Arbre généalogique Homs » Herbastus 'le Danois' de Crépon (± 890-987)

Données personnelles Herbastus 'le Danois' de Crépon 

Les sources 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6
  • Il est né environ 890 dans between 890-911 in Crépon, Calvados, Normandie, France.
  • Il a été baptisé dans of Port Ausdemer, Normandy, France.
  • Alternative: Il a été baptisé dans of Port Ausdemer, Normandy, France.
  • Alternative: Il a été baptisé dans of Port Ausdemer, Normandy, France.
  • Baptisé (à 8 ans ou plus tard) par l'autorité de la prêtrise de l'église SDJ le 18 août 1992.
  • Alternative: Baptisé (à 8 ans ou plus tard) par l'autorité de la prêtrise de l'église SDJ le 19 décembre 1992.
  • Profession: dans Forestier d'Arques.
    {geni:current} 0
  • Résidant: France.
  • Il est décédé le 1 novembre 987 dans Arques, Seine Inferieure, Normandy, France.
  • Il est enterré environ 984 dans France.
  • Un enfant de Ranulph (Ranulfus) de Crépon et N.N. Wife of Ranulph de Crépon
  • Cette information a été mise à jour pour la dernière fois le 6 mars 2012.

Famille de Herbastus 'le Danois' de Crépon

Il est marié avec N.N. (Josceline) de Crépon.

Ils se sont mariés environ 929 TO ABT 936 à France.


Enfant(s):

  1. Avelina (Aveline) de Crépon  ± 985-± 1079 
  2. Gunnor Gunnora de Crépon  ± 936-1031 
  3. Sainsfrida Seinfrie de Crépon  ± 975-± 1058 
  4. Wevia Wewa de Crépon  ± 955-± 1060 
  5. Herfast de Crépon  ± 955-± 1075 


Notes par Herbastus 'le Danois' de Crépon

GIVN Herbastus de
SURN Crepon
AFN 9HMF-4R
DATE 9 SEP 2000
TIME 13:15:39
GIVN Herbastus de
SURN Crepon
AFN 9HMF-4R
DATE 9 SEP 2000
TIME 13:15:39
Name Suffix: "The Dane"
Name Suffix: "The Dane"
SOURCE CITATION:
Title: Ancestral File (TM)
Author: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Publication Information: July 1996 (c), data as of 2 January 1996
Repository Name: Family History Library
Address: 35 N West Temple Street
Salt Lake City, UT 84150 USA

aka Harold II Blatann Gormsson
I do not have verification on all information that you have downloaded. Please feel free to contact me @ (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX) for errors/corrections/ or any additional information, especially if you are willing to share information
[johnpanagentA.FTW]
MZM7PMU.(a) --- (Squire de Crepon)
b.
d.
MZM7PMR.(A) Gunnora de Crepon
MZM7PMR.B Herphaste de Crepon
MZM6NNMX.(C)

AKA Harold Blantand or Bluetooth.
King of Denmark 931 -979.

There if a period of 38 years where no king of Denmark is listed, probabley Harold Parcus and Gormo Del Gammel are the missing Kings.
Harold is listed as both Both Harold VII and Harold VIII

There is a problem in this line, in this area, both Harde Knud and Frotho VI, King of Denmark, are listed as the father of Gromo; who was the father of Harold" Blantand"( Bluetooth), King of Denmark (910 - 986). Harolds mother is listed as Sida and/or Thyre - Gormo's Wives. More research needs to be done in this area. Harold Gormosson is listed in Scandinavian Mythology as Harald "Wartooth" and/or Harald "Greycloak", who was bapitized a Christian by the priest, Poppo. He has the frist Christian King of Denmark.
Ancesrry and Progentry of Captain James Blount - Immigrant, by Robert F. Pfafman, p E-33.
One source specifies that he is the same as King of Denmark,Haraldblaafand.
Frederick Rose's Genealogy
URL: http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=PED&db=:1416850&id=I88739834
ID: I88739834
Name: (King) Herbastus DE CREPON
Given Name: (King) Herbastus
Surname: De Crepon
Sex: M
Birth: 911
Death: 986 in Germany
MARR:
Note: King of Denmark. Also known as Harold (Bluetooth)II Blaatand. Brother of Harold VIII Blaatand.

Father: (King) Gorm (The Old) DE GAMMEL b: 860
Mother: Thyra (Klacksdattir) OF JUTLAND b: < 907

Marriage 1 Spouse Unknown
Children
(Duchess) Gunnora DE CREPON, OF NORMANDY b: 936 in Normandy, France

================================================================================

Freepages Genealogy
URL: http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~jamesdow/s038/f001301.htm

The PEDIGREE of
Herbastus (Herfastus) (Sire) de CREPON
Poss. HRH William's 27-Great Grandfather.
Poss. PM Churchill's 27-Great Grandfather.
Born: abt. 911 Died: abt. 981
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Wife: Cyrid of SWEDEN
Possible Children: Gunnora (Gonnor) de CREPON ; Duvelina (Seinfreda?; Wevie?) de CREPON ; Herfast (Herbastus Arfast) de CREPON ; Wevia (Woerta) de CREPON ; sibling of Gunnora de CREPON ; Senfrida (Senfria)
Alternative Father of Possible Children: Herbastus (Herfastus) (Sire) de CREPON

================================================================================

[Geoffrey De Normandie, Gedcom BSJTK Smith Family Tree.ged]

Dead[Geoffrey De Normandie, Gedcom BSJTK Smith Family Tree.ged]

#Générale# Naissance : ou bien encore vers 911 (?)

I wish I was sure of every name in this file & that I didnt
need to know what you think :) hey, but always refining this,
So if you spot a place where Im just flat wrong please tell
me or someone I didnt go on out with, I do this file out of fun and wanting to know, but do not
respond to the 'know it alls' , that dont have manners.I dont
consider them Kin!
Thanks and Happy Hunting!

EVEN
TYPE Title (Facts Pg)
PLAC 'Forester of Arques'

TITL Final.ged
REPO
CALN
MEDI Other
DATA
TEXT Date of Import: Feb 1, 1999
TITL Final.ged
REPO
CALN
MEDI Other
DATA
TEXT Date of Import: Feb 1, 1999

DATE 20 JUN 2000

OCCU Forestier de Crepon ...
SOUR HAWKINS.GED says ABT 906;www.rootsweb.com/gumby says ABT 911, Normandy,
France; members.aol.com/sargen3 says ABT 911, Normandy, France;
www.teleport.com/ddonahue/donahue ;
of Arques - COMYNI.GED (Compuserve); Forester of Arques-Royalty for Commoners,
Roderick W. Stuart, p. 124

OCCU Forestier de Crepon ...
SOUR HAWKINS.GED says ABT 906;www.rootsweb.com/gumby says ABT 911, Normandy,
France; members.aol.com/sargen3 says ABT 911, Normandy, France;
www.teleport.com/ddonahue/donahue ;
of Arques - COMYNI.GED (Compuserve); Forester of Arques-Royalty for Commoners,
Roderick W. Stuart, p. 124

OCCU Forestier de Crepon ...
SOUR HAWKINS.GED says ABT 906;www.rootsweb.com/gumby says ABT 911, Normandy,
France; members.aol.com/sargen3 says ABT 911, Normandy, France;
www.teleport.com/ddonahue/donahue ;
of Arques - COMYNI.GED (Compuserve); Forester of Arques-Royalty for Commoners,
Roderick W. Stuart, p. 124

_MED Book
ABBR Royalty for Commoners
TITL Royalty for Commoners: The Complete Known Lineage of John of Gaunt, Son of Edward III, King of England, and Queen Philippa
AUTH Roderick W. Stuart
PUBL 3rd ed., 1998, Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., Baltimore, MD
Dead
_MED Book
ABBR Royalty for Commoners
TITL Royalty for Commoners: The Complete Known Lineage of John of Gaunt, Son of Edward III, King of England, and Queen Philippa
AUTH Roderick W. Stuart
PUBL 3rd ed., 1998, Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., Baltimore, MD
DATE 20 JUL 1999

TITL Final.ged
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MEDI Other
DATA
TEXT Date of Import: Feb 1, 1999
TITL Final.ged
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TEXT Date of Import: Feb 1, 1999

TITL pennington.FTW
REPO
CALN
MEDI Other
PAGE Tree #1222
DATA
TEXT Date of Import: Aug 19, 1997
TITL pennington.FTW
REPO
CALN
MEDI Other
PAGE Tree #1222
DATA
TEXT Date of Import: Aug 19, 1997

I wish I was sure of every name in this file & that I didnt
need to know what you think :) hey, but always refining this,
So if you spot a place where Im just flat wrong please tell
me or someone I didnt go on out with, I do this file out of fun and wanting to know, but do not
respond to the 'know it alls' , that dont have manners.I dont
consider them Kin!
Thanks and Happy Hunting!
GIVN Herbastus de
SURN Crepon
AFN 9HMF-4R
DATE 9 SEP 2000
TIME 13:15:39
The parentage of Gunnor and her siblings is unknown. While sources call
her father Herfastus, that was in fact the name of her brother.
{geni:occupation} Forester of Arques
{geni:about_me} '''A fictitious person. See Todd A. Farmerie, [http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~medieval/gunnor.htm Robert de Torigny and the family of Gunnor, Duchess of Normandy] (Dec. 1996).'''

Herbastus (Herfast) "the Dane"

Parents: Ranulf and his wife

Wife: (Josceline)

Children:

1. Sainsfrida (married to a forrester)

2. Gunnor (married Richard le Bon)

3. Herfast

4. Wevia (married Thorold)

5. Aveline (married Osbern)

6. (parent of Beatrice)

LINKS

http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/NORMAN%20NOBILITY.htm

NOTE

Although many people seem to claim that the father of the sisters and brother "de Crépon" was either King Harald Blatand (Bluetooth) of Denmark or his brother (son of Gorm the Old), this scenario seems very unlikely and lacks evidence. It is more likely that he was either a Danish immigrant to Normandy or the son of one, who settled in the area of Crépon in Calvados, Normandy, east of Bayeux. Some sources also associate him with the community of Arques, which is most likely the area which later became the site of the 11th century castle Arques-la-Bataille in Haute-Normandie near Dieppe. Some sources say that he was a forester in Arques.

--------------------------

Robert de Torigny and the family of Gunnor, Duchess of Normandy (by Todd A. Farmerie, Ph.D.; Dec 1996):

http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~medieval/gunnor.htm

Robert de Torigny, writing after the Norman Conquest, recorded the genealogical traditions which tied many of the Norman nobility to the family of Gunnor, first mistress of Richard I, then Duchess of Normandy. He reported the tradition that Richard had become infatuated with the wife of one of his foresters, but being the pious wife, she substituted her sister Gunnor, much to everyone's satisfaction. He proceded to name the siblings of Gunnor, and also indicated that she had numerous nieces, who are left unnamed, but whose marriages and descendants are provided.

The genealogical information contained in his account has at various times been praised and condemned, but recent opinion seems to favor the view that, while minor errors abound, the genealogies accurately represent a tradition of shared descent that may account for the rapid rise of these nobles.

The parentage of Gunnor and her siblings is unknown. While some sources call her father Herfastus, this was in fact the name of her brother. She has also been claimed as daughter of the Danish royal family, but there is no evidence for this, and the context of her coming to the attention of Richard I and the family's subsequent rise to power militates against her being a royal daughter. Douglas argued (in a 1944 English Historical Review article on the family of William Fitz Osbern), based on the donations of brother Arfast to the monastery of St. Pere, that the root of the family was in the Cotetin region of Normandy, but van Houts has suggested that the Cotetin land was granted to Arfast, rather than inherited by him. Thus we are left with the more ambiguous statements of Torigny and others that she was a member of a Norman family of Danish origins.

The only known brother of Gunnor was Arfast/Herfast, of whom we gain what little insight we have from a trial of heretics conducted by King Robert II of France. Arfast testified that he had pretended to join the sect, all the better to denounce them when the time arose. He later donated lands to the monastery of St. Pere, to which he retired. He had at least two sons: Osbern, who was steward to the later Dukes, and was murdered by William de Montgomery while defending the young Duke William; and Ranulf, known from charters. Osbern maried a niece of Richard I (the daughter of his half-brother) and by her was the father of the Conquest baron William Fitz Osbern.

Gunnor had at least three sisters, of which the oldest appears to have been Senfria (Seinfreda), who was wife of the (unnamed) forester from the area of St. Vaast d'Equiqueville, and it was her charms which are said first to have attracted the attentions Duke Richard I. She appears to have had at least one daughter, Joscelina, wife of Hugh de Montgomery. (Torigny makes Joscelina daughter of another sister, Wevia, but a contemporary of Torigny, in demonstrating the genealogical impediment to a marriage of a bastard of Henry I to a Montgomery descendant specifically calls Joscelina's mother Senfria, and the inheritance by the Montgomerys of large holdings suggests that Joscelina was a significant coheiress to her parents, which does not match Wevia's family where the two sons would be expected to acquire most of the family land.) Hugh de Montgomery and Joscelina had a son Roger, but contrary to Torigny's statements, he was not the Conquest baron of that name, but instead his father. By a wife possibly named Emma, Roger had: Hugh; Roger (who married Mabel of Belleme and played a significant role in pre-Conquest Normandy); William (who murdered cousin Osbern); Robert, and Gilbert.

Duvelina, a second sister of Gunnor, married Turulf de Pont Audemer, son of a Norman founder Torf, and uncle of the first of the Harcourts. They had at least one son, Humphrey de Vielles, who in turn was father of Roger de Beaumont, another Conquest-era baron.

Wevia, the only other sister of Gunnor named by Torigny, married Osbern de Bolbec (who is otherwise unknown to history). They had at least two sons: Walter Giffard, ancestor of the English Giffard/Gifford families, and also, through a daughter, of the Clare family; and Godfrey, whose son William de Arques had two daughters and co-heiresses.

Torigny indicates that Gunnor had numerous nieces, naming the descendants of several of them, but usually not naming the nieces themselves or their parents. As has already been seen with niece Joscelina, the accounts of these families are more difficult to harmonize with other available sources.

One niece is said to have married Nicholas de Bracqueville, and to have had William Martel and Walter de St. Martin. As to Martel, there seems to have been a connection to Bracqueville, since Hawise, daughter of Nicholas married Hugh de Wareham, son of a Grippo. Hugh had a brother Geoffrey Martel, but beyond this no recent analysis provides any insight as to the descent of the later Martels. Walter de St. Martin is even more of a problem, since elsewhere Torigny incorrectly makes him brother of William de Warenne, but the ancestry given there is clearly false. Thus it is not clear that Torigny knew the exact connection of Walter, and there is no evidence to help clarify his true origins.

A second niece is said to have married Richard, vicomte of Rouen (who was son of Tesselin). He had a son Lambert of St. Saens, whose son Helias married a bastard daughter of Robert II of Normandy. (If the connection here given is correct, then these two were within the prohibited degree, which may throw doubt on the relationship, or simply suggest that the relationship did not come to light at the time.) Based on later interactions between Montgomery and Warenne (thought to be related to this branch) it has been speculated that this niece was sister of Joscelina, which is possible but unsupported.

It appears to be through this family that the relationship of two more Norman barons come into play, but not exactly as Torigny presents it. He shows yet another niece marrying Ranulph de Warenne, and by him having William de Warenne and Roger de Mortimer. This is clearly untrue, because Roger appears to have been a generation older than William. The solution appears to be that Torigny (as he had done with the Montgomerys) compressed two people, a father and son of the same name, into one individual. Ranulph de Warenne (I) appears to have married Beatrice, sister of Richard, vicomte of Rouen, and thus sister-in-law of one of Gunnor's nieces (thus it would appear that this family actually does not descend from a relative of Gunnor's, but is genealogically linked to some of her descendants) and had sons: Roger (de Mortimer) and Ranulph de Warenne (II), who in turn was father of another Ranulf (III) and of William de Warenne.

Finally, Torigny states that a niece married Osmund de Centumvillis, vicomte of Vernon, and had a son Fulk de Alnou, and a daughter whose son was Baldwin de Reviers. Much debate has focussed on the attempt to identify these men, but in the latter case, clearly a connection to the Reviers/Vernon Earls of Devon is intended. The precise nature of the relationship is more difficult to pin down. It would seem that the first Earl Richard de Reviers and his brother Hugh were sons of a Baldwin, who had brothers Richard de Vernon (app. d.s.p.) and William Fitz Hugh de Vernon. (William, who was perhaps a uterine half-brother, had by wife Emma a son Hugh, often confused with the brother of Earl Richard. It is this error that has led to the statement that Emma was the relative of Gunnor, which derives from a set of relationships hypothesized in Complete Peerage (CP, under Devon) and predicated on her being mother of Hugh, brother of Earl Richard, an untrue relationship, and on Richard being nephew of William Fitz Osbern, which is discussed below.) If Baldwin, father of Earl Richard, was the same as the grandson of Osmund de Centumvillis this would complete the picture, but one more relationship invites comment. Earl Richard is said by an early source, cited by CP, to be nephew of William Fitz Osbern. If the stated connection with vicomte Osmund is correct, then Baldwin de Reviers would have been too closely related to William Fitz Osbern to have married his sister. (An alternative solution, that the wife of vicomte Osmund was sister of William Fitz Osbern, and hence grandniece of Gunnor, is chronologically impossible.) I suspect that this tradition records the memory that William Fitz Osbern was an older male relative of Richard, rather than a precise genealogical relationship.

The work of Robert de Torigny thus provides a valuable source for the genealogical origins of the immediate pre-Conquest Norman aristocracy. When it has been possible to compare the information with other sources, some inconsistancies are found, but it is unclear whether these represent errors of Robert, or inaccuracies in the genealogical traditions he was recording. In most cases, an in-depth study of the available material has enabled modern historians to satisfactorilly reconstruct the descents from Gunnor's family and provide a representation of the true relationships among these early Norman families.

--------------------------

MEDIEVAL LANDS

Chapter 1. EARLY NORMAN FAMILIES of VIKING ORIGIN

A. FAMILY of GUNNORA, mistress of RICHARD I Comte de NORMANDIE

Four sisters and one brother, parents not known, presumably of Viking origin:

1. SAINSFRIDA [Senfrie] . She and her three sisters, as well as their husbands, are named by Robert de Torigny[3]. The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines names "Seufriam" as sister of "Gunnor uxor…Richardi Normannis ducem"[4]. Guillaume de Jumièges records that "la femme d'un sien forestier…Sainfrie" rejected the advances of Richard I Comte [de Normandie] and sent her sister Gunnor to his bed in her place[5]. m ---. The name of Sainsfrida's husband is not known. Sainsfrida and her husband had one child:

a) JOSCELINE . The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines names "Iosceline" as daughter of "Seufriam"[6]. Josceline, her husband and her mother are named in a letter of Ives Bishop of Chartres to Henry I King of England dated 1114 which explains the consanguinity between the king and Hugues de Châteauneuf, who wanted to marry one of the king's illegitimate daughters[7]. m ROGER [I] Seigneur de Montgommery, son of ---.

2. GUNNORA ([950]-5 Jan 1031). She and her three sisters, as well as their husbands, are named by Robert de Torigny[8]. It appears from Dudo de Saint-Quentin and Robert de Torigny[9] that Gunnora was Richard I's mistress before she married him. According to William of Jumièges, she was "of noble Danish origin"[10]. According to Robert de Torigny, the marriage took place to legitimise Richard and Gunnora's son Robert to permit his appointment as Bishop of Rouen[11]. The necrology of Saint-Père-en-Vallée records the death "Non Jan" of "Gonnoridis…comitissa Normannie"[12]. m ([before 989]) as his second wife, RICHARD I “Sans Peur" Comte [de Normandie], son of GUILLAUME Comte [ de Normandie] & his first wife Sprota --- (Fécamp [932]-20 Nov 996, bur Fécamp).

3. HERFAST . Guillaume de Jumièges names "Herfast, frère de la comtesse Gunnor" when recording the murder of his son Osbern[13]. m ---. The name of Herfast's wife is not known. Herfast & his wife had two children:

a) OSBERN de Crépon (-murdered Vandreuil 1038). "Duke Richard [II]" donated property to the abbey of Mont Saint-Michel by charter dated to [1026], subscribed by "…Osbernus filius Arfast, Ranulfus frater eius"[14]. "…Osbe filius Herfasti…" witnessed the charter dated to [1030] under which Robert II Duke of Normandy confirmed rights of Mont Saint-Michel[15]. Steward (dapifer) of Guillaume II Duke of Normandy. "Osberni dapifer" witnessed the donation of "Erchembaldus vicecomes" dated [1030/35] and the donation of "Gulbertus filius Erchemboldus vicecomitis" dated after 1035[16]. He was strangled by Guillaume de Montgommery[17]. Guillaume de Jumièges records that "Osbern, intendant de la maison du prince [Guillaume II Duke of Normandy] et fils d'Herfast" was murdered at Vandreuil in the early years of the duke's reign by "Guillaume fils de Roger de Montgomeri"[18]. m EMMA d'Ivry, daughter of RAOUL d'Ivry Comte de Bayeux & his wife --- (-after [1067]). She is named as mother of Guillaume and Osbern in the donation to Sainte-Trinité de Rouen, dated to 1038 or after, which they made jointly for the soul of their father "Osbern cognomento Pacifici"[19]. "Emma matre eorum [Willelmi et Osberni]" witnessed a charter dated 1038 or after[20]. "Emma Osberni dapiferi uxore" is named as "dominis mei" with her two sons in the undated charter of Ansfredus[21]. "Emmæ matris eius" signed a charter of "Erchenbaldo filio Erchenbaldi vicecomitis", dated to [1067], immediately after "Willelmi filii Osberni"[22]. Osbern & his wife had three children:

i) GUILLAUME FitzOsbern (-killed in battle Cassel, Flanders 22 Feb 1071, bur Abbaye de Cormeilles). Guillaume de Jumièges names "Guillaume fils d'Osbern, proche parent du duc Guillaume", recording that he built the monasteries at Lire and Corneilles[23]. He is named as brother of Osbern, son of Emma, in his donation to Sainte-Trinité de Rouen dated 1038 or after, made jointly with his mother and brother[24]. "Willelmi filii Osberni" witnessed two charters dated 1035 or after and 1038 or after[25]. "…Guillelmi filii Osberni…" witnessed the charter dated 1054 under which Guillaume II Duke of Normandy confirmed the donation of "terram…Sancta Columba…dedit Niellus clericus" to the abbey of Mont-Saint-Michel[26]. "…Willelmi filii Osberti, Rotgerii de Monte Golmerii, Richardis vicecomitis Abrinchensis…" witnessed the charter dated [1055/56] under which Guillaume II Duke of Normandy "in pago…Constantino, villam…Flotomannum" to Saint-Florent de Saumur[27]. "…Guillelmus filius Osberti…Guillelmus filius Guillelmi filiii Osberti…" witnessed the charter dated to [1060] under which Guillaume II Duke of Normandy granted "Brenerias" to the abbey of Bayeux[28]. "Willelmus filius Osberti…" witnessed the charter dated 29 Aug 1060 under which "milite…Richardo…fratribus Willelmo…atque Balduino" donated "Gausberti Villa" to Chartres Saint-Père[29]. The Chronique de Normandie, based on le Roman de Rou, records that William I King of England made "le Conte Rogier de Montgomery et Guillaume le filz Osber" his two "Marechaulx d´Engleterre" after the conquest of England[30]. "Willelmi filii Osberni" signed a charter of "Erchenbaldo filio Erchenbaldi vicecomitis" dated 1067 or after[31]. "Willelmus comes filius Osberni dapiferi" made a donation to Sainte-Trinité de Rouen dated 1068[32]. He was rewarded for his part in the conquest of England with estates in the Isle of Wight and county of Hereford, thereby becoming Earl of Hereford.

- EARLS of HEREFORD.

ii) OSBERN (-1101). He is named as brother of Guillaume, son of Emma, in his donation to Sainte-Trinité de Rouen dated 1038 or after, made jointly with his mother and brother[33]. "Osberni frater eius [Willelmi]" witnessed a charter dated 1038 or after[34]. Chancellor of England. Bishop of Exeter 1072[35].

iii) EMMA . "Emma conjux eius" donated land belonging to the castle of Vernon to Sainte-Trinité de Rouen jointly with her husband, dated 1066[36]. Guillaume de Vernon, his son Hugues and his wife Emma donated property to Rouen Holy Trinity, confirmed in the charter dated to [1067][37]. Her parentage is confirmed by a charter of Carisbrooke Priory, Isle of Wight which names “Johannem et Ricardum” as the two sons of “Willielmum filium Osberni marescallum…comitem Herefordiæ” who predeceased their father, and records that their inheritance went to “Ricardo de Rivers, nepoti prædicti Willielmi filii Osberni, tunc comiti Exoniæ”[38]. m GUILLAUME de Vernon, son of HUGUES de Vernon & his wife ---.

b) RAINULF . "Duke Richard [II]" donated property to the abbey of Mont Saint-Michel by charter dated to [1026], subscribed by "…Osbernus filius Arfast, Ranulfus frater eius"[39].

4. WEWA . She and her three sisters, as well as their husbands, are named by Robert de Torigny[40]. Guillaume de Jumièges names "Gueuve et Aveline" as two sisters of Gunnor, recording that the former married "Turulfe de Pont-Audemer, son of Torf"[41]. The Genealogia Fundatoris of Tintern Abbey, Monmouthshire records that the (unnamed) sister of ”Gunnora comitissa Normanniæ” married “Turulpho de Ponte-Adomaro”[42]. m THOROLD de Pont-Audemer, son of [TORF & his wife ---] (-after 1040).

5. [AVELINE] . She and her three sisters, as well as their husbands, are named by Robert de Torigny[43]. Guillaume de Jumièges names "Gueuve et Aveline" as two sisters of Gunnor, the latter married to Osbern de Bolbec[44]. On the other hand, the Genealogia Fundatoris of Tintern Abbey, Monmouthshire names ”Turketillus…frater…Turulphi, cuius filius Hasculfus d´Harcourt” married “aliam sororem…comitissæ Gunnoræ” by whom he was father of “duos…filios…Walterum de Giffard primogenitum…”[45]. As noted under Giffard, another primary source indicates that the wife of "Osbernus Giffardus" (assumed to refer to Osbern de Bolbec given that his son used the name Giffard) was named Hawise[46]. It is not known whether Osbern was married twice or whether all the sources cited refer to the same person, one or other mistaking the name. m [as his first wife,] OSBERN de Bolbec, son of ---.

6. [--- . It is not known which brother or sister of Gunnor was the parent of Beatrice.]

a) BEATRIX . Guillaume de Jumièges records that one of the nieces of Gunnor, mistress of Richard I Comte [de Normandie], married "le père du premier Guillaume de Warenne"[47]. "Rodulf de Warenne" sold property to the abbey of Holy Trinity, Rouen by charter dated to [1055], signed by "eiusdem Rodulfi de Guarethna, Beatricis uxoris eius…"[48]. m as his first wife, RODULF de Warenne, son of --- .

--------------------

--------------------

The Forester of Argues. {For line see "Interpolation of Jumieges," Robert de Torigny, and "The Genealogist," New

Series, 37:57.}

References: [RGD],[RFC],[GENSERV],[Moncreiffe],[LDS-AF],[ES], [ConverseA]

--------------------

Herbastus is our ancestor through four lines of descent: through his son Herbastus and through each of his three daughters Wevia, Gunnor, and Seinfreda.

Sprote was not really his daughter. This is a mistake that I do not know how to undo. (Allan)

See "My Lines"

( http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/p45.htm#i5198 )

from Compiler: R. B. Stewart, Evans, GA

( http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cousin/html/index.htm )

--------------------

Note: Title: Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists, 7th Edition, by Frederick Lewis Weis, additions by Walter Lee Shippard Jr., 1999

# Note: Page: 121e-20

# Note: Text: Forester of Arque (no name)

--------------------
BIOGRAPHY: . c. 910

d. c. 985,, Jumne, Den.

byname HARALD BLUETOOTH, DANISH HARALD BLÅTAND, king of Denmark from c. 940 to c. 985, credited with the first unification of the country.

He was the son of Gorm the Old, the first significant figure in a new royal line centred at Jelling (North Jutland). Harald completed the country's unification begun by his father, converted the Danes to Christianity, and conquered Norway. After Harald's Baptism (c. 960) his father's pagan tomb was transformed into a Christian place of worship with a church between two great mounds; and the newly appointed Jutland bishops, under the Archbishop of Hamburg, organized the country's conversion. The expansion begun by Harald in Norway was continued by his son Sweyn I, who conquered England in 1013. Under Sweyn's son Canute there grew up a great Anglo-Scandinavian kingdom that included parts of Sweden.

Copyright © 1994-2001 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.

Harold Bluetooth

(BLAATAND)

Born 911; died 1 November, 985 or 986. He was the son of King Gorm the Old of Denmark and of Thyra, daughter of a noblemen of Schleswig (Sunderjylland) who is supposed to have been kindly disposed towards Christianity <http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03712a.htm>. His mother must have implanted in the child's soul the first germs of faith which his father, a devout servant of Wotan, did his utmost to destroy. The latter's invasion of Friesland in 934 involved him in war with the German King, Henry I. Having been vanquished, he was forced to restore the churches which he had demolished as well as to grant toleration to his Christian <http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03712a.htm> subjects, and he died one year later, bequeathing his throne to Harold. Bishop Unni of Bremen, accompanied by Benedictine monks from the Abbey of Corvey, preached the gospel in Jutland (Jylland) and the Danish isles, and soon won the confidence of the young ruler, although he did not succeed in persuading him to receive baptism. Harold sought to shut the Germans out of his kingdom by strengthening the "Danawirk"–a series of ramparts and fortifications that existed until the latter half of the nineteenth century; moreover, as absolute quiet prevailed throughout the interior, he was even able to turn his thoughts to foreign enterprises. Again and again he came to the help of Richard the Fearless of Normandy (in the years 945 and 963), while his son conquered Semland and, after the assassination of King Harold Graafeld of Norway, he also managed to force the people of that country into temporary subjection to himself. Meanwhile the new religion had become more and more deeply rooted among the Danes. Even a few members of the nobility (such as Frode, Viceroy of Jutland) embraced the faith and soon episcopal sees were established (Schleswig, Ribe, Aarhus). However the prominent part the Germans had in these achievements as well as the lofty idea of the Roman Empire then prevailing led Otto I, the Great, to require Harold to recognize him as "advocatus", or lord protector of the Danish church, and even as "Lord Paramount". It is easy to understand why the indignant king of the Danes replied to this demand with a declaration of war, and why the "emperor" sought to force his "vassal" into subjection. The devastating expeditions, which were pushed as far as the Lÿmfjord, enabled the emperor to beat down all opposition (972), and to compel Harold not only to conclude peace but to accept baptism. Henceforth paganism steadily lost ground. The Bishopric of Odense was established at Fünen (Fyen) in 980; the sacrificial grove at Lethra (on Zealand), which, until then, had been from time to time the scene of many human sacrifices, was deserted. King Harold removed his royal residence to Roeskilde and erected there a wooden church dedicated to the Holy Trinity. Later (in the eleventh century) it was replaced by a basilica which in turn was soon torn down. Since about the year 1200 its site has been occupied by the Gothic cathedral (dedicated to St. Lucius), the burial place of the kings of Denmark. Christian <http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03712a.htm> houses of worship were also built in many other places during Harold's reign; in these German and Danish priests preached the gospel of the crucified and risen Saviour. There is no doubt that Harold professed Christianity <http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03712a.htm> at that time: it is also true that he contributed to its spread. But his moral conduct in many respects distinctly violated the Divine commandments. Consequently many people looked on the plots that were directed against the sovereignty and life of the ageing prince by his own son (Svend) as a punishment from Heaven. Although baptized, the latter joined forces with Palnatoke, the most powerful chieftain on Fünen, who was leader of the heathen party. The fortunes of war varied for a time, but finally Harold was slain on 1 November, 985 or 986. His remains were buried in the cathedral at Roeskilde, where his bones are still preserved, walled up in one of the pillars of the choir.
--------------------
HIs children included :

Seinfreda de Crepon b. c 932

Herbastus de Crepon b. c 935

Duvelina de Crepon b. c 936

Gunnor de Crepon b. 936, d. 1031

Wevia de Crepon b. c 950

All married into either royalty or were well matched in powerful families.
--------------------
Occupation: Forester of Argues
--------------------
Herbastus de Crepon Sr.

b. 914

Herbastus de Crepon Sr. was born in 914.

Family

Children

* Seinfreda de Crepon+ b. c 932

* Herbastus de Crepon Jr.+ b. c 935

* Duvelina de Crepon+ b. c 936

* Gunnor de Crepon+ b. 936, d. 1031

* Wevia de Crepon+ b. c 950
_P_CCINFO 1-3597
BIOGRAPHY: Forester of Arques
--Other Fields

Ref Number: 625
_P_CCINFO 2-2438
[Hirt saga July 04 Ged.FTW]

also known as Harold VII (III) * Denmark (Blaatand/Bluetooth)

Please contact (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX) with any corrections/additions.
OR "HERBASTUS"; KING OF DENMARK
33rd great grandfather
SOURCE NOTES:
http://uts.cc.utexas.edu/~churchh/edw3chrt.html
RESEARCH NOTES:
Forester of Arques, Sire of Crepon
edw3chrt has a date of 1002. This seems late.
Alias: "Bluetooth" King of /Denmark/
Harald refused to accept the crown until he had first performed his
father's obsequies with all the magnificencebecoming his high rank. One
of his earliest was the conquest of Norway, which became a province of
Denmark. Styrbear, King of Sweden, solicited the aid of King Harold in
one of his wars, and to enforce his request he brought alongwith him
Gyntha, his sister, a lady of admirable beauty. The stratagem had the
intended effect; Harold Bluetooth became enamored and married her. The
progress of Christianity gained some headway during his reign, and the
King received baptism, and erected a splendid church. His daughter
Gunilda married Richard I, Duke of Normandy.
!King of Denmark

Data From Lynn Jeffrey Bernhard, 2445 W 450 South #4, Springville UT 84663-4950
email - (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)
_P_CCINFO 1-20792
Name Suffix: King of Denmark Ancestral File Number: 9HMF-4R AKA Harold Blantand or Bluetooth. King of Denmark 931 -979. There if a period of 38years where no king of Denmark is listed, probabley Harold Parcus and Gormo Del Gammel are the missing Kings. Harold is listed as both Both Harold VII andHarold VIII There is a problem in this line, in this area, both Harde Knud and Frotho VI, King of Denmark, are listed as the father of Gromo; who was the father of Harold" Blantand"( Bluetooth), King of Denmark (910 - 986). Harolds mother is listed as Sida and/or Thyre - Gormo's Wives. More research needs to bedone in this area. Harold Gormosson is listed in Scandinavian Mythology as Harald "Wartooth" and/or Harald "Greycloak", who was bapitized a Christian by thepriest, Poppo. He was the frist Christian King of Denmark. Ancesrry and Progentry of Captain James Blount - Immigrant, by Robert F. Pfafman, p E-33.
_UIDE7873C69635D0741A6FC02A5AD0B68EA6E10
Original individual @P2203942341@ (@MS_NHFETTERLYFAMIL0@) merged with @P2203942566@ (@MS_NHFETTERLYFAMIL0@)
Original individual @P2689361025@ (@MS_NHFETTERLYFAMIL0@) merged with @P2203432572@ (@MS_NHFETTERLYFAMIL0@)
Original individual @P2689361025@ (@MS_NHFETTERLYFAMIL0@) merged with @P2203553270@ (@MS_NHFETTERLYFAMIL0@)
Original individual @P2689361025@ (@MS_NHFETTERLYFAMIL0@) merged with @P2689280808@ (@MS_NHFETTERLYFAMIL0@)
Original individual @P2689361025@ (@MS_NHFETTERLYFAMIL0@) merged with @P2203942341@ (@MS_NHFETTERLYFAMIL0@)
Original individual @P2689361025@ (@MS_NHFETTERLYFAMIL0@) merged with @P2689366867@ (@MS_NHFETTERLYFAMIL0@)
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Original individual @P2203942353@ (@MS_NHFETTERLYFAMIL0@) merged with @P2689366872@ (@MS_NHFETTERLYFAMIL0@)
Original individual @P2203942353@ (@MS_NHFETTERLYFAMIL0@) merged with @P2689280818@ (@MS_NHFETTERLYFAMIL0@)
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Original individual @P2203942353@ (@MS_NHFETTERLYFAMIL0@) merged with @P2203947349@ (@MS_NHFETTERLYFAMIL0@)

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    • La température au 19 décembre 1992 était entre 4,8 et 10,5 °C et était d'une moyenne de 6,9 °C. Il y avait une précipitation de 3,1 mm pendant 4,8 heure(s). Il faisait presque totalement couvert. La force moyenne du vent était de 2 Bft (vent faible) et venait principalement du au nord. Source: KNMI
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      • 11 février » collision entre le USS Baton Rouge et K-276 Kostroma, près de Mourmansk, en Russie.
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    La publication Arbre généalogique Homs a été préparée par .contacter l'auteur
    Lors de la copie des données de cet arbre généalogique, veuillez inclure une référence à l'origine:
    George Homs, "Arbre généalogique Homs", base de données, Généalogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/stamboom-homs/I6000000000424705521.php : consultée 13 juin 2024), "Herbastus 'le Danois' de Crépon (± 890-987)".