Roman law and antiquities, especially the esoteric lore of the augural college of which he was a controversial member. He was head of the senior line of the most powerful family of the patrician Claudii. The Claudii were one of the five leading families (gentes maiores or "Greater Clans") which had dominated Roman social and political life from the earliest years of the republic. He is best known as the recipient of 13 of the extant letters in Cicero's ad Familiares corpus (the whole of book III), which date from winter 53-52 to summer 50 BC. Regrettably they do not include any of Appius' replies to Cicero as extant texts of any sort by members of Rome's ruling aristocracy are quite rare, apart from those of Julius Caesar. He is also well known for being the older brother of the infamous Clodius and Clodia. His wives and marriage details remain unknown, and he may not have married until after returning from the eastern wars. No sons survived to adulthood, but he had at least two daughters Claudiae neither of whom are mentioned directly by name, but only in the context of their relationships by marriage: the younger to Pompey the younger (born c.79 BC), while the elder was the first wife of Marcus Junius Brutus (born 85). The terminus ante quem for both marriages is spring 51 BC (calendar Iunius). Most likely Claudia maior married Brutus c.59 (when he turned 26) while her minor sister's match with Magnus' son was probably arranged around the time of the Luca and Ravenna conferences (spring 56 BC), with the marriage taking place in Pompeius' second consulate after Appius returned from Sardinia. It was an interesting choice of in-laws (adfines) since Brutus refused to speak to Pompeius Magnus until the Civil War, detesting him as a tyrant and the murderer of his father. As he had no living sons, he adopted his nephew Gaius Claudius Pulcher, who changed his name to Appius Claudius Pulcher, and who became consul in 38 BC. ******************* Academic.org Daughters of Appius Claudius Pulcher (praetor 57 BC) Claudia Pulchra Major was the elder daughter of Appius Claudius Pulcher (consul 54 BC), praetor of 57 BC, elder brother of Publius Clodius. She was the first wife of Marcus Junius Brutus,[2] who was praetor of 44 BC and the most famous of Julius Caesar's assassins. This marriage was very useful to Claudia's father as Brutus was very wealthy and it allied him with the leader of Optimates, Cato the Younger, who was Brutus' uncle. When Claudia's father was accused of bribery by Publius Cornelius Dolabella in 50 BC, Brutus was part of the faction that helped have him acquitted. In 45 BC Brutus divorced Claudia, without stating his reasons, in order that he could marry Porcia Catonis, who was the daughter of Cato and his first cousin.[3][4] Claudia is not mentioned again. Claudia Pulchra Minor was the younger daughter of Appius Claudius Pulcher. She was married to Gnaeus Pompeius who was the son of Pompey the Great and his third wife Mucia Tertia. Little is known of her life.
- Death: 49 BC, Naples, Roman Republic
Ancestors of Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus INREGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
/-Publius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Gaius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER Counsul of Rome
| \-Fonteia Claudia
Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
\-Caecilia Metella BALEARICA
Ancestors of Appius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius SABINUS REGILLENSIS OR Inregillensis
/-Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus INREGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
/-Publius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Gaius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
Appius Claudius PULCHER
\-Antistia VETORUM
- Father: Publius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
- Birth: 258 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Praetor, 215, Roma Roman Republic
- Occupation: Curule Aedile, 217, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Curule Aedile, 217, Roma, Roman Republic
- Occupation: Curule Aedile, 217, Roma, Roman Republic
- Title Of Nobility: Consul of Rome, 212 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- LifeSketch: Appius Claudius Pulcher (died 211 BC) was a Roman politician of the 3rd century BC, active in the Second Punic War. He was the son of Publius Claudius Pulcher (consul 249 BC), and the father of Appius Claudius Pulcher (consul 185 BC), Publius Claudius Pulcher (consul 184 BC), and Gaius Claudius Pulcher (consul 177 BC). His daughter, Claudia, married Pacuvius Calavius, the chief magistrate of Capua in 217 BC. In 217 BC, Claudius was an aedile. In the following year, he was a military tribune and fought at Cannae. Together with Publius Cornelius Scipio Africanus Major, he was raised to the supreme command by the troops who had fled to Canusium. In 215 BC, he was created a praetor, and conducted the survivors of the defeated army into Sicily, where his efforts to detach Hieronymus, the grandson of Hiero II, from his connection with the Carthaginians, were unsuccessful.[3] He remained in Sicily the following year as propraetor and legatus to Marcus Claudius Marcellus, having charge of the fleet and the camp at Leontini. In 213 BC, when the Carthaginians landed there, he co-commanded an expedition to the island with M. Claudius Marcellus. In 212 BC, he was elected consul, and in conjunction with his colleague Quintus Fulvius Flaccus undertook the siege of Capua. At the close of his year of office, in pursuance of a decree of the Senate, he went to Rome and created two new consuls. His own command was prolonged another year. In the battle against Hannibal's forces before Capua, he received a wound from whose effects he died shortly after the surrender of the city. He ineffectually opposed the infliction of the sanguinary vengeance that Fulvius took on the Capuans
- Capua, Roman Republic: During the Second Punic War (218–201 BC) Capua sided with Carthage against Rome. When the Romans recaptured the city in 211 BC, they deprived its citizens of political rights and replaced their magistrates with Roman prefects. The Roman colonies of Volturnum and Liternum were founded on Capuan territory in 194 BC. Spartacus, the slave leader, began his revolt at Capua in 73 BC. Although it suffered during the Roman civil wars in the last decades of the republic, it prospered under the empire (after 27 BC).
- Death: 211 BC, Capua, Roman Republic
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Marcus CLAUSUS
/-Appius Claudius SABINUS REGILLENSIS OR Inregillensis
/-Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus INREGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
/-Publius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
Descendants of Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
1 Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
=(Unknown)
2 Gaius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
=(Unknown)
3 Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
=Fonteia Claudia Marriage: 138 BC
=Antistia VETORUM Marriage: 164 BC
3 Claudia PULCHER
2 Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
2 Publius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
- Father: Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
- Birth: ABT 215, Roma, Roman Republic
- Title Of Nobility: Consul of Rome
- The Aetolians: The Aetolians allied with the Romans, while Philip destroyed the temple of Apollo Thermios and allied with the Carthaginians. The Aetolians continued to fight on the side of the Romans even in the Battle of Cynoscephalae (196 BC), ignoring the great dangers looming for Greece as a result of this alliance. The Aetolians took the side of Antiochus III against the Roman Republic, and on the defeat of that monarch in 189 BC, they became virtually the subjects of Rome. Following the conquest of the Achaeans by Lucius Mummius Achaicus in 146 BC, Aetolia became part of the Roman province of Achaea. When the Roman garrisons were withdrawn because of the civil wars in Rome, the Aetolians, too, began to fight each other. Following Octavius’ victory at the Battle of Actium, the Aetolians who had sided with Antony disbanded completely. Octavius handed Calydon over to the Achaeans, who devastated it entirely and moved the statue of Artemis Laphria to Patras. There were subsequent invasions by Goths, Huns, and Vandals several centuries later at the end of the Roman Empire., BET 189 BC AND 146 BC, Aetolia, Greece
- LifeSketch: He was the son of Appius Claudius Pulcher (consul 212 BC) and the brother of Publius Claudius Pulcher (consul 184 BC). In 197 BC and the three following years, he served as a military tribune under Titus Quinctius Flamininus in Greece in the war with Philip V of Macedon.[1] He was again in Greece in 191 BC, serving first under Marcus Baebius Tamphilus in the war with Antiochus III the Great,[2] and afterwards under the consul Manius Acilius Glabrio against the Aetolians.[3] In 187 BC, he was made a praetor, and the governor of Tarentum, which fell to him by lot as his province.[4] In 185 BC, he was elected as a consul, and gained some advantages over the Ingauni, a Ligurian tribe, and, by his violent interference at the comitia, procured the election of his brother Publius to the consulship.[5] In 184 BC, when Philip was preparing for a new war with the Romans, Appius was sent at the head of an embassy into Macedon and Greece, to observe his movements and wrest from his grasp those cities of which he had made himself master.[6] In 176 BC, he was a member of an embassy sent to the Aetolians to bring about a cessation of their internal hostilities and oppose the machinations of Perseus of Macedon
- Title Of Nobility: He was a member of an embassy sent to the Aetolians
- Death: AFT 176 BC
Ancestors of Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Marcus CLAUSUS
/-Appius Claudius SABINUS REGILLENSIS OR Inregillensis
/-Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus INREGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
/-Publius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
Ancestors of Aufidia PULCHER
/-Marcus Aufidius LURCO
Aufidia PULCHER
Ancestors of Claudia PULCHER
/-Marcus CLAUSUS
/-Appius Claudius SABINUS REGILLENSIS OR Inregillensis
/-Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus INREGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
/-Publius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Gaius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
Claudia PULCHER
Ancestors of Claudia PULCHER
/-Marcus CLAUSUS
/-Appius Claudius SABINUS REGILLENSIS OR Inregillensis
/-Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus INREGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
/-Publius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
Claudia PULCHER
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Gaius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus INREGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
/-Publius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Gaius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER Counsul of Rome
| \-Fonteia Claudia
Gaius Claudius PULCHER
\-Caecilia Metella BALEARICA
Descendants of Gaius Claudius PULCHER
1 Gaius Claudius PULCHER
=(Unknown)
2 Claudia DE ROME
=Publius Licinius Crassus Dives Mucianus DE ROME
3 Licinia Crassa DE ROME
=Sempronius Tuditanus
3 Licinia Crassi Minor
3 Marcus Licinius Crassus Agelastus DE ROME
- Father: Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
- Birth: 220 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Also known as: Caius
- Title Of Nobility: Augur
- LifeSketch: Wikiedia - Gaius Claudius Pulcher, a.k.a. Caius Claudius (died 167 BC), consul in 177 BC, was the son of Appius Claudius Pulcher, consul in 212 BC, and he was the father of Appius Claudius Pulcher, consul in 143 BC.[1] Augur in 195 BC, suffect praetor peregrinus in 180 BC, during his consulate in 177 BC, he set out to fight against the Istrians,[2] but failed to perform the proper ceremonies and was forced to return to Rome.[3] Setting out again, he defeated the Istrians and moved on to fight the Ligurians, recovering the town of Mutina.[4] In 169 BC he was elected censor with Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus, his former co-consul. Their censorship was quite severe and as a result they were impeached. They were acquitted due to Gracchus's popularity with the people.[5] Later, in 167 BC, he went as part of an embassy to Macedon.[6] In that year, he died.[7]
- Title Of Nobility: Suffect praetor peregrinus
- Title Of Nobility: Consul (-177), Ambassadeur en Macédoine (-167)
- Title Of Nobility: Censor
- Title Of Nobility: Suffect praetor peregrinus
- Title Of Nobility: Consul (-177), Ambassadeur en Macédoine (-167)
- Title Of Nobility: Censor
- Title Of Nobility: Suffect praetor peregrinus
- Title Of Nobility: Consul (-177), Ambassadeur en Macédoine (-167)
- Title Of Nobility: Censor
- Death: 167 BC, Macedonia, Greece
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Gaius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Marcus CLAUSUS
/-Appius Claudius SABINUS REGILLENSIS OR Inregillensis
/-Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus INREGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
/-Publius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
Gaius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
Descendants of Gaius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
1 Gaius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
=(Unknown)
2 Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
=Fonteia Claudia Marriage: 138 BC
3 Appius Claudius PULCHER Counsul of Rome
=Caecilia Metella BALEARICA
3 Gaius Claudius PULCHER
=Antistia VETORUM Marriage: 164 BC
3 Appius Claudius PULCHER
3 Claudia Minor
3 Claudia Vestal Virgin
3 Claudia Tertia
2 Claudia PULCHER
- Father: Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
- Mother: Fonteia Claudia
- Title Of Nobility: curule aedile
- LifeSketch: Gaius Claudius Pulcher was a Roman Republic consul in 92 BC, together with Marcus Perperna. His great-grandfather was Gaius Claudius Pulcher in 177 BC. In 100 BC he was one of those took up arms against Saturninus. In 99 BC he was curule aedile, and in the games celebrated by him elephants were for the first time exhibited in the circus, and painting employed in the scenic decorations. In 85 BC he was praetor in Sicily, and, by direction of the senate, gave laws to the Halesini respecting the appointment of their senate. The Mamertines made him their patronus. He was consul in 92 BC. Cicero speaks of him as a man possessed of great power and some ability as an orator.
- Title Of Nobility: Consul of Rome
- Title Of Nobility: Praetor in Sicily
- Title Of Nobility: Consul of Rome
- Title Of Nobility: Praetor in Sicily
- Death: AFT 85 BC, Roma, Roman Empire
Ancestors of Gaius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius SABINUS REGILLENSIS OR Inregillensis
/-Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus INREGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
/-Publius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Gaius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
Gaius Claudius PULCHER
\-Fonteia Claudia
- Father: Marcus Livius Drusus III DE ROME
- Mother: Servilia Caepia MAJOR
- Birth: 26 MAY 78 BC, Rome, Roma, Lazio, Italy
- Also known as: Governor of Macedonia
- Also known as: Appius Claudius Pulcher
- Also known as: Marcus Livius CLAUDIANUS
- Also known as: Appius Claudius Pulcher
- Also known as: Marcus Livius CLAUDIANUS
- Also known as: Appius Claudius Pulcher
- Also known as: Marcus Livius CLAUDIANUS
- Also known as: Appius Claudius Pulcher
- Also known as: Marcus Livius CLAUDIANUS
- Occupation: Roman Senator
- LifeSketch: Marcus Livius Drusus Claudianus (born no later than 93 BC[1] - died 42 BC) was a senator of the Roman Republic. He was born with the name Appius Claudius Pulcher, into the patrician family of the Claudii. According to Suetonius, Drusus was a direct descendant of the consul and censor Appius Claudius Caecus. He was descended from Caecus via the first Appius Claudius Pulcher, who was consul in 212 BC and Caecus's great-grandson. His daughter Livia became the wife of the first Roman Emperor Augustus, and he was a direct ancestor of the Julio-Claudian emperors Tiberius, Caligula, Claudius and Nero not through this marriage, which produced no children, but through Livia's first marriage.
- Death: 24 JUN 42 BC, Rome, Lazio, Italy
- Death: 24 JUN 42 BC, Philippi, Greece
- Burial: Evrípedhon, Drama, Greece
Ancestors of Marcus Livius Drusus Claudianus Emporer Appius Claudius PULCHER
/-Quintus Servilius CAEPIO
/-Quintus Servilius Caepio THIRD OF ROME
| \-Caecilia METALLA
/-Marcus Livius Drusus III DE ROME
| \-Livia Drusa DE ROME
Marcus Livius Drusus Claudianus Emporer Appius Claudius PULCHER
\-Servilia Caepia MAJOR
Descendants of Marcus Livius Drusus Claudianus Emporer Appius Claudius PULCHER
1 Marcus Livius Drusus Claudianus Emporer Appius Claudius PULCHER
=Aufidia LURCO
2 Marcus SCRIBONIUS LIBO DRUSUS
2 Claudia PULCHRA the Younger
2 Livia DRUSILA
=Caesar Augustus GAIUS OCTAVIUS 1st Roman Emperor Marriage: BET 37 BC AND 14, Rome, Roma, Lazio, Italy
=Gaius Octavius of ROME Marriage: BET 37 BC AND 14, Rome, Roma, Lazio, Italy
=Tiberius Claudius NERO III Marriage: BET 42 BC AND 38 BC, Rome, Roma, Lazio, Italy Marriage: BET 42 BC AND 38 BC, Rome, Roma, Lazio, Italy
3 Tiberius Julius CEASAR AUGUSTUS Emperor of Rome
3 Julia Cassius do Augustus Empress The ELDER
3 Nero Claudius DRUSUS
=Antonia AUGUSTA Minor Marriage: 16 Marriage: 16 BC Marriage: 19
- Father: Appius Claudius PULCHER Counsul of Rome
- Mother: Caecilia Metella BALEARICA
- Birth: ABT DEC 93 BC, Rome, Roman Republic
- Also known as: born Publius Claudius Pulcher
- Also known as: He affected the "plebeian" spelling of his nomen after his controversial adoption into the plebeian Fonteii in 59 BC.
- Occupation: Tribun de la plèbe, 58 BC
- Occupation: Sénateur romain Questeur Édile, 56 BC
- Title Of Nobility: Roman Patrician
- LifeSketch: Publius Clodius Pulcher was a Roman nobilis of the patrician Claudian gens and a senator. He was known as an eccentric, mercurial and arrogant character. He became a major disruptive force in Roman politics during the First Triumvirate, of Pompey, Crassus, and Julius Caesar. He passed numerous laws in the tradition of the populares known as the "Leges Clodiae," and has been called "one of the most innovative urban politicians in Western history." As tribune, he pushed through an ambitious legislative program, including a grain dole, but he is chiefly remembered for his feud with Cicero and Titus Annius Milo, whose bodyguards murdered him on the Appian Way. -- Wikiwand: Publius Clodius Pulcher
- He was the youngest son of Appius Claudius Pulcher. The identity of his mother's family: was and is one of the most disputed issues of 1st century BC. Most likely she was a Servilia of the patrician Caepiones, daughter of Quintus Servilius Caepio, or a Caecilia Metella, sister of Quintus Caecilius Metellus Celer..
- Title Of Nobility: He was was a Roman "nobilis" of the patrician Claudian "gens" and a senator.
- Death: 18 JAN 52 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
Ancestors of Publius Claudius PULCHER
/-Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus INREGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
/-Publius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Gaius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Appius Claudius PULCHER Counsul of Rome
| \-Fonteia Claudia
Publius Claudius PULCHER
\-Caecilia Metella BALEARICA
- Father: Appius Claudius CAECUS
- Birth: 295 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Title Of Nobility: Curule Aedile, 253 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- The Battle of Drepana: The naval Battle of Drepana (or Drepanum) took place in 249 BC during the First Punic War near Drepana (modern Trapani) in western Sicily, between a Carthaginian fleet under Adherbal and a Roman fleet commanded by Publius Claudius Pulcher. Pulcher was blockading the Carthaginian stronghold of Lilybaeum (modern Marsala) when he decided to attack their fleet, which was in the harbour of the nearby city of Drepana. The Roman fleet sailed by night to carry out a surprise attack but became scattered in the dark. Adherbal was able to lead his fleet out to sea before it was trapped in harbour; having gained sea room in which to manoeuvre he then counter-attacked. The Romans were pinned against the shore, and after a day of fighting were heavily defeated by the more manoeuvrable Carthaginian ships with their better-trained crews. It was Carthage's greatest naval victory of the war; they turned to the maritime offensive after Drepana and all but swept the Romans from the sea. It was seven years before Rome again attempted to field a substantial fleet, while Carthage put most of its ships into reserve to save money and free up manpower., 249 BC, Drepana, Sicily
- LifeSketch: Publius Claudius Pulcher (died 249 BC/246 BC) was a Roman politician. Son of Appius Claudius Caecus, Publius was the first of the Claudii to be given the cognomen "Pulcher" ("handsome"). He was also the father of Appius Claudius Pulcher, consul in 212 BC. Curule aedile in 253 BC, as consul in 249 he was given command of the Roman fleet during the First Punic War. He lost the Battle of Drepana against the Carthaginians after ignoring a bad omen. According to Valerius Maximus, Suetonius and Cicero, when the sacred chickens refused to eat, Claudius threw them into the sea, saying: "Since they do not wish to eat, let them drink!" (Latin "Bibant, quoniam esse nollent"). He was recalled to Rome and ordered to appoint a dictator; his nomination of his subordinate Marcus Claudius Glicia was overruled. He was tried for incompetence and impiety, avoiding capital or corporal punishment due to double jeopardy and was instead fined a 120,000 assēs, 1,000 for each ship Rome had lost in the battle against Carthage. He died soon afterwards, possibly by suicide.
- Clan Name: House of Claudii
- Title Of Nobility: Consul of Rome
- Clan Name: Founder of the Claudii Pulchri
- Title Of Nobility: Consul of Rome
- Clan Name: Founder of the Claudii Pulchri
- Title Of Nobility: Consul of Rome
- Clan Name: Founder of the Claudii Pulchri
- Title Of Nobility: Edile curule
- Title Of Nobility: Consul of Rome
- Death: 249 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Publius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
/-Marcus CLAUSUS
/-Appius Claudius SABINUS REGILLENSIS OR Inregillensis
/-Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus INREGILLENSIS
/-Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus INREGILLENSIS
/-Gaius Claudius CRASSUS
/-Appius Claudius CAECUS
Publius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
Descendants of Publius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
1 Publius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
=(Unknown)
2 Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
=(Unknown)
3 Gaius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
=(Unknown)
3 Appius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
3 Publius Claudius PULCHER Consul of Rome
2 Claudia PULCHER