matrilineal pedigree of Helena Snakenborg

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M.Sjostrom

matrilineal pedigree of Helena Snakenborg

Legg inn av M.Sjostrom » 17 okt 2007 06:07:41

This is the pure matriline in the ancestry of Helena
Snakenborg. As far as I have seen genealogies,
including even spurious genealogies.

Helena Snakenborg, Marchioness of Northampton
was daughter of:

Agneta Knutsdotter, heiress of Norrnes
was daughter of:

Märta Göransdotter of Norrnes, of whom is a tad
unclear whether sge was born of her father's first or
second marriage.
If from the first marriage (as property heritage
evidence supports), was daughter of:

Gertrud Nilsdotter Posse, from Westrogothia
was (as near-contemporary primary material shows)
daughter of:

Gjertrud Matsdottir, of the Reymar, from Norway
was (as near-contemporary primary material shows)
daughter of:

knight Mattis Jepson (? av Stovreim), d 1458, and his
wife
Gro Alvsdottir av Sigerstad (bc 1400, d aft 1472),
both from Norway
herself (as near-contemporary primary material shows)
daughter of:

Alv Haraldson av Sigerstad, lord of Tronstad (d 13
March 1412), and his second wife
Kari Jonsdottir av Sudreim, heiress of Manvik (bc
1380, dc 1455), both from Norway
herself (as near-contemporary primary material shows)
daughter of:

knight Jon Marteinson (dc 1430), from Sweden, and his
wife
Agnes Sigurdsdottir av Giske, heiress of Sudreim (bc
1350, d aft 1404), from Norway
herself (as near-contemporary primary material shows)
daughter of:

Sigurd Havtoreson av Borgarsyssel, lord of Sudreim,and
jure uxoris Giske, Bjarkey etc (bc 1315, dc 1392), and
his wife
Ingebjorg Erlingsdottir av Bjarkoy, heiress of Giske
etc (bc 1320, dc 1355), both from Norway
herself (as near-contemporary primary material shows)
daughter of:

Erling Vidkunson av Bjarkey, lord of Giske and
Stovreim etc, Regent of Norway (d 1355), and his wife
Elin Toresdottir av Leikvang, heiress of Leikum (fl
1351), both from Norway
herself (as near-contemporary primary material shows)
daughter of:

Tore Haakonson av Leikvang, lord of Leknes, chancellor
of Norway (dc 1317), and his wife
Ingebjorg Erlingsdottir av Tornberg, from Norway
herself (as near-contemporary primary material shows)
daughter of:

Erling Alvson, lord of Tornberg (Tandberg), d 1283,
from Ringerike and near Tunsberg, Norway, and his wife
(Kristin), of whose antecedents no more is
historically known
However, seemingly a totally historically unattested
much later genealogical fiction, apparently written on
nationalist-romanticist motives *, claim this Kristin
to be daughter of:

Margret Magnusdottir of Norway, daughter of deposed
king (her legitimate child should be presumed to have
been born c 1207),
who (as near-contemporary primary material, such as
near-contemporary chronicles, narrate) was daughter
of:

Magnus Erlingson, king Magnus V of Norway (bc 1156,
killed 15 June 1184 at the battle of Fimreite), and
his wife
Eldrid Bjornsdottir, both from Norway
herself (as near-contemporary primary material,
including chronicles and sagas, narrate) daughter of:

lord Bjorn Byrdasvein, and his wife
Ragnrid Guttormsdottir av Rein, both from Norway
herself (as Heimskringla sagas not too detached from
her era narrate) daughter of:

Guttorm Aasolvson, lord of Rein (dc 1183), and his
first wife
Eldrid Jonsdottir [av Blindhjem] (dc 1144), both from
Norway,
herself (as Heimskringla sagas not too detached from
her era narrate) daughter of lord Jon Smjorbalte, and
sister of magnate Hallkjell Huk, from More, Norway
(who flourished at least in 1120s and died 1160)


Even romanticists seem not to have invented
genealogies any farther back in matriline to continue
this.
(Though, should fictional genealogy surface, I would
not be too surprised)


* It seems that in certain eras in Norway, romanticism
in creating high-medieval roots out of thin air and
good imagination, by wishful thinking, was a norm even
to histoians. Consequently, several such (historically
unattested) lineages have ended up even in older
editions of Norwegian standard biographies and history
books. And even today, despite advice from more
critical researchers, such genealogies are cherished
by many and trusted - such trust probably comes from
their position in otherwise respected older history
books and encyclopedias.







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