My Conrad Family Tree

The Family of Helen and Dan Conrad

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51 1801 Census LØKRA, Lars Larsen Sletta (I1829)
 
52 6h. arne larsen slettali, b. ca. 1840.
Banker in u.s.a. I have found Anne
Larsdatter (!) b. 1/17/1845, and also found
her at graduation. But by the
relocation 1859 indicated that Arne Larsen
Born 22.1.1845. School protocol shows that
Arne was 12 in 1857. This is not entirely
elucidated.

ALNESS Arne I Banker born in Norway Jan 22 1845 educated in public schools and Commercial College Chrlstlania Norway Came to St Paul In 1869 and until 1886 was engaged in railroad building and commercial pursuits retired 1886 traveled in Europe one year with family then returned Organized 1887 and ever since president of Scandinavian American Bank of St Paul formerly president Scandinavian Literary Society incorporator and director in corporation Member of First Charter Commission of St Paul Trustee Luther Hospital Recreation Trout fishing three months every summer in the Rocky Mountains or in Norway Club Minnesota St Paul Residence 463 Ashland Av Office Scandinavian Bank Building St Paul 
SLETTALI, Arne Larsen (I1849)
 
53 Admiral U. Kaas was the father of admirals Christian Frederik Kaas (1727-1804) and Ulrik Christian Kaas (1729-1808). FC Kaas giftet seg til stamhuset Nedergård (som var i slekten til 1936), og var far til kammerherre Otto Ditlev Kaas (1772–1811) og Henrik Valentin Eichstädt Kaas (1779–1857). FC Kaas married to the regular house Nedergård (who was in the race to 1936), and was the father of chamberlain Otto Ditlev Kaas (1772-1811) and Henry Valentine Eichstädt Kaas (1779-1857). Sistnevntes yngre sønn Johan Wilhelm Kaas (1818–1901) er stamfar for den nålevende danske gren. The latter's younger son Johan Wilhelm Kaas (1818-1901) is the ancestor of the present Danish branch. OD Kaas ble gift med arvingen til baroniet Guldborgland, og fikk 1804 tittelen baron Kaas-Lehn. NPD Kaas married the heir to the barony Guldborgland, 1804 and received the title Baron Kaas-Lehn. KAAS, Ulrik (I1548)
 
54 Af Krabberup (Luggude herred), mageskiftede sig 1354 en gård i Bollerup til fra Niels Pedersen af Asmindtorp, beseglede 1360 til vitterlighed med Erkebisp Jakob i Lund, levede 1365. KROGNOS, Peder Stigsen (I960)
 
55 Afonso I of Portugal
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Full article here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afonso_I_of_Portugal

Afonso I Image:AfonsoI-P.jpg
Reign July 26, 1139 - December 6, 1185
Queen Maud of Savoy (1125-1157)
Royal House House of Burgundy
Father Henry, Count of Portugal (1066-1093)
Mother Teresa of Leon (1080-1130)
Issue Urraca of Portugal (1151-1188)
Sancho I of Portugal (1154-1212)
Teresa of Portugal (1157-1218)
Mafalda of Portugal (d. young)
Henrique (d. young)
João (d. young)
Sancha (d. young)
Urraca Afonso (natural daughter)
Fernando Afonso (natural son)
Pedro Afonso (natural son)
Afonso of Portugal (natural son)
Teresa Afonso (natural daughter)
Date of Birth July 25, 1109
Place of Birth Guimarães
Date of Death December 6, 1185
Place of Death Coimbra
Place of Burial Santa Cruz Monastery (Coimbra)

Afonso I, King of Portugal (English Alphonzo or Alphonse), more commonly known as Afonso Henriques (pron. IPA /?'fõsu e~'?ik??/), or also Affonso (Archaic Portuguese), Alfonso or Alphonso (Portuguese-Galician) or Alphonsus (Latin version), (Guimarães, 1109?, traditionally July 25 - Coimbra, 1185 December 6), also known as the Conqueror (Port. o Conquistador), was the first King of Portugal, declaring his independence from León.
Contents
[hide]

* 1 Life
* 2 Ancestors
* 3 Descendants
* 4 See also
* 5 Bibliography
* 6 References

[edit] Life

Afonso I was the son of Henry of Burgundy, Count of Portugal and Teresa of León, the illegitimate daughter of King Alfonso VI of Castile and León. He was proclaimed King on July 26, 1139, immediately after the Battle of Ourique, and died on December 6, 1185 in Coimbra.

At the end of the 11th century, the Iberian Peninsula political agenda was mostly concerned with the Reconquista, the driving out of the Muslim successor-states to the Caliphate of Cordoba after its collapse. With European military aristocracies focused on the Crusades, Alfonso VI called for the help of the French nobility to deal with the Moors. In exchange, he was to give the hands of his daughters in wedlock to the leaders of the expedition and bestow royal privileges to the others. Thus, the royal heiress Urraca of Castile wedded Raymond of Burgundy, younger son of the Count of Burgundy, and her half-sister, princess Teresa of León, wedded his cousin, another French crusader, Henry of Burgundy, younger brother of the Duke of Burgundy, whose mother was daughter of the Count of Barcelona. Henry was made Count of Portugal, a burdensome earldom south of Galicia, where Moorish incursions and attacks were to be expected. With his wife Teresa as co-ruler of Portugal, Henry withstood the ordeal and held the lands for his father-in-law.

From this wedlock several sons were born, but only one, Afonso Henriques (meaning "Afonso son of Henry") thrived. The boy, probably born around 1109, followed his father as Count of Portugal in 1112, under the tutelage of his mother. The relations between Teresa and her son Afonso proved difficult. Only eleven years old, Afonso already had his own political ideas, greatly different from his mother's. In 1120, the young prince took the side of the archbishop of Braga, a political foe of Teresa, and both were exiled by her orders. Afonso spent the next years away from his own county, under the watch of the bishop. In 1122 Afonso became fourteen, the adult age in the 12th century. He made himself a knight on his own account in the Cathedral of Zamora, raised an army, and proceeded to take control of his lands. Near Guimarães, at the Battle of São Mamede (1128) he overcame the troops under his mother's lover and ally Count Fernando Peres de Trava of Galicia, making her his prisoner and exiling her forever to a monastery in León. Thus the possibility of incorporating Portugal into a Kingdom of Galicia was eliminated and Afonso become sole ruler (Dux of Portugal) after demands for independence from the county's people, church and nobles. He also vanquished Alfonso VII of Castile and León, another of his mother's allies, and thus freed the county from political dependence on the crown of León and Castile. On April 6, 1129, Afonso Henriques dictated the writ in which he proclaimed himself Prince of Portugal. 
PORTUGAL, Afonso I Henriques of (I1179)
 
56 After Trine Helene died Victor, Sverre, Ebba, and Lilly were raised in an Orphanage at Latvik, Vestfold, Norway. Hans Kristian ENGH eventually remarried. HANSDATTER, Trine Helene (I757)
 
57 Age at Death: 82 PETERSEN, Peter C (I1976)
 
58 Age: 80 MOORE, John B. (I2020)
 
59 Age: 90 PETERSEN, Gert Philip (I1956)
 
60 Albert I of Brandenburg
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Albert I, Margrave of Brandenburg)
Jump to: navigation, search
Monument commemorating Albrecht, Spandau Citadel, Berlin
Enlarge
Monument commemorating Albrecht, Spandau Citadel, Berlin

Albert I (c. 1100 - November 18, 1170), also called, The Bear (Ger: Albrecht der Bär), was Margrave of Brandenburg from 1157 to 1170 and duke of Saxony from 1138 to 1142.

[edit] Biography

Albert was the only son of Otto the Rich, count of Ballenstedt, and Eilika, daughter of Magnus Billung, Duke of Saxony. He inherited the valuable estates in northern Saxony of his father in 1123, and on his mother's death, in 1142, succeeded to one-half of the lands of the house of Billung. Albrecht was a loyal vassal of his relation, Lothar I, duke of Saxony, from whom, about 1123, he received the margravate of Lusatia, to the east; after Lothar became king of the Germans, he accompanied him on a disastrous expedition to Bohemia in 1126, when he suffered a short imprisonment.

Albert's entanglements in Saxony stemmed from his desire to expand his inherited estates there. In 1128 his brother-in-law, Henry II, who was margrave of a small area on the Elbe called the Saxon Northern March, died, and Albert, disappointed at not receiving this fief himself, attacked Udo, the heir, and was consequently deprived of Lusatia by Lothar. In spite of this, he went to Italy in 1132 in the train of the king, and his services there were rewarded in 1134 by the investiture of the North Mark, which was again without a ruler.

Once he was firmly established in the Nordmark, Albert's covetous eye lay also on the thinly populated lands to the north and east. Three years he was occupied in campaigns against the Slavic Wends, who as pagans were considered fair game, and whose subjugation to Christianity was the aim of the "Wendish crusade" of 1147 in which Albert took part; diplomatic measures were more successful, and by an arrangement made with Pribislav, the last of the Wendish dukes of Brandenburg, Albert secured this district when the duke died in 1150. Taking the title "Margrave of Brandenburg", he pressed the "crusade" against the Wends, extended the area of his mark, encouraged German migration, established bishoprics under his protection, and so became the founder of the Margraviate of Brandenburg in 1157, which his heirs-the Ascanians-held until the line died out in 1320.
The seal of Albert I
Enlarge
The seal of Albert I

In 1137 his cousin and nemesis, Henry the Proud was deprived by the Hohenstaufen Conrad III, King of the Germans of his Saxon duchy, which was awarded to Albert, if he could take it. After some initial success in his efforts to take possession, he was driven from Saxony, and also from his Nordmark by Henry, and compelled to take refuge in South Germany. When peace was made with Henry in 1142 Albert renounced the Saxon dukedom and received the counties of Weimar and Orlamünde. It was possibly at this time that Albert was made Arch-Chamberlain of the Empire, an office which afterwards gave the Margraves of Brandenburg the rights of a prince-elector.

A feud with Henry's son, Henry the Lion, Duke of Saxony, was interrupted, in 1158, by a pilgrimage to the Holy Land, and in 1162 Albert accompanied the Emperor Frederick Barbarossa to Italy, where he distinguished himself at the storming of Milan.

In 1164 he joined a league of princes formed against Henry the Lion, and peace being made in 1169, Albert divided his territories among his six sons, and died on November 13, 1170, and was buried at Ballenstedt.

His personal qualities won for him the surname of the Bear, "not from his looks or qualities, for he was a tall handsome man, but from the cognisance on his shield, an able man, had a quick eye as well as a strong hand, and could pick what way was straightest among crooked things, was the shining figure and the great man of the North in his day, got much in the North and kept it, got Brandenburg for one there, a conspicuous country ever since," says Carlyle, who called Albert "a restless, much-managing, wide- warring man." He is also called by later writers "the Handsome."

[edit] Family and children

He was married in 1124 to Sofie of Winzenburg (d. 25 March 1160) and they had the following children:

1. Otto I, Margrave of Brandenburg (1126/28 - 7 March 1184).
2. Count Hermann I of Orlamünde (d. 1176).
3. Siegfried (d. 24 October 1184), Bishop of Brandenburg in 1173-80, Archbishop of Bremen in 1180-84.
4. Heinrich (d. 1185), a canon in Magdeburg.
5. Count Albrech of Ballenstedt (d. after 6 December 1172).
6. Count Dietrich of Werben (d. after 5 September 1183).
7. Count Bernhard of Anhalt (1140 - 9 February 1212), Duke of Saxony in 1180-1212 as Bernard III.
8. Hedwig (d. 1203), married to Otto, Margrave of Meißen.
9. Daughter, married ca. 1152 to Vladislav of Bohemia.
10. Adelheid (d. 1162), a nun in Lamspringe.
11. Gertrude, married 1155 to Duke Diepold of Moravia.
12. Sybille (d. ca. 1170), Abbess of Quedlinburg.
13. Eilika
 
SACHSEN, Albrecht I "The Bear" hertug af (I1166)
 
61 Ancestors recorded here:
http://forum.arkivverket.no/topic/115990-30397-kapteinloeytnant-mechlenborg/

http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~morem/index.txt

About Family Mechlenburg. Reported by Archivfuldmægtig EA Thomle. JL) a particular in Norway in the 17th and 18th century, very numerous and diverse - now extinct dersteds - Genealogy Mechlenburg about which there this journal, 2 R. III. S. 293. has provoked questions, write down as so many other more well-known Norwegian families originally from Schleswig, where Fa-militants in the 16th century lived, as it seems, for-nemmelig Around Haderslev and Flensburg. Already in 1573 2) was His Mechlenburg, from 25 Decbr. 1571-24 Februar 1602, when he was publican in Elsinore, appearing as Hof-pattern type 3), endowed with a Kannikedømme in Oslo Diocese and: ^ ) Danish Collections H. Page 309th *) Norwegian National records., U: S. 59th *) announcements Interest Appeal-Archive for 1872 Sf. 168th 67 he obtained the later of July 3, 1583 Tenth of Tanum and Kville Parish in Bohuslen rid and free ad gratiam ^), although he does not ever seem to have resided in the country. He must be dead before 17 November 1623, when the Tenth of Tanum and Kville bortgaves to another ^).
However, it seems Oluf Mechlenburg ^ Citizen of Flensburg, which øiensyijigt has driven a substantial trade in Norway, especially in Nordland ^) that have come in a more personal touch with the land. It also assumed that it is from him that the Northern Mediterranean and in North - tender resident branch of the family Mechlenburg descended ^). Sam-tidigt with Oluf Mechlenburg seems also a Carson Mech-lenburg, like hin Citizen of Flensburg and therefore possibly his brother, who also stood in Trade Relationship with Norway ^).
It is certainly no doubt be present Carsten Mechlenburg, later merchant and Mayor in Haderslev, which last office he probably has been for the father, Johan Schnell, whose daughter Margaret Schnell he egtede in the year 1602nd She was, according to the above her by the Bishop of Christiania Diocese, Dr . Henning Stockfleth, held and later into print released Ligpræ-Diken born in Haderslev 15 June 1574 and a daughter of the above-mentioned Mayor who Johan Schnell and wife Anna Reimers. She enjoyed until his 17 years teaching at home by private teachers and came in the year 1591 in matrimony with publican in Haderslev and county clerk of Haderslevhus Nils Toller, who died in the same place in the year 1596 after probably five years of matrimony. From this matrimony, she had two children, among which the son later Mayor of Christiania Nils Toller. After her husband's death she was in 6 Aars Time hensides in widowhood, until she, in the year 1602, as mentioned, egtede Mayor Carsten Mechlenburg who died in Haderslev in the year 1618th in this Egte-closet, she got 10 children, six sons and four daughters, of whom two sons ') Norwegian National records., II. S. 533, cfr. III. S. 321st') Norwegian National records., VS 344th ') Norwegian National records., HS 450, III. SS. 527, 5Q5 and 651st *) Norwegian Saml, 8vo. II. S. 514 f. ^) Norwegian National records., III. SS. 387 and 407 5 * 68 and three daughters also survived her mother. The widow was Mar- grethe Schnell in nearly 10 years living in Haderslev until the year 1627, when she because of enemy invasion in Holstein with her children went to Norway for the Son of 1st matrimony. Here she died in Christiania Wednesday, 1 May 1647 and was buried in Holy Trinity Church 6 Mai P. A. - Of her 10 children with Carsten Mechlenburg known by the Security alone following 4 ^), namely: A. Annie Chen Mechlenburg, died in Christiania in 1658 (begr. in the church choir 7 Mai P. A.). She was married to Berg Writes at Kongsberg Sølwerk, later First Minister in Christiania and Participant in Sølwerket NIS Hanssøn (begr. in Christiania "in chorus ** June 13, 1655), with whom she had many children, of which at any rate each according to his Place of birth called themselves , Kongsberg * ".
 
MECHLENBURG, Carsten (I999)
 
62 Ancestors recorded here:
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~morem/index.txt

About Family Mechlenburg. Reported by Archivfuldmægtig EA Thomle. JL) a particular in Norway in the 17th and 18th century, very numerous and diverse - now extinct dersteds - Genealogy Mechlenburg about which there this journal, 2 R. III. S. 293. has provoked questions, write down as so many other more well-known Norwegian families originally from Schleswig, where Fa-militants in the 16th century lived, as it seems, for-nemmelig Around Haderslev and Flensburg. Already in 1573 2) was His Mechlenburg, from 25 Decbr. 1571-24 Februar 1602, when he was publican in Elsinore, appearing as Hof-pattern type 3), endowed with a Kannikedømme in Oslo Diocese and: ^ ) Danish Collections H. Page 309th *) Norwegian National records., U: S. 59th *) announcements Interest Appeal-Archive for 1872 Sf. 168th 67 he obtained the later of July 3, 1583 Tenth of Tanum and Kville Parish in Bohuslen rid and free ad gratiam ^), although he does not ever seem to have resided in the country. He must be dead before 17 November 1623, when the Tenth of Tanum and Kville bortgaves to another ^).
However, it seems Oluf Mechlenburg ^ Citizen of Flensburg, which øiensyijigt has driven a substantial trade in Norway, especially in Nordland ^) that have come in a more personal touch with the land. It also assumed that it is from him that the Northern Mediterranean and in North - tender resident branch of the family Mechlenburg descended ^). Sam-tidigt with Oluf Mechlenburg seems also a Carson Mech-lenburg, like hin Citizen of Flensburg and therefore possibly his brother, who also stood in Trade Relationship with Norway ^).
It is certainly no doubt be present Carsten Mechlenburg, later merchant and Mayor in Haderslev, which last office he probably has been for the father, Johan Schnell, whose daughter Margaret Schnell he egtede in the year 1602nd She was, according to the above her by the Bishop of Christiania Diocese, Dr . Henning Stockfleth, held and later into print released Ligpræ-Diken born in Haderslev 15 June 1574 and a daughter of the above-mentioned Mayor who Johan Schnell and wife Anna Reimers. She enjoyed until his 17 years teaching at home by private teachers and came in the year 1591 in matrimony with publican in Haderslev and county clerk of Haderslevhus Nils Toller, who died in the same place in the year 1596 after probably five years of matrimony. From this matrimony, she had two children, among which the son later Mayor of Christiania Nils Toller. After her husband's death she was in 6 Aars Time hensides in widowhood, until she, in the year 1602, as mentioned, egtede Mayor Carsten Mechlenburg who died in Haderslev in the year 1618th in this Egte-closet, she got 10 children, six sons and four daughters, of whom two sons ') Norwegian National records., II. S. 533, cfr. III. S. 321st') Norwegian National records., VS 344th ') Norwegian National records., HS 450, III. SS. 527, 5Q5 and 651st *) Norwegian Saml, 8vo. II. S. 514 f. ^) Norwegian National records., III. SS. 387 and 407 5 * 68 and three daughters also survived her mother. The widow was Mar- grethe Schnell in nearly 10 years living in Haderslev until the year 1627, when she because of enemy invasion in Holstein with her children went to Norway for the Son of 1st matrimony. Here she died in Christiania Wednesday, 1 May 1647 and was buried in Holy Trinity Church 6 Mai P. A. - Of her 10 children with Carsten Mechlenburg known by the Security alone following 4 ^), namely: A. Annie Chen Mechlenburg, died in Christiania in 1658 (begr. in the church choir 7 Mai P. A.). She was married to Berg Writes at Kongsberg Sølwerk, later First Minister in Christiania and Participant in Sølwerket NIS Hanssøn (begr. in Christiania "in chorus ** June 13, 1655), with whom she had many children, of which at any rate each according to his Place of birth called themselves , Kongsberg * ". 
MECHLENBURG, Carsten (I999)
 
63 Anders fikk tilsammen 27 barn med sine hustruer.

ALMENNINGEN, Lise Lotte. 691878-123199061908. Tømtevn. 106 , 2013 Skjetten, Date 30 Dec 1999.

16. Andres Nielsen of Asdal, died 1405, married Ide Sydersk Holck, died 1447
http://www.torske.net/O/Oeksendal/Lynne_family_tree.html
 
ASDAL\PANTER, Anders Nielsen (I69)
 
64 Anders Kaas was the grandfather of such major Jørgen Kaas til Hastrup (død 1658), som igjen var far til amtmann Jørgen Grubbe Kaas til Rydbjerggård (1643-1711) og stiftamtmann i Trondheim Hans Kaas til Hastrup (1657-1700). Major Jørgen Kaas to Hastrup (died 1658), which in turn was the father of Governor Jørgen Kaas to Rydbjerggård Grubb (1643-1711) and the Prefect of Trondheim Hans Kaas to Hastrup (1657-1700). Førstnevnte var far til stiftamtmann i Bergen, admiral Ulrik Kaas (1677-1746) og kommandør Hans Kaas til Rydbjerggård (1683-1737). The former was the father of Prefect of Bergen, Admiral Ulrich Kaas (1677-1746) and Commander Hans Kaas to Rydbjerggård (1683-1737). KAAS, Jørgen (I40)
 
65 Anders Kaas was the grandfather of such major Jørgen Kaas til Hastrup (død 1658), som igjen var far til amtmann Jørgen Grubbe Kaas til Rydbjerggård (1643–1711) og stiftamtmann i Trondheim Hans Kaas til Hastrup (1657–1700). Major Jørgen Kaas to Hastrup (died 1658), which in turn was the father of Governor Jørgen Kaas to Rydbjerggård Grubb (1643-1711) and the Prefect of Trondheim Hans Kaas to Hastrup (1657-1700). Førstnevnte var far til stiftamtmann i Bergen, admiral Ulrik Kaas (1677–1746) og kommandør Hans Kaas til Rydbjerggård (1683–1737). The former was the father of Prefect of Bergen, Admiral Ulrich Kaas (1677-1746) and Commander Hans Kaas to Rydbjerggård (1683-1737).

http://slektenkaas.com/getperson.php?personID=I500&tree=1

Saturday 30 January 1658 passed the huge army of the Little Belt to Wedel Borg (then Ivernæs) and fønsskov. The Danish troops - 700 Landwehr people on foot, mostly farmers, and 24 squadrons - stretched after a brief gun battle weapons and fled. Among the fallen Danes were Jørgen Kaas to Lindskov whose bodies the Swedish king who loves the bravery, even in an enemy, followed by a two miles and at whose funeral in Egense Church 26June (?) bishop spoke and honor come with a silver pitcher of 100 allowed by the widow

http://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/J%C3%B8rgen_Kaas

Jørgen KaasFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaThe Swedes came across the ice to Fyn30 January 1658, and Jørgen Kaas led the resistance with someone quickly summoned forcesJørgen Kaas (born 1618 , died January 30, 1658 at Fyn ), to Hastrup and Østergaard, was a Danish Colonel , lord of Lists County and landowner who belonged to the noble family Kaas (Kaas with the wall).
Jørgen Kaas was from 30 December 1648 lord of Lists County in Norway, an appointment he received such against selling goods Østergaard the king (then minor) son Ulrik Christian Gyldenløve the initiative of King Christian IV . [1] He never lived in Norway, and leaning was administered by the governor on Nedenes .Jørgen Kaas was Colonel and Commander of the Funen cavalry, and made ??his mark as a war hero during the first Karl Gustav War when the Swedes took over the ice from Jutland to Funen the unusually cold day 30 January 1658. The attack came as a surprise, and Jørgen Kaas took up the fight with someone quickly summoned forces and even fell in battle 39 years old. He had burned his name on your arm with gunpowder, that his body should be recognized after his death.In recognition of his heroism came Swedish King Karl X Gustav to follow his equal "a quarter way" to the foot. [2] After a few days, Fyn entirely in Karl Gustav violence and was thoroughly looted . Jørgen Kaas was buried inside the church Egense and Bishop Laurids Jacobsen Hindsholm officiating. The remains were moved in 1811 to the churchyard.
Jørgen Kaas was buried in Egense church , and is now buried outside the cemeteryHe was the son of the country judge on Fyn Hans Kaas and Birgitte Norby, and was married to Karen Jørgensdatter Grubbe (born in 1616 on Halsted monastery , d 1695 at Lerbæk ). She was the sister of Regitze Grubbe , wife of King Christian IV's son Hans Ulrik Gyldenløve . [3] Jørgen Kaas and Karen Grubbe was such parents prefect of Christiania and Trondheim Hans Kaas (1640-1700) and Governor Jorgen Grubbe Kaas to Rydbjerggård (1643-1711), grandparents prefect of Bergen and admiralUlrik Kaas (1677-1746) and General Henry Bielke Kaas (1686 - 1773), as well as grandparents to admirals Frederik Christian Kaas (1727-1804) and Ulrik Christian Kaas (1729-1808). His Kaas was such father of the poet Birgitte Christine Kaas (1682-1761) married to Lieutenant General Henry Jørgen Huitfeld to Elingård , and among their descendants are national archivistHenrik Jørgen Huitfeld-Kaas .
Grandson, General Henry Bielke KaasSon Son admiral Ulrik KaasJørgen Kaas is the ancestor of the contemporary Danish branch of the family Kaas (but not for the Norwegian branch Munthe-Kaas). He was also the father of Vivien ("Birthe") Kaas (born 1644), mother of Elisabeth Sophie Høeg (1669-1739) marriedClaus , who has many descendants in Norway through his grandson Mads Lind Nissen (1756-1827) (as bl . A. heraldikeren Harald Claus originated from) and granddaughter Andrea Jaspara Nissen (1725-1772) married to Judge Hans Paus (1721-1774). Elisabeth Sophie Høeg was also the mother of the deputy governor of St. Croix Gregers Høeg Nissen (1709-1773).
Jørgen Kaas was also the great-great-great-grandfather of Louise Danneskiold -Samsøe (1796-1867), wife of Duke Christian August of August Borg , a member of the house Oldenburg and the king's brother. She was such grandmother of Empress Augusta ; among her descendants are also King Carl XVI Gustav of Sweden , King Constantine II of Greece , Queen Sofia of Spain , the current head of the house Glücksburg and house Oldenburg Christoph of Schleswig-Holstein, the current head of the house Hannover Ernst August V of Hanover and the current head of the house Hohenzollern Georg Friedrich of Prussia .
 
KAAS, Jørgen (I40)
 
66 Arnulf, Duke of Bavaria
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Arnulf I of Bavaria)
Jump to: navigation, search

Arnulf (died July 14, 937), called the Bad or the Evil (German: der Böse), was the duke of Bavaria from 907 until his death. He was a member of the Luitpolding dynasty.

Arnulf was the son of Margrave Luitpold of Bavaria and Cunigunda, daughter of Berthold I, Count Palatine of Swabia.

He was a fifth generation descendant of Charlemagne.

Besieged by frequent raids by the Hungarians and desperate to raise funds to finance a defence, Arnulf strengthened his power through confiscation of church lands and property, which earned him the nickname "the Bad". He re-established the duchy of Bavaria and eventually negotiated a truce with the Hungarians who thereafter largely passed though Bavaria on their raids into other German territories. Arnold vigorously resisted King Conrad, Duke of Franconia (and the second husband of Arnulf's mother Cunigunda), but later submitted to Conrad's successor as King of the Germans, Henry the Fowler of Saxony, who confirmed Arnulf's sovereignty over Bavaria.

Arnulf was married to Judith of Friuli, daughter of Count Eberhard of Sülichgau and Gisela of Verona. Arnulf's daughter Judith married Henry I of Bavaria, brother of Otto I, Holy Roman Emperor.

Arnulf died in Regensburg in 937 and was buried in St. Emmeram.

[edit] See also

* Descendants of Charlemagne
* Descendants of Arnulf of Bavaria
 
Arnulf hertug af Bayern (I1185)
 
67 at sea ANDREASON, Jens (I1083)
 
68 Barn: Harold, Druella, Tostig
sønn av 'churl' Wulfnoth Cild, død 1015 ? 
GODWIN (I1633)
 
69 Barn: Marine, Claus, Vedder FRESE, Ingken Weddesen (I1616)
 
70 Basnæs Estate Basnæsvej 4230 Skælskør

An old legend tells that Basnæs takes its name from a sea warrior, or rather a pirate named Bass, who chose this stretch of land by the sea to his home and residence, but this is undoubtedly quite unhistorical, since the origins of the farm's name probably originates from the word bast, which refers to a collection of trees.

Incidentally, it seems is not possible to disentangle the first farm of origin. In the old days there was in the place where Basnæs and its land now stretches out, two small villages, Bastnæs (or Barsnæs) and Nybølle and of these cities is the evidently been formed.

The first time we encounter a manor in the town Bastnæs in the middle of 15th century, when Sir Ove Jacobsen Lung Niels Steenstrup (Musse parish) 1446 listed as owner.

Basnæs mansion south of Skælskør; has since been owned by Axel Arenfeldt (1590-1647), Christian IV trusted man who built the farm. After the 1758 fire was built, after a drawing by CF Hetsgh, the present main building in the 1840's by JB Scavenius in whom HCA was a frequent guest.

In 1933, farm land 528 acres of meadow land and 367 acres of forest. Basnæs Estate Basnæsvej 4230 Skælskør

After reading the notes below it is uncertain whether Sophie Folmersdatter Folmersen or Aagesdatter Steeg II was the mother of Ove Jakobsen Lunge as both have Saltensee ancestors.

Subject: Which children belong to which wives are uncertain.
to Høistrup (Stevns H.) Ryegaard (Voldborg H.) and main farms in the lake and Valby (Slagelse Stevns and H.), was best man for the 1343 King Valdemar of Settlement in Helsingborg, was probably
1351 Knight,
1353 was the guardian of Mrs. Elene Nielsdatter (Rani),
king's captain of Als, 1357 but jailed on suspicion of Participation in Jydernes rebellion
was by 1362 captain at Helsingborg,
had 1371 St. Clare Monastery Manor in Ølby in bed, lost 1376 Kalundborg Lehn and 1377 Holbæk Castle he had had in Pant, but got into Forlehning,
WOULD Trudsholm in Jutland Forlehning and St. Clare Abbey Manor at Moen, 1381 same Abbey Estate in Bårse H., 1382 sold Hegnet mm (Ramsø H.) to Mrs. Elene by Bjernede and then sealed with him his brother Sir Oluf Lung and Sons Folmer and Anders Jepsen, lived 31 Mai 1384, but died June 20, 1387, when shift work for him, between his sons Mr. Folmer, Niels and Anders Jepsen in their immature brothers and sisters Olufsen and Ove Jepsen, Sophie, Regitze and at Oluf Lung of Skjoldenæs' children everywhere, sealed by their kinsmen Bishop Niels (Ulfeld) in Roskilde, Mr. Donald Sivendesen (Mule), Absalom Mogensen (Gøye), Donald and John Olsen (Lung), Ove Steeg, Mogens Steeg, Ebbe Jakobsen (Lung), Pastor Niels AlmaTsen in Heddinge, Hemming Tues (boat) tours vg William Tures, Tyge Mogensen (Ravensberg), Poul Henriksen, Henrik Ivensen (Mark Male), Karl Thomesen (Banner), Johannes Poulsen, Oluf Lung of Svansbjerg and Peder SAXESS of Froslev; indicated by genealogies g. 1 ° m. Maren Myndel Niels Steenstrup and Asser troupe, 2 ° m. Elsebet Sandberg, 3 ° w. Mette Limbek, Widow after Mr. Niels Hak, but it is certain that one of his wives named Sophie, and this or his first Wife seems to have been a daughter of Mr. Folmer Folmersen to city Ager (Falster North H.) and Mrs. Cecilia *).

*) Some family records, for instance. Mrs. Lisbet Bryskes, calling Mr. Anders Jakobsen's mother Kirsten, James, Henry's daughter, whose arms were a divided and twice cross divided shield of blue and white, while Ove Jakobsen Lung mother must have been a daughter of Mr. Erik Nielsen (Saltensee) which resulted in two gold deer Vier in blue field, which also arms along with the Lunge'rs and Krafse'rs old was to be seen in Tjæreby Church (see GI. RC. Jur 4 ° 1269).

Margaret Steeg Sigil leads Hjortevir, and is seen very unlike Steeg-family weapons. This suggests that her father was perhaps the "Saltensee of Tystofte"(or a branch of the Hvide family line) and Steeg name comes from mother's side. 
LUNGE, Ove Jakobsen til Nielstrup (I310)
 
71 Basse.

Dette Navn førtes i det 14de Aarhundrede af en mægtig og anseet sjællandsk Familie, der utvivlsomt har taget Navn efter sit Vaaben: et afhugget hvidt Vildbassehoved i blaat Felt. Af denne Familie var Hr. Jacob Basse, der var Medlemaf det Rigsforstanderskab, som Kong Valdemar Atterdag 1352 indsatte til at styre Riget under sin Fraværelse i Tydskland 1 ). Ogsaa Hr. Jacobs Brødre, hvoraf flere havde Sæde i Rigens Raad, og deres Afkom vare anseelige Mænd, der spillede en betydelig Rolle deels paa Grund af deres store Jordegodsbesiddelser og deels paa Grund af de Stillinger,de indtoge 2 ). Slægtens Blomstring var dog kun af kort Varighed. Flowering race was only of short duration. Ved Aar 1435 synes den paa Mandslinien at have været indskrænket til Hr. Jacobs Brodersøns Søn, Hr. Steen Basse den Yngre, og dennes Søn Jes Basse. Sønnen døde kort efter, vistnok ugift, og Hr. Steen Basse vilde saaledes blive den, med hvem Vaabnet skulde nedlægges i Graven.

This name was carried into the 14th century by a mighty and esteemed Zealand Family, which has undoubtedly been named after his weapon: a severed head in white tomboy blue field. Of this family was Mr. Jacob Basse, who was Medlemaf det Rigsforstanderskab, as King Valdemar IV 1352 inmates to control the Empire during his absence in Tydskland 1). Even Mr. Jacobs brothers, several of which had a seat in Rigens Raad and their Offspring product sizeable men who played a significant role partly because of their large estates possessions and partly because of the positions they occupied 2). By year 1435 it appears that the male line was restricted to Mr. Jacob's brother, sons, son, Mr. Steen Basse the Younger and his Son Jes Basse. The son died shortly after, probably unmarried, and Mr. Steen Basse would thus be the one with whom the weapon was to be laid in the grave.

1) Hvitfeld pag. 1) Hvitfeldt pag. 506. 506.

2) cfr. Ny dansk Magazin VI, p. 264 etc. New Danish Magazine VI, p. 264, etc.
Side 607 Page 607

For nu i det Mindste at bevare sit Navn fra at uddø, gav Hr. Steen Basse, efter Slægtebøgernes Beretning, Hr. Torben Bille til Allinge, der var gift med hans Søsters Datter, Fru Sidsel Ovesdatter Lunge, betydeligt Jordegods, der siges Søholm 1 ) og 12 Læster Korn, paa det Vilkaar, at en af Hr. Torbens Sønner skulde opkaldes efter Hr. Steen Basse. Det er andetsteds 2 ) paavist, at denne Beretning synes at forholde sig rigtig, idet Hr. Steen Basse i 1446 paa SjællandsLandsthing tilskjedede Hr. Torben alt sit Kjøbe- og Pante-Gods i Sjælland. Hr. Torben Bille lod da ogsaa en Søn døbe Steen Basse, og Hr. Steen Basses Valg var i og for sig ikke ilde til Opnaaelse af hans -Øiemed at bevare sit Navn fra at uddø, eftersom Hr. Torben Billes Søn Steen Basse blev Stamfader for en talrig Slægt, som endnu den Dag i Dag blomstrer, men Basse-Navnet er forlængst bortkastet.Allerede Hr. Torbens Søn kaldte sig kun sjelden Steen Basse, langt oftere Steen Bille eller Basse Bille, og hans Børn og Efterkommere brugte kun Navnet Bille. OgsaaSøholm gik snart over til andre Linier af Bille-Slægten, og kun Fornavnet Steen, der er gaaet i Arv i den paagjældendeLinie til vore Dage, minder om gamle Hr. Steen Basse og hans Forsøg paa at knytte sit Navn til Slægten Bille. Man skulde ellers fristes til at tro, at Hr. Steen selv har havt en Fornemmelse af, at de Biller, som vare en anseet og talrig Slægt, der alt i lang Tid selv havde brugt Stammenavn, snart vilde føle sig fristede til at lade Basse- Navnet fare og holde sig til deres fædrene Navn; thi der berettes, at han ogsaa gav Gods til sin anden Søsters EfterkommerepaaVilkaar, at de skulde antage Navnet Basse.

For now at least, to preserve his name from extinction, gave Mr. Steen Basse after genealogies Report, Mr. Torben Bille to Allinge, who was married to his sister's daughter, Mrs. Sidsel Ovesdatter Lung, considerable estate, who said Søholm 1 ) and 12 Read Grains on the condition that one of Mr Torben's sons was named after Mr Steen Basse. It is elsewhere 2) demonstrated that this report seems correct just as Mr. Steen Basse in 1446 in Zeeland country thing tilskjedede Mr Torben all his buying and deposit-Gods in Sealand.
Mr Torben Bille then had also a son baptized Steen Basse, and Mr. Steen Basses choice was in itself not bad for ensuring his-Øiemed to preserve his name from extinction, since Mr. Torben Bille's son, Steen Basse, was the father of a numerous family, who still to this day flourishes, but Basse-name is long bortkastet.Allerede Mr Torben's sons called themselves seldom Steen Basse, far more often Steen Bille or Basse Bille, and his children and descendants only used the name Bille . OgsaaSøholm soon went over to other lines of Bille-race, and only first name Steen, who has been passed in the paagjældendeLinie to our times, is reminiscent of old Mr. Steen Basse and his attempt to attach his name to the race Bille.
One would otherwise be tempted to believe that Mr. Steen himself had a feeling that the Billes that were an esteemed and numerous family, all of which for a long time had used the tribe name, would soon feel tempted to let Basse - Name danger and stick to their ancestral name, for there is reported that he also gave the Manor to his other sisters, EfterkommerepaaVilkaar, that they should assume the name Basse. 
BASSE, Steen (I318)
 
72 Berengaria, a Portuguese princess who married King Valdemar II Sejr of Denmark. She is said to descend from the Maurish Kings of Sevilla, the Abbasides, who claimed Mohammed as their forefather. This eventually, of course, leads to Abraham and to Adam and Eve! A genealogist's dream come true!

Berengária of Portugal (pron. IPA: [b??e~'ga?i?]) was a Portuguese infanta, later Queen consort of Denmark. She was the fifth daughter of Portuguese King Sancho I and Dulce Berenguer. She married Danish King Valdemar II and mother of Danish kings Eric IV, Abel and Christopher I.

She was born c. 1195 and married Valdemar II in 1214. She died in 1221. 
PORTUGAL, Berengaria of (I1124)
 
73 Bernard I, Duke of Saxony
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Bernard I (c. 950 – 9 February 1011) was the duke of Saxony (973 – 1011), the second of the Billung dynasty, a son of Duke Herman and Oda. He extended his father's power considerably.

He fought the Danes in 974, 983, and 994 during their invasions. He supported the succession of Otto III over Henry the Wrangler. In 986, he was made marshal and in 991 and 995 he joined the young Otto on campaign against the Slavs. He increased his power vis-à-vis the crown, where his father had been the representative of the king to the tribe, Bernard was the representative of the tribe to the king [1]. Bernard died in 1011 and was buried in the Church of Saint Michael in Lüneburg.

[edit] Family

In 990, Bernard married Hildegard, daughter of the count of Stade. They had the following issue:

* Herman, died young
* Bernard II, his successor
* Thietmar, a count, died in a duel on 1 April 1048 in Pöhlde
* Gedesdiu (or Gedesti) (died 30 June c.1040), abbess of Metelen (from 993) and Herford (from 1002)

and probably:

* Matilda, nun
* Othelindis (died 9 March 1044), married Dirk III of Holland
 
BILLUNG, Bernard Duke of Saxony I (I655)
 
74 Bernard II, Duke of Saxony
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Bernard II (c. 990 – 29 June 1059) was the duke of Saxony (1011 – 1059), the third of the Billung dynasty, a son of Bernard I and Hildegard. He had the rights of a count in Frisia.

Like his father, Bernard expanded the powers of the duke in Saxony and is regarded as the greatest of the Billungers. He was originally a supporter of Emperor Henry II and he accompanied him into Poland and negotiated the treaty of Bautzen of 1018. In 1019-1020, he revolted and gained the recognition of the tribal laws of Saxony, something his father had just failed to do. He returned then to war with the Slavs and drew them into his sphere of power and influence through their leader, Godescalc (Gottschalk).

He supported Conrad II in 1024 and his son Henry III, though he began to fear the latter for his closeness to the Archbishop Adalbert of Bremen, an inveterate enemy of the dukes of Saxony. Though he was a critical ally of the Danes, so fundamental to Henry's wars in the Netherlands, Bernard was on the brink of rebellion until the death of Adalbert. The remainder of his reign, however, was quiet.

In 1045, he erected the Alsterburg in Hamburg. He died in 1059 and was succeeded without incident by his son Ordulf. He is buried in the Church of Saint Michael in Lüneburg. 
BILLUNG, Bernard II hertug af Sachsen (I1177)
 
75 BESIDDELSER: Løvenbalk

Erik Christoffersen (Løvenbalk), der findes ingen beskrivelser om E.C. i samtidige kilder, me n traditionen støttes af våbenet en blå løve over to blå bjælker i guldfelt. E.C. er den egentlige stamfader til dendanske adelsslægt LØVENBALK. Han havde 3 børn: Johan, Margrethe og Niels. E.C. var gift med Gyldenstjerne (til Aagaard) en søster til Niels Pedersen Gyldenstjerne til Aagaard.

The family Løvenbalk, who deduces their origin from a nonmarital son of Christoffer II
http://historyandlegend.blogspot.com/2006/11/tjele-lvenbalk-family-tjele-tjele.html 
LØVENBALK, Erik Christoffersen (I1115)
 
76 BIRTH: (Svend) (Tveskæg) (usikker mor) TVESKÆG, King of Denmark Svend I (I521)
 
77 BIRTH: ABT 0970, (?) (usikre foreldre) STYRJORNSSON, Thorgils "Sprakeleg" (I224)
 
78 Born 1680 paa Bragernes and death in 1731 Christiania. Kammerjunker 1703. Kammerjunker 1703. Stiftamtmand i Bergen 1705, i Christiania 1710-31; deputert i Slotsloven, assessor i Overhofretten. Stiftamtmand in Bergen 1705, in Christiania 1710-31; deputert in Slot, assessor in Overhofretten. Hvit ridder 1723. White knight 1723. Dygtig, anset embedsmand og for sin jovialitet og omgjængelighet meget populær. Dygtig, is considered embedsmand and for his jovialitet and omgjængelighet very popular. Hadde sin embedsbolig i Raadhusgaten 7; eiet Ulveland paa Eker og betydelig jordegods. Had his embedsbolig in Raadhusgate 7; owned paa Ulveland Ekeren and significant jordegods. Gift 1705 med Helene Sophie Kaas. Married 1705 with Helene Sophie Kaas. DE TONSBERG, Wilhelm (I1428)
 
79 Both Joseph and Daniel Jenssen changed their name to Conrad upon entering the U.S. THe story is that there were too many Jensens, Johnsens and Johanssens in Minnesota. So they chose their father's middle name. JENSSEN, Joseph Pavels CONRAD (I1127)
 
80 buried at Graabrødre Kirke i Odense BROCKENHUUS, Anne Johansdatter (I2111)
 
81 Businessman

1865 Census
http://www.rhd.uit.no/folketellinger/ftliste.aspx?ft=1865&knr=0203&kenr=000&bnr=0124&lnr=00
Forrige bosted Neste bosted
Informasjon om bostedet:
Tellingsår: 1865
Kommune: Drøbak
Kommunenummer: 0203
Gatenavn: Bjærgene i Vest
Gatenr: 94
Bydel:
Gårdeier:
Antall leiligheter: 1
Antall personer registrert på bostedet: 12
Navn Familie-stilling Sivil-stand Yrke Fødselsår Fødested Etnisitet
Arne Larsen g Handelsborger 1809?? Romsdalen
Amalie Tønsberg Larsen Kone g 1828 Drøbak
Hans Jakob Arnesen* s ug 1854 Drøbak
Axel Tønsberg Arnesen* s ug 1857 Drøbak
Alfred Pavel Arnesen* s ug 1861 Drøbak
Betty Sameline Arnesdatter* d ug 1851 Drøbak
Agnis Henryette Arnesdatter* d ug 1852 Drøbak
Valborg Sophie Arnesdatter* d ug 1856 Drøbak
Helene Johansdatter ug Tjænestetyende 1847 Røken Præstegjeld
Edle Andersdatter ug Tjænestetyende 1850 Sverige
Jens Nilsen ug Handelsbetjænt 1844 Modum Præst.
Christen Paulsen Fosen Logerende ug Farver 1844 Ekers Præstegjæld 
ALNES, Arne Larsen (I31)
 
82 Casimir I (the Restorer), grand duke of Poland, 1038-1058, son of Mieszko II, recovered his throne from which he had been deposed, reestablished order in Poland with the aid of Emperors Conrad II and Henry III of Germany, and regained possession of Mazovia and Silesia. In the achievement of these successes, however, he was obliged to extend numerous concessions to the nobility and the clergy.
- A Dictionary of Medieval Civilization by Joseph Dahmus

Casimir I of Poland
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This article is about the 11th century Polish king. For other uses, please see Casimir.

Casimir I the Restorer
Casimir I the Restorer
Fragment of a painting by Jan Matejko.
Born July 25, 1016
Died November 28, 1058

Reign ca. 1040
to 1058

Family or dynasty Piast dynasty
Coat of Arms Piast.
Parents Mieszko II Lambert
Richensa of Lotharingia
Marriage and children with Maria Dobroniega:
Boleslaus II the Bold
Vladislaus I Herman
S'wie;tos?awa I of Bohemia (aka Svatava Polská in Czech)
Mieszko Kazimierzowic
Otton Kazimierzowic

Casimir I the Restorer (Polish: Kazimierz I Odnowiciel; 25 July 1016 – 28 November 1058), was a Duke of Poland of the Piast dynasty and the de facto monarch of the entire country. He is known as the Restorer mostly because he managed to reunite all parts of Poland after a period of turmoil and permanently attached Masovia, Silesia and Pomerania. Son of Mieszko II Lambert and Richensa of Lotharingia, Casimir failed to crown himself the King of Poland, mainly because of internal and external threats to his rule.

[edit] Biography

Relatively little is known of Casimir's early life. Born to Mieszko II of Poland and Richensa of Lotharingia, he must have spent his childhood at the royal court of Poland in Gniezno. Mieszko II was crowned the king of Poland in 1025 after his father's death. The many landlords, however, feared the single rule of the monarch. This situation led to conflicts in the country, in which Mieszko's brothers turned against him and the Emperor Conrad II's forces attacked the country, seizing Lusatia. Years of chaos and conflict followed, during which Mieszko died (1034) in suspicious circumstances after his forced abdication and a brief restoration.

After the death of her husband, Richensa probably tried to seize the power in the country and secure the crown for her son. However, she failed and Casimir had to flee to the Kingdom of Hungary while the central parts of Poland were controlled by Bezprym. The region of Greater Poland revolted against the nobles and clergy and a mass pagan revival ensued there. Also the land of Masovia seceded and a local landlord named Miec?aw formed a state of his own there. Similar situation happened in Pomerania, where the power was held by a local dynasty loosely related to the Piasts. Duke Bretislaus I of Bohemia, observing the period of turmoil in Poland, took advantage of his neighbour's weakness and invaded the country. After a short struggle he conquered Silesia and Lesser Poland and severely pillaged Greater Poland, burning Gniezno to the ground and looting the relics of Saint Adalbert.

The following year the new Holy Roman Emperor, Henry III, allied himself with the exiled Polish ruler against the Bohemians. Casimir was given a troop of 1,000 heavy footmen and a significant amount of gold to restore his power in the country. Casimir also signed an alliance with Yaroslav I the Wise, the Prince of Kievan Rus'. The alliance was sealed by Casimir's marriage with Yaroslav's sister, Maria Dobronega. With such support Casimir returned to Poland and managed to retake most of his domain. In 1041, the defeated Bretislaus signed a treaty at Regensburg in which he renounced his claims to all Polish lands except for Silesia, which was to be incorporated into the Crown of Bohemia. It was Casimir's success in strengthening royal power and ending internal strife that earned him the epithet of "the Restorer".
Kazimierz I the Restorer. Black and white reproduction of the entire painting by Jan Matejko.
Enlarge
Kazimierz I the Restorer. Black and white reproduction of the entire painting by Jan Matejko.

The treaty gained Casimir a period of peace at the southern border and the capital of Poland was moved to Kraków, the only major Polish city relatively untouched by the wars. It is probable that the Holy Roman Emperor was happy with the balance of power restored in the region and forced Casimir not to crown himself the king of Poland. In 1046 Emperor Henry held royal and imperial courts at Merseburg and Meißen, at which he ended the strife among the Dux Bomeraniorum (Duke of Pomerania), Duke Bretislaus of Bohemia, and Poland's Casimir I. In 1047 Casimir, aided by his Kievan ally, started a war against Masovia and seized the land. It is probable that he also defeated Miec?aw's allies from Pomerania and attached Gdan'sk to Poland. This secured his power in central Poland. Three years later, against the will of the emperor, Casimir seized Czech-controlled Silesia, thus securing most of his father's domain. In 1054 in Quedlinburg the Emperor ruled that Silesia was to remain in Poland in exchange for a yearly tribute of 117 kilograms of silver and 7 kg of gold.

At that time Casimir focused on internal matters. Conflicted with the Emperor in the Silesian case, he supported the Papacy in the Investiture Controversy and gained the support of the church. To strengthen his rule he re-created the bishopric in Kraków and Wroc?aw and erected the new Wawel Cathedral. During Casimir's rule heraldry was introduced in Poland and, unlike his predecessors, he promoted landed gentry over the druz.yna as his base of power. One of his reforms was the introduction, to Poland, of a key element of feudalism: the granting of fiefdoms to his retinue of warriors, thus gradually transforming them into medieval knights. 
POLAND, Casimir I "The Restorer" King of (I270)
 
83 characters named after Erik and his wife in Shakespeare's Hamlet

Rosenkrantz, Erik Ottesen, - 1503, to Bjørnholm, seneschal, the son of Otte Nielsen Rosenkrantz (d. 1477). At a young age he attained high positions, as he well proved completely grown up, but that hardly would be tilfaldne him so fast if he had not had a mighty support in her father's reputed name. Already in 1449, when he mentioned for the first time (he got when various favors by the pope), he was a knight; 1452 seems Rosenkrantz as a statesman and as a bailiff, even as Holder of several Len, among which, as far as can be seen, was Skanderborg Castle. And in 1456, probably at the age of approx. 30 years, he became the kingdom grandest secular Officials, at he time between 31 May and 3 July replaced Niels Eriksen Gyldenstierne as seneschal, an office, he then coated in a long series of years, even in October 1480 can Rosenkrantz with safety demonstrated by its proprietor, he therefore probably at least have been just to Christian I's death or for about 25 years. Throughout this period shall be his name again and again. In relation to the rest of the world he is mentioned already in 1456 the negotiations on Borgholms Surrender, 1457, he was on the train to Sweden, where Christian I was taken to the king in 1460 medbeseglede he Privileges in Ribe of Schleswig and Holstein in 1462 and 1469, took Rosenkrantz an effective part in Negotiations with Hanseater in Copenhagen, in 1464, he headed a legation to Prussia and played P. A. one role at the meeting where the Archbishop Jøns Bengtsson of Upsala humbly asked King Christian forgiveness. His marriage had brought him increased prosperity, at his wife Sophie, who was the daughter of Henrik Knudsen Gyldenstierne (VI, 373) and the 'haughty' Anne Mogensdatter Munk, and with whom he had married in 1456, after his mother's death inherited Boller . End continue owned Mr. E. Skjern Middelsom Hundred and, as far as can be seen, Elvedgård on Funen and perhaps also Møgelkjær in Jutland, on the whole, he has probably heard of his time richest men. - He was endowed with Skanderborg Castle (presumably at least 1452-88) and Byfogediet in Randers (at any rate, 1467-94); Hassens and, as it seems, Stenmark, both of which already had been in his father's possession, he had to pledge. Neither can be mentioned as his pawn: Middelsom Shire (which in 1495 by the Crown was left with his son Jørgen Rosenkrantz, but fell back to Mr. E. Rosenkrantz, as this survived the Son), Sønderlyng District, rinds Shire (which last, however, in 1497 the mortgage was set his son-Predbjørn Podebusk) and the so-called Ranes Gods in Kalø Len (as another of his sons in law, Jørgen Rud, 1495 received in pledge). The EO has nurtured historical interests, is shown in a still preserved Krønnikehaandskrift, as he made ​​depreciate. Like his father, he was a pious man, whose generosity several Monasteries persuade him well, very special, however, the Abbey at whose church he built a chapel, in a building in the neighborhood, he spent his last life and after his death he found a temporary resting place in the Abbey Church. Aside from the more outward piety that shows up in the implied Gifts for clergy Foundations, you will meet also drag with him to witness a beautiful moral conception of life, and his whole personality has evidently in an uncommon degree been fitted to instill esteem. In a witness of Viborg Parliament in 1474 states that he had offered to stand any to reason that might have something to complain about him, but that no such attendance in parliament, whereas those assembled thanked him "honor and good." And a posthumous reputation who falls in many Lod, he gets in a Chronicles from the first half of the 16th Century, which states that "he was like a father to Denmark, his Mage and Just so we do not than honor, virtue, piety, and in all good Modalities'. Rosenkrantz died 7 January 1503, after he already had partially changed with his children, his wife, he had lost the 1487th Barner, Fam. Rosenkrantz's Hist. I-182 et seq.

Family Sophie Henrik Daughter Gyldenstierne , d 1487
Children
> 1 Niels Eriksen Rosenkrantz , on November 2, 1516, Vallo Slot
> 2 Holger Eriksen Rosenkrantz , d 1496
> 3 Elsebet Eriksdatter Rosenkrantz , d 1492
> 4 Mette Eriksdatter Rosenkrantz , d 1503
> 5 Kirstine Eriksdatter Rosenkrantz , b 1450, on April 5, 1509, Elvedgård Veflinge
> 6 Vibeke Eriksdatter Rosenkrantz , b 1460, Bidstrup Estate near Lerbjerg , d 1506 
ROSENKRANTZ, Erik Ottesen til Bjørnholm (I944)
 
84 Charlemagne
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A portion of the article

A portrait of Charlemagne by Albrecht Dürer that was painted several centuries after Charlemagne's death.
Enlarge
A portrait of Charlemagne by Albrecht Dürer that was painted several centuries after Charlemagne's death.

Charlemagne (Charles the Great;[1] from Latin, Carolus Magnus[2]; 742 or 747 – 28 January 814) was the King of the Franks (768–814) who conquered Italy and took the Iron Crown of Lombardy in 774 and, on a visit to Rome in 800, was crowned imperator Romanorum ("Emperor of the Romans") by Pope Leo III on Christmas Day, presaging the revival of the Roman imperial tradition in the West in the form of the Holy Roman Empire. By his foreign conquests and internal reforms, Charlemagne helped define Western Europe and the Middle Ages. His rule is also associated with the Carolingian Renaissance, a revival of the arts and education in the West.

The son of King Pippin the Short and Bertrada of Laon, his original name in the Frankish language was never recorded, but early instances of his name in Latin read "Carolos" or "Karol's". He succeeded his father and co-ruled with his brother Carloman until the latter's death in 771. Charlemagne continued the policy of his father towards the papacy and became its protector, removing the Lombards from power in Italy, and waging war on the Saracens who menaced his realm from Spain. It was during one of these campaigns that he experienced the worst defeat of his life at Roncesvalles (778). He also campaigned against the peoples to his east, especially the Saxons, and after a protracted war subjected them to his rule. By converting them to Christianity, he integrated them into his realm and thus paved the way for the later Ottonian Dynasty.

Today regarded as the founding father of both France and Germany and sometimes as the Father of Europe, as he was the first ruler of a united Western Europe since the fall of the Roman Empire.[3]

Background
By the 6th century the Franks were Christianised, and the Frankish Empire ruled by the Merovingians had become the most powerful of the kingdoms which succeeded the Western Roman Empire. But following the Battle of Tertry, the Merovingians declined into a state of powerlessness, for which they have been dubbed do-nothing kings(French: rois fainéants). Practically all government powers of any consequence were exercised by their chief officer, the mayor of the palace or major domus.

In 687, Pepin of Herstal, mayor of the palace of Austrasia, ended the strife between various kings and their mayors with his victory at Tertry and practically became the sole governor of the entire Frankish kingdom. Pepin himself was the grandson of two most important figures of the Austrasian Kingdom, Saint Arnulf of Metz and Pepin of Landen. Pepin the Middle was eventually succeeded by his illegitimate son Charles, later known as Charles Martel (the Hammer). After 737, Charles governed the Franks without a king on the throne but desisted from calling himself "king". Charles was succeeded by his sons Carloman and Pepin the Short, the father of Charlemagne. To curb separatism in the periphery of the realm, the brothers placed Childeric III on the throne, who was to be the last Merovingian king.

After Carloman resigned his office, Pepin had Childeric III deposed with Pope Zachary's approval. In 751, Pepin was elected and anointed King of the Franks and in 754, Pope Stephen II again anointed him and his young sons. Thus was the Merovingian dynasty replaced by the Carolingian dynasty, named after Pippin's father Charles Martel and its most famous member, Charlemagne.

Pippin's sons, Charlemagne and Carloman, immediately became joint heirs to the great realm which already covered most of western and central Europe. Under the new dynasty, the Frankish kingdom spread to encompass an area including most of Western Europe. The division of that kingdom formed France and Germany;[4] and the religious, political, and artistic evolutions originating from a centrally-positioned Francia made a defining imprint on the whole of Western Europe. The foundations of Europe—as more than a geographic entity—were laid in the Dark Ages, largely out of the Frankish Empire.

[edit] Date and place of birth

Charlemagne's birthday was believed to be April 2, 742; however several factors led to reconsideration of this traditional date. First, the year 742 was calculated from his age given at death, rather than attestation within primary sources. Another date is given in the Annales Petarienses, April 1, 747. In that year, April 1 is Easter. The birth of an emperor on Easter is a coincidence likely to provoke comment, but there is no such comment documented in 747, leading some to suspect that the Easter birthday was a pious fiction concocted as a way of honoring the Emperor. Other commentators weighing the primary records have suggested that the birth was one year later, 748. At present, it is impossible to be certain of the date of the birth of Charlemagne. The best guesses include April 1, 747, after April 15, 747, or April 1, 748, in Herstal (where his father was born), a city close to Liège, in Belgium, the region from which both the Meroving and Caroling families originate. He went to live in his father's villa in Jupille when he was around seven, which caused Jupille to be listed as possible place of birth in almost every history book. Other cities have been suggested, including, Prüm, Düren, or Aachen.
Life

Much of what is known of Charlemagne's life comes from his biographer, Einhard, who wrote a Vita Caroli Magni (or Vita Karoli Magni), the Life of Charlemagne.

[edit] Early life

Charlemagne was the eldest child of Pippin the Short (714 – 24 September 768, reigned from 751) and his wife Bertrada of Laon (720 – 12 July 783), daughter of Caribert of Laon and Bertrada of Cologne. The reliable records name only Carloman and Gisela as his younger siblings. Later accounts, however, indicate that Redburga, wife of King Egbert of Wessex, might have been his sister (or sister-in-law or niece), and the legendary material makes him Roland's maternal uncle through Lady Bertha.

Einhard says of the early life of Charles:

It would be folly, I think, to write a word concerning Charles' birth and infancy, or even his boyhood, for nothing has ever been written on the subject, and there is no one alive now who can give information on it. Accordingly, I determined to pass that by as unknown, and to proceed at once to treat of his character, his deed, and such other facts of his life as are worth telling and setting forth, and shall first give an account of his deed at home and abroad, then of his character and pursuits, and lastly of his administration and death, omitting nothing worth knowing or necessary to know.

This article follows that general format.

On the death of Pippin, the kingdom of the Franks was divided—following tradition—between Charlemagne and Carloman. Charles took the outer parts of the kingdom, bordering on the sea, namely Neustria, western Aquitaine, and the northern parts of Austrasia, while Carloman retained the inner parts: southern Austrasia, Septimania, eastern Aquitaine, Burgundy, Provence, and Swabia, lands bordering on Italy. Perhaps Pippin regarded Charlemagne as the better warrior, but Carloman may have regarded himself as the more deserving son, being the son, not of a mayor of the palace, but of a king. 
CHARLEMAGNE, kejser af det Tysk-Romerske Rige (I1196)
 
85 Children of this marriage are given by Hull as:
Ragnarsson, Ivar "the Boneless", King of Dublin
Ragnarsson, Halfdan "White Shirt", King of Dublin
Ragnarson, Sigurd "Snake-in-Eye"
Ragnarson, Bjorn "Ironside"
Ragnardottir, Ragnhildir
Ragnarsdottir, Alof
Ragnarsson, Ubbe.3 
SIGURDSDOTTIR, Aslaug (I1253)
 
86 children of this marriage is referred to as being minors at the turn after the father 1387th STEEG, Aagesdatter II (I100)
 
87 Coat of arms - Steeg II. Coat of arms - Steeg II.
Margaret Steeg Sigil leads Hjortevir, and is seen very unlike Steeg-family weapons. This suggests that her father was perhaps the "Saltensee of Tystofte"(or a branch of the White race) and Steeg name comes from mother's side. 
STEEG, Ove (Aage) II (I315)
 
88 Conrad I, Duke of Swabia
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Conrad I (died August 20, 997) was Duke of Swabia from 983 until 997. His appointment as duke marked the return of Conradine rule over Swabia for the first time since 948.

When Duke Otto I unexpectedly died during the Imperial campaign in Italy of 981-982, he left no heirs. To fill the vacancy, Emperor Otto II appointed Conrad as Duke of Swabia. Conrad is notable for being the first Swabian duke to keep the title in the family; after his death in 997 he was succeeded by his son Hermann II.

There is considerable confusion about Conrad's family. The identities of his parents are not known for sure. This same situation exists for his wife, although he may have been married to a daughter of Liudolf, Duke of Swabia, the son of Emperor Otto I. He had at least six children, including his successor, Hermann II.

Stoyan lists his grandmother as Cunigunde of Vermandois, which would make him a seventh generation descendant of Charlemagne.

[edit] See also

* Descendants of Charlemagne
* Descendants of Pepin of Vermandois

Preceded by:
Otto I Duke of Swabia
983–997
Succeeded by:
Hermann II 
SWABIA, Conrad I Duke of (I1344)
 
89 Corfits Ulfeldt (1606-1664), Danish statesman, was the son of the chancellor Jacob Ulfeldt. After a careful education abroad, concluding with one year under Cesare Cremonini at Padua, he returned to Denmark in 1629 and quickly won the favor of Christian IV. In 1634 he was made a Knight of the Order of the Elephant, in 1636 became Councillor of State, in 1637 Governor of Copenhagen, and in 1643 Steward of the Realm. Commonly known and recognized as the most notorious traitor in Danish history.

n 1637 Ulfeldt married the king's daughter Leonora Christina, who had been betrothed to him from her ninth year. Ulfeldt was the most striking personality at the Danish court in all superficial accomplishments, but his character was marked by ambition, avarice and absolute lack of honor or conscience. He was largely responsible for the disasters of the Swedish war of 1643-45, and when the Treaty of Brömsebro was signed there was a violent scene between him and the King, though Ulfeldt's resignation was not accepted.

In December 1646 he was sent as ambassador extraordinary to the Hague, but the results of his embassy by no means corresponded to its costliness, and when he returned to Denmark in July 1647 he found the king profoundly irritated. Ulfeldt, supported by the Rigsråd and the nobility, who objected to Christian's fiscal policy, resisted his father-in-law, and triumphed completely. As Lord High Steward he was the virtual ruler of Denmark during the two months which elapsed between the death of Christian IV and the election of Frederick III (July 6, 1648); but the new king was by no means disposed to tolerate the outrageous usurpations of Ulfeldt and his wife, and this antagonism was still further complicated by allegations of a plot (ultimately proved to be false, but believed at the time to be true) on the part of Dina Vinhofvers, a former mistress of Ulfeldt, to poison the royal family. Dina was convicted of perjury and executed, but Ulfeldt no longer felt secure at Copenhagen, and on the day after the execution he secretly left Denmark (July 14, 1651) with his family.

After living for a time in concealment at Amsterdam, he migrated to Stralsund in Swedish Pomerania, and began the intrigues which have branded his name with infamy. In July 1657 he eagerly responded to the invitation of Charles X of Sweden, when he invaded Denmark, and entered the service of his country's deadliest foe, for the express purpose of humiliating his sovereign and enriching himself. He persuaded the commandant of Nakskov, the one fortress of Lolland, to surrender to Charles X, and did his best to convince his countrymen that resistance was useless. He even loaned the Swedish king a fortune to finance the war, money that is generally believed to have been embezzled from the Danish state. Finally, as one of the Swedish negotiators at the Congress of Taastrup, he was instrumental in humiliating his native land as she had never been humiliated before.

Ulfeldt's treason was rewarded by Charles X of Sweden with the countship of Sölvesborg in Blekinge; but the discontented renegade began intriguing against his new master, and in May 1659 he was condemned to death. On July 7 the Swedish regents amnestied him, and he returned to Copenhagen to try to make his peace with his lawful sovereign, who promptly imprisoned him and his wife. In the summer of 1660 they were conveyed to Hammershus in Bornholm, as prisoners of state.

Their captivity was severe to brutality; and they were only released (in September 1661) on the most degrading conditions. The fallen magnate henceforth dreamed of nothing but revenge, and in the course of 1662, during his residence at Bruges, he offered the Danish crown to the Frederick William I, Elector of Brandenburg, proposing to raise a rebellion in Denmark for that purpose. Frederick William betrayed Ulfeldt's treason to Frederick III, and the Danish government at once impeached the traitor; on July 24, 1663 he and his children were degraded, his property was confiscated, and he was condemned to be beheaded and quartered.

He escaped from the country, but the sentence was actually carried out on his effigy; and a pillory was erected on the ruins of his mansion at Copenhagen. During a new flight he died February 1664 in a boat on the Rhine not far from Basel. The circumstances of his death or his final resting place are not known. 
ULFELDT, Corfitz Jacobsen (I1382)
 
90 CPL NORMAN PAVELS CONRAD7TH CAVALRY REGIMENTK CO 3 BN1ST CAVALRY DIVISIONARMYHOSTILE, DIED (KIA)DATE OF LOSS: OCTOBER 5, 1951SERVICE NUMBER: NG27340421BORN: OCTOBER 25, 1929HOME OR PLACE OF ENLISTMENTHENNEPIN COUNTY, MNLOCATION OR BATTLE ZONE: CHORWON AREABURIAL LOCATIONFORT SNELLING NATIONAL CEMETERYComments: Corporal Conrad was a member of Company K, 3rd Battalion, 7th Cavalry Regiment, 1st Cavalry Division. He was Killed in Action while fighting the enemy in North Korea on October 5, 1951.
Memory of fellow soldier:
http://www.koreanwar.org/html/korean_war_project_remembrance_2011.html?casualty_id=12886
I did not know Norman Conrad, but I did find his body. We had tried to take this hill several times, but we were pushed back, finally we were able to take the hill and as I went up the hill I found the body of Norman Conrad. How I know this... I looked at his dog tags and there was a dead Chinese soldier close-by and I looked thru the pockets of the dead Chinese and found a small brown Bible which most of us carried in combat, in the Bible was his name and the last 4 letters of his serial # printed in blue. I took the Bible and kept it with me with the intention of sending it to Norman's folks, but we continued pushing on different hills and the Bible became lost and I was never able to send it to his folks. I can remember feeling bad about it. I personally did not know Norman Conrad, but I believe he was a rifleman in K Co., 7 Cav. Reg. He died honorably. Carl Meyers 
CONRAD, Norman Pavels (I1968)
 
91 Daniel Bolstad Jenssen was born into a family of artists in Norway and began painting at a young age. He immigrated to the United States in 1907, at the age of 19, with two of his brothers. Dan and his brother Joseph both changed their last names to Conrad after immigrating. Dan thought this would give him a more unique name, as an artist. While living in Minneapolis, Minnesota he met and married Helen Engh Moore, a Norwegian girl, who had immigrated to the U.S in 1906 at the age of 11. They had 4 children. Early in their marriage they lived on a homestead in Northeastern Montana near Daniel’s sister Ruth and her husband, Gert Petersen. See more at https://conrad-family.com/daniel-bolstad-conrad/ CONRAD, Daniel Bolstad (I34)
 
92 Danish Consul in Dunkuerque 1642-1648.

D. Willum or Mechlenburg Wilhelm, born in Haderslev March 20, 1615, f at Strømsø 3 Novbr. 1677 62 5 A. M. gi. Grmid On the imperial idea in Holstein and Jutland, he listed with her mother in the year 1627 to Christiania, 'which his said Half brother Nils Toller ^) even then had been living for several years, which presumably also have been the occasion for that mother just went up to Norway. From there he went in the year 1630 to London and elsewhere, resided 1636 in Kjø-Copenhagen and was in 1642 Danish Agent or Consultant in Diinkirken where he later became Resident, but was in the year 1648 called to-bake from this line and obtained at the parting of Erkehertug-governor of the Spanish Netherlands with a four Diamonds obsessed Present 1000 Rdls. Value. After having come to-bake, he was 1 January 1649 from Philippi-Jacobi (o: 1 Mai) P. A. hired as Zahlcommissarius in Norway, with an annual salary of 1200 Rdl. after having already in August the previous year had been on the speech that he Krigscommissaire would take over Gommissarii accounts after Jacob Ulfeldt. Already at Rescript of January 9, 1652, it was determined that Gommissariehuset should be abolished and policemen same-office redundancies, however persisted Mechlenburg act as Zahl-commissarius until Philippi Jacobi in 1653, when first accounts were closed. Probably as a replacement for the office, so he had lost, he got the 15 April 1652 at 6 years from Philippi Jacobi P. A. starting in Farming Shem yard and Eker Lehn as when fi: a Hannibal Sehested had fallen back ^) About him see King Christian the Fourth, autograph letters by Bricka and Fredericia, 1636-1640, S. 191 The note and it is quoted. 70 to the crown, against an annual fee of 2,000 Rdl. which he did under 21 October P. A. obtained the 200 Rdls. and later may have had additional Dismissal because the annual fee was only in 1330 Rdl . when he July 24, 1656 got the lease renewed for five years. The 19 Decbr. in 1654, he was probably on this occasion Shot-objectives of common people in Eker, which in no respect had nothing to complain at him. On July 27, 1656, he an annual pension of 300 Rdl. and regarding script of March 9, 1657, it was determined that Vincent Bildt would be Generalcommissarius søndenfjelds in Norway and that he should take Willum Mechlenburg for assistence. After Bildt deaths were Mechlenburg 25 April 1658 administrator who Generalkrigscommissarius in his place, in which capacity he served from 10 May to 29 August 1658th On 31 Decbr. last year he was appointed Krigscommissarius north-mountains, and shall as such Accounts J5: 'a 1 Febr 1659-1 Februar 1661, but calculate the salary equal until a May 1662 when first shops could close. By Rescript of 16 January 1661 he received orders ^) to go to Christiania, to intervene in the General Land Commission, of which he subsequently was a member as President of Gommissionen for Christ stiania Lagdømme if Reporting, dated Sept. 9. P. A., are published in Communications of the Norwegian Rigsarchiv, IS 68 - 88th On January 16, 1663, he was Assistentsraad, proposed July 14, 1665 by Vicar Ulrik Frederik Gyldenløve whose favor he apparently has had for Member of the by Rescript of July 7 p. A. under the Governor's own Bureau created Admiralty rotting søndenfjelds if Affected appelleredes directe to the king, during July 22 P. A. also welcomed it Gyldenløve taken Appointment of Members. He is besides the Golden Lion to be-suited to the Assessor in the result of his initiative of 14 March 1666 created Overhofret in Norway, in which he later increasingly seen to have worked, got 30 Novbr. 1672 Rank and seat with Høiesteretsassessorer in Denmark and 3 Febr 1677 with Commerce-^) Notwithstanding Mechlenburg so from 1658-62 when his business has been tied to the Nordenfjeldske Norway, he has surely never had his Residence there. Taader 71. For several years he had Fosseshohii in Lease of Crown and drive a considerable lumber trade and Skibsrhederi together with the rich Anders Madssøn in Tønsberg ^). At War-styrene on the occasion of the Scanian War put him in 3rd class who tællede 60 Persons, which would pay Vg Rdl. daily for treasure. To Strømsø Church he gave with his wife in 1671 a large silver pot to Value of 52 Rdl.
 
MECKLENBURG, Vilhelm M. (I1438)
 
93 Dansk konge 1157-82. Død af "febril Bronchitis" (Skyum-Nielsen: Kvindeog slave, 1 9 7 1 , s . 2 1 2 ) .Valdemar I "The Great" Knudsen, King of Denmark:
Waldemar (Valdemar) I, King of Denmark, 1157-1182, who united his country under his authority. With the help of Henry the Lion of Saxony and Albert the Bear of Brandenburg, he conducted a crusade against the pagan Wends in Rugen and Pomerania. Later he erected a wall (Wall of Waldemar or Dannevirke) to protect his people from Saxony to the south and swore homage to Frederick I Barbarossa as added protection against the aggressiveness of Henry the Lion.
- Dictionary of Medieval Civilization by Joseph Dahmus

Tapestry
http://www.ses.dk/ses_web/html/uk_slotte/gobelin_kronborg_uk.htm 
KNUDSEN, King of Denmark Valdemar I (I1125)
 
94 Died in Korean War CONRAD, Norman Pavels (I1968)
 
95 Dødsårsak: Forstoppelse ANDREASEN, Hans (I1439)
 
96 Dødsårsak: Lungetæring ENGH, Karl Victor (I1067)
 
97 Dødsårsak: Nyrebetennelse (Morbus Brightii) HANSDATTER, Trine Helene (I757)
 
98 Ebbe Skjalmsen Hvide * ab. 1085 + 1151. Ebbe was a son of Skjalm Hvide and Signe Asbjørnsdatter. He appears in history in 1131 for the first time, when he together with his brothers had Knud Lavard's body brought from Haraldsted to the more stately Ringsted - and he raised the Zealanders in order to revenge his fosterbrother's murder. During the subsequent civil war (1131-1157) Ebbe Skjalmsen stood together with Erik Emune, and he was also among Erik Lam's highly trusted men.

Ebbe Skjalmsen is signatory to a special licence issued by Erik Lam by the Archbishop of Lund in 1145. He is here mentioned as one of the king's men. Furthermore he was a faithful supporter of Svend Grathe, who appointed him army commander in the newly fortificated Roskilde. Svend's rival to the throne Knud Magnussen tried together with a man named Sune to tempt people in Roskilde to desertion, but Ebbe cunningly got Sune in his power, and Knud's plan failed. Later Knud succeeded in taking Roskilde by surprise. Ebbe escaped, but he couldn't prevent Knud from ravaging and burning down his Roskilde estate.

According to Saxo Ebbe had a strong influence upon Svend, who always complied with him in both war and peace, as well as in public and in private relations, and when Svend received the news that Ebbe had died (1151), he was so overcome with grief that he discontinued an expedition against Knud Magnussen. Ebbe's later successor as army commander was his brother-in-law Peder Torstensen, who was married to Cæcilia Skjalmsdatter.

Bjernede Church is the only round church on Sjælland. It is built like a massive, impregnable, early medieval fortification. Built 1125-1175 by two wellknown men from Denmark's history: Skjalm Hvide's son and grandson, Ebbe Skjalmsen and Sune Ebbesen. The round church represents the meeting between the early church buildings' granite and the bricks introduced in the 1160s. In Latin above the entrance in the porch is said ' Ebbe Skjalmsen and his wife Ragnhild built this church which his son Sune later raised in stone in the honor of God, St. Maria and St. Laurentius'. This was during the period 1125-1175. It was assumed that Ebbe built a wooden church, and that Sune started building in granite, lifting it one storey more in the new brick technique introduced in the 1160s.

Ebbe's first wife was Gyda, his second wife Ragnhild. She is also named Ragnhild of Denmark; she brought much property into the marriage and must have been from a rich family. Ebbe and Ragnhild lived upon a farm in Bjernede near Fjenneslevlille; but Ebbe had much property elsewhere upon Sjælland besides his house in Roskilde. He also owned Knardrup by Ganløse, and today there are two villages named Ebberup by Bjernede.

Ebbe is known to have four sons and two daughters. The sources about 'who's the mother to whom' are uncertain, but Ebbe's eldest son was Toke, who died after having given half of his estate to Sorø. Another son was Fin, who died at about the same time. A memorial stone is placed in the wall of Bjernede church for 'Fin, Ebbe's son'. A third son (name?) lived much longer, but the most famous son was Sune Ebbesen, who was the father of the seven 'Sune-sons'.

Ebbe's daughters were Margrethe Ebbesdatter and Gythe(Gyde) Ebbesdatter, * ab. 1140, + 1160, who was married to the very rich Oluf Glug of Bavelse.

Ebbe Skjalmsen is considered first ancestor of the Galen- family. He is buried in Sorø.

After 1151 all four Skjalm-sons had died, Toke before 1150, Asser and Ebbe in 1151 and Sune in 1152. Asser's wife, fru Inge still lived in 1157.

Bastruptårnet/The Bastrup Tower is a circular tower house with a diameter of 21 meters, the wall is 6 meters wide. Built in the first half of the 1100s. From the strong fortification building is only preserved the cellar storey. It is built by travertine and granite boulders. Heavy logs have supported the two or three storeys of the tower. The tower was part of a defense line across Sjælland. Erik Ejegod built a church in Slangerup had probably a 'kongsgård' there. Ebbe of Bastrup, who gave witness in a deed of gift from king Niels, was possibly the same as Ebbe Skjalmsen, who was responsible for this fortification tower. The church in Jørlunde was possibly also built by the Hvide-family. 
HVIDE, Ebbe Skjalmsen (I345)
 
99 Eberstein
County
Swab
1574: Partitioned from Neu-Eberstein
1085: 1st mention of Eberstein
1196: 1st use of "Count of Eberstein"
1387: Portion of Eberstein went to the Margraves of Baden
1660: Line of counts extinct; divided between Baden,Speyer and Württemberg 
EVERSTEIN, Albrecht I (I726)
 
100 Else Holgersdatter Krognos blev gift anden gang med rigshofmester Otte Nielsen Rosenkrantz til Hevringholm.
Begravet ved Gråbrødre klostret i Randers, hvorfra han senere er ført til Hornslet kirke. 
KROGNOS, Else Holgersdatter (I947)
 

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