Emma of Normandy, daughter of Richard of "'the Fearless', Richard I of Normandy" Normandy, Duke of Normandy and Gunnora of "Gunnora of Crepon" Denmark, Duchess of Normandy. Born ± ABT. 985 at Normandy, France; 3, died Mar 6, 1051/52 at Winchester, Hampshire, France; 3, approximately 66 years, buried 1052 at Winchester, Hampshire, England Name: Emma or Aelfgifu OF NORMANDY Queen of England Surname: of Normandy Given Name: Emma or Aelfgifu NSFX: Queen of England Sex: F Birth: 0982 in Normandy Death: 6 Mar 1052 in Winchester,Hampshire,England Burial: 1052 Winchester,Hampshire,England Reference Number: 1055859 _UID: 867A4CDFF528C442969A7240C377EAD32719 Note: !Took her 3 children to Normandy in 1013 to take refuge with her family during the climax of the Danish invasion of England. [William I and the Conq. of Eng.] NEWLIN LINE - 24th ggrandmother !Twice Queen Consort of England -- married first to Ethelred the Unready in 1002; secondly to Canute the Great in 1017. [The Bruces and the Cumyns, p. 490] !2nd wife of Aethelred. Married in Wessex in the summer of 1002 to strengthen the ties between England and Normandy. [Chronicle of the Royal Family, p. 22-3] !England, 1019. Queen Emma has a son, Harthacnut. Flanders, 1037. Emma, the widow of Cnut, flees after failing to oust Harold, the son of Cnut by Aelfgifu, who has made himself king. [Chronicle of the Royal Family, p. 24] !Emma is about 32 and Cnut is 22 at the time of their marriage. [Chronicle of the Royal Family, p. 24] In 1017 King Knut commanded the widow of the late king Ethelred, Richard's daughter, to be brought to him so that she might become his wife. This was an admirable stroke of policy. It could hardly displease the English, promised well dynastically, and ensured the friendship of Duke Richard II of Normandy. He remained warmly attached to Aelfigu of Northampton for whom he made generous provision in Norway for their son Svein; but it was agreed that Emma was his queen and that her children by Knut should take precedence over her sons by Ehtelred and exclude the children of Aelgifu from the royal succession. [A History of the Vikings, p. 372] Within a few months of Ethelred's death, Emma astutely married Cnut. Emma remained strongly Scandinavian in sympathy until her death in 1052 and her influence on affairs was never negligible. Herself the consort for a time of the lord of a great Scandinavian empire, she was later to see reigning in England first Harthacnut, her son by Cnut, and then Edward, her son by Ethelred. By her career and through her connections she formed a link between many of the personalities involved in the Anglo-Norman crisis of the 11th century. [The Norman Achievement, p. 30] Dau. of Richard I the Fearless and Gonor de Crepon; m.1. Ethelred, King of England and was mother of Edmund and Edward the Confessor; m.2. Canute, King of Denmark. [Falaise Roll, Table IV] Regal rights in the fisheries of Bury St. Edmunds were made over to the monks, and by the same charter there were assigned, as a gift from Queen Emma, 4000 eels yearly from Lakenheath. [Victoria History of Suffolk, p. 58] Dau. of Richard I, Duke of Normandy; m. Aethelred II and was mother of King Edward the Confessor; m.2 Canute the Great, king of England by whom she had Harthacanute, King of England. [Ancestral Roots, p. 2] Dau. of Richard I the Fearless and Gunnor of Crepon; m. 1002, Aethelred, King of England. [GRS 3.03, Automated Archives, CD1, CD00 Author: Automated Archives, Inc. Publication: Genealogical Research System, 1994 Repository: Name: Denver Public Library Title: Genealogy of the Warren and Abbott Families Repository: Name: Cheryl Varner Library Title: Who's Who in the Middle Ages Author: Fines, John Publication: Barnes and Noble Books, New York, 1995 Page: p. 62 From 'Glick/Foster Ancestry' at Rootsweb.com Married 1002 at 3 (approximately 49 years married) to: Ethelred of ""the Unready"" England, King of England, son of Edgar of "'the Peaceful'" England, King of England and Elfrida Ordgar. Born ± ABT. 968 at Wessex, England; 3, died Apr 23, 1016 at London, England; 3, approximately 48 years, buried 1016 at St. Paul's Cathedral, London, England, 1st marriage to: Alflaed "Elfgifu Thoredson" Thoredsdottir, 2nd marriage to: Emma of Normandy Name: Ethelred II "The Unready" King of England 1 2 Sex: M Birth: 968 in Wessex, England 1 Death: 23 APR 1016 in London, Middlesex, England, England 3 Event: Gen Source 15 MAR 1994 MCS 1215, p 107 4 Burial: St. Paul's Cathedral. London, England (tomb destroyed in Fire of London) 5 Event: Acceded 4 APR 978 Kingston-upon-thames, Surrey, England 5 Note: The Dirtectory of Royal Genealogy: "Reigned 979-101 (deposed) and 1014-1016. In the face of Danish raids, he was forced to pay huge tributes (Dangold) to the enemy. He was driven into exile by Sweyn but returned afer his death. Died during Canutes invasion of England. Burke says he died 1010. His tomb was lost when old St. Paul's was destroyed in the great fire of London." Aethelred, one of the most hated kings of England, inherited the throne when he was ten years old. His name comes from the Anglo Saxon name for him, "Unraed," which means "evil-counseled," or "uncounseled," and was a pun on his name. Later generations, after the language had changed, produced the pun we have here. He was supposed to be licentious and mean. He was not ready for the Danes to renew their attack. They had been pretty docile since Alfred, the Great. He lost all of England. His son Edmund II Ironside, briefly recovered some of it, but then King Canute (and 2 other Danish kings) took over until Aethelred's other son, Edward the Confessor, regained the throne--only to lose it (for the Saxons anyway) in the next generation to William the Conqueror. ------------------------------------------------ Ethelred II, also spelled AETHELRED, byname ETHELRED THE UNREADY, or AETHELRED UNRAED (b. 968? - d. 23 April 1016, London), king of the English from 978 to 1013 and from 1014 to 1016. He was an ineffectual ruler who failed to prevent the Danes from overrunning England. The epithet "unready" is derived from unraed, meaning "evil counsel." The son of King Edgar (ruled 959-975), Ethelred ascended the throne upon the assassination of his half brother King Edward the Martyr in March 978. Widespread suspicion that Ethelred may have had a part in the murder created much of the distrust and disloyalty that undermined his authority. Hence, there was no unified defense when the Danish invasions resumed in 980. Nearly all of the country was ravaged, and Ethelred's efforts to buy peace only made the invaders more rapacious. When they did begin to settle down in towns, Ethelred provoked further invasions by launching a massacre of Danish settlers (13 Nov 1002). By the end of 1013 the Danish king Sweyn I had been accepted as king in England, and Ethelred had fled to Normandy. After Sweyn died in Feb 1014, Ethelred's council of advisers invited him to return to the throne on condition that he agree to satisfy their grievances. At the time of Ethelred's death in 1016, Sweyn's son Canute was ravaging England. Ethelred was succeeded by his son Edmund II Ironside (ruled 1016); one of his other sons ruled England as Edward the Confessor from 1042 to 1066. [Encylcopaedia Britannica] Father: Edgar I " the Peaceful" King of England b: 943 in Wessex, England Mother: Elfrida (Aelfthryth) Ealdorman b: ABT 945 in Lydford Castle, Devonshire, England Marriage 1 Alffaed Thoredsdottir b: ABT 968 in Wessex, England Married: 985 4 Married: WFT Est 984-1016 6 Married: ABT 985 in Wessex, England 7 Children Alfgifu (Elgiva) Princess of England b: ABT 987 in Wessex, England Edmund II "Ironside" King of England b: 989 in Wessex, England Marriage 2 Emma of Normandy b: ABT 982 Married: 5 APR 1002 in Winchester Cathedral, London, England Children St. Edward "the Confessor" King of England b: ABT 1003 in Islip, Oxfordshire, England Godgifu (Goda) , Princess of England b: ABT 1004 in Wessex, England Edred Prince of England b: ABT 1010 in Wessex, England Sources: Title: Magna Charta Sureties 1215, 5th Ed. Author: Weis, Frederick Lewis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr. Publication: 1999 Repository: Call Number: Media: Book Page: 161-5 Title: Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Ed. Author: Charles Mosely, Editor-in-Chief Publication: 1999 Repository: Call Number: Media: Book Page: 13 Title: Magna Charta Sureties 1215, 5th Ed. Author: Weis, Frederick Lewis, additions by Walter Lee Sheppard Jr. Publication: 1999 Repository: Call Number: Media: Book Page: 161-5 Text: 1016 Title: World Family Tree Vol. 29, Ed. 1 Author: Brøderbund Software, Inc. Publication: Release date: August 23, 1996 Note: Customer pedigree. Repository: Call Number: Media: Other Page: Tree 1518 Text: Date of Import: May 21, 1999 Title: Ancestry.com Tree 8319 Repository: Call Number: Media: Electronic Text: Date of Import: Jan 15, 2000 Name: Ethelred II The Unready, King of ENGLAND Surname: England Given Name: Ethelred II The Unready, King of _AKA: Aethelred the Redeless Sex: M Birth: 0967/0968 in Wessex,England 1 Death: 23 Apr 1016 in London,England 1 Burial: 1016 St. Paul's,London,England Reference Number: 19000 _UID: 2E097DF4C0BF054D95A93C9B0903F4C5534D Note: !Anglo-Saxon king of England (978-1016). Reign was marked by bitter military struggles. After negotiating a treaty with Richard II, duke of Normandy, he married Richard's sister Emma which provided the subsequent Norman claim to the English throne. [Funk & Wagnalls] NEWLIN LINE - 24th ggrandfather !Col. & Rev. Fam. of PA says his wife/mother of Edmund was Elgiva, dau. of Earl Thorald. !His willingness to buy off the Viking invaders with bribes known as Danegeld angered his own people - who were heavily taxed to meet the cost of the payments - which failing to placate the Danes whose King, Cnut, took over the throne in 1016, incoporating England into a Scandinavian empire which included Norway as well as Denmark. [The History of England] !Handsome and pleasant of address, the young King's pride showed itself in a string of imperial titles, and his restless and self-confident temper drove him to push the pretensions of the crown to their furthest extent. His aim throughout his reign was to free himself from the dictation of the great nobles; and it was his indifference to their "rede" or counsel that won him the name of "Aethelred the Redeless." From the first he struck boldly at his foes, and Aelfar, the Ealdorman of Mercia, whom the death of his rival Aethelwine left supreme in the realm, was driven by the King's hate to desert to a Danish force which he was sent in 992 to drive from the coast. Aethelred turned from his triumph at home to meet the forces of the Danish and Norwegian kings, Swegen and Olaf, which anchored off London in 994. His policy throughout was a policy of diplomacy rather than of arms, and a treaty of subsidy gave time for intrigues which parted the invaders till troubles at home drew both again to the north. Aethelred took quick advantage of his success at home and abroad; the place of the great ealdormen in the royal council was taken by court-thegns, in whom we see the rudiments of a ministry, while the king's fleet attacked the pirates' haunts in Cumberland and the Cotentin. The rise of the "new men" only widened the breach between the court and the great nobles, and their resentment showed itself in delays which foiled every attempt of Aethelred to meet the pirate-bands who still clung to the coast. [WBH - England] !After Sweyn proclaimed himself king of England in 1012, Ethelred fled with his wife and children to seek asylum with his father-in-law, Richard of Normandy. He had been a faithless husband, but he was received with kindness. In 1014, Sweyn died. His army proclaimed his son Canute as king; but Ethelred was recalled by all the witan who were in England, clergy and laity. They called him upon terms "that no lord were dearer to them than their natural lord, if he would rule them rightlier than he had done before." [Knight's Popular History of England, Vol. 1, p. 180] !Succeeded to the throne at age 12 and from his accession to present day (1968), one of the most fiercely reprehended of English monarchs. It was early in his disturbed, unhappy reign (978-1016) that the Viking scourge again fell upon England. [A History of the Vikings, p. 355] !Whether it was the destruction of Olaf Tryggvason, King of Norway, in 1000, and the murder of King Svein's (of Denmark) sister in the St. Brice's day massacre of November 1002 which led/drove Svein to a course of action as gratifying to his ambitions as to his need for revenge. In any case the contrast between the calculating and purposeful Svein and the uncounselled and fitful Ethelred is as sharp as the differing fates of their peoples. Prior to Svein's moves, Olaf Tryggvason had ravished England with the outcome of a treaty which stipulates that all past offences between the peoples should be dismissed from ind, and concludes with an unadorned statement that 22,000 pound of gold and silver have been paid to the vikings in exchange for peace. Olaf was not heard of again in England for a couple of years, but returned again in 994. Olaf had warships, warriors, and as ally King Svein Forkbeard of Denmark. There are indications that already there were English noblemen prepared to Take Svein as their king -- men who could see no other remedy for the ineptitude of Ethelred. The men of London defended their city so bravely that the vikings failed in their attempt to burn it and suffered heavy casualties. Olaf was baptized and left England for good. [A History of the Vikings, pp. 356-8] !Also known as Aethelred II evil counsel; reigned 978-1016; married Aelfgifu; father of Edmund II Ironside. [Chronicles of the Royal Family, chart] !Kingston, Surrey, 4 May 979. King Aethelred II is crowned. [Chronicles ...] !M. Alfflaed; father of Elgiva of England. [The Royal Descents, p. 435] King of England; m. Aelfgifu; father of Alfgifu. [Charlemagne & Others, Chart 3323b] Crowned 14 Apr 979, Kingston-upon-Thames; son of Eadgar I and Aelfthryth; m. Aelfledr; father of Eadmund II Ironsides. [Charlemagne & Others, Chart 3314] 979 - Ethelred II the Unready crowned at Kingston 980 - Renewal of Danish raids on England; they attack Chester, Southampton, Thanet 993 - Vikings ravage Yorkshire 994 - Olaf of Norway and Sweyn of Denmark besiege London 998 - Isle of Wight attacked by Danes 1000 - Ethelred ravages Cumberland and Anglesey 1003 - Sweyn lands with his army in England 1007 - Ethelred II pays 30,000 pounds to the Danes to gain 2 years' freedom from attacks 1011 - Ethelred invades South Wales, and the Danes take Canterbury 1012 - Ethelred pays additional 48,000 pounds to the Danes 1014 - Sweyn dies; succeeded by Canute; Ethelred returns 1016 - Ethelred dies and Canute ascends England's throne [Timetables of History] Son of Edgar the Peaceful and Elfrida; b. 968, d. 1016; m.1 985, Alfflaed; m.2 Emma. father of Edmund Ironside. [Ancestral Roots, p. 2] King of England, 979-1016; m.1 985 Alfflaid, dau. of Thored; father of Alfgifu/Elgiva. [Ancestral Roots, p. 37] m.1 Aelfgifu/Elgiva; father of Edmund Ironside. [Royalty for Commoners, p. 119] Son of Edgar the Peaceful and Elfrida; m. Alfflaid; father of Alfgifu/Elgiva. [Charlemagne & Others, Chart 3307c] Son of Edgar, King of England, and Elfrida Queen of England; m. Emma; m. Alfgifu and was father of Edmund Ironside and Alfgifu. [WFT Vol 1 Ped 986] Sudeley Castle's connections with royalty date from the 9th century when it was owned by Ethelred the Unready. ["Golden Treasury" by John Leonard, Realm Mar/Apr 1998, p. 32] 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 1 Change Date: 1 Jul 2003 at 20:54:40 Father: Edgar "The Peaceable" or the Peaceful OF ENGLAND King of England b: 0943 in Wessex,England Mother: Elfrida Aelfthryth ELFTHRYTH Queen of England b: 0945/0947 in Lydford Castle,,Devonshire,England Marriage 1 Alffaed Aelfgifu Aelfledr GUNNARSSON Queen b: 0966/0968 in Wessex,England,Northumberland,England Married: 0985 in Wessex,,,England 1 Children Eadwig of England Prince b: ABT 0987 in ,,,England Edmund II Ironside, King of ENGLAND b: 0989 in Wessex, England of England Princess b: ABT 0995 in ,,,England Elgiva or Alfgifu Princess of England b: ABT 0989 in Wessex,England Marriage 2 Emma or Aelfgifu OF NORMANDY Queen of England b: 0982 in Normandy Married: 1002 in ,,,Normandy Children Aelfred, Prince of ENGLAND b: ABT 1002 in England Edward the Confessor, King of ENGLAND b: ABT 1004 in Islip,Oxfordshire,England Goda or Godgifu Princess of England b: 1017 in Wessex,England Sources: Repository: Title: terrellancest-39-1450.FTW Note: Source Media Type: Other Text: Date of Import: Mar 5, 2001 Repository: Name: Cheryl Varner Library Title: Funk & Wagnalls New Encyclopedia Author: Bram, Leon L. V.P. and Ed. Dir.; Dickey, Norma H. Editor-in-Chief Publication: Funk & Wagnalls, Inc., 1986 Repository: Name: Cheryl Varner Library Title: World's Best Histories: England Author: Green, John Richard Publication: The Co-operative Publication Society, New York and London, n.d. Repository: Name: Cheryl Varner Library Title: The Story of England Author: Hibbert, Christopher Publication: Phaidon Press Limited, London, 1992 Repository: Name: Cheryl Varner Library Title: The Popular History of England Author: Knight, Charles Publication: T.Y. Crowell, New York, c. 1854 Page: Vol. I, p. 180 Repository: Name: Cheryl Varner Library Title: A History of the Vikings Author: Jones, Gwyn Publication: Oxford University Press, New York and Toronto, 1968 Page: p. 355-358 Repository: Name: Cheryl Varner Library Title: Chronicle of the Royal Family Author: Mercer, Derrik, ed. Publication: Jacques Legrand, London, 1991 Page: chart Repository: Name: Cheryl Varner Library Title: The Royal Descents of 500 Immigrants to the American Colonies or the United States Author: Roberts, Gary Boyd Publication: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., Baltimore, 1993 Page: p. 435 Title: Royal Ancestors of Some LDS Families Author: Call, Michel Publication: Salt Lake City, 1972 Page: Charts 511-605 Title: The Oxford Illustrated History of the British Monarchy Author: Cannon and Griffith Repository: Name: Birmingham Public Library Title: The Noble Lineage of the Delaware West Family Author: Fox, Anne; edited by Margaret McNeill Ayres Publication: Seabode Printing, Memphis, 1958 Repository: Name: Denver Public Library Title: Charlemagne, Alfred the Great and Other Ancestors Author: Mitchell, James T. Publication: 1991 Page: Chart 3314, 3323b Repository: Name: Cheryl Varner Library Title: The Timetables of History Author: Grun, Bernard Publication: Simon & Schuster, Inc., New York, 1982 Repository: Name: Cheryl Varner Library Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700, Seventh Edition Author: Weis, Frederick Lewis Publication: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., Baltimore, 1995 Page: p. 2, 37 Repository: Name: Denver Public Library Title: Charlemagne, Alfred the Great and Other Ancestors Author: Mitchell, James T. Publication: 1991 Page: Chart 3307c Repository: Name: Cheryl Varner Library Title: World Family Tree Volume 1, pre-1600 to present Author: Family Tree Maker Publication: Broderbund Software, Inc., 1995 Page: Ped 986 Repository: Name: Cheryl Varner Library Title: "Golden Treasury' Author: Leonard, John Publication: REALM, March/April 1998, p. 32 From 'Glick/Foster Ancestry' at Rootsweb.com Children: 1. Alfred of England, PrinceBorn ± ABT. 1002, died 1036 at 3, approximately 34 years 2. Edward of England, King of EnglandBorn ± ABT. 1004 at 3. Godgifu of Wessex, Princess of EnglandBorn 1004 at Wessex, England; 3, died ± ABT. 1055 at of Sudeley Manor, Herefordshire, England, approximately 51 years Name: Goda or Godgifu Princess of England Given Name: Goda or Godgifu NSFX: Princess of England Sex: F Birth: 1017 in Wessex,England Death: 1055 in Of Sudeley Manor,England 1 Reference Number: 527929 _UID: 36B15D3017F133479EFBA321E679BFBD2EB3 Note: Sister of Edward the Confessor; m.1 Dreu, count of Vexin, Pontoise, Chaumont and Amiens; mother of Ralf, earl of Hereford/East Angles. [Falaise Roll, p. 74] NEWLIN LINE Cousin of Robert the Magnificent. [Falaise Roll, p. 129] Dau. of Ethelred II, King of England, and Emma, Queen of England; m. Druex Vexin; mother of Ralph the Timid Gael. [WFT Vol 1 Ped 986] Dau. of Aethelred II, King of England, and Emma of Normandy; m. Dreux, Count of Vexin; mother of Ralph de Sudeley who m. Getha. [Ancestral Roots, Line 235, p. 201] Dau. of Ethelred II, king of England; m.1. Dreu, count of Vexin, Pontoise, Chaumont, and Amiens; m.2. Eustache, comte de Boulogne. [Falaise Roll, p. 18] The story of Sudeley starts in the 10th century when King Ethelred (The Unready) gave the manor of Sudeley as a wedding present to his daughter, Goda, and her bridegroom, Walter de Maunt. Their son, Ralf, became Earl of Hereford, and his heir, Harold, was the first Lord Sudeley. [Sudeley Castle & Gardens] Sudeley is one of the stateliest piles to be found in the Cotswolds and its history dates back to the 10th century when King Ethelred 'The Unready' gave the manor to his daughter, Goda, as a wedding present. ["Gardens of the Cotswolds" by Heidi Best-Hayes, REALM, June 2002, pp. 23-28] 2 3 4 5 6 Change Date: 19 Mar 2003 at 17:13:03 Father: Ethelred II The Unready, King of ENGLAND b: 0967/0968 in Wessex,England Mother: Emma or Aelfgifu OF NORMANDY Queen of England b: 0982 in Normandy Marriage 1 Dreux of Pontoise DROGO Count of Vexin b: 1012 in of Vexin,Pontoise,Chaumont,and Amiens Children Gautier of Pontoise le VIEUX Count b: ABT 1020 in of Pontoise,of Chaumont,of Mantes,Normandy Ralf the Timid of East Angles GAEL Earl of Hereford b: ABT 1033 in Pontoise,Vexin,Normandy Fouque of Amiens Bishop b: ABT 1020 in of Amiens,,,Normandy Amaury of Pontoise the Delicate b: ABT 1020 in of Pontoise,,Vexin,Normandy Marriage 2 Eustace II of BOULOGNE Count Boulogne b: ABT 1020 in of Boulogne,Lorraine,France Children Son of Eustace b: ABT 1050 in of Boulogne Marriage 3 Gaultier of Mantes MAUNT b: ABT 1000 in of Mantes Children Ralph de MANTES Earl b: ABT 1025 in Normandy Sources: Repository: Name: Cheryl Varner Library Title: Sudeley Castle & Gardens Author: Hurt, Nicholas Publication: Dovecote Press Ltd., Dorset, England, 1994 Repository: Name: Cheryl Varner Library Title: Falaise Roll: Recording Prominent Companions of William Duke of Normandy at the Conquest of England Author: Crispin, M. Jackson; Macary, Leonce; with additions and corrections by G. Andrews Moriarty Publication: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 1994 Page: p. 18, 74, 129 Repository: Name: Cheryl Varner Library Title: World Family Tree Volume 1, pre-1600 to present Author: Family Tree Maker Publication: Broderbund Software, Inc., 1995 Page: Ped 986 Repository: Name: Cheryl Varner Library Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America before 1700, Seventh Edition Author: Weis, Frederick Lewis Publication: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., Baltimore, 1995 Page: p. 201 Repository: Name: Cheryl Varner Library Title: William I and the Norman Conquest Author: Barlow, Frank Publication: Collier Books, New York, 1967 Repository: Name: Cheryl Varner Library Title: "Gardens of the Cotswolds" Author: Best-Hayes, Heidi Publication: REALM, June 2002, Romsey Publishing Co. Ltd. Page: pp. 23-28 From 'Glick/Foster Ancestry' at Rootsweb.com Name: Godgifu de WESSEX Given Name: Godgifu de Surname: Wessex Sex: F Birth: 1004 in <, , Wessex, England> 1 2 Death: 1055 in <, , Herefordshire, England> 1 2 Title: Princess of England Event: Princess of England Unknown , , Wessex, England 3 2 Event: Countess of Vexin Unknown , Vexin, Île-de-France, France 3 2 LDS Baptism: 31 Dec 1932 Endowment: 15 Feb 1933 Sealing Child: 18 May 1933 Change Date: 20 Mar 2001 Note: Name Suffix: Princess of England REFN: HWS17002 Ancestral File Number: V9SZ-BP OBJE: C:\LEGACY\PICTURES\C_PrinceSaintEmpire.GIF OBJE: C:\LEGACY\PICTURES\C_Comte.gif OBJE: C:\LEGACY\PICTURES\Vexin.GIF Father: Æthelred "The Unready" UNKNOWN b: Abt 968 in <, , Wessex, England> Mother: Emma UNKNOWN b: Abt 975 in <, , Normandie, France> Marriage 1 Drogo de MANTES b: Abt 981 in <, Vexin, Île-de-France, France> Married: Abt 1022 in <, , Herefordshire, England> 1 2 Note: CHAN20 Mar 2001 Children Radulf de HEREFORD b: Abt 1031 in <, Vexin, Île-de-France, France> Ralph "The Timid" de BOULOGNE b: Abt 1026 in <, , Herefordshire, England> Marriage 2 Eustache II de BOULOGNE b: Abt 1030 in , Boulogne, Pas-de-Calais, France Married: Abt 1050 in <, , , England> 4 1 2 Note: CHAN20 Mar 2001 Sources: Author: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Title: "FamilySearch® Ancestral File™ v4.19" Publication: 3 Feb 2001 Repository: Name: SLC - Family History Library Salt Lake City, UT 84150 U.S.A. SLC - Family History Library 25 N. West Temple Street Salt Lake City UT 84150 U.S.A. Author: Larson, Kirk Title: "Genealogical Research of Kirk Larson" Publication: Personal Research Works including Bethune & Hohenlohe Descendants, 1981-2001, Kirk Larson, Private Library Repository: Name: Kirk Larson Laguna Niguel, CA 92677 U.S.A. Kirk Larson 23512 Belmar Dr. Laguna Niguel CA 92677 U.S.A. Author: Arnaud Bunel Title: "Héraldique européenne" Publication: Coats of Arms for European Royalty and Nobility (http://www.heraldique-europeenne.org, Arnaud Bunel, 1998) , Internet Note: "Armigerous" (ahr-MIJ-ehr-us) adjective Bearing or entitled to bear heraldic arms. The reason the notion of a family crest was brought into the language was that those who were armigerous (entitled to bear arms) used to put their crest or achieveme Repository: Name: Arnaud Bunel Arnaud Bunel France Author: Crispin, Mordecai Jackson, 1875-1953. (Main) Macary, Lâeonce, joint author. (Added) Title: "Falaise roll recording prominent companions of William, Duke of Normandy at the conquest of England" Publication: 12 Feb 2001 Text: DESCRIPTION: xx, 196, 196a-196d, [197]-258 p. illus., facsims., geneal. tables (14 (part fold.) in pocket), map. 24 cm. NOTES: Reprint of the 1938 ed. SUBJECTS: Normans--England.William I, King of England, 1027 or 8-1087.Great Britain--Genealogy. Repository: Name: Orange - Family History Library Orange, CA 92869-5042 U.S.A. Orange - Family History Library 674 S. Yorba Street Orange CA 92869-5042 U.S.A. Page: p. 18 From 'Hohelohe, Bethune Research' at Rootsweb.com |