man Heinrich of "King of the Germans; the Fowler" Germany, Emperor‏‎, son of Otto of ""the Illustrious"" Saxony, Duke of Saxony and Hedwige of "Empress of the Holy Roman Empire, Hadwig of Baben" Germany, Princess of Germany‏.
Born ‎ 876 at Saxony, Germany, died ‎ Jul 2, 936 at Memleben, Saxony, Germany‎, 59 or 60 years
Name: Henry I the Fowler L'Oseleur LIUDOLFING King of Germany
Surname: Liudolfing
Given Name: Henry I the Fowler L'Oseleur
NSFX: King of Germany
Sex: M
Birth: ABT 0876 in of Saxony, Germany
Death: 2 Jul 0936 in Memleben, Saxony, Germany
Reference Number: Minor,Newl
_UID: 226B7AE42667F04AB9FAC96AC52635843CAE
Note:
!The first of the Saxon line of German kings. In 912 Henry succeeded his father as duke of Saxony. Following the death of Conrad I, king of Germany, in 918, Henry was chosen king by the Franconian and Saxon nobles. Bavaria, Swabia, and Lotharingia refused to acknowledge him at first, and it was not until 925 that he managed to win recognition from all the German states. In 926 Henry secured a 9-year truce from warfare with the Magyars. During that period he transformed many of the small towns of Germany into fortified cities with trained troops of mounted warriors. His military preparations were successfully tested in a war against the Wends in 929. When the Magyars
invaded Thuringia in 933, Henry repulsed them decisively. He defeated the Danes in the following year and seized territory from them. Henry was the first to create a united Germany, and although he never received the imperial crown, he is generally recognized as one of the Holy Roman emperors. He was succeeded by his son, Otto. [Funk & Wagnalls]

MINOR, NEWLIN LINES - 30th ggrandfather

!Emperor of Germany. [Desc. of Charlemagne]

!919 - becomes king of Germany
925 - conquers Lorraine
928 - conquers the Slav province of Brennabor (Brandenburg)
929 - subdues Bohemia and the Slavs east of the Elbe River933 - defeats Hungarians at Merseburg
934 - acquires the Schleswig marches
936 - dies and is succeeded by his son Otto I the Great
[Timetables of History]

!Constructed castles similar to the Polish forts to counter attacks by the Magyar, Danes and Slavs. [The Oxford History of Medieval Europe]

!Designated by Conrad I, his succession was initially recognized only within his own duchy, Saxony, and Conrad's, Franconia. Force having failed, he was obliged to gain recognition from the dukes of Swabia and Bavaria by allowing them to appoint bishops within their territories and by allowing them to take over the crown lands. With these grants he appeared to have conceded the essentials of kingship; estates upon which the ruler and his entourage might stay when travelling through the kingdom to hear pleas, offices which could be filled with trusted servants. By the time of Henry's death the losses had been recovered. The course of German history is not one of smooth development within which the monarchy could establish its own authority and traditions; nor was it one of an inevitable degeneration into princely particularism. Rather it lay in violent oscillation between the two. [Oxford History]

!Henry I's success lay upon two foundations. As a vigorous war-leader he was able to contain the threat from Denmark to the north of his duchy, and in 933 to inflict a major defeat upon the Magyars, who had menaced the whole of eastern Germany and many points further west since their destruction of the Moravian kingdom in 906. The scale of the threat made the dukes his far from
unwilling partners, and it brought other rulers, Wenceslaus of Bohemia chief among them, under his overlordship. Henry's other asset lay in the comparatively recent rise of his family, the Liudolfings; he had been duke of Saxony only from 912, by marriage into the ducal house. The law of consanguinity was not yet fully defined, and churchmen were as yet hesitant in invoking it, but it was already the case that marriage could for several generations prevent the marriage of descendants; in time the number of generations was defined as seven, but this was not strictly enforced. A new dynasty thus had the advantage of an old one, for it still had a reasonably free choice of the politically most advantageous marriages before it. The asset was naturally a wasting one, but it helped Henry draw Lotharingia back into the kingdom under his brother-in-law, Duke Giselbert, and was to be a major element in the success of his son and successor, Otto I. [Oxford History]

!First Saxon King of Germany; merely overlord of the federation of duchies. Control over Suabia, Bavaria, and Lotharingia established, and Magyars (Hungarians) defeated. Succeeded by his ons, Otto I. [Leaders & Landmarks, Vol. II, p. 233]

!Germany took a new stand when the dying Conrad of Franconia was magnanimous enough to recommend for this crown his rival the Saxon Duke, Henry the Fowler. Henry defied the Huns, beat them in a great fight at Merseburg, and fortified the frontier against them by building not only castles but walled cities, while he enloisted in his service many of the turbulent knights, whom he bound to such laws of honor and religion as evince a new spirit of dutiful chivalry. [Leaders & Landmarks, Vol. II, p. 34]

!Henry I, the Fowler, l'Oiseleur, Emperor of Germany, Duke of Saxony, Brunswick and Zelle; b. abt 876; d. July 2, 936; m. 2. 911, Mathilda Ringelheim; father of Princess Hatwide/Hatwin/Hawise/Hatwige. [Ped of Charlemagne, Vol. I, p. 63, 124]

!Widukind in Res gestae Saxonicae and other German chronicles says, that to punish the Danes for harrying in Frisia Henry the Fowler invaded their territory in 934, chastised them soundly and forced them to pay him tribute, and made their King Chunuba submit to baptism. Gorm, son of Hardaknut, was a heathen persecutor of Christian men, who so angered Henry the Fowler that he invaded Denmark and made his unheroic adversary sue for peace, whereupon Henry `drew his kingdom's boundary at Slesvig, which is now called Hedeby, established a march (borderland), and ordered that a colony of Saxons should become resident there'. In light of Henry's invasion of the same area in 934, when he humbled the heather Gnupa, and his own death soon afterwards in 936, there must be a substantial confusion of events and persons here; but German pressure was strong upon Denmark at this time, and to continue with Gorm, it is unlikely that he was strong enough to resist it entirely. [A History of the Vikings, pp. 112, 114]

Heinrich I L'Oseleur [Cole Waite}

per Ances of Pres
"Henry I the Fowler", German emperor

per Pedigrees of Some of the Emperor Charlemagne's Descendants
compiled by Marcellus Donald Alexander R. von Redlich
vol 1 1986

Son of Otto the Illustrious and Hedwig; m. Mathilda of Ringleheim; father of
Gerberge of Germany. [GRS 3.03, Automated Archives, CD00]
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Change Date: 19 Mar 2003 at 17:13:00

Father: Otho I the Illustrious der Erlauchte, Duke of SAXONY b: ABT 0836 in of Saxony,Germany
Mother: Hedwige Edith of GERMANY b: ABT 0855 in of Ostfranken, Germany

Marriage 1 Hartheburg of Merseburg de MERSEBURG b: ABT 0880 in of Merseburg,,,Germany
Married: ABT 0905 in Saxony, Germany
Children
Henry, Duke of LOTHARINGIA & BAVARIA b: ABT 0910 in ,,,Germany

Marriage 2 Mathilda von RINGELHEIM Queen b: 0890 in Ringelheim, Goslar, Hanover, Germany
Married: 0909/0911 in ,,,Germany
Children
Hedwig, Princess OF SAXONY b: 0910 in of Lorraine,Saxony,Germany
Otto I the Great Emperor of West b: 23 Nov 0912 in of Saxony, Germany
Gerberga VON SACHSEN Princess of Germany b: ABT 0912/0913 in Nordhausen,Saxony,Germany
Henry I ,Duke of BAVARIA, LORRAINE & SAXONY b: 0919/0922 in of Bavaria,of Lorraine,of Saxony,Germany
Bruno I KOLN Archbishop of Cologne b: ABT 0925 in Saxony, Germany
of SAXONY b: ABT 0927 in Saxony, Germany

Sources:
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: The Timetables of History
Author: Grun, Bernard
Publication: Simon & Schuster, Inc., New York, 1982
Title: Pedigrees of Some of the Emperor Charlemagne's Descendants, Vol. I
Author: von Redlich, Marcellus Donald Alexander R.
Publication: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., Baltimore, 1986
Page: pp. 63, 124
Repository:
Name: Cheryl Varner Library

Title: The Oxford History of Medieval Europe
Author: Holmes, George, ed.
Publication: Oxford University Press, Oxford and New York, 1992
Repository:
Name: Cheryl Varner Library

Title: Leaders & Landmarks in European History, Volume II: The Middle Ages
Author: Moncrieff, A.R. Hope; Chaytor, The Rev. H.J., M.A..
Publication: The Gresham Publishing Company, London, 1913
Page: p. 34, 233
Repository:
Name: Cheryl Varner Library

Title: A History of the Vikings
Author: Jones, Gwyn
Publication: Oxford University Press, New York and Toronto, 1968
Page: pp. 112, 114
Title: Ancestors of American Presidents
Author: Roberts
Glick/Foster Ancestry at Rootsweb.com

Married ‎ at 3 to:

woman Mech‏‎


2nd marriage
man Heinrich of "King of the Germans; the Fowler" Germany, Emperor‏‎, son of Otto of ""the Illustrious"" Saxony, Duke of Saxony and Hedwige of "Empress of the Holy Roman Empire, Hadwig of Baben" Germany, Princess of Germany‏.

Married ‎between 909 BET., - and at Germany; Quality: 3 to:

woman Mechtilde of "St. Matilda; Feast Day is March 14." Ringleheim, Countess of Ringleheim‏‎, daughter of Theodoric Saxon-Hamelant of "Count in the Saxonian Hamalant, Theodoric of Ring" Ringleheim and Ludmilla Reginhilde of Middle "Princess of Middle Friesland, Ludmilla Reginhilde " Friesland‏.
Born ‎± ABT. 890 at Ringelheim, Goslar, Hannover, Germany, died ‎ Mar 14, 967/68 at Hereford Monastery, Rheinland Palatinate, Germany‎, approximately 77 years, buried ‎ May 14, 968, ‎1st marriage to: Heinrich of "King of the Germans; the Fowler" Germany, Emperor, 2nd marriage to: Heinrich of "King of the Germans; the Fowler" Germany, Emperor
Name: Mathilda von RINGELHEIM Queen
Surname: Ringelheim
Given Name: Mathilda von
NSFX: Queen
_AKA: Mechtilde
Sex: F
Birth: 0890 in Ringelheim, Goslar, Hanover, Germany
Death: 14 Mar 0968 in Memleben, Saxony, Germany
Burial: 14 May 0968
Reference Number: Minor,Newl
_UID: 84CC0DA50C6AF84497B6DB3E3CB3231A46F0
Note:
!Wife of Henry I, the Fowler; mother of Princess Gerberga. [Ped. of Charlemagne, Vol. I, p. 164]

MINOR, NEWLIN LINES - 30th ggrandmother

Of Saxon Hamelant; m. Henry the Fowler, King of Lorraine & Germany; mother of Hedwig. [Charlemagne & others, Chart 3318]

Dau. of Theodoric/Dietrich and Reginhilde; m. Henry I the Fowler; mother of Gerberge of Germany. [GRS 3.03, Automated Archives, CD1, CD00
Author: Automated Archives, Inc.
Publication: Genealogical Research System, 1994
From 'Glick/Foster Ancestry' at Rootsweb.com

Children:

1.
woman Hedwige of Saxony‏
Born ‎ 910 at Wittenberg, Sachsen-Wittenberg, Thuringia, died ‎after 14 AFT., Mar at Aix-la-Chapelle, France‎, approximately 54 years, buried ‎ May 1, 965 at Aachen, Rhineland, Prussia
Name: Hedwig, Princess OF SAXONY
Surname: of Saxony
Given Name: Hedwig, Princess
_AKA: Hathui
Sex: F
Birth: 0910 in of Lorraine,Saxony,Germany
Death: 14 Mar 0965 in Aix-la-Chapelle
Burial: 1 May 0965 Aachen, Rheinland, Prussia
Reference Number: Foster
_UID: A1434D2E5C95CD4B86639A92A337CC63866C
Note:
!Desc. of Charlemagne, Vol. III

FOSTER LINE - 29th ggrandmother

!3rd wife of Hugh the Great; dau. of Henry the Fowler and Mathilda Ringelheim. [Ped. of Charlemagne, Vol. I, p. 63, 124]

b. 910, d. 965 [Judy Martin]

!Name spelled also Hartwige

b.923 [Mayflower PAF]

Of Lorraine & Saxony; m. Hugh the Great, Duke of France & Burgundy; mother of Hugh Capet, king of France. [Charlemagne & Others, Chart 3311, 3366, 3381]

b.c. 921/2, dau. of Henry the Fowler and Matilda; d. 10 May 965. [Charlemagne & Others, Chart 3318, 3332]

Dau. of Henry I, King of the Saxons; 3rd wife of Hugh Magnus; mother of Hugh Capet, King of France. [Ancestral Roots, p. 57]
1 2 3
Change Date: 1 Jul 2003 at 20:45:39

Father: Henry I the Fowler L'Oseleur LIUDOLFING King of Germany b: ABT 0876 in of Saxony, Germany
Mother: Mathilda von RINGELHEIM Queen b: 0890 in Ringelheim, Goslar, Hanover, Germany

Marriage 1 Hugh Magnus the White CAPET Count of Orleans, Vexin & Paris b: 0900 in of Paris,Seine,France
Married: ABT 14 Sep 0938 in Mainz Oder,Ingelheim,Rhineland,Germany
Children
Hugh CAPET King of France b: 0938 in Verberie Sur Oise, France
Beatrice de FRANCE b: 0939 in Paris, Seine, France
Emma CAPET Princess of France b: 0943 in France
Otto CAPET Duke of Burgundy b: 0944 in France
Henry, Duke of BURGUNDY b: 0946 in Paris, Seine, France

Sources:
Title: Pedigrees of Some of the Emperor Charlemagne's Descendants, Vol. I
Author: von Redlich, Marcellus Donald Alexander R.
Publication: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., Baltimore, 1986
Page: p. 63, 124
Repository:
Name: Denver Public Library

Title: Charlemagne, Alfred the Great and Other Ancestors
Author: Mitchell, James T.
Publication: 1991
Page: Charts 3311, 3318, 3332, 3366, 3381
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. 67
From 'Glick/Foster Ancestry' at Rootsweb.com
2.
man Otto of "'The Great'" Saxony, Holy Roman Emperor‏
Born ‎ Nov 23, 912 at 3, died ‎ May 7, 973 at Memleben, Thuringia; 3‎, 60 years, buried ‎ at Magdeburg, Cathedral; Quality: 3
Name: Otto I the Great Emperor of West
Given Name: Otto I the Great
NSFX: Emperor of West
_AKA: Otho
Sex: M
Birth: 23 Nov 0912 in of Saxony, Germany
Death: 7 May 0973 in Memleben, Germany
Burial: Magdeburg
Reference Number: Minor,Newl
_UID: D876CA4B4D2BC14680D2618DC4C8E04FDDF6
Note:
!Holy Roman Emperor (962-73), king of Germany (936-73). After subduing an uprising of nobles incited by his brother, Otto consolidated his kingdom by granting duchies to faithful relatives and followers. In 951 he marched to Italy to assist Adelaide, the widowed queen of Lombardy, against Berengar II, who had usurped the kingdom. Otto defeated Berengar and married Adelaide, thereby becoming ruler of northern Italy. Whe he returned to Germany, he again crushed a rebellion of nobles led by his son Liudolf and halted a Hungarian invasion in 955. In 962 he was crowned Holy Roman emperor. In 963 he deposed Pope John XII and had Leo VIII elected in his stead. Otto sought to make the church subordinate to the authority of the empire but assisted in spreading
Christianity throughout his domain. He negotiated unsuccessfully with the Byzantine emperor Nicephorus II Phocas for an alliance between the Byzantine and Holy Roman empires, but was able to arrange a marriage between his son Otto II and Theophano. [Funk & Wagnalls]

FOSTER, BURR, MINOR, NEWLIN LINES - 30th ggrandfather

!Upon his father Henry's foundations, Otto was able to raise the German monarchy to one of its greatest peaks. In this he was aided by a happy combination of circumstances. To the east he unleashed a series of campaigns against the pagan Slavs between the Elbe and the Oder, who were also being menaced from the nascent ducy of Poland under Mieszko I; that helped to provide
territory and manpower with which he might bind men to him. To the west he was favored by the intermittent conflicts between the Carolingians and Robertians which made it unappealing for the dukes of Lotharingia to throw off his rule for they could expect little help from France if they did so. Within Germany marriages of his relatives into the ducal families secured their accession to Swabia and Bavaria, while Lotharingia was bestowed on a son-in-law. To the south the turbulent poltics of Italy provided a fruitful sphere in which to intervene, bringing Otto the crown of Italy in 951, the imperial crown in 962, and a rich harvest of relics with which he could endow the great eastern
bishoprics and monasteries. By appointing bishops to sees well distant from their native parts he helped to create alternative sources of support should their neighbors prove restive and was at the same time able to impose military obligations on the Church to defent the eastern frontier and provide troops for more distant expeditions. Despite these opportunities and achievements he also
faced periods of very great danger. His stepbrother and younger brother regarded themselves as alternative candidates for the throne and in turn revolted; so too did other dukes, including his son, Duke Liudolf of Swabia, when he feared that Otto's marriage to Adelaide of Italy would preclude him
from the succession. What set the seal upon Otto's achievements was fortune; at the time of the most serious of the revolts, Liudolf's, fresh Magyar hosts burst upon the scene. King and rebels united againt this threat and at the Lechfeld, near Augsburg, gained one of the most decisive battles in the course of history (955). [The Oxford History of Medieval Europe]

!Rebellions of dukes of Bavaria, Franconia, and Lotharingia subdued. Victories over the Hungarians; the East Mark, called later Austria, set up. (A mark or march, was a frontier district set up for defensive purposes.) [Leaders & Landmarks, Vol. II, p. 233]

!Under Otto, the Huns again broke into the empire, for the last time in force, when myriads of them were slain or drowned in a battle before Augsburg (A.D. 955). [Leaders & Landmarks, Vol. II, p. 34]

!When Otto I returned from Italy to Germany in 972/3, Haralod Bluetooth was one of a number of monarchs who did him homage at Quedlinburg. A few months later Otto was dead, and Harald wasted no time in testing the mettle of his successor Otto II by some raids on Holstein. [A History of the Vikings, p. 128]

!2nd husband of Princess Edith of England. [Chronicle of the Royal Family, p. 17]

!In 961, Otho, king of Saxony, invaded Italy. He conquered the realm, dethrones Berenger II and sent him to end his days in a German prison. Otho was crowned sovereign with the title of emperor. Thus Italy, after having been annexed as a subjugated kingdom to Greece, and then to France, was now grasped by Germany. For half a century the three Othos, father, son, and grandson, were acknowledged emperors and kings of Italy. [Nations of the World - Italy, Vol XXV, p. 430]

King of Germany, 939-73; King of Italy, 951; Emperor of the West, 962-73; m.1 Eadgyth, Princess of England; m.2 St. Adelaide of Burgundy and was father of Otto II, Emperor of the West; father of Richilde by neither of these wives. [Royalty for Commoners, p. 121, 158]

m. St. Adelaide of Burgundy; father of:
1. Richilde who m. Cuno Oeningen
2. Henry
3. Otto II (Rufus), Holy Roman Emperor
4. Bruno
5. Mathilda Quedlinburg
6. dau who m. Frank Conrad of Lotharingia
[Levi Stebbins 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Change Date: 25 Mar 2003 at 22:24:35

Father: Henry I the Fowler L'Oseleur LIUDOLFING King of Germany b: ABT 0876 in of Saxony, Germany
Mother: Mathilda von RINGELHEIM Queen b: 0890 in Ringelheim, Goslar, Hanover, Germany

Marriage 1 Eadgyth, Princess of the ANGLO-SAXONS b: 0896 in Wessex,England
Married: 0929 in of Saxony, Germany
Children
Liudolf of Swabia Duke b: ABT 0935 in ,,,Germany
Luitgarde of SAXONY b: ABT 0935/0940 in Saxony, Germany

Marriage 2 Adelaide of BURGUNDY Queen of Lombardy b: 0931 in of Burgundy, France
Married: Oct 0951 in Lombardy, Italy
Children
Henry of SAXONY b: 0952 in Saxony, Germany
Bruno of SAXONY b: 0953 in Saxony, Germany
Adelheid, Princess of SAXONY b: ABT 0954 in of Saxony
Otto II King of Italy Emperor of West b: 0955 in Schweinfurt, Unterfranken, Bavaria
Mathilda Quedlinburg of SAXONY b: 0956 in Saxony, Germany

Marriage 3 Spouse Unknown
Children
Richilde, Princess of GERMANY b: ABT 0925 in Saxony, Germany

Sources:
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: The Oxford History of Medieval Europe
Author: Holmes, George, ed.
Publication: Oxford University Press, Oxford and New York, 1992
Repository:
Name: Cheryl Varner Library

Title: Leaders & Landmarks in European History, Volume II: The Middle Ages
Author: Moncrieff, A.R. Hope; Chaytor, The Rev. H.J., M.A..
Publication: The Gresham Publishing Company, London, 1913
Page: pp. 34, 233
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. 128
Repository:
Name: Cheryl Varner Library

Title: Chronicle of the Royal Family
Author: Mercer, Derrik, ed.
Publication: Jacques Legrand, London, 1991
Page: p. 17
Repository:
Name: Cheryl Varner Library

Title: The Nations of the World Series: Italy
Author: Abbott, John S. C.; Lay, Wilfred C., Ph.D.
Publication: Peter Fenelon Collier, New York, 1908
Page: Vol. XXV, p. 230
Repository:
Name: Cheryl Varner Library

Title: Royalty for Commoners, Revised Second Edition
Author: Stuart, Roderick W.
Publication: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., Baltimore, 1995
Page: pp. 121, 158
From 'Glick/Foster Ancestry' at Rootsweb.com
3.
woman Gerburga of Saxony, Princess of Germany‏
Born ‎between 912 BET., - and at Nordhausen, Saxony, Germany, died ‎ May 5, 984 at Reims, Marne, France; 3‎, buried ‎ at Reims, Marne, France
Name: Gerberga VON SACHSEN Princess of Germany
Surname: von Sachsen
Given Name: Gerberga
NSFX: Princess of Germany
Sex: F
Birth: ABT 0912/0913 in Nordhausen,Saxony,Germany
Death: 5 May 0984 in Reims,Marne,France
Burial: Reims,Marne,France
Reference Number: 76031
_UID: 4B4F9813F427EB41881C19D672539BFF7EEA
Note:
!M.1 Gisilbert, Duke of Lorraine; m.2. Louis IV, d'Outre Mer, King of France; mother of Princess Albreda; dau of Henry the Fowler and Mathilda von Ringelheim. [Ped. of Charlemagne, Vol. I, p. 279]

NEWLIN, WAITE LINES

Dau. of Henry the Fowler, king of Germany; m. Louis IV d'Outremer, king of France; mother of Mathilda. [Charlemagne & Others, Chart 3312b, 3315]

m. Giselbert, Count of Hainault/Duke of Lorraine; mother of Aubrie of Lorraine. [Charlemagne & Others, Chart 3317]

Dau. of Henry I the Fowler and Mathilda of Ringleheim; m. Giselbert, Duke ofLorraine; mother of Alberada of Hainault; m. Louis IV, king of France, and was mother of Mathilda of France. [GRS 3.03, Automated Archives, CD1, CD00
Author: Automated Archives, Inc.
Publication: Genealogical Research System, 1994
Repository:
Name: Denver Public Library

Title: Charlemagne, Alfred the Great and Other Ancestors
Author: Mitchell, James T.
Publication: 1991
Page: Charts 3312b, 3315, 3317
Title: The Oxford Illustrated History of the British Monarchy
Author: Cannon and Griffith
Title: Tableaux Genealogiques des Souverains de la France et de seu Grands Feudataires
Publication: Paris, 1863
Page: Table IV
Title: Die Nachkommen Karls de Grossen
Page: p. 3
Title: Plantagenet Ancestry of Seventeenth Century Colonists
Author: Faris, David
Publication: Genealogical Publishers, Baltimore, MD, 1996
Page: p. 171
Title: Royal Genealogies
Author: Anderson
Call Number: Eng 130
Page: p. 451, 616
Title: Keiser und Koenig History
Call Number: Gen Hist 25
Page: pt. 1, p. 9
Title: Betham's Genealogy Tables
Page: Table 253
From 'Glick/Foster Ancestry' at Rootsweb.com
4.
man Heinrich of "'the Quarrelsome'" Bavaria, Duke of Bavaria‏
Born ‎between 919 BET., - and at Saxony, Germany, died ‎ Nov 1, 955‎
Name: Henry I ,Duke of BAVARIA, LORRAINE & SAXONY
Surname: Bavaria, Lorraine & Saxony
Given Name: Henry I ,Duke of
_AKA: Heinrich II
Sex: M
Birth: 0919/0922 in of Bavaria,of Lorraine,of Saxony,Germany
Christening: of Verona,of Aquilas
Death: 0955
Reference Number: Waite,Newl
_UID: A4636055B920B34488E09CEABA49ECF76038
Note:
Duke of Lorraine (deposed), duke of Bavaria & Saxony, Marquis of Verona & Aquilas; Son of Henry the Fowler, King of Lorraine & Germany, and Matilda of the Saxon Hamelant; m.938 Judith of Bavaria; father of Henry II the Wrangler, Duke of Bavaria. [Charlemagne & Others, Chart 3315]

WAITE, NEWLIN, FOSTER LINES - 29th ggrandfather

Mayflower PAF

born abt 960?
1
Change Date: 21 Mar 2003 at 13:53:39

Father: Henry I the Fowler L'Oseleur LIUDOLFING King of Germany b: ABT 0876 in of Saxony, Germany
Mother: Mathilda von RINGELHEIM Queen b: 0890 in Ringelheim, Goslar, Hanover, Germany

Marriage 1 Judith of BAVARIA b: 0919 in Nordgau, Schwaben, Bavaria
Married: 0938
Children
Henry II the Wrangler, Duke of BAVARIA b: 0951 in Bavaria

Sources:
Repository:
Name: Denver Public Library

Title: Charlemagne, Alfred the Great and Other Ancestors
Author: Mitchell, James T.
Publication: 1991
Page: Chart 3315
Glick/Foster Ancestry at Rootsweb.com


3rd marriage
man Heinrich of "King of the Germans; the Fowler" Germany, Emperor‏‎, son of Otto of ""the Illustrious"" Saxony, Duke of Saxony and Hedwige of "Empress of the Holy Roman Empire, Hadwig of Baben" Germany, Princess of Germany‏.

Married ‎ 910 (25 or 26 years married) to:

woman Mechtilde of "St. Matilda; Feast Day is March 14." Ringleheim, Countess of Ringleheim‏‎, daughter of Theodoric Saxon-Hamelant of "Count in the Saxonian Hamalant, Theodoric of Ring" Ringleheim and Ludmilla Reginhilde of Middle "Princess of Middle Friesland, Ludmilla Reginhilde " Friesland‏.
Born ‎± ABT. 890 at Ringelheim, Goslar, Hannover, Germany, died ‎ Mar 14, 967/68 at Hereford Monastery, Rheinland Palatinate, Germany‎, approximately 77 years, buried ‎ May 14, 968, 1st marriage to: Heinrich of "King of the Germans; the Fowler" Germany, Emperor, ‎2nd marriage to: Heinrich of "King of the Germans; the Fowler" Germany, Emperor
Name: Mathilda von RINGELHEIM Queen
Surname: Ringelheim
Given Name: Mathilda von
NSFX: Queen
_AKA: Mechtilde
Sex: F
Birth: 0890 in Ringelheim, Goslar, Hanover, Germany
Death: 14 Mar 0968 in Memleben, Saxony, Germany
Burial: 14 May 0968
Reference Number: Minor,Newl
_UID: 84CC0DA50C6AF84497B6DB3E3CB3231A46F0
Note:
!Wife of Henry I, the Fowler; mother of Princess Gerberga. [Ped. of Charlemagne, Vol. I, p. 164]

MINOR, NEWLIN LINES - 30th ggrandmother

Of Saxon Hamelant; m. Henry the Fowler, King of Lorraine & Germany; mother of Hedwig. [Charlemagne & others, Chart 3318]

Dau. of Theodoric/Dietrich and Reginhilde; m. Henry I the Fowler; mother of Gerberge of Germany. [GRS 3.03, Automated Archives, CD1, CD00
Author: Automated Archives, Inc.
Publication: Genealogical Research System, 1994
From 'Glick/Foster Ancestry' at Rootsweb.com

Child:

1.
man Heinrich of "'the Quarrelsome'" Bavaria, Duke of Bavaria‏
Born ‎between 919 BET., - and at Saxony, Germany, died ‎ Nov 1, 955‎
Name: Henry I ,Duke of BAVARIA, LORRAINE & SAXONY
Surname: Bavaria, Lorraine & Saxony
Given Name: Henry I ,Duke of
_AKA: Heinrich II
Sex: M
Birth: 0919/0922 in of Bavaria,of Lorraine,of Saxony,Germany
Christening: of Verona,of Aquilas
Death: 0955
Reference Number: Waite,Newl
_UID: A4636055B920B34488E09CEABA49ECF76038
Note:
Duke of Lorraine (deposed), duke of Bavaria & Saxony, Marquis of Verona & Aquilas; Son of Henry the Fowler, King of Lorraine & Germany, and Matilda of the Saxon Hamelant; m.938 Judith of Bavaria; father of Henry II the Wrangler, Duke of Bavaria. [Charlemagne & Others, Chart 3315]

WAITE, NEWLIN, FOSTER LINES - 29th ggrandfather

Mayflower PAF

born abt 960?
1
Change Date: 21 Mar 2003 at 13:53:39

Father: Henry I the Fowler L'Oseleur LIUDOLFING King of Germany b: ABT 0876 in of Saxony, Germany
Mother: Mathilda von RINGELHEIM Queen b: 0890 in Ringelheim, Goslar, Hanover, Germany

Marriage 1 Judith of BAVARIA b: 0919 in Nordgau, Schwaben, Bavaria
Married: 0938
Children
Henry II the Wrangler, Duke of BAVARIA b: 0951 in Bavaria

Sources:
Repository:
Name: Denver Public Library

Title: Charlemagne, Alfred the Great and Other Ancestors
Author: Mitchell, James T.
Publication: 1991
Page: Chart 3315
Glick/Foster Ancestry at Rootsweb.com