Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta KING OF BRITTANY. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta KING OF BRITTANY. Mostrar todas las entradas

martes, 31 de enero de 2023

Daniel Dremrud, King of Brittany ♛★Bisabuelo n°31★ Ref: KB-0710 |•••► #FRANCIA 🇫🇷🏆 #Genealogía #Genealogy


 31 ° Bisabuelo/ Great Grandfather de: Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo →Daniel Dremrud, King of Brittany is your 31st great grandfather.


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 (Linea Materna)

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Daniel Dremrud, King of Brittany is your 31st great grandfather.of→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Morella Álamo Borges

your mother → Belén Eloina Borges Ustáriz

her mother → Belén de Jesús Ustáriz Lecuna

her mother → Miguel María Ramón de Jesús Uztáriz y Monserrate

her father → María de Guía de Jesús de Monserrate é Ibarra

his mother → Teniente Coronel Manuel José de Monserrate y Urbina

her father → Antonieta Felicita Javiera Ignacia de Urbina y Hurtado de Mendoza

his mother → Isabel Manuela Josefa Hurtado de Mendoza y Rojas Manrique

her mother → Juana de Rojas Manrique de Mendoza

her mother → Constanza de Mendoza Mate de Luna

her mother → Mayor de Mendoza Manzanedo

her mother → Juan Fernández De Mendoza Y Manuel

her father → Sancha Manuel

his mother → Sancho Manuel de Villena Castañeda, señor del Infantado y Carrión de los Céspedes

her father → Manuel de Castilla, señor de Escalona

his father → Elizabeth of Swabia

his mother → Philipp von Schwaben, King of Germany

her father → Beatrice of Burgundy

his mother → Reginald III, Count of Burgundy

her father → Stephen I "the Rash" count of Mâcon & Burgundy

his father → William I "the Great" count of Burgundy

his father → Adeliza (Alice) of Normandy, Countess Of Burgundy

his mother → Judith of Brittany

her mother → Conan I 'le Tort’ de Rennes, duc de Bretagne

her father → Judicaël Berenger de Rennes, comte de Rennes

his father → Pascweten de Rennes

his father → Alan I "the Great", king of Brittany

his father → Ridoredh de Bretagne, Comte de Nantes et Vannes

his father → Erispoë II, king of Brittany

his father → Nominoë, king of Brittany

his father → Erispoë "the Elder" de Broërec

his father → Budic de Poher, Roi du Bretagne

his father → Daniel Dremrud, King of Brittany

his fatherConsistency CheckShow short path | Share this path

Shortest in-law relationship

Daniel Dremrud, King of Brittany is your 18th great uncle's second great aunt's husband's 6th great grandfather.

You

  → Morella Álamo Borges

your mother → show 31 relatives → Budic de Poher, Roi du Bretagne

his father → Daniel Dremrud, King of Brittany

his fatherConsistency CheckShare this path


Daniel Dremrost de Poher, Comte de Cornuaille et Poher 

Gender: Male

Birth: 710

Bretagne, France

Death: 749 (38-39)

France

Immediate Family:

Son of Riwallon de Poher, II and Gerwenn de Cornouailles

Husband of N.N. N.N.

Father of Budic de Poher, Roi du Bretagne


Added by: James Frederick Pultz on January 19, 2008

Managed by: Jan-Cedric Hansen and 32 others

lunes, 30 de enero de 2023

Alan I the Great king of Brittany ♛★Bisabuelo n°25★ Ref: KB-0857 |•••► #FRANCIA 🇫🇷🏆 #Genealogía #Genealogy


 25 ° Bisabuelo/ Great Grandfather de: Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo →Alan I "the Great", king of Brittany is your 25th great grandfather.


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 (Linea Materna)

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Alan I "the Great", king of Brittany is your 25th great grandfather.of→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Morella Álamo Borges

your mother → Belén Eloina Borges Ustáriz

her mother → Belén de Jesús Ustáriz Lecuna

her mother → Miguel María Ramón de Jesús Uztáriz y Monserrate

her father → María de Guía de Jesús de Monserrate é Ibarra

his mother → Teniente Coronel Manuel José de Monserrate y Urbina

her father → Antonieta Felicita Javiera Ignacia de Urbina y Hurtado de Mendoza

his mother → Isabel Manuela Josefa Hurtado de Mendoza y Rojas Manrique

her mother → Juana de Rojas Manrique de Mendoza

her mother → Constanza de Mendoza Mate de Luna

her mother → Mayor de Mendoza Manzanedo

her mother → Juan Fernández De Mendoza Y Manuel

her father → Sancha Manuel

his mother → Sancho Manuel de Villena Castañeda, señor del Infantado y Carrión de los Céspedes

her father → Manuel de Castilla, señor de Escalona

his father → Elizabeth of Swabia

his mother → Philipp von Schwaben, King of Germany

her father → Beatrice of Burgundy

his mother → Reginald III, Count of Burgundy

her father → Stephen I "the Rash" count of Mâcon & Burgundy

his father → William I "the Great" count of Burgundy

his father → Adeliza (Alice) of Normandy, Countess Of Burgundy

his mother → Judith of Brittany

her mother → Conan I 'le Tort’ de Rennes, duc de Bretagne

her father → Judicaël Berenger de Rennes, comte de Rennes

his father → Pascweten de Rennes

his father → Alan I "the Great", king of Brittany

his father

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Alan MP

French: Alain

Gender: Male

Birth: before circa December 11, 857

Nantes, Loire-Atlantique, Pays de la Loire, France

Death: November 10, 907

Nantes, Loire-Atlantique, Pays DE La Loire, France

Place of Burial: Nantes, France

Immediate Family:

Son of Ridoredh de Bretagne, Comte de Nantes et Vannes and Aremburge d'Ancenis (concubine)

Husband of Oreguen, Queen of Britanny

Father of Rudalt, comte de Vannes; Pascweten de Rennes; Guerec de Bretagne; Budic de Bretagne and N.N.

Brother of Pascwethen de Vannes, duc de Bretagne


Added by: <private> Hibbard on June 19, 2007

Managed by: Jf Antoine and 91 others

Curated by: Jf Antoine

 0 M

HISTORIA - history

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Alain (Alan) I, rey de Bretaña

Alano I (en francés: Alain; muerto en 907), llamado el Grande, fue conde de Vannes y duque de Bretaña (dux Brittonium) desde 876 hasta su muerte. Probablemente también fue el único rey de Bretaña (rex Brittaniæ) que ostentó ese título por concesión legítima del emperador.


Alan era el segundo hijo del conde Ridoredh de Vannes. Sucedió a su hermano Pascweten en Vannes y Bretaña cuando este último murió, probablemente a mediados de 876. Representaba el bloque de poder del sureste de Bretaña y tuvo que luchar, inicialmente, contra Judicael de Poher, representante de los intereses bretones occidentales, por el trono ducal. Finalmente, él y Judicael hicieron las paces para luchar contra los vikingos. Judicael murió en la batalla de Questembert en 888 o 889. En 890, Alano derrotó a los vikingos en Saint-Lô, persiguiéndolos en un río donde muchos se ahogaron.


Después de la muerte de Judicael, Alan gobernó toda Bretaña como lo había sido durante la época de Salomón. Gobernó no solo los territorios bretones de Léon, Domnonée, Cornouaille y Vannetais, sino también los condados francos de Rennes, Nantes, Coutances y Avranches, así como las partes occidentales de Poitou (el llamado pays de Retz) y Anjou. En el este, su gobierno se extendió hasta el río Vire. Fue el primer gobernante bretón en gobernar todo este territorio sin gran oposición dentro del oeste y el último en gobernar todo el bloque de países franco-celtas. Su oponente más fuerte fue Fulco I de Anjou, quien disputó el control de los Nantais con él, aunque Alan parece haber tenido la ventaja en su vida. Su base de poder permaneció en el sureste y era poderoso y rico en tierras alrededor de Vannes y Nantes.


Según la Crónica anglosajona, después de la muerte de Carlomán II en 884, Carlos el Gordo sucedió a toda Francia Occidental excepto Bretaña, haciendo así de Bretaña un reino independiente; Pero esto no parece haber sido cierto. Una carta datable entre 897 y 900 hace referencia al alma de Karolus en cuyo nombre Alan había ordenado que se dijeran oraciones en el monasterio de Redon. Este fue probablemente Carlos el Gordo, quien, como emperador, probablemente le otorgó a Alan el derecho a ser titulado rex. Como emperador habría tenido esa prerrogativa y se sabe que tuvo contactos con Nantes en 886, por lo que no es improbable que entrara en comunicación con Alan. Carlos también hizo un esfuerzo concertado para gobernar eficazmente en la totalidad de su imperio y para hacer antiguos enemigos, con dudosos vínculos con el imperio, como el vikingo Godfrid, hombres de prestigio a cambio de su lealtad. A lo largo de su reinado, Alan usó símbolos carolingios de regalías y formas carolingias en sus cartas.


Alan aumentó su poder durante los débiles reinados de Odón y Carlos III. Murió en 907 y Bretaña fue invadida por los vikingos, que mantuvieron la región hasta 936, cuando el nieto de Alan, Alan II, logró restablecer el gobierno cristiano, pero Bretaña nunca fue tan extendida como en la época de Alan y ningún futuro gobernante bretón fue llamado reyes.


Hijos de su esposa Oreguen, Alan dejó el siguiente número:


Pascweten (muerto c. 903)

Guerec

Budic

Rudalt, conde de Vannes, huyó de la invasión vikinga c. 919

Hija sin nombre, que se casó con Mathuedoi, conde de Poher, y fue la madre de Alan II

Hija sin nombre, que se casó con Tangui, conde de Vannes, murió antes de 913.

http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/BRITTANY.htm#_Toc284059577


ALAIN (-907). Regino registra que "Alanus frater Pasquitani" sucedió a su hermano, conjuntamente con "Iudicheil, ex filia Herispoii regis natus"[73]. Los Annales Mettenses nombran "Judicheil ex filia Heriospoii regis natus" al registrar que gobernó conjuntamente con "Alanus frater Pasquitani"[74]. Sucedió a su hermano en [876] como ALAIN I "le Grand" duque conjunto de Bretaña, gobernando conjuntamente con Judicaël hijo del duque Gurwent. Regino registra disputas entre "Alanum et Iudicheil duces Brittonium" en 890[75] y, en un pasaje anterior, que el duque Alain gobernó únicamente después de que Judicaël muriera luchando contra los vikingos[76]. La Crónica anglosajona registra que los bretones derrotaron a los vikingos en St Lo en 890 y "los arrojaron a un río y ahogaron a muchos"[77]. Parece que, después de la muerte de Alain, el poder en Bretaña fue compartido entre los condes de Poher (yerno de Alain), Vannes (el posible hijo mayor de Alain) y Cornouaïlle, y que ninguno de ellos fue reconocido como gobernante general. Es probable que esta situación persistiera hasta la invasión vikinga en 919, ya que no se ha encontrado ninguna referencia a ningún duque bretón general durante ese tiempo en ninguna de las fuentes primarias consultadas hasta ahora en la preparación del presente documento. m [primero] OREGUEN, hija de ---. "Alano ... rex Brittaniæ" donó la propiedad "abbatial sancti Sergii in pago Andecavensi" a "Raino Andacavensis episcopus" a "episcopo Adalaldo archiepiscopo simulque Rainoni episcopo, fratri eiusdem" por carta fechada [5 Feb 897/26 Nov 903], suscrita por "Orgaim uxoris suæ... Vuereche filii Alani, Pascuiten fratris sui"[78]. [m en segundo lugar como su primer marido, ---. "Tanchi viene ... cum... filiolum suum Derian, filium Alani" propiedad compartida que donaron a la abadía de Redon por carta fechada el 27 de noviembre de 910, "Gurmahilon regnante Britanniam"[79]. Esta carta indica que Tanguy estaba estrechamente relacionado con la familia del duque Alain. El uso de la palabra "filiolus" sugiere que Derien pudo haber sido el hijastro de Tanguy. Como los otros hijos conocidos del duque Alain eran adultos a finales del siglo 9, como lo demuestran los diversos documentos en los que se nombran, es poco probable que su madre se hubiera vuelto a casar después de la muerte de su marido. Por lo tanto, la explicación más probable es que Alain se volvió a casar después de la muerte de su esposa Oreguen, tuvo un hijo de este segundo matrimonio, y que su viuda se casó en segundo lugar con Tanguy después de la muerte de su primer marido. Esto explicaría la tenencia conjunta de propiedades en las que no se afirma que los otros hijos del duque Alain hayan tenido ningún interés.] El duque Alain I y su [primera] esposa tuvieron [seis] hijos.


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Fuentes

Smith, Julia M. H. Provincia e Imperio: Bretaña y los carolingios. Cambridge University Press: 1992.

Tierras medievales Fundación para la Genealogía Medieval. 2006 - 2010.

Artículo de Wikipedia sobre Alan I, rey de Bretaña

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Alain (Alan) I, King of Brittany

Alan I (French: Alain; died 907), called the Great, was the Count of Vannes and Duke of Brittany (dux Brittonium) from 876 until his death. He was probably also the only King of Brittany (rex Brittaniæ) to hold that title by legitimate grant of the Emperor.


Alan was the second son of Count Ridoredh of Vannes. He succeeded his brother Pascweten in Vannes and Brittany when the latter died, probably in the middle of 876. He represented the power bloc of southeastern Brittany and had to fight, initially, against Judicael of Poher, representative of western Breton interests, for the ducal throne. Eventually he and Judicael made peace in order to fight the Vikings. Judicael died in the Battle of Questembert in 888 or 889. In 890, Alan defeated the Vikings at Saint-Lô, chasing them into a river where many drowned.


After the death of Judicael, Alan ruled all of Brittany as it had been during the time of Salomon. He ruled not only the Breton territories of Léon, Domnonée, Cornouaille, and the Vannetais, but also the Frankish counties of Rennes, Nantes, Coutances, and Avranches, as well as the western parts of Poitou (the so-called pays de Retz) and Anjou. In the east his rule extended as far as the river Vire. He was the first Breton ruler to rule this entire territory without great opposition within the west and the last to rule the whole bloc of Franco-Celtic countries. His strongest opponent was Fulk I of Anjou, who disputed control of the Nantais with him, though Alan seems to have had the upper hand in his lifetime. His power base remained in the southeast and he was powerful and wealthy in land in around Vannes and Nantes.


According to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, after the death of Carloman II in 884, Charles the Fat succeeded to all of West Francia save Brittany, thus making Brittany an independent kingdom; but this does not seem to have been true. A charter datable to between 897 and 900 makes reference to the soul of Karolus on whose behalf Alan had ordered prayers to be said in the monastery of Redon. This was probably Charles the Fat, who, as emperor, probably granted Alan the right to be titled rex. As emperor he would have had that prerogative and he is known to have had contacts with Nantes in 886, making it not improbable that he came into communication with Alan. Charles also made a concerted effort to rule effectively in the entirety of his empire and to make former enemies, with dubious ties to the empire, like the Viking Godfrid, men of standing in return for their loyalty. Throughout his reign, Alan used Carolingian symbols of regalia and Carolingian forms in his charters.


Alan augmented his power during the weak reigns of Odo and Charles III. He died in 907 and Brittany was overrun by Vikings, who held the region until 936, when Alan's grandson, Alan II, succeeded in reestablishing Christian rule, but Brittany was never thenceforth as extended as in Alan's time and no future Breton rulers were called kings.


Children by his wife Oreguen, Alan left the following issue:


Pascweten (died c. 903)

Guerec

Budic

Rudalt, Count of Vannes, fled the Viking invasion c. 919

Unnamed daughter, who married Mathuedoi, Count of Poher, and was the mother of Alan II

Unnamed daughter, who married Tangui, Count of Vannes, died before 913

http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/BRITTANY.htm#_Toc284059577


ALAIN (-907). Regino records that "Alanus frater Pasquitani" succeeded his brother, jointly with "Iudicheil, ex filia Herispoii regis natus"[73]. The Annales Mettenses names "Judicheil ex filia Heriospoii regis natus" when recording that he ruled jointly with "Alanus frater Pasquitani"[74]. He succeeded his brother in [876] as ALAIN I "le Grand" joint Duke of Brittany, ruling jointly with Judicaël son of Duke Gurwent. Regino records disputes between "Alanum et Iudicheil duces Brittonium" in 890[75] and, in an earlier passage, that Duke Alain ruled solely after Judicaël died fighting the Vikings[76]. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle records that the Bretons defeated the Vikings at St Lo in 890 and "drove them into a river and drowned many"[77]. It appears that, after the death of Alain, power in Brittany was shared between the counts of Poher (Alain´s son-in-law), Vannes (Alain´s possible eldest son) and Cornouaïlle, and that none of them was acknowledged as overall ruler. It is likely that this situation persisted until the Viking invasion in 919 as no reference has been found to any overall Breton duke during that time in any of the primary sources so far consulted in the preparation of the present document. m [firstly] OREGUEN, daughter of ---. "Alanus…rex Brittaniæ" donated property "abbatial sancti Sergii in pago Andecavensi" to "Raino Andacavensis episcopus" to "episcopo Adalaldo archiepiscopo simulque Rainoni episcopo, fratri eiusdem" by charter dated [5 Feb 897/26 Nov 903], subscribed by "Orgaim uxoris suæ…Vuereche filii Alani, Pascuiten fratris sui"[78]. [m secondly as her first husband, ---. "Tanchi comes…cum…filiolum suum Derian, filium Alani" shared property which they donated to the abbey of Redon by charter dated 27 Nov 910, "Gurmahilon regnante Britanniam"[79]. This charter indicates that Tanguy was closely related to the family of Duke Alain. The use of the word "filiolus" suggests that Derien may have been Tanguy´s stepson. As Duke Alain´s other known children were adult by the late 9th century as shown by the various documents in which they are named, it is unlikely that their mother would have remarried after her husband´s death. The most likely explanation therefore is that Alain remarried after the death of his wife Oreguen, had a son by this second marriage, and that his widow married secondly Tanguy after her first husband died. This would explain the joint holding of property in which the other sons of Duke Alain are not stated to have held any interest.] Duke Alain I & his [first] wife had [six] children.


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Sources

Smith, Julia M. H. Province and Empire: Brittany and the Carolingians. Cambridge University Press: 1992.

Medieval Lands Foundation for Medieval Genealogy. 2006 - 2010.

Wikipedia article on Alan I, King of Brittany

http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~greenefamily/lape...



Alan and Jukeal, his brother, ruled Brittany together. When his brother died he ruled alone. He held the title of King of Brittany ,bestowed by the Emperor, from 890 until his death in 907. He was successful in fighting off a Viking invasion in 890.


Henry Project: https://fasg.org/projects/henryproject/data/alain000.htm


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Oreguen, Queen of Britanny

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Rudalt, comte de Vannes

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son


Budic de Bretagne

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N.N.

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Agregado por: Ing. Carlos Juan Felipe Urdaneta Alamo, MD.IG.


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