William of Worcester's Chronicle of England
William of Worcester, born around 1415, and died around 1482 was secretary to John Fastolf, the renowned soldier of the Hundred Years War, during which time he collected documents, letters, and wrote a record of events. Following their return to England in 1440 William was witness to major events. Twice in his chronicle he uses the first person: 1. when writing about the murder of Thomas, 7th Baron Scales, in 1460, he writes '… and I saw him lying naked in the cemetery near the porch of the church of St. Mary Overie in Southwark …' and 2. describing King Edward IV's entry into London in 1461 he writes '… proclaimed that all the people themselves were to recognize and acknowledge Edward as king. I was present and heard this, and immediately went down with them into the city'. William’s Chronicle is rich in detail. It is the source of much information about the Wars of the Roses, including the term 'Diabolical Marriage' to describe the marriage of Queen Elizabeth Woodville’s brother John’s marriage to Katherine, Dowager Duchess of Norfolk, he aged twenty, she sixty-five or more, and the story about a paper crown being placed in mockery on the severed head of Richard, 3rd Duke of York.
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Paternal Family Tree: Anjou aka Plantagenet
Maternal Family Tree: Ermesinde of Carcassonne 975-1058
Around 1068 [his father] Fulk "Réchin" Anjou 4th Count Anjou [aged 25] and Hildegarde Beaugency Countess Anjou [aged 24] were married. She by marriage Countess Anjou. He the son of [his grandfather] Geoffrey "Ferréol" Anjou 2nd Count Gâtinais and [his grandmother] Ermengarde Blanche Ingelger Duchess Burgundy [aged 50].
Before 1072 [his father] Fulk "Réchin" Anjou 4th Count Anjou [aged 28] and Ermengarde Bourbon Countess Anjou [aged 21] were married. She by marriage Countess Anjou. He the son of [his grandfather] Geoffrey "Ferréol" Anjou 2nd Count Gâtinais and [his grandmother] Ermengarde Blanche Ingelger Duchess Burgundy [aged 53].
Around 1076 [his father] Fulk "Réchin" Anjou 4th Count Anjou [aged 33] and Orengarde Chatellailon Countess Anjou were married. She by marriage Countess Anjou. He the son of [his grandfather] Geoffrey "Ferréol" Anjou 2nd Count Gâtinais and [his grandmother] Ermengarde Blanche Ingelger Duchess Burgundy [aged 58].
In 1089 [his father] Fulk "Réchin" Anjou 4th Count Anjou [aged 46] and [his mother] Bertrade Montfort Queen Consort France [aged 19] were married. She by marriage Countess Anjou. The difference in their ages was 27 years. He the son of [his grandfather] Geoffrey "Ferréol" Anjou 2nd Count Gâtinais and [his grandmother] Ermengarde Blanche Ingelger Duchess Burgundy.
Around 1089 Fulk "Young" King Jerusalem was born to [his father] Fulk "Réchin" Anjou 4th Count Anjou [aged 46] and [his mother] Bertrade Montfort Queen Consort France [aged 19] at Angers [Map].
On 15th May 1092 [his step-father] Philip I King of the Franks [aged 39] and [his mother] Bertrade Montfort Queen Consort France [aged 22] were married. She by marriage Queen Consort of France. They were married despite their both having living spouses: Bertha Gerulfing Queen Consort France [aged 37] and [his father] Fulk "Réchin" Anjou 4th Count Anjou [aged 49] respectively. He the son of Henry I King of the Franks and Anne of Kiev Queen Consort Francia. They were fourth cousin once removed.
In 1093 [his brother-in-law] Alan Canhiart IV Duke Brittany [aged 30] and [his half-sister] Ermengarde Anjou Duchess Brittany and Aquitaine [aged 25] were married. She by marriage Duchess Brittany. She the daughter of [his father] Fulk "Réchin" Anjou 4th Count Anjou [aged 50] and Hildegarde Beaugency Countess Anjou [aged 49]. They were third cousin once removed.
In 1096 [his uncle] Geoffrey "Bearded" Count Anjou 3rd Count Gâtinais [aged 56] died. His brother [his father] Fulk [aged 53] succeeded 4th Count Anjou.
On 14th April 1109 [his father] Fulk "Réchin" Anjou 4th Count Anjou [aged 66] died. In 1109 His son Fulk [aged 20] succeeded V Count Anjou.
In 1110 Fulk "Young" King Jerusalem [aged 21] and Ermengarde of Maine Countess of Anjou were married. She by marriage Countess Anjou. She the daughter of Elias I Count Maine and Matilda Chateau Du Loir Countess Maine. He the son of Fulk "Réchin" Anjou 4th Count Anjou and Bertrade Montfort Queen Consort France [aged 40]. They were third cousin twice removed.
Adam Murimuth's Continuation and Robert of Avesbury’s 'The Wonderful Deeds of King Edward III'
This volume brings together two of the most important contemporary chronicles for the reign of Edward III and the opening phases of the Hundred Years’ War. Written in Latin by English clerical observers, these texts provide a vivid and authoritative window into the political, diplomatic, and military history of fourteenth-century England and its continental ambitions. Adam Murimuth Continuatio's Chronicarum continues an earlier chronicle into the mid-fourteenth century, offering concise but valuable notices on royal policy, foreign relations, and ecclesiastical affairs. Its annalistic structure makes it especially useful for establishing chronology and tracing the development of events year by year. Complementing it, Robert of Avesbury’s De gestis mirabilibus regis Edwardi tertii is a rich documentary chronicle preserving letters, treaties, and official records alongside narrative passages. It is an indispensable source for understanding Edward III’s claim to the French crown, the conduct of war, and the mechanisms of medieval diplomacy. Together, these works offer scholars, students, and enthusiasts a reliable and unembellished account of a transformative period in English and European history. Essential for anyone interested in medieval chronicles, the Hundred Years’ War, or the reign of Edward III.
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Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. 1110. This year also died [his father-in-law] Earl Elias, who held Maine in fee-tail140 of King Henry [aged 42]; and after his death the Earl of Anjou [aged 21] succeeded to it, and held it against the king. This was a very calamitous year in this land, through the contributions which the king received for his [his future daughter-in-law] daughter's [aged 7] portion, and through the badness of the weather, by which the fruits of the earth were very much marred, and the produce of the trees over all this land almost entirely perished. This year men began first to work at the new minster at Chertsey [Map].
Note 140. That is, the territory was not a "fee simple", but subject to "taillage" or taxation; and that particular species is probably here intended which is called in old French "en queuage", an expression not very different from that in the text above.
Around 1111 [his daughter] Matilda of Anjou was born to Fulk "Young" King Jerusalem [aged 22] and [his wife] Ermengarde of Maine Countess of Anjou. She married 1119 her fourth cousin once removed William Adelin Duke Normandy, son of King Henry I "Beauclerc" England and Edith aka Matilda Dunkeld Queen Consort England.
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. 1111. This year the King Henry [aged 43] bare not his crown at Christmas, nor at Easter, nor at Pentecost. And in August he went over sea into Normandy, on account of the broils that some had with him by the confines of France, and chiefly on account of the Earl of Anjou [aged 22], who held Maine against him. And after he came over thither, many conspiracies, and burnings, and harrowings, did they between them. In this year died the Earl Robert of Flanders [aged 46], and his son Baldwin [aged 18] succeeded thereto.141 This year was the winter very long, and the season heavy and severe; and through that were the fruits of the earth sorely marred, and there was the greatest murrain of cattle that any man could remember.
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. 1112. All this year remained the King Henry [aged 44] in Normandy [Map] on account of the broils that he had with France, and with the Earl of Anjou [aged 23], who held Maine [Map] against him. And whilst he was there, he deprived of their lands the Earl of Evreux, and William Crispin, and drove them out of Normandy. To Philip of Braiose [aged 42] he restored his land, who had been before deprived of it; and Robert of Belesme [aged 56] he suffered to be seized, and put into prison. This was a very good year, and very fruitful, in wood and in field; but it was a very heavy time and sorrowful, through a severe mortality amongst men.
Around 1112 [his daughter] Sibylla Anjou Countess Essex was born to Fulk "Young" King Jerusalem [aged 23] and [his wife] Ermengarde of Maine Countess of Anjou. She married (1) 1123 her fourth cousin once removed William Clito Count Flanders, son of Robert Curthose III Duke Normandy and Sybilla Conversano Duchess Normandy (2) after 1132 her fifth cousin Thierry Count Flanders, son of Theodoric "Valiant" Metz II Duke Lorraine and Gertrude Flanders Duchess Lorraine, and had issue.
On 24th August 1113 [his son] Geoffrey Plantagenet Duke Normandy was born to Fulk "Young" King Jerusalem [aged 24] and [his wife] Ermengarde of Maine Countess of Anjou. He married 17th June 1128 his fourth cousin once removed Empress Matilda, daughter of King Henry I "Beauclerc" England and Edith aka Matilda Dunkeld Queen Consort England, and had issue.
After May 1114 [his son] Elias Anjou 2nd Count Maine was born to Fulk "Young" King Jerusalem [aged 25] and [his wife] Ermengarde of Maine Countess of Anjou. He married before 15th January 1151 his half fourth cousin Philippa Chateaudun Countess Maine, daughter of Routrou "The Great" Chateaudun III Count Perche and Matilda Fitzroy Countess Perche, and had issue.
On 14th February 1117 [his mother] Bertrade Montfort Queen Consort France [aged 47] died.
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. 1119. This year went [his son-in-law] William [aged 15], the son of King Henry [aged 51] and [his future daughter-in-law] Queen Matilda [aged 16], into Normandy [Map] to his father, and there was given to him, and wedded to wife, the daughter [aged 8] of the Earl of Anjou [aged 30].
In 1119 [his son-in-law] William Adelin Duke Normandy [aged 15] and Matilda of Anjou [aged 8] were married. She the daughter of Fulk "Young" King Jerusalem [aged 30] and Ermengarde of Maine Countess of Anjou. He the son of King Henry I "Beauclerc" England [aged 51] and Edith aka Matilda Dunkeld Queen Consort England. They were fourth cousin once removed.
Henrici Quinti, Angliæ Regis, Gesta, is a first-hand account of the Agincourt Campaign, and subsequent events to his death in 1422. The author of the first part was a Chaplain in King Henry's retinue who was present from King Henry's departure at Southampton in 1415, at the siege of Harfleur, the battle of Agincourt, and the celebrations on King Henry's return to London. The second part, by another writer, relates the events that took place including the negotiations at Troye, Henry's marriage and his death in 1422.
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Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. 1121. This year came the Earl of Anjou [aged 32] from Jerusalem into his land; and soon after sent hither to fetch his daughter [aged 10], who had been given to wife to William, the king's [aged 53] son.
In 1123 [his son-in-law] William Clito Count Flanders [aged 20] and Sibylla Anjou Countess Essex [aged 11] were married. She the daughter of Fulk "Young" King Jerusalem [aged 34] and Ermengarde of Maine Countess of Anjou. He the son of Robert Curthose III Duke Normandy [aged 72] and Sybilla Conversano Duchess Normandy. They were fourth cousin once removed. He a grandson of King William "Conqueror" I of England.
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. 1123. In this year was the King Henry [aged 55], at Christmastide at Dunstable, Bedfordshire [Map], and there came to him the ambassadors of the Earl of Anjou [aged 34].
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. 1123. About the same time departed the earl's [aged 34] messengers149 in hostility from the king [aged 55], reckless of his favour. During the same time came a legate from Rome, whose name was Henry. He was abbot of the monastery of St. John of Angeli; and he came after the Rome-scot. And he said to the king, that it was against right that men should set a clerk over monks; and therefore they had chosen an archbishop before in their chapter after right. But the king would not undo it, for the love of the Bishop of Salisbury. Then went the archbishop, soon after this, to Canterbury; and was there received, though it was against their will; and he was there soon blessed to bishop by the Bishop of London, and the Bishop Ernulf of Rochester, and the Bishop William Girard of Winchester, and the Bishop Bernard of Wales, and the Bishop Roger of Salisbury. Then, early in Lent, went the archbishop to Rome, after his pall; and with him went the Bishop Bernard of Wales; and Sefred, Abbot of Glastonbury; and Anselm, Abbot of St. Edmund's bury; and John, Archdeacon of Canterbury; and Gifard, who was the king's court-chaplain. At the same time went the Archbishop Thurstan of York [aged 53] to Rome, through the behest of the pope, and came thither three days ere the Archbishop of Canterbury came, and was there received with much worship. Then came the Archbishop of Canterbury, and was there full seven nights ere they could come to a conference with the pope. That was, because the pope was made to understand that he had obtained the archbishopric against the monks of the minster, and against right. But that overcame Rome, which overcometh all the world; that is, gold and silver. And the pope softened, and gave him his pall. And the archbishop (of York) swore him subjection, in all those things, which the pope enjoined him, by the heads of St. Peter and St. Paul; and the pope then sent him home with his blessing.
Note 149. i.e. Of the Earl of Anjou.
In 1124 [his son-in-law] William Clito Count Flanders [aged 21] and [his daughter] Sibylla Anjou Countess Essex [aged 12] were divorced.
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. 26th March 1124. All this year was the King Henry [aged 56] in Normandy. That was for the great hostility that he had with the King Louis of France [aged 42], and with the Earl of Anjou [aged 35], and most of all with his own men. Then it happened, on the day of the Annunciation of St. Mary, that the Earl Waleram of Mellent [aged 20] went from one of his castles called Belmont to another called Watteville. With him went the steward of the King of France, Amalric, and Hugh [aged 26] the son of Gervase [aged 54], and Hugh of Montfort [aged 49], and many other good knights. Then came against them the king's knights from all the castles that were thereabout, and fought with them, and put them to flight, and took the Earl Waleram, and Hugh, the son of Gervase, and Hugh of Montfort, and five and twenty other knights, and brought them to the king. And the king committed the Earl Waleram, and Hugh, the son of Gervase, to close custody in the castle at Rouen; but Hugh of Montfort he sent to England, and ordered him to be secured with strong bonds in the castle at Glocester [Map]. And of the others as many as he chose he sent north and south to his castles in captivity.
In 1126 [his wife] Ermengarde of Maine Countess of Anjou died.
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle. 1127. This year held the King Henry [aged 59] his court at Christmas in Windsor. There was David the king of the Scots [aged 43], and all the head men that were in England, learned and lewd. And there he engaged the archbishops, and bishops, and abbots, and earls, and all the thanes that were there, to swear England and Normandy [Map] after his day into the hands of his daughter [his future daughter-in-law] Athelicia [aged 24], who was formerly the wife of the Emperor of Saxony. Afterwards he sent her to Normandy; and with her went her brother Robert, Earl of Glocester [aged 28], and Brian, son of the Earl Alan Fergan [aged 27];154 and he let her wed the son [aged 13] of the Earl of Anjou [aged 38], whose name was Geoffry Martel. All the French and English, however, disapproved of this; but the king did it for to have the alliance of the Earl of Anjou, and for to have help against his nephew William [aged 24].
Note 154. See an account of him in "Ord. Vit." 544. Conan, another son of this Alan, Earl of Brittany, married a daughter of Henry I.
On 17th June 1128 Geoffrey Plantagenet Duke Normandy [aged 14] and Empress Matilda [aged 26] were married in Le Mans by the bishops of Le Mans and Séez. See : She the daughter of King Henry I "Beauclerc" England [aged 60] and Edith aka Matilda Dunkeld Queen Consort England. He the son of Fulk "Young" King Jerusalem [aged 39] and Ermengarde of Maine Countess of Anjou. They were fourth cousin once removed.
In 1129 Fulk "Young" King Jerusalem [aged 40] travelled to Jerusalem [Map] on pilgrimage. His son Geoffrey Plantagenet Duke Normandy [aged 15] was appointed Count Anjou.
On 2nd June 1129 Fulk "Young" King Jerusalem [aged 40] and Melisende Queen of Jerusalem [aged 24] were married at Jerusalem [Map]. She by marriage Countess Anjou. Her father [aged 54] had written to Fulk "Young" King Jerusalem requesting the marriage since he had no male heirs. She the daughter of Baldwin II King Jerusalem. He the son of Fulk "Réchin" Anjou 4th Count Anjou and Bertrade Montfort Queen Consort France.
In 1130 [his son] Baldwin III King Jerusalem was born to Fulk "Young" King Jerusalem [aged 41] and [his wife] Melisende Queen of Jerusalem [aged 25].
This is a translation of the 'Memoires of Jacques du Clercq', published in 1823 in two volumes, edited by Frederic, Baron de Reissenberg. In his introduction Reissenberg writes: 'Jacques du Clercq tells us that he was born in 1424, and that he was a licentiate in law and a counsellor to Philip the Good, Duke of Burgundy, in the castellany of Douai, Lille, and Orchies. It appears that he established his residence at Arras. In 1446, he married the daughter of Baldwin de la Lacherie, a gentleman who lived in Lille. We read in the fifth book of his Memoirs that his father, also named Jacques du Clercq, had married a lady of the Le Camelin family, from Compiègne. His ancestors, always attached to the counts of Flanders, had constantly served them, whether in their councils or in their armies.' The Memoires cover a period of nineteen years beginning in in 1448, ending in in 1467. It appears that the author had intended to extend the Memoirs beyond that date; no doubt illness or death prevented him from carrying out this plan. As Reissenberg writes the 'merit of this work lies in the simplicity of its narrative, in its tone of good faith, and in a certain air of frankness which naturally wins the reader’s confidence.' Du Clercq ranges from events of national and international importance, including events of the Wars of the Roses in England, to simple, everyday local events such as marriages, robberies, murders, trials and deaths, including that of his own father in Book 5; one of his last entries.
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On 21st August 1131 [his father-in-law] Baldwin II King Jerusalem [aged 56] died. Fulk "Young" King Jerusalem [aged 42] succeeded King Jerusalem. [his wife] Melisende Queen of Jerusalem [aged 26] by marriage Queen Consort Jerusalem.
After 1132 [his son-in-law] Thierry Count Flanders [aged 33] and Sibylla Anjou Countess Essex [aged 20] were married. She by marriage Countess Flanders. She the daughter of Fulk "Young" King Jerusalem [aged 43] and Ermengarde of Maine Countess of Anjou. He the son of Theodoric "Valiant" Metz II Duke Lorraine and Gertrude Flanders Duchess Lorraine. They were fifth cousins.
In 1136 [his son] Almaric I King Jerusalem was born to Fulk "Young" King Jerusalem [aged 47] and [his wife] Melisende Queen of Jerusalem [aged 31]. He married (1) 1157 his third cousin Agnes Courtenay Queen Jerusalem, daughter of Joscelin Courtenay II Count Edessa, and had issue (2) 1167 Maria Komnenos Queen Jerusalem and had issue.
A History of Deeds Done Beyond the Sea by William of Tyre Book 15 Chapter 27. [13th November 1143]. It happened, however, in those days that, when the lord king [Fulk "Young" King Jerusalem [aged 54]], along with the lady queen [[his wife] Melisende Queen of Jerusalem [aged 38]], after autumn had passed, was staying in the city of Acre, the queen wished, to relieve her boredom, to go out of the city to certain suburban places, irrigated by springs, for the sake of recreation; whereupon the lord king, so that the queen might not lack company, decided also himself, with his usual retinue, to set forth. And while they were going along, it happened by chance that the boys who were going before the ranks and retinue stirred up a hare lying in the furrows, which, as it fled, was pursued by the clamor of all. The king, however, seizing a lance, in order to pursue this same hare, driven by a stroke of bad luck, began to urge his horse toward those parts, and to press on the chase vigorously. Finally, as the horse rushed forward heedlessly, it was driven headlong; and falling to the ground, threw the king headlong, and to the one lying there, stunned by the pain of the fall, the saddle crushed his head, so that the brain was emitted both through his ears and even through his nostrils. At this accident, the entire retinue, both those going before and those following, terrified by the harshness of the event, turned around, and wanting to bring help to the one lying there, found him lifeless, for he had neither voice nor sense.
Accidit autem illis diebus, quod cum dominus rex, una cum domina regina transcurso autumno, in civitate Acconense moram faceret, voluit regina, sublevandi gratia fastidii, extra urbem ad loca quaedam suburbana, fontibus irrigua, causa recreationis exire: quo dominus rex, ut solatium reginae non deesset, adjecit etiam ipse, cum solito comitatu proficisci. Dumque inter eundum esset, accidit casu ut qui agmina et comitatum praeibant pueri, leporem in sulcis jacentem excitarent, quem fugientem clamor prosecutus est universorum. Rex autem, arrepta lancea, ut eumdem leporem insectaretur, sinistro actus casu, equum ad illas coepit urgere partes, et cursui vehementer instare. Tandem inconsulte festinans equus in praeceps agitur; corruensque in terram, regem dedit praecipitem, jacentique prae casus dolore attonito, sella caput obtrivit, ita ut cerebrum tam per aures, quam per nares etiam emitteretur. Ad hunc casum, universus qui praeibat et qui sequebatur, facti acerbitate perterritus, conversus est comitatus, et jacenti opem ferre volentes, exanimem reperiunt, cui neque vox erat, neque sensus.
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On 13th November 1143 Fulk "Young" King Jerusalem [aged 54] died in a hunting accident. His wife Melisende Queen of Jerusalem [aged 38] continued to reign in her own right with their son Baldwin III King Jerusalem [aged 13].
On 11th September 1161 [his former wife] Melisende Queen of Jerusalem [aged 56] died. Her son Baldwin [aged 31] succeeded King Jerusalem.
Kings Franks: Great x 9 Grand Son of Charles "Charlemagne aka Great" King of the Franks King Lombardy Holy Roman Emperor
Agnes de la Marck Queen Consort Navarre [7]
Baldwin III King Jerusalem [1]
King Henry "Curtmantle" II of England [1]
Isabelle Flanders Queen Consort France [1]
Matilda Dammartin Queen Consort Portugal [1]
Blanche Capet Queen Navarre [1]
Maria of Brabant Queen Consort France [1]
Henry Luxemburg VII Holy Roman Emperor [1]
Joan of Burgundy Queen Consort France [1]
Blanche of Burgundy Queen Consort France [1]
Philip "Noble" III King Navarre [1]
Joan Évreux Queen Consort France [1]
Philippa of Hainaut Queen Consort England [2]
Margaret Hainaut Holy Roman Empress [2]
King Robert II of Scotland [1]
Blanche Valois Holy Roman Empress Luxemburg [1]
Blanche Dampierre Queen Consort Norway and Sweden [2]
Joan Auvergne Queen Consort France [1]
Joanna Bourbon Queen Consort France [3]
Blanche Bourbon Queen Consort Castile [3]
Yolande of Bar Queen Consort Aragon [1]
King Richard II of England [1]
Philippa Lancaster Queen Consort Denmark [2]
Joan Beaufort Queen Consort Scotland [3]
Jacquetta of Luxemburg Duchess Bedford [3]
Margaret of Anjou Queen Consort England [2]
Mary of Guelders Queen Consort Scotland [7]
King Richard III of England [7]
Anne Neville Queen Consort England [11]
King Henry VII of England and Ireland [4]
Christina Queen Consort Denmark Norway and Sweden [1]
Bianca Maria Sforza Holy Roman Empress [4]
Anne of Brittany Queen Consort France [1]
Philip "Handsome Fair" King Castile [11]
Germaine Foix Queen Consort Aragon [7]
Marguerite Valois Orléans Queen Consort Navarre [11]
Queen Anne Boleyn of England [9]
Queen Jane Seymour [10]
Catherine Parr Queen Consort England [16]
Anne of Cleves Queen Consort England [12]
Mary of Guise Queen Consort Scotland [28]
Antoine King Navarre [15]
Catherine Medici Queen Consort France [2]
Queen Catherine Howard of England [7]
Maximilian Habsburg Spain II Holy Roman Emperor [4]
Jane Grey I Queen England and Ireland [18]
Louise Lorraine Queen Consort France [21]
King James I of England and Ireland and VI of Scotland [2]
Maximilian "The Great" Wittelsbach I Duke Bavaria I Elector Bavaria [33]
Maria Anna Wittelsbach Holy Roman Empress [33]
Marie de Medici Queen Consort France [4]
Electress Louise Juliana of the Palatine Rhine [6]
Ferdinand of Spain II Holy Roman Emperor [15]
George Wharton [120]
Margaret of Austria Queen Consort Spain [15]
Anna of Austria Holy Roman Empress [14]
John George Wettin Elector Saxony [16]
Frederick William "Great Elector" Hohenzollern Elector Brandenburg [16]
Eleonora Gonzaga Queen Consort Bohemia [26]
Maria Leopoldine Habsburg Spain Queen Consort Bohemia [15]
Hedwig Eleonora Queen Consort Sweden [16]
Marie Françoise Élisabeth of Savoy Queen Consort of Portugal [37]
Charlotte Amalie Hesse-Kassel Queen Consort Denmark and Norway [16]
Victor Amadeus King Sardinia [43]
Louise of Mecklenburg Güstrow Queen Consort Denmark and Norway [16]
Maria Anna Neuburg Queen Consort Spain [32]
Joseph I Holy Roman Emperor [32]
Charles Habsburg Spain VI Holy Roman Emperor [32]
Francis I Holy Roman Emperor [22]
Adolph Frederick King Sweden [16]
Elisabeth Therese Lorraine Queen Consort Sardinia [22]
President George Washington [6]
King George III of Great Britain and Ireland [34]
Charlotte Mecklenburg Strelitz Queen Consort England [18]
Caroline Matilda Hanover Queen Consort Denmark and Norway [34]
Marie Sophie Hesse-Kassel Queen Consort Denmark and Norway [48]
Caroline of Brunswick Queen Consort England [34]
Frederick William III King Prussia [16]
Frederica Mecklenburg Strelitz Queen Consort Hanover [34]
Queen Fredrika Dorotea Vilhelmina [32]
King Christian I of Norway and VIII of Denmark [52]
Frederick William IV King Prussia [34]
Caroline Amalie Oldenburg Queen Norway [2]
Frederick VII King of Denmark [86]
Queen Louise Hesse-Kassel of Denmark [100]
King Christian IX of Denmark [51]
Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom [68]
Queen Sophia of Sweden and Norway [83]
Victoria Empress Germany Queen Consort Prussia [188]
King Edward VII of the United Kingdom [188]
Maria Christina of Austria Queen Consort Spain [48]
Brigadier-General Charles Fitz-Clarence [473]
Victoria Mary Teck Queen Consort England [96]
Frederick Charles I King Finland [100]
Constantine I King Greece [51]
Alexandrine Mecklenburg-Schwerin Queen Consort Denmark [137]
Victoria Eugénie Mountbatten Queen Consort Spain [236]
Louise Mountbatten Queen Consort Sweden [284]
Ingrid Bernadotte Queen Consort Denmark [222]
Philip Mountbatten Duke Edinburgh [335]
Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom [1926]
Sophia Glücksburg Queen Consort Spain [2]
Constantine II King Hellenes [2]
Carl XVI King Sweden [463]
Queen Consort Camilla Shand [650]
Diana Spencer Princess Wales [5749]
Great x 2 Grandfather: Fulcuich Count Mortagne au Perche
Great x 1 Grandfather: Hugh de Perche Count Gâtinais
Great x 2 Grandmother: Melisende Viscountess Châteaudun
GrandFather: Geoffrey "Ferréol" Anjou 2nd Count Gâtinais
Great x 2 Grandfather: Albéric II Count Mâcon
Great x 1 Grandmother: Béatrice de Mâcon Countess Gâtinais
Father: Fulk "Réchin" Anjou 4th Count Anjou
Great x 4 Grandfather: Fulk "Red" Ingelger 1st Count Anjou
Great x 3 Grandfather: Fulk "Good" Ingelger 2nd Count Anjou
Great x 4 Grandmother: Roscille Loches Countess Anjou
Great x 2 Grandfather: Geoffrey "Greygown" Ingelger 1st Count Anjou
Great x 4 Grandfather: Ratburnus I Viscount of Vienne
Great x 3 Grandmother: Gerberge Unknown Viscountess Anjou
Great x 1 Grandfather: Fulk "Black" Ingelger III Count Anjou
Great x 4 Grandfather: Herbert II Count Vermandois, Soissons and Meaux
Great x 3 Grandfather: Robert Vermandois Count Meaux Count Châlons
Great x 4 Grandmother: Adela Capet Countess Vermandois, Soissons and Meaux
Great x 2 Grandmother: Adele Vermandois Countess Anjou
GrandMother: Ermengarde Blanche Ingelger Duchess Burgundy
Great x 1 Grandmother: Hildegarde Sundgau Countess Anjou
Great x 4 Grandfather: Reginar II Reginarids II Count Hainaut
Great x 3 Grandfather: Aumary Reginarids
Great x 2 Grandfather: William Reginarids
Great x 1 Grandfather: Aumary Reginarids
GrandFather: Simon Montfort
Great x 1 Grandmother: Bertrade Unknown
Mother: Bertrade Montfort Queen Consort France
Great x 4 Grandfather: William "Longsword" I Duke Normandy
Great x 3 Grandfather: Richard "Fearless" Normandy I Duke Normandy
Great x 4 Grandmother: Sprota
Great x 2 Grandfather: Robert Normandy Archbishop of Rouen
Great x 4 Grandfather: Unknown Dane
Great x 3 Grandmother: Gunnora Countess Ponthieu
Great x 1 Grandfather: Richard Normandy 2nd Count Évreux
Great x 2 Grandmother: Herleva Countess Évreux
GrandMother: Agnès of Normandy
Great x 2 Grandfather: Ramon Borrell Count of Barcelona
Great x 1 Grandmother: Adelaide aka Godehildis Ramon
Great x 3 Grandfather: Roger I of Carcasonne
Great x 2 Grandmother: Ermesinde of Carcassonne