Hij is getrouwd met Adélaïs / Aélis von Sundgau.
Zij zijn getrouwd rond 845 te Tours,France.
Kind(eren):
Name Prefix:Count Name Suffix: Count Of Argengau
Name Suffix:III
Titled Count in the Argengau and in the Linzgau , Count of Auxere, Lay Abbot of St. Germain d'Auxerre
Titled Count in the Argengau and in the Linzgau , Count of Auxere, Lay Abbot of St. Germain d'Auxerre
Titled Count in the Argengau and in the Linzgau , Count of Auxere, Lay Abbot of St. Germain d'Auxerre
[s2.FTW]
[Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #1241, Date of Import: May 8, 1997]
!COUNT OF AUXERRE[Brøderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #1241, Date of Import: May 8, 1997]
!COUNT OF AUXERRE
Conrad I, Count of Auxerre
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Conrad I the Elder was the count of several counties, most notably the Aargau and Auxerre, around Lake Constance, as well as Paris from 859 to 864. He was also the lay abbot of Saint-Germaine in Auxerre.
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 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.
Conrad's father was Welf.
[edit] Sources
* The Annals of Fulda. (Manchester Medieval series, Ninth-Century Histories, Volume II.) Reuter, Timothy (trans.) Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1992.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:Moriarty, G Andrews, Plantagenet Ancestry of King Edward III And Queen Philippa. Salt Lake: Mormon Pioneer Genealogical Society, 1985. LDS Film#0441438. nypl#ARF-86-2555.
Paget, Gerald, The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales. London: Charles Skilton Ltd, 1977. Nypl ARF+ 78-835.
Schwennicke, Detlev, ed., Europaische Stammtafeln: Stammtafeln zur Geschichte der europaischen Staaten, New Series. I.2: Premysliden, Askanier, Herzoge von Lothringen, die Hauser Hessen, Wurttemberg und Zahringen. Frankfurt am Main: Vittorio Klostermann, 1999.
Schwennicke, Detlev, ed., Europaische Stammtafeln: Stammtafeln zur Geschichte der europaischen Staaten, New Series. I: Die Stammesherzoge, Die Weltlichenkurforsten, Die Kaiserlichen, Koniglichen und Grossherzoglichen Familien. Marburg: Verlag von J. A. Stargardt, 1980.
Schwennicke, Detlev, ed., Europaische Stammtafeln: Stammtafeln zur Geschichte der europaischen Staaten, New Series. II: Die Ausserdeutschen Staaten Die Regierenden Hauser der Ubrigen Staaten Europas. Marburg: Verlag von J. A. Stargardt, 1984.
Schwennicke, Detlev, ed., Europaische Stammtafeln: Stammtafeln zur Geschichte der europaischen Staaten, New Series. III/1 (#1-#200): Herzogs und Grafenhauser des Heiligen Romischen Reiches Andere Europaische Furstenhauser. Marburg: Verlag von J. A. Stargardt, 1984. III/2 (#201-#400): Nichtstandesgemasse und Illegitime Nachkommen der Regierenden Hauser Europas. Marburg: Verlag von J. A. Stargardt, 1983. III/3 (#401-#600): Andere Grosse Eurpaische Familien, Illegitime Nachkommen Spanischer und Portugiesischer Konigshauser. Marburg: Verlag von J. A. Stargardt, 1985. III/4 (#601-#820): Das Feudale Frankreich und sein Einfluss auf die Welt des Mittelalters. Marburg: Verlag von J. A. Stargardt, 1989. III/5 (#821-#1000): Seitenverwandte der Rurikiden. Frankfurt am Main: Vittorio Klostermann, 2004.
Weis, Frederick Lewis, Walter Lee Sheppard, Jr, David Faris, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists who came to America before 1700, 7th Edition, Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co, 1992.
Wurts, John S., Magna Charta: The Pedigrees of the Barons, Philadelphia, PA: Brookfield Publishing Co, 1942.
RESEARCH NOTES:Count of Auxerra [Ref: ES I.2 #200A] Count in the Argengau [Ref: Moriarty Plantagenet p9] Count in the Bergen and Linzgaus, Count of Auxerra [Ref: Moriarty Plantagenet p17] Lay Abbot of St. Germain [Ref: Moriarty Plantagenet p17]
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
BIBLIOGRAPHY:Moriarty, G Andrews, Plantagenet Ancestry of King Edward III And Queen Philippa. Salt Lake: Mormon Pioneer Genealogical Society, 1985. LDS Film#0441438. nypl#ARF-86-2555.
Paget, Gerald, The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales. London: Charles Skilton Ltd, 1977. Nypl ARF+ 78-835.
Schwennicke, Detlev, ed., Europaische Stammtafeln: Stammtafeln zur Geschichte der europaischen Staaten, New Series. I.2: Premysliden, Askanier, Herzoge von Lothringen, die Hauser Hessen, Wurttemberg und Zahringen. Frankfurt am Main: Vittorio Klostermann, 1999.
Schwennicke, Detlev, ed., Europaische Stammtafeln: Stammtafeln zur Geschichte der europaischen Staaten, New Series. I: Die Stammesherzoge, Die Weltlichenkurforsten, Die Kaiserlichen, Koniglichen und Grossherzoglichen Familien. Marburg: Verlag von J. A. Stargardt, 1980.
Schwennicke, Detlev, ed., Europaische Stammtafeln: Stammtafeln zur Geschichte der europaischen Staaten, New Series. II: Die Ausserdeutschen Staaten Die Regierenden Hauser der Ubrigen Staaten Europas. Marburg: Verlag von J. A. Stargardt, 1984.
Schwennicke, Detlev, ed., Europaische Stammtafeln: Stammtafeln zur Geschichte der europaischen Staaten, New Series. III/1 (#1-#200): Herzogs und Grafenhauser des Heiligen Romischen Reiches Andere Europaische Furstenhauser. Marburg: Verlag von J. A. Stargardt, 1984. III/2 (#201-#400): Nichtstandesgemasse und Illegitime Nachkommen der Regierenden Hauser Europas. Marburg: Verlag von J. A. Stargardt, 1983. III/3 (#401-#600): Andere Grosse Eurpaische Familien, Illegitime Nachkommen Spanischer und Portugiesischer Konigshauser. Marburg: Verlag von J. A. Stargardt, 1985. III/4 (#601-#820): Das Feudale Frankreich und sein Einfluss auf die Welt des Mittelalters. Marburg: Verlag von J. A. Stargardt, 1989. III/5 (#821-#1000): Seitenverwandte der Rurikiden. Frankfurt am Main: Vittorio Klostermann, 2004.
Weis, Frederick Lewis, Walter Lee Sheppard, Jr, David Faris, Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists who came to America before 1700, 7th Edition, Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co, 1992.
Wurts, John S., Magna Charta: The Pedigrees of the Barons, Philadelphia, PA: Brookfield Publishing Co, 1942.
RESEARCH NOTES:Count of Auxerra [Ref: ES I.2 #200A] Count in the Argengau [Ref: Moriarty Plantagenet p9] Count in the Bergen and Linzgaus, Count of Auxerra [Ref: Moriarty Plantagenet p17] Lay Abbot of St. Germain [Ref: Moriarty Plantagenet p17]
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
[2620] WSHNGT.ASC file (Geo Wash Ah'tafel) # 558134220 = 14714976
[2924] OCCU Count of Auxerre ...
BIRTH: COMYNI.GED (Compuserve)
DEATH:
COMYNI.GED (Compuserve)
COMYN4.TAF (Compuserve) PAGE 9
DEAT QUAY 0
Konrad I - COMYN4.TAF (Compuserve), p. 9; Konrad (Welf) d'Auxerre - COMYNI.GED (Compuserve)
Kinship II - A collection of family, friends and U.S. Presidents
URL: http://worldconnect.genealogy.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=:2902060&id=I575151002
ID: I575151002
Name: Conrad I Of AUXERRE
Given Name: Conrad I Of
Surname: AUXERRE
Sex: M
Birth: Abt 0800 in Of Burgundy, France
Change Date: 7 Apr 2003 1 1
Note:
Name Prefix: Count
Ancestral File Number: FLHG-HQ
Marriage 1 Adela De TOURS b: Abt 0802 in Of, Tours, , France
Note: _UID68140D3F59E8A84E865EDE05739C1F8F8383
Children
Conrad II Of AUXERRE b: 0825 in , Burgundy, France
Sources:
Author: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Title: Ancestral File (R)
Publication: Copyright (c) 1987, June 1998, data as of 5 January 1998
Repository
============================================
[Geoffrey De Normandie, Gedcom BSJTK Smith Family Tree.ged]
TITLE: Count of Burgundy & Swabia
AFN#: FLHG-HQ & 9HQD-R7
TITLE: Count of Auxerre
NOTE: End Of Line (CHK)
GIVN Conrad of
SURN Burgundy
NSFX Count of Auxerre*
OCCU Count of Auxerre ...
SOUR COMYNI.GED (Compuserve), #1060 says ABT 800;www.rootsweb.com/gumby says
ABT 800, Burgundy, France; Royalty for Commoners, Roderick W. Stuart, p. 214
says c800; HAWKINS.GED says ABT 800;
SOUR HAWKINS.GED says 16-Feb- 863;www.public.asu.edu/bgertz/family/d0000 says 863;
Royalty for Commoners, Roderick W. Stuart, p. 214;
ROYAL.THD (Compuserve) says ABT 862
Konrad I - COMYN4.TAF (Compuserve), p. 9; Konrad (Welf) d'Auxerre - COMYNI.GED
(Compuserve); Konrad I Welf, Count in the Argen and Linzgau, Count of Auxerre,
Lay Abbot of St. Germain d'Auxerre - ANJOU.TXT (Compuserve); Count in the
Argengau & in the Linzgau,Count of Auxerre-Royalty for Commoners, Roderick W.
Stuart, p. 17; Count of Aargau - p. 164; Lay Abbot of St. Germain d'Auxerre-
p. 214; Count of Burgundy and Swabia - www.rootsweb.com/gumby
OCCU Count of Auxerre ...
SOUR COMYNI.GED (Compuserve), #1060 says ABT 800;www.rootsweb.com/gumby says
ABT 800, Burgundy, France; Royalty for Commoners, Roderick W. Stuart, p. 214
says c800; HAWKINS.GED says ABT 800;
SOUR HAWKINS.GED says 16-Feb- 863;www.public.asu.edu/bgertz/family/d0000 says 863;
Royalty for Commoners, Roderick W. Stuart, p. 214;
ROYAL.THD (Compuserve) says ABT 862
Konrad I - COMYN4.TAF (Compuserve), p. 9; Konrad (Welf) d'Auxerre - COMYNI.GED
(Compuserve); Konrad I Welf, Count in the Argen and Linzgau, Count of Auxerre,
Lay Abbot of St. Germain d'Auxerre - ANJOU.TXT (Compuserve); Count in the
Argengau & in the Linzgau,Count of Auxerre-Royalty for Commoners, Roderick W.
Stuart, p. 17; Count of Aargau - p. 164; Lay Abbot of St. Germain d'Auxerre-
p. 214; Count of Burgundy and Swabia - www.rootsweb.com/gumby
DATE 3 MAY 2000
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, 1997TITLE: Count of Burgundy & Swabia
AFN#: FLHG-HQ & 9HQD-R7
TITLE: Count of Auxerre
NOTE: End Of Line (CHK)
GIVN Conrad of
SURN Burgundy
NSFX Count of Auxerre*
OCCU Count of Auxerre ...
SOUR COMYNI.GED (Compuserve), #1060 says ABT 800;www.rootsweb.com/gumby says
ABT 800, Burgundy, France; Royalty for Commoners, Roderick W. Stuart, p. 214
says c800; HAWKINS.GED says ABT 800;
SOUR HAWKINS.GED says 16-Feb- 863;www.public.asu.edu/bgertz/family/d0000 says 863;
Royalty for Commoners, Roderick W. Stuart, p. 214;
ROYAL.THD (Compuserve) says ABT 862
Konrad I - COMYN4.TAF (Compuserve), p. 9; Konrad (Welf) d'Auxerre - COMYNI.GED
(Compuserve); Konrad I Welf, Count in the Argen and Linzgau, Count of Auxerre,
Lay Abbot of St. Germain d'Auxerre - ANJOU.TXT (Compuserve); Count in the
Argengau & in the Linzgau,Count of Auxerre-Royalty for Commoners, Roderick W.
Stuart, p. 17; Count of Aargau - p. 164; Lay Abbot of St. Germain d'Auxerre-
p. 214; Count of Burgundy and Swabia - www.rootsweb.com/gumby
OCCU Count of Auxerre ...
SOUR COMYNI.GED (Compuserve), #1060 says ABT 800;www.rootsweb.com/gumby says
ABT 800, Burgundy, France; Royalty for Commoners, Roderick W. Stuart, p. 214
says c800; HAWKINS.GED says ABT 800;
SOUR HAWKINS.GED says 16-Feb- 863;www.public.asu.edu/bgertz/family/d0000 says 863;
Royalty for Commoners, Roderick W. Stuart, p. 214;
ROYAL.THD (Compuserve) says ABT 862
Konrad I - COMYN4.TAF (Compuserve), p. 9; Konrad (Welf) d'Auxerre - COMYNI.GED
(Compuserve); Konrad I Welf, Count in the Argen and Linzgau, Count of Auxerre,
Lay Abbot of St. Germain d'Auxerre - ANJOU.TXT (Compuserve); Count in the
Argengau & in the Linzgau,Count of Auxerre-Royalty for Commoners, Roderick W.
Stuart, p. 17; Count of Aargau - p. 164; Lay Abbot of St. Germain d'Auxerre-
p. 214; Count of Burgundy and Swabia - www.rootsweb.com/gumby
DATE 3 MAY 2000
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, 1997Dead
DeadKarl der Grosse..Charlemagne URL: http://www.aritek.com/hartgen/htm/charlemagne.htm
Princess Adelahide of Tours - also known as: Adelheid - was born about 0824, lived in Tours, France and died after 0866 . She was the daughter of Emporer Louis I "The Pious" of Roman Empire and Ermengarde de Hesbaye.
Princess Adelahide married Duke Robert "Fortis - the Strong" of France IV about 0846 in France. Duke Robert was born about 0820, lived in France. He was the son of Rutpert (Robert) III of Wormsgau and Wiltrud of Orleans. He died on 25 Aug 0866 in Anjou, France .
Duke Robert - Robert the Strong (died 866), count of Anjou and Blois; at first rebelled against Charles the Bald but later won king's confidence by defense of the Seine and Loire valleys against the Normans and Bretons; his two sons, Odo and Robert I, became kings of France.
Then Princess Adelahide married Count Conrad I of Auxerre. Count Conrad was born about 0795, lived in Burgundy, France.
Kilde: Wurts, John S., Magna Charta: The Pedigrees of the Barons,
Philadelphia, PA: Brookfield Publishing Co, 1942.
Kilde: date: [Ref: Wurts p428], parents: [Ref: Wurts p428]
Kilde: names: [Ref: Wurts p428] Kilde: date: [Ref: Wurts p428] //
[Alan B. Wilson,] : 'The descent
from Charlemagne through Hugues 'l'Abbe' appears in Turton, The
Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 6. [Turton cites Louis de Mas Latrie, Tresor
le chronologie, 1889]. It also is outlined in Michel Call's Pedigree
Chart No. 502 and Family Group Sheet No. 935. Call cites Turton and
Collett's collection of unpublished pedigree charts.'
[Nat Taylor,] : ' Turton cannot be cited
as an authority; his source, the 'TrÚsor de chronologie', must also be
incorrect if it indeed identifies Hugh the Abbot with Hugh,
illegitimate son of Charlemagne. Hugh the Abbot (d. 886) was, as Cam
Dyck said correctly, son of Conrad, count of Paris and Auxerre (d. ca.
862), of the Welf family (see Europaische Stammtafeln III:736) and
Adelaide, daughter of Hugh, count of Tours (Adelaid married second
Robert the Strong, and was mother of the first Robertine kings Odo and
Robert I, who were thus Hugh the Abbot's half-brothers. Hugh of Tours
was probably of the Etichonid family (see Vollmer, 'Die Etichonen' in
Studien und Vorarbeiten zur Geschichte des grossfrankischen Adels, ed.
Gerd Tellenbach (1957), especially the chart at p. 183). It is through
this Hugh of Tours (d. 826) that the given name 'Hugh' passed both to
the Capetians, and (through the Welf brother of Hugh the Abbot) to the
early Burgundian dynasty (where it appeared in the person of Hugh 'the
Black', Duke of Burgundy, d. 952), and also, through Adelaide's
sister's marriage to Emperor Lothar I, to the Carolingians and their
successors in Italy and Savoy. The Welf Hugh the Abbot was generally
believed to have died s.p.. His identification as the father of
Petronilla, wife of Tertullus, ancestor of the Angevins, is based on a
mistaken reading of the medieval text 'Gesta consulum andegavensis',
edited by Louis Halphen and Rene Poupardin (Paris, 1913). The text
actually says that she was a relative of Hugh the Abbot and doesn't say
he was her father. Bernard Bachrach discusses the accuracy of this text
in his article 'Some Origins of the Angevin Dynasty,' Medieval
Prosopography 10/2 (1989), 1-23. He corrects it by drawing a dotted
line between Hugh the Abbot and Petronilla in his genealogical table of
the Angevins. But at any rate Hugh was not the son of Charlemagne.
That was another Hugh, abbot of Saint-Quentin, who died in battle on
June 14, 844 (see Bernard W. Scholz, Carolingian Chronicles (Ann
Arbor, 1970), p. 207, note 7). But this is all nitpicking as the
original point of your message, to demonstrate multiple descents of the
earliest Anglo-Norman kings of England from Charlemagne, is perfectly
correct. The problem is, of course, that mistaken identifications made
by Turton and others continue to make the rounds in people's databases
and on their pedigree charts and on the usenet even when contradicted
by perfectly clear, solid scholarly work. //
21 Sept. 862 ?
#Générale##Générale#de Linzgau, de Paris, dit Conrad Welf, 1ʻ mari
s: theroff.welf
note couple : #Générale#s:ds01.200a ; ds03.736 ; Auréjac ; MJ Delrieu
{geni:about_me} http://genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00020396&tree=LEO
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/190252845/conrad-de_bourgogne
Conrad I "l'Ancien" was the count of several counties, most notably the Aargau and Auxerre, around Lake Constance, as well as Paris from 859 to 864. He was also the lay abbot of Saint-Germain in Auxerre.
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 and his sons Hugh and Conrad the Younger — abandoned theirsovereign 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.
Conrad's father was Welf.
=-------------------- =
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/SWABIAN%20NOBILITY.htm#WelfIdied824B
CONRAD "l'Ancien" (-22 Mar [862/66]). Thegan's Vita Hludowici Imperatoris names (in order) "Chuonradum et Ruodolfum" as brothers of Empress Judith[973]. Graf von Linz- und Argengau. Dux. Nithard records that Conrad and his brother Rudolf were forcibly tonsured in [Apr 830] by their sister's stepson, Lothar, then in revolt against his father, and sent to Aquitaine "to be held by Pepin"[974]. Comte de Paris. The Miraculis Sancti Germani record that "Chuonradus princeps" was cured of an eye problem by the saint, and that he built the church of Saint-Germain at Auxerre in thanks[975]. An agreement between Charles II "le Chauve" King of the West Franks and his brother Ludwig II "der Deutsche" King of the East Franks dated Jun 860 names "nobilis ac fidelibus laicis…Chuonradus, Evrardus, Adalardus, Arnustus, Warnarius, Liutfridus, Hruodolfus, Erkingarius, Gislebertus, Ratbodus, Arnulfus, Hugo, item Chuonradus, Liutharius, Berengarius, Matfridus, Boso, Sigeri, Hartmannus, Liuthardus, Richuinus, Wigricus, Hunfridus, Bernoldus, Hatto, Adalbertus, Burchardus, Christianus, Leutulfus, Hessi, Herimannus, item Hruodulfus, Sigehardus"[976]. "Ludowicus…rex" confirmed an exchange between Grimald abbot of St Gallen and "quidam comis…Chuonratus" relating to property in Linzgau and Argengau, by charter dated 1 Apr 861[977]. A poem by Walahfridus Strabus records the epitaph of "Chonradum comitem"[978]. The necrology of Auxerre cathedral records the death 22 Mar of "Conradus comes"[979].
m ADELAIS [de Tours], daughter of HUGUES Comte [de Tours] & his wife Ava ---. The Miraculis Sancti Germani name "Adheleid" as wife of "Chuonradus princeps"[980]. A poem by Walahfridus Strabus records the epitaph of "Adelheidam"[981]. The primary source which confirms her parentage has not yet been identified. Some secondary works[982] assert that the second husband of Adelais was Robert "le Fort" [Capet]. If this is correct, Adelais must have been Comte Robert's second or third wife as his known children were already born by the time Adelais's husband Conrad died. The assertion appears based on the Chronicle of St Bénigne de Dijon which names "duo filii Rotberti Andegavorum comitis, frs Hugonis abbatis, senior Odo…Robertus alter"[983]. Settipani states that the passage is a 12th century interpolation and has little historical value, although he does suggest that it is likely that the wife of Comte Robert was a close relation of Adelais without providing the basis for this statement[984]. A family connection between Comte Robert and Conrad Comte de Paris is also suggested by the former being invested with the county of Auxerre in 865, after this county was confiscated from the latter (as recorded by Hincmar[985]), on the assumption that there was some basis of heredity behind the transmission of counties in France at that time (which is probable, but remains unproven). Comte
Conrad & his wife had [five] children:
a) WELF (-before 876). The primary source which confirms his parentage has not yet been identified. Graf im Linzgau 842/850. Graf im Alpgau 852/858. m ---. The name of Welf's wife is not known. Graf Welf & his wife had [two possible children]:
>i) [CONRAD . The primary source which confirms his parentage has not yet been identified. Graf im Linzgau.]
>ii) [ETICHO (-after 911, bur Ammergau). The primary source which confirms his parentage has not yet been identified. Graf im Ammergau.]
- see below.
b) CONRAD (-876). His parentage is deduced from Regino who names "Ruodolfus filius Chuonradi, nepos Huggonis abbatis"[986], the latter being recorded in the Miraculis Sancti Germani as "Hugo" one of the sons of "Chuonradus princeps", the patron of the church of Saint-Germain at Auxerre[987]. He helped save Charles II "le Chauve" King of the West Franks after the invasion of Ludwig II "der Deutsche" King of the East Franks. Comte d'Auxerre. He fell into disgrace in 861, and passed into the service of the sons of Emperor Lothar. He received from Emperor Louis the territories of Genève, Lausanne and Sion. Marquis de Transjurane in Dec 864 after he killed comte Hubert [Bosonide][988].
- KINGS of BURGUNDY.
c) HUGO (-Orléans 12 May 886, bur Saint-Germain d'Auxerre). The Annales Bertiniani name "Hugoni clerico, avunculi sui [=Karoli regis] Chonradi filio" when recording that he received the counties of Tours and Angers in 866[989]. Abbot of Saint-Germain d'Auxerre 853. The Miraculis Sancti Germani names "Hugo" as one of the sons of "Chuonradus princeps" who continued to patronise the church of Saint-Germain at Auxerre after their father's death[990]. Imperial missus in Auxerre in 853. Abbot of Saint-Riquier until 861. Abbot of Saint-Bertin 859/62. He was a supporter of King Lothar 861/865. He was elected Archbishop of Köln in 864. The Annales Xantenses record that "quidam tirannicus Hugo…filius predicti Cuonradi" (the previous paragraph naming "Cuonradi fratris quondam Iuthit reginæ") succeeded as archbishop of Köln[991]. Marquis de Neustrie, Comte de Tours et d'Angers 866. Comte d'Auxerre in[866], assuming that Hugues was appointed to succeed Robert "le Fort" in this as well as the latter's other counties, although the primary source which confirms this beyond doubt has not yet been identified. Abbot of Saint-Martin de Tours 866. Abbot of St Vaast, Arras [874]. Abbot of Saint-Aignan, Orléans before 876. Abbot of Saint-Julien d'Auxerre 877. Chaplain of the imperial chapel in [880]. "Hugo consobrinus eius [Conradi]" succeeded his cousin [as Abbot of Saint-Colombe de Sens] in 882, recording that he was "clericatus in Palatio"[992]. "Karolus…imperator augustus" confirmed a donation by "Hugo…propinquus noster" of property "villam Apiarias in pago Aurelianensi" to "episcopo Adalaldo archiepiscopo simulque Rainoni episcopo, fratri eiusdem" at the request of "Odo comes" by charter dated 27 Oct 886[993]. Regino records the death in 887 of "Hugo abba" at Orléans and his burial "apud Sanctum Germanum Autisiodoro"[994]. The necrology of Auxerre cathedral records the death 12 May of "Hugo abbas"[995].
d) RUDOLF . The primary source which confirms his parentage has not yet been identified.
e) [JUDITH]. The identity of Udo's wife is not known with certainty. According to Jackman[996], she may have been the daughter of Konrad Graf im Linz- und Argengau, whom he speculates was named Judith. King Arnulf in a charter dated 19 May 891 names "Chonradi…comitis et nepotis nostri"[997]. The speculation is that the relationship may have been through Konrad's mother who, if identified as the daughter of Graf Konrad, was the niece of King Arnulf's paternal grandmother Queen Hemma. m UDO Graf im Lahngau, son of GEBHARD Graf im Niederlahngau [Konradiner] & his wife ---. 860/879.]
Sources
* [973] Thegani Vita Hludowici Imperatoris 36, MGH SS II, p. 597.
* [974] Nithard I.3, p. 131.
* [975] Ex Heirici Miraculis S. Germani 3, MGH SS XIII, p. 401.
* [976] Adnuntatio domni Karoli, MGH LL 1, p. 469.
* [977] D LD 103, p. 149.
* [978] Walahfridi Strabi Carmen, MGH Poetæ Latini ævi Carolini II, p. 387.
* [979] L'abbé Lebeuf (1855) Mémoires concernant l'histoire civile et ecclésiastique d'Auxerre et de son ancient diocese (Auxerre) (“Histoire d´Auxerre”), IV, p. 11.
* [980] Ex Heirici Miraculis S. Germani 2, MGH SS XIII, p. 401, footnote 1 citing v. Dümmler Ostfr. Reich I, p. 422, as stating her origin.
* [981] Walahfridi Strabi Carmen, MGH Poetæ Latini ævi Carolini II, p. 391.
* [982] Including ES II 10.
* [983] Abbé E. Bougaud (ed.) (1875) Chronique de l'abbaye de Saint-Bénigne de Dijon ( Dijon) ("Chronicle St-Bénigne de Dijon"), p. 109.
* [984] Settipani (1993), p. 400.
* [985] Hincmari Remensis Annales 865, MGH SS I, p. 470.
* [986] Reginonis Chronicon 888, MGH SS I, p. 598.
* [987] Ex Heirici Miraculis S. Germani 5, MGH SS XIII, p. 402.
* [988] Settipani (1993), p. 383 footnote 150.
* [989] Annales Bertiniani III 866.
* [990] Ex Heirici Miraculis S. Germani 5, MGH SS XIII, p. 402.
* [991] Annales Xantenses 866, MGH SS II, p. 232.
* [992] Chronico Senonensi Sanctæ Columbæ 881, RCGF 9, p. 40.
* [993] Urseau, C. (ed.) (1908) Cartulaire noir de la cathédrale d'Angers (Paris, Angers) ("Angers") 14, p. 34.
* [994] Reginonis Chronicon 887, MGH SS I, p. 597.
* [995] Histoire d'Auxerre, IV, p. 14.
* [996] Jackman (1997), p. 72.
* [997] D Arn 89, p. 181.
=---------------------------- =
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Konrad_I._%28Welfen%29
Konrad I. († 21. September nach 862) war ein Sohn des Grafen Welf I. und der Heilwig, ein Bruder der Kaiserin Judith († 843) und der Königin Hemma. Aufgrund dieser Verwandtschaft wurde er einer der engsten Vertrauten des Kaisers Ludwig der Fromme († 840), der auch dessen Haft 833/834 teilte, und dem es gelang, in Oberschwaben seiner Familie eine starke Machtposition aufzubauen.
Er war einer der drei Gesandten, die 842 von Karl dem Kahlen und Ludwig dem Deutschen mit außerordentlichen Vollmachten ausgestattet zu deren Bruder Lothar I. geschickt wurden, um über die Teilung des fränkischen Reiches zu verhandeln und Lothar den von ihnen bestimmten dritten Teil des Reiches anzubieten. Die beiden anderen Gesandten waren der Seneschall Adalhard und Graf Cobbo der Ältere.
Nach dem Tod Ludwigs des Frommen war er am Zustandekommen des Vertrags von Verdun (843) beteiligt. Er war nun Berater seines anderen Schwagers, Ludwigs des Deutschen, bis er diesen 859 während eines Feldzugs im Westfrankenreich verließ und sich gemeinsam mit seinen Söhnen dessen Halbbruder auf der Gegenseite, seinem leiblichen Neffen Karl dem Kahlen anschloss. Er war bereits zehn Jahre zuvor nach seiner Heirat mit Aelis, einer Tochter des Grafen Hugo von Tours aus der Familie der Etichonen, als Graf von Paris in das Königreich seines Neffen einbezogen. Aufgrund dieses Seitenwechsels verlor Konrad sämtliche Ämter und Grafschaften im Ostfrankenreich, wurde aber später im Westen durchdie Grafschaft Auxerre entschädigt.
Konrad führte folgende Titel:
* 830 „Dux nobilissimus“ (d.h. Herzog in Alemannien),
* 839 – nach 849 Graf im Argengau,
* 839 Graf im Alpgau,
* 844 Graf im Linzgau,
* 849 Graf von Paris,
* nach 860 Graf von Auxerre als Gefolgsmann Karls des Kahlen;
Konrad und Aelis hatten mindestens drei Söhne:
* Konrad II., Markgraf von Transjuranien
* Hugo Abbas, † 12. Mai 886
* Rudolf, † vor 864, Abt von Saint-Riquier, 849 Abt von Jumièges
sowie vermutlich auch
* Welf II. (der aber auch ein Sohn von Konrads Bruder Rudolf sein könnte), 842/850 Graf im Linzgau, 852-858 Graf im Alpgau, der wahrscheinliche Stammvater der schwäbischen Welfen.
Aelis heiratete nach dem Tod Konrads in zweiter Ehe 864 den Robertiner Robert den Starken (le Fort), Graf von Tours und Paris († 15. September 866), womit sie Konrads Sohn Hugo Abbas, weniger Konrad II., der bei Karl dem Kahlen inUngnade gefallen war und das Reich verlassen hatte, durch die Anbindung an die Robertiner erneut ins Machtzentrum des Westfrankenreichs rückte.
=-------------------- =
Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conrad_I_of_Auxerre
Conrad I, Count of Auxerre
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Conrad I of Auxerre)
Jump to: navigation, search
Conrad I the Elder (died 862/4) 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 was Welf.
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 and his sons Hugh and Conrad the Younger — abandoned theirsovereign 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.
[edit] Sources
* The Annals of Fulda. (Manchester Medieval series, Ninth-Century Histories, Volume II.) Reuter, Timothy (trans.) Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1992.
=-------------------- =
Conrad Graf von Linzgau
M, #8855
Last Edited=9 Feb 2003
Conrad Graf von Linzgau is the son of Guelph I Herzog von Bayern.
Conrad Graf von Linzgau gained the title of Graf von Linzgau.
Forrás / Source:
http://www.thepeerage.com/p886.htm#i8855
=-------------------- =
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Konradiner ...Udo, graf im Lahngau married NN, tochter von Konrad I, graf von Auxerre (Welfen) und Adelheid von Tours (Eticonen)
--------------------
Conrad I "l'Ancien" was the count of several counties, most notably the Aargau and Auxerre, around Lake Constance, as well as Paris from 859 to 864. He was also the lay abbot of Saint-Germain in Auxerre.
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 and his sons Hugh and Conrad the Younger — abandoned theirsovereign 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.
Conrad's father was Welf.
--------------------
http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/SWABIAN%20NOBILITY.htm#WelfIdied824B
CONRAD "l'Ancien" (-22 Mar [862/66]). Thegan's Vita Hludowici Imperatoris names (in order) "Chuonradum et Ruodolfum" as brothers of Empress Judith[973]. Graf von Linz- und Argengau. Dux. Nithard records that Conrad and his brotherRudolf were forcibly tonsured in [Apr 830] by their sister's stepson, Lothar, then in revolt against his father, and sent to Aquitaine "to be held by Pepin"[974]. Comte de Paris. The Miraculis Sancti Germani record that "Chuonradus princeps" was cured of an eye problem by the saint, and that he built the church of Saint-Germain at Auxerre in thanks[975]. An agreement between Charles II "le Chauve" King of the West Franks and his brother Ludwig II "der Deutsche" King of the East Franks dated Jun 860 names "nobilis ac fidelibus laicis…Chuonradus, Evrardus, Adalardus, Arnustus, Warnarius, Liutfridus, Hruodolfus, Erkingarius, Gislebertus, Ratbodus, Arnulfus, Hugo, item Chuonradus, Liutharius, Berengarius, Matfridus, Boso, Sigeri, Hartmannus, Liuthardus, Richuinus, Wigricus, Hunfridus, Bernoldus, Hatto, Adalbertus, Burchardus, Christianus, Leutulfus, Hessi, Herimannus, item Hruodulfus, Sigehardus"[976]. "Ludowicus…rex" confirmed an exchange between Grimald abbot of St Gallen and "quidam comis…Chuonratus" relating to property in Linzgau and Argengau, by charter dated 1 Apr 861[977]. A poem by Walahfridus Strabus records the epitaph of "Chonradum comitem"[978]. The necrology of Auxerre cathedral records the death 22 Mar of "Conradus comes"[979].
m ADELAIS [de Tours], daughter of HUGUES Comte [de Tours] & his wife Ava ---. The Miraculis Sancti Germani name "Adheleid" as wife of "Chuonradus princeps"[980]. A poem by Walahfridus Strabus records the epitaph of "Adelheidam"[981]. The primary source which confirms her parentage has not yet been identified. Some secondary works[982] assert that the second husband of Adelais was Robert "le Fort" [Capet]. If this is correct, Adelais must have been Comte Robert's second or third wife as his known children were already born by the time Adelais's husband Conrad died. The assertion appears based on the Chronicle of St Bénigne de Dijon which names "duo filii Rotberti Andegavorum comitis, frs Hugonis abbatis, senior Odo…Robertus alter"[983]. Settipani states that the passage is a 12th century interpolation and has little historical value, although he does suggest that it is likely that the wife of Comte Robert was a close relation of Adelais without providing the basis for this statement[984]. A family connection between Comte Robert and Conrad Comte de Paris is also suggested by the former being invested with the county of Auxerre in 865, after this county was confiscated from the latter (as recorded by Hincmar[985]), on the assumption that there was some basis of heredity behind the transmission of counties in France at that time (which is probable, but remains unproven). Comte
Conrad & his wife had [five] children:
a) WELF (-before 876). The primary source which confirms his parentage has not yet been identified. Graf im Linzgau 842/850. Graf im Alpgau 852/858. m ---. The name of Welf's wife is not known. Graf Welf & his wife had [two possible children]:
i) [CONRAD . The primary source which confirms his parentage has not yet been identified. Graf im Linzgau.] ii) [ETICHO (-after 911, bur Ammergau). The primary source which confirms his parentage has not yet been identified. Graf im Ammergau.]
- see below.
b) CONRAD (-876). His parentage is deduced from Regino who names "Ruodolfus filius Chuonradi, nepos Huggonis abbatis"[986], the latter being recorded in the Miraculis Sancti Germani as "Hugo" one of the sons of "Chuonradus princeps", the patron of the church of Saint-Germain at Auxerre[987]. He helped save Charles II "le Chauve" King of the West Franks after the invasion of Ludwig II "der Deutsche" King of the East Franks. Comte d'Auxerre. He fell into disgrace in 861, and passed into the service of the sons of Emperor Lothar. He received from Emperor Louis the territories of Genève, Lausanne and Sion. Marquis de Transjurane in Dec 864 after he killed comte Hubert [Bosonide][988]. - KINGS of BURGUNDY.
c) HUGO (-Orléans 12 May 886, bur Saint-Germain d'Auxerre). The Annales Bertiniani name "Hugoni clerico, avunculi sui [=Karoli regis] Chonradi filio" when recording that he received the counties of Tours and Angers in 866[989]. Abbot of Saint-Germain d'Auxerre 853. The Miraculis Sancti Germani names "Hugo" as one of the sons of "Chuonradus princeps" who continued to patronise the church of Saint-Germain at Auxerre after their father's death[990]. Imperial missus in Auxerre in 853. Abbot of Saint-Riquier until 861. Abbot of Saint-Bertin 859/62. He was a supporter of King Lothar 861/865. He was elected Archbishop of Köln in 864. The Annales Xantenses record that "quidam tirannicus Hugo…filius predicti Cuonradi" (the previous paragraph naming "Cuonradi fratris quondam Iuthit reginæ") succeeded as archbishop of Köln[991]. Marquis de Neustrie, Comte de Tours et d'Angers 866. Comte d'Auxerre in [866], assuming that Hugues was appointed to succeed Robert "le Fort" in this as well as the latter's other counties, although the primary source which confirms this beyond doubt has not yet been identified. Abbot of Saint-Martin de Tours 866. Abbot of St Vaast, Arras [874]. Abbot of Saint-Aignan, Orléans before 876. Abbot of Saint-Julien d'Auxerre 877. Chaplain of the imperial chapel in [880]. "Hugo consobrinus eius [Conradi]" succeeded his cousin [as Abbot of Saint-Colombe de Sens] in 882, recording that he was "clericatus in Palatio"[992]. "Karolus…imperator augustus" confirmed a donation by "Hugo…propinquus noster" of property "villam Apiarias in pago Aurelianensi" to "episcopo Adalaldo archiepiscopo simulque Rainoni episcopo, fratri eiusdem" at the request of "Odo comes" by charter dated 27 Oct 886[993]. Regino records the death in 887 of "Hugo abba" at Orléans and his burial "apud Sanctum Germanum Autisiodoro"[994]. The necrology of Auxerre cathedral records the death 12 May of "Hugo abbas"[995].
d) RUDOLF . The primary source which confirms his parentage has not yet been identified.
e) [JUDITH]. The identity of Udo's wife is not known with certainty. According to Jackman[996], she may have been the daughter of Konrad Graf im Linz- und Argengau, whom he speculates was named Judith. King Arnulf in a charter dated 19 May 891 names "Chonradi…comitis et nepotis nostri"[997]. The speculation is that the relationship may have been through Konrad's mother who, if identified as the daughter of Graf Konrad, was the niece of King Arnulf's paternal grandmother Queen Hemma. m UDO Graf im Lahngau, son of GEBHARD Graf im Niederlahngau [Konradiner] & his wife ---. 860/879.]
Sources
[973] Thegani Vita Hludowici Imperatoris 36, MGH SS II, p. 597.
[974] Nithard I.3, p. 131.
[975] Ex Heirici Miraculis S. Germani 3, MGH SS XIII, p. 401.
[976] Adnuntatio domni Karoli, MGH LL 1, p. 469.
[977] D LD 103, p. 149.
[978] Walahfridi Strabi Carmen, MGH Poetæ Latini ævi Carolini II, p. 387.
[979] L'abbé Lebeuf (1855) Mémoires concernant l'histoire civile et ecclésiastique d'Auxerre et de son ancient diocese (Auxerre) (“Histoire d´Auxerre”), IV, p. 11.
[980] Ex Heirici Miraculis S. Germani 2, MGH SS XIII, p. 401, footnote 1 citing v. Dümmler Ostfr. Reich I, p. 422, as stating her origin.
[981] Walahfridi Strabi Carmen, MGH Poetæ Latini ævi Carolini II, p. 391.
[982] Including ES II 10.
[983] Abbé E. Bougaud (ed.) (1875) Chronique de l'abbaye de Saint-Bénigne de Dijon ( Dijon) ("Chronicle St-Bénigne de Dijon"), p. 109.
[984] Settipani (1993), p. 400.
[985] Hincmari Remensis Annales 865, MGH SS I, p. 470.
[986] Reginonis Chronicon 888, MGH SS I, p. 598.
[987] Ex Heirici Miraculis S. Germani 5, MGH SS XIII, p. 402.
[988] Settipani (1993), p. 383 footnote 150.
[989] Annales Bertiniani III 866.
[990] Ex Heirici Miraculis S. Germani 5, MGH SS XIII, p. 402.
[991] Annales Xantenses 866, MGH SS II, p. 232.
[992] Chronico Senonensi Sanctæ Columbæ 881, RCGF 9, p. 40.
[993] Urseau, C. (ed.) (1908) Cartulaire noir de la cathédrale d'Angers (Paris, Angers) ("Angers") 14, p. 34.
[994] Reginonis Chronicon 887, MGH SS I, p. 597.
[995] Histoire d'Auxerre, IV, p. 14.
[996] Jackman (1997), p. 72.
[997] D Arn 89, p. 181.
----------------------------
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Konrad_I._%28Welfen%29 Konrad I. († 21. September nach 862) war ein Sohn des Grafen Welf I. und der Heilwig, ein Bruder der Kaiserin Judith († 843) und der Königin Hemma. Aufgrund dieser Verwandtschaftwurde er einer der engsten Vertrauten des Kaisers Ludwig der Fromme († 840), der auch dessen Haft 833/834 teilte, und dem es gelang, in Oberschwaben seiner Familie eine starke Machtposition aufzubauen.
Er war einer der drei Gesandten, die 842 von Karl dem Kahlen und Ludwig dem Deutschen mit außerordentlichen Vollmachten ausgestattet zu deren Bruder Lothar I. geschickt wurden, um über die Teilung des fränkischen Reiches zu verhandeln und Lothar den von ihnen bestimmten dritten Teil des Reiches anzubieten. Die beiden anderen Gesandten waren der Seneschall Adalhard und Graf Cobbo der Ältere.
Nach dem Tod Ludwigs des Frommen war er am Zustandekommen des Vertrags von Verdun (843) beteiligt. Er war nun Berater seines anderen Schwagers, Ludwigs des Deutschen, bis er diesen 859 während eines Feldzugs im Westfrankenreich verließ und sich gemeinsam mit seinen Söhnen dessen Halbbruder auf der Gegenseite, seinem leiblichen Neffen Karl dem Kahlen anschloss. Er war bereits zehn Jahre zuvor nach seiner Heirat mit Aelis, einer Tochter des Grafen Hugo von Tours aus der Familie der Etichonen, als Graf von Paris in das Königreich seines Neffen einbezogen. Aufgrund dieses Seitenwechsels verlor Konrad sämtliche Ämter und Grafschaften im Ostfrankenreich, wurde aber später im Westen durchdie Grafschaft Auxerre entschädigt.
Konrad führte folgende Titel:
* 830 „Dux nobilissimus“ (d.h. Herzog in Alemannien), * 839 – nach 849 Graf im Argengau, * 839 Graf im Alpgau, * 844 Graf im Linzgau, * 849 Graf von Paris, * nach 860 Graf von Auxerre als Gefolgsmann Karls des Kahlen;
Konrad und Aelis hatten mindestens drei Söhne:
* Konrad II., Markgraf von Transjuranien * Hugo Abbas, † 12. Mai 886 * Rudolf, † vor 864, Abt von Saint-Riquier, 849 Abt von Jumièges
sowie vermutlich auch
* Welf II. (der aber auch ein Sohn von Konrads Bruder Rudolf sein könnte), 842/850 Graf im Linzgau, 852-858 Graf im Alpgau, der wahrscheinliche Stammvater der schwäbischen Welfen.
Aelis heiratete nach dem Tod Konrads in zweiter Ehe 864 den Robertiner Robert den Starken (le Fort), Graf von Tours und Paris († 15. September 866), womit sie Konrads Sohn Hugo Abbas, weniger Konrad II., der bei Karl dem Kahlen inUngnade gefallen war und das Reich verlassen hatte, durch die Anbindung an die Robertiner erneut ins Machtzentrum des Westfrankenreichs rückte.
--------------------
Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conrad_I_of_Auxerre Conrad I, Count of Auxerre From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Conrad I of Auxerre)
Jump to: navigation, search
Conrad I the Elder (died 862/4) 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 was Welf.
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 and his sons Hugh and Conrad the Younger — abandoned theirsovereign 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. [edit] Sources
* The Annals of Fulda. (Manchester Medieval series, Ninth-Century Histories, Volume II.) Reuter, Timothy (trans.) Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1992.
--------------------
Conrad Graf von Linzgau
M, #8855
Last Edited=9 Feb 2003
Conrad Graf von Linzgau is the son of Guelph I Herzog von Bayern.
Conrad Graf von Linzgau gained the title of Graf von Linzgau.
Forrás / Source:
http://www.thepeerage.com/p886.htm#i8855
--------------------
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Konradiner ...Udo, graf im Lahngau married NN, tochter von Konrad I, graf von Auxerre (Welfen) und Adelheid von Tours (Eticonen)
read more
--------------------
* Updated from [http://www.myheritage.com/research/collection-1/myheritage-family-trees?itemId=274859511-2-31691&action=showRecord&indId=externalindividual-f2155823be9119cb3e8a656dcb7b34fb&mrid=90e09ae2884d3c52614b6e533778cc08 MyHeritage Family Trees] via father [http://www.geni.com/profile-34673001972 Guelph I Bavaria] by [http://www.geni.com/projects/SmartCopy/18783 SmartCopy]: ''Apr 28 2015, 12:21:41 UTC''
Alias:Count /de Paris/
Data From Lynn Jeffrey Bernhard, 2445 W 450 South #4, Springville UT 84663-4950
email - (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)
Line 7647 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long:
NAME Conrad I Count Of /BURGUNDY/
SOURCE NOTES:
www.dcs.hull.ac.uk/cgi-bin/gedlkup/n=royal?royal07528
[De La Pole.FTW]
Sources: RC 169; Ancestral Roots 48; AF. RC: Konrad I, Count in the Argengau and in the Linzgau. Count of Auxerre, Lay Abbot of St. Germain d'Auxerre.
Roots: Conrad I, Count of Aargau amd Aixerre. Died 863.
Also:
Count of Auxere
Count in the Argengau & Linzgau
Graaf van de Aargouw; lekenabt van Sankt-Gallen en St. Germain d?Auxerre; misschien ook graaf van Parijs en Auxerre. Hij stamt uit het huis der Welfen.
This individual was found on GenCircles at: http://www.gencircles.com/users/robgomes/3/data/11316
Greve av Burgund-Welfen
_P_CCINFO 2-2438
COUNT OF AARGAU AND AUXERRE
Bio
http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=document&guid=f8e53348-8ef5-427e-9851-2b3d09bc0e8c&tid=10145763&pid=-446405212
Bio
http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=document&guid=f8e53348-8ef5-427e-9851-2b3d09bc0e8c&tid=10145763&pid=-446405212
Line 7647 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long:
NAME Conrad I Count Of /BURGUNDY/
[De La Pole.FTW]
Sources: RC 169; Ancestral Roots 48; AF. RC: Konrad I, Count in the Argengau and in the Linzgau. Count of Auxerre, Lay Abbot of St. Germain d'Auxerre.
Roots: Conrad I, Count of Aargau amd Aixerre. Died 863.
[De La Pole.FTW]
Sources: RC 169; Ancestral Roots 48; AF. RC: Konrad I, Count in the Argengau and in the Linzgau. Count of Auxerre, Lay Abbot of St. Germain d'Auxerre.
Roots: Conrad I, Count of Aargau amd Aixerre. Died 863.
grootouders
ouders
broers/zussen
kinderen
Conrad "the Elder" Welfen | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
± 845 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Adélaïs / Aélis von Sundgau | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
De getoonde gegevens hebben geen bronnen.