domingo, 2 de febrero de 2020

Mellobaude, King of the Franks at Worms ♛ Ref: MG-620 |•••► #Francia #Genealogía #Genealogy

Padre: Malaric I, Frankish Chief
Madre:


____________________________________________________________________________
39 ° Bisabuelo/ Great Grandfather de:
Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo
____________________________________________________________________________


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(Linea Paterna)
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Mellobaude, King of the Franks at Worms is your 39th great grandfather.
Yof→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→
  Enrique Jorge Urdaneta Lecuna
your father →  Elena Cecilia Lecuna Escobar
his mother →  María Elena de la Concepción Escobar Llamosas
her mother → Cecilia Cayetana de la Merced Llamosas Vaamonde de Escobar
her mother →  Cipriano Fernando de Las Llamosas y García
her father → José Lorenzo de las Llamozas Silva
his father →  Joseph Julián Llamozas Ranero
his father →  Manuel Llamosas y Requecens
his father →  Isabel de Requesens
his mother →  Luis de Requeséns y Zúñiga, Virrey de Holanda
her father →  Juan de Zúñiga Avellaneda y Velasco
his father → Pedro de Zúñiga y Avellaneda, II conde de Miranda del Castañar
his father →  Diego López de Zúñiga y Guzmán, I conde de Miranda del Castañar
his father → Isabel de Guzmán y Ayala, III Señora de Gibraleón
his mother →  Elvira López de Ayala Guzmán
her mother →  Leonor Suárez de Toledo y Guzmán
her mother → D. Pero Suárez de Toledo, señor de Bolaños
her father →  Teresa Vázquez de Acuña, Señora de Villaverde
his mother → Vasco Martins da Cunha, "o Seco", 5º senhor de Tábua
her father →  Joana Rodrigues de Nomães
his mother → Rodrigo Martins de Nomães, Señor de Reviñade y Silva-Escura
her father →  Rodrigo Romães Conde de Monterroso
his father → Remón II de Monterroso, III conde de Monterroso
his father →  Rodrigo Romaes, II conde de Monterroso y de Santa Marta de Ortigueira
his father → Remón Romaes, Conde de Monterroso y Santa Marta de Ortigueira
his father →  Fruela I el Cruel, rey de Asturias
his father → Ermessenda, reina consorte de Asturias
his mother →  Pelayo, rey de Asturias
her father →  Liubigotona
his mother →  Suintila, rey de los visigodos
her father → Clodesinde
his mother →  Siegbert I, King of Austrasia
her father →  Chlothar I "the Old" King of the Franks
his father →  Clovis I the Great, King of the Franks
his father → Childéric I, King of the Franks
his father →  Mérovech Mérovingiens, leader of the Frankish tribes
his father →  Clodius de Cologne, VI
his father → Pharamond, king of the Franks (Fictitious)
his father →  Hatilde
his mother →  Himbald, King of the Franks
her father →  Mellobaude, King of the Franks at Worms
his father show short path | share this path

Mellobaudes de Toxandrie MP
Spanish: Dn. Mellobaude de Toxandría
Gender: Male
Birth: circa 320
Worms, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany
Death: circa 383 (55-71)
Worms, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany
Immediate Family:
Son of Malaric I, Frankish Chief and Gauloise of Belgique
Husband of Blesinde, Princess of Suevi and Queen of Lombardy Ascyla van Gallic
Father of Himbald, King of the Franks; Chlogio von Köln, I; Flavius Richomeres de Toxandrie, Saliens Chief of Lombardy and Daughter of Mallobaudes
Brother of Flavius Merobaudes Richomeres; Priaros, King of the Franks at Toxandria and Ascyla Vr. Athanaric Koning van de Visigoten
Half brother of Richimir de Toxandrie
Added by: Jean-Jacques Chacun on February 7, 2007
Managed by: Jan Meijnaerts and 93 others
Curated by: Henn Sarv
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https://de.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mallobaudes

Mellobaudes (c320-376), King of the Franks at Worms. In 374, Mallobaudes killed Macrianus, King of the Alemanni. In 378, he was appointed as commander of household troops by Gratian and sent with general Nannianus against Lentienses Alemanni (Ammianus Marcellinus, XXX, 3,7), defeating the Alemans near the Rhine and killing King Priarius (AM XXXI, 10,6).

Mallobaudes, King of the Franks, in Worms opposed the Frank Malaric.1 He was born in 320. He was the son of Malaric, King of the Franks, in Toxandrie and N. N. of the Gauls. He killed Macrianus, king of the Alemanni in 374.2 King of the Franks in Worms. He was elected King of the Franks in 378.1 He was appointed as commander of household troops by Gratian and sent with general Nannianus against Lentienses Alemanni (Ammianus Marcellinus, XXX, 3,7), defeating the Alemans near the Rhine and killing King Priarius (AM XXXI, 10,6) in 378.2
Children of Mallobaudes, King of the Franks, in Worms: N. N. des Francs+ Richomer, Consul+ b. c 350, d. 384
[S504] Christian Settipani, Les Ancetres de Charlemagne, Addenda (1990), and Addenda thereto (31 Jan 2000) (http://www.rootsweb.com/~medieval/charladdend.htm: GEN-MEDIEVAL/soc.genealogy.medieval, 31 Jan 2000). Hereinafter cited as AdC-Addendas. [S218] The Oxford Merovingian Page, online .. Hereinafter cited as The Oxford Merovingian Page.

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Mallobaudes
 Connected to: Bucinobantes Macrian Battle of Argentovaria
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: "Mallobaudes" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (December 2010) (Learn how and when to remove this template message)
Mallobaudes or Mellobaudes was a 4th-century Frankish king who also held the Roman title of comes domesticorum. In 354 he was a tribunus armaturarum in the Roman army in Gaul, where he served under Silvanus, who usurped power in 355. Mallobaudes tried unsuccessfully to intervene on his behalf.[clarification needed] Appointed comes domesticorum by Gratian, he was second-in-command of the army in Gaul in 378 when he defeated the Alemannic tribes under King Priarius at Battle of Argentovaria (near modern Colmar) according to Ammianus Marcellinus.[1] In 380 he killed Macrian, king of the Bucinobantes and Roman ally, who had invaded Frankish territory. During the usurpation of Maximus, Mallobaudes was killed shortly after the assassination of the emperor Gratian.[2]
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http://gw.geneanet.org/dardhen?lang=en&pz=henri+gabriel+georges+edmond&nz=dardenne&ocz=0&p=mellobaud+1er+teutomer&n=de+toxandrie+des+franccs

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Showing 12 of 13 people

Queen of Lombardy Ascyla van Gallic
wife

Himbald, King of the Franks
son

Chlogio von Köln, I
son

Flavius Richomeres de Toxandrie,...
son

Daughter of Mallobaudes
daughter

Blesinde, Princess of Suevi
wife

Gauloise of Belgique
mother

Malaric I, Frankish Chief
father

Flavius Merobaudes Richomeres
brother

Priaros, King of the Franks at T...
brother

Ascyla Vr. Athanaric Koning van ...
sister

Unknown
stepmother

____________________________________________________________________________

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Indice de Personas

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____________________________________________________________________________

Himbald, King of the Franks ♛ Ref: MQ-619 |•••► #Francia #Genealogía #Genealogy

Padre: Mellobaude, King of the Franks at Worms
Madre:


____________________________________________________________________________
38 ° Bisabuelo/ Great Grandfather de:
Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo
____________________________________________________________________________


<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
(Linea Paterna)
<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
Himbald, King of the Franks is your 38th great grandfather.
You→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  →
  Enrique Jorge Urdaneta Lecuna
your father →  Elena Cecilia Lecuna Escobar
his mother →  María Elena de la Concepción Escobar Llamosas
her mother → Cecilia Cayetana de la Merced Llamosas Vaamonde de Escobar
her mother →  Cipriano Fernando de Las Llamosas y García
her father → José Lorenzo de las Llamozas Silva
his father →  Joseph Julián Llamozas Ranero
his father →  Manuel Llamosas y Requecens
his father →  Isabel de Requesens
his mother →  Luis de Requeséns y Zúñiga, Virrey de Holanda
her father →  Juan de Zúñiga Avellaneda y Velasco
his father → Pedro de Zúñiga y Avellaneda, II conde de Miranda del Castañar
his father →  Diego López de Zúñiga y Guzmán, I conde de Miranda del Castañar
his father → Isabel de Guzmán y Ayala, III Señora de Gibraleón
his mother →  Elvira López de Ayala Guzmán
her mother →  Leonor Suárez de Toledo y Guzmán
her mother → D. Pero Suárez de Toledo, señor de Bolaños
her father →  Teresa Vázquez de Acuña, Señora de Villaverde
his mother → Vasco Martins da Cunha, "o Seco", 5º senhor de Tábua
her father →  Joana Rodrigues de Nomães
his mother → Rodrigo Martins de Nomães, Señor de Reviñade y Silva-Escura
her father →  Rodrigo Romães Conde de Monterroso
his father → Remón II de Monterroso, III conde de Monterroso
his father →  Rodrigo Romaes, II conde de Monterroso y de Santa Marta de Ortigueira
his father → Remón Romaes, Conde de Monterroso y Santa Marta de Ortigueira
his father →  Fruela I el Cruel, rey de Asturias
his father → Ermessenda, reina consorte de Asturias
his mother →  Pelayo, rey de Asturias
her father →  Liubigotona
his mother →  Suintila, rey de los visigodos
her father → Clodesinde
his mother →  Siegbert I, King of Austrasia
her father →  Chlothar I "the Old" King of the Franks
his father →  Clovis I the Great, King of the Franks
his father → Childéric I, King of the Franks
his father →  Mérovech Mérovingiens, leader of the Frankish tribes
his father →  Clodius de Cologne, VI
his father → Pharamond, king of the Franks (Fictitious)
his father →  Hatilde
his mother →  Himbald, King of the Franks
her father show short path | share this path
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Himbald, roi des Francs MP
Spanish: Dn. Asturius x, roi des Francs
Gender: Male
Birth: circa 325
France
Immediate Family:
Son of Mellobaude, King of the Franks at Worms and Queen of Lombardy Ascyla van Gallic
Husband of Hodesh
Father of Hatilde
Brother of Chlogio von Köln, I; Flavius Richomeres de Toxandrie, Saliens Chief of Lombardy and Daughter of Mallobaudes
Added by: Enrique Maria Algorta Facio on October 20, 2007
Managed by: Pablo Romero (Curador) and 13 others
Curated by: Henn Sarv
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English (default)  edit | history
The earliest sources call him a King of the Franks, but do not give any genealogical details.

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Showing 8 people

Hodesh
wife

Hatilde
daughter

Queen of Lombardy Ascyla van Gallic
mother

Mellobaude, King of the Franks a...
father

Chlogio von Köln, I
brother

Flavius Richomeres de Toxandrie,...
brother

Daughter of Mallobaudes
sister

Blesinde, Princess of Suevi
stepmother

____________________________________________________________________________

____________________________________________________________________________



Indice de Personas

____________________________________________________________________________


____________________________________________________________________________

Hatilde (0350) ♔ Ref: HH-617 |•••► #Alemania #Genealogía #Genealogy

Padre: Himbald, King of the Franks
Madre:


____________________________________________________________________________
37 ° Bisabuela/ Great Grandmother de:
Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo
____________________________________________________________________________


<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
(Linea Paterna)
<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
Hatilde is your 37th great grandmother.
You→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→→
  Enrique Jorge Urdaneta Lecuna
your father →  Elena Cecilia Lecuna Escobar
his mother →  María Elena de la Concepción Escobar Llamosas
her mother → Cecilia Cayetana de la Merced Llamosas Vaamonde de Escobar
her mother →  Cipriano Fernando de Las Llamosas y García
her father → José Lorenzo de las Llamozas Silva
his father →  Joseph Julián Llamozas Ranero
his father →  Manuel Llamosas y Requecens
his father →  Isabel de Requesens
his mother →  Luis de Requeséns y Zúñiga, Virrey de Holanda
her father →  Juan de Zúñiga Avellaneda y Velasco
his father → Pedro de Zúñiga y Avellaneda, II conde de Miranda del Castañar
his father →  Diego López de Zúñiga y Guzmán, I conde de Miranda del Castañar
his father → Isabel de Guzmán y Ayala, III Señora de Gibraleón
his mother →  Elvira López de Ayala Guzmán
her mother →  Leonor Suárez de Toledo y Guzmán
her mother → D. Pero Suárez de Toledo, señor de Bolaños
her father →  Teresa Vázquez de Acuña, Señora de Villaverde
his mother → Vasco Martins da Cunha, "o Seco", 5º senhor de Tábua
her father →  Joana Rodrigues de Nomães
his mother → Rodrigo Martins de Nomães, Señor de Reviñade y Silva-Escura
her father →  Rodrigo Romães Conde de Monterroso
his father → Remón II de Monterroso, III conde de Monterroso
his father →  Rodrigo Romaes, II conde de Monterroso y de Santa Marta de Ortigueira
his father → Remón Romaes, Conde de Monterroso y Santa Marta de Ortigueira
his father →  Fruela I el Cruel, rey de Asturias
his father → Ermessenda, reina consorte de Asturias
his mother →  Pelayo, rey de Asturias
her father →  Liubigotona
his mother →  Suintila, rey de los visigodos
her father → Clodesinde
his mother →  Siegbert I, King of Austrasia
her father →  Chlothar I "the Old" King of the Franks
his father →  Clovis I the Great, King of the Franks
his father → Childéric I, King of the Franks
his father →  Mérovech Mérovingiens, leader of the Frankish tribes
his father →  Clodius de Cologne, VI
his father → Pharamond, king of the Franks (Fictitious)
his father →  Hatilde
his mother
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Hatilde MP
French: Hastilde daughter of Himbald, King of the Franks and Hodesh
Gender: Female
Birth: circa 350
France
Death: 449 (95-103)
Westphalia, Germany
Immediate Family:
Daughter of Himbald, King of the Franks and Hodesh
Wife of Marcomir I, King of the Franks at Cologne and Mérovée II, King of the Franks
Mother of Marcomir II, King of the Franks; Pharamond, king of the Franks (Fictitious); Ragnachilde De Toxandrie and Meroveo II de los Francos
Added by: Isa Souchon on July 8, 2007
Managed by: Isa Souchon and 39 others
Curated by: Jason Scott Wills
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English (default)  edit | history
Some sources identify this Hatilde with the Hatilde who is said to have been the wife of Frotmundus.

http://larryvoyer.com/genealogy/getperson.php?personID=I153551&tree=v7_28

Hildegonde (Ildegond ) De TOXANDRIE, of the LOMBARDS
Suffix of the LOMBARDS Birth Abt 373 Lombardy, Italy Gender Female Died Yes, date unknown Person ID I153551 voyer_7_28_2008 Last Modified 09 May 2010

Father Richimir De TOXANDRIE, b. Abt 335, Maritime Charente, Saintonge, France , d. 384, Maritime Charente, Saintonge, France
Mother Ascyla, b. Abt 335, d. Yes, date unknown
Married Abt 373
Family ID F2677 Group Sheet
Family Marcomir I of the EAST FRANKS, b. Abt 347, Germany , d. Abt 404
Children
Chlodwig de COLOGNE, b. Abt 405, d. Abt 450
Ildegonde of The FRANKS, b. 399, Bourgogne, Marne, Aisne, France , d. 450
Last Modified 09 May 2010
Family ID F63517 Group Sheet

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Hildegonde (Ildegond ) De TOXANDRIE, of the LOMBARDS
Suffix of the LOMBARDS Birth Abt 373 Lombardy, Italy Gender Female Died Yes, date unknown Person ID I153551 voyer_7_28_2008 Last Modified 09 May 2010

Father Richimir De TOXANDRIE, b. Abt 335, Maritime Charente, Saintonge, France , d. 384, Maritime Charente, Saintonge, France
Mother Ascyla, b. Abt 335, d. Yes, date unknown
Married Abt 373
Family ID F2677 Group Sheet
Family Marcomir I of the EAST FRANKS, b. Abt 347, Germany , d. Abt 404
Children
Chlodwig de COLOGNE, b. Abt 405, d. Abt 450
Ildegonde of The FRANKS, b. 399, Bourgogne, Marne, Aisne, France , d. 450
Last Modified 09 May 2010
Family ID F63517 Group Sheet
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Mérovée II, King of the Franks
husband

Ragnachilde De Toxandrie
daughter

Meroveo II de los Francos
son

Marcomir I, King of the Franks a...
husband

Marcomir II, King of the Franks
son

Pharamond, king of the Franks (F...
son

Himbald, King of the Franks
father

Hodesh
mother

Chlodowig I, King of the Franks ...
stepson

Albofledis .
stepdaughter

Blésinde des Francs
stepdaughter

Sunno Franks
stepson

____________________________________________________________________________

____________________________________________________________________________



Indice de Personas

____________________________________________________________________________


____________________________________________________________________________

Pharamond, king of the Franks (Fictitious) ♛ Ref: MH-616 |•••► #Alemania #Genealogía #Genealogy

Padre: Marcomir I, King of the Franks at Cologne
Madre: Hatilde  Ref: 183017


____________________________________________________________________________
36 ° Bisabuelo/ Great Grandfather de:
Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo
____________________________________________________________________________


<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
(Linea Paterna)
<---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------->
Pharamond, king of the Franks (Fictitious) is your 36th great grandfather.
Yof→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→
  Enrique Jorge Urdaneta Lecuna
your father →  Elena Cecilia Lecuna Escobar
his mother →  María Elena de la Concepción Escobar Llamosas
her mother → Cecilia Cayetana de la Merced Llamosas Vaamonde de Escobar
her mother →  Cipriano Fernando de Las Llamosas y García
her father → José Lorenzo de las Llamozas Silva
his father →  Joseph Julián Llamozas Ranero
his father →  Manuel Llamosas y Requecens
his father →  Isabel de Requesens
his mother →  Luis de Requeséns y Zúñiga, Virrey de Holanda
her father →  Juan de Zúñiga Avellaneda y Velasco
his father → Pedro de Zúñiga y Avellaneda, II conde de Miranda del Castañar
his father →  Diego López de Zúñiga y Guzmán, I conde de Miranda del Castañar
his father → Isabel de Guzmán y Ayala, III Señora de Gibraleón
his mother →  Elvira López de Ayala Guzmán
her mother →  Leonor Suárez de Toledo y Guzmán
her mother → D. Pero Suárez de Toledo, señor de Bolaños
her father →  Teresa Vázquez de Acuña, Señora de Villaverde
his mother → Vasco Martins da Cunha, "o Seco", 5º senhor de Tábua
her father →  Joana Rodrigues de Nomães
his mother → Rodrigo Martins de Nomães, Señor de Reviñade y Silva-Escura
her father →  Rodrigo Romães Conde de Monterroso
his father → Remón II de Monterroso, III conde de Monterroso
his father →  Rodrigo Romaes, II conde de Monterroso y de Santa Marta de Ortigueira
his father → Remón Romaes, Conde de Monterroso y Santa Marta de Ortigueira
his father →  Fruela I el Cruel, rey de Asturias
his father → Ermessenda, reina consorte de Asturias
his mother →  Pelayo, rey de Asturias
her father →  Liubigotona
his mother →  Suintila, rey de los visigodos
her father → Clodesinde
his mother →  Siegbert I, King of Austrasia
her father →  Chlothar I "the Old" King of the Franks
his father →  Clovis I the Great, King of the Franks
his father → Childéric I, King of the Franks
his father →  Mérovech Mérovingiens, leader of the Frankish tribes
his father →  Clodius de Cologne, VI
his father → Pharamond, king of the Franks (Fictitious)
his father
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Pharamond 
 Connected to: Franks Carolingian Liber Historiae Francorum
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
King Pharamond in an anachronistic portrait

Pharamond[1] or Faramund (c. 365 – 430) is a legendary early king of the Franks, first referred to in the anonymous 8th-century Carolingian text Liber Historiae Francorum, also known as the Gesta regnum Francorum. In this work, which is customarily dated to 727, the anonymous author begins by writing of a mythical Trojan origin for the Franks. The emphasis of the Liber was upon "construct[ing] a specific past for a particular group of people."[2]

Legend
The story is told of the election of the first Frankish king.[3] It says that after the death of Sunno, his brother Marcomer, leader of the Ampsivarii and Chatti, proposed to the Franks that they should have one single king, contrary to their tradition. The Liber adds that Pharamond, named as Marcomer's son, was chosen as this first king (thus beginning the tradition of long-haired kings of the Franks), and then states that when he died, his son Chlodio was raised up as the next king. The work says no more of him.

Because there is no reference in any source prior to this work[4] to this figure named Pharamond, who is placed prior to Chlodio (that is, before ca. 428), scholars consider him a legendary rather than historical figure.[5] As a matter of fact in several sources, for example Gregory of Tours, multiple kings are attested to rule simultaneously in later times.[citation needed] It is thus a dubious matter to assume that, even if Pharamond existed, he was ever recognized as sole king. The first king of the Franks who may have been close to this position was Clovis I, but after his death his empire was divided again amongst his sons, who ruled again simultaneously.

The myth of Pharamond has led to new legends and romances in later times. In past times this has led to attempts to falsely write Pharamond into Prosper Tiro.[6] Martin Bouquet at a much later date invented an entire history of Pharamond.[1]

Historical sources
Gregory of Tours, in his Annales Francici notes in 420 "Pharamond reigns in France" ("Pharamundus regnat in Francia" - Annales Francici, page 151)

Sigebert of Gembloux names him as King of the Franks between Marcomer and Chlodio ("Post Marcomirum filius ejus Faramundus fuit, rex crinitus, a quo Franci crinitos reges habere coeperunt. Post quem Clodius filius ejus regnans Francis a Thoringia advectis Gallias invasit, et capta urbe Tornaco Cameracum usque progressus multos Romanorum in Galliis peremit" [2]). He keeps the mythical origin for Marcomer.

Saint Gregory wrote about a group of Trojans that escaped to the Maeotian marshes, then into Pannonia, becoming the Sicambri (a subdivision of the Franks), who inhabited the region along with the Alans. The Alan presence in Pannonia is historical around 370, as part of their migrations to Gaul, and later to Hispania, where they ruled until the arrival of the Visigoths. He says that later, the Franks migrated to Germania led by Marcomer, and established themselves along the Rhine. After Marcomer's death, Pharemundus, or Faramundus succeeded him as chieftain.

In Gesta Francorum (c.1100), chapter 8 describes how the Franks changed their laws under Pharamond . ([3] page 229)

Pharamond in later culture
A Pharamond appears as the king of France in the Prose Tristan and later Arthurian works.

Pharamond is mentioned in William Shakespeare's Henry V, Act I, Scene 2, as the originator of the Salic law banning women from succession to the throne of France.

He appears as the title character in the opera Faramondo by George Frideric Handel.

A character named Pharamond appears in the Sandman and Lucifer comics series.

Alluded to in Victor Hugo's The Hunchback of Notre-Dame after Jehan Frollo's arrow pierces the left arm of Quasimodo the hunchback: "This no more disturbed Quasimodo than a scratch would have bothered King Pharamond." (Cobb translation)

Faramund is the faction leader of the Franks and a playable character in the PC video game Total War: Attila when beginning a Grand Campaign, with a begin date of 395 AD. He is the son of the former deceased faction leader Marcomer.


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Pharamond MP
Gender: Male
Birth: estimated between 348 and 384
France 
Death: between circa 427 and circa 430 
Immediate Family:
Son of Marcomir I, King of the Franks at Cologne and Hatilde
Husband of Argotta of the Franks and Ymbergide / Imberitrude
Father of Fredemundus; Clodius de Cologne, VI; Adalbertus de Cologne; Chararic (Guerric) de Tongres; Sigebert De Soissons, King de Cologne and 5 others
Brother of Marcomir II, King of the Franks
Half brother of Ragnachilde De Toxandrie; Meroveo II de los Francos; Chlodowig I, King of the Franks at Cologne; Albofledis .; Blésinde des Francs and 2 others
Added by: Virginia Lea Sooy on March 12, 2007
Managed by:   Daniel Dupree Walton and 374 others
Curated by: Anne Brannen
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English (default)  history
Pharamond or Faramund (c. 370 - c. 427) is probably legendary rather than historical. Although he is often called the first king of the Salian Franks, he was first mentioned in the anonymous 8th century Carolingian text Liber Historiae Francorum, also known as the Gesta regnum Francorum.

A modern invention sometimes calls him a son of Frotmund (Fictitious)

The legend of his miraculous birth suggests that the ancient Franks had a form of Divine Kingship, probably a descent from Odin.

Some sources show Pharamond and Marcomir as brothers
Some sources show Marcomir as Pharamond's father
Some sources show Marcomir as Pharamond's step-father
Bronnen
De eerste bron die een koning Pharamond noemt, in één zin, is het achtste-eeuwse Liber Historiae Francorum, dat bedoeld was om de Franken een specifiek verleden te geven (de anonieme auteur was een monnik van de Abdij van Saint-Denis, die onder de invloed stond van hofmeier Karel Martel). De Benedictijner monnik Martin Bouquet (1685-1754) bedacht een heel verhaal om koning Pharamond heen. Een oude vertaalfout in het Liber Historiae Francorum leidde enkele historici uit de Vroegmoderne tijd ertoe om de vermelding van Pharamond ook aan de geschiedschrijver Prosper van Aquitanië (ca. 390-455) toe te schrijven, een tijdgenoot dus. En om de verwarring compleet te maken vermeldt Gregorius van Tours een andere Pharamond, een priester uit Parijs die leefde in de tweede helft van de zesde eeuw.

Maar in de negentiende eeuw werd uiteindelijk bewezen dat 'koning Pharamond' een verzinsel was.
Source:Dutch Wikipedia !
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

King Pharamond
Pharamond or Faramund is a legendary early king of the Franks first referred to in the anonymous 8th century Carolingian text Liber Historiae Francorum, also known as the Gesta regnum Francorum. In this work, which is customarily dated to 727, the anonymous author begins by writing of a mythical Trojan origin for the Franks. The emphasis of the Liber was upon "construct[ing] a specific past for a particular group of people."[1]

The story is told of the election of the first Frankish king.[2] It says that after the death of Sunno, his brother Marcomer, leader of the Ampsivarii and Chatti, proposed to the Franks that they should have one single king, contrary to their tradition. The Liber adds that Pharamond, named as Marchomir's son, was chosen as this first king (thus beginning the tradition of long-haired kings of the Franks), and then states that when he died, his son Chlodio was raised up as the next king. The work says no more of him.

Because there is no reference in any source prior to this work[3] to this figure named Pharamond, who is placed prior to Chlodio (that is, before ca. 428), scholars consider him a legendary rather than historical figure.[4] As a matter of fact in several sources, for example Gregory of Tours, multiple kings are attested to rule simultaneously in later times. It is thus a dubious matter to assume that, even had Pharamond existed, he was ever recognized as sole king. The first king of the Franks who may have been close to this position was Clovis I, but after his death his empire was divided again amongst his sons who ruled again simultaneously. Pharamond exact life time is not known, but he did live during the 4th cenruty.[5]

The myth of Pharamond has led to new legends and romances in later times. In past times this has led to attempts to falsely write Pharamond into Prosper Tiro[6]. Martin Bouquet at a much later date invented an entire history of Pharamond.[1]

Reigned 410 - 426 Originally Duke of the East Franks, King Pharamond is considered to be the first king of the Franks. Pharamond or Faramund is a legendary early king of the FranksFranks The Franks or Frankish people were a West Germanic ethnic group first identified in the 3rd century as living north and east of the Lower Rhine River....

first referred to in the anonymous 8th century CarolingianCarolingian
File:Charlemagne denier Mayence 812 814.jpgThe Carolingian dynasty was a Frankish noble family with its origins in the Arnulfing and Pippinid clans of the 7th century....

text Liber Historiae FrancorumLiber Historiae Francorum
Liber historiae Francorum is a book that briefly starts as secondary source for early Franks in the time of Marcomer, and it gives a short breviarum until the time of the late Merovingians, where it becomes an important primary source of the contemporain history.... , also known as the Gesta regnum Francorum. In this work, which is customarily dated to 727, the anonymous author begins by writing of a mythical TrojanTroy Troy is a legendary city and center of the Trojan War, as described in the Epic Cycle, and especially in the Iliad, one of the two epic poems attributed to Homer....

origin for the FranksFranks
The Franks or Frankish people were a West Germanic ethnic group first identified in the 3rd century as living north and east of the Lower Rhine River.... Pharamond or Faramund is a legendary early king of the FranksFranks The Franks or Frankish people were a West Germanic ethnic group first identified in the 3rd century as living north and east of the Lower Rhine River....

first referred to in the anonymous 8th century CarolingianCarolingian
File:Charlemagne denier Mayence 812 814.jpgThe Carolingian dynasty was a Frankish noble family with its origins in the Arnulfing and Pippinid clans of the 7th century....

text Liber Historiae FrancorumLiber Historiae Francorum
Liber historiae Francorum is a book that briefly starts as secondary source for early Franks in the time of Marcomer, and it gives a short breviarum until the time of the late Merovingians, where it becomes an important primary source of the contemporain history.... , also known as the Gesta regnum Francorum. In this work, which is customarily dated to 727, the anonymous author begins by writing of a mythical TrojanTroy Troy is a legendary city and center of the Trojan War, as described in the Epic Cycle, and especially in the Iliad, one of the two epic poems attributed to Homer....

origin for the FranksFranks
The Franks or Frankish people were a West Germanic ethnic group first identified in the 3rd century as living north and east of the Lower Rhine River.... . The emphasis of the Liber was upon "construct[ing] a specific past for a particular group of people."

Austrasien var ett frankiskt kungarike under merovingerna, från 500-talet till 700-talet. Det omfattande områden på båda sidor av mellersta Rhen, med huvudorterna Metz och Reims.

Under Pharamond reign the Franks were united under one crown. He succeeded his father as Duke of the East Franks in 404 A.D.; became King of the West Franks in 419 A.D. and King of Westphalia in 420 A.D. He married Argotta, daughter of Grimald, Duke of the West Franks, in 409 A.D. At his father-in- law's death in 419 A.D., Pharamond became Duke of the West Franks. A son is recorded from this marriage: Clodio , b. 389 A.D.

Pharamond was King of Westphalia, and is considered the first king of the Salian Franks after the departure of the Romans from Gaul. He was born about 370, and he married Argotta, daughter of Genebald, Duke of East Franks. They were the parents of Clodius “Long Hair”, King of the Franks.

Noteringar PHARAMOND , kung över hela Franks Enligt Pharamond regeringstid frankerna förenades under en krona. Han efterträdde sin far som hertig av East frankerna i 404 AD , blev kung av West Franks i 419 AD och kung av Westfalen i 420 e.Kr. Han gifte sig Argotta , dotter till Grimald , hertig av West Franks , i 409 AD Vid faderns - svärfar död 419 e.Kr. , blev Pharamond hertig av West Franks . En son är inspelad från detta äktenskap : Clodio , b. 389 A.D.

Pharamond är stamfader som har en tydlig dokumenterad linje. Tidigare härskare dokumenterades från gamla skivor och annaler nämns i kyrkan historia.

PHARAMOND, KING OF ALL FRANKS Under Pharamond reign the Franks were united under one crown. He succeeded his father as Duke of the East Franks in 404 A.D.; became King of the West Franks in 419 A.D. and King of Westphalia in 420 A.D. He married Argotta, daughter of Grimald, Duke of the West Franks, in 409 A.D. At his father-in- law's death in 419 A.D., Pharamond became Duke of the West Franks. A son is recorded from this marriage: Clodio , b. 389 A.D.

Faramund (auch Pharamund, französisch Pharamond) war angeblich ein König der salischen Franken von 418 oder 420 bis zu seinem Tod 428.

Er wurde in der französischen Geschichtsschreibung als erster merowingischer König angesehen, ist aber sehr wahrscheinlich nur eine Sagengestalt. Sollte es sich um eine historische Gestalt handeln, so hat er nach einem gescheiterten Versuch des 4. Jahrhunderts (Toxandrien) den neuerlichen und diesmal erfolgreichen Versuch unternommen, die Franken dauerhaft westlich des Rheins anzusiedeln. Diese fränkischen Stämme wurde dann als Salfranken bekannt, während die östlich verbliebenen Rheinfranken oder Ripuarier genannt wurden.

Der im 8. Jahrhundert verfasste Liber historiae Francorum nennt erstmals einen König namens Faramundus; er sei ein Sohn des Marcomer (Marchamirus) und Vater Chlodios gewesen.[1]

Faramund wurde lange Zeit als erster König aus dem Geschlecht der Merowinger angesehen. Ende des 19. Jahrhunderts wurde seine Existenz jedoch als mythisch erkannt. Der Autor des Liber historiae Francorum fasste die sechs ersten Bücher des Geschichtswerks Gregors von Tours zusammen und fügte dabei 21 Zusatzinformationen an, darunter die zu Faramund und Marcomir. Er verfügte aber über keine eigenen authentischen Informationen zur Geschichte des 5. Jahrhunderts, sondern stützte sich auf Gregors Angaben. Es ist sehr unwahrscheinlich, dass er drei Jahrhunderte nach den Ereignissen Kenntnisse über frühe Merowinger besaß, die weiter reichten als diejenigen Gregors.

http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faramund_(König)

http://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faramundo

Pharamond (c. 370 - c. 430) é considerado como sendo o primeiro rei dos francos salianos, embora ele seja possivelmente uma figura mais lendária que histórica. Ele era possivelmente filho ou genro de Marcomer.

Apenas os historiadores Próspero da Aquitânia e Martin Bouquet escreveram sobre seu reinado em datas bastante posteriores. Em 420, ele supostamente conduziu seu povo na travessia do Reno na direção oeste. Esse movimento efetivamente separou sua tribo da tribo majoritária dos francos ripurianos que haviam se fixado próximo a Colônia. Faramundo foi finalmente sucedido por seu filho Clódio. Sua esposa foi Argotta.

Genealogia

Ele era filho de Marcomer ou Marcomir (filho de Clodius ou Cláudio) e Frimutel ou Frimuta. Clodius (324-389) era filho de Dagobert ou Dagoberto (300-379). Dagoberto era filho de Genebald ou Genebaldo (262-358), por sua vez, filho de outro Dagoberto, de filiação desconhecida.

Duc des Francs Saliens (420-428) -

Hertog van Salische Franken (420-428) -

Duke of Salian Franks (420-428)

Pharamond 1 2 •Sex: M •Title: King of Franks •Birth: ABT 370 in Westphalia, Germany 3 •Death: 430 1 2

Pharamond, Duke of the East Franks, 404 A.D., elected King of the West Franks, 419, died in 430, 16th in descent from Boadicea. He married Argotta, "the mother of all the kings of France." They were the great great grandparents of Clovis. He was descended 13 generations from Athildis, who married in 129 A.D. Marcomir IV., King of Franconia, who died in 149. Athildis was the daughter of "Old King Cole," known also as Colius I., who died in 170 A.D.

Father: Marcomir b: ABT 347 in Germany

Marriage 1 Argotta b: ABT 376 in Kingdom of the East Franks •Married: 394 3 Children 1. Chlodo b: ABT 395 in Westphalia, Germany

Pharamond (c.370-426)

Considered to be the first king of the Salian Franks from AD 409, Pharamond is scarcely known to history, living on the fringes of the Roman empire as he did. His parentage is unknown, but he could have been a son or son-in-law of Marcomer.

Contemporary historian Prosper Tiro wrote about Pharamond. In 420, he reportedly led his people across the River Rhine to head into the Roman Empire. This movement effectively separated his tribe from the majority of the Ripuarian Franks who had settled near Cologne. However, there were certainly Franks already settled on the west bank of the Rhine in 407, possibly Sicambrian Franks, so perhaps Pharamond was leading the first group of Salian Franks to arrive.

Pharamond was eventually succeeded by his son Clodio. His wife was Argotta. A Pharamond appears as the king of France in the prose Tristan and later Arthurian works; he was clearly inspired by the historical leader.

http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~pmcbride/james/f010.htm#I425X4

http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=jloops&id=I5683

ID: I5683 Name: Pharamond King Of Franks Given Name: Pharamond Suffix: King Of Franks Sex: M Birth: ABT 0370 in Westphalia,Germany Death: ABT 0427 _UID: F3933B1540399F438E1A09614F02F41CA4A3 Change Date: 27 Dec 2007 at 03:00:00

Father: Marcomir Duke Of East Franks b: ABT 0347 in Germany

Marriage 1 Argotta b: ABT 0376 in France

Married: 0394
Children

Has Children Clodius "Long Hair" King Of Franks b: ABT 0395 in Westphalia,Germany
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http://ancestralfamilytrees.blogspot.com/2012/05/king-pharamond.html

King Pharamond b. 370

Pharamond or Faramund (c. 370-427) is a legendary early king of the Franks, first referred to in the anonymous 8th century Carolingian text Liber Historiae Francorum, also known as the Gesta regnum Francorum. In this work, which is customarily dated to 727, the anonymous author begins by writing of a mythical Trojan origin for the Franks. The emphasis of the Liber was upon "constructing a specific past for a particular group of people."

Legend

The story is told of the election of the first Frankish king. It says that after the death of Sunno, his brother Marcomer, leader of the Ampsivarii andChatti, proposed to the Franks that they should have one single king, contrary to their tradition. The Liber adds that Pharamond, named as Marchomir's son, was chosen as this first king (thus beginning the tradition of long-haired kings of the Franks), and then states that when he died, his son Chlodiowas raised up as the next king. The work says no more of him.

Because there is no reference in any source prior to this work to this figure named Pharamond, who is placed prior to Chlodio (that is, before ca. 428), scholars consider him a legendary rather than historical figure. As a matter of fact in several sources, for example Gregory of Tours, multiple kings are attested to rule simultaneously in later times.[citation needed] It is thus a dubious matter to assume that, even if Pharamond existed, he was ever recognized as sole king. The first king of the Franks who may have been close to this position was Clovis I, but after his death his empire was divided again amongst his sons, who ruled again simultaneously.

The myth of Pharamond has led to new legends and romances in later times. In past times this has led to attempts to falsely write Pharamond into Prosper Tiro. Martin Bouquet at a much later date invented an entire history of Pharamond.

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http://www.themorrisclan.com/GENEALOGY/PHARAMOND.html PHARAMOND King of the Franks HUSBAND:- PHARAMOND. (Faramond, Faramund, Faramundus). First King of all the Franks. King of Westphalia. First King of the Merovingians. Born in 370 in Westphalia, Germany; son of MARCOMIR, Duke of the Franks. Pharamond is known as the first King of France after the departure of the Romans from Gaul. He is not mentioned by Roman historians of the 4-5th centuries, or by Gregory of Tours, so most modern historians disregard him as a historical person, but regard him as an invention to establish a dubious dynastic continuity.

The Liber Historiae Francorum, also known as the Gesta regnum Francorum, which is customarily dated to 727 AD, gives a different father for Pharamond. It is noted though that this work is incorrect in other historical datings.

He married (1) Ymbergide (Imberltrude). They did not have children.

He married (2) Argotta in 394 AD.

The story is told of the election of the first Frankish king. It says that after the death of Sunno, Marcomir proposed to the Franks that they should have one single king, contrary to their tradition. The Liber adds that Pharamond, named as Marcomir's son, was chosen as this first king, and then states that when he died, his son Chlodio was raised up as the next king. The work says no more of him.

He was Duke of the East Franks in 404, and then also Duke of the West Franks in 419, and King of Westphalia.

In Prosper of Aquitaine, we read, under the year 417, the twenty-sixth year of Honorius: Faramundus regnat in Francia. (S12).

In several sources, for example Gregory of Tours, who wrote Historia Francorum, multiple kings are attested to rule simultaneously in later times, so it was not always the rule to have only one king over the Franks.

He is believed to have led his people across the Rhine River heading west in 420 AD, separating his people from the Ripuarian Franks settlement near Cologne.

He died in (427-S1)(428-S2)(430-S4,S5).

NOTE: David Hughes makes the following statement, without citing and sources:

The genealogy of the early Frankish kings was confused by medieval clerics who had few sources available to them, but modern scholarship has come along to untangle the mess using multiple sources that have come to be available over the years from discoveries made in the libraries of old monasteries. For example, the 1st, 2nd, & 3rd Frankish kings, namely, Faramond [Pharamond], Chlodio, and Merovech, are NOT father, son, and grandson, as they appear in the traditional genealogy of the Merovingians, but rather each came from entirely different families. Faramond's mother and both of his wives were Frankish princesses. His successor, Chlodio, murdered Faramond's only son upon Faramond's death to clear his own succession. Chlodio's wife, Argotta [aka Siegse], was one of Faramond's two daughters. Argotta brought into the marriage a son, Merovech, from a previous marriage to Quintus Tarus, Prefect of Provence. It was the civil war between Merovech and his half-brother, Cloderic, that was the pretext for the invasion of Gaul by Attila "The Hun". And, the confusion of the parentage of King Clovis "The Great", who was not the son of the Frankish King Childeric I, is due to the fact that the wife of Prince Clovis [King Childeric I's son], namely, Dochilt, married [the future] King Clovis "The Great" upon the premature death of her husband, Prince Clovis [King Childeric I's son], thus, the misidentification of Prince Clovis [King Childeric I's son] with King Clovis "The Great" by medieval clerics is understandable. (S10).

WIFE (1): Ymbergide (Imberltrude). She married Pharamond, King of the Franks. They did not have children.

WIFE (2): ARGOTTA. Queen Of France. (Princess of the SALIC FRANKS, Argotta De Cimbres)(Siegse)). Born in 376; daughter of GENEBALD (Genbald), Duke Of the Franks. Argotta is sometimes listed as the daughter of the King of the Cimbri (Cambray).

CHILDREN of PHARAMOND King of the Franks, and ARGOTTA:

CLODIUS, Long Haired. (Le Chevelu). (Clodius V, King of Westphalia, Clodio, Clodian, Le Chevelu). King of France, King of Cologne. Born (in 395)(about 352). He married Basina of Thuringia. He died in 447 (430)(449). Note that David Hughes (S10) says he was not the son of Pharamond, but the son-in-law. Fredemundus DESPOSYNI. Adalbert (Alberico, Adelbertus). Duke of MOSEL. Born in 405 AD. He died in 491 AD. (Frotmund?). Ancestor of Viviane del Acqs. (S2). She would have been named after her grandmother.
SOURCES:

[S1]. http://www.smokykin.com/ged/f002/f01/a0020171.htm [S2]. http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~jamesdow/s016/f002140.htm [S3]. http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~humefamily/25753.htm [S4]. http://www.aemyers.net/genealogy/d0017/g0000085.html#I3914 [S5]. http://www.martin.romano.org/wc07/wc07_076.htm [S6]. http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/i/a/c/Fred-Iacoletti-VA/WEBSITE-0001/UHP-0625.html?Welcome=1071760421 [S7]. http://www.genpc.com/gen/files/d0025/f0000023.html [S8]. http://www.deloriahurst.com/deloriahurst%20page/1811.html [S9]. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. [S10]. EARLY FRANKISH KINGS & THE MEROVINGIANS. David Hughes. http://www.angelfire.com/ego/et_deo/earlyfrankishkings.wps.htm. [S11]. Part I, Chapter VI: Of the ten Kingdoms represented by the ten horns of the fourth Beast. by Isaac Newton. This document is part of Observations upon the Prophecies of Daniel, and the Apocalypse of St. John.. (London: 1733)' The Newton Project. http://www.newtonproject.sussex.ac.uk/view/texts/diplomatic/THEM00200. [S12]. The Ethnology of Germany.- Part VI. The Varini, Varangians, and Franks.- Section I. by Henry H. Howorth. The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, Vol. 12. (1883), pp. 525-553. Published by: Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland. http://www.jstor.org/stable/2841691.
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Pharamond of the Franks of Westph, Possibly a legendary rather than historical figure. Only the later century historicians Prosper Tyron and Dom Bouquet give a report about his reign. In AD 420, he reportedly led his people in crossing the river Rhine and heading west. This movement would effectively separate his tribe from the majority of the Rhinefranks that had settled near Cologne. Pharamond was eventualy succeeded by his son Clodio. (From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia)
Pharamond, Duke of the East Franks in 404 A. D., was elected King of the West Franks 419, and is reckoned by historians as the first King of France. He married Argotta, who was descended from Heli, first King of the Britons, one of whose descendants had married one of the Kings of France, a daughter Althildis who married Marconier IV, King of France A. D. 128, from whom Argotta was 14th in line. Thus she was 22nd in line from Heli, King of the Britons, and was called the mother of all the Kings of France. (Kin of Mellcene Thurman Smith, page 353)
PHARAMOND, King of the West Franks,(*) who died 428, married Argotta, daughter of Gunibald, Duke of the West Franks, who died 419, son of Priam, or Dagobert, first Duke of the West Franks under the Romans, who died 389, son of Clodius, King of the West Franks 378. (Fenwick Allied Ancestry, page 58)
...x 1 NAME Pharamond of the /Franks/ 2 SOUR S033320 3 DATA 4 TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001 1 BIRT 2 DATE BEF. 404 2 SOUR S033320 3 DATA 4 TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001 1 DEAT 2 DATE 430 2 SOUR S033320 3 DATA 4 TEXT Date of Import: Jan 17, 2001
[De La Pole.FTW] : Duke of East Franks, 404. King of West Franks, 419. King of Westphalia, 430. Died 430. K: Pharamond. Elected King of the West Franks. Established the Salique Law. First King of the Franks. Also King of the Salistian Franks. Died 427-430.
Father: Marcomir Of The Franks Duke Of The East Franks b: ABT 347 in Germania, Inferior, Roman Empire of the West Mother: Hatilde b: ABT 353

Marriage 1 Argotta Of Sciambr Queen Of Franks b: ABT 376 in Thuringia, Germany

Children

Has Children Fredemundus Of The Franks Has No Children Frotmund Of The Franks Has Children Clodion of France King of the Franks b: ABT 395 in Westphalia, Germany
Pharamond var grunnleggeren av Merowinger-dynastiet og var den første Konge over Frankerne

Arguments
I see that there is a lot of people that seems to have the truth about genealogi in all aspects of it. This is the reason why I and many others keep a lot private. In the matter of Pharamond and his existence, there are some who says he is fictional at Geni. I do wonder how they can make that argument without backing it up. Because a lot of the statements that are made is taken from nowhere. People are allowed to have opinions about things, but to lock profiles and to stop people from editing them are wrong. If people have any comments to profiles they can send a request to ask for proof of the things that are put out, or they can ignore it. In the archeological excavating in France and Germany in 1986 they found evidence of the existence of Pharamond, they found coins with his name and his title, these coins are dated with modern tecnology and are therefor proven to be from the the time Pharamond is set to been living. Pharamond was the child of Marcomar, who is the ancestor from a tribe called Marcomanners.. They originally came from Greece and fled to France, to Languedoc. That is why the Merowingians were told to be the keepers for Maria Magdalena and her doughter. This is the place that is to be said where Maria Magdalenas doughter arrived from Egypt. Here name was Sara (which means Princess. They were a tribe that lived in France and some moved south in germany up to Cologne,they passed the Rhine and got an area called Marcomanni , to a place which today is called Judenburg in South-East Germany into Austria I see that some are refering to Troy in Greece, but there are also a place called Troy in France, in beetween Paris and Metz a bit south. This is the place where Marcomar after a while came with his men. As he was a warrior he and his men also moved further west to Lutetia (Marcomar named it Paris) and Gallicia, northern Portugal.). Marcomars son Merovech has a legend to his birth, if this is true is hard to tell, but he still was a man who ruled the area after his father Marcomar. Marcomar was the son of Priam which other archological excovatings have confirmed to have been an existing person. Many people put out information that comes from Wikipedia with no scepsis. Wikipedia is ok to start and to get some info, but you have to confirm it from other sources, if it’s not already validated. It seems that some people on Geni are more concerned to have a lot of people to manage than to bee sure that the info is correct. I see that some have over 50 000 people to manage and they have been doing this for 6 or 7 yers. I have about 1400 people together in the trees of my and my fiance. I have been working 6,5 years to get this information accurat and the last 3 months I’ve joined Geni, this may tell you that it takes a lot of effort to get things correct. Everyone can have a large amount of people to manage if they don’t confirm the info. Clovis

Sources
Source:Dutch Wikipedia !
http://www.our-royal-titled-noble-and-commoner-ancestors.com/p575.htm#i17283
http://www.homeofourfathers.com/lisbeth/royaltyfrancepharamond410426.htm
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=john_d_newport&id=I5206
[http://www.angelfire.com/ego/et_deo/earlyfrankishkings.wps.htm EARLY FRANKISH KINGS & THE MEROVINGIANS}
http://gw.geneanet.org/nobily?lang=fr;pz=elisabeth+therese+marie+helene;nz=de+belgique;ocz=0;p=pharamond;n=de+francie
http://www.our-royal-titled-noble-and-commoner-ancestors.com/p575.htm#i17283

Given also as Pharamond Der Oost Franken in profiles on his wife Argotte or Arcote van Cimbrië see her about me section

Pharamond (van Tongeren) van Keulen

MyHeritage Family Trees
van Leeuwen - van Zuijlen, managed by Gerard van Leeuwen
Birth: 397 - Westfalen
Death: 427
Parents: Marcomir Van Keulen, Hildegonda Van Keulen (geboren Van Lombardije (Of Frotmund Franks) Frimutel)
Sister: Hildegonde Der Merovingen (geboren Van Keulen)
Wife: Arcote (Van Tongeren) Van Keulen (geboren Van Cimbrië)
Daughter: Elivira Balthes (geboren (Van Tongeren) Van Keulen)
Pharamund Pharamond van Keulen Thoxandrie

MyHeritage Family Trees
Van Cakenbergh Web Site, managed by Hugo Van Cakenbergh
Birth: 364 - Westfalen D
Death: 427
Daughter: Erelieva Der Oostgoten
Pharamond van Keulen

MyHeritage Family Trees
Visschers Web Site, managed by Jan Visschers
Birth: Circa 397 - Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany
Death: Circa 427 - Bet, Germany
Parents: Marcomir Van Keulen, Frotmund Van Keulen
Sister: Hillegonda Der Franken (geboren Van Keulen)
Wife: Arcote Van Keulen (geboren Van Cimbrië)
Children: Elvira Der Ostrogothen (geboren Van Tongeren (Van Keulen)), Clodius Van Keulen
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Basina de Cologne
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Clodius de Cologne, VI ♛ Ref: PA-615 |•••► #ALEMANIA #Genealogía #Genealogy

Padre: Pharamond, king of the Franks (Fictitious)
Madre:


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35 ° Bisabuelo/ Great Grandfather de:
Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo
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Clodius de Cologne, VI is your 35th great grandfather.
You→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→
  Enrique Jorge Urdaneta Lecuna
your father →  Elena Cecilia Lecuna Escobar
his mother →  María Elena de la Concepción Escobar Llamosas
her mother → Cecilia Cayetana de la Merced Llamosas Vaamonde de Escobar
her mother →  Cipriano Fernando de Las Llamosas y García
her father → José Lorenzo de las Llamozas Silva
his father →  Joseph Julián Llamozas Ranero
his father →  Manuel Llamosas y Requecens
his father →  Isabel de Requesens
his mother →  Luis de Requeséns y Zúñiga, Virrey de Holanda
her father →  Juan de Zúñiga Avellaneda y Velasco
his father → Pedro de Zúñiga y Avellaneda, II conde de Miranda del Castañar
his father →  Diego López de Zúñiga y Guzmán, I conde de Miranda del Castañar
his father → Isabel de Guzmán y Ayala, III Señora de Gibraleón
his mother →  Elvira López de Ayala Guzmán
her mother →  Leonor Suárez de Toledo y Guzmán
her mother → D. Pero Suárez de Toledo, señor de Bolaños
her father →  Teresa Vázquez de Acuña, Señora de Villaverde
his mother → Vasco Martins da Cunha, "o Seco", 5º senhor de Tábua
her father →  Joana Rodrigues de Nomães
his mother → Rodrigo Martins de Nomães, Señor de Reviñade y Silva-Escura
her father →  Rodrigo Romães Conde de Monterroso
his father → Remón II de Monterroso, III conde de Monterroso
his father →  Rodrigo Romaes, II conde de Monterroso y de Santa Marta de Ortigueira
his father → Remón Romaes, Conde de Monterroso y Santa Marta de Ortigueira
his father →  Fruela I el Cruel, rey de Asturias
his father → Ermessenda, reina consorte de Asturias
his mother →  Pelayo, rey de Asturias
her father →  Liubigotona
his mother →  Suintila, rey de los visigodos
her father → Clodesinde
his mother →  Siegbert I, King of Austrasia
her father →  Chlothar I "the Old" King of the Franks
his father →  Clovis I the Great, King of the Franks
his father → Childéric I, King of the Franks
his father →  Mérovech Mérovingiens, leader of the Frankish tribes
his father →  Clodius de Cologne, VI
his father
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Chlodio
 Connected to: Gregory of Tours Clovis I Childeric I
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chlodio
A King of the Franks

Chlodio
Reign 20 years[1]
Died probably after 450[2]
Issue Merovech (uncertain, but probable relative)
Full name
Chlodio
Father Theudemeres or Pharamond (uncertain)
Chlodio (d. approx. 450) also Clodio, Clodius, Clodion, Cloio or Chlogio, was a king of the Franks who attacked and apparently then held Roman-inhabited lands and cities in the Silva Carbonaria and as far south as the river Somme, apparently starting from a Frankish base which was also technically within the Roman empire. He is known from very few records, but it is thought that he might be an ancestor of the Merovingian dynasty, and possibly a descendant of the Salian Franks reported by Roman sources in the 4th century.

Gregory of Tours (II,9) reported that he attacked from a fort (castrum) named "Dispargum" on the edge of the "Thoringian" land. This is a place which has been interpreted many ways, for example possibly as Duisburg on the Rhine, or Duisburg near Brussels, or Diest in Belgium.[3] The latter two proposals would fit the geography well, because they are within striking distance of the Silva Carbonaria, and close to Toxandria, which is known to have been settled by the Salians. It requires "Thoringorum" (genitive case) to be an error for something like "Tungrorum", but this matches Gregory's previous mention in the same passage of how the Franks had earlier settled on the banks of the Rhine and then moved into "Thoringia" on the left side of the Rhine. This does not match the medieval and modern "Thuringia" which is far inland from the Rhine.[2][3] Gregory wrote:

It is commonly said that the Franks came originally from Pannonia and first colonized the banks of the Rhine. Then they crossed the river, marched through Thuringia, and set up in each country district and each city long-haired kings chosen from the foremost and most noble family of their race. [...] They also say that Clodio, a man of high birth and marked ability among his people, was King of the Franks and that he lived in the castle of Duisberg in Thuringian territory. In those parts, that is towards the south, the Romans occupied the territory as far as the River Loire. [...] Clodio sent spies to the town of Cambrai. When they discovered all that they needed to know, he himself followed and crushed the Romans and captured the town. He lived there only a short time and then occupied the country up to the Somme. Some say that Merovech, the father of Childeric, was descended from Clodio.[4]
According to this account, he held power in the northernmost part of still-Romanized Northern Gaul, together with an area further northeast apparently already Frankish.

Two works written after Gregory of Tours, added details which are mostly not considered reliable, but which may contain some facts derived from other sources. These are the Liber Historiae Francorum and the Chronicle of Fredegar. It is the first of these which specifies that Chlodio first pushed west through Roman-inhabited territories of the Silva Carbonaria, a region running roughly from Brussels to the Sambre, and took the city of Tournai, before moving south to Cambrai.

Concerning Chlodio's ancestry, the non-contemporary Liber Historiae Francorum says his father was Pharamond, a Frankish King only known from such later records, but reputedly the son of the real Frankish King who fought the Romans, Marcomer. The Chronicle of Fredegar makes Chlodio son of Theudemeres, another real Frankish king who Gregory reported to have been executed with his mother by the Romans. In both cases, legendary pedigrees were attached to people known from real Roman history, and so the pedigrees are considered unreliable.

In about 428 AD, a marriage party of the Franks of Chlodio was attacked and defeated at a village named Vicus Helena in Artois by Flavius Aëtius, the commander of the Roman army in Gaul.[5] This is known because the future emperor Majorian was present, and this incident was therefore celebrated in the panegyric written by Sidonius Apollinaris for him. The passage describes "Cloio" as having overrun the land of the Atrebates (Artois, a province north of the Somme, and partly between Tournai and Cambrai).[6]

As explained above Gregory of Tours mentions that "some people said" that Merovech, the ancestor of the 'Merovingian' dynasty, was in the line of Chlodio, although Merovech's son Childeric I is known only from records associating him with Romanized northern Gaul. Only once his son Clovis I took power in that area did he turn to Kings still ruling in more traditionally Frankish areas. According to Gregory's understanding, the Frankish regions had many kings, but they were all part of one specific noble family, including Chlodio. However, according to the Gesta episcoporum Cameracensium, Clovis and his noble-blooded competitor King Ragnachar of Cambrai (the town Chlodio had put under Frankish control) were related not through the male line, but through Clovis's mother, Basina, a Thuringian princess whom his father met when exiled from Gaul. (Gregory reports that Clovis asked Ragnachar: "Why have you humiliated our family in permitting yourself to be bound? It would have been better for you to die." He then killed him with an axe and told Ricchar, "If you had aided your brother, he would not have been bound", before killing Ricchar in the same way.)

A contemporary Roman historian, Priscus writes of having witnessed in Rome, a "lad without down on his cheeks as yet and with fair hair so long that it poured down his shoulders, Aetius had made him his adopted son". Priscus writes that the excuse Attila used for waging war on the Franks was the death of their king and the disagreement of his children over the succession, the elder being allied with Attila and the younger with Aetius. It has been speculated that this Frankish succession dispute may involve the family of Chlodio and Merovech.[7] On the other hand, it has also been concluded that the Franks in this story must be Rhineland Franks, with whom Aëtius had various interactions.[8]
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Clodius de Cologne, VI MP
French: Chlodion ' de Cologne, Roi des Francs, Swedish: Clodian av Westphalia, VI
Gender: Male
Birth: 395
Cologne, Koln, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany
Death: between 447 and 448 (52-53)
Cambray, Nord, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France
Immediate Family:
Son of Pharamond, king of the Franks (Fictitious) and Argotta of the Franks
Husband of Basina de Westphalia
Father of Mérovech Mérovingiens, leader of the Frankish tribes
Brother of Fredemundus; Adalbertus de Cologne; Chararic (Guerric) de Tongres; Sigebert De Soissons, King de Cologne; Weldelphus and 4 others
Half brother of Chlodégar, king of the Salian Francs at Cologne and Clovis "the Riparian", King of the Franks
Added by: Arnaldo Muniz on October 6, 2016
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Adalbertus de Cologne
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Mérovech Mérovingiens, leader of the Frankish tribes ♛ Ref: CB-614 |•••► #bELGICA #Genealogía #Genealogy

Padre: Clodius de Cologne, VI
Madre:


____________________________________________________________________________
34 ° Bisabuelo/ Great Grandfather de:
Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo
____________________________________________________________________________


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(Linea Paterna)
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Mérovech Mérovingiens, leader of the Frankish tribes is your 34th great grandfather.of→ Carlos Juan Felipe Antonio Vicente De La Cruz Urdaneta Alamo→  Enrique Jorge Urdaneta Lecuna
your father → Elena Cecilia Lecuna Escobar
his mother → María Elena de la Concepción Escobar Llamosas
her mother → Cecilia Cayetana de la Merced Llamosas Vaamonde de Escobar
her mother → Cipriano Fernando de Las Llamosas y García
her father → José Lorenzo de las Llamozas Silva
his father → Joseph Julián Llamozas Ranero
his father → Manuel Llamosas y Requecens
his father → Isabel de Requesens
his mother → Luis de Requeséns y Zúñiga, Virrey de Holanda
her father → Juan de Zúñiga Avellaneda y Velasco
his father → Pedro de Zúñiga y Avellaneda, II conde de Miranda del Castañar
his father → Diego López de Zúñiga y Guzmán, I conde de Miranda del Castañar
his father → Isabel Elvira de Guzmán y Ayala, III Señora de Gibraleón
his mother → Elvira López de Ayala Guzmán
her mother → Leonor Suárez de Toledo y Guzmán
her mother → D. Pero Suárez de Toledo, señor de Bolaños
her father → Teresa Vázquez de Acuña, Señora de Villaverde
his mother → Vasco Martins da Cunha, "o Seco", 5º senhor de Tábua
her father → Joana Rodrigues de Nomães
his mother → Rodrigo Martins de Nomães, Señor de Reviñade y Silva-Escura
her father → Rodrigo Romães Conde de Monterroso
his father → Remón II de Monterroso, III conde de Monterroso
his father → Rodrigo Romaes, II conde de Monterroso y de Santa Marta de Ortigueira
his father → Remón Romaes, Conde de Monterroso y Santa Marta de Ortigueira
his father → Fruela I el Cruel, rey de Asturias
his father → Ermessenda, reina consorte de Asturias
his mother → Pelayo, rey de Asturias
her father → Liubigotona
his mother → Suintila, rey de los visigodos
her father → Clodesinde
his mother → Siegbert I, King of Austrasia
her father → Chlothar I "the Old" King of the Franks
his father → Clovis I the Great, King of the Franks
his father → Childéric I, King of the Franks
his father → Mérovech Mérovingiens, leader of the Frankish tribes
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Mérovech Mérovingiens, leader of the Frankish tribes MP
Latin: Merovius Mérovingiens, leader of the Frankish tribes, Swedish: Merovec av Frankerna, leader of the Frankish tribes
Gender: Male
Birth: circa 415
Turnacum (Present Tournai), Belgica II (within present Belgium), Galliae, Roman Empire
Death: between circa 451 and 47 (372-36)
Tournai, (Present Belgium), Salian Frankish Kingdom
Immediate Family:
Son of Clodius de Cologne, VI and Basina de Westphalia
Father of Childéric I, King of the Franks
father: Pharamond II Roi des Francs
GGGfather: Ascaric Roi des Francs
GGGmother: Regaise
grand father: Marcomir General ou chef des Francs Later elected King
Great Grandfather: Priam ou Prarius, Roi des Francs
wife: Ragnachilde de Evaric Reine de Visigoths
wife 2: NN Reine de Cambria
Added by: Randy Edwards on March 8, 2007
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English (default) edit | history
KINGS of the FRANKS [451/57]-751 (MEROVINGIANS) DESCENT LINE ON CAWLEY'S MEDLANDS
MEROVECH (-[451/57]). It is not known whether Merovech, after whom the dynasty was named, was a purely mythical figure or if there is some factual basis for his existence. If he did exist, his precise ancestry is not known. Gregory of Tours writes that "some say that Merovech, the father of Childeric, was descended from Chlodio"[14] but this is the only reference he makes to Merovech in his work. The early 8th century Liber Historiæ Francorum names "Merovechus de genere eius" as successor to Chlodio, commenting that he gave his name to the dynasty[15]. Fredegar asserts, colourfully, that Merovech was conceived when Chlodio's wife went swimming and encountered a Quinotaur[16]. It is possible that Merovech succeeded Chlodio as leader of the Franks in Roman Gaul. Assuming that he did enjoy some sort of leadership role over some or all of the Frankish tribes in Gaul, it seems inappropriate to attribute the title "king" to Merovech. In the first place, it is likely that his leadership was localised. In addition, Roman domination continued until the overthrow in 476 of the last Roman Emperor in the West, Romulus Augustulus, and no documentary evidence has so far been found which suggests that there was a sub-level of Frankish administration under the Roman emperor, despite the fact that imperial authority was in decline during the later years.] MEDLANDS

m ---. The name of Merovech's wife is not known. Merovech is recorded as having one child:

1. CHILDERICH (-Tournai [481/82], bur Tournai). Gregory of Tours records that Merovech was the father of Childerich[17]. The Liber Historiæ Francorum names "Merovechus…filium…Childerico"[18]. He succeeded in [451/57] as leader of the Franks in Roman Gaul, and subsequently adopted the title CHILDERICH I King of the Franks, confirmed by his undated seal which bears the title "Childerici Regiz"[19]. Gregory of Tours records that King Childerich's "private life was one long debauch" and that he was forced into exile in Thuringia by his subjects who chose as his replacement the Roman General Ægidius, named magister militum per Gallias in [456/57] and who ruled for 8 years[20]. Gregory of Tours records Childerich's restoration as king in Gaul, followed by his alliance with "Odovacar…[and] his Saxons" (indicating that this is unlikely to refer to the Ostrogoth leader in Italy), and their joint subjugation of the Alamans[21]. A letter from Remigius Bishop of Reims to Childerich's son Clovis congratulates the latter on taking over his father's position in "Belgica Secunda"[22], implying that Childerich's authority was limited to the north-east part of Gaul. The Liber Historiæ Francorum records that "Childericus rex" reigned for 24 years[23]. MEDLANDS

Merovech

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Merovech (Latin: Meroveus or Merovius; ) is the legendary founder of the Merovingian dynasty of the Salian Franks, that later became the dominant Frankish tribe. The name is a latinization of a form close to Old High German proper name Marwig, lit. "famed fight"[1] (cf. māri "famous" + wīg "fight").

There is little information about him in the later histories of the Franks. Gregory of Tours only names him once as the father of Childeric I while putting doubt on his descent from Clodio.[2] Many admit today that this formulation finds its explanation in a legend reported by Fredegar.[3] The Chronicle of Fredegar interpolated on this reference by Gregory by adding Merovech was the son of the queen, Clodio's wife; but his father was a sea-god, bistea Neptuni.[4] No other historical evidence exists that Merovech ever lived. Some researchers have noted that Merovech, the Frankish chieftain, may have been the namesake of a certain god or demigod honored by the Franks prior to their conversion to Christianity. It has been suggested Merovech refers to or is reminiscent to the Dutch river Merwede,[5] nowadays part of the Rhine-Meus-Scheldt delta but historically a main subsidiary of the Rhine, in the neighborhood of which the Salian Franks once dwelled according to Roman historians. Another theory[6] considers this legend to be the creation of a mythological past needed to back up the fast-rising Frankish rule in Western Europe.

According to another legend, Merovech was conceived when Pharamond's wife encountered a Quinotaur, a sea monster which could change shapes while swimming. Though never stated, it is implied that she was impregnated by it. This legend was related by Fredegar in the seventh century, and may have been known earlier. The legend is probably a back-formation or folk etymology used to explain the Salian Franks' origin as a sea coast dwelling people, and based on the name itself. The "Mero-" or "Mer-" element in the name suggests a sea or ocean (see Old English "mere," Latin "mare," or even the Modern English word "mermaid," etc.). The "Salian" in "Salian Franks" may be a reference to salt, a reminder of their pre-migration home on the shores of the North Sea (alternatively, it may refer to the Isala or IJssel river behind which their homeland, the Salland, may have been located). The legend could also be explained in a much easier way. The sea monster could have been a foreign conqueror, coming from the sea, taking the dead king's(Chlodio or Pharamonds) wife to legitimise his rule.

The first Frankish royal dynasty called themselves Merovingians in his honor.

Merovech may have been the father of Childeric I who may have succeeded him.

Reference in popular culture

The legend about Merovech's conception was adapted in 1982 by authors Henry Lincoln and Richard Leigh in their book Holy Blood Holy Grail, as the seed of a new idea. They hypothesized that this "descended from a fish" legend was actually referring to the concept that the Merovingian line had married into the bloodline of Jesus Christ, since the symbol for early Christians had also been a fish. This theory, with no other basis than Lincoln and Leigh's concoction, was further popularized in 2003 via Dan Brown's bestselling novel, The Da Vinci Code.[7][8]

There is also a fictional character called The Merovingian in the movies The Matrix Reloaded and The Matrix Revolutions (portrayed by Lambert Wilson). The character is modeled as an ancient and powerful leader of exiles. He also has extensive knowledge of the inner workings of the universe and uses this knowledge to support his decadent lifestyle. The Merovingian is very much a mystical king type character.

Notes

^ Green, D.H. Language and History in the Early Germanic World. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 1998.

^ Gregory of Tours - The History of the Franks, II.9

^ Christian SETTIPANI - Addenda to Les Ancêtres de Charlemagne, 1990 [1]

^ Pseudo-Fredegar, Hist. III, 9

^ Emil Rückert: Oberon von Mons und die Pipine von Nivella; Weidmann'sche Buchhandlung, Leipzig, Germany, 1836

^ see M. Todd's, "The early Germans"

^ Behind the Da Vinci Code, 2006, History Channel documentary about Henry Lincoln

^ Holy Blood Holy Grail, Michael Baigent, Richard Leigh, Henry Lincoln, 1982

References

Wood, Ian. The Merovingian Kingdoms 450-751. London: Longman Group, 1994.

Todd, M. The early Germans

Behind the Da Vinci Code, 2006, History Channel documentary about Henry Lincoln

Meroveo, rey de los francos (desde 448 a 457). Dio su nombre a la dinastía Merovingia.

Una leyenda cuenta que nació de la unión de su madre, esposa de Clodión "el Cabelludo", y de un monstruo marino, por lo que los sucesores del trono de Francia vendrían siempre del mar.

Tercer rey de Francia, el nacimiento de este príncipe es un problema. Unos dicen que es hijo de Clodión. Otros pretenden que sólo era de la familia. De cualquier forma, es seguro que un príncipe con este nombre reinó sobre los francos y que tuvo como competidor al trono a un hijo de Clodión. Fue por su nombre por lo que los reyes de la primera dinastía franca fueran llamados Merovingios. La mayoría de los historiadores creen que Meroveo estuvo con el ejército romano en la sangrienta batalla en la que Aecio vence a Atila en la llanura de los Campos Cataláunicos (Châlon-en-Champagne). Este príncipe murió después de diez años de reinado. La historia no habla ni del número de hijos que tuvo ni del nombre de la reina, madre de Childerico I, su hijo y sucesor. (Texto de Wikipedia).-

http://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merovech

Merovech was hoogst waarschijnlijk koning van de Salische Franken (447-458) na Chlodio. Hij is de naamgever van de zogenaamde Merovingen, onder welke het Frankische rijk tot bloei kwam.

Over Merovech zelf is weinig bekend, en hij geldt daarom als een half-mythische figuur. Hij was waarschijnlijk de zoon van Chlodio. Volgens de legende werd hij verwekt toen zijn moeder bij het baden een zeemonster tegenkwam. Vandaar de uitspraak dat iemand van (Europese) adel "blauw bloed" zou hebben, zoals de zeewezens.

Omstreeks 450 verkeerden de Salische Franken op goede voet met de Romeinse Generaal Aetius. Als bondgenoten hebben zij, en daarmee ook vermoedelijk Merovech in 451 meegestreden aan de zijde van Aetius tegen de Hunnen. Merovech werd opgevolgd door zijn zoon Childerik I.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merovech

ID: I5413Me58a

Name: Merovech Franks,king-of-the

Given Name: Merovech

Surname: Franks,king-of-the

Sex: M

Death: 0458A

Note:

VERSIONS OF HIS NAME:

- Merobeo [O'Hart1923] [wPhilip5]

- Merovech | Merovich [EB1986:"Merovingian] dynasty"

- Merovee "the Young" [wDKBingham]

- Merovech #I "the Young" [wEnf-Bry]

- Merovaeus [wJMorin] [wRJones]

- Merevee ?[wDonW] ?[wWinch] ?[wYoung]

- Meroveus [Gardner1996] [wUE]

-

OTHER RELATIONSHIPS:

- His mother was supposedly Basina of the Thuringians [390A-450A].

-

TITLES:

- king of Franks

- king of the Franks

- king of Franconia

-

SOURCES:

- EB1986 "Merovech" | "Merovingian dynasty"

- O'Hart1923 "The Lineal Descent of King Philip V., of Spain":p#42-3

- Gardner1996

- wDKBingham

- wEnf-Bry

- wJMorin

-

wPhilip5

- wRJones

- wWinch

- wYoung

-

wCharlemagne

-

PKD RUO-5413Me58a 2001De02

Copyright (c) 2009 Paul K Davis [paulkdavis@earthlink.net] Fremont CA

Father: Clodius "Long Hair" - b: in (Westphalia, Germany)

Marriage 1 Verica -

Children

-1. Childeric Merovingian , I b: 0437A
Forrás / Source:

http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=pkd&id=I5413Me58a

Merovech "The Young KIng" of Salic Franks (c.413 - 458)

(No Name)

Photo:

Silvered brass mounting from 1867 depicting Merovech victorious in battle, by Emmanuel Frémiet.

Merovech (Latin: Meroveus or Merovius; French: Mérovée; German: Merowig) is the legendary founder of the Merovingian dynasty of the Salian Franks, which later became the dominant Frankish tribe.

He allegedly lived in the first half of the fifth century. His name is a Latinization of a form close to the Old High German given name Marwig, lit. "famed fight" (cf. māri "famous" + wīg "fight").[1] The first Frankish royal dynasty called themselves Merovingians ("descendants of Meroveus") after him.

There is little information about him in the later histories of the Franks. Gregory of Tours only names him once as the father of Childeric I while putting doubt on his descent from Clodio.

Many admit today that this formulation finds its explanation in a legend reported by Fredegar.[3] The Chronicle of Fredegar interpolated on this reference by Gregory by adding Merovech was the son of the queen, Clodio's wife; but his father was a sea-god, bistea Neptuni.
Merovech (Latin: Meroveus or Merovius; French: Mérovée; German: Merowig) is the legendary founder of the Merovingian dynasty of the Salian Franks, which later became the dominant Frankish tribe. He allegedly lived in the first half of the fifth century. His name is a Latinization of a form close to the Old High German given name Marwig, lit. "famed fight" (cf. māri "famous" + wīg "fight").[1] The first Frankish royal dynasty called themselves Merovingians ("descendants of Meroveus") after him.

There is little information about him in the later histories of the Franks. Gregory of Tours only names him once as the father of Childeric I while putting doubt on his descent from Clodio.[2] Many admit today that this formulation finds its explanation in a legend reported by Fredegar.[3] The Chronicle of Fredegar interpolated on this reference by Gregory by adding Merovech was the son of the queen, Clodio's wife; but his father was a sea-god, bistea Neptuni.[4] No other historical evidence exists that Merovech ever lived. Some researchers have noted that Merovech, the Frankish chieftain, may have been the namesake of a certain god or demigod honored by the Franks prior to their conversion to Christianity. It has been suggested Merovech refers to or is reminiscent to the Dutch river Merwede,[5] nowadays part of the Rhine-Meus-Scheldt delta but historically a main subsidiary of the Rhine, in the neighborhood of which the Salian Franks once dwelled according to Roman historians. Another theory[6] considers this legend to be the creation of a mythological past needed to back up the fast-rising Frankish rule in Western Europe.

According to another legend, Merovech was conceived when Pharamond's wife encountered a Quinotaur, a sea monster which could change shapes while swimming. Though never stated, it is implied that she was impregnated by it. This legend was related by Fredegar in the seventh century, and may have been known earlier. The legend is probably a back-formation or folk etymology used to explain the Salian Franks' origin as a sea coast dwelling people, and based on the name itself. The "Mero-" or "Mer-" element in the name suggests a sea or ocean (see Old English "mere," Latin "mare," or even the Modern English word "mermaid," etc.). The "Salian" in "Salian Franks" may be a reference to salt, a reminder of their pre-migration home on the shores of the North Sea (alternatively, it may refer to the Isala or IJssel river behind which their homeland, the Salland, may have been located). The legend could also be explained in a much easier way. The sea monster could have been a foreign conqueror, coming from the sea, taking the dead king's (Chlodio or Pharamond) wife to legitimise his rule.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merovech

Meroveo o Mérovée, rey de los francos (desde 448 a 457). Dio su nombre a la dinastía Merovingia.

Una leyenda cuenta que nació de la unión de su padre Clodion el Cabelludo y de un monstruo marino, por lo que los sucesores del trono de Francia vendrían siempre del mar.

Tercer rey de Francia, el nacimiento de este príncipe es un problema. Unos dicen que es hijo de Clodion. Otros pretenden que solo era de la familia. De cualquier forma, es seguro que un príncipe con este nombre reinó sobre los francos y que tuvo como competidor al trono a un hijo de Clodion. Fue por su nombre por lo que los reyes de la primera raza (Dinastía) fueron llamados Merovingios. La mayoría de los historiadores creen que Meroveo estuvo con el ejército romano en la sangrienta batalla en la que Aecio vence a Atila en la llanura de los Campos Cataláunicos (Châlon-en-Champagne). Este príncipe murió después de diez años de reinado. La historia no habla ni del número de hijos que tuvo ni del nombre de la reina, madre de Childerico I, su hijo y sucesor.

http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meroveo

ID: I6529

Name: Merovee Merovingian

Given Name: Merovee

Surname: Merovingian

Suffix: King of the Franks

Sex: M

_UID: 5C0A2AFA5118D811BE490080C8C142CCFA53

Change Date: 26 Jun 2005

Birth: ABT 415 in France

Death: 457

Father: Clodius (The Long-Haired) Merovingian b: ABT 395 in Westfalen, Germany

Mother: Basina of Thuringia b: ABT 398

Marriage 1 Verica of Sweden b: ABT 419 in Westfalen, Germany

Married:

Children

Childeric I Merovingian b: 436 in Westfalen, Germany
Forrás / Source:

http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=jdp-fam&id=I6529

King Merovech "the Young" of Franks

Born: 0415

Died: 0458

Governed the Salic Franks

Defeated "Attila the Hun" in 451

Was son or son-in-law of Clodion

Before 430, the Salic Francs traverse the Escaut, and settle north of Gand [Gant] and also into Courtrai. Their chief, Clodion, takes Cambrai in 430. When Clodion died in 448, Merovee would succeed him as chief. Merovee was a Frankish Prince who ruled over the Saliennes [thus, this Merovee is King of the Salic Francs] from 452-458. He was the commander of the Francs in the great Battle of the Catalonic Fields, where he defeated Attila the Hun in 451. It is from his name that the kings of the First Race derived their name. The Huns had steadily increased their domination from humble beginnings off the Caspian sea from Caucase to the Elbe, from Muldavia to Hungary in the later part of the Fourth Century.

During his reign the Empress of the Roman Empire, Galla Placidia, in 423 governed in the name of her 4-year old son, Valentinius III. She put the Gallo-Roman Aetius [who really came from Bulgaria [originally Silistria] in charge of maintaining the Roman authority over Gaule.

Although he was unsuccessful against the Wisigoths, he pushed the Riparian Francs beyond the Rhine. In 440, the Riparians would return and take over Cologne and Treves. In the meantime, the Burgundians settle in what would become Bourgogne and in Savoie. In 443, they are camped around Worms and Mayence under the command of their King, Gonthier. Died: in 458.

"A number of mythical genealoies can take his line back to the 1st C. and link him to the early Kings of Britain. Merovech is widely accepted as historical, and Gregory of Tours wrote that some said his father was Chlodio. But from there up to Boudicca not one generation is attested in a contemporary source, and most are from the sort of late chronicles that tend to be dismissed as fiction."

Merowig (fl. c.450, died c. 458) (Latin: Meroveus or Merovius; German: Merowech; Spanish: Meroveo; French: Mérovée, other spellings include Merovech, Merovich, Merwich) is the legendary founder of the Merovingian Dynasty of Frankish kings. He was ruler over the Salian Franks in the years after 450, but no contemporary record of him exists, and there is little information about him in the later histories of the Franks. Gregory of Tours records him as the possible son of Clodio. He was supposed to have led the Franks in the Battle of Chalons in 451.

According to legend, Merowig was conceived when Clodio's wife encountered a Quinotaur, a sea monster which could change shapes while swimming. Though never stated, it is implied that she was impregnated by it. This legend was related by Fredegar in the seventh century, and may have been known earlier. The legend is probably a back-formation or folk etymology used to explain the Salian Franks' origin as a sea coast dwelling people, and based on the name itself. The "Mero-" or "Mer-" element in the name suggests a sea or ocean (see Old English "mere," Latin "mare," or even the Modern English word "mermaid," etc.). The "Salian" in "Salian Franks" may be a reference to salt, a reminder of their pre-migration home on the shores of the North Sea (alternatively, it may refer to the Isala or Ijssel river behind which their homeland, the Salland, may have been located).

The "-wig/weg/veus" part of the name could have been seen as a reference to a traveller, trail, or conveyance (see German "weg," Latin "via," or even the Modern English word "way"). By this interpretation, "Merowig," "Mérovée," et al. would simply mean "from the sea." A slight variant of this interpretation would follow through the Old High German/Old Saxon word "wiht," (thing or demon"), related to the now-obsolete English word "wight" (meaning a human or human-like creature). Thus, "Merowig" and its spelling variants could easily have been rationalized by Frankish chroniclers as a reference to a sea-creature of some sort, thereby giving rise to the sea-origin legend – whatever the original meaning of the name. Merowig was the father of Childeric I who succeeded him.

Født av havet

Merovech (Latin: Meroveus or Merovius; French: Mérovée; German: Merowig) is the legendary founder of the Merovingian dynasty of the Salian Franks, which later became the dominant Frankish tribe. He allegedly lived in the first half of the fifth century. His name is a Latinization of a form close to the Old High German given name Marwig, lit. "famed fight" (cf. māri "famous" + wīg "fight").[1] The first Frankish royal dynasty called themselves Merovingians ("descendants of Meroveus") after him.

There is little information about him in the later histories of the Franks. Gregory of Tours only names him once as the father of Childeric I while putting doubt on his descent from Clodio.[2] Many admit today that this formulation finds its explanation in a legend reported by Fredegar.[3] The Chronicle of Fredegar interpolated on this reference by Gregory by adding Merovech was the son of the queen, Clodio's wife; but his father was a sea-god, bistea Neptuni.[4] No other historical evidence exists that Merovech ever lived. Some researchers have noted that Merovech, the Frankish chieftain, may have been the namesake of a certain god or demigod honored by the Franks prior to their conversion to Christianity. It has been suggested Merovech refers to or is reminiscent to the Dutch river Merwede,[5] nowadays part of the Rhine-Meus-Scheldt delta but historically a main subsidiary of the Rhine, in the neighborhood of which the Salian Franks once dwelled according to Roman historians. Another theory[6] considers this legend to be the creation of a mythological past needed to back up the fast-rising Frankish rule in Western Europe.

According to another legend, Merovech was conceived when Pharamond's wife encountered a Quinotaur, a sea monster which could change shapes while swimming. Though never stated, it is implied that she was impregnated by it. This legend was related by Fredegar in the seventh century, and may have been known earlier. The legend is probably a back-formation or folk etymology used to explain the Salian Franks' origin as a sea coast dwelling people, and based on the name itself. The "Mero-" or "Mer-" element in the name suggests a sea or ocean (see Old English "mere," Latin "mare," or even the Modern English word "mermaid," etc.). The "Salian" in "Salian Franks" may be a reference to salt, a reminder of their pre-migration home on the shores of the North Sea (alternatively, it may refer to the Isala or IJssel river behind which their homeland, the Salland, may have been located). The legend could also be explained in a much easier way. The sea monster could have been a foreign conqueror, coming from the sea, taking the dead king's (Chlodio or Pharamond) wife to legitimise his rule.

Merovech (Latin: Meroveus or Merovius; French: Mérovée; German: Merowig) is the legendary founder of the Merovingian dynasty of the Salian Franks, which later became the dominant Frankish tribe. He allegedly lived in the first half of the fifth century. His name is a Latinization of a form close to the Old High German given name Marwig, lit. "famed fight" (cf. māri "famous" + wīg "fight").[1] The first Frankish royal dynasty called themselves Merovingians ("descendants of Meroveus") after him.

References

* Wood, Ian. The Merovingian Kingdoms 450-751. London: Longman Group, 1994.
* Todd, M. The early Germans
* Behind the Da Vinci Code, 2006, History Channel documentary about Henry Lincoln
http://wespatterson.com/biblical/charlemagne-abraham.asp

Merovech (Latin: Meroveus or Merovius; French: Mérovée; German: Merowig) is the legendary founder of the Merovingian dynasty of the Salian Franks, which later became the dominant Frankish tribe. He allegedly lived in the first half of the fifth century. His name is a Latinization of a form close to the Old High German given name Marwig, lit. "famed fight" (cf. māri "famous" + wīg "fight").[1] The first Frankish royal dynasty called themselves Merovingians ("descendants of Meroveus") after him.

References

* Wood, Ian. The Merovingian Kingdoms 450-751. London: Longman Group, 1994.
* Todd, M. The early Germans
* Behind the Da Vinci Code, 2006, History Channel documentary about Henry Lincoln
Merowig is the Germanic form of his name. Others: Merovech (Latin: Meroveus or Merovius; French: Mérovée). He is the legendary founder of the Merovingian dynasty of the Salian Franks, which later became the dominant Frankish tribe. He allegedly lived in the first half of the fifth century.

According to legend, Merovech was conceived when Clodio's wife encountered a Quinotaur, a sea monster which could change shapes while swimming. Though never stated, it is implied that she was impregnated by it.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merovech

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merovech

According to myth, Merovech was the son of a sea monster, or a sea god.

He was the founder of the Merovingian Dynasty.

He was of the Salii tribe also known as the Salian Franks.

MEROVIUS, KING OF THE SALIC FRANKS

b. 411 A.D.; d. 458 A.D.

Merovius gave the name to his descendants and his dynasty. Merovius had one recorded son: Childeric, b. 436 A.D.

Merovech

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Silvered brass mounting from 1867 depicting Merovech victorious in battle, by Emmanuel Frémiet.

Merovech/Merowig (411-457) (Latin: Meroveus or Merovius; French: Mérovée) is the legendary founder of the Merovingian dynasty of the Salian Franks, which later became the dominant Frankish tribe. The name is a Latinization of a form close to Old High German proper name Marwig, lit. "famed fight"[1] (cf. māri "famous" + wīg "fight").

Contents

[hide]

* 1 Reference in popular culture
* 2 Notes
* 3 See also
* 4 References
There is little information about him in the later histories of the Franks. Gregory of Tours only names him once as the father of Childeric I while putting doubt on his descent from Clodio.[2] Many admit today that this formulation finds its explanation in a legend reported by Fredegar.[3] The Chronicle of Fredegar interpolated on this reference by Gregory by adding Merovech was the son of the queen, Clodio's wife; but his father was a sea-god, bistea Neptuni.[4] No other historical evidence exists that Merovech ever lived. Some researchers have noted that Merovech, the Frankish chieftain, may have been the namesake of a certain god or demigod honored by the Franks prior to their conversion to Christianity. It has been suggested Merovech refers to or is reminiscent to the Dutch river Merwede,[5] nowadays part of the Rhine-Meus-Scheldt delta but historically a main subsidiary of the Rhine, in the neighborhood of which the Salian Franks once dwelled according to Roman historians. Another theory[6] considers this legend to be the creation of a mythological past needed to back up the fast-rising Frankish rule in Western Europe.

According to another legend, Merovech was conceived when Pharamond's wife encountered a Quinotaur, a sea monster which could change shapes while swimming. Though never stated, it is implied that she was impregnated by it. This legend was related by Fredegar in the seventh century, and may have been known earlier. The legend is probably a back-formation or folk etymology used to explain the Salian Franks' origin as a sea coast dwelling people, and based on the name itself. The "Mero-" or "Mer-" element in the name suggests a sea or ocean (see Old English "mere," Latin "mare," or even the Modern English word "mermaid," etc.). The "Salian" in "Salian Franks" may be a reference to salt, a reminder of their pre-migration home on the shores of the North Sea (alternatively, it may refer to the Isala or IJssel river behind which their homeland, the Salland, may have been located). The legend could also be explained in a much easier way. The sea monster could have been a foreign conqueror, coming from the sea, taking the dead king's (Chlodio or Pharamond) wife to legitimise his rule.

The first Frankish royal dynasty called themselves Merovingians in his honor.

[edit] Reference in popular culture

The legend about Merovech's conception was adapted in 1982 by authors Henry Lincoln and Richard Leigh in their book Holy Blood Holy Grail, as the seed of a new idea. They hypothesized that this "descended from a fish" legend was actually referring to the concept that the Merovingian line had married into the bloodline of Jesus Christ, since the symbol for early Christians had also been a fish. This theory, with no other basis than Lincoln and Leigh's concoction, was further popularized in 2003 via Dan Brown's bestselling novel, The Da Vinci Code.[7][8]

There is also a fictional character called The Merovingian in the movies The Matrix Reloaded and The Matrix Revolutions (portrayed by Lambert Wilson). The character is modeled as an ancient and powerful leader of exiles. He also has extensive knowledge of the inner workings of the universe and uses this knowledge to support his decadent lifestyle.

[edit] Notes

1. ^ Green, D.H. Language and History in the Early Germanic World. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press, 1998.
2. ^ Gregory of Tours - The History of the Franks, II.9
3. ^ Christian SETTIPANI - Addenda to Les Ancêtres de Charlemagne, 1990 [1]
4. ^ Pseudo-Fredegar, Hist. III, 9
5. ^ Emil Rückert: Oberon von Mons und die Pipine von Nivella; Weidmann'sche Buchhandlung, Leipzig, Germany, 1836
6. ^ see M. Todd's, "The early Germans"
7. ^ Behind the Da Vinci Code, 2006, History Channel documentary about Henry Lincoln
8. ^ Holy Blood Holy Grail, Michael Baigent, Richard Leigh, Henry Lincoln, 1982
[edit] See also

* List of Frankish Kings
* Battle of the Catalaunian Plains
[edit] References

* Wood, Ian. The Merovingian Kingdoms 450-751. London: Longman Group, 1994.
* Todd, M. The early Germans
* Behind the Da Vinci Code, 2006, History Channel documentary about Henry Lincoln
MEROVIUS, KING OF THE SALIC FRANKS

b. 411 A.D.; d. 458 A.D.

Merovius gave the name to his descendants and his dynasty. Merovius had one recorded son: Childeric, b. 436 A.D.

Merovech is possibly the son of Clodio (born 395, died 447-449). Clodio was known as "The Long-haired" or "Hairy." He was the son of Argotta (the son of Gerrobaud) and Pharamond (the daughter of Marcomer). There is a legend that Marcomer was the son of the legendary Priam, who is known as the father of Laomedan (a Trojan King), who is known in the legend as the father of Ilus, the King of Troy during the Trojan War.

Seimi-legendary early Frankish King for whom the Merovingian Dynasty is named (Meroveus in Latin). His whole line was characterized by long hair as a symbol of royalty. He fought against the Visigoths under the Roman General Aetius at the Battle of Chalons in 451. Name also seen as: Meroveus Salic & Merovech.

Sources:

The book, 'Kings & Queens of Europe'

The book, 'The Dark Ages'

Merovaeus, founder of the Merovingian House of Frankish Kings, was possibly the son-in-law rather than son of

Clodion. Merovaeus defeated Atilla with the aid of Aetius in 451 and reigned as King, 448-458. Also known as

Merowig, he was a Flandrian or Tournai Frank.{See Encyclopaedia Brit., 1959, 5:467-8, 9:698}

Merovaeus (Meroveus/Merovee/Merovech) was King of the Salian Franks from 447 to 456, after whom the Merovingian Dynasty is named. It is believed by some historians that this dynasty was descended from Jesus and Mary Magdalene, and that the blood-line has continued down through the centuries to the present day. Organisations which seem to been involved in its continuation and protection include the Knights Templar and the 'secret society', The Priory of Sion, whose Grand Masters are said to include Leonardo da Vinci, Isaac Newton, Victor Hugo and Claude Debussy.

Defeated Attila the Hun in 458.

Roi des Francs Saliens de 448 à 457.

Contre l'opinion généralement admise, qui fait de Mérovée le fils de Chlodion le Chevelu, Gilles Houdry pense qu'il n'en était que le gendre.

Merovee, King of the Franks from 447-458 A.D., was an adherent of the cult of Diana. His Son,
Childeric I, 458-481 A.D, practiced witchcraft (Paganism). His son, Clovis I, 481-511 A.D., adopted

christianity in 496 A.D.

*In 496 A.D., the Bishop of Rome made a pact with Clovis, the Grandson of Merovee, King of the
Franks, calling him "The New Constantine", giving him authority to preside over a "Christianized

Roman Empire". (The term "Holy Roman Empire" was not officially used until 962 A.D.)

(bk-4,11-13) At this time the church was not yet aware of the Merovingian connection.

*Rev. J.R. Church, author of "Guardians of the Grail", traces the lineage of these Merovingian
Kings and documents that most European royalty descends from this bloodline, including the

Hapsburg dynasty and the present royalty of Spain.

*Clovis was suceeded by his son Dagobert II, born in 651. Clovis ruled the Franks and Gauls from
France and died when Dagobert was age 5. A struggle broke out for ascendancy to the throne.

5-year old Dagobert was reported to have been killed. But, in fact he was kidnapped by a catholic

priest and spirited away to Ireland where he was raised and protected at the Irish Monastary of

Slane, not far from Dublin, and here at the school attached to the monastary, he recieved an

education unobtainable in France at the time. (bk-1,247)

*In 666, Dagobert II married a Celtic Princess, fathering three daughters but no sons. Soon he
moved to England establishing residence at York. His first wife died in 670 A.D. and Dagobert II

returned to France. He married his second wife, Giselle de Razes, daughter of the Count of Razes

and niece of the King of the Visigoths in southern France. The marriage was celebrated at Rennes le

Chateau, a Visigoth bastion, the same village where Saunier found the secret genealogies in 1891.

With this marriage, the Merovingian bloodline was now allied with the Royal bloodline of the

Visigoths, who had strong gnostic tendencies. Dagobert II was in fact converted to the religion by his

wife, turning away from his catholic heritage.

Finally, in 674, with the support of his mother and her advisors, the long exiled monarch
announced who he was, reclaimed his realm and was officially proclaimed King of Austrisia, which

took in the territory of North-Western Europe and parts of what are now Austria and Germany.

(bk-1,250)

*Dagobert II established a Coat-Of-Arms for Rennes le Chateau consisting of two triangles
interlaced, one, white and upright and the other black and upside down, forming a six-pointed star.

This is a dominant symbol in Freemasonry. (bk-1,396)

*Mackey's "Encyclopedia of Freemasonry" defines the six-pointed star as representing the good
and evil powers in life. (bk-6)

*Dagobert II set himself against the Roman church and by this time Rome was knowledgable
about the Merovingian "Heresay".

*On Dec. 3,679, while resting under a tree during a hunt in the Ardenes Forest in northern France,
Dagobert II was assassinated. The murderers then returned to his northern palace intent on

exterminating the rest of the Royal family. (bk-2,52)

Rey legendario, hijo presumido de Clodion, es rey de los Francos. Habría ayudado a Aetius a vencer Attila en la batalla de los Campos Catalauniques. Es el padre probable de Childéric Ier. Él da su nombre a la dinastía de los Merovingios

Härskare över frankiska riket. Påstås ha lett frankerna mot Attila och hunnerna i slaget vid Chalons år 451.

Legendary founder of the Merovingian dynasty of the Salian Franks, that later became the dominant Frankish tribe.

Ruler of the Salic Franks BET 448 AND 457

http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~jamesdow/jdahn4.htm

Merovech (I; King) of (Salic) FRANKS; aka Meroveus (Merowig Merovey Meroving) the Young'; defeated Attila the Hun.

The Quinotaur is a mythical sea creature mentioned in the 7th century Frankish Chronicle of Fredegar. Referred to as "bestea Neptuni Quinotauri similis",[1] (the beast of Neptune which resembles a Quinotaur) it was held to have fathered Meroveus by attacking the wife of the Frankish king Chlodio and thus to have sired the line of Merovingian kings.

The name translates from Latin as "bull with five horns", whose attributes have commonly been interpreted as the incorporated symbols of the sea god Neptune with his trident, and the horns of a mythical bull or Minotaur. It is not known whether the legend merged both elements by itself or whether this merger should be attributed to the Christian author.[2] The clerical Latinity of the name does not indicate whether it is a translation of some genuine Frankish creature or a coining.

The suggested rape and subsequent family relation of this monster attributed to Frankish mythology, correspond to both the Indo-European etymology of Neptune (from PIE '*nepots', "grandson" or "nephew", compare also the Indic and Avestan 'Apam Napat', "grandson/nephew of the water")[3] and to bull-related fertility myths in Greek mythology, where for example the Phoenician princess Europa was abducted by the god Zeus, in the form of a white bull, that swam her to Crete.

Merovech (411-457) (Latin: Meroveus or Merovius; French: Mérovée) is the legendary founder of the Merovingian dynasty of the Salian Franks, that later became the dominant Frankish tribe. The name is a latinization of a form close to Old High German proper name Marwig, lit. "famed fight"[1] (cf. māri "famous" + wīg "fight").
One candidate of fathers was Pharamond or Genebald

By wikipedia, the mother of Merofing was wife of Pharamnd

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merovech

Henn

Governed the Salic Franks

Note: Defeated "Attila the Hun" in 451
Note: Was son or son-in-law of Clodion
Note:
Note:
Before 430, the Salic Francs traverse the Escaut, and settle north of Gand [Gant] and also into Courtrai. Their chief, Clodion, takes Cambrai in 430. When Clodion died in 448, Merovee would succeed him as chief. Merovee was a Frankish Prince who ruled over the Saliennes [thus, this Merovee is King of the Salic Francs] from 452-458. He was the commander of the Francs in the great Battle of the Catalonic Fields, where he defeated Attila the Hun in 451. It is from his name that the kings of the First Race derived their name. The Huns had steadily increased their domination from humble beginnings off the Caspian sea from Caucase to the Elbe, from Muldavia to Hungary in the later part of the Fourth Century.
Note:
Note: SOURCES:
Note: Merovee=Merovech, Prince des Francs (Rosamond McKitterick, The Frankish kingdom under the Carolingians: 751-987 (Singapore: Longman Singapore Publishers Pte Ltd, (c) 1983).)
Note: (Paul, Nouveau Larousse Universel.)
Note:
Note: (Roderick W. Stuart, Royalty for Commoners in ISBN: 0-8063-1344-7 (1001 North Calvert Street, Baltimore, MD 21202, USA: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 1992), Page 216, Line 303-53.)
Note:
Note:
(Andre Castelot, Histoire de La France, Pages, 176, 200). Born: before 390, son of Arcadios Claudius Claudianus and Eudoxie, Merovee is presumed to have been at least 15 years of age by the time his son Childeric I was born. Married before 405:
She was a concubine. Note - between 451 and 458:

Note:
Note:
Before 430, the Salic Francs traverse the Escaut, and settle north of Gand [Gant] and also into Courtrai. Their chief, Clodion, takes Cambrai in 430. When Clodion died in 448, Merovee would succeed him as chief. Merovee was a Frankish Prince

who ruled over the Saliennes [thus, this Merovee is King of the Salic Francs] from 452-458. He was the commander of the Francs in the great Battle of the Catalonic Fields, where he defeated Attila the Hun in 451. It is from his name that the
kings of the First Race derived their name. The Huns had steadily increased their domination from humble beginnings off the Caspian sea from Caucase to the Elbe, from Muldavia to Hungary in the later part of the Fourth Century.
Note:
Note:
During his reign the Empress of the Roman Empire, Galla Placidia, in 423 governed in the name of her 4-year old son, Valentinius III. She put the Gallo-Roman Aetius [who really came from Bulgaria [originally Silistria] in charge of maintaining
the Roman authority over Gaule.
Note:
Note:
Although he was unsuccessful against the Wisigoths, he pushed the Riparian Francs beyond the Rhine. In 440, the Riparians would return and take over Cologne and Treves. In the meantime, the Burgundians settle in what would become Bourgogne and
in Savoie. In 443, they are camped around Worms and Mayence under the command of their King, Gonthier. Died: in 458.
Note:
Note: Title: Encyclopedia Britannica, Treatise on
Note: Page: Early Frankish Period page 454 of Macropedia
Note: Text: traditional belief of close ancestry
http://www.genealogieonline.nl/kwartierstaat-zuur/I199.php

Roi des Francs Saliens -

Koning van de Salische Franken -

King of the Salian Franks

Roi des Francs -

Koning van de Franken -

King of the Franks

http://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meroveu

Meroveu (◊ c. 411 † c. 458) é o lendário fundador da dinastia merovíngia de reis francos. Ele foi rei dos francos salianos nos anos depois de 450. Sobre ele não existem registros contemporâneos e há pouca informação nas histórias posteriores dos francos. Gregório de Tours registra que possivelmente ele tenha sido filho de Clódio. Ele supostamente liderou os francos na Batalha de Chalons (ou Batalha dos Campos Cataláunicos) em 451.

De acordo com uma lenda, Meroveu foi concebido quando a esposa de Clódio encontrou um Quinotauro, um monstro marítimo que podia mudar de forma enquanto nadava. Apesar de nunca declarar, ela foi impregnada por isso. Essa lenda foi relatada pelo cronista Fredegar no século VII, mas deve ter sido conhecida antes. A lenda é provavelmente de origem folclórica e usada para explicar a origem dos francos salianos como um povo residente próximo ao litoral. O elemento "Mero-" ou "Mer-" no nome sugere alusão a "mar" ou "oceano" (inglês antigo: mere; latim: mare). O termo "saliano" é, de fato, uma referência ao sal, uma lembrança de seu lar pré-migração nas praias do mar do Norte. O elemento "-wig/weg/veus" poderia ser visto como uma referência a "viajante", "rota, caminho" ou "transporte, veículo" (em alemão: weg; em latim: via). Por essa interpretação, Meroveu significaria simplesmente "do mar". Uma pequena variação dessa interpretação derivaria da palavra do alto alemão antigo/saxão antigo "wiht" ("coisa" ou "demônio"), relacionada com a agora obsoleta palavra inglesa "wight" (que significa "humano" ou "criatura semelhante a um humano"). Então, Meroveu e suas formas variantes de grafia poderiam facilmente ter levado os cronistas dos francos à referência a uam criatura marítima de algum tipo, e através disso gerando a lenda da origem marítima - qualquer que seja o significado do nome. Meroveu foi o pai de Childerico I, que o sucedeu.

Referências na cultura popular

A lenda sobre a concepção merovíngia foi adaptada em 1982 pelos autores Michael Baigent, Richard Leigh e Henry Lincoln no livro O Santo Graal e a Linhagem Sagrada (The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail), como a semente de uma nova idéia. Eles, por hipótese, afirmam que a lenda "descendido de um peixe" era na verdade uma referência ao conceito de que a linha merovíngia havia se unido via casamentos com a linha sangüínea direta dos descendentes de Jesus Cristo, por que o símbolo dos primeiros cristãos também havia sido um peixe. Essa teoria, foi popularizada posteriormente em 2003 pelo best-seller de Dan Brown O Código Da Vinci.

Merovaeus 1 2 •Sex: M •Title: King of the Franks •Birth: ABT 415 in Gaul (France) 3 •Death: 457 4

Father: Chlodo b: ABT 395 in Westphalia, Germany Mother: Basina Of Thuringia b: BEF 398 in Thuringia, Germany

Marriage 1 Verica Of Sweden Children 1. Childeric I b: 436

http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=monicap&id=I00367

http://www.palmspringsbum.org/genealogy/getperson.php?personID=I15997&tree=Legends

7. Basina de Thuringia 10 11 (Galla Placidia , of Cauca6, Galla Juntina Valentina , of Rome5, Valentinia I , Western Emperor of Rome4, Justina , of Rome3, Lucinianus, of Rome2, Valerius Licinianus, of Rome1) was born in 398 in Thuringia, Germany and died about 414 in France about age 16.

Basina married Clodio , King of the Salic Franks, son of Pharamond , King of the Franks [Legendary] and Argotta , Princess of the Salian Franks. Clodio was born about 395 in Belgium and died in 447 about age 52.

Noted events in his life were:

• King of Salian Franks: at Dispargum and later Tournai, 426-447.

Children from this marriage were:

+ 8 M i. Merovech King of the Salic Franks [Legendary] 15 16 was born about 411 in Belgium and died about 457 about age 46.

+ 9 M ii. Sigimerus I d'Auverigne 17 was born about 414.

Eighth Generation
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8. Merovech King of the Salic Franks [Legendary] 15 16 (Basina , de Thuringia7, Galla Placidia , of Cauca6, Galla Juntina Valentina , of Rome5, Valentinia I , Western Emperor of Rome4, Justina , of Rome3, Lucinianus, of Rome2, Valerius Licinianus, of Rome1) was born about 411 in Belgium and died about 457 about age 46.

Research Notes: Legendary founder of the Merovingian dynasty of the Salian Franks. May not have been a real person, the father of Childeric I.

Defeated Atilla the Hun with the aid of Aetius in 451.

From Wikipedia - List of Frankish kings : Merovech , possible son of Chlodio, King at Tournai (447 - 458)

The first Frankish royal dynasty called themselves Merovingians in his honor.

Merovech may have been the father of Childeric I who may have succeeded him.

Noted events in his life were:

• King of the Salian Franks: at Tournai, 447-458.

Merovech married Verica.18 19 Verica was born about 413.

The child from this marriage was:

+ 10 M i. Childeric I King of the Salian Franks 20 21 22 was born between 436 and 437 in Westphalia, Germany, died on 26 Nov 482 in Tournai, (Hainaut), Frankish Empire (Belgium), and was buried in Tournai, (Hainaut), Frankish Empire (Belgium).

9. Sigimerus I d'Auverigne 17 (Basina , de Thuringia7, Galla Placidia , of

http://gen.cookancestry.com/getperson.php?personID=I5955&tree=1

Merovaeus (Meroveus/Merovee/Merovech) was King of the Salian Franks from 447 to 456, after whom the Merovingian Dynasty is named. It is believed by some historians that this dynasty was descended from Jesus and Mary Magdalene, and that the blood-line has continued down through the centuries to the present day. Organisations which seem to been involved in its continuation and protection include the Knights Templar and the 'secret society', The Priory of Sion, whose Grand Masters are said to include Leonardo da Vinci, Isaac Newton, Victor Hugo and Claude Debussy.

Foto från familypedia.wiki.com

Titres: Roi des Francs Saliens (2e, 448-457), Roi de Tournai (Tournaisis) http://gw.geneanet.org/nobily?lang=fr;pz=elisabeth+therese+marie+helene;nz=de+belgique;ocz=0;p=merovee+ier;n=de+francie+merovingien

Titres: Roi des Francs Saliens (2e, 448-457), Roi de Tournai (Tournaisis) http://gw.geneanet.org/nobily?lang=fr;pz=elisabeth+therese+marie+helene;nz=de+belgique;ocz=0;p=merovee+ier;n=de+francie+merovingien
Merovech (447 – 458). Det finnes mange myter og legender i forbindelse med Merovingerne, en av mytene går ut på at de var Maria Magdalenas beskyttere da hun kom til Frankrike og at hun hadde med seg den Hellige Graal. Det er her forskjellige teorier, men en av dem går ut på at ordet SANGRAAL var misforstått. Hvis ordet ble brutt etter n ville det bli San Graal oversatt til Holy Grail (Hellig Graal), men hvis man bryter det etter g blir ordet endret til SANG RAAL som på gammel fransk betyr ”kongelig blodslinje”. Når jeg da ser på legenden om hvordan Merovech ble til, blir legenden en annen. Merovech ble unfanget da hans mor svømte i Middelhavet og hans far skulle da være et sjømonster. Han ble da halvt menneske og halvt fisk. I følge de tidligste kristne var Jesus kjent som ”Ichtys” som betyr Fisken og Maria Magdalena ble identifisert som ”båten til fisken”.
Hvis legenden om blodslinjen ”sang raal” er sann, hvem skulle føre denne videre om det ikke var et barn. Hvem skulle så føre denne slekt videre i form av det Frankiske dynastiet. Hadde Maria Magdalena et barn? Dette fører oss til Sarah en ungjente som som var en flyktning om bord på båten og hvis navn betyr ”Prinsesse” på hebraisk. Kunne hun være det glemte barn av ”sang raal” – det kongelige blod av Israels konge. Hennes alder burde stemme, hun skulle være mellom 9-12 år ved båtens ankomst i år 42 etter Jesus død. Hennes ansikt er mørkt og med kariktiristiske trekk, hun kalles Sarah egypteren. I en av bøkene i Det Nye Testamentet står det om linjene til Kong Davids ætt: ”Deres ansikt var hvite som melk, nå svarte som sot. De gjenkjennes ikke i gatene”. De er nå i eksil, deportert og gjemt, ”ikke gjenkjent i gatene”.
King of the Salian Franks (447-457) born in present Belgium, first king and founder of the Merovingian dynasty, which dominated much of the current France and Germany between centuries V and VII. He was the son of Clodion (405-448) , king of a tribe of Salian Franks or Salian (430-448) and his queen name Basine , and succeeded his father as king of his tribe of saliens Franks (447). It was a king of the Franks Salier semi-legendary, that is, there is no reliable information about him but rather a set of legends, and founder of the dynasty. One of the legends is that was born of a woman emprenhada by a man and seduced by a marine animal, in his veins the blood of the two. After dominating the neighboring tribes in the late fifth century imposed its hegemony in Gaul and later allied to the Roman general Aetius to fight Attila , the Hun died in inaccurate place and was succeeded by his son with the queen Verica , Childerico I (437-482) . However, the architect of the Merovingian power was a grandson, Clovis , son of Childeric I . Is it the name, which comes from the word March in French, which gave rise to the term Merovingian , which was renamed the members of that family reportedly origin in that little-known Frankish king. They were created as kings and the children were given titles and became kings automatically at age 12 and his role was not to rule, this task being given to the Directors of the Palace. Involved with witchcraft, the Merovingian acquired an aura of mystical and sobrenaturalidades, they adopted as a symbol Bee and were seen more as priests kings, similar to the Egyptian pharaohs.
See the Wikipedia article for furthur info on this semi-legendary character and his mythological roots.

http://www.coltechpub.com/hartgen/htm/of-the-west-franks.htm#name3916
http://www.our-royal-titled-noble-and-commoner-ancestors.com/p575.htm#i17279
Bron:[ http://home.hccnet.nl/ton.stangenberger/gnosis/merowinger/merowech1.htm]

Merovech, de legendarische koning Merovech was hoogst waarschijnlijk koning van de Salische Franken(447-458) na Chlodio. Hij is de naamgever van de zogenaamde Merovingen, onder welke het Frankische Rijk tot bloei kwam. Volgens Emil Rückert [1]zou de naam Merovingen als volgt tot stand gekomen zijn: het heersende geslacht van de Franken woonde aan de Merwedeof Merowe, bij Slot Loevestein, waar deze samenvloeit met de Maas. Merovech zou hieraan zijn naam ontleend hebben.

Over Merovech zelf is weinig bekend, en hij geldt daarom als een half-mythische figuur. Hij was waarschijnlijk de zoon van Chlodio. Volgens de legende werd hij verwekt toen zijn moeder bij het baden een zeemonster tegenkwam. Vandaar de uitspraak dat iemand van (Europese) adel "blauw bloed" zou hebben, zoals de zeewezens. Omstreeks 450verkeerde de Salische Franken op goede voet met de Romeinse Generaal Aetius. Als bondgenoten hebben zij, en daarmee ook vermoedelijk Merovech in451meegestreden aan de zijde van Aetius tegen de Hunnen. Merovech werd opgevolgd door zijn zoon Childerik I.

De afkomst van de Merovingische koningen is door mythen omgeven. Merovech (Meroveus) zou omstreeks 415 geboren zijn als zoon van Chlodion, bijgenaamd 'de langharige'. Het is daarom dat de Merovingers uit dit geslacht ook wel worden aangeduid met 'de langharige koningen'. Deze koningen werden verondersteld hun macht te ontlenen aan hun lange rode haar. Het knippen van hun haar stond gelijk aan een verlies van macht. Van Chlodion (en diens vader Pharamond), wordt aangenomen dat ze uit legenden zijn voortgekomen en niet werkelijk bestaan hebben. Ook van Merovech is niet met 100% zekerheid vast te stellen dat hij werkelijk geleefd heeft.

De figuur van Merovech heeft in de loop der tijden mythische vormen aangenomen. Zo wordt van hem verteld dat hij geboren is uit twee vaders. Toen zijn moeder zwanger van hem was, ging ze zwemmen in de oceaan. Eenmaal in het water, werd ze verleid dan wel verkracht (al naargelang de versie van het verhaal) door een onbekend zeemonster, "bestea Neptuni Quinotauri similis". Dat wil zeggen een beest van Neptunus gelijkend op een Quinotaurus. Door dit creatuur, half zeemonster en half stier, werd de zwangere koningin een tweede maal bevrucht. Toen Merovech geboren werd, stroomden er twee soorten bloed door zijn anderen: dat van de Frankische koningen en dat van een zeemonster. De uitdrukking 'blauw bloed in de aderen hebben' is hiervan afgeleid (zeedieren als bijvoorbeeld kreeft en inktvis hebben blauw bloed). Er wordt ook wel beweerd dat Merovech een rechtstreekse afstammeling is van Jezus Christus wiens bloedlijn (via Maria Magdalena) door de tempelridders naar Europa gebracht zou zijn. De heilige bloedlijn van Jezus is in deze theorie "de graal".

Merovech trouwt in 435 met Verica, afkomstig uit Westfalen (Duitsland). Men zou op basis hiervan wellicht aannemen dat de Frankische koningen monogaam waren. Niets is echter minder waar! Sommigen hielden er, naar Oosters voorbeeld, zelfs een complete harem op na. Ook na hun bekering tot het Christendom houden zij vast aan hun concubines. Zelfs als de aristocratie, onder druk van de kerk, de (openlijke) polygamie reeds lang heeft opgegeven.

In 448 wordt Merovech uitgeroepen tot koning, hij wordt hiermee de eerste koning uit het geslacht van de Merovingers. Merovech is vooral bekend geworden door zijn strijd tegen de Hunnen. Hij helpt in 451 de Romeinse legeraanvoerder Aetius en Theodorik, koning van de Gothen, om de opmars van Attila de Hun te stoppen. De Hunnen richten grote schade aan. Als ze Parijs naderen wil de bevolking vluchten. De heilige Geneviève houdt de uittocht een halt toe door de Parijzenaars te verzekeren dat hun stad gespaard zal blijven. Merovech valt de Hunnen aan, ergens tussen Châlons sur Marne en Méry sur Seine (nabij Troyes). Na een verschrikkelijke veldslag worden de Hunnen teruggedreven. Deze gedenkwaardige slag op Catalunische velden (451) was evenwel niet beslissend want Atilla kon zich terugtrekken aan de overzijde van de Rijn.

Merovech sterft in 458. Hij wordt opgevolgd door zijn zoon Childerik I . Het merovingische geslacht is naar hem genoemd. Aangenomen wordt dat alle koningshuizen afstammen van de bloedlijn van de Merovingen. Ook zou de afstamming van 34 presidenten terug te voeren zijn op Merovech.

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Childéric I, King of the Franks
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Clodius de Cologne, VI
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Basina de Westphalia
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