Il est marié avec Richenza von Kyburg (von Lenzburg-Baden).
Ils se sont mariés.
Enfant(s):
Hartman III, Graf von Kyburg is your 26th great grandfather.
You‰
‰ ‰ ᆒ‰ Henry Marvin Welborn‰
your father‰ ᆒ‰ Emma Corine Bombard‰
his mother‰ ᆒ‰ Emma Elizabeth Bombard‰
her mother‰ ᆒ‰ Isabelle Bynum‰
her mother‰ ᆒRobert W Bynum‰
her father‰ ᆒ‰ Elizabeth Bynum‰
his mother‰ ᆒ‰ Lydia Mitchell‰
her mother‰ ᆒ‰ Jonathan Wheeler, I‰
her father‰ ᆒ‰ Martha Wheeler (Salisbury)‰
his mother‰ ᆒWilliam Salisbury, Jr.‰
her father‰ ᆒ‰ William Salisbury, of Denbigh & Swansea‰
his father‰ ᆒ‰ John Salisbury, of Denbigh‰
his father‰ ᆒSir John Salusbury, III, "The Strong", MP‰
his father‰ ᆒ‰ Catrin o Ferain / Kathryn of Berain‰
his mother‰ ᆒ‰ Jane de Velville‰
her mother‰ ᆒ‰ Sir Roland Velville, of Beaumaris‰
her fatherᆒ‰ Henry VII of England‰
his father‰ ᆒ‰ Edmund Tudor, 1st Earl of Richmond‰
his father‰ ᆒ‰ Catherine of Valois, Queen consort of England‰
his mother‰ ᆒElisabeth von Bayern, reine de France‰
her mother‰ ᆒ‰ Stephan III von Bayern‰
her father‰ ᆒ‰ Stephan II, Herzog von Bayern-Ingolstadt‰
his father¬â ·ÜíKaiser Ludwig von Wittelsbach, IV, des Heiligen Rââmischen Reiches¬â
his father‰ ᆒ‰ Mathilde von Habsburg‰
his mother‰ ᆒRudolf I von Habsburg, Roman-German King‰
her father‰ ᆒ‰ Hedwig of Kyburg‰
his mother‰ ᆒ‰ Ulrich III, count of Kyburg‰
her father‰ ᆒ‰ Hartman III, Graf von Kyburg‰
his father
https://www.geni.com/people/Hartman-III-Graf-von-Kyburg/6000000008264669961
Hartmann I von Kyburg (III von Dillingen)
Gender:
Male
Birth:
circa 1138
Dillingen, Duchy of Swabia, (now Germany)
Death:
August 20, 1180 (37-46)
Schloss Kyburg, Kyburg, Duchy of Swabia, (now Switzerland)
Immediate Family:
Son of Adalbert I, Graf von Kyburg und Dillingen and Mechthild von Mörsberg-Nellenburg
Husband of Richenza von Kyburg (von Lenzburg-Baden)
Father of Ulrich III, count of Kyburg; Adelbert III Graf von Dillingen; Richenza von Dillingen; Adalhard Graf von Kyburg; Ada of Dillingen; and Nn von Kyburg ¬´ less
Brother of Adalhard von Kyburg and Ulrich Graf von Dillingen
Half brother of Mathilde von Sponheim and Gottfried I, Graf von Sponheim
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kyburg_(Adelsgeschlecht)
The Counts of Kyburg (also outdated Kiburg) were a noble family that belonged to the imperial high nobility and whose main rulership was in what is now northern and eastern Switzerland. The Kyburgs were an older sideline of the Counts of Dillingen, who named themselves after the Kyburg in today's Canton of Zurich. After the Kyburg male line died out in 1263, the Habsburg family branch Kyburg-Burgdorf or Neu-Kyburg emerged through female succession. Gotfrid is considered the ancestor of the Kyburg family. Hartmann von Dillingen's grandsons divided their property. Hartmann III. von Dillingen took over ownership in Switzerland as Hartmann I. von Kyburg. The Kyburger were allies of the dukes of Swabia from the Staufer family. The connection was probably reinforced by Hartmann's marriage to Richenza von Baden-Lenzburg in the middle of the 12th century. After the Counts of Lenzburg died out in 1172/1173, the Kyburgers inherited parts of the extensive Lenzburg possessions in what is now Switzerland and southern Germany together with the Staufers and the Zâ§hringers. How extensive the inheritance was is uncertain and was probably also controversial at the time. In any case, it is certain that the Kyburgers came into possession of the Lenzburg property in Gaster, on Lake Walen and around Baden. Later, the Lenzburg bailiffs over the Schâ§nis and Beromâºnster monasteries are also in the hands of the Kyburgs.
Kyburg (/àkaâ¦â¢bâ¦úêr⦰/; German: [àkyêbäÅk]; also Kiburg) was a noble family of grafen (counts) in the Duchy of Swabia, a cadet line of the counts of Dillingen, who in the late 12th and early 13th century ruled the County of Kyburg, corresponding to much of what is now Northeastern Switzerland.
The family was one of the four most powerful noble families in the Swiss plateau beside the House of Habsburg, House of Zâ§hringen and the House of Savoy during the 12th century. With the extinction of the Kyburg family's male line in 1264, Rudolph of Habsburg laid claim to the Kyburg lands and annexed them to the Habsburg holdings, establishing the line of "Neu-Kyburg", which was in turn extinct in 1417.
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Hartmann III von Kyburg | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Richenza von Kyburg (von Lenzburg-Baden) |
Les données affichées n'ont aucune source.