Ancestors of Quintus Petilius Cerialis Caesius RUFUS
/-Titus Flavius PETRONIUS
/-Titus Flavius SABINUS
| | /-Marcus Licinius Trimvir CRASSUS AGELASTUS
| \-Tertulla
| \-Arrecina TERTULLA 1
Quintus Petilius Cerialis Caesius RUFUS
Descendants of Quintus Petilius Cerialis Caesius RUFUS
1 Quintus Petilius Cerialis Caesius RUFUS
=Flavia DOMITILIA
2 Titus Flavius Caesar Vespasianus AUGUSTUS
=(Unknown)
3 Flavia Domitilla RUFUS
=Titus Flavius CLEMENS
2 Flavia Domitilla RUFUS
- Father: Suffectus Servius Sulpicius Camerinus RUFUS
- Birth: 15 BC, Julian - Ostia, Roma, Lazio, Italy
- LifeSketch: related to many other Romans of the first C b.c., as well as first and second C a.d. and then married into the Franks.
- Death: 53, Roma, Roma, Lazio, Itália
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
/-Quintus Sulpicius CAMERINUS
/-Servius Sulpicius Camerinus RUFUS
/-Publius Sulpicius CAMERINUS
| \-Fabia ROMA
/-Quintus SULPICIUS
/-Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
/-Qunitus Sulpicius RUFUS
/-Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
/-Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
/-Servius Sulpicius RUFUS
/-Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
| | /-Aulus Postumius ALBINUS
| \-Postumia spouse of Servius Sulpicius RUFUS
/-Suffectus Servius Sulpicius Camerinus RUFUS
Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
Descendants of Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
1 Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
=(Unknown)
2 Quintus Sulpicius Camerinus Peticus CONSUL
=(Unknown)
3 Verania Gemina OF ROME
=Lucius Calpurnius Piso Frugi Licinianus OF ROME
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
/-Servius Sulpicius CAMERINUS
/-Servius Sulpicius CAMERINUS
/-Quintus Sulpicius CAMERINUS
/-Servius Sulpicius Camerinus RUFUS
/-Publius Sulpicius CAMERINUS
| \-Fabia ROMA
/-Quintus SULPICIUS
/-Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
/-Qunitus Sulpicius RUFUS
/-Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
/-Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
/-Servius Sulpicius RUFUS
Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
| /-Aulus Postumius ALBINUS
\-Postumia spouse of Servius Sulpicius RUFUS
Descendants of Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
1 Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
=(Unknown)
2 Suffectus Servius Sulpicius Camerinus RUFUS
=(Unknown)
3 Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
=(Unknown)
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
/-Publius SULPICIUS
/-Servius Sulpicius CAMERINUS
/-Servius Sulpicius CAMERINUS
/-Servius Sulpicius CAMERINUS
/-Quintus Sulpicius CAMERINUS
/-Servius Sulpicius Camerinus RUFUS
/-Publius Sulpicius CAMERINUS
| \-Fabia ROMA
/-Quintus SULPICIUS
/-Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
/-Qunitus Sulpicius RUFUS
/-Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
Descendants of Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
1 Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
=(Unknown)
2 Servius Sulpicius RUFUS
=Postumia spouse of Servius Sulpicius RUFUS
3 Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
=(Unknown)
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
/-Publius SULPICIUS
/-Servius Sulpicius CAMERINUS
/-Servius Sulpicius CAMERINUS
/-Servius Sulpicius CAMERINUS
/-Quintus Sulpicius CAMERINUS
/-Servius Sulpicius Camerinus RUFUS
/-Publius Sulpicius CAMERINUS
| \-Fabia ROMA
/-Quintus SULPICIUS
/-Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
/-Qunitus Sulpicius RUFUS
Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
Descendants of Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
1 Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
=(Unknown)
2 Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
=(Unknown)
3 Servius Sulpicius RUFUS
=Postumia spouse of Servius Sulpicius RUFUS
- Father: Quintus SULPICIUS
- Birth: ABT 260 BC, Rome, Roma, Lazio, Italy
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
/-Publius SULPICIUS
/-Servius Sulpicius CAMERINUS
/-Servius Sulpicius CAMERINUS
/-Servius Sulpicius CAMERINUS
/-Quintus Sulpicius CAMERINUS
/-Servius Sulpicius Camerinus RUFUS
/-Publius Sulpicius CAMERINUS
| \-Fabia ROMA
/-Quintus SULPICIUS
Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
Descendants of Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
1 Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
=(Unknown)
2 Qunitus Sulpicius RUFUS
=(Unknown)
3 Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
=(Unknown)
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Qunitus Sulpicius RUFUS
/-Publius SULPICIUS
/-Servius Sulpicius CAMERINUS
/-Servius Sulpicius CAMERINUS
/-Servius Sulpicius CAMERINUS
/-Quintus Sulpicius CAMERINUS
/-Servius Sulpicius Camerinus RUFUS
/-Publius Sulpicius CAMERINUS
| \-Fabia ROMA
/-Quintus SULPICIUS
/-Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
Qunitus Sulpicius RUFUS
Descendants of Qunitus Sulpicius RUFUS
1 Qunitus Sulpicius RUFUS
=(Unknown)
2 Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
=(Unknown)
3 Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
=(Unknown)
Ancestors of Servius Sulpicius RUFUS
/-Servius Sulpicius CAMERINUS
/-Servius Sulpicius CAMERINUS
/-Servius Sulpicius CAMERINUS
/-Quintus Sulpicius CAMERINUS
/-Servius Sulpicius Camerinus RUFUS
/-Publius Sulpicius CAMERINUS
| \-Fabia ROMA
/-Quintus SULPICIUS
/-Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
/-Qunitus Sulpicius RUFUS
/-Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
/-Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
Servius Sulpicius RUFUS
Descendants of Servius Sulpicius RUFUS
1 Servius Sulpicius RUFUS
=Postumia spouse of Servius Sulpicius RUFUS
2 Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
=(Unknown)
3 Suffectus Servius Sulpicius Camerinus RUFUS
=(Unknown)
Ancestors of Servius Sulpicius Camerinus RUFUS
/-Publius SULPICIUS
/-Servius Sulpicius CAMERINUS
/-Servius Sulpicius CAMERINUS
/-Servius Sulpicius CAMERINUS
/-Quintus Sulpicius CAMERINUS
Servius Sulpicius Camerinus RUFUS
Descendants of Servius Sulpicius Camerinus RUFUS
1 Servius Sulpicius Camerinus RUFUS
=Fabia ROMA
2 Publius Sulpicius CAMERINUS
=(Unknown)
3 Quintus SULPICIUS
=(Unknown)
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Suffectus Servius Sulpicius Camerinus RUFUS
/-Servius Sulpicius CAMERINUS
/-Quintus Sulpicius CAMERINUS
/-Servius Sulpicius Camerinus RUFUS
/-Publius Sulpicius CAMERINUS
| \-Fabia ROMA
/-Quintus SULPICIUS
/-Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
/-Qunitus Sulpicius RUFUS
/-Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
/-Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
/-Servius Sulpicius RUFUS
/-Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
| | /-Aulus Postumius ALBINUS
| \-Postumia spouse of Servius Sulpicius RUFUS
Suffectus Servius Sulpicius Camerinus RUFUS
Descendants of Suffectus Servius Sulpicius Camerinus RUFUS
1 Suffectus Servius Sulpicius Camerinus RUFUS
=(Unknown)
2 Quintus Sulpicius RUFUS
=(Unknown)
3 Quintus Sulpicius Camerinus Peticus CONSUL
=(Unknown)
- Birth: BEF 132 BC
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Descendants of Wife Of Gnaeus Octavius RUFUS II
1 Wife Of Gnaeus Octavius RUFUS II
=Gnaeus OCTAVIUS RUFUS II
2 Gaius I Octavius
=Octavius spouse of Gaius I OCTAVIUS
3 Gaius II OCTAVIUS
=Servilia WIFE OF GAIUS II OCTAVIUS
=Anarchia VON ROM
2 Eneius Octavius
2 Gnaeus OCTAVIUS
- Birth: 6 BC, Lorraine, Allier, Auvergne, France
- Also known as: Protector of the Rye
- LifeSketch: Hafeida the Rugij de France Hafeida di Rugij 0042 BC – 0011 https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/L5GH-GH2 https://www.geni.com/people/Hafeida-di-Rugij/6000000040337942440
- Death: 79, Sachsen-Weimar-Eisenach, Germany
Descendants of Hifilda of the RUGIJ
1 Hifilda of the RUGIJ
=Clodemir PENARDIM lll
2 Antenor KING OF THE WEST FRANKS IV
=Sarah Damaris BAT YESHUAH
3 Ratcherius KING OF THE FRANKS
=Grotte DE MENAPIE
2 Bran the blessed OF FRANKS
- Birth: ABT 730
- Death: 768
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Descendants of Abba RUPARI
1 Abba RUPARI
=(Unknown)
2 Dietrich VON RUPARI I
=(Unknown)
3 Gerolf I VON FRIESLAND
=Cynthia VON CORBIC
- Father: Sviatislav I Igorevitch SVIATISLAV
- Mother: Malusha MALKOVNA LUBECHANKA
- Birth: 960, Budyatychi, Volyns’ka Oblast’, Ukraine
- Christening: 988, Korsun’, Donets’ka Oblast’, Ukraine
- Also known as: Vladimir I of Kievan Rus
- Also known as: Vladimir the Great, Prince of Novgorod
- Also known as: Володимѣръ Свѧтославичь, Volodiměrъ Svętoslavičь
- Also known as: Vladimir I, Prince Of Kievan Rus And Novgorod
- Also known as: Vladimir St.
- Also known as: Vladimir I, Prince Of Kievan Rus And Novgorod
- Also known as: Володимѣръ Свѧтославичь, Volodiměrъ Svętoslavičь
- Also known as: Vladimir the Great, Prince of Novgorod
- Also known as: Vladimir St.
- Also known as: Vladimir I, Prince Of Kievan Rus And Novgorod
- Also known as: Володимѣръ Свѧтославичь, Volodiměrъ Svętoslavičь
- Also known as: Vladimir the Great, Prince of Novgorod
- Also known as: Vladimir St.
- Occupation: Grossfürst von Kiew und Nowgorod
- Title Of Nobility: Prince of Novgorod
- Conversion to Christianity: AFT 988
- Mass baptism of the citizens of Kyiv took place on 1 August 988: Beginning of Byzantine Orthodox Christianity in Kyivan Rus, AUG 988, Kyïv, Ukraine
- Mass baptism of the citizens of Kievan Rus took place on 1 August 988: Beginning of Byzantine Orthodox Christianity in Kyivan Rus, AUG 988, Kievan Rus, Rurikid Dynasty
- LifeSketch: Vladimir I, in full Vladimir Svyatoslavich or Ukrainian Volodymyr Sviatoslavych, byname Saint Vladimir or Vladimir the Great, Russian Svyatoy Vladimir or Vladimir Veliky, (born c. 956, Kyiv, Kievan Rus [now in Ukraine]—died July 15, 1015, Berestova, near Kyiv; feast day July 15), grand prince of Kyiv and first Christian ruler in Kievan Rus, whose military conquests consolidated the provinces of Kyiv and Novgorod into a single state, and whose Byzantine baptism determined the course of Christianity in the region. Vladimir was the son of the Norman-Rus prince Svyatoslav of Kyiv by one of his courtesans and was a member of the Rurik lineage dominant from the 10th to the 13th century. He was made prince of Novgorod in 970. On the death of his father in 972, he was forced to flee to Scandinavia, where he enlisted help from an uncle and overcame Yaropolk, another son of Svyatoslav, who attempted to seize the duchy of Novgorod as well as Kyiv. By 980 Vladimir had consolidated the Kievan realm from Ukraine to the Baltic Sea and had solidified the frontiers against incursions of Bulgarian, Baltic, and Eastern nomads. Although Christianity in Kyiv existed before Vladimir’s time, he had remained a pagan, accumulated about seven wives, established temples, and, it is said, taken part in idolatrous rites involving human sacrifice. With insurrections troubling Byzantium, the emperor Basil II (976–1025) sought military aid from Vladimir, who agreed, in exchange for Basil’s sister Anne in marriage. A pact was reached about 987, when Vladimir also consented to the condition that he become a Christian. Having undergone baptism, assuming the Christian patronal name Basil, he stormed the Byzantine area of Chersonesus (Korsun, now part of Sevastopol) to eliminate Constantinople’s final reluctance. Vladimir then ordered the Christian conversion of Kyiv and Novgorod, where idols were cast into the Dnieper River after local resistance had been suppressed. The new Rus Christian worship adopted the Byzantine rite in the Old Church Slavonic language. The story (deriving from the 11th-century monk Jacob) that Vladimir chose the Byzantine rite over the liturgies of German Christendom, Judaism, and Islam because of its transcendent beauty is apparently mythically symbolic of his determination to remain independent of external political control, particularly of the Germans. The Byzantines, however, maintained ecclesiastical control over the new Rus church, appointing a Greek metropolitan, or archbishop, for Kyiv, who functioned both as legate of the patriarch of Constantinople and of the emperor. The Rus-Byzantine religio-political integration checked the influence of the Roman Latin church in the Slavic East and determined the course of Russian Christianity, although Kyiv exchanged legates with the papacy. Among the churches erected by Vladimir was the Desiatynna in Kyiv (designed by Byzantine architects and dedicated about 996) that became the symbol of the Rus conversion. The Christian Vladimir also expanded education, judicial institutions, and aid to the poor. Another marriage, following the death of Anne (1011), affiliated Vladimir with the Holy Roman emperors of the German Ottonian dynasty and produced a daughter, who became the consort of Casimir I the Restorer of Poland (1016–58). Vladimir’s memory was kept alive by innumerable folk ballads and legends. https://www.britannica.com/biography/Vladimir-I Vladimir Yaroslavich (Russian: Владимир Ярославич, Old Norse Valdamarr Jarizleifsson;[1] 1020 – October 4, 1052) reigned as prince of Novgorod from 1036 until his death. He was the eldest son of Yaroslav I the Wise of Kiev by Ingigerd, daughter of king Olof Skötkonung of Sweden.[2] In the state affairs he was assisted by the voivode Vyshata and the bishop Luka Zhidiata. In 1042, Vladimir may have been in conflict with Finns, according to some interpretations even making a military campaign in Finland.[3] In the next year he led the Russian armies together with Harald III of Norway against the Byzantine emperor Constantine IX. He predeceased his father by two years and was buried by him in St Sophia Cathedral he had built in Novgorod. His sarcophagus is in a niche on the south side of the main body of the cathedral overlooking the Martirievskii Porch. He is depicted in an early twentieth-century fresco above the sarcophagus and on a new effigial icon on top of the sarcophagus.[4] The details of his death is unknown, however his son Rostislav and his descendants were in unfriendly relationship with the descendants of the Yaroslaviches triumvirate (Iziaslav, Sviatoslav, and Vsevolod). Three of Vladimir's younger brothers Izyaslav I, Svyatoslav II and Vsevolod I all reigned in Kiev, while other two (Igor and Vyacheslav) died in their early twenties after which their lands were split between the Yaroslaviches triumvirate. Coincidentally, the Vyshata of Novgorod pledged his support to Rostislav in the struggle against the triumvirate. Vladimir's only son, Rostislav Vladimirovich, was a landless prince who usurped power in Tmutarakan. His descendants[5] were dispossessed by their uncles and were proclaimed as izgoi (outcast), but gradually managed to establish themselves in Halychyna, ruling the land until 1199, when their line became extinct. In order to downplay their claims to Kiev, the records of Vladimir's military campaigns seem to have been obliterated from Kievan chronicles. As a result, medieval historians often confuse him with two more famous namesakes — Vladimir the Great and Vladimir Monomakh. The name of Vladimir's consort is uncertain either. According to Nikolai Baumgarten, Vladimir was married to the daughter of count Leopold of Staden, Ode. Others (Aleksandr Nazarenko) disregard that assumption or claim a different person. Vladimir's memory was better preserved in foreign sources. In Norse sagas he frequently figures as Valdemar Holti (that is, "the Nimble"). George Cedrenus noticed Vladimir's arrogance in dealing with the Byzantines. Further reading Volkoff, Vladimir. Vladimir, the Russian Viking. Overlook Press, 1985. References Fagrskinna ch. 67 (Alison Finlay, Fagrskinna: A Catalogue of the Kings of Norway Brill (2004), p. 236) Traditionally, Ingegerd is associated with Anna of Novgorod, who is buried in the cathedral in another niche near Vladimir. However, Soviet archaeologists who opened her sarcophagus found the remains to be that of a woman in her 30s, whereas Ingegard is said to have lived into her fifties. Thus it is thought that Vladimir's mother, Anna, was Yaroslav's first wife and is not the same person as Ingegerd. The first indisputable Novgorodian expedition to Finland was done in 1191. Suomen varhaiskeskiajan lähteitä. Gummerus Kirjapaino Oy, 1989. ISBN 951-96006-1-2. See also "online description of the conflict". Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. from Laurentian Codex as hosted by the National Archive of Finland. In Swedish. T. N. Tsarevskaia, Sofiiskii Sobor v Novgorode. Marek, Miroslav. "His descendants". Genealogy.EU. 6. Coggeshall, Robt W. "Ancestors and Kin" (1988), p 189 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vladimir_of_Novgorod#:~:text=Vladimir%20Yaroslavich%20(Russian%3A%20%D0%92%D0%BB%D0%B0%D0%B4%D0%B8%D0%BC%D0%B8%D1%80%20%D0%AF%D1%80%D0%BE%D1%81%D0%BB%D0%B0%D0%B2%D0%B8%D1%87,king%20Olof%20Sk%C3%B6tkonung%20of%20Sweden.
- Title Of Nobility: Grand Prince of Kiev
- Title Of Nobility: Prince of Novgorod, Grand Prince of Kievan Rus
- Title Of Nobility: Grand Prince of Kiev
- Title Of Nobility: Prince of Novgorod, Grand Prince of Kievan Rus
- Title Of Nobility: Grand Prince of Kiev
- Title Of Nobility: Prince of Novgorod, Grand Prince of Kievan Rus
- Death: 15 JUL 1015, Chortitza, Zaporizʹkyy Rayon, Zaporizhia, Ukraine, Union soviétique
- Burial: JUL 1015, The Tithes Church, Kiev, Ukraine
- LdsBaptism: 30 NOV 1929
- LdsEndowment: 10 DEC 1929
- LdsSealingToParents: 16 FEB 1932
- Partnership with: Rogneda VON KONRADINER
- Partnership with: Rognvald OF POLOTZK
- Partnership with: Anna PORPHYROGENITA of the Byzantine Empire
Marriage: 977
- Partnership with: Svanhild ØYSTEINSDOTTER
- Partnership with: Sophia OF HUNGARY
- Partnership with: Malfriede OF BOHEMIA
- Child: Pozvizd VLADIMIROVICH RIOURIKIDES Birth: 985, Wolodymyr-Wolynskyj, Volyn, Ukraine
- Child: Gleb VLADIMIROVICH RIOURIKIDES Birth: ABT 987, Murom, Vladimir, Russia
- Child: Boris David VLADIMIROVICH RIOURIKIDES Birth: ABT 986, Rostov Oblast, Russia
- Child: Stanislav VLADIMIROVICH RIOURIKIDES Birth: ABT 988, Kiev, Ukraine
- Child: Sudislav VLADIMIROVICH RIOURIKIDES
- Child: Gleb Roman VLADIMIROVICH RIOURIKIDES Birth: ABT 983, Moscow, Russia
- Partnership with: Adelia von Öhningen
- Partnership with: Olova VAN NOORWEGEN of Bohemia
Ancestors of Vladimir I Svyatoshlavich RURIKID
/-Rurik PRINCE OF LADOGA AND NOVGOROD
/-Igor Rurikovich Ingwar KIEVSKIJ
| | /-Король вендов и ободритов ГОДРАХ
| | /-Буривой father of Князь Новгородский ГОСТОМЫСЛ
| | /-Князь Новгородский ГОСТОМЫСЛ
| | /-Кетиль KETIL
| \-Ефанда-Едвина Княгиня НОВГОРОДСКАЯ
/-Sviatislav I Igorevitch SVIATISLAV
| | /-Oleg HELGI Grand Prince of Kiev Russia
| \-Elena Olga of KIEV
| \-Thorunn Hydrna KETILSDATTER
Vladimir I Svyatoshlavich RURIKID
| /-Niskinin of the DREVLIANS
| /-Mal of the DREVLIANS
| /-Malk Drevianes of LUBECH
\-Malusha MALKOVNA LUBECHANKA
Descendants of Vladimir I Svyatoshlavich RURIKID
1 Vladimir I Svyatoshlavich RURIKID
=Rogneda VON KONRADINER
2 Predslava VLADIMIROVNA RIOURIKIDES
2 Vladimirovna of KIEV
2 Yaroslav I of RUSSIA
=Ingigerd OLAFSDOTTIR Marriage: 1019, of, Uppsala, Uppsala, Sweden
3 Vladimir YAROSLAVICH
3 Anastasia of Kiev
3 Anna Rurikides DE KIEVE
3 Iziaslav I YAROSLAVICH
3 Elisaveta YAROSLAVNA
3 Sviatoslav II YAROSLAVICH
3 Anne DE KIEV
=Henri I DES FRANCS Marriage: 19 MAY 1051, Reims, Marne, Champagne-Ardenne, France
=Raoul III de VALOIS, Comte de Valois Marriage: ABT 1061
3 Vsevolod Ier VSEVOLOD I
3 Vyacheslav YAROSLAVICH
3 Igor YAROSLAVICH
2 Mstislav VLADIMIROVICH RIOURIKIDES
=Rognvald OF POLOTZK
2 Ragnvald II BRUSESSON Earl of Orkney
2 Arlogia VLADIMIROVNA
=Anna PORPHYROGENITA of the Byzantine Empire Marriage: 977
2 Predslava VLADIMIROVNA RIOURIKIDES
2 Dobronegra Mariya VLADIMIROVNA RIOURIKIDES
=Svanhild ØYSTEINSDOTTER
2 Maria DOBRONIEGA Princess of Kiev
2 Anasztázia OF KIEV Queen
2 Vsevolod OF KIEV I Grand Prince
=Sophia OF HUNGARY
=Malfriede OF BOHEMIA
2 Pozvizd VLADIMIROVICH RIOURIKIDES
2 Gleb VLADIMIROVICH RIOURIKIDES
2 Boris David VLADIMIROVICH RIOURIKIDES
2 Stanislav VLADIMIROVICH RIOURIKIDES
2 Sudislav VLADIMIROVICH RIOURIKIDES
2 Gleb Roman VLADIMIROVICH RIOURIKIDES
=Adelia von Öhningen
=Olova VAN NOORWEGEN of Bohemia
2 Vladimirovna of KIEV
2 Stanislav VLADIMIROVICH RIOURIKIDES
- Christening: 6 OCT 1530, Saint Thomas, Salisbury, Wiltshire, England
- Residence: Salisbury, Wiltshire, England
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
- Burial: 27 AUG 1607, Cottenham, Cambridge, England
- Partnership with: Edward NORMAN
Marriage: 29 JUL 1588, Cottenham, Cambridgeshire, England
- Child: Edward NORMAN Birth: ABT 1585, Cottenham, Cambridgeshire, England
Descendants of Margett RUSSELL
1 Margett RUSSELL
=Edward NORMAN Marriage: 29 JUL 1588, Cottenham, Cambridgeshire, England
2 Edward NORMAN
- Father: Vladimir I Svyatoshlavich RURIKID
- Mother: Rogneda VON KONRADINER
- Birth: ABT 978, Kiev, Rus
- Also known as: Iaroslav the Wise
- Also known as: Yaroslav the Wise
- Also known as: Yaroslav Vladimirovich
- Also known as: Yaroslav I
- Also known as: Iaroslav Vladimirovich
- Also known as: Jarizleifr Valdamarsson
- Also known as: Grand Prince Iaroslav Mudryi
- Also known as: George
- Also known as: Ярослав Владимирович
- Also known as: JAROSLAV VLADIMIROVICH VLADIMIROVICH
- Also known as: Ярослав Владимирович
- Also known as: George
- Also known as: Grand Prince Iaroslav Mudryi
- Also known as: Jarizleifr Valdamarsson
- Also known as: Iaroslav Vladimirovich
- Also known as: Yaroslav I
- Also known as: Yaroslav Vladimirovich
- Also known as: Yaroslav the Wise
- Also known as: JAROSLAV VLADIMIROVICH VLADIMIROVICH
- Also known as: Yaroslav the Wise
- Also known as: JAROSLAV VLADIMIROVICH VLADIMIROVICH
- Also known as: Ярослав Владимирович
- Also known as: George
- Also known as: Grand Prince Iaroslav Mudryi
- Also known as: Jarizleifr Valdamarsson
- Also known as: Iaroslav Vladimirovich
- Also known as: Yaroslav I
- Also known as: Yaroslav Vladimirovich
- Also known as: Yaroslav the Wise
- Also known as: JAROSLAV VLADIMIROVICH VLADIMIROVICH
- Also known as: Ярослав Владимирович
- Also known as: George
- Also known as: Grand Prince Iaroslav Mudryi
- Also known as: Jarizleifr Valdamarsson
- Also known as: Iaroslav Vladimirovich
- Also known as: Yaroslav I
- Also known as: Yaroslav Vladimirovich
- Founded the city of Yaroslavl: 1010
- BUILT PALACE IN NOVGOROD: While prince of Novgorod from 988–1015, Yaroslav built a palace there known as Yaroslav's Court", BET 988 AND 1015, Novgorod, Kievan Rus'
- Title Of Nobility: Grand Prince of Kiev
- Title Of Nobility: Grand Prince of Kiev
- Title Of Nobility: Grand Prince of Kiev
- Title Of Nobility: Grand Prince of Kiev
- Accomplishment: Codified Russian Law, ABT 1025, Novgorod, Seversk, Chernigov, Ukraine
- FOSTERED EXILED ENGLISH PRINCES EDWARD AND EDMUND: The sons of Edmund Ironside, King of England, Edward and Edmund were sent from England as infants with orders to murder them. The boys were spared and lived with King Stephen of Hungary until assassins of Cnut found them in 1028. At that time they were sent to Prince Yaroslav the Wise in Kievan Rus' for safe keeping. Yaroslav fostered them, educated them as princes, and raised them to adulthood., BET 1028 AND 1038, Kiev, Russian Empire
- Title Of Nobility: Grand Prince of Kievan Rus', Grand Prince of Kiev, Prince of Rostov, Prince of Novgorod
- Burial: 1054, Russia
- LdsBaptism: 30 NOV 1929
- LdsEndowment: 12 DEC 1929
- LdsSealingToParents: 16 FEB 1932
- Affiliation: Royal House of Rurikids, also known as the Rurik dynasty
- LifeSketch: Yaroslav I, Grand Prince of Rus', known as Yaroslav the Wise or Iaroslav the Wise (Old East Slavic: Ꙗрославъ Володимѣровичъ Мѫдрꙑи; Ukrainian: Ярослав Мудрий; Russian: Ярослав Мудрый, [jɪrɐˈslaf ˈmudrɨj]; Old Norse: Jarizleifr Valdamarsson; Latin: Iaroslaus Sapiens; c. 978 – 20 February 1054) was thrice grand prince of Veliky Novgorod and Kiev, uniting the two principalities for a time under his rule. Yaroslav's baptismal name was George (Yuri) after Saint George (Old East Slavic: Гюрьгi, Gjurĭgì). A son of Vladimir the Great, the first Christian Prince of Kiev, Yaroslav acted as vice-regent of Novgorod at the time of his father's death in 1015. Subsequently, his eldest surviving brother, Sviatopolk I of Kiev, killed three of his other brothers and seized power in Kiev. Yaroslav, with the active support of the Novgorodians and the help of Varangian mercenaries, defeated Svyatopolk and became the Grand Prince of Kiev in 1019. Under Yaroslav the codification of legal customs and princely enactments began, and this work served as the basis for a law code called the Russkaya Pravda ("Rus Truth [Law]"). During Yaroslav's lengthy reign, Kievan Rus' reached the zenith of its cultural flowering and military power. The early years of Yaroslav's life are mostly unknown. He was one of the numerous sons of Vladimir the Great, presumably his second by Rogneda of Polotsk, although his actual age (as stated in the Primary Chronicle and corroborated by the examination of his skeleton in the 1930s) would place him among the youngest children of Vladimir. It has been suggested that he was a child begotten out of wedlock after Vladimir's divorce from Rogneda and marriage to Anna Porphyrogenita, or even that he was a child of Anna Porphyrogenita herself. Yaroslav figures prominently in the Norse sagas under the name Jarisleif the Lame; his legendary lameness (probably resulting from an arrow wound) was corroborated by the scientists who examined his remains. In his youth, Yaroslav was sent by his father to rule the northern lands around Rostov but was transferred to Veliky Novgorod, as befitted a senior heir to the throne, in 1010. While living there, he founded the town of Yaroslavl (literally, "Yaroslav's") on the Volga River. His relations with his father were apparently strained, and grew only worse on the news that Vladimir bequeathed the Kyivan throne to his younger son, Boris. In 1014 Yaroslav refused to pay tribute to Kyiv and only Vladimir's death, in July 1015, prevented a war. During the next four years Yaroslav waged a complicated and bloody war for Kyiv against his half-brother Sviatopolk I of Kyiv, who was supported by his father-in-law, Duke Bolesław I Chrobry (King of Poland from 1025). During the course of this struggle, several other brothers (Boris, Gleb, and Svyatoslav) were brutally murdered. The Primary Chronicle accused Svyatopolk of planning those murders, while the saga Eymundar þáttr hrings is often interpreted as recounting the story of Boris' assassination by the Varangians in the service of Yaroslav. However, the victim's name is given there as Burizaf, which is also a name of Boleslaus I in the Scandinavian sources. It is thus possible that the Saga tells the story of Yaroslav's struggle against Svyatopolk (whose troops were commanded by the Polish duke), and not against Boris. Yaroslav defeated Svyatopolk in their first battle, in 1016, and Svyatopolk fled to Poland. But Svyatopolk returned in 1018 with Polish troops furnished by his father-in-law, seized Kyiv and pushed Yaroslav back into Novgorod. Yaroslav, at last, prevailed over Svyatopolk, and in 1019 firmly established his rule over Kyiv. One of his first actions as a grand prince was to confer on the loyal Novgorodians (who had helped him to gain the Kyivan throne), numerous freedoms, and privileges. Thus, the foundation of the Novgorod Republic was laid. For their part, the Novgorodians respected Yaroslav more than they did other Kyivan princes; and the princely residence in their city, next to the marketplace (and where the veche often convened) was named Yaroslav's Court after him. It probably was during this period that Yaroslav promulgated the first code of laws in the lands of the East Slavs, the Russkaya Pravda. Power struggles between siblings Leaving aside the legitimacy of Yaroslav's claims to the Kievan throne and his postulated guilt in the murder of his brothers, Nestor the Chronicler and later Russian historians often presented him as a model of virtue, styling him "the Wise". A less appealing side of his personality is revealed by his having imprisoned his youngest brother Sudislav for life. Yet another brother, Mstislav of Chernigov, whose distant realm bordered the North Caucasus and the Black Sea, hastened to Kiev and, despite reinforcements led by Yaroslav's brother-in-law King Anund Jacob of Sweden (as Jakun - "blind and dressed in a gold suit"), inflicted a heavy defeat on Yaroslav in 1024. Yaroslav and Mstislav then divided Kievan Rus' between them: the area stretching left from the Dnieper River, with the capital at Chernihiv, was ceded to Mstislav until his death in 1036. Allies along the Baltic coast In his foreign policy, Yaroslav relied on a Scandinavian alliance and attempted to weaken the Byzantine influence on Kiev. In 1030, he conquered Cherven Cities from the Poles followed by the construction of Sutiejsk to guard the newly acquired lands. Yaroslav concluded an alliance with Polish King Casimir I the Restorer, sealed by the latter's marriage to Yaroslav's sister, Maria. In another successful military raid the same year, he captured Tartu, Estonia and renamed it Yuryev (named after Yury, Yaroslav's patron saint) and forced the surrounding Ugandi County to pay annual tribute. Campaign against Byzantium Yaroslav presented his second direct challenge to Constantinople in 1043, when Rus' flotilla headed by one of his sons appeared near Constantinople and demanded money, threatening to attack the city otherwise. Whatever the reason, the Greeks refused to pay and preferred to fight. The Rus' flotilla defeated the Byzantine fleet but was almost destroyed by a storm and came back to Kyiv empty-handed. Protecting the inhabitants of the Dnieper from the Pechenegs To defend his state from the Pechenegs and other nomadic tribes threatening it from the south he constructed a line of forts, composed of Yuriev, Bohuslav, Kaniv, Korsun, and Pereyaslavl. To celebrate his decisive victory over the Pechenegs in 1036 (who thereafter were never a threat to Kiev) he sponsored the construction of the Saint Sophia Cathedral in 1037. That same year there were built monasteries of Saint George and Saint Irene. Some mentioned and other celebrated monuments of his reign such as the Golden Gate of Kiev perished during the Mongol invasion of Rus', but later restored. Establishment of law Yaroslav was a notable patron of book culture and learning. In 1051, he had a Slavic monk, Hilarion of Kiev, proclaimed the metropolitan bishop of Kiev, thus challenging the Byzantine tradition of placing Greeks on the episcopal sees. Hilarion's discourse on Yaroslav and his father Vladimir is frequently cited as the first work of Old East Slavic literature. Family life and posterity In 1019, Yaroslav married Ingegerd Olofsdotter, daughter of the king of Sweden, and gave Staraya Ladoga to her as a marriage gift. Saint Sophia's Cathedral in Kiev houses a fresco representing the whole family: Yaroslav, Irene (as Ingegerd was known in Rus), their four daughters and six sons. Yaroslav had at least three of his daughters married to foreign princes who lived in exile at his court: Elisiv of Kiev to Harald Harðráði (who attained her hand by his military exploits in the Byzantine Empire); Anastasia of Kiev to the future Andrew I of Hungary; Anne of Kiev married Henry I of France and was the regent of France during their son's minority (she was Yaroslav the Wise's most beloved daughter); (possibly) Agatha, wife of Edward the Exile, of the royal family of England, the mother of Edgar the Ætheling and Saint Margaret of Scotland. Yaroslav had one son from the first marriage (his Christian name being Ilya (?-1020)), and six sons from the second marriage. Apprehending the danger that could ensue from divisions between brothers, he exhorted them to live in peace with each other. The eldest of these, Vladimir of Novgorod, best remembered for building the Cathedral of St. Sophia, Novgorod, predeceased his father. Three other sons—Iziaslav I, Sviatoslav II, and Vsevolod I—reigned in Kiev one after another. The youngest children of Yaroslav were Igor Yaroslavich (1036–1060) of Volhynia and Vyacheslav Yaroslavich (1036–1057) of the Principality of Smolensk. About Vyacheslav, there is almost no information. Some documents point out the fact of him having a son, Boris Vyacheslavich, who challenged Vsevolod I sometime in 1077-1078. Following his death, the body of Yaroslav the Wise was entombed in a white marble sarcophagus within Saint Sophia's Cathedral. In 1936, the sarcophagus was opened and found to contain the skeletal remains of two individuals, one male and one female. The male was determined to be Yaroslav, however, the identity of the female was never established. The sarcophagus was again opened in 1939 and the remains removed for research, not being documented as returned until 1964. Then, in 2009, the sarcophagus was opened and surprisingly found to contain only one skeleton, that of a female. It seems the documents detailing the 1964 reinterment of the remains were falsified to hide the fact that Yaroslav's remains had been lost. Subsequent questioning of individuals involved in the research and reinterment of the remains seems to point to the idea that Yaroslav's remains were purposely hidden prior to the German occupation of Ukraine and then either lost completely or stolen.
- Death: Vyshgorod, Kuvshinovskiy Rayon, Kalininskaya Oblastʹ, Russia, Union soviétique
- Burial: St. Sophia Cathedral, Kiev, Ukraine
- Partnership with: Ingigerd OLAFSDOTTIR
Marriage: 1019, of, Uppsala, Uppsala, Sweden
- Child: Vladimir YAROSLAVICH Birth: 1020, Novgorod, Velikiy, Novgorod Oblast, Russia
- Child: Anastasia of Kiev Birth: ABT 1023, Kiev, Ukraine
- Child: Anna Rurikides DE KIEVE Birth: 1024
- Child: Iziaslav I YAROSLAVICH Birth: 1024, Turaw, Zhytkavichy Raion, Palyeskaya Voblastsʹ, Valko-Venäjä, Sowjetunion
- Child: Elisaveta YAROSLAVNA Birth: 1025, Kyyiv, Ukraine
- Child: Sviatoslav II YAROSLAVICH Birth: 1027, Vladimir Volyns, Volyns, Ukraine
- Child: Anne DE KIEV Birth: ABT 1030, Kyiv, Kyivan Rus
- Child: Vsevolod Ier VSEVOLOD I Birth: 1030, Kiev, City of Kiev, Ukraine
- Child: Vyacheslav YAROSLAVICH Birth: ABT 1033, Smolensk, Smolensk, Russia
- Child: Igor YAROSLAVICH Birth: 1036, Vladimir-Volynskij, Volynskaja oblast', Ukraine
Ancestors of Yaroslav I of RUSSIA
/-Rurik PRINCE OF LADOGA AND NOVGOROD
/-Igor Rurikovich Ingwar KIEVSKIJ
| | /-Король вендов и ободритов ГОДРАХ
| | /-Буривой father of Князь Новгородский ГОСТОМЫСЛ
| | /-Князь Новгородский ГОСТОМЫСЛ
| | /-Кетиль KETIL
| \-Ефанда-Едвина Княгиня НОВГОРОДСКАЯ
/-Sviatislav I Igorevitch SVIATISLAV
| | /-Oleg HELGI Grand Prince of Kiev Russia
| \-Elena Olga of KIEV
| \-Thorunn Hydrna KETILSDATTER
/-Vladimir I Svyatoshlavich RURIKID
| | /-Niskinin of the DREVLIANS
| | /-Mal of the DREVLIANS
| | /-Malk Drevianes of LUBECH
| \-Malusha MALKOVNA LUBECHANKA
Yaroslav I of RUSSIA
| /-Rogvolod Olafsson of POLATSK
\-Rogneda VON KONRADINER
\-Ingelborge TRYGGVASDITTER
Descendants of Yaroslav I of RUSSIA
1 Yaroslav I of RUSSIA
=Ingigerd OLAFSDOTTIR Marriage: 1019, of, Uppsala, Uppsala, Sweden
2 Vladimir YAROSLAVICH
2 Anastasia of Kiev
2 Anna Rurikides DE KIEVE
2 Iziaslav I YAROSLAVICH
2 Elisaveta YAROSLAVNA
2 Sviatoslav II YAROSLAVICH
2 Anne DE KIEV
=Henri I DES FRANCS Marriage: 19 MAY 1051, Reims, Marne, Champagne-Ardenne, France
3 Philippe I DES FRANCS
=Bertha VON HOLLAND Marriage: 1072
=Bertrade DE MONTFORT Marriage: 2 JUN 1092
=Raoul III de VALOIS, Comte de Valois Marriage: ABT 1061
2 Vsevolod Ier VSEVOLOD I
2 Vyacheslav YAROSLAVICH
2 Igor YAROSLAVICH
- Father: Appius Claudius CAECUS
- Birth: ABT 300 BC
- Title Of Nobility: Consul of Rome
- Clan Name: House of Claudii
- Death: ABT 268 BC
Ancestors of Appius Claudius RUSSUS
/-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
Appius Claudius RUSSUS
- Birth: 160
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Descendants of Vesia RUSTICA
1 Vesia RUSTICA
=Quintus Anicius Faustus Sextus VAN ROMA
- Birth: 377, Lithuania Guberniya, Russian Empire
- Death: 414, Lithuania
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Descendants of King Erkembert RUTHENES
1 King Erkembert RUTHENES
=(Unknown)
2 Walmer of The Ruthènes KING
=Blesinde THEROUANNE
3 Theudria DE BOULOGNE
=Lambert KING of the Salian Franks at Thérouanne Marriage: ABT 445
- Birth: 205 BC, Rome, Roman Empire
- Death: 145 BC, Rome, Italy
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Descendants of Públius RUTÍLIUS RUFO
1 Públius RUTÍLIUS RUFO
=(Unknown)
2 Publius Rutilius RUFUS I
=Livia Julia DRUSILLA AUGUSTA Rome Marriage: 139 BC, Roma, Lazio, Italien
3 Rutilia Rufa DIROMA
=Lucius Aurelius COTTA Marriage: Rome, Roma, Lazio, Italy
3 Publius Rutilius RUFUS II
3 Rutilia,"mother of Caius Cotta"
Ancestors of Ruadbert im SAALGAU
/-Charibert in NEUSTRIEN
/-Chrodobertus I DE NEUSTRIE Bischof von Tours
| \-Wulfgurd DE HESBAYE
/-Lantbertus I in NEUSTRIEN
| \-Glismoda spouse of Chrodobertus I de Neustrie Bischof VON TOURS
/-Chrodobertus II DE NEUSTRIA
| \-Chrotlind DE NEUSTRIE
/-Lambert II in NEUSTRIEN
| \-Dota HESBYE
/-Robert I im HASPENGAUF
| \-Chrothlind spouse of Lambert II in NEUSTRIEN
/-Cancor in ALEMANNIEN
| | /-Adelhelm.im WORMSGAU
| \-Williswint im OBERRHEINGAU
| \-Alleaume von Burgund
/-Heimrichf im OBERRHEINGAU
| \-Angila spouse of Cancor in ALEMANNIEN
Ruadbert im SAALGAU
Ancestors of Flavia Titia SABINA
/-Titus Flavius PETRONIUS
/-Titus Flavius SABINUS
| | /-Marcus Licinius Trimvir CRASSUS AGELASTUS
| \-Tertulla
| \-Arrecina TERTULLA 1
Flavia Titia SABINA
\-Vespasia POLLA
Ancestors of Gnaeus Arulenus Caelius SABINUS
/-Titus Flavius PETRONIUS
/-Titus Flavius SABINUS
| | /-Marcus Licinius Trimvir CRASSUS AGELASTUS
| \-Tertulla
| \-Arrecina TERTULLA 1
/-Titus Flavius Sabinus, Roman Consul
| \-Vespasia POLLA
Gnaeus Arulenus Caelius SABINUS
| /-Marcus Arrecinus ARRECINUS
| /-Marcus Arrecinus CLEMENS
| | | /-Tertullus DI ROMA
| | \-Tertulla TERTULLUS
| | | /-Marcus Junius BRUTUS
| | \-Alfridia DI ROMA
| | \-Servilia Caepia MAJOR
\-Arrencina CLEMENTINA
| /-Tiberius Julius LUPUS
\-Julia LUPUS
\-Vrouw Van Tiberius Julius Lupus ONBEKEND
- Father: Titus Flavius Sabinus II
- Mother: Arrecina Clementina DE ROME
- Birth: ABT 52, Rome, Italy, Roman Empire
- Occupation: suffect Consul of Rome, BET APR AND JUN 69, Rome, Italy, Roman Empire
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia Gnaeus Arulenus Caelius Sabinus was a Roman senator, who was active during the Year of Four Emperors. He was suffect consul in the nundinium of April through June of 69 as the colleague of his brother Titus Flavius Sabinus.[1] Gavin Townend has identified Flavius Sabinus as a nephew of the emperor Vespasian, and the son of Titus Flavius Sabinus, consul in 47,[2] a thesis that has come to be accepted by other scholars.[3] Tactius describes Caelius Sabinus as the brother of Flavius Sabinus, so the consul of 47 was also his father.[4] Life Little is known of Sabinus' activities before his consulate. According to Tacitus, Sabinus and his brother were appointed consuls for the second nundinium of the year 69, an arrangement that Otho did not change.[4] However Townend, citing the evidence of an Egyptian papyrus, argued that both Sabini were intended by Nero to have been the consules ordinarii for that year, but Galba had moved them from that prestigious position in the calendar to the nundinium immediately following.[5]
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Ancestors of Gnaeus Arulenus Caelius SABINUS
/-Titus Flavius PETRONIUS
/-Titus Flavius SABINUS
| | /-Marcus Licinius Trimvir CRASSUS AGELASTUS
| \-Tertulla
| \-Arrecina TERTULLA 1
/-Titus Flavius Sabinus II
| | /-Vespasius Pollux DE ROME
| \-Vespasia POLLA
| \-Julia Berenice RAINHA DE ROMA
Gnaeus Arulenus Caelius SABINUS
| /-Marcus Arrecinus ARRECINUS
\-Arrecina Clementina DE ROME
| /-Tertullus DI ROMA
\-Tertulla TERTULLUS
| /-Marcus Junius BRUTUS
\-Alfridia DI ROMA
\-Servilia Caepia MAJOR
Ancestors of Marcus Titus Flavius II SABINUS
/-Titus Flavius PETRONIUS
/-Titus Flavius SABINUS
| | /-Marcus Licinius Trimvir CRASSUS AGELASTUS
| \-Tertulla
| \-Arrecina TERTULLA 1
/-Titus Flavius Sabinus, Roman Consul
| \-Vespasia POLLA
/-Titus Flavius SABINUS V
| | /-Marcus Arrecinus ARRECINUS
| | /-Marcus Arrecinus CLEMENS
| | | | /-Tertullus DI ROMA
| | | \-Tertulla TERTULLUS
| | | | /-Marcus Junius BRUTUS
| | | \-Alfridia DI ROMA
| | | \-Servilia Caepia MAJOR
| \-Arrencina CLEMENTINA
| | /-Tiberius Julius LUPUS
| \-Julia LUPUS
| \-Vrouw Van Tiberius Julius Lupus ONBEKEND
Marcus Titus Flavius II SABINUS
\-Cocceia
Ancestors of Mariamne Caecina Arria SABINUS
/-Titus Flavius PETRONIUS
/-Titus Flavius SABINUS
| | /-Marcus Licinius Trimvir CRASSUS AGELASTUS
| \-Tertulla
| \-Arrecina TERTULLA 1
/-Titus Flavius Sabinus, Roman Consul
| \-Vespasia POLLA
Mariamne Caecina Arria SABINUS
| /-Marcus Arrecinus ARRECINUS
| /-Marcus Arrecinus CLEMENS
| | | /-Tertullus DI ROMA
| | \-Tertulla TERTULLUS
| | | /-Marcus Junius BRUTUS
| | \-Alfridia DI ROMA
| | \-Servilia Caepia MAJOR
\-Arrencina CLEMENTINA
| /-Tiberius Julius LUPUS
\-Julia LUPUS
\-Vrouw Van Tiberius Julius Lupus ONBEKEND
- Father: Titus Flavius PETRONIUS
- Mother: Tertulla
- Birth: ABT 20 BC, Rieti, Roman Empire
- Also known as: Titus Flavius Sabinus Ier FLAVII
- Occupation: Customs Official, Province of Asia, Roman Empire
- Occupation: Banker, Aventicum, Gaul, Roman Empire
- Occupation: Consul, 47, Latium, Italy, Roman Empire
- Occupation: Centurion romain puis fonctionnaire du fisc en Judée
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia Titus Flavius T. f. Sabinus was a Roman eques and the father of the emperor Vespasian. Sabinus came from Reate in the Sabine region of Italy, the son of Titus Flavius Petro and his wife, Tertulla. He served as a customs official and then as a banker in the province of Asia, where he was honoured with statues dedicated "To an Honest Tax-gatherer", and later as a banker at Aventicum among the Helvetii in Gaul, where he died.[1] With his wife Vespasia Polla he had at least two sons, the consul Titus Flavius Sabinus, and Titus Flavius Vespasianus, the future emperor Vespasian; and also a daughter who died in infancy, Flavia Vespasia.[1]
- Title Of Nobility: Percépteur
- LifeSketch: Roman soldier and politician.
- Death: 20 DEC 69, Rome, Rome, Lazio, Italy
Ancestors of Titus Flavius SABINUS
/-Titus Flavius PETRONIUS
Titus Flavius SABINUS
| /-Marcus Licinius Trimvir CRASSUS AGELASTUS
\-Tertulla
\-Arrecina TERTULLA 1
Descendants of Titus Flavius SABINUS
1 Titus Flavius SABINUS
=Vespasia POLLA
2 Titus Flavius Sabinus, Roman Consul
=Arrencina CLEMENTINA
3 Titus Flavius SABINUS V
=Cocceia
3 Flavia Sabina
3 Mariamne Caecina Arria SABINUS
3 Gnaeus Arulenus Caelius SABINUS
2 Sabinus FLAVIUS
2 Flavia Titia SABINA
2 Imperator Caesar "Vespasian" Titus Vespasianus FLAVIUS AUGUSTUS
=Flavia DOMITILIA
3 Flavia DOMITILIA
=Quintus Petilius Cerialis Caesius RUFUS
3 Titus Flavius DOMITIANUS
=(Unknown)
2 Quintus Petilius Cerialis Caesius RUFUS
=Flavia DOMITILIA
3 Titus Flavius Caesar Vespasianus AUGUSTUS
=(Unknown)
3 Flavia Domitilla RUFUS
=Vespasia POLLA
2 Titus Flavius Sabinus II
=Arrecina Clementina DE ROME
3 Gaius Laelius DE ROME
=Salonia Matidia
3 Flavia Sabina
3 Gnaeus Arulenus Caelius SABINUS
3 Titus Flavius SABINUS
=Domitila II DE ROME
3 Saint Publius Flavius Sabinus Clemens DE ROME
- Father: Titus Flavius Sabinus II
- Mother: Arrecina Clementina DE ROME
- Birth: ABT 50, Rome, Italy, Roman Empire
- Occupation: suffect Consul of Rome, BET APR AND JUN 69, Rome, Roman Empire
- Occupation: suffect Consul of Rome, BET MAY AND JUN 72, Rome, Italy, Roman Empire
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia Titus Flavius Sabinus was a Roman senator who was active in the first century AD. He was twice consul suffectus, first in the nundinium of April through June of 69 with his brother Gnaeus Arulenus Caelius Sabinus, and again in May and June of 72 as the colleague of Gaius Licinius Mucianus.[1] Gavin Townend has identified Sabinus as a nephew of the emperor Vespasian, and the son of Titus Flavius Sabinus, consul in 47,[2] a thesis that has come to be accepted by other scholars.[3] Townend further argued that Sabinus was the father of Titus Flavius Sabinus consul in 82, and Titus Flavius Clemens consul in 95.[4] Life Little is known of Sabinus' activities before his consulate. According to Tacitus, Sabinus and his brother were appointed consuls for the second nundinium of the year 69, the Year of the Four Emperors, an arrangement that Otho did not change.[5] However Townend, citing the evidence of an Egyptian papyrus, argued that both Sabini were intended by Nero to have been the consules ordinarii for that year, but Galba had moved them from that prestigious position in the calendar to the nundinium immediately following.[6] That same year, Sabinus served as a general for Otho, assuming command of a group of gladiators who had been pressed into service on Otho's side and placed under the command of Martius Macer, but had been defeated by a detachment of soldiers supporting Vitellius. Tacitus writes that "the soldiers were delighted by this change of generals, while the generals were led by these continual outbreaks to regard with disgust so hateful a service."[7] Following the defeat and suicide of Otho, Sabinus submitted to Vitellius.[8] As the brothers Sabini had already begun their nundinium as suffect consuls when the decisive First Battle of Bedriacum was fought, Vitellius allowed the brothers to complete their term of office.[9] Townend also suggests that Sabinus was appointed governor of Pannonia between his two consulates.[10] "Sabinus must have had some claims to be considered a vir militaris," Townend argues in a footnote, "if only as legatus legionis, to be given an active commission by Otho (Hist. II, 36), when so many distinguished soldiers were available on the staff." Other scholars of the period have not been quick to accept this possibility.
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Ancestors of Titus Flavius SABINUS
/-Titus Flavius PETRONIUS
/-Titus Flavius SABINUS
| | /-Marcus Licinius Trimvir CRASSUS AGELASTUS
| \-Tertulla
| \-Arrecina TERTULLA 1
/-Titus Flavius Sabinus II
| | /-Vespasius Pollux DE ROME
| \-Vespasia POLLA
| \-Julia Berenice RAINHA DE ROMA
Titus Flavius SABINUS
| /-Marcus Arrecinus ARRECINUS
\-Arrecina Clementina DE ROME
| /-Tertullus DI ROMA
\-Tertulla TERTULLUS
| /-Marcus Junius BRUTUS
\-Alfridia DI ROMA
\-Servilia Caepia MAJOR
- Father: Marcus CLAUSUS
- Birth: 530 BC, Regillus, Sabinum, Italy
- Residence: Aniene, Roman Empire
- Occupation: a wealthy Sabine merchant
- Title Of Nobility: Consul of the Roman Republic with Publius Servilius Priscus Structus
- Clan Name: founder of the Roman gens Claudia
- He received patrician rank (ie. Privileged not plebeian): Rome, Roma, Lazio, Italy
- LifeSketch: Appius Claudius Sabinus Regillensis or Inregillensis (fl. 505 – 480 BC) was the legendary founder of the Roman gens Claudia, and consul in 495 BC. He was the leading figure of the aristocratic party in the early Roman Republic. Appius Claudius was a wealthy Sabine from a town known as "Regillum". His original name was Attius Clausus, according to Livy; Suetonius gives Atta Claudius, while Dionysius of Halicarnassus gives Titus Claudius. From the Fasti consulares, it is known that Claudius' father was named Marcus. He had at least two sons: Appius Claudius Sabinus Regillensis, consul in 471 BC, and Gaius Claudius Sabinus Regillensis, consul in 460 BC. Appius Claudius Crassus, the decemvir, was his grandson. In 505 BC, shortly after the establishment of the Roman Republic, Rome successfully waged war against the Sabines, and in the following year, the Sabines were divided as to whether to retaliate or make peace with the Romans. Clausus favoured peace with the Romans, and as the faction favouring war became more powerful, he migrated to Rome with a large group of his clients, and took the name Appius Claudius. In recognition of his wealth and influence, he was admitted to the patriciate, and given a seat in the Senate, where he quickly became one of the leading men. His followers were allotted land on the far side of the Anio, and along with other Sabines formed the basis of the "Old Claudian" tribe. * Regillum or Inregillum was a town in ancient Sabinum, north of Rome, known chiefly as the original home of Appius Claudius Sabinus Regillensis. According to tradition, during the early years of the Roman Republic, the Sabines were debating whether to declare war against Rome. One of the leading members of the faction urging peace was Attius Clausus, a wealthy merchant of Regillum. In 504 BC, as the majority of the Sabines seemed ready to vote for war, Clausus and his retainers migrated to Rome, where they were warmly received. Clausus, who took the Latin name "Appius Claudius", was admitted to the patriciate, and given a seat in the Roman Senate. His followers, numbering some five hundred men capable of bearing arms, were granted land north of the Anio, where they later formed the basis of the tribus Claudia. For centuries, Claudius' descendants were among the most powerful and influential of all Roman families. The precise location of Regillum is not known, but it must have been in the neighborhood of Lake Regillensis, which was presumably named after it. The Battle of Lake Regillus was one of the most important events in the early Republic, as a Roman army under the command of the dictator Aulus Postumius Albus defeated an alliance of Latin towns, led by Octavius Mamilius, the dictator of Tusculum, which aimed to restore Lucius Tarquinius Priscus, the seventh and last King of Rome, to the throne. Postumius obtained the surname Regillensis as a result of his victory; Claudius presumably received it as a native of the town, although it is possible that he also participated in the battle. Many years later, Claudius' son, Gaius Claudius Sabinus Regillensis, who had been consul in 460 BC, is said to have retired to Regillum after failing to dissuade his nephew, Appius, the decemvir, from abusing the power of the Roman state; but he returned to defend Appius when the latter was impeached, and afterward remained at Rome.
- Immigration: 504 BC
- Death: AFT 480 BC, Ancient Rome, Roman Empire
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Appius Claudius SABINUS REGILLENSIS OR Inregillensis
/-Marcus CLAUSUS
Appius Claudius SABINUS REGILLENSIS OR Inregillensis
Descendants of Appius Claudius SABINUS REGILLENSIS OR Inregillensis
1 Appius Claudius SABINUS REGILLENSIS OR Inregillensis
=(Unknown)
2 Appius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
=(Unknown)
3 Appius Claudius Crassus Sabinus REGILLENSIS
=(Unknown)
2 Gaius Claudius Sabinus REGILLENSIS
- Father: Titus Flavius Sabinus, Roman Consul
- Mother: Arrencina CLEMENTINA
- Birth: 40, Rome, Roma, Italy
- Fact: https://www.geni.com/people/Titus-Flavius-Sabinus-Consul-69/6000000005379570072?through=6000000009144745200
- Title Of Nobility: Consul
- Fact: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titus_Flavius_Sabinus_(consul_69)
- Fact: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titus_Flavius_Sabinus_(consul_69)
- Fact: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titus_Flavius_Sabinus_(consul_69)
- Fact: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titus_Flavius_Sabinus_(consul_69)
- Death: AFT 72
Ancestors of Titus Flavius SABINUS V
/-Titus Flavius PETRONIUS
/-Titus Flavius SABINUS
| | /-Marcus Licinius Trimvir CRASSUS AGELASTUS
| \-Tertulla
| \-Arrecina TERTULLA 1
/-Titus Flavius Sabinus, Roman Consul
| \-Vespasia POLLA
Titus Flavius SABINUS V
| /-Marcus Arrecinus ARRECINUS
| /-Marcus Arrecinus CLEMENS
| | | /-Tertullus DI ROMA
| | \-Tertulla TERTULLUS
| | | /-Marcus Junius BRUTUS
| | \-Alfridia DI ROMA
| | \-Servilia Caepia MAJOR
\-Arrencina CLEMENTINA
| /-Tiberius Julius LUPUS
\-Julia LUPUS
\-Vrouw Van Tiberius Julius Lupus ONBEKEND
Descendants of Titus Flavius SABINUS V
1 Titus Flavius SABINUS V
=Cocceia
2 Titus Flavius CLEMENS
=Flavia Domitilla RUFUS
3 Praefect Titus Flavius TITIANUS
=Unknown Spouse of Titus Flavius TITIANUS
2 Marcus Titus Flavius II SABINUS
Ancestors of Hengist of Kent SACHSEN
/-Wichtgiste VON SACHSEN
Hengist of Kent SACHSEN
\-Wecta Woden HOCINGAS
Descendants of Hengist of Kent SACHSEN
1 Hengist of Kent SACHSEN
=Roen IN SACHSEN
2 Oeric VON SACHSEN
=Roene IM SACHSEN
3 Hediugathonius VON BALLENSTEDT
=(Unknown)
2 Roene IM SACHSEN
=Oeric VON SACHSEN
3 Hediugathonius VON BALLENSTEDT
=(Unknown)
=Elsa KENT
2 Hartwker or Odoacre of the Saxons
Ancestors of Reginbern in SACHSEN
/-Widukind VON ENGERN
/-Wigbert in SACHSEN
| \-Geva von Haithabu
/-Waltbert im GRAINGAU
Reginbern in SACHSEN
\-Altburge spouse of Waltbert im GRAINGAU
Descendants of Reginbern in SACHSEN
1 Reginbern in SACHSEN
=Mathilde im GRAINGAU
2 Thiadrich in WESTFALEN
=Reinhild spouse of Thiadrich in WESTFALEN Marriage: BEF 892
3 Mathilde Königin DES OSTFRÄNKISCHEN
=Heinrich I VON SACHSEN Marriage: 909, Wallhausen, Deutschland Marriage: 909, Wallhausen, Sangerhausen, Sachsen-Anhalt, Germany Marriage: 909, Wallhausen, Sangerhausen, Sachsen-Anhalt, Germany
3 Immed son of Thiadrich in WESTFALEN
3 Bia von Engern
- Father: Otto I VON SACHSEN
- Mother: Haduich VON BABENBERG
- Birth: ABT 870, Sachsen, Duitsland
- LifeSketch: Europäische Stammtafeln names Thankmar as a son of Liudolf & his wife but the primary source which confirms this has not so far been identified. [Abbot of Corvey 877/79]. “Ludolphus comes” donated property “in Daelhem et in Adonhusen” to Corvey monastery “pro filio suo Tancmaro” THANKMAR (-before 30 Nov 912). "Thancmarus et Liudolfus", sons of Otto & Hathwiga, died before their father according to the Annalista Saxo, which implies they were older than their brother Heinrich who "ecce fratribus defunctis, tota hereditas in ipsum iam ducem derivatur". https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/SAXONY.htm#Ekkeharddied954
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Ancestors of Thankmar von SACHSEN
/-Bruno father of Liudolf VON SACHSE
/-Liudolf VON SACHSEN
/-Otto I VON SACHSEN
| \-Oda Herzogin von Sachsen
Thankmar von SACHSEN
| /-Chrodobertus I DE NEUSTRIE Bischof von Tours
| /-Lantbertus I in NEUSTRIEN
| | \-Glismoda spouse of Chrodobertus I de Neustrie Bischof VON TOURS
| /-Chrodobertus II DE NEUSTRIA
| | \-Chrotlind DE NEUSTRIE
| /-Lambert II in NEUSTRIEN
| | \-Dota HESBYE
| /-Robert I im HASPENGAUF
| | \-Chrothlind spouse of Lambert II in NEUSTRIEN
| /-Cancor in ALEMANNIEN
| | | /-Adelhelm.im WORMSGAU
| | \-Williswint im OBERRHEINGAU
| | \-Alleaume von Burgund
| /-Heimrichf im OBERRHEINGAU
| | \-Angila spouse of Cancor in ALEMANNIEN
| /-Heimrich VON SAALGAU
| /-Poppo I VON GRABFELD
| /-Heinrich VON BABENBERG
| | \-Williswind spouse of Poppo I VON GRABFELD
\-Haduich VON BABENBERG
\-Ingeltrude VON FRIAUL
- Partnership with: (Unknown)
Ancestors of Wigbert in SACHSEN
/-Widukind VON ENGERN
Wigbert in SACHSEN
\-Geva von Haithabu
Descendants of Wigbert in SACHSEN
1 Wigbert in SACHSEN
=(Unknown)
2 Waltbert im GRAINGAU
=Altburge spouse of Waltbert im GRAINGAU
3 Reginbern in SACHSEN
=Mathilde im GRAINGAU
3 Immed I in WESTSACHSEN
3 Wigbert Bischof von Verden.
3 Widukind son of Waltbert im GRAINGAU
- Birth: AFT 130
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Descendants of SAFRA
1 SAFRA
=Safracht DE GOTHIE
2 Demoiselle DE GOTHIE
=Thuringus DE THURINGE
3 Fritigern Ier DE THURINGE
=Aelia Euphenia DE ROME
2 Xa DES GOTHS
- Father: Chodulphe de Metz
- Mother: Hilda de Landen
- Birth: ABT 635, Treves, Lorraine, France
- LifeSketch: Seventh-century benedictine monk. Abbot of Saint Maximinus monastery in Trier, Germany. Bishop of Trier. Assisted English missionaries in the area, including Saint Willibrord of Echternach. In Trier, Rhineland, in Austrasia, St. Basinus, Bishop, of the family of the Dukes of the Kingdom of Austrasia, who was first a monk, then Abbot of Saint maximum of Trier, and finally raised to the episcopal see of the city, he approved the foundation of the monastery of Epternach, carried out by saint Irmina. Roman martyrology He received his education from his maternal uncle, Saint Basinus, Archbishop of Treves. In 697, Leudwinus signed the Deed of Echternach with his uncle In 697 Leudwinus was appointed coadjutor of his uncle Basinus von Trier. In 698, he cofounded the Echternack Abbey at Mettlach. When Archbishop Bastinus died on 4 March 705, Leudwinus succeeded him and was consecrated Archbishop of Treve. Leudwinus was also appointed bishop of Laon. This made Leudwinus one of the most important church dignitaries in the Frankish kingdom.
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Ancestors of Basinus SAINT Bishop of Trier
/-Chodulphe de Metz
Basinus SAINT Bishop of Trier
\-Hilda de Landen
- Father: Augin DE SOISSONS
- Mother: Agia D’AISE
- Birth: Sancy, five miles from Soissons, between Soissons and Meaux, Aisne, Picardie, France
- Also known as: Dezydery
- Also known as: Desiderato
- Also known as: Désiré Desire
- Also known as: called Theodule
- Also known as: Désiré Desire
- Also known as: Desiderato
- Also known as: called Theodule
- Occupation: 23d Bishop of Bourges, 543
- Occupation: a secretary for King Clotaire, He sought to eliminate simony and heresy in Clotaire's lands. According to legend, Desideratus wanted to retire to a monastery but served Clotaire in order to put the needs of others ahead of himself.
- Occupation: a secretary for King Clotaire, He sought to eliminate simony and heresy in Clotaire's lands. According to legend, Desideratus wanted to retire to a monastery but served Clotaire in order to put the needs of others ahead of himself.
- Death: 8 MAY 550
- Burial: Basilica of Sant ’Ursino, Bourges, France, the building of which he began
Ancestors of Desideratus, SAINT Bishop of Bourges
/-Augin DE SOISSONS
Desideratus, SAINT Bishop of Bourges
\-Agia D’AISE
- Death: (Date and Place unknown)
Descendants of Usrsula SAINT
1 Usrsula SAINT
=Cynan Meiriadog ap Caradoc of DUMNONIA
- Father: Walacho
- Birth: 628, Verdun, Kingdom of Austrasia, Frankish Empire
- Founder of Fontanelle Abbey, Normandy, France: Abbey is noted for the inception of the Gregorian chants, literary works, its library and commitment to education, 649, Caudebec en Caux, Seine Maritime, Normandy, Kingdom of Neustria, Frankish Empire -see history in collaborate, notes.
- LifeSketch: From Wikipedia Saint Wandregisel (French: Wandrille) (c. 605–668 AD) was a Frankish courtier, monk, and abbot.[1] Life The son of Walchisus, a kinsman of Pepin of Landen,[2] he was born around 605, near Verdun in the region then known as Austrasia. He was educated at the Frankish court in Metz. Wandregisel was part of a group of young courtiers Audoin and Didier of Cahors who served Dagobert I, but in 629 he retired from court to become a monk at Montfaucon under the guidance of Saint Balderic. Wandregisel had received the tonsure without the permission normally required for a courtier, and was summoned to court to explain this apparent oversight. Dagobert then approve his request.[3] Wandregisel soon withdrew to live as a hermit in complete solitude at Saint-Ursanne in the Jura.[2] Wandregisel adhered to the principles of Columbanus and his disciple Saint Ursicinus, both of whom had founded several monasteries in the region. In 635 Wandregisel spent some time at the monastery of Saint Columban at Bobbio in northern Italy.[1] From there, he wished to travel to Ireland,[4] but by 642 got only as far as the abbey of Romainmôtier,[5] which lay on the banks of the Isère River, in the Tarentaise Valley. Wandregisel was ordained, and then founded Fontenelle Abbey in Normandy,[1] on land obtained from Erchinoald through the influence of his friend Archbishop Audoin of Rouen. Fontenelle followed the rule of Saint Columbanus, and the abbey became an important center of learning. Near the abbey’s ruins lies the village of Saint-Wandrille-Rançon. Wandregisel died in July 22, 668.[6] Veneration During the Viking invasions, Wandregisel's relics were dispersed to various locations and shared between various churches, including the abbey of Saint-Pierre-au-Mont-Blandin in Ghent (now in Belgium). Wandregisel's cult was celebrated in England prior to the Norman Conquest of 1066.[1] In the 19th century one of his relics remained: his skull was found in Liège. It was brought back to the Abbey, when the new church was dedicated in 1967. It can be seen today in a modern reliquary.
- Death: 21 APR 665, Fontanelle Abbey, Normandy, Kingdom of Neustria, Frankish Empire
- Burial: 665, Abbey of Fontanelle, Normandy, France
Ancestors of Wandregisel SAINT of Fontanelle
/-Walacho
Wandregisel SAINT of Fontanelle
Ancestors of Richbod of SAINT-RIQUIER
/-Arnulf Bischof von Metz
/-Ansegisel Maior Domus
| \-Doda
/-Pippin II VON HERSTAL Maior Domus
| | /-Karlmann von Landen
| | /-Pippin DER ÄLTERE Maior Domus
| | | | /-Garibald I, Herzog der Bajuwaren in Baiern
| | | \-Gertrudis von Baiern
| | | | /-Claffo König der Langobarden
| | | | /-Zuchilo Herzog und Feldherr
| | | | /-Wacho König der Langobarden
| | | \-Waldrada von den Langobarden
| | | | /-Elemund King of the Gepids
| | | \-Austrigusa Königin der Langobarden
| \-Begga von Herstal
| \-Ittaberga DE NIVELLES
/-Karl MARTELL Maior Domus
| \-Chalpaida
/-Pippin III der Jüngere DER FRANKEN
| | /-Chrodobertus I (Robert I) VON HASPENGAU OF NEUSTRASIA (NEUSTRIA)
| | /-Lambert I De HASPENGAU Neustria
| | /-Bodilon de Poitiers Bishop of Treves BURGUNDY
| | | \-Demoiselle MEAUX
| | /-Warin VON POITOU Graf von Paris
| | | | /-Gondobald LatiniiI Count of LYON
| | | | /-Desiderius BISHOP von Verdun
| | | | | \-Agia DE SOISSONS DE SANCY
| | | | /-Salvius, COUNT OF ALBI
| | | | | \- DE TOUL
| | | | /-Desiré DE GRANDISON
| | | | | \-Herchenefreda
| | | | /-Ansaud DIJON
| | | | | \-Gerberge OF THE BURGUNDIANS
| | | | | | /-Augin DE SOISSONS
| | | | | \-Desideria DE SOISSONS
| | | | | \-Agia D’AISE
| | | \-Sigrada DE VERDUN vom Elsass
| | | | /-Erchenaud DE MOSELLE
| | | | /-Leutharius II Duke D'Alsace
| | | | | \-Leudefindis OF FRANCE
| | | \-Sigreda D' POINTIERS
| | | | /-Richemir FRANKONIANS
| | | \-Gerberge DE BOURGOGNE ET DE FRANCONIA
| | | | /-Agivald Theodobert Garibald D'BAVIÈRE I
| | | | /-Theodebald I BAVARIANS
| | | | | \-Wisigarde of France LOMBARDY
| | | \-Garitrudis BAYERN Hamage
| | | \-Blithildis OF KÖLN
| | /-Leutwinus VAN TRIER Bishop of Treves
| | | | /-Chodulphe de Metz
| | | \-Gunza DE METZ von Trier
| | | \-Hilda de Landen
| \-Chrotrude
| \-Willigarde VON BAYERN DE TREVES
/-Karolus Magnus Rex Francorum Imperator ROMANORUM
| | /-Unknown Graf VON LAON
| | /-Charibert von Laon Graf von Laon
| | | | /-Theotar dux
| | | | /-Hugues D'AUSTRASIA Mayor of the Palace
| | | | /-Hugobert Seneschall und Pfalzgraf
| | | \-Bertrada DIE ÄLTERE
| | | \-Irmina VON OEREN Äbtissin von Oeren
| \-Bertrada DIE JÜNGERE von Laon
Richbod of SAINT-RIQUIER
\-Ethelind spouse of Karolus Magnus Rex Francorum Imperator ROMANORUM
Ancestors of Datter Av Salmon III SALMONSDTR
/-Hoël II DE CORNUAILLE le Petit
/-Alain Judual AP HOËL FYCHAN de Bretagne
| \-Rimo Tymyr VERCH RHUN
/-Hoël III ap Alain DE CORNUAILLE
| \-Azenor DE BREST
/-Rhiwallon I DE POHER
| \-Fratelle FERCH OSOCHE
/-Waroch I OF POHER
| \-Pritelle D'ACQS
/-Riwallon II DE POHER
| \-Unknown Spouse of Waroch I of POHER
/-Daniel DREMRUD
| \-Gerwenn DE CORNOUIALLE
/-Budic de Bretagne of POHER
| \-Hadelauge CAROLINGIAN
/-Erispoe I DE POHER
| | /-David DE FRAMLING
| \-Miriam DE FRAMLING Queen of Bretagne
/-Riwallon III DE POHER
/-Saloman of BRETAGNE
| \-Roiandrech DE CORNOUAILLE Frenhines de Bretagne
Datter Av Salmon III SALMONSDTR
\-Guenebret DE BRETAGNE
- Birth: 50, Julian, Roman Empire, Italy
- Fact: https://www.geni.com/people/Servius-Cornelius-Salvidienes/6000000042190909124
- Death: 93, Julian, Roman Empire, Italy
Descendants of Servius Cornelius SALVIDIENUS
1 Servius Cornelius SALVIDIENUS
=Calpurina LEPIDA
2 Cornelius Scipio Salvidienus Orfitus Major of ROME
=Calpurina LEPIDA
3 Sextius Cocceius Serverianus
=Caesonia de Rome
3 Servilius Prudens DE ROME
Ancestors of Servius Cornelius Scipio SALVIDIENUS ORFITUS
/-Servius Cornelius Scipio SALVIDIENUS ORFITUS
Servius Cornelius Scipio SALVIDIENUS ORFITUS
| /-Lucius Sergius PAULLUS
\-Sergia PAULLINA
\-Vispania JULIA
Descendants of Servius Cornelius Scipio SALVIDIENUS ORFITUS
1 Servius Cornelius Scipio SALVIDIENUS ORFITUS
=Arria Sextia PAULINA
2 Cornelia NEGRINA
=Lucius Cossonius Eggius Marullus
3 Lucius Cossonius Scipio Orfitus
=(Unknown)
=Aquilia spouse of Servius Cornelius Scipio Salvidienus ORFITUS
- Birth: 90, Rome, Italy, Roman Empire
- Occupation: Senator and Consul ordinaris, 51, Rome, Italy, Roman Empire
- Execution of Servius Cornelius Scipio Orfitus: Servius Cornelius Ser. f. Scipio Salvidienus Orfitus, served at various times as quaestor and praetor urbanus, and was consul in AD 51, serving alongside the emperor Claudius. He held several priesthoods, and was governor of Africa in 62 and 63. Nero had him put to death in 66, ostensibly for wrongfully renting three shops attached to his house, but more likely because of a perceived insult.[19][20][21][22][23], 66, Rome, Italy, Roman Empire
- LifeSketch: Wikipedia Servius Cornelius Scipio Salvidienus Orfitus (died AD 66) was a Roman senator, and consul ordinarius for the year 51, as the colleague of the emperor Claudius.[1] His father Orfitus was one of the seven sons of Vistilia, a noblewoman who came from a family that had held the praetorship, although some have erroneously stated Servius himself was the husband of Vistilia.[2] He became a member of the gens Cornelia through adoption by an otherwise unknown Servius Cornelius Scipio. His career is set forth in an inscription found at Lepcis Magna, dated to AD 61 or 62.[3] According to the inscription, he was first quaestor to the emperor Claudius, then praetor urbanus; both of these are prestigious offices, and he likely owed them to his father's half-brother, Publius Suillius Rufus, who was an intimate associate of Claudius. Following his consulate in 51, Servius was inducted into the collegia of Pontifices and the sodales Augustales, two socially powerful groups. He was proconsular governor of Africa for the term Summer 62/Summer 63; one Publius Silius Celer is mentioned as his legatus or assistant. Our next glimpse of Orfitus is in Tacitus, who records that in AD in 65 that he proposed that the months of May and June be renamed Claudius and Germanicus, respectively, in honor of the emperor Nero, explaining that the deaths of Decimus and Lucius Junius Silanus Torquatus had rendered the name "Junius" inauspicious.[4] Frederik Juliaan Vervaet has argued that instead of an act of flattery, Nero and his partisans may have interpreted this proposal as a subtle form of criticism. If so, it would explain the actual motivation for Marcus Aquilius Regulus accusing Orfitus in the Senate of being a traitor to Nero the following year.[5][6] Regardless of the motivation, Orfitus was found guilty and executed.[7][8] Orfitus' son, Servius, was consul at some point before AD 87, under the Flavian dynasty, but the year has not been determined. A grandson, also named Servius Cornelius Scipio Salvidienus Orfitus, followed in their footsteps and became consul in AD 110, under the emperor Trajan.
- Death: 138, Rome, Italy, Roman Empire
Descendants of Servius Cornelius Scipio SALVIDIENUS ORFITUS
1 Servius Cornelius Scipio SALVIDIENUS ORFITUS
=Sergia PAULLINA
2 Servius Cornelius Scipio SALVIDIENUS ORFITUS
=Arria Sextia PAULINA
3 Cornelia NEGRINA
=Lucius Cossonius Eggius Marullus
=Aquilia spouse of Servius Cornelius Scipio Salvidienus ORFITUS
Ancestors of Vibia SALVINA SALVIA VARIA
/-Marcus POSTUMIUS FESTUS
| \-Postumius
Vibia SALVINA SALVIA VARIA
| /-Titus VIBIUS VARUS
| /-Titus CLODIUS VIBIUS VARUS
\-Vibia FESTUS
- Birth: 25 DEC 456, Moesia, Roman Empire
- Death: 30 APR 538, Rheims, Marne, Champagne-Ardenne, France
Descendants of Babaidokhtar SARMATHA
1 Babaidokhtar SARMATHA
=Théodoric I of the OSTROGOTHS
2 Theudicote D`OSTROGOTHIE
2 Ostrogotha of the Ostrogoths
- Father: Pharnaces Arshamid Daskyleion I
- Birth: ABT 435 BC, Daskyleion, Anatolia, Persia
- Title Of Nobility: satrap of Hellespontine Phrygia
- Death: 373 BC, Daskyleion, Anatolia, Persia
Ancestors of Pharnabaszus SATRAP
/-Achaemenes Apical Ancestor of the Achaemenid DYNASTY
/-Tiespes King of ANSHAN
/-Ariaramnes KING of Anshan
/-Arsames Prince of PERSIA
/- PHARNACES I
/-Artabazus I Persian NOBLEMAN
/-Daskyleion of Bactria
/-Pharnaces Arshamid Daskyleion I
Pharnabaszus SATRAP
Descendants of Pharnabaszus SATRAP
1 Pharnabaszus SATRAP
=Apama of PERSIA
2 Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
=Daskalytis spouse of Artabazus Satrap Bithniya BACTRIA
3 Spitamenes Satrap of BAKTRIA
=Apame Amastris DASCYLIUM
2 Artabzus OF PHRYGIA
2 Apame Amastris DASCYLIUM
= SPITAMENES
=Spitamenes Satrap of BAKTRIA
3 Apama I of BACTRIA
= SPITAMENES
- Birth: 480 BC
- Death: 405 BC
Descendants of Hydarnes III SATRAPE of Armenia
1 Hydarnes III SATRAPE of Armenia
=Parysatis Queen Consort of PERSIA
2 Stateira Hydarnid D'ARMÉNIE
=Artaxerxes II Memnon DE PERSE
3 Rhodogune de Perse
=Orontes I DE COMMAGENE
3 Ariaspes
3 Artaxerxes III SJAHANSJAH TOU PERSIS Arsames de Ostanes
3 Sisygambis de Perse ACHEMENIDE
3 Apama of PERSIA
=Pharnabaszus SATRAP
Ancestors of Appulia SATURNINA
/-Lucius Appuleius Saturninus de Rome Tribune of the PLEBE
/-Lucius Appuleius Saturninus NEAR ROME II Tribune
Appulia SATURNINA
Descendants of Appulia SATURNINA
1 Appulia SATURNINA
=Marcus Aemelius Lepidus DE ROME
2 Lucius Aemilius LEPIDUS PAULLUS
=Junia Bruta Paullus
3 Lucius Aemilius Lepidus PAULLUS
=Cornelia SCIPIONIS Marriage: ABT 30 BC, Roma, Roman Republic
=Claudia MARCELLA MINOR
3 Marcus Aemilius LEPIDUS
2 Marcus Aemilius LEPIDUS, Triumvir of the Roman Republic
Ancestors of Walter of SAVER
/-Bouchard DE CORSICA
/-Aubrey DE GATINAIS
| \-Adelindis spouse of Bouchard DE CORSICA
/-Bouchard de FEZENSAC
| \-Adelindas of Fezensac
/-Geoffrey DE GATINAI
| \-Bava DE FEZENSAC
/-Aubri II D'ORLÉANS
| \-Hildegarde DE GASCOGNE
Walter of SAVER
\-Rothaut spouse of Aubri II D'ORLÉANS