lunes, 29 de mayo de 2017

473

Beggo, Count of Toulouse 

Beggo (died 28 October 816) was the son of Gerard I of Paris. He was appointed Count of ToulouseDuke of Septimania,Duke of Aquitaine, and Margrave of the Hispanic March in 806 and followed his father as Count of Paris in 815.
In 806, William of Gellone abdicated and Charlemagne appointed Beggo to take his place in Toulouse and the March of Gothia. He did not succeed his father in Paris, but was later placed in the comital office there, but did not live long after that.
He married Alpais or Alpheidis. Their children were:
Gerard I of Paris (d. 779) was a count of Paris. He was the founder of the House of Girardids.

According to various sources, he married a certain Rotrude who may have been a daughter of Carloman, son of Charles Martel. From this union was born:

His son Stephen of Paris succeeded him to the title of count of Paris.

472

Suppo II, marchese di Spoleto 805-78


Adalgiso I de Spoleto

Adalgiso I (Adelgis o Adelchis, † después de 861) fue conde de Parma en la década de los 830, de Cremona después de 841, y después fue conde de Brescia. De acuerdo con algunas fuentes, sucedió a su (supuesto) hermano Moringo comoduque de Spoleto en 824. Su principal área de interés territorial estuvo en las tierras ancestrales de su familia, la Emilia y laLombardía oriental.
Era el segundo hijo de Supo I de Spoleto, noble de origen franco epónimo de la familia nobiliaria italiana de los Supónidas. Adalgiso estuvo casado con una mujer no identificada, de cuyo matrimonio algunas fuentes (no hay de momento fuentes primarias que confirmen el parentesco) identifican cuatro descendientes:

Suppo I, duca di Spoleto 760-824

471

Austrigusa of the Gepids 499-515


King Elemund of Gepiden 490-548


Gunderith Van De Gepidae 425-85

miércoles, 24 de mayo de 2017

470

Waccho, king of the Lombards 490-539


Zucchilon, King of the Lombardsb460-540


Cleph I, King of the Lombards 430-90


Godehoc, King of the Lombards 430-88


Hildeoc, King of the Lombards 400-60


Lethuc, King of the Lombards 370-440 


Lamicho, King of the Lombards 330-405 


Agilmund, King of the Lombards 305-400


Ayo, King of the Longobards 270-305


Gambara, Queen of the Lombards 265

469

Gundiberga of the Lombards 600-36


Agilulf (Ago), King of the Lombards 560-616 

Theodelinda, queen of the Lombards 565-625  Garibald I, duke of the BavariansWaldrada of the Lombards 


Ansvlad, Duke of Turin 538-616 


Agila 506


468

Ragnetrude of East Anglia 625


Rægenhere 565-616 

Clothilde of Allemannia 560-620


Rædwald, king of East Anglia 560-624 


Tyttla, king of East Anglia 540-93


Wuffa, king of East Anglia 475-578 


Wehha 413-533


Wilhelm 533


Hryp 533


Hroðmund


Tyrgils


Tyttman


Casere 


Odin 270-330

Frigg 222  Fjörgynn


Borr 330

Bestla 330  Bolthorn the frost giant 


Buri 

467

Waldrada of Wormsgau 845-68


Liudolf I "the Great", duke of Saxony 805-64  Margrave Bruno y Unknown Mother of Liudolf 



Wichbert, duke of Saxony 747-927   Widukind, duke of Saxony ySvatana of the Saxons

Sindacilla / Odrade VonWestphalia 756-80


desarrollada anteriormente

466

Conrad II the Younger was the Count of Auxerre from 864 until his death in 876. He was a son of Conrad I of Auxerre, andAdelaide of Tours; an older brother of Hugh the Abbot; and a member of the Bavarian branch of the Welfs.
In 858, at the coaxing of Charles the Bald, his cousin, he and his brother betrayed Louis the German when he sent them on an espionage mission and went over to Charles, who rewarded them handsomely because he had lost his Bavarianhonores. He acted as Duke of Transjurane (Upper) Burgundy from then until about 864.
He married Judith, daughter of Eberhard of Friuli, and later Waldrada of Worms, by whom he left a son, Rudolf, who later became King of Transjurane Burgundy, and a daughter, Adelaide of Auxerre, who married Richard, Duke of Burgundy, and had issue.

Conrad I the Elder (died about 864) was the count of several counties, most notably the Aargau and Auxerre, around Lake Constance, as well as Paris from 859 to 862/4. He was also the lay abbot of Saint-Germaine in Auxerre. Conrad's father wasWelf.
He was one of the early Welfs, a member of the Bavarian branch, and his sister Judith was the second wife of Louis the Pious. In 858, he and his family — his wife Adelaide of Tours and his sons Hugh and Conrad the Younger — abandoned their sovereign Louis the German and went over to Charles the Bald, Judith's son. They were generously rewarded and Conrad was appointed to many countships. Louis the German confiscated his Bavarian fiefs and lands.
The Miracula Sancti Germani calls Conrad Chuonradus princeps (prince, sovereign), when recording his marriage. By some accounts his wife re-married to Robert the Strong after his death.
Adelaide of Tours (c.820-c.866) was a daughter of Hugh of Tours and his wife Ava.
She married Conrad I, Count of Auxerre, with whom she had at least two children, Hugh and Conrad the Younger.
After his death she probably married Robert the Strong,[1] whose children Odo and Robert I of France are perhaps hers.
Since Robert was born in 866, well after her first husband died, he is more likely to be her offspring. His grandson was Hugh Capet, the first King of the House of Capet.

Welf I (or Hwelf; died about 825) is the first documented ancestor of theElder House of Welf. He is mentioned as a count (comes) in the Frankishlands of Bavaria.
Welf originated from a distinguished dynasty of Franconian nobles. He is mentioned only once: on the occasion of the wedding of his daughter Judithwith Emperor Louis the Pious in 819 at Aachen.[1] His son Conrad later appeared as a dux (duke) in Alamannia and achieved a powerful position in the Upper Swabian estates he possibly had inherited from his mother Hedwig (Heilwig).
His family became politically powerful when Louis the Pious chose his oldest daughter as his 2nd wife upon the death of his consort Ermengarde of Hesbaye. Though Welf himself never became publicly prominent, his family became interwoven with the Carolingian dynasty.

Welf married Hedwig (Heilwig), daughter of the Saxon count Isambart; Hedwig later became abbess of Chelles. The couple had the following children:

Welf I..jpg

Hedwig (c. 778 – after 833) was a Saxon noble woman, the wife of Count Welf I and mother-in-law of Emperor Louis the Pious through his marriage to Judith, her daughter.
She was possibly born at Altdorf in the Frankish lands of Alamannia (present-day Germany). According to Bishop Thegan of Trier, she was a member of the Saxon high nobility, the daughter of Count Isambart. She had a sister, Adalung des Franken, half-brother Hunfrid I de Recia e de Istria, and a brother Guelph, Count of Andech.
In her later life (about 826) she appears as abbess of Chelles near Paris,[1][2][3] however, it is uncertain if she had already become a widow by then.

465

Reinhild Ludmilla of Frisia, of Friesland 870-917 


Godfrid, duke of Frisia 820-85 

Gisela of Lotharingia, Princess of Lorraine 869-907  Lothair II, king of Lotharingia yWaldrada of Wormsgau 

464

Theodoric of Ringelheim 872-916 


Reginhart, count in West Saxony 828-91  Walpert, count of Ringelheim y Alburgis

Mathilda von Merseburg, Äbtissen von Herford 835-915  Eckbert "the Loyal" von Sachsen, graf y Ida von Sachsen 


Walpert, count of Ringelheim 805-90  Wichbert, duke of Saxony yGodrada Saksen, van 

Alburgis of Lesmonia 808-90  Immed I von Sachsen, Graf von Ostsachsen 


Wichbert, duke of Saxony 780-827  Widukind, duke of Saxony ySvatana of the Saxons 

Godrada Saksen, van 780


Desarrollada anteriormrntr

463

Amaltrude Von Werl von Sillichgau (Bonngau) 885-940 


Hermann von Avalgau, count 857