Paternal Family Tree: Capet
Maternal Family Tree: Eilika Schweinfurt Duchess Saxony
In 1072 [his father] Philip I King of the Franks [aged 19] and [his mother] Bertha Gerulfing Queen Consort France [aged 17] were married. She by marriage Queen Consort of France. She the daughter of [his grandfather] Floris Gerulfing I Count Holland and [his grandmother] Gertrude Billung Countess Holland [aged 42]. He the son of Henry I King of the Franks and Anne of Kiev Queen Consort Francia [aged 42]. They were half fourth cousin twice removed.
On 1st December 1081 Louis VI King of the Franks was born to Philip I King of the Franks [aged 29] and Bertha Gerulfing Queen Consort France [aged 26].
On 15th May 1092 [his father] Philip I King of the Franks [aged 39] and [his step-mother] Bertrade Montfort Queen Consort France [aged 22] were married. She by marriage Queen Consort of France. They were married despite their both having living spouses: [his mother] Bertha Gerulfing Queen Consort France [aged 37] and Fulk "Réchin" Anjou 4th Count Anjou [aged 49] respectively. He the son of [his grandfather] Henry I King of the Franks and [his grandmother] Anne of Kiev Queen Consort Francia. They were fourth cousin once removed.
In 1094 [his mother] Bertha Gerulfing Queen Consort France [aged 39] died.
In 1104 Louis VI King of the Franks [aged 22] and Lucienne Rochefort [aged 16] were married. He the son of Philip I King of the Franks [aged 51] and Bertha Gerulfing Queen Consort France.
Around 1105 [his brother-in-law] Prince Bohemond I of Antioch [aged 51] and [his sister] Constance Capet Countess Champagne [aged 27] were married. The difference in their ages was 24 years. She the daughter of [his father] Philip I King of the Franks [aged 52] and [his mother] Bertha Gerulfing Queen Consort France.
On 23rd May 1107 Louis VI King of the Franks [aged 25] and Lucienne Rochefort [aged 19] were divorced.
On 30th July 1108 [his father] Philip I King of the Franks [aged 56] died. His son Louis [aged 26] succeeded VI King France: Capet.
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. 1108. In this year was the King Henry [aged 40] on the Nativity at Westminster, and at Easter at Winchester, and by Pentecost at Westminster again. After this, before August, he went into Normandy. And [his father] Philip, the King of France [aged 55], died on the nones of August [30th July 1108], and his son Louis [aged 26] succeeded to the kingdom. And there were afterwards many struggles between the King of France and the King of England, while the latter remained in Normandy.
In 1115 Louis VI King of the Franks [aged 33] and Adelaide Savoy Queen Consort France were married. She by marriage Queen Consort of France. She the daughter of Humbert "Fat" Savoy II Count Savoy and Gisela Ivrea Countess Savoy [aged 45]. He the son of Philip I King of the Franks and Bertha Gerulfing Queen Consort France. They were fourth cousin twice removed.
Adam Murimuth's Continuation and Robert of Avesbury’s 'The Wonderful Deeds of King Edward III'
This volume brings together two of the most important contemporary chronicles for the reign of Edward III and the opening phases of the Hundred Years’ War. Written in Latin by English clerical observers, these texts provide a vivid and authoritative window into the political, diplomatic, and military history of fourteenth-century England and its continental ambitions. Adam Murimuth Continuatio's Chronicarum continues an earlier chronicle into the mid-fourteenth century, offering concise but valuable notices on royal policy, foreign relations, and ecclesiastical affairs. Its annalistic structure makes it especially useful for establishing chronology and tracing the development of events year by year. Complementing it, Robert of Avesbury’s De gestis mirabilibus regis Edwardi tertii is a rich documentary chronicle preserving letters, treaties, and official records alongside narrative passages. It is an indispensable source for understanding Edward III’s claim to the French crown, the conduct of war, and the mechanisms of medieval diplomacy. Together, these works offer scholars, students, and enthusiasts a reliable and unembellished account of a transformative period in English and European history. Essential for anyone interested in medieval chronicles, the Hundred Years’ War, or the reign of Edward III.
Available at Amazon in eBook and Paperback format.
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. 1116. And the king [aged 48] soon after Easter went over sea into Normandy. And there were many conspiracies and robberies, and castles taken betwixt France and Normandy. Most of this disturbance was because the King Henry assisted his nephew, Theobald de Blois [aged 26], who was engaged in a war against his lord, Louis, the King of France [aged 34]. This was a very vexatious and destructive year with respect to the fruits of the earth, through the immoderate rains that fell soon after the beginning of August, harassing and perplexing men till Candlemas-day. This year also was so deficient in mast, that there was never heard such in all this land or in Wales. This land and nation were also this year oft and sorely swincked by the guilds which the king took both within the boroughs and without.
On 29th August 1116 [his son] Philip Capet was born to Louis VI King of the Franks [aged 34] and [his wife] Adelaide Savoy Queen Consort France.
On 17th July 1119 at the Battle of Bures-en-Bray King Henry I "Beauclerc" England [aged 51] fought against the army of Louis VI King of the Franks [aged 37].
Baldwin VII Count Flanders [aged 26] who was killed. His first cousin Charles [aged 35] succeeded I Count Flanders. Marguerite Clermont Countess Flanders [aged 14] by marriage Countess Flanders.
On 20th August 1119 at the Battle of Bremule at Gaillardbois Cressenville King Henry I "Beauclerc" England [aged 51] and his son William Adelin Duke Normandy [aged 16] defeated the army of Louis VI King of the Franks [aged 37] who had invaded Normandy in support of William Clito Count Flanders [aged 16] who claimed the Duchy of Normandy.
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. 1120. This year were reconciled the King of England [aged 52] and the King of France [aged 38]; and after their reconciliation all the King Henry's own men accorded with him in Normandy, as well as the Earl of Flanders [aged 36] and the Earl of Ponthieu [aged 27]. From this time forward the King Henry settled his castles and his land in Normandy [Map] after his will; and so before Advent came to this land.
In 1120 [his son] Louis VII King of the Franks was born to Louis VI King of the Franks [aged 38] and [his wife] Adelaide Savoy Queen Consort France at Paris [Map]. He married (1) 25th July 1137 his third cousin once removed Eleanor of Aquitaine Queen Consort Franks and England, daughter of William "Saint" Poitiers X Duke Aquitaine and Aenor Chatellerault Duchess Aquitaine, and had issue (2) 1154 his second cousin Constance of Castile Queen of the Franks, daughter of Alfonso VII King Castile VII King Leon and Berenguela Barcelona Queen Consort Castile and Leon, and had issue (3) 13th November 1160 his third cousin once removed Adèle Queen of the Franks, daughter of Theobald Blois II Count Champagne IV Count Blois and Matilda Carinthia Countess Champagne and Blois, and had issue.
Around August 1120 William Adelin Duke Normandy [aged 16] paid homage to Louis VI King of the Franks [aged 38] for Normandy.
In 1121 [his son] Henry Capet Archbishop of Reims was born to Louis VI King of the Franks [aged 39] and [his wife] Adelaide Savoy Queen Consort France.
Around 1123 [his son] Robert "Great" Capet I Count Dreux was born to Louis VI King of the Franks [aged 41] and [his wife] Adelaide Savoy Queen Consort France. He married (1) 1139 Agnes Garlande Countess Dreux and had issue (2) 1145 Hawise Salisbury Countess Dreux, daughter of Walter of Salisbury 2nd Baron Chitterne and Sybilla Chaworth Baroness Chitterne, and had issue (3) 1152 Agnes Baudemont Countess Dreux and had issue.
In 1123 [his brother-in-law] Amadeus Savoy III Count Savoy [aged 28] and Mahaut Albon Countess Savoy were married. She by marriage Countess Savoy. He the son of Humbert "Fat" Savoy II Count Savoy and [his mother-in-law] Gisela Ivrea Countess Savoy [aged 53].
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. 26th March 1124. All this year was the King Henry [aged 56] in Normandy. That was for the great hostility that he had with the King Louis of France [aged 42], and with the Earl of Anjou [aged 35], and most of all with his own men. Then it happened, on the day of the Annunciation of St. Mary, that the Earl Waleram of Mellent [aged 20] went from one of his castles called Belmont to another called Watteville. With him went the steward of the King of France, Amalric, and Hugh [aged 26] the son of Gervase [aged 54], and Hugh of Montfort [aged 49], and many other good knights. Then came against them the king's knights from all the castles that were thereabout, and fought with them, and put them to flight, and took the Earl Waleram, and Hugh, the son of Gervase, and Hugh of Montfort, and five and twenty other knights, and brought them to the king. And the king committed the Earl Waleram, and Hugh, the son of Gervase, to close custody in the castle at Rouen; but Hugh of Montfort he sent to England, and ordered him to be secured with strong bonds in the castle at Glocester [Map]. And of the others as many as he chose he sent north and south to his castles in captivity.
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. After 26th March 1124. After this went the king [aged 56], and won all the castles of the Earl Waleram [aged 20] that were in Normandy, and all the others that his enemies held against him. All this hostility was on account of the son of the Earl Robert [aged 73] of Normandy, named William [aged 21]. This same William had taken to wife the younger daughter [aged 12] of Fulke, Earl of Anjou [aged 35]: and for this reason the King of France [aged 42] and all the earls held with him, and all the rich men; and said that the king held his brother Robert wrongfully in captivity, and drove his son William unjustly out of Normandy.
Before 14th September 1125 [his former brother-in-law] Hugh Blois Count Champagne and [his sister] Constance Capet Countess Champagne [aged 47] were married. She by marriage Countess Champagne. She the daughter of [his father] Philip I King of the Franks and [his mother] Bertha Gerulfing Queen Consort France. He the son of Theobald Blois III Count Blois and Adela Valois Countess Blois and Vermandois. They were fourth cousin once removed.
William of Worcester's Chronicle of England
William of Worcester, born around 1415, and died around 1482 was secretary to John Fastolf, the renowned soldier of the Hundred Years War, during which time he collected documents, letters, and wrote a record of events. Following their return to England in 1440 William was witness to major events. Twice in his chronicle he uses the first person: 1. when writing about the murder of Thomas, 7th Baron Scales, in 1460, he writes '… and I saw him lying naked in the cemetery near the porch of the church of St. Mary Overie in Southwark …' and 2. describing King Edward IV's entry into London in 1461 he writes '… proclaimed that all the people themselves were to recognize and acknowledge Edward as king. I was present and heard this, and immediately went down with them into the city'. William’s Chronicle is rich in detail. It is the source of much information about the Wars of the Roses, including the term 'Diabolical Marriage' to describe the marriage of Queen Elizabeth Woodville’s brother John’s marriage to Katherine, Dowager Duchess of Norfolk, he aged twenty, she sixty-five or more, and the story about a paper crown being placed in mockery on the severed head of Richard, 3rd Duke of York.
Available at Amazon in eBook and Paperback format.
On 14th September 1125 [his sister] Constance Capet Countess Champagne [aged 47] died.
In September 1126 [his son] Peter Courtenay was born to Louis VI King of the Franks [aged 44] and [his wife] Adelaide Savoy Queen Consort France. He married his third cousin twice removed Elizabeth Courtenay and had issue.
In 1127 William Clito Count Flanders [aged 24] and [his sister-in-law] Joanna Monferrat Countess Essex and Flanders were married. She by marriage Countess Essex. She the daughter of Rainier Aleramici Marquis of Monferrat [aged 43] and [his mother-in-law] Gisela Ivrea Countess Savoy [aged 57]. He the son of Robert Curthose III Duke Normandy [aged 76] and Sybilla Conversano Duchess Normandy. They were third cousins. He a grandson of King William "Conqueror" I of England.
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. 1127. And the King of France [aged 45] brought William [aged 24], the son of the Earl of Normandy [aged 76], and gave him the earldom; and the people of that land accepted him. This same William had before taken to wife the daughter [aged 15] of the Earl of Anjou; but they were afterwards divorced on the plea of consanguinity. This was all through the King Henry [aged 59] of England. Afterwards took he to wife the [his sister-in-law] sister1 of the king's wife of France; and for this reason the king gave him the earldom of Flanders.
Note. Maternal half-sister; their mother Gisela Ivrea Countess Savoy [aged 57].
On 2nd March 1127 Charles I Count Flanders [aged 43] was murdered at Church of St Donatian. His second cousin William [aged 24] succeeded Count Flanders. [his sister-in-law] Joanna Monferrat Countess Essex and Flanders by marriage Countess Flanders.
Around 1128 [his daughter] Constance Capet Countess Boulogne and Toulouse was born to Louis VI King of the Franks [aged 46] and [his wife] Adelaide Savoy Queen Consort France. She married (1) Raymond Rouerge V Count Toulouse, son of Alphonse Rouerge I Count Toulouse, and had issue (2) 1148 her third cousin once removed Eustace Blois IV Count Boulogne.
In 1128 [his sister-in-law] Joanna Monferrat Countess Essex and Flanders died.
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. 1129. This same year died Pope Honorius. Ere he was well dead, there were chosen two popes. The one was named Peter, who was monk of Clugny, and was born of the richest men of Rome; and with him held those of Rome, and the Duke of Sicily. The other was Gregory: he was a clerk, and was driven out of Rome by the other pope, and by his kinsmen. With him held the Emperor of Saxony, and the King of France [aged 47], and the King Henry [aged 61] of England, and all those on this side of the Alps. Now was there such division in Christendom as never was before. May Christ consult for his wretched folk.
On 13th October 1131 or 30th October 1131 [his son] Philip Capet [aged 15] died when a pig ran in front of horse, startling it, throwing him. See William Nangis.
Around 1133 [his son] Philip Capet was born to Louis VI King of the Franks [aged 51] and [his wife] Adelaide Savoy Queen Consort France.
After 6th May 1137 [his former wife] Lucienne Rochefort [deceased] died.
On 25th July 1137 Louis VII King of the Franks [aged 17] and Eleanor of Aquitaine Queen Consort Franks and England [aged 15] were married at the Cathedral of Saint-André, Bordeaux [Map] by Archbishop Geoffrey of Loroux. Her father William "Saint" Poitiers X Duke Aquitaine had died some three months previously leaving Eleanor of Aquitaine Queen Consort Franks and England as a ward of Louis's father Louis VI King of the Franks [aged 55] who quickly married her to his son Louis with a view to the Duchy of Aquitaine becoming joined with the Kingdom of France. A week later Louis VI King of the Franks died and his son Louis and Eleanor became King and Queen of France. She the daughter of William "Saint" Poitiers X Duke Aquitaine and Aenor Chatellerault Duchess Aquitaine. He the son of Louis VI King of the Franks and Adelaide Savoy Queen Consort France. They were third cousin once removed.
Eleanor gave Louis a rock-crystal vase as a wedding gift which he subsequently gave to Abbot Suger of Saint-Denis. The vase is now in the Louvre.
Crystal vase, 'of Eleanor'. Crystal: Iran (?), 6th-7th century (?). Mounting: Saint-Denis, before 1147; 13th and 14th centuries. Rock crystal, nielloed and gilded silver, precious stones, pearls, champlevé enamels on silver. Originating from the treasury of the Abbey of Saint-Denis. Inscription: "+ HOC VAS SPONSA DEDIT A(ie)NOR-REGI LUDOVICO MITADOL(us) AVO MIHI REX S(an)C(tis)Q(ue) SUGER(ius)" (This vase, Eleanor, his spouse, gave it to King Louis, Mitadolus to his ancestor, the king to me, Suger, who have offered it to the saints).
Vase de cristal, "d'Aliénor". Cristal: Iran (?), VI-VII siécle (?). Monture: Saint-Denis, avant 1147; XIII et XIV siécles. Cristal de roche, argent niellé et doré, pierres pécieuses, perles, émaux champlevés sur argent Provient du trésor de I'abbaye de Saint-Denis. Inscription: "+ HOC VAS SPONSA DEDIT A(ie)NOR-REGI LUDOVICO MITADOL(us) AVO MIHI REX S(an)C(tis)Q(ue) SUGER(ius)". (ce vase, Aliénor, son épouse, l'a donné au roi Lous, Mitadolus a son aïeul, le roi à moi, Suger, qui l'ai offert aux saints).
Archbishop Geoffrey of Loroux: In 1137 he was appointed Archbishop of Bordeaux. On 18th July 1155 he died.
William "Saint" Poitiers X Duke Aquitaine: William "Saint" Poitiers X Duke Aquitaine and Aenor Chatellerault Duchess Aquitaine were married. She by marriage Duchess Aquitaine. He the son of William "Troubadour" Poitiers IX Duke Aquitaine and Philippa Rouerge Duchess Aquitaine. In 1099 he was born to William "Troubadour" Poitiers IX Duke Aquitaine and Philippa Rouerge Duchess Aquitaine at Toulouse. On 10th February 1127 William "Troubadour" Poitiers IX Duke Aquitaine died. His son William succeeded X Duke Aquitaine. On 9th April 1137 William "Saint" Poitiers X Duke Aquitaine died. His daughter Eleanor succeeded XI Duchess Aquitaine.


Anne Boleyn. Her Life as told by Lancelot de Carle's 1536 Letter.
In 1536, two weeks after the execution of Anne Boleyn, her brother George and four others, Lancelot du Carle, wrote an extraordinary letter that described Anne's life, and her trial and execution, to which he was a witness. This book presents a new translation of that letter, with additional material from other contemporary sources such as Letters, Hall's and Wriothesley's Chronicles, the pamphlets of Wynkyn the Worde, the Memorial of George Constantyne, the Portuguese Letter and the Baga de Secrets, all of which are provided in Appendices.
Available at Amazon in eBook and Paperback format.
On 1st August 1137 Louis VI King of the Franks [aged 55] died of dysentery. His son Louis [aged 17] succeeded VII King of the Franks. Eleanor of Aquitaine Queen Consort Franks and England [aged 15] by marriage Queen Consort Franks.
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. 1140. And the earl stole out, and went after Robert, Earl of Glocester [aged 41], and brought him thither with a large army. And they fought strenuously on Candlemas day against their lord, and took him; for his men forsook him and fled. And they led him to Bristol, and there put him into prison in close quarters. Then was all England stirred more than ere was, and all evil was in the land. Afterwards came the daughter of King Henry, who had been Empress of Germany [aged 37], and now was Countess of Anjou. She came to London; but the people of London attempted to take her, and she fled, losing many of her followers. After this the Bishop of Winchester, Henry [aged 42], the brother of King Stephen [aged 46], spake with Earl Robert, and with the empress, and swore them oaths, "that he never more would hold with the king, his brother," and cursed all the men that held with him, and told them, that he would give them up Winchester; and he caused them to come thither. When they were therein, then came the king's queen with all her strength, and beset them, so that there was great hunger therein. When they could no longer hold out, then stole they out, and fled; but those without were aware, and followed them, and took Robert, Earl of Glocester, and led him to Rochester, and put him there into prison; but the empress fled into a monastery. Then went the wise men between the king's friends and the earl's friends; and settled so that they should let the king out of prison for the earl, and the earl for the king; and so they did. After this settled the king and Earl Randolph at Stamford, and swore oaths, and plighted their troth, that neither should betray the other. But it availed nothing. For the king afterwards took him at Northampton, through wicked counsel, and put him into prison; and soon after he let him out again, through worse counsel, on the condition that he swore by the crucifix, and found hostages, that he would give up all his castles. Some he gave up, and some gave he not up; and did then worse than he otherwise would. Then was England very much divided. Some held with the king, and some with the empress; for when the king was in prison, the earls and the rich men supposed that he never more would come out: and they settled with the empress, and brought her into Oxford, and gave her the borough. When the king was out, he heard of this, and took his force, and beset her in the tower.165 And they let her down in the night from the tower by ropes. And she stole out, and fled, and went on foot to Wallingford [Map]. Afterwards she went over sea; and those of Normandy turned all from the king to the Earl of Anjou [aged 26]; some willingly, and some against their will; for he beset them till they gave up their castles, and they had no help of the king. Then went Eustace, the king's son, to France, and took to wife the sister of the King of France. He thought to obtain Normandy thereby; but he sped little, and by good right; for he was an evil man. Wherever he was, he did more evil than good; he robbed the lands, and levied heavy guilds upon them. He brought his wife to England, and put her into the castle at…166 Good woman she was; but she had little bliss with him; and Christ would not that he should long reign. He therefore soon died, and his mother also. And the Earl of Anjou died; and his son Henry took to the earldom. And the Queen of France parted from the king; and she came to the young Earl Henry; and he took her to wife, and all Poitou with her. Then went he with a large force into England, and won some castles; and the king went against him with a much larger force. Nevertheless, fought they not; but the archbishop and the wise men went between them, and made this settlement: That the king should be lord and king while he lived, and after his day Henry should be king: that Henry should take him for a father; and he him for a son: that peace and union should be betwixt them, and in all England. This and the other provisions that they made, swore the king and the earl to observe; and all the bishops, and the earls, and the rich men. Then was the earl received at Winchester, and at London, with great worship; and all did him homage, and swore to keep the peace. And there was soon so good a peace as never was there before. Then was the king stronger than he ever was before. And the earl went over sea; and all people loved him; for he did good justice, and made peace.
Note 165. The tower of the castle at Oxford, built by D'Oyley, which still remains.
Note 166. The MS. is here deficient.
In 1154 [his former wife] Adelaide Savoy Queen Consort France died.
Kings Wessex: Great x 6 Grand Son of King Alfred "The Great" of Wessex
Kings France: Great x 2 Grand Son of Hugh I King of the Franks
Kings Duke Aquitaine: Great x 6 Grand Son of Ranulf I Duke Aquitaine
Agnes de la Marck Queen Consort Navarre [6]
Louis VII King of the Franks [1]
Constance Rouerge Queen Consort Navarre [1]
Isabella of Angoulême Queen Consort England [1]
Marie Coucy [1]
Yolande of Dreux Queen of Scotland [1]
Henry Luxemburg VII Holy Roman Emperor [1]
Margaret of France Queen Consort England [1]
Philip "Noble" III King Navarre [3]
Philippa of Hainaut Queen Consort England [1]
Margaret Hainaut Holy Roman Empress [1]
Joan Capet II Queen Navarre [1]
Blanche Valois Holy Roman Empress Luxemburg [1]
King John "The Good" II of France [1]
Blanche Dampierre Queen Consort Norway and Sweden [3]
Blanche Bourbon Queen Consort Castile [3]
Martha Armagnac Queen Consort Aragon [1]
Yolande of Bar Queen Consort Aragon [4]
Charles "Beloved Mad" VI King France [3]
Jacquetta of Luxemburg Duchess Bedford [4]
Margaret of Anjou Queen Consort England [1]
Mary of Guelders Queen Consort Scotland [6]
King Richard III of England [1]
Anne Neville Queen Consort England [1]
King Henry VII of England and Ireland [1]
Bianca Maria Sforza Holy Roman Empress [7]
Philip "Handsome Fair" King Castile [16]
Germaine Foix Queen Consort Aragon [9]
Marguerite Valois Orléans Queen Consort Navarre [20]
Queen Anne Boleyn of England [1]
Anne of Cleves Queen Consort England [15]
Mary of Guise Queen Consort Scotland [38]
Antoine King Navarre [26]
Queen Catherine Howard of England [1]
Maximilian Habsburg Spain II Holy Roman Emperor [6]
Jane Grey I Queen England and Ireland [1]
Francis II King France King Consort Scotland [4]
Elizabeth Valois Queen Consort Spain [4]
Louise Lorraine Queen Consort France [22]
King James I of England and Ireland and VI of Scotland [2]
Maximilian "The Great" Wittelsbach I Duke Bavaria I Elector Bavaria [37]
Maria Anna Wittelsbach Holy Roman Empress [37]
Electress Louise Juliana of the Palatine Rhine [11]
Ferdinand of Spain II Holy Roman Emperor [21]
George Wharton [13]
Margaret of Austria Queen Consort Spain [21]
Anna of Austria Holy Roman Empress [19]
Elisabeth Bourbon Queen Consort Spain [6]
Henrietta Maria Bourbon Queen Consort England [6]
John George Wettin Elector Saxony [21]
Frederick William "Great Elector" Hohenzollern Elector Brandenburg [21]
Eleonora Gonzaga Queen Consort Bohemia [41]
Maria Leopoldine Habsburg Spain Queen Consort Bohemia [21]
Hedwig Eleonora Queen Consort Sweden [21]
Marie Françoise Élisabeth of Savoy Queen Consort of Portugal [63]
Charlotte Amalie Hesse-Kassel Queen Consort Denmark and Norway [21]
Victor Amadeus King Sardinia [84]
Louise of Mecklenburg Güstrow Queen Consort Denmark and Norway [21]
Maria Anna Neuburg Queen Consort Spain [42]
Joseph I Holy Roman Emperor [42]
Charles Habsburg Spain VI Holy Roman Emperor [42]
Francis I Holy Roman Emperor [26]
Adolph Frederick King Sweden [21]
Elisabeth Therese Lorraine Queen Consort Sardinia [26]
President George Washington [1]
King George III of Great Britain and Ireland [42]
Charlotte Mecklenburg Strelitz Queen Consort England [21]
Caroline Matilda Hanover Queen Consort Denmark and Norway [42]
Marie Sophie Hesse-Kassel Queen Consort Denmark and Norway [63]
Caroline of Brunswick Queen Consort England [42]
Frederick William III King Prussia [21]
Frederica Mecklenburg Strelitz Queen Consort Hanover [42]
Queen Fredrika Dorotea Vilhelmina [42]
King Christian I of Norway and VIII of Denmark [63]
Frederick William IV King Prussia [42]
Frederick VII King of Denmark [105]
Queen Louise Hesse-Kassel of Denmark [126]
King Christian IX of Denmark [63]
Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom [84]
Queen Sophia of Sweden and Norway [105]
Victoria Empress Germany Queen Consort Prussia [231]
King Edward VII of the United Kingdom [231]
Maria Christina of Austria Queen Consort Spain [63]
Brigadier-General Charles Fitz-Clarence [49]
Victoria Mary Teck Queen Consort England [126]
Frederick Charles I King Finland [126]
Constantine I King Greece [63]
Alexandrine Mecklenburg-Schwerin Queen Consort Denmark [168]
Victoria Eugénie Mountbatten Queen Consort Spain [294]
Louise Mountbatten Queen Consort Sweden [357]
Ingrid Bernadotte Queen Consort Denmark [273]
Philip Mountbatten Duke Edinburgh [420]
Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom [206]
Carl XVI King Sweden [567]
Queen Consort Camilla Shand [87]
Great x 4 Grandfather: Robert I King West Francia
Great x 3 Grandfather: Hugh "Great" Capet Count Paris
4 x Great Grandson of Charles "Charlemagne aka Great" King of the Franks King Lombardy Holy Roman Emperor
Great x 4 Grandmother: Beatrice Vermandois 3 x Great Granddaughter of Charles "Charlemagne aka Great" King of the Franks King Lombardy Holy Roman Emperor
Great x 2 Grandfather: Hugh I King of the Franks
-2 x Great Grandson of Hugh I King of the Franks
Great x 4 Grandfather: Henry "Fowler" I King East Francia
Great x 3 Grandmother: Hedwig Saxon Ottonian
Great x 4 Grandmother: Matilda Ringelheim Queen Consort East Francia
Great x 1 Grandfather: Robert "Pious" II King of the Franks
son of Hugh I King of the Franks
Great x 4 Grandfather: Ebles "Manzer aka Bastard" III Duke Aquitaine Grandson of Ranulf I Duke Aquitaine
Great x 3 Grandfather: William "Towhead" III Duke Aquitaine Great Grandson of Ranulf I Duke Aquitaine
Great x 2 Grandmother: Adelaide Poitiers Queen Consort France 2 x Great Granddaughter of Ranulf I Duke Aquitaine
Great x 4 Grandfather: Rollo Duke Normandy
Great x 3 Grandmother: Gerloc aka Adela Normandy Duchess Aquitaine
Great x 4 Grandmother: Poppa Unknown Duchess Normandy
Grandfather: Henry I King of the Franks
Grandson of Hugh I King of the Franks
Great x 3 Grandfather: Boson II Count Arles
Great x 2 Grandfather: William "Liberator" I Count Provence I Count Arles
Great x 1 Grandmother: Constance Arles Queen Consort France
Great x 4 Grandfather: Fulk "Red" Ingelger 1st Count Anjou
Great x 3 Grandfather: Fulk "Good" Ingelger 2nd Count Anjou
Great x 4 Grandmother: Roscille Loches Countess Anjou
Great x 2 Grandmother: Adelaide-Blanche of Anjou Queen Consort West Francia
Great x 4 Grandfather: Ratburnus I Viscount of Vienne
Great x 3 Grandmother: Gerberge Unknown Viscountess Anjou
father: Philip I King of the Franks
Great Grandson of Hugh I King of the Franks
Great x 1 Grandfather: Yaroslav "The Wise" Rurik
Grandmother: Anne of Kiev Queen Consort Francia
Louis VI King of the Franks
2 x Great Grandson of Hugh I King of the Franks
Great x 3 Grandfather: Dirk Gerulfing II Count Holland
Great x 2 Grandfather: Arnulf Gerulfing Count Holland
2 x Great Grandson of King Alfred "The Great" of Wessex
Great x 4 Grandfather: Arnulf "Great" I Count Flanders Grandson of King Alfred "The Great" of Wessex
Great x 3 Grandmother: Hildegarde Flanders Countess Holland Great Granddaughter of King Alfred "The Great" of Wessex
Great x 4 Grandmother: Adela Vermandois Countess Flanders 4 x Great Granddaughter of Charles "Charlemagne aka Great" King of the Franks King Lombardy Holy Roman Emperor
Great x 1 Grandfather: Dirk Gerulfing III Count Holland
3 x Great Grandson of King Alfred "The Great" of Wessex
Great x 4 Grandfather: Wigeric Ardennes
Great x 3 Grandfather: Siegfried Count of Ardennes 4 x Great Grandson of Charles "Charlemagne aka Great" King of the Franks King Lombardy Holy Roman Emperor
Great x 4 Grandmother: Cunigunda Unknown 3 x Great Granddaughter of Charles "Charlemagne aka Great" King of the Franks King Lombardy Holy Roman Emperor
Great x 2 Grandmother: Luitgarde Luxemburg Countess Holland 5 x Great Granddaughter of Charles "Charlemagne aka Great" King of the Franks King Lombardy Holy Roman Emperor
Great x 4 Grandfather: Eberhard IV Nordgau
Great x 3 Grandmother: Hedwig Nordgau
Grandfather: Floris Gerulfing I Count Holland
4 x Great Grandson of King Alfred "The Great" of Wessex
Great x 1 Grandmother: Othelindis d Bernard Margrave Nordmark Count Holland
mother: Bertha Gerulfing Queen Consort France
5 x Great Granddaughter of King Alfred "The Great" of Wessex
Great x 3 Grandfather: Hermmann Billung Margrave Billung March
Great x 2 Grandfather: Bernard I Duke of Saxony
Great x 3 Grandmother: Hildegard Westerburg Margrave Billung March
Great x 1 Grandfather: Bernard II Duke of Saxony
Grandmother: Gertrude Billung Countess Holland
Great x 2 Grandfather: Henry Schweinfurt
Great x 1 Grandmother: Eilika Schweinfurt Duchess Saxony