You are on page 1of 21

House of

Seignard de LaFressange

Heraldica

* * * * * * * * * * * * Masters of arcane knowledge with prophetic utterances and telepathic projection, to thy message the Animals of the Fields replyeth: The key of the harbinger shall come to our house when the black Marsh intermingles with Aryan white below, of this we have been a witness standing on the balcony above. The first seal knowest of Adam of the blood and will upon visitation present a stone ring encased in gold at our table, with two letters engraved in the stone, and many letters on the inside of the golden circle. When she cometh, the lord of that house, rightful owner of the signet welcomes her in nakedess, where upon he is scorned by twistedness of the greed of this black Marsh woman. In violation of the sacred code blinded by unholy guidance she will attempt to lay dominion over the abode of another man, thus causing herself to be chasen from out of the house of the naked one into the spiral ladder where manifestation of darkness receive incantations of foreboding; "Present the ring of my father which thou hath stolen child of the Marsh, and take it from off thy finger which thou wieldest in accusation of others, and let it depart from thy wicked greed. Lest thou doest so that I say the first seal shall be uncloaked and soak the lands of Aryah in a lake of iron, causing destruction and suffering. Out of the fumes of burning iron shall cometh a king with a little horn, released from the old chains of iron cast by false prophets in dark times, and lo, thou shall haveth thy war of judgement declared by the very same false prophets long ago upon thee". Upon hearing this declaration the woman of the black Marsh knoweth great fear, casting herself in haste out of the abode of the naked into the tentacles of the black sorcerers whom upon her command curse the baked goods of many small ovens causing men to consume feces in the place of bread, and capture seven million evil spirits within unholy incantations, where after delivered with spitefulness and contempt to the house of the naked. By this then they shall conjure the foreboading of the naked one into the human realm, for he, the naked one, upon harnessing their force of wickedness into his own force of pureness revealeth himself thus as the natural beast with a little horn, and out of the lakes of iron summoning the ancient alliance of the horned, and tribulation will be sent upon all wicked men in the lands of Aryah forever and ever thereafter until he is killed with death and sent up to the Higher Gan where he must answer before his master and tell tales of the wickedness of earthly men which will be measured heavily against celestial scales of justice and thus release the true judgement of his lord upon the world. * * * * * * * * * * *

Genealogy

Fort contre l'ennemi


1. Emmanuel Alberto Paul Michel David de SEIGNARD de LA FRESSANGE, Comte de La Fressange, n le 19 janvier 1956. 2. Andr Jean Bernard de SEIGNARD de LA FRESSANGE, Marquis de La Fressange, n le 22 mars 1932. 3. Marie Alfred Henri "Paul" de SEIGNARD de LA FRESSANGE, Marquis de La Fressange, Chevalier de la Lgion d'honneur, Croix de guerre 1914-1918, n en 1889, dcd en 1946 ( l'ge de 57 ans). 4. Alexandre Auguste Etienne Henri de SEIGNARD de LA FRESSANGE, Marquis de La Fressange, n le 23 septembre 1853, Semur-en-Auxois (21), baptis le 28 septembre 1853, dcd, Officier de cavalerie. 5. Alfred Charles Henri Franois de SAIGNARD, Marquis de La Fressange chevalier de la Lgion d'honneur, n le 3 fvrier 1820, dcd le 14 aot 1879, Paris (75) ( l'ge de 59 ans). 6. Henri Jacques Hilaire Jean Franois Rgis de SAIGNARD de LA FRESSANGE, dit marquis de La Fressange , baron de Queyrires, officier de la Lgion d'honneur, n le 10 mars 1791, Saint-Didier-la-Sauve (43), baptis le 12 mars 1791, dcd le 28 aot 1852, Bagnres-de-Luchon (31) ( l'ge de 61 ans), Capitaine de cavalerie, dput en 1843. 7. Jacques Joseph Gabriel de SAIGNARD de LA FRESSANGE, Baron de Queyrires et des Etats du Velay, seigneur de La Fressange, Chaponod et autres places, baptis le 28 janvier 1753, dcd le 25 septembre 1810 ( l'ge de peut-tre 57 ans), Chevalier, page des Petites Ecuries du Roi, garde du corps du Roi. 8. Jean Armand de SAIGNARD, Baron de Queyrires seigneur de La Fressange et de Chaponod, baptis le 26 janvier 1711, dcd en 1754 ( l'ge de peut-tre 43 ans), Chevalier, page de la petite curie du Roi. 9. Jean Armand ALLIER de SAIGNARD, Baron de Queyrires seigneur de La Fressange, dcd avant 17 novembre 1739, Ecuyer, puis chevalier, gendarme de la maison du Roi. 10. Gabriel ALLIER de SAIGNARD, Seigneur de La Fressange, n vers 1627, dcd le 5 aot 1702, Saint-Didier-laSauve (43) ( l'ge de peut-tre 75 ans). 11. Jean de SAIGNARD, Seigneur des Praux, Montmat, Poinsac, La Fressange, dcd avant 1682. 12. Csar de SANHARD, Baron de Queyrires et des Etats du Velay , seigneur de Mortesagne, Saignard, Queyrires, Maumeyres et en partie de Glavenas, n vers 1560, dcd aprs 20 janvier 1641, Ecuyer, capitaine de cavalerie. 13. Pierre de SANHARD, Seigneur du Vernet co-seigneur de Mortesaigne, dcd entre 1585 et 1589. 14. Jehan ALLIER,Seigneur de la Fressange, Munas, etc., dcd vers 1557 julien. 15. Gabriel ALLIER, Seigneur de La Fressange, dcd entre le 20 mars 1508 et 1509. 16. Jehan ALLIER, Seigneur de La Fressange. 17. Gabriel ALLIER, Seigneur de La Fressange, dcd aprs 3 aot 1436, Ecuyer, licenci s droits, juge au Puy en 1408. 18. Jehan ALLIER, Seigneur de La Fressange, dcd aprs 20 octobre 1420, Notaire Saint-Didier.

19. Hugon ALLIER, Seigneur de La Roche, 1318-134312 20. Jean ALLIER & Catherine de La Roche 1343 21. Pierre ALLIER, 1308

Alliances Rogemont

Anima mea Dei, Vita mea Regi, Honos mihi


22. Bertrand de ROGEMONT345, Crusader, Bertrandus Senarcto6; "Old Chief7 of the Marsh"8. Born ~1145-50. One son, Pierre. 23. Guillaume de ROGEMONT, 1164. 24. Andr de ROGEMONT, 1106.9

Lusignan

Pour Lealte Maintenir


Catherine ALLIER de La FRESSANGE, Wed to Andr du PELOUX de SAINT-ROMAIN in 1450 148510 son of: Jean du PELOUX de SAINT-ROMAIN Catherine de GROLE Batrix de BRESSIEU 1330-1387 Jeanne de CLERMONT Batrice de SAVOIE 1280-1338, daughter of; Jeanne de MONTFORT ~1250-1300, mother of: Jean I de FOREZ, 1334, in union with (1311): 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 http://en.calameo.com/books/000357550292e6a5a33e0 http://gw.geneanet.org/pierfit?lang=sv;p=pierre;n=allier;oc=1 http://gw.geneanet.org/pierfit?lang=sv;p=bertrand;n=de+rogemont;oc=1 http://rosamondpress.wordpress.com/2013/03/31/house-of-rougemont/ http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Famille_de_Rougemont http://translate.google.com/translate?u=sagnard.e-monsite.com&sl=fr&tl=en&ie=UTF-8 https://www.msu.edu/~defores1/gre/roots/gre_rts_afx2.htm? http://www.jeantosti.com/noms/s4.htm Histoire de la Bresse, du Bugey et des familles Nobles de la Rgion, par Samuel Guichenon, 1649. http://gw.geneanet.org/bobby43?lang=sv;p=catherine;n=allier+de+la+fressange

Elonore de SAVOIE, 1324, in union with (1305): Dreux IV de MELLO, 1270-1317, son of; Eustachie de LUSIGNAN11, 1270. Geoffroy (1274) seigneur de Jarnac (LUSIGNAN). Hugues X (1249), sire de LUSIGNAN. Hugues IX le brun (1219), sire de LUSIGNAN. Hugues de LUSIGNAN dit le Brun ( av. 16 mars 1169). Hugues VIII le Vieuxou le Brun (1173), sire de LUSIGNAN. Hugues VII le brun ( ap.2 fv.1151), sire de LUSIGNAN. Hugues VI dit le Diable ou de Jrusalem ( 1110), sire de LUSIGNAN. Hugues V dit le Pieux ou le Dbonnaire( 1060), sire de LUSIGNAN. Hugues IV dit le Brun ou le Chiliarque, sire de LUSIGNAN ( 1025/30). Hugues IIIdit le Blanc, sire de LUSIGNAN (~1012). Hugues II dit le Cher ou le bien Aim(~967), sire de LUSIGNAN. Hugues Ier le Veneur, sire de LUSIGNAN, 885.12 Huntsman of the Counts of Poitou. Jehan ALLIER Seigneur de La Fressange; Several members of this family have been serving the Kings of Jerusalem, named LUSIGNAN.13

11 http://gw.geneanet.org/pierfit? lang=sv;m=RLM;i1=583909;t1=1;i2=346299;t2=2;i3=325519;t3=3;i4=939763;t4=4;i5=681479;t5=5;i6=375975;t6 =6;i7=1212105;t7=7;i8=1212107;t8=8;i9=478769;t9=9;i10=751203;t10=10;i11=762152;t11=11;i12=347367;t12=1 2;i13=347358;t13=13;i14=527816;t14=14;i15=469372;t15=15;i16=334408;t16=16;i17=1143359;t17=17;i18=75119 8;t18=18;i19=636827;t19=19;i20=169648;t20=20;i21=891548;t21=21;i22=1339805;t22=22;i23=683348;t23=23;i2 4=478141;t24=24;i25=469147;t25=25;i26=1039476;t26=26;i27=1136679;t27=27;i28=1013151;t28=28;i29=118589 1;t29=29;i30=991567;t30=30;i31=1024772;t31=31;i32=1079586;t32=32;i33=169637;t33=33;i34=667892;t34=34;i 35=667889;t35=35;i36=476459;t36=36;i37=1136675;t37=37;i38=683376;t38=38;i39=864659;t39=39;i40=497003;t 40=40;i41=1607451;t41=41;i42=1219596;t42=42;i43=667890;t43=43;i44=1156636;t44=44;i45=1237536;t45=45;i4 6=1185324;t46=46;i47=752125;t47=47;i48=811226;t48=48;i49=1554667;t49=49;i50=1318614;t50=50;i51=127058 9;t51=51;i52=1247170;t52=52;i53=1228990;t53=53;i54=1108582;t54=54;i55=1103677;t55=55;i56=1067806;t56=5 6;i57=1057771;t57=57;i58=1039481;t58=58;i59=709950;t59=59;i60=662386;t60=60;i61=535148;t61=61;i62=478 868;t62=62;i63=110520;t63=63;lim=6 12 http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maison_de_Lusignan 13 http://roglo.eu/roglo?lang=sv%3Bi%3D4781103;i=4781103

Poitiers

Ramnulf II of Aquitaine, 850-890. King of Aquitaine, Count of Poitiers. Defender against the Viking invasion. Ramnulf I of Aquitaine, 820- October 866, Count of Poitiers. Killed by Vikings 14.

Counts of Auvergne

Gerard, June 25th841, Count of Auvergne. Possible great grandson of Charlemagne.15 Warin of Provence, 853, Count of Auvergne (819-839). Icterius, Count of Auvergne, 778. Bertmond, Count of Auvergne, 765-778. Nominated by Charlemagne.16 Chilping, Count of Auvergne, 763-765. Blaudin, Count of Auvergne, 760-763. Fell in Battle Against King Pepin the Short, father of Charlemagne. Ithier, Count of Auvergne, 758.

Merovingians

Courtesy of http://my.raex.com/~obsidian/Languedoc.html#Auvergne

Becco..................................................................532 Sigivald...............................................................532 To Neustria........................................................532-534 Hortensius.............................................................533


14 Dillange 1995, p. 50-51. 15 http://fabpedigree.com/s044/f280253.htm 16 http://www.ebooksread.com/authors-eng/society-for-the-diffusion-of-useful-knowledge-gre/biographical-dictionaryvolume-41-ico/page-54-biographical-dictionary-volume-41-ico.shtml

To (Frankish) Burgundy.............................................534-592
Evodius Georgius Britianus Firminus...............................................................555 Firminius......................................................... < 555/8 Sallustus......................................................555/8-560/1 Firminius (restored).............................................560/1-571 Venerandus.......................................................... < 585 Nicetius I.............................................................585 Nicetius II............................................................585 Eulalius...........................................................585-590

Venerandus.......................................................... < 585


To Austrasia.......................................................592-595 To (Frankish) Burgundy.............................................595-613 To Austrasia.......................................................612-639 To Neustria........................................................639-673

Bobon...........................................................c. 638-656 Hector.......................................................fl. c. 658-75 To Austrasia.......................................................673-675 To Neustria............................................................675 Bodilon................................................................675 To Austrasia.......................................................675-676 To Neustria........................................................676-751 Calminius.......................................................fl. c. 675 Genesius........................................................fl. c. 685 Haribert........................................................fl. c. 695

Senatus PopulusQue Romanus

the Roman Republic................................................52-27 To the Roman Empire..........................................27 BCE-395


CE

To the Western Roman Empire.....................................395-c.


400

To Burgundy.....................................................c. 400-532

Lords of Auvergne Sometimes described as Counts (Comes), at other times Dukes (Dux). Victorius..........................................................479-488

Apollonarius....................................................... ? -506 Hortensius.............................................................527


The Arverni Confederation A Gaulish tribal association within this region.

Luernios.....................................................c. 180-c. 167 Bituitus.....................................................c. 167-c. 123 Kestaingos......................................................fl. c. 118 Gobargonios.......................................................c. 72-58 Vercingetorix..................................................58-52 d. 46

Auvergne takes its name from the Arverni17.

The Amalgamation of The Master of the Animals and Oracle at Delphi


Delphi Auvergne was the geographic borderlands of Gaul and Liguria 18. The Sibylline Books of Rome were forged within The Etruscan Libri Haruspicini19 and The Gallo-Druidic priesthood. Ligurian, Gallic and Etruscan knowledge of Delphi came via trade routes from the Greek colony of Massalia 20. In Hellas, the books arrived during the fall of Troy 21 in 1200 BC where they had been kept since the fall of Akkadia in the 2nd millenium BC 22. The Magis of Akkadia transcribed propecies on Tablets of Omen, this is the root of the Sibylline Books. The Master of the Animals (Cernunnos) is an ancient god of the Cro-Magnon shamans of Lascaux and The Sorcerer of Les Trois Frres23.

The Animals of the Fields and Am-Tuat

Amun-Ra, King of Atlantis (Beringia)24, 10 000 BC. Anubis, High-Priest of the dead. Osiris, Tamer of Beasts, King of Atlantis, 10 000 BC.

17 http://ancienthistory.about.com/od/celts1/g/071907arverni.htm 18 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rh%C3%B4ne-Alpes 19 Pallottino, M.; Cremina, J (Translator); Ridgway, David (Editor) (1975). The Etruscans (Revised and Enlarged ed.). Bloomington & London: Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-32080-1. 20 Duchne & Contrucci 1998, p. 4954, "Du commerce l'exploration". Evidence of trade is provided by the circulation of silver coins minted in Marseille from 525 BC, as well as exported pottery from 550 BC; wine produced in Marseille was distributed throughout Gaul during this period. 21 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trojan_War#The_Aeneid 22 http://www.scribd.com/doc/123294156/Sapid-Acacia 23 Trois Frres, (cave in Arige, France) Britannica Online Encyclopedia 24 http://www.scribd.com/doc/123294156/Sapid-Acacia

Senarcto Archaeo Matrilineal Bloodline

Derivatives of Senarcto: This assumes that Sequana was a pre-Celtic word, possibly Ligurian.25 D'Arbois, PH ii. 132.25 Either of two ancient Celtic tribes, or perhaps two divisions of the same people, one living in Gaul, the other in Italy. The Gallic Senones lived in the area that includes the modern French departements of Seine-et-Marne, Loiret, and Yonne. They fought against Julius Caesar in 53-51 BC; in later times these Senones were included in Gallia Lugdunensis. Their chief town was Agendicum (later Senonus, whence Sens).26 Sigynnae. The people themselves wore a Medic costume, and, according to their own account, were colonists from Media27. According to Herodotus, the Ligures who lived above Massilia called traders "Sigynnae". According to J. L. Myres, the Sigynnae of Herodotus were "a people widely spread in the Danubic basin in the 5th century BC," and connected with the iron-working culture of Hallstatt, which produced a narrow-bladed throwing spear, the sigynna spear (see notice of "Anthropological Essays" in Classical Review, November 1908). Rawlinson speculates that "the Sigynnae retained a better recollection than other European tribes of their migrations westward and Aryan origin".28 According to Herodotus (v. 9), they dwelt beyond the Danube, and their frontiers extended almost as far as the Eneti on the Adriatic. Adriatic Veneti: Other tribes originally thought to have been Illyrians were actually related to Veneti, such as: Secusses29. The origins of the Veneti are not completely formed and is a much debated topic. However some scholars link them with the Illyrians. An expert on the language of the Veneti, Karl Pauli, has declared that the language is more closely related to that of the Illyrians than any other language. A people called the Enetoi (Eneti) is mentioned by Homer (who lived ca. 850 BC) in the Iliad, as inhabiting Paphlagonia on the southern coast of the Black Sea in the time of the Trojan War (ca. 1200 BC). The Paphlagonians are listed among the allies of the Trojans in the war, where their king Pylaemenes and his son Harpalion perished. Roman historian Titus Livius (59 BC AD 17), himself a native of the Veneti town of Patavium, claims that Trojan leader Antenor, together with a large number of Paphlagonians who had been expelled from their homeland by a revolution, migrated to the northern end of the Adriatic coast. 30 Media: The Median people are mentioned by that name in many ancient texts. According to the Histories of Herodotus;[19] The Medes were called anciently by all people Aryans; but when Medea, the Colchian, came to them from Athens, they changed their name. Such is the account which they themselves give. 31 Aryans: Blavatsky argued that humanity had descended from a series of "Root Races", naming the fifth root race (out of seven) the Aryan Race. She thought that the Aryans originally came from Atlantis and described the Aryan races with the following words: "The Aryan races, for instance, now varying from dark brown, almost black, red-brown-yellow, down to the whitest creamy colour, are yet all of one and the same stock -- the Fifth Root-Race -- and spring from one single progenitor, (...) who is said to have lived over 18,000,000 years ago, and also 850,000 years ago -- at the time of the sinking of the last remnants of the great continent of Atlantis." Blavatsky used "Root Race" as a technical term to describe human evolution over the large time periods in her cosmology. However, she also claimed that there were modern non-Aryan peoples who were inferior to 25 26 27 28 29 THE RELIGION OF THE ANCIENT CELTS BY J.A. MACCULLOCH http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/senones Herodotus (v. 9) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sigynnae The classical gazetteer: a dictionary of ancient geography, sacred and profane by William Hazlitt,1851,page 311,"SECUSSES, a people of Histria" 30 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adriatic_Veneti 31 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medes

Aryans. She regularly contrasts "Aryan" with "Semitic" culture, to the detriment of the latter, asserting that Semitic peoples are an offshoot of Aryans who have become "degenerate in spirituality and perfected in materiality. Blavatsky's admirers claim that her thinking was not connected to fascist or racialist ideas, asserting that she believed in a Universal Brotherhood.32 According to Blavatsky's writings, there will be seven root races assembled for our Earth; each root race is divided into seven subraces. Only five root races have appeared so far; the sixth is expected to emerge in the 28th century. Samael Aun Weor writes that the sixth root race is named Koradhi; Francis Bacon (which theosophy considers as the same Count of St. Germain) in his work The New Atlantis (1627) describes a potential future civilisation which lives on a land called Bensalem. some Atlanteans eventually migrated to the Americas and Asia. The seven subraces of the Atlantean root race were the Rmoahal the Tlavati (Cro-Magnons) the Toltec (a term which Theosophists use as a synonym for American Indians) the Turanian the (original) Semites (e.g., the Phoenicians) the Akkadians, and the Mongolian, which migrated to and colonized East Asia. The descendants of the Atlanteans according to traditional Theosophy include those of the Mongolian race, the Malayan race, and the American Indian race as well as some people of what in the late 19th and early 20th centuries was called the "olive-skinned" Mediterranean race. The downfall of Atlantis started when some of the Toltecs began to practice black magic about 850,000 BC, corrupted by the dragon "Thevetat", remembered as Devadatta as the opponent of Buddha. The people began to become selfish and materialistic. The Masters of the Ancient Wisdom telepathically warned their disciples (the white magicians) to flee Atlantis in ships while there was still time to get out before the final cataclysm. As noted above, the final sudden submergence of Atlantis due to earthquakes occurred in 9,564 BC The Atlantean and Lemurian races were more spiritually developed than the Aryan race In the United States, the best-selling 1907 book Race Life of the Aryan Peoples by Joseph Pomeroy Widney consolidated in the popular mind the idea that the word "Aryan" is the proper identification for "all IndoEuropeans", and that "Aryan Americans" of the "Aryan race" are destined to fulfill America's manifest destiny to form an American Empire.

Comment
Somewhere in history the patrilineal bloodline intermingled with a woman from the East by Massalian traderoutes: The Ligures (ancestors of de la Fressange 3334) who lived above Massilia (route of the Sibylline Books into Gaul, Liguria, Etruria and later Rome where they became legendary) called traders "Sigynnae". Coincidentally, Vellavi of the Ligurians shared a similar name to the Veneti of Sigynnae who lived across the alps near the Adriatic. Related to the Veneti tribes were the Secusses. The Veneti tribe of the Sigynnae people are several times in literature referred to as having come from the east around the time of Troy, which coincides with the prediction made earlier in the chapter and in the book Sapid Acacia on the origin of the Sibylline books. The Sigynnae themselves say that they were colonists of Media - the geographical and cultural ground zero of the Sibylline Books which arose from Akkadia. Media was 32 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aryan_race#Occultism 33 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occitania
34 "The land of Vellaves formed, originally, a small Ligurian nation whose Chapteuil was the capital, or more precisely the Capitol, because that's how we called before the arrival of the Gauls, the place or was both the military center and religious center of the nation. The Capitol was called Vellavum, Vellavos, Vellaus, as M. Prou, director of the Ecole des Chartes states in his book on Merovingian coins, suggesting that this form 'the city took its name from the people whose it was the capital '(Prou, LXVI) ... so the people inhabiting this region were called Vellavi, Vellavum their city and their nation Vellavia, who gave Velay form."

conquered by Cyrus the Great and the oldest records of the Sibylline Books were from this time 35. For a complete overview on the theory of Atlantis see the earlier work: Sapid Acacia. This hypothesis is very different from the Theosophist explanation. Bensalem is the same as my taken name Ben-Sala, which I (unknowingly at the time of the connection to Theosophy) took after having been commanded to so do by unintelligible writings. It is only worth mentioning as the name will be discarded once the United Nations and government of France approve the application for retroactive legitimation, citizenship and official entry into the line of succession. The Theosophist migration routes of the Atlanteans are similar to my own conjectures. Ligurians were direct descendants of the Cro-Magnon people. 36 Akkadia was, as mentioned earlier, the birthplace of the Sibylline Books (Delphi), which so dominated Greco-Roman affairs in the first millennium BC. In later chapters of the "doctrine", the Theosophist explanation of the downfall of Atlantis is addressed. It is a highly relevant topic of contemporary society. Telepathy is mentioned in brief as I had a dream hours before coming upon the Sophist texts today in the lords year of Friday the 13th of September 2013 which was telepathically transmitted from an undisclosed source. The dream has been incorporated into this work. Pomeroy was a boy who committed suicide in the documentary "Streetwise". He was highly sensitive and could, if been given ample opportunity, have become an artist of importance. There is a critical aspect in my reasoning which is tied to the treatment of creative people, gained from first hand experience, by present day authorities and dogma. An acrostic poem was inspired by one of the girls of streetwise; Erin Blackwell. The American Empire is the resurrected Roman Empire - I offer my service and knowledge of the Sibylline Books, partially restored in 2012, to complement the warrior in accordance with the Campbellian twinned hero motif and Archaic Rights of Legitimate Kingship (Sapid Acacia).

35 http://www.classics.upenn.edu/myth/php/tools/dictionary.php?regexp=PATRICIANS.&method=standard 36 Arturo Issel Liguria geologica e preistorica, Genova 1892, II volume, pp.356-357.

Catherine de la Roche bloodline


Daughter of Guy de la Roche1 who lived from 1205-1263, father of six children including one Alice de la Roche better known as Alice of Athens, mother of Anne de Lusignan, King Charles VIII of France, Anne of France and Mary, Queen of Scots. Catherine was the wife of Carlo di Lagonessa, Seneschal of Sicily. The marriage did not produce children and she remarried Jean Allier as the records show a woman of the same name appearing in 1319, with ties to Lusignan, Kings of Jerusalem, allies of de La Fressange. Tree: Catherine de la ROCHE, 1343 & Jean Allier2 Guy I de la ROCHE (12051263) was the Duke of Athens (from 1225/34)3 Otto (or Othon) de la ROCHE (died before 1234) was a Burgundian nobleman from the castle of La Roche-sur-l'Ognon, in the Franche-Comt commune of Rigney, Doubs. He joined the Fourth Crusade in 1204 and became the first Duke of Athens. He took the title of megaskyr or grand seignior in Athens. He held his Greek possessions from the King of Thessalonica. He fortified the Acropolis. In 1208, he took the title of duke.4 Pons II de la ROCHE, 1221. His first wife was Mathilde de Beaujeu-Seveux, who he married in BEF 1168.5 Othon de la ROCHE crusader of the IV Crusades first Duke of Athens, 1161. His wife was Gertrude de Ray. 6 Pons de la ROCHE I (born in 1080) and Sybille de Scey, married in ABT 1105. 7 Othon Ier de SCEY EN VARAIS, 1050- September 6 1098.8910 Guy II de SCEY EN VARAIS, 1084. Henri de SCEY EN VARAIS, 1063. Brothers Hugues de SCEY EN VARAIS, 1055, Braud de SCEY EN VARAIS, 1044. Guillne de SCEY EN VARAIS, 1013. Milon II de TONNERRE, 998.1112 Gui III de TONNERRE de SCEY EN VARAIS, 959. Guilenc I de TONNERRE de SCEY EN VARAIS, 898-955/59. Arduin III de SCEY EN VARAIS, 955. Gui II, 928. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guy_I_de_la_Roche http://gw.geneanet.org/pierfit?lang=sv;p=jean;n=allier http://www.morganlefay.ca/CD/Bourbon/INDIs/II3486.html http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Otto_de_la_Roche http://www.morganlefay.ca/CD/Bourbon/INDIs/II4424.html http://www.morganlefay.ca/CD/Bourbon/INDIs/II4436.html http://www.morganlefay.ca/CD/Bourbon/INDIs/II4441.html http://gilles.maillet.free.fr/histoire/famille_bourgogne/famille_scey_en_varais.htm http://gw.geneanet.org/loic15?lang=sv&i=771 http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liste_des_seigneurs_de_Scey http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=ancestorsearch&id=I62498 http://fabpedigree.com/s008/f320918.htm

Arduin II Comte de Gurimbourg, 870. Arduin I of Burgundy13 and Gurimbourg, 859. Eudes-Odo I Graaf van Orleans, Graaf van Lahngau) d'Orlans (Graaf van de Nederlahngau) (c.780 - c.834).14 Hadrianus (Adriaan) Graaf van Orleans d'Orlans (Udalriching), Count of Orlans (c.770 - 15 February 824). 1516 Duke Gerold I Savoy Gottfried of (Gerold I) von Schwaben formerly Schwaben aka Gerold I, Graf im Kraichgau und Anglachgau, 710 in Aachen, Rheinland-Pfalz, Germany - 0779 in Aichen, Rheinland-Pfalz, Germany. 17 Gerold Bishop of (Gerold) "Evque de Mayence, Bishop of Mayence, 697 in Mayence, France - 744 in Bishop, Mayenne, Pays de la Loire, France. King of Sa King Dieterick Theodoric of (Dieterich) "Theodoric" Sachsen, 675 in Sachsen-Anhalt - 740 in SachsenAnhalt. Sighard King of the Saxons aka von Wettin, 630-691 Sachsen.1819 Bertold (Berthold) King of the Saxons Wettin, 592-633 Saxony. Bodicus King of the Saxons, 539-568 Sachsen. Hulderick King of the Saxons, 480-540 Sachsen. Hatwigate King of the Saxons, 450-524 Sachsen. Hengest King of Kent, 415 in Kent, England - 488 in Tunbridge Castle, Kent, England. Wihgils Sachsen, 360 in Sachsen, Germany - 434 in Kent, England.2021 Uitta of Sachsen, 381 in Denmark - 400 in Kent, England.22 Wecta Birthplace: Scandinavia Death: Died 358 in Europe Occupation: King of Zealand and/or Angel, Roi des Saxons, King of Saxons - see http://www.rpi.edu/~holmes/Hobbies/Genealogy/ps08/ps08_327.htm, King of Saxons, 300-350 son of: Wtan, Odin - Allfather of the Gods, Ruler of Asgard, Ruler of Valhalla. Yggr of Yggdrasil, the Tree of Life.

13 http://www.werelate.org/wiki/Person:Hardouin_of_Burgundy_%281%29 14 http://www.geni.com/people/Hardouin-Count-of-Neustria/6000000005076635842 15 http://www.thewinegumfactory.nl/phpgedview/individual.php?pid=I3781&ged=Een%20Giessendamse%20Familie %20van%20Wijngaarden.ged 16 http://www.geni.com/people/Adrien-Comte-d-Orl%C3%A9ans/6000000007316403023 17 http://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Schwaben-16 18 http://www.geni.com/people/Sigismund-Sigurd-King-of-the-Saxons/6000000004533780878 19 http://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Sachsen-60 20 http://www.geni.com/people/Wihtgils/6000000006797956096 21 [S38] John Morby, Dynasties of the World: a chronological and genealogical handbook (Oxford, Oxfordshire, U.K.: Oxford University Press, 1989), page 64. Hereinafter cited as Dynasties of the World. 2. [S58] E. B. Fryde, D. E. Greenway, S. Porter and I. Roy, editors, Handbook of British Chronology, 3rd edition (London, U.K.: Royal Historical Society, 1986), page 12. Hereinafter cited as Handbook of British Chronology. 22 Lundy, Darryl, "The Peerage.com - A Genealogical Survey of the Peerage of England as well as the Royal Families of Europe" (http://www.thepeerage.com rev. 12 Mar 2006), Citing: E. B. Fryde, D. E. Greenway, S. Porter and I. Roy, editors, Handbook of British Chronology, 3rd edition (London, U.K.: Royal Historical Society, 1986), page 12. 2. E. B. Fryde, D. E. Greenway, S. Porter and I. Roy, editors, Handbook of British Chronology, 3rd edition (London, U.K.: Royal Historical Society, 1986), page 12. Hereinafter cited as Handbook of British Chronology.

Coat of Arms

Comments
The Shroud of Turin 1208 Pons de la Roche presents to Amadeus de Tramelay, Archbishop of Besanon, the Shroud that his son Othon de la Roche, Latin Duke of Athens, had sent him from Constantinople.23 Humbert de Rougemont owned the shroud of Turin. 2425. The Rougemonts of Bugey (in the Bertrandus Senarcto Lineage) are probably connected to the Rougemonts of Burgundy: Coat of arms of the House of Rougemont in Bugey: Some authors such as Samuel Guichenon, Genealogist of the Roy Bresse, Dombes, Bugey, Valromey, had opinion that this House could have a common origin with the County of Burgundy (hereditary Viscounts of Besanon) House of Rougemont , whose weapons are Gold Eagle displayed gules, beaked, Member [and crowned] azure . However, no title domestic could not be found to confirm or refute this

23 http://rosamondpress.wordpress.com/2013/03/30/templar-holy-shroud-and-fountain/ 24 http://genforum.genealogy.com/roseman/messages/186.html 25 http://rosamondpress.wordpress.com/2013/03/30/templar-holy-shroud-and-fountain/

relationship, for which are nevertheless well presumptions. 26 A certain credence would be lent to the hypothesis of the two houses shared origin given that Catherine de la Roche's (married to Jean Allier) great grandfather Pons were in possession of the Shroud of Turin in 1208, which 200 years later, in 1418 belonged to Humbert de Rougemont (Villersexel) 27. Bertrandus Senarcto (~1145-12xx) identified as Bertrandus de Rougemont28 had a son Pierre (Allier), father of Jean Allier who then married Catherine de la Roche. "Othon 1 de la Roche (-before 1161) had a son named Pons de la Roche the Seigneur de Ray. He first married Marguerite Tilchatel who may be a Rougemont who came to own Til-Chatel. Guillaume, Gui, Humbert4, Gui 2, and Thibaut 6 were Seigneurs of Til-Chatel. Othon then married Pontia de Rougemont/de Dramelay the daughter of Thiebaud 2 de Rougemont. They had three children. Humbert, Thiebaud, and Sibylle de la Roche. This union makes the Shroud the Rougemont a family icon, or relic".29 Catherines sister Alice of Athens had a daughter; Anne de Lusignan or Anne of Cyprus: "In 1452, Anne bought the Shroud of Turin from Jeanne de Charny in exchange for the castle of Varambon. Years later Pope Paul II authorised Yolande of France to deposit the relic of the Holy Shroud in the vault of the castle of Chambry from which she raised a tower above the sacristy, as a religious symbol."30 "The only city to have claimed to possess the Shroud from 1208 to 1329 was the French city of Besanon. The theory is that during the Fourth Crusade, the Burgundian knight who commanded the district of Blachernae where the Shroud was kept, Othon de la Roche, Duke of Athens and Sparta, received it as part of his recompense. The claim that the Shroud was in Athens is attested to directly in a letter by Theodore of Epirus dated August 1, 1205, and indirectly by Nicholas of Otranto, abbot of the monastery of Casole. Othon, in turn, sent the cloth to his father, Ponce de la Roche, who then handed it over to the Bishop of Besanon, who placed it in the Cathedral of St. Etienne where it was exposed for veneration each year on Easter until 1349. In that year a fire burned down the Cathedral causing slight damage to the Shroud. In the midst of all the confusion, the Shroud disappeared. According to a dubious sixteenth-century account kept in the second church of Lirey, the Shroud was given to King Philip VI. He subsequently gave it to a friend whose name, coincidentally, was the same as the Templar Grand Master who was burned at the stake, Geoffrey I de Charny!" 31 Saxons An Irminsul (Old Saxon, probably "great/mighty pillar" or "arising pillar") was a kind of pillar which is attested as playing an important role in the Germanic paganism of the Saxon people. The Old Norse form of Irmin is Jrmunr, which just like Yggr was one of the names of Odin. Yggdrasil ("Yggr's horse") was the yew or ash tree from which Odin sacrificed himself, and which connected the nine worlds. 32

26 27 28 29 30 31 32

http://rosamondpress.wordpress.com/2013/03/31/house-of-rougemont/ http://rosamondpress.wordpress.com/2013/03/30/templar-holy-shroud-and-fountain/ http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Famille_de_Rougemont http://rosamondpress.wordpress.com/2013/03/30/templar-holy-shroud-and-fountain/ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anne_of_Cyprus http://genforum.genealogy.com/roseman/messages/186.html http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irminsul

Map 1 (Saxon)33

33 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saxons

Rougemont Lineage
Bertrand de ROGEMONT123, Crusader, Bertrandus Senarcto4; "Old Chief5 of the Marsh"6. Born ~1145-50. One son, Pierre. Guillaume de ROGEMONT, 1164. Andr de ROGEMONT, 1106.7 Wikipedia: Hugues III de Bourgogne fut archevque de Besanon de 1085 1101, fils du comte Guillaume Ier de Bourgogne et frre du pape Calixte II.8 Guillaume Ier de Bourgogne dit Guillaume le Grand ou Tte Hardie (1020-1087) de la dynastie des UNROCHIDES comte de Bourgogne, comte de Mcon et pre du Pape Calixte II.9 Renaud Ier de Bourgogne (986-1057) fut 2e comte de Bourgogne (1er comte palatin de Bourgogne) de la Maison d'Ivre au XIe sicle. Otte-Guillaume Ier de Bourgogne ou Otte-Guillaume de Mcon1 (vers 962-1026) fut le premier comte palatin de Bourgogne (982-1026) et comte de Mcon par mariage avec Ermentrude de Roucy (hritire du comt de Mcon par son premier mariage avec le comte Aubry II de Mcon 982). Aubert Ier d'Italie ou Adalbert Ier d'Italie (931?-972?). Roi d'Italie (Roi des Lombards), associ son pre Brenger II d'Italie, de 950 964, et Marquis d'Ivre (Aubert II) de 965 972 (?), comte d'Aoste et de Lombardie. Brenger II d'Italie ou Brenger d'Ivre1 (v. 900 - 6 juillet 966), marquis (margrave) d'Ivre. Proclam roi d'Italie en 950, il est destitu l'anne suivante par le roi de Germanie Otton Ier. Essayant en vain de reprendre le pouvoir, Otton le fait enfermer Bamberg o il meurt en 966. Il est l'anctre des comtes palatins de Bourgogne. Adalbert Ier d'Ivre (880-915) marquis margrave d'Ivre en Italie de l'Empire carolingien de Charlemagne. Anschaire Ier d'Ivre (860-902), ou Anschier Ier, comte d'Oscheret (867-887), dans le royaume de Bourgogne, et premier marquis (margrave) d'Ivre, en Italie, de 888 902. Il est le fondateur de la maison d'Ivre. Amde d'Oscheret (790-867), comte d'Oscheret (dans le royaume de Bourgogne), comte bnficiaire des pays de Langres, Dijon et Tonnerre, il fut peut-tre abb lac de Saint-Cosme de Chalons. Comment Map 110. Tonnerre is connected with the line of Catherine de la Roche. It is the neighbour of Senonais whence came the Gallic Senones of which the name Senarcto might derive. Map 21112+31314. The Houses of Rougemont geographical proximity. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 http://gw.geneanet.org/pierfit?lang=sv;p=bertrand;n=de+rogemont;oc=1 http://rosamondpress.wordpress.com/2013/03/31/house-of-rougemont/ http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Famille_de_Rougemont http://translate.google.com/translate?u=sagnard.e-monsite.com&sl=fr&tl=en&ie=UTF-8 https://www.msu.edu/~defores1/gre/roots/gre_rts_afx2.htm? http://www.jeantosti.com/noms/s4.htm Histoire de la Bresse, du Bugey et des familles Nobles de la Rgion, par Samuel Guichenon, 1649. Jean Baptiste Guillaume, Histoire gnalogique des sires de Salins au comt de Bourgogne, Jean-Antoine Vieille, 1757 p. 114 127 http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guillaume_Ier_de_Bourgogne http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Am%C3%A9d%C3%A9e_d%27Oscheret http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liste_des_seigneurs_de_Rougemont http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franche-Comt%C3%A9 http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Famille_de_Rougemont http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bugey

Map 1

Map 2

Map 3

Misc Maps

Pays d'Auvergne1

Loire Valley2 1 http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Pays_d%27Auvergne_map-fr.svg 2 http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Loire_river_tribs_map.png

Gaul, 1st century BC3

Conquests of Clovis4

3 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaul 4 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clovis_I

You might also like