_Egbert King of Wessex _+
| (0775 - 0838)
_Ethelwulf or Aethelwulf _|
| (0790 - 0858) m 0830 |
| |_Raedburh or Ida _______+
| (0788 - ....)
_Alfred "the Great" ____________________|
| (0849 - 0899) m 0868 |
| | _Oslac _________________+
| | |
| |_Osburh __________________|
| (0810 - 0846) m 0830 |
| |________________________
|
|
|--Edward I "The Elder"
| (0871 - 0924)
| ________________________
| |
| _Aethelred Mucil _________|
| | (0825 - ....) |
| | |________________________
| |
|_Ealhswith or Alswitha DE GAINSBOROUGH _|
(0849 - 0905) m 0868 |
| _Wigmund _______________+
| |
|_Eadburh _________________|
|
|________________________
[2968]
BIRTH: RULERS.ENG (Compuserve)
WSHNGT.ASC file abt 871/872
"Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists ..." b 875
EDWARD3.DOC b 871
DEATH: Anglo-Saxon England, Frank Stenton p. 339, COMYN4.TAF (Compuserve Roots), p. 6 says ABT 924, Americans of Royal Descent, Charles H. Browning; WSHNGT.ASC file, d at Farrington, Berkshire, England
King of Wessex (899-924). He fought with his father against the Danes and was apparently joint king with him. He gradually became ruler of all England south of the Humber. - Encyclopedia, p 254
Had children by his concubine Ecgwyna and contracted a legitimate marriage only after the death of his father ... subsequently married twice, probably repudiating one wife - Marriage and the Family in the Middle Ages, p. 106
United English, claimed Scotland - RULERS.ENG (Compuserve)
MARRIAGE: Anglo-Saxon England, P.H. Blair PAGE 193
ROYALS.GED, b. abt 871, d. & bur. place
COLVER31.TXT file: b. 873
WSHNGT.ASC file (Geo Washington Ahnentafel) # 34900592 = 3682832, b 871/72, d 17 Jul 925 Farrington, Berkshire
"Anglo Saxon Chronicle", Part 1:
A.D. 495. 'Then succeeded Edward, the son of Alfred, and reigned twenty-four winters.'
"Anglo Saxon Chronicle", Part 2:
A.D. 920. This year, before midsummer, went King Edward to Maldon; and repaired and fortified the town, ere he departed thence.
A.D. 921. This year, before Easter, King Edward ordered his men to go to the town of Towcester, and to rebuild it. Then again, after that, in the same year, during the gang-days, he ordered the town of Wigmore to be repaired. The same summer, betwixt Lammas and midsummer, the army broke their parole from Northampton and from Leicester; and went thence northward to Towcester, and fought against the town all day, and thought that they should break into it; but the people that were therein defended it, till more aid came to them; and the enemy then abandoned the town, and went away. Then again, very soon after this, they went out at night for plunder, and came upon men unaware, and seized not a little, both in men and cattle, betwixt Burnham-wood and Aylesbury. At the same time went the army from Huntington and East-Anglia, and constructed that work at Ternsford; which they inhabited and fortified; and abandoned the other at Huntingdon; and thought that they should thence oft with war and contention recover a good deal of this land. Thence they advanced till they came to Bedford; where the men who were within came out against them, and fought with them, and put them to flight, and slew a good number of them. Then again, after this, a great army yet collected itself from East-Anglia and from Mercia, and went to the town of Wigmore; which they besieged without, and fought against long in the day; and took the cattle about it; but the men defended the town, who were within; and the enemy left the town, and went away. After this, the same summer, a large force collected itself in King Edward's dominions, from the nighest towns that could go thither, and went to Temsford; and they beset the town, and fought thereon; until they broke into it, and slew the king, and Earl Toglos, and Earl Mann his son, and his brother, and all them that were therein, and who were resolved to defend it; and they took the others, and all that was therein. After this, a great force collected soon in harvest, from Kent, from Surrey, from Essex, and everywhere from the nighest towns; and went to Colchester, and beset the town, and fought thereon till they took it, and slew all the people, and seized all that was therein; except those men who escaped therefrom over the wall. After this again, this same harvest, a great army collected itself from East-Anglia, both of the land-forces and of the pirates, which they had enticed to their assistance, and thought that they should wreak their vengeance. They went to Maldon, and beset the town, and fought thereon, until more aid came to the townsmen from without to help. The enemy then abandoned the town, and went from it. And the men went after, out of the town, and also those that came from without to their aid; and put the army to flight, and slew many hundreds of them, both of the pirates and of the others. Soon after this, the same harvest, went King Edward with the West-Saxon army to Passham; and sat there the while that men fortified the town of Towcester with a stone wall. And there returned to him Earl Thurferth, and the captains, and all the army that belonged to Northampton northward to the Welland, and sought him for their lord and protector. When this division of the army went home, then went another out, and marched to the town of Huntingdon; and repaired and renewed it, where it was broken down before, by command of King Edward. And all the people of the country that were left submitted to King Edward, and sought his peace and protection. After this, the same year, before Martinmas, went King Edward with the West-Saxon army to Colchester; and repaired and renewed the town, where it was broken down before. And much people turned to him. both in East-Anglia and in Essex, that were before under the power of the Danes. And all the army in East-Anglia swore union with him; that they would all that he would, and would protect all that he protected, either by sea or land. And the army that belonged to Cambridge chose him separately for their lord and protector, and confirmed the same with oaths, as he had advised. This year King Edward repaired the town of Gladmouth; and the same year King Sihtric slew Neil his brother.
A.D. 922. This year, betwixt gang-days and midsummer, went King Edward with his army to Stamford, and ordered the town to be fortified on the south side of the river. And all the people that belonged to the northern town submitted to him, and sought him for their lord. ...[He] then [after Ethelfleda his sister died at Tamworth] rode he to the borough of Tamworth; and all the population in Mercia turned to him, who before were subject to Ethelfleda. And the kings in North-Wales, Howel, and Cledauc, and Jothwel, and all the people of North-Wales, sought him for their lord. Then went he thence to Nottingham, and secured that borough, and ordered it to be repaired, and manned both with English and with Danes. And all the population turned to him, that was settled in Mercia, both Danish and English.
A.D. 923. This year went King Edward with an army, late in the harvest, to Thelwall; and ordered the borough to be repaired, and inhabited, and manned. And he ordered another army also from the population of Mercia, the while he sat there to go to Manchester in Northumbria, to repair and to man it.
A.D. 924. This year, before midsummer, went King Edward with an army to Nottingham; and ordered the town to be repaired on the south side of the river, opposite the other, and the bridge over the Trent betwixt the two towns.
Thence he went to Bakewell in Peakland; and ordered a fort to be built as near as possible to it, and manned. And the King of Scotland, with all his people, chose him as father and lord; as did Reynold, and the son of Eadulf, and all that dwell in Northumbria, both English and Danish, both Northmen and others; also the king of the Strathclydwallians, and all his people.
[this and the following are from different MS versions of the A-S C] ((A.D. 924. This year Edward was chosen for father and for lord by the king of the Scots, and by the Scots, and King Reginald, and by all the North-humbrians, and also the king of the Strath-clyde Britons, and by all the Strath-clyde Britons.))
((A.D. 924. This year King Edward died among the Mercians at Farndon; and very shortly, about sixteen days after this, Elward his son died at Oxford; and their bodies lie at Winchester.))
A.D. 925. This year died King Edward at Farndon in Mercia; and Elward his son died ...
_William Count of Eu BOURCHIER _
| (.... - 1420) m 1420
_John BOURCHIER _____|
| (.... - 1474) |
| |_Anne __________________________+
| m 1420
_Humphrey 2nd Baron Berners BOURCHIER _|
| (.... - 1471) |
| | _Richard BERNERS _______________
| | |
| |_Margery BERNERS ____|
| (.... - 1475) |
| |_Philippa DALYNGRIDGE __________+
|
|
|--John 2nd Baron Berners BOURCHIER
| (1467 - 1533)
| ________________________________
| |
| _Frederick TYLNEY ___|
| | |
| | |________________________________
| |
|_Elizabeth TILNEY _____________________|
(.... - 1497) |
| ________________________________
| |
|_____________________|
|
|________________________________
[3653] "Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists ...", Line 4, Knight of the Bath, Member of Parliament 1495-1529, Chancellor of the Exchequer 1516-1527, 2nd Baron Berners
_Alberic II DE VERE ________+
| (1062 - 1141)
_Aubrey DE VERE ____________|
| (1120 - 1194) |
| |_Alice or Adeliza DE CLARE _+
| (1080 - 1136)
_Robert DE VERE _____|
| (1164 - 1221) |
| | _Henry DE ESSEX ____________+
| | | (1110 - 1163)
| |_Lucia or Agnes DE ESSEX ___|
| (1152 - ....) |
| |_Cicely BIGOD ______________+
| (1118 - ....)
|
|--Hugh DE VERE
| (1210 - 1263)
| _Walter DE BOLEBEC _________
| |
| _Hugh or Walter DE BOLEBEC _|
| | (1140 - 1187) |
| | |_Helawise __________________
| |
|_Isabel DE BOLEBEC __|
(1164 - 1205) |
| ____________________________
| |
|_Sibil DE VESEY ____________|
(1142 - ....) |
|____________________________
[4847] http://www.genealogy.org/~smcgee/cgi-bin/genweb.cgi/DB=pool/INDEX=I6047/?Lookup Internal
_Martin I ________________________
|
_Ruivallon DE VITRE ___________|
| |
| |__________________________________
|
_Andre DE VITRE _____|
| |
| | __________________________________
| | |
| |_Genetgan DE LA VICAIRE _______|
| |
| |__________________________________
|
|
|--Robert I DE VITRE
|
| _Harlevin de Burgo DE CONTEVILLE _+
| | (1001 - ....) m 1035
| _Robert de Burgo DE MORTAIGNE _|
| | (1037 - 1091) |
| | |_Arlotte DE FALAISE ______________+
| | (1003 - ....) m 1035
|_Agnes DE MORTAIGNE _|
(1054 - ....) |
| _Roger DE MONTGOMERY _____________+
| | (1005 - 1094) m 1048
|_Maud DE MONTGOMERY ___________|
(1039 - ....) |
|_Mabel de Belleme D'ALENCON ______+
(1014 - ....) m 1048
[2624] WSHNGT.ASC file (Geo Washington Ahnentafel) # 4358956 = 1092076
_______________________
|
_____________________|
| |
| |_______________________
|
_Peter MEZZINA ____________________|
| (1961 - ....) m 1991 |
| | _______________________
| | |
| |_____________________|
| |
| |_______________________
|
|
|--Hannah Patricia MEZZINA
| (1995 - ....)
| _Hiram BINGHAM ________+
| | (1903 - 1988) m 1934
| _Robert Kim BINGHAM _|
| | (1942 - ....) |
| | |_Rose Lawton MORRISON _+
| | (1908 - 1996) m 1934
|_Alexandra Morrison Dixon BINGHAM _|
(1966 - ....) m 1991 |
| _______________________
| |
|_Anne Fairfax CARR __|
(1942 - ....) |
|_______________________
[5830] http://www.my-ged.com/db/page/lucier/3006
_Alan LA ZOUCHE _______+
| (1120 - 1190)
_Roger LA ZOUCHE ____________|
| (1175 - 1238) m 1204 |
| |_Alice DE BEAUMES _____+
| (1138 - ....)
_Alan LA ZOUCHE ___________|
| (1205 - 1270) |
| | _______________________
| | |
| |_Margaret --- _______________|
| (1179 - 1232) m 1204 |
| |_______________________
|
|
|--Helene de la ROHAN-PORHOET
| (1242 - ....)
| _Saier IV DE QUINCY ___+
| | (1150 - 1219) m 1173
| _Roger DE QUINCY ____________|
| | (1174 - 1264) m 1228 |
| | |_Margaret DE BEAUMONT _+
| | (1154 - 1234) m 1173
|_Helen or Ellen DE QUINCY _|
(1222 - 1269) |
| _Allan MACDONAL _______+
| | (1170 - 1233)
|_Helen de Galloway MCDONALD _|
(1196 - 1245) m 1228 |
|_Ragnhild or Hilda ____+
(1174 - ....)