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Judith Countess Of Northumberland

Female Abt 1036 - 1093  (~ 57 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Judith Countess Of Northumberland was born Abt 1036, , Flanders; died 1093.

    Other Events:

    • AFN: 8XJL-3T

    Notes:

    Judith (Fausta), Countess Of Northumbria

    Judith married Tostig, Earl (Duke) Northumberland Aug 1051. Tostig, was born Abt 1029, Wessex, England; died 19 Sep 1066. [Group Sheet]

    Judith married Guelph IV Duke Bavaria 1070. Guelph (son of Azo II Marquis Este and Cunigunde Bavaria) was born Abt 1039; died 3 Nov 1091. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 2. Heinrich, Duke Of Bavaria  Descendancy chart to this point was born 1073; died 1135.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Heinrich, Duke Of Bavaria Descendancy chart to this point (1.Judith1) was born 1073; died 1135.

    Other Events:

    • AFN: 9HM7-2L

    Heinrich, married Ulfhide (Wolfhildis), Princess Saxony 1094/1099. Ulfhide (daughter of Magnus, Duke Of Saxony and Zsofia, Princess Of Hungary) was born Abt 1079, Saxe, Prussia; died 22 Dec 1126, Altdorf, Uri, Switzerland; was buried Altdorf, Uri, Switzerland. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 3. Sophia, Princess Of Bavaria  Descendancy chart to this point was born Abt 1100, Of, Bavaria.
    2. 4. Judith, Princess Of Bavaria  Descendancy chart to this point was born Abt 1102, Of, Bavaria; died 15 Feb 1125.


Generation: 3

  1. 3.  Sophia, Princess Of Bavaria Descendancy chart to this point (2.Heinrich,2, 1.Judith1) was born Abt 1100, Of, Bavaria.

    Other Events:

    • AFN: 91RJ-XR


  2. 4.  Judith, Princess Of Bavaria Descendancy chart to this point (2.Heinrich,2, 1.Judith1) was born Abt 1102, Of, Bavaria; died 15 Feb 1125.

    Other Events:

    • AFN: 9HM6-WR

    Judith, married Friedrich II, Duke Swabia 1119/1120, Of. Friedrich (son of Frederick I, Von Hohenstauffen, [Count of] and Agnes Of Franconia) was born 1089, Of, Swaben, Bavaria; died 30 Mar 1147. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 5. Adrienne Swabia  Descendancy chart to this point was born Abt 1114, Of, Swaben, Bavaria.
    2. 6. Friedrich I, "Barbarossa" Holy Roman Empir  Descendancy chart to this point was born 1121, Of, Swaben, Bavaria; died 3 Jun 1190, Holy Land; was buried In Holy Land.


Generation: 4

  1. 5.  Adrienne Swabia Descendancy chart to this point (4.Judith,3, 2.Heinrich,2, 1.Judith1) was born Abt 1114, Of, Swaben, Bavaria.

    Other Events:

    • AFN: 8RNS-7F

    Adrienne married Ferry Chabot Abt 1137, Of, Vendome, Loir-Et-Cher, France. [Group Sheet]


  2. 6.  Friedrich I, "Barbarossa" Holy Roman Empir Descendancy chart to this point (4.Judith,3, 2.Heinrich,2, 1.Judith1) was born 1121, Of, Swaben, Bavaria; died 3 Jun 1190, Holy Land; was buried In Holy Land.

    Other Events:

    • AFN: 8RNS-C4

    Notes:

    Friedrich I, "Barbarossa" Emperor Of The Holy Roman Empire called Barbarossa or
    Red Beard, succeeded his uncle Conrad III as king of Germany in 1152. He
    became Holy Roman Emperor in 1155. The German people admired and respected him
    as a great national hero. In 1180, he defeated his great rival for power in
    Germany, Henry the Lion, Duke of Saxony and Bavaria. With the help of loyal
    princes and an able administration, he enforced his authority in Germany and
    the Slavic borderlands to the east.
    He was less successful in a bitter struggle against Pope Alexander III and the
    Lombard League of North Italian cities. The League defeated Frederick at the
    Battle of Legnano in 1176. It was in this battle that foot soldiers recorded
    their first great victory over feudal cavalry. The Lombard cities forced
    Frederick to grant them self-government in the Peace of Constance in 1183. The
    Emperor started on the Third Crusade to the Holy Land in 1189, but drowned the
    next year while crossing a river. A German legend, however, says that
    Barbarossa never really died but is sleeping beside a huge table in the
    Kyffhauser Mountains. When his beard grows completely around the table, the
    legend says, he will arise and conquer Germany's enemies.

    Frederick I (Holy Roman Empire), called Frederick Barbarossa (1123?-90), Holy
    Roman emperor and king of Germany (1152-90), king of Italy (1155-90), and as
    Frederick III, duke of Swabia (1147-52, 1167-68). He was born in Waiblingen,
    the son of Frederick II of Hohenstaufen, duke of Swabia (1090-1147), and the
    nephew of Conrad III, king of Germany. Conrad III, favoring Frederick over his
    own son, on his deathbed recommended to the German princes that Frederick be
    chosen for the German kingship and the imperial throne. Accordingly, after the
    death of his uncle in 1152, Frederick Barbarossa was made German king and
    elected Holy Roman emperor. He conceived of his imperial title as a grant from
    God, through the German princes, and wished to restore the glory of the Roman
    Empire. He consequently decided to consolidate the imperial position in Germany
    and Italy and began by issuing a general order for peace among the princes of
    Germany, at the same time granting them extensive concessions. In 1154 he
    proceeded to Italy, where he received the Lombard crown at Pavia. The following
    year he was crowned Holy Roman emperor by Pope Adrian IV, whose authority
    Frederick had reinstated before his coronation.

    In 1156 Pope Adrian aroused Frederick against the papacy by implying in a
    letter to him that the emperor held lands only as a fief from the pope. Two
    years later Frederick incurred the hostility of the Lombards by demanding
    recognition of all his royal rights, including his power to appoint the
    imperial podesta, or governor, in every town. Such cities as Milan, Piacenza,
    Brescia, and Crema considered that demand a denial of their communal liberties
    and in 1158 began a struggle that lasted until 1183 and required Frederick to
    lead five expeditions to Italy. Between 1158 and 1162 Frederick warred with
    Milan and its allies, subduing that city and confirming claims to other Italian
    cities. Meanwhile Frederick had set up a series of antipopes in opposition to
    the reigning pope, Alexander III, who espoused the cause of the Milanese and
    their allies and who, in 1165, excommunicated Frederick. By attacking the
    Leonine City in Rome in 1167-68, Frederick was able to install one of the
    antipopes, Paschal III (died 1168), on the papal throne. The Lombard League,
    consisting of the cities of Milan, Parma, Padua, Verona, Piacenza, Bologna,
    Cremona, Mantua, Bergamo, and Brescia, was formed in 1167 and eventually
    acknowledged Pope Alexander as leader. During the next seven years the league
    acquired military strength, rebuilt Milan, constructed the fortress city of
    Alessandria, and organized a federal system of administration. The fifth
    expedition (1174-76) of Frederick to Italy terminated in defeat by the Lombard
    League at Legnano. The defeat was significant in military history, because it
    was the first major triumph of infantry over a mounted army of feudal knights.
    Frederick was forced in 1177 to acknowledge Alexander III as pope and in 1183
    to sign the Peace of Constance, acceding to the demands of the Lombards for
    autonomy but retaining imperial suzerainty over the towns.

    Although imperial control in Italy was virtually ended by his defeat at
    Legnano, Frederick managed to enhance his prestige in central Europe. He made
    Poland tributary to the empire, raised Bohemia to the rank of a kingdom, and
    erected the margravate of Austria into an independent hereditary duchy. His own
    power as emperor in Germany was firmly established in 1180, when he ended his
    long struggle with the Welfs by putting down a revolt led by the Welf Henry the
    Lion and depriving him of most of his lands.

    Frederick initiated the Third Crusade in 1189, and in the next year, having
    resigned the government of the empire to his son Henry, later Holy Roman
    Emperor Henry VI, set out for Asia Minor. After gaining two great victories
    over the Muslims at Philomelion (now Ak3ehir) and Iconium (now Konya), he was
    drowned in the Calycadnus (now Goksu) River in Cilicia (now in Turkey) on June
    10, 1190.
    ----------
    Reference:
    "The World Book Encyclopedia", 1968, p F422.
    "Frederick I (Holy Roman Empire)," Microsoft (R) Encarta. Copyright (c) 1993
    Microsoft Corporation. Copyright (c) 1993 Funk & Wagnall's Corporation

    Friedrich married Beatrix, Empress Of Holy Roman Empir 9 Jun 1156. Beatrix, (daughter of Raimond III, Count Palatine and Agatha Princess Of Lorraine) was born Abt 1121, Of, Swabia, Germany; died 8 Nov 1184. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. 7. Henry VI, Emperor Germany  Descendancy chart to this point was born 1164; died 1196.
    2. 8. Phillip II, Emperor Germany  Descendancy chart to this point was born 1176/1180, Of, Swabia, Germany; died 14 Jun 1208, Bamberg.