Thursday, June 26, 2014

Queen of France

Ancestors from King Edward The III

edward III edward III edward III
Ancestors from King Edward the III
The Netherlands
From Edward III House of Avesnes
Edward King of England III William I Count of Hainaut John II, Count of Hainaut John I of Avesnes Bouchard IV of Avesnes James of Avesnes Nicolas d'Oisy, Lord of Avesnes Walter I, Lord of Avesnes, “Le Beau”
Philippa Hainhault Joan of Valois Philippa of Luxembourg Adelaide of Holland Margaret II of Flanders Adela of Guise Matilda de la Roche Ada of Tournai
France

House of Valois House of Capet
William I Count of Hainaut Charles of Valois Philip III of France, “the bold” Louis IX of France, Louis VIII of France, Louis VIII of France, Louis VII of France, Louis VI of France,
Joan of Valois Margaret, Countess of Anjou Isabela of Aragon Margaret of Provence Blanche of Castile Isabelle of Hainaut Adele of Champagne Adelaide of Maurienne
The Robertians
Philip I of France, “King of the Franks” Henry I of France, Robert II of France, “The Pious” Hugh Capet Hugh The Great Robert I of France, Robert of France, “the strong” Robert III of Worms.
Bertha of Holland Anne of Kiev Constance of Arles Adelaide of Aquitaine Hedwige of Saxony Beatrice of Vermandois Adelaide of Tours Margrave of Neustria
Kiev
House of Capet Rurik Dynasty
Henry I of France, Yaroslav the Wise Vladimir The Great Svuatoslav I of Kiev, The Brave Igor Rurik
Anne of Kiev Ingegerd Olofsdottor of Sweden Rogneda of Polotski Malusha Saint Olga
Spain and Normandy
From Edward II House of Champagne House of Blois
Edward King of England II Philip IV of France Henry I of Navarre Theobald I of Navarre Theobald III of Navarre Henry I Count of Champagne Thibaut of Champagne Stephen II, Count of Blois Theobald III, Count of Blois
Isabela of France Joan I, Queen of Navarre Blanche of Artois Margaret of Bourbon Blanche of Navarre Marie of France, Countess of Champagne Matilda of Carinthia Adela of Normandy Garsinde du Maine
house of Blois
Odo II, Count of Blois Odo I, Count of Blois Theobald I, Count of Blois Theobald the Elder of Blois
Ermengarde of Auvergne Bertha of Burgandy Luitgarde of Vermandois
Spain
From Edward I
House of Burgandy
House of Ivrea<
Edward King of England I Ferdinand III of Castile Alfonso IX of Leon Ferdinand II of Leon and Galicia Alfonso VII of Leon Raymond of Burgandy William I, Count of Burgandy, “The Great” Renaud I, Count of Burgandy Otto-William Count of Burgandy
Eleanor of Castile Joan, Countess of Ponthieu Berangaria of Castile Urraca of Portugal Beranguela of Barcelona Urraca of Leon and Castile Stepanie Alice of Normandy Ermentrude of Reims and Roucy
Hungary
Arpad Dynasty
William I Count of Hainaut Charles of Valois Charles II of Naples Stephen V of Hungary Bela IV of Hungary Andrew II of Hungary Bela III of Hungary Geza II of Hungary Bela II of Hungary
Joan of Valois Margaret, Countess of Anjou Mary of Hungary, Queen of Naples Elizabeth the Cumin Maria Laskarina Gertrude of Merania Agnes of Antioch Euphrosyne of Kiev Helena of Rascia
Arpad Dynasty
continued.
Almos of Hungary Geza I of Hungary Bela I of Hungary, “The Champion” or Wisent" Vazul Michael Taksony Zoltan Arpad Almos
Predslava of Kiev Sophia Lady of the clan Tatony Richeza or Adelaide of Poland

Menumoruts, un-named daughter (debated)

Wednesday, June 25, 2014

Queen of France

The Vaux Rochette's King Line to England

The Vaux Rochettes King-Line of England

Samuel Vaux, 1786: son David, Grandson Robert Elijah
John Rockett
Richard Rockett
Robert Abernathy [111]
Robert A. Abernathy [11]
Roger Tilghman
Christopher Tilghman Jr.
Christopher Tilghman Sr.
Myra Elizabeth Rockett
Sarah Abernathy
Mary May Abernathy
Mary Harwell Howell
Christina Tillman,
Tilghman
Winnefred Tilghman (Austin)
Ruth Devonshire
Anna Saunders

House of Neville

Edward Saunders
John Saunders
George Wheatonhall
Thomas Richard Berkeley
raby castle neville
George de Neville
Edward de Neville
Ralphe de Neville
Anna Pandreth
Anna Wheatonhall
Alice Alys Berkeley
Elizabeth de Neville
neville coat of arms
Margaret Fenne
Elizabeth Beauchamps
Joan de Beaufort

House of Plantagent

John of Gaunt, first duke of lancaster
Edward King of England III
Edward King of England II
Edward King of England I
Henry King of England III
John King of England
Henry King of England II
Henry King of England II
Katherine Swynford de Roet
Philippa Hainhault
Isabela of France
"Capetian Dynasty"
Eleanor of Castile
"Kingdom of Castile"
Eleanor of Provence
Isabela Countess of Angouleme
Eleanor Duchess of Aquitaine

House of Plantagent

House of Anjou

House of Angevins

Geoffrey Plantagenet, Count of Anjou
Fulk, King of Jerusalem
Fulk IV of Anjou. “le Rechin”
Geoffrey II, Count of Gatinais
Hughes de Perche
Matilda of England
Ermengarde, Countess of Maine
Bertrade de Montfort
Ermengarde of Anjou
Beatrice de Macon

Rockette Lettuce & Wine

The Rocket name, in french is the derivative of Roche, and originally in older dialects with the namesake of Roque, and there is a sharp tiny lattuie, (lettuce) known as Roquette.
number 20
When dealing with the "Vaux" name change into "Vans".
It could have been a humorous invent to name it after wine itself. Vans being the french phonetic of the french word for wine: "Les Vins".
The number 20 "Vingt", pronounced "Vah-nne" ", Vins (in french)", coincides with many marvels, in Science, and even Sports.
"20" is the top number on a dartboard. The time of becoming an adult, to the Atomic number of calcium, and so forth.
vannes france
Vannes, France
Though the keep of 'Vannes', a strategically important city in Britanny, France; the travels of the surname really stems from its prior hold on Southern France.
"Vans", surname is typically found in the North, with the French Normans, (through Maud Chester, listed on previous blog). The heritage location, of Normandy and Bretagne, for the 'Vannes' names, was about one hundred and fifty years prior the time of William the Conquerer's Siege of England.
When "Rollo", and other famous knights of the tech-mechanic era surnames, many descending from the French Monarchs.

The Vaux Vans Baus

The V 'ahnce' with the long 's' snake sounding ending, was most likely from recent American dialects.
Returning to History: Vaus, Vaud*, Vaux, Beau, and Baux,
All are pronounced "Voe",............(Vose and Bose, are directly plurals.* Vaud has a silent d.)
In non-written language what did mean?
Aside from bowed legs, "bow" can run towards the english sparring word for defeat.
There is the obvious usage though... Men of a great tribe who used bows and arrows.,
rather than being from a tribe of tall women who wore colorful bows in their hair.
Bringing the naming of the Voe (boe) sound to, the bow keepers.

"Boughs of trees, bows of Boats, & Violins."

violin bow
viking ships bow
package bow

Germanic Influence

The german "wo bist du?" "where are you?" confuses a bit, as "Valley" is a place and 'Wo' is the question. "Valley are you?" (asked, in modern English, "Are you from this valley?").
As valley is the "where", and location is in question:
Which valley you are from, and how you are when there on an internal level?
Stated in only 3 small words, wo bist du?
Where the other responds, with which valley 'place name' he or she is from, (the identity of a mapped place). "&" How's it going with you as a person, in retrospect to life experiences. (your personal thoughts held.)

Many forms of Beauty

Where the most beautiful Vaux's become Beau's.
I haven't seen anywhere online with Beau & Vaux together, which leads me to 2 versions: "beautiful valley" or just an "ok valley". Both valley types, able to contain other meanings indicative of the people:
"Are you in a beautiful place with yourself recently?", or just "Vaux: an average normal with nothing spectacular. Where when names were being assigned one-by-one as time passed.
The people from Baux (Beau) were known as being "kind-hearted or good-looking" and the ones from "Vaux", known as being: a normal friend or foe.

Which Mountains to Climb?

Even the V as a sharp looking Consonant, meaning of a valley that's difficult to climb and dangerous, where the B valleys could be older mountains.
In a time, when no words were written, the slightly softer tonation of 'B', from 'V' (in french) could have saved your life, by the direction of where you were physically walking towards.
The Viking Areas or the Bascogne, Many of the Northern mountains are not hikable, unless a mountain sheep and used all over Switzerland higher to climb Alps is Vaud, and Vaux, steeper and more dangerous. If anomalies have interrupted along the way, where a Baux mountain is steep, that probably returns to local claims from the Bascogne in spoken tongue were their regional lands.

Secure Your Valleys

To walk away from your valley, was to also possibly lose it to strangers or enemies. Hence, populating becoming a security need, where a religion with plural wives, like the Mormon faith would flourish. Oddly the Mormons do speak of "Golden tablets, etched-in writing on gold plates," from a time very long ago.
Keep the valleys filled with your army of persons, to maintain ownership.

The Local Claimers

It's very possible in modern Bretagne and other areas of Europe, that people from many old dialects prefer to not recognize official French ownership papers. Especially when the owners have forfeited their lands for a while to go elsewhere. ie., purchased house & fields, and the fields have been re-claimed by local farmers, after being allowed to till the soil for few years. A very difficult situation to stop, once they've been given the workable land.
A non-humourous situation, where a country officially sets its boundry and habitation rules, yet those rules don't really apply to the local people. The beaucracy of Paris is in Paris.

Namesake! It's My Kingdom, All the Lands and All the Castles !

Namesake castles: ie. "Vaux" Kingdoms'castles and chateaus,'
deeded by its very own surnamed-persons (or builder designer count or countess Vaux, who named the chateaux.), The provenance effect is returns to the heritage of that family and surname.
A rightful ownership also, in the eyes of many, Non-disputed ownership. Where that castle belongs with persons of that family, as long as they do not abandon it on purpose.
A good info-source for the Rocketts is at http://tantleyrockett.familytreeguide.com

Tuesday, June 24, 2014

Queen of France

King Lines, A few Scottish Kings, to Henry I King of England

3 Scottish Kings Found and a Princess,
within my Grandmother's Lines:

1001 Duncan I, King of Scots , Atholl, Perthshire, Scotland
1031 Malcolm III** *, 'Canmore', King of Scots
& Saint Margaret, Queen of Scots, Dunkeld, Perthshire
**(he assassinated and usurped "Lulach")
*Northumberland, England (killed in battle near Alnwick)

1083 David I, King of Scots Maud /Matilda de Senlis, Countess of Huntingdon, Fordoun, Kincardineshire, Scotland
1114 Henry of Scotland (his uncle was King Henry I of England, married to his aunt Edith) and his wife Ada de Warenne, Countess of Huntingdon, Kelso, Roxburghshire, Scotland
*Daughter of Henry of Scotland was Margaret de Huntingdon, Princess of Scotland
* only listed with my Grandmothers line, no star indicates both Grandparents share the same royal ancestor of King Edward III, 21 generations ago.
An oldie king, I discovered through the surnames a few years ago, during the 1300 time frame. A Scottish King, found through his daughter Margaret Stewart.
Robert II of Scotland: I know you want a story about him, but, there are many others wanting their picture-day also.
(I'm starting to refurbish the site, with larger images. Too many historical images, have been over-reduced for the web. Note: my too-tiny Chesters!)
Henry the first King of England:
He died of poisoning, from overeating the eel fish called lamphreys. Possibly a problem that exists even today, to over-imbibe on the river snake, may actually find ones-self at deaths-end quickly. It may be a descendant poisoner specifically, kinda like an avoidfish, for the Beauclerc children, etc. It's an inland variety, here in France.
from wiki:
[Henry I, also known as Henry Beauclerc, was King of England from 1100 to 1135. Henry was the fourth son of William the Conqueror and was educated in Latin and the liberal arts.]
I was trying to get to the king-line, away from Edward the third and found a line through, much earlier...with the Earls of Chester.
The Earls of Chester, with Rundulf, le Meschin, and others, are inner-fixed in Normandy, Calvados region for quite a while, and the Guernons, built at least one castle during that time. There was a web-page stating 50 or so manor houses in conjunction were given to the Chester Earls, in the Guernon area, so I suppose they are somewhere on the books as a property title that is historically deed-owned.

The Earls of Chester
& Kings of the Scots,
through The Vaux line

Circa 1080: House of Dunkeld, and Bruce
Ranulf de Briquessart
Ranulf le Meschin, 3rd Earl of Chester
Ranulf de Gernon, 4th Earl of Chester
Hugh Kevelioc 5th Earl of Chester
David of Scotland, 9th earl of Huntington
Robert Brewes, 4th lord of Annandale
Sir Robert Brewes 5th lord of Annandale
Sir Robert le Brus, 1st Lord Brus
Robert the first Bruce, King of Scotland
Margaret Goz
Lucy of Bolingbroke
Maud of Gloucester
Bertrade de Monfort of Evreux
Matilda (Maud) of Chester
Isobel of Huntington
Isabella de Clare, of Gloucester and Hertford
Marjorie Countess of Carrick
Isabela of Mar
from Robert Bruce & Isabela Ambassador to Denmark
Walter Stewart, 6th high Stewart
Robert I I Stewart King of Scotland
David Stewart first Earl of Caithness
Patrick Graham Straithearn
Malise Graham
Robert Vaux
Blaise Vaux
Patrick Vans
Alexander Vans
Marjorie Bruce, the Princess of Scotland
Eupheme de Ross, Countess of Moray
Lindsey
Eupheme Stewart
Marion Campbell
Euphemia Graham
Elizabeth Stabos
Mary Kennedy
Euphemia Graham
to Euphemia Graham wife, son Patrick Vans & his wife Catherine Kennedy
Circa 1575: The Normandy Dynasty: from maud's parents above:
Rollo
William the 1st “Longsword”
Richard “the fearless” Duke of Normandy
Richard “the good” 2nd Duke of Normandy
Robert “the magnificent” 1st Duke of Normandy
William the Conquerer, King of England
King Henry Beauclerc of England, the First
Robert The 1st Earl of Gloucester, Robert de Caen
Ranulf de Gernon, 4th Earl of Chester
Poppa
Luitgarde Vermandois
Gunorra, Duchess of Norway
Judith of Brittany
Herleva of Falaise
Matilda of Flanders
Eupheme de Ross, Countess of Moray
Mabel FitzRobert, of FitzHamon
Maud of Gloucester, Countess of Chester
to Daughter of Conan 1 duke of Brittany and Ermingarde of Anjou
--------------------------------
I am a little bit time lost:
The Robert Vaux-----Huntington line also goes to
'David I 'the Saint'King of Scotland
born around 1080, to his father:
King Malcolm III 'Caennmor' King of Scotland
and Saint Margaret of Exile, leading to her mother as Agatha of Kiev.
Malcolm is buried in the El Escorial Palace in Madrid.
A lot of new info, with "The Normandy Dynasty" and "William the Conquerer",
as well as, more of the Robert Kings of Scotland,
and "Henry the first" as an English King, with "The Earls of the Chester Line".
Leading into... Aethelrred "The Unready".
So many new names, even Malet, though tech problems have persisted,
and I just can't get gedcom to work with ubuntu, it crashed the server, and I had to re-install.
My little chart program can't handle it anymore. So, I re-made the charts above, to help document it. Because... going back to the castle keeper ages, 700-1000 yrs can be time-consuming.
There was also a Portugal Province, given to "Ranulf Guernon",
from King Alfonso the 1st, leading to another "Red-haired link" in the south for the Vaux's.