• Re: Neel de St Sauveur

    From Trent Hatten@21:1/5 to Todd A. Farmerie on Sun Apr 24 20:00:20 2022
    On Tuesday, July 19, 2005 at 11:37:03 PM UTC-5, Todd A. Farmerie wrote:
    paul bulkley wrote:
    Neel III married a daughter of Duke Robert of Normandy
    (great great grand daughter of Richard Duke of
    Normandy), and if this is correct presumably a sister
    of William I of England. Children included Neel IV of
    Halton and possibly a daughter who married William de
    Vernon.
    There is no evidence that Niel of St. Sauveur was identical to Nigel of Halton, from whom many Cheshire families claim descent. Further, there
    is no evidence for this Vernon marriage (note that in your other post
    you marry Niel to a daughter of William).
    taf




    I know it's 17 years since ya'll last posted on this thread, but I would like to ask if any of you gentleman are still interested in this genealogy.

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  • From taf@21:1/5 to Trent Hatten on Mon Apr 25 13:40:05 2022
    On Sunday, April 24, 2022 at 8:00:21 PM UTC-7, Trent Hatten wrote:
    I know it's 17 years since ya'll last posted on this thread, but I would like to ask if any of you gentleman are still interested in this genealogy.

    Do you have a specific question? I am unaware of any publuished progress, leaving us in the same boat:
    1. The St Sauveur counts were an authentic family, though much of what you find about them in online pedigrees (and 19th century antiquarian publications) is wishful thinking or entirely made up.
    2. Because they were a prominent family, there has been a long history of making name's-the-same identifications of Anglo-Norman barons with members of the family, and these identifications appear to range from possible but completely devoid of evidence
    other than the name to (again) groundlerss wishful thinking.

    Regarding the origin of William Fitz Nigel of Halton, mentioned in the thread, Keats-Rohan implicitly suggests identification with a WIlliam filius Nigel de Haia, and states that he is named as 'nepos' by Walter de Gand. The latter relationship probably
    in some manner gave rise to the 19th century sources (and modern online pedigrees, and Wikipedia) that claim William married Agnes, Walter's sister, a relationship that would not be encompassed by 'nepos'. Keats-Rohan does not include this Agnes among
    her listing of the children of Gilbert, Walter's father.

    taf

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  • From Trent Hatten@21:1/5 to taf on Mon Apr 25 20:38:44 2022
    On Monday, April 25, 2022 at 3:40:06 PM UTC-5, taf wrote:
    On Sunday, April 24, 2022 at 8:00:21 PM UTC-7, Trent Hatten wrote:
    I know it's 17 years since ya'll last posted on this thread, but I would like to ask if any of you gentleman are still interested in this genealogy.
    Do you have a specific question? I am unaware of any publuished progress, leaving us in the same boat:
    1. The St Sauveur counts were an authentic family, though much of what you find about them in online pedigrees (and 19th century antiquarian publications) is wishful thinking or entirely made up.
    2. Because they were a prominent family, there has been a long history of making name's-the-same identifications of Anglo-Norman barons with members of the family, and these identifications appear to range from possible but completely devoid of
    evidence other than the name to (again) groundlerss wishful thinking.

    Regarding the origin of William Fitz Nigel of Halton, mentioned in the thread, Keats-Rohan implicitly suggests identification with a WIlliam filius Nigel de Haia, and states that he is named as 'nepos' by Walter de Gand. The latter relationship
    probably in some manner gave rise to the 19th century sources (and modern online pedigrees, and Wikipedia) that claim William married Agnes, Walter's sister, a relationship that would not be encompassed by 'nepos'. Keats-Rohan does not include this Agnes
    among her listing of the children of Gilbert, Walter's father.

    taf
    my male

    I have tons of questions, actually. I've been researching my family tree for about 3 years, and I think my family may be the last descendants in the male line.

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  • From taf@21:1/5 to Trent Hatten on Tue Apr 26 11:04:39 2022
    On Monday, April 25, 2022 at 8:38:45 PM UTC-7, Trent Hatten wrote:

    I have tons of questions, actually. I've been researching my family tree for about 3 years, and I think my family may be the last descendants in the male line.

    I think I know where you are going with this and I have to warn you, there are probably at least three problematic/unsupported genealogical links that underly this conclusion.

    taf

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  • From taf@21:1/5 to taf on Wed Apr 27 10:28:01 2022
    On Tuesday, April 26, 2022 at 11:04:41 AM UTC-7, taf wrote:
    On Monday, April 25, 2022 at 8:38:45 PM UTC-7, Trent Hatten wrote:

    I have tons of questions, actually. I've been researching my family tree for about 3 years, and I think my family may be the last descendants in the male line.
    I think I know where you are going with this and I have to warn you, there are probably at least three problematic/unsupported genealogical links that underly this conclusion.


    Lest it be unclear to people new to this area why I am saying this, the three problematic connections I had in mind are:

    1) the suppositition that the Nigel who was father of baron WIlliam fitz Nigel was the same man as Neel de St Sauveur. This is just a name's-the-same identification, without solid foundation, and not accepted by any recent scholars I am aware of. Nigel,
    father of William, is a mysterious person, entirely undocumented except in his son's patronymic.

    2) that the Hatton founder was brother of Nigel, WIlliam's father. This claim is based on a monastic foundation myth that reports that the father of William was accompanied from Normandy by five brothers. One of these, Wulfatus, in later genealogies
    morfed into an entirely undocumented Wolfric de Hatton, founder of the Hatton family. There seems to be no authentic history here, particularly given that the five claimed brothers of Nigel all bore Anglo-Saxon names (i.e. they were native men,
    presumably early landholders under the Norman William fitz Nigel)

    3) that the Hattons descend from Wolfric. The earliest versions of the pedigrees connecting to 'Wolfric' make that man father of William de Hatton, who died almost 150 later (subsequently modified by insertion of additional generations). This seems to
    just be a made up connection, to attach the later family to the Wulfatus of the monastic foundation legend (not there associated with Hatton).

    I could add another one, but have insufficient information to evaluate the situation.

    4) that the poster's Hatten family descends in the male line from the Hatton lords, which I take to be the basis of the proposed male-line descent. The senior male line of the Hattons went extinct at the start of the 14th century, and though most of
    these families produced lines from younger sons, these lines are usually poorly documented, and the presumption that a later person with a similar surname must have descended from the earlier landed family of the same name is unsafe, to say the least.

    taf

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  • From Paulo Ricardo Canedo@21:1/5 to All on Wed Apr 27 16:18:11 2022
    A quarta-feira, 27 de abril de 2022 à(s) 18:28:03 UTC+1, taf escreveu:
    On Tuesday, April 26, 2022 at 11:04:41 AM UTC-7, taf wrote:
    On Monday, April 25, 2022 at 8:38:45 PM UTC-7, Trent Hatten wrote:

    I have tons of questions, actually. I've been researching my family tree for about 3 years, and I think my family may be the last descendants in the male line.
    I think I know where you are going with this and I have to warn you, there are probably at least three problematic/unsupported genealogical links that underly this conclusion.

    Lest it be unclear to people new to this area why I am saying this, the three problematic connections I had in mind are:

    1) the suppositition that the Nigel who was father of baron WIlliam fitz Nigel was the same man as Neel de St Sauveur. This is just a name's-the-same identification, without solid foundation, and not accepted by any recent scholars I am aware of. Nigel,
    father of William, is a mysterious person, entirely undocumented except in his son's patronymic.

    2) that the Hatton founder was brother of Nigel, WIlliam's father. This claim is based on a monastic foundation myth that reports that the father of William was accompanied from Normandy by five brothers. One of these, Wulfatus, in later genealogies
    morfed into an entirely undocumented Wolfric de Hatton, founder of the Hatton family. There seems to be no authentic history here, particularly given that the five claimed brothers of Nigel all bore Anglo-Saxon names (i.e. they were native men,
    presumably early landholders under the Norman William fitz Nigel)

    3) that the Hattons descend from Wolfric. The earliest versions of the pedigrees connecting to 'Wolfric' make that man father of William de Hatton, who died almost 150 later (subsequently modified by insertion of additional generations). This seems to
    just be a made up connection, to attach the later family to the Wulfatus of the monastic foundation legend (not there associated with Hatton).

    I could add another one, but have insufficient information to evaluate the situation.

    4) that the poster's Hatten family descends in the male line from the Hatton lords, which I take to be the basis of the proposed male-line descent. The senior male line of the Hattons went extinct at the start of the 14th century, and though most of
    these families produced lines from younger sons, these lines are usually poorly documented, and the presumption that a later person with a similar surname must have descended from the earlier landed family of the same name is unsafe, to say the least.

    taf
    Thanks for this, Todd. I had never studied this family. What you said is interesting and clarifying.

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  • From Trent Hatten@21:1/5 to taf on Sun May 1 02:11:31 2022
    On Wednesday, April 27, 2022 at 12:28:03 PM UTC-5, taf wrote:
    On Tuesday, April 26, 2022 at 11:04:41 AM UTC-7, taf wrote:
    On Monday, April 25, 2022 at 8:38:45 PM UTC-7, Trent Hatten wrote:

    I have tons of questions, actually. I've been researching my family tree for about 3 years, and I think my family may be the last descendants in the male line.
    I think I know where you are going with this and I have to warn you, there are probably at least three problematic/unsupported genealogical links that underly this conclusion.

    Lest it be unclear to people new to this area why I am saying this, the three problematic connections I had in mind are:

    1) the suppositition that the Nigel who was father of baron WIlliam fitz Nigel was the same man as Neel de St Sauveur. This is just a name's-the-same identification, without solid foundation, and not accepted by any recent scholars I am aware of. Nigel,
    father of William, is a mysterious person, entirely undocumented except in his son's patronymic.

    2) that the Hatton founder was brother of Nigel, WIlliam's father. This claim is based on a monastic foundation myth that reports that the father of William was accompanied from Normandy by five brothers. One of these, Wulfatus, in later genealogies
    morfed into an entirely undocumented Wolfric de Hatton, founder of the Hatton family. There seems to be no authentic history here, particularly given that the five claimed brothers of Nigel all bore Anglo-Saxon names (i.e. they were native men,
    presumably early landholders under the Norman William fitz Nigel)

    3) that the Hattons descend from Wolfric. The earliest versions of the pedigrees connecting to 'Wolfric' make that man father of William de Hatton, who died almost 150 later (subsequently modified by insertion of additional generations). This seems to
    just be a made up connection, to attach the later family to the Wulfatus of the monastic foundation legend (not there associated with Hatton).

    I could add another one, but have insufficient information to evaluate the situation.

    4) that the poster's Hatten family descends in the male line from the Hatton lords, which I take to be the basis of the proposed male-line descent. The senior male line of the Hattons went extinct at the start of the 14th century, and though most of
    these families produced lines from younger sons, these lines are usually poorly documented, and the presumption that a later person with a similar surname must have descended from the earlier landed family of the same name is unsafe, to say the least.

    taf


    I am certainly not trying to falsely establish a connection. I have spent hundreds of hours researching the history, and I do admi I'm still no where near a definitive conclusion. I am confident that I have perused the paternal line all the way back to
    Malahuc, the Uncle of Rollo. I have found several instances that the family changed their name. I am simply asking for help, and this is a purely personal/academic journey!

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  • From Paulo Ricardo Canedo@21:1/5 to All on Sun May 1 09:31:59 2022
    A domingo, 1 de maio de 2022 à(s) 10:11:32 UTC+1, Trent Hatten escreveu:
    On Wednesday, April 27, 2022 at 12:28:03 PM UTC-5, taf wrote:
    On Tuesday, April 26, 2022 at 11:04:41 AM UTC-7, taf wrote:
    On Monday, April 25, 2022 at 8:38:45 PM UTC-7, Trent Hatten wrote:

    I have tons of questions, actually. I've been researching my family tree for about 3 years, and I think my family may be the last descendants in the male line.
    I think I know where you are going with this and I have to warn you, there are probably at least three problematic/unsupported genealogical links that underly this conclusion.

    Lest it be unclear to people new to this area why I am saying this, the three problematic connections I had in mind are:

    1) the suppositition that the Nigel who was father of baron WIlliam fitz Nigel was the same man as Neel de St Sauveur. This is just a name's-the-same identification, without solid foundation, and not accepted by any recent scholars I am aware of.
    Nigel, father of William, is a mysterious person, entirely undocumented except in his son's patronymic.

    2) that the Hatton founder was brother of Nigel, WIlliam's father. This claim is based on a monastic foundation myth that reports that the father of William was accompanied from Normandy by five brothers. One of these, Wulfatus, in later genealogies
    morfed into an entirely undocumented Wolfric de Hatton, founder of the Hatton family. There seems to be no authentic history here, particularly given that the five claimed brothers of Nigel all bore Anglo-Saxon names (i.e. they were native men,
    presumably early landholders under the Norman William fitz Nigel)

    3) that the Hattons descend from Wolfric. The earliest versions of the pedigrees connecting to 'Wolfric' make that man father of William de Hatton, who died almost 150 later (subsequently modified by insertion of additional generations). This seems
    to just be a made up connection, to attach the later family to the Wulfatus of the monastic foundation legend (not there associated with Hatton).

    I could add another one, but have insufficient information to evaluate the situation.

    4) that the poster's Hatten family descends in the male line from the Hatton lords, which I take to be the basis of the proposed male-line descent. The senior male line of the Hattons went extinct at the start of the 14th century, and though most of
    these families produced lines from younger sons, these lines are usually poorly documented, and the presumption that a later person with a similar surname must have descended from the earlier landed family of the same name is unsafe, to say the least.

    taf
    I am certainly not trying to falsely establish a connection. I have spent hundreds of hours researching the history, and I do admi I'm still no where near a definitive conclusion. I am confident that I have perused the paternal line all the way back to
    Malahuc, the Uncle of Rollo. I have found several instances that the family changed their name. I am simply asking for help, and this is a purely personal/academic journey!
    We don't know Rollo's parentage, so any claim that they were descended from a paternal uncle of his named Mahaluc (I never heard of such an uncle of Rollo in any of his supposed parentages, BTW), is fantasy.

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  • From Peter Stewart@21:1/5 to Paulo Ricardo Canedo on Mon May 2 08:16:43 2022
    On 02-May-22 2:31 AM, Paulo Ricardo Canedo wrote:
    A domingo, 1 de maio de 2022 à(s) 10:11:32 UTC+1, Trent Hatten escreveu:
    On Wednesday, April 27, 2022 at 12:28:03 PM UTC-5, taf wrote:
    On Tuesday, April 26, 2022 at 11:04:41 AM UTC-7, taf wrote:
    On Monday, April 25, 2022 at 8:38:45 PM UTC-7, Trent Hatten wrote:

    I have tons of questions, actually. I've been researching my family tree for about 3 years, and I think my family may be the last descendants in the male line.
    I think I know where you are going with this and I have to warn you, there are probably at least three problematic/unsupported genealogical links that underly this conclusion.

    Lest it be unclear to people new to this area why I am saying this, the three problematic connections I had in mind are:

    1) the suppositition that the Nigel who was father of baron WIlliam fitz Nigel was the same man as Neel de St Sauveur. This is just a name's-the-same identification, without solid foundation, and not accepted by any recent scholars I am aware of.
    Nigel, father of William, is a mysterious person, entirely undocumented except in his son's patronymic.

    2) that the Hatton founder was brother of Nigel, WIlliam's father. This claim is based on a monastic foundation myth that reports that the father of William was accompanied from Normandy by five brothers. One of these, Wulfatus, in later genealogies
    morfed into an entirely undocumented Wolfric de Hatton, founder of the Hatton family. There seems to be no authentic history here, particularly given that the five claimed brothers of Nigel all bore Anglo-Saxon names (i.e. they were native men,
    presumably early landholders under the Norman William fitz Nigel)

    3) that the Hattons descend from Wolfric. The earliest versions of the pedigrees connecting to 'Wolfric' make that man father of William de Hatton, who died almost 150 later (subsequently modified by insertion of additional generations). This seems
    to just be a made up connection, to attach the later family to the Wulfatus of the monastic foundation legend (not there associated with Hatton).

    I could add another one, but have insufficient information to evaluate the situation.

    4) that the poster's Hatten family descends in the male line from the Hatton lords, which I take to be the basis of the proposed male-line descent. The senior male line of the Hattons went extinct at the start of the 14th century, and though most of
    these families produced lines from younger sons, these lines are usually poorly documented, and the presumption that a later person with a similar surname must have descended from the earlier landed family of the same name is unsafe, to say the least.

    taf
    I am certainly not trying to falsely establish a connection. I have spent hundreds of hours researching the history, and I do admi I'm still no where near a definitive conclusion. I am confident that I have perused the paternal line all the way back
    to Malahuc, the Uncle of Rollo. I have found several instances that the family changed their name. I am simply asking for help, and this is a purely personal/academic journey!
    We don't know Rollo's parentage, so any claim that they were descended from a paternal uncle of his named Mahaluc (I never heard of such an uncle of Rollo in any of his supposed parentages, BTW), is fantasy.

    The name is Malahulc, and the source stating that he was a paternal
    uncle of Rollo is an interpolation by Orderic in William of Jumièges'
    _Gesta Normannorum ducum_ ("Rogerius Toenites de stirpe Malahulcii, qui Rollonis ducis patruus fuerat"). Since Orderic did not name any brother
    of Malahulc, this of course does not help in identifying Rollo's father.

    As for a line of agnatic descent from Malahulc - assuming he was
    correctly described in the 12th century - for any family other than the
    Tosnys, to whom Orderic drew the bare connection, I don't know of a source.

    Peter Stewart



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  • From taf@21:1/5 to pss...@optusnet.com.au on Sun May 1 18:04:52 2022
    On Sunday, May 1, 2022 at 3:16:47 PM UTC-7, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:

    As for a line of agnatic descent from Malahulc - assuming he was
    correctly described in the 12th century - for any family other than the Tosnys, to whom Orderic drew the bare connection, I don't know of a source.

    Most English language sources seem to trace to John Pym Yeatman (1882), The Early Genealogical History of the House of Arundel, who assigns three sons, giving rise to Toeny, St Sauveur and Bayeux, based on his own evaluation of French suources from
    previous decades that I just can't be bothered to track down, given that his summary of their work shows them to have started with assuming that there must have been a connection and then going fishing among the known ducal relatives for a place to
    dangle the lines - this is from a quick glance, as none of what I am seeing is of a level of schoalrship that would merit a more careful reading.

    taf

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  • From Paulo Ricardo Canedo@21:1/5 to All on Sun May 1 18:30:58 2022
    A segunda-feira, 2 de maio de 2022 à(s) 02:04:54 UTC+1, taf escreveu:
    On Sunday, May 1, 2022 at 3:16:47 PM UTC-7, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:

    As for a line of agnatic descent from Malahulc - assuming he was
    correctly described in the 12th century - for any family other than the Tosnys, to whom Orderic drew the bare connection, I don't know of a source.
    Most English language sources seem to trace to John Pym Yeatman (1882), The Early Genealogical History of the House of Arundel, who assigns three sons, giving rise to Toeny, St Sauveur and Bayeux, based on his own evaluation of French suources from
    previous decades that I just can't be bothered to track down, given that his summary of their work shows them to have started with assuming that there must have been a connection and then going fishing among the known ducal relatives for a place to
    dangle the lines - this is from a quick glance, as none of what I am seeing is of a level of schoalrship that would merit a more careful reading.

    taf
    Thanks for this, Todd.

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  • From Paulo Ricardo Canedo@21:1/5 to All on Sun May 1 18:31:21 2022
    A domingo, 1 de maio de 2022 à(s) 23:16:47 UTC+1, pss...@optusnet.com.au escreveu:
    On 02-May-22 2:31 AM, Paulo Ricardo Canedo wrote:
    A domingo, 1 de maio de 2022 à(s) 10:11:32 UTC+1, Trent Hatten escreveu:
    On Wednesday, April 27, 2022 at 12:28:03 PM UTC-5, taf wrote:
    On Tuesday, April 26, 2022 at 11:04:41 AM UTC-7, taf wrote:
    On Monday, April 25, 2022 at 8:38:45 PM UTC-7, Trent Hatten wrote:

    I have tons of questions, actually. I've been researching my family tree for about 3 years, and I think my family may be the last descendants in the male line.
    I think I know where you are going with this and I have to warn you, there are probably at least three problematic/unsupported genealogical links that underly this conclusion.

    Lest it be unclear to people new to this area why I am saying this, the three problematic connections I had in mind are:

    1) the suppositition that the Nigel who was father of baron WIlliam fitz Nigel was the same man as Neel de St Sauveur. This is just a name's-the-same identification, without solid foundation, and not accepted by any recent scholars I am aware of.
    Nigel, father of William, is a mysterious person, entirely undocumented except in his son's patronymic.

    2) that the Hatton founder was brother of Nigel, WIlliam's father. This claim is based on a monastic foundation myth that reports that the father of William was accompanied from Normandy by five brothers. One of these, Wulfatus, in later
    genealogies morfed into an entirely undocumented Wolfric de Hatton, founder of the Hatton family. There seems to be no authentic history here, particularly given that the five claimed brothers of Nigel all bore Anglo-Saxon names (i.e. they were native
    men, presumably early landholders under the Norman William fitz Nigel)

    3) that the Hattons descend from Wolfric. The earliest versions of the pedigrees connecting to 'Wolfric' make that man father of William de Hatton, who died almost 150 later (subsequently modified by insertion of additional generations). This seems
    to just be a made up connection, to attach the later family to the Wulfatus of the monastic foundation legend (not there associated with Hatton).

    I could add another one, but have insufficient information to evaluate the situation.

    4) that the poster's Hatten family descends in the male line from the Hatton lords, which I take to be the basis of the proposed male-line descent. The senior male line of the Hattons went extinct at the start of the 14th century, and though most
    of these families produced lines from younger sons, these lines are usually poorly documented, and the presumption that a later person with a similar surname must have descended from the earlier landed family of the same name is unsafe, to say the least.

    taf
    I am certainly not trying to falsely establish a connection. I have spent hundreds of hours researching the history, and I do admi I'm still no where near a definitive conclusion. I am confident that I have perused the paternal line all the way back
    to Malahuc, the Uncle of Rollo. I have found several instances that the family changed their name. I am simply asking for help, and this is a purely personal/academic journey!
    We don't know Rollo's parentage, so any claim that they were descended from a paternal uncle of his named Mahaluc (I never heard of such an uncle of Rollo in any of his supposed parentages, BTW), is fantasy.
    The name is Malahulc, and the source stating that he was a paternal
    uncle of Rollo is an interpolation by Orderic in William of Jumièges' _Gesta Normannorum ducum_ ("Rogerius Toenites de stirpe Malahulcii, qui Rollonis ducis patruus fuerat"). Since Orderic did not name any brother
    of Malahulc, this of course does not help in identifying Rollo's father.

    As for a line of agnatic descent from Malahulc - assuming he was
    correctly described in the 12th century - for any family other than the Tosnys, to whom Orderic drew the bare connection, I don't know of a source.

    Peter Stewart



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    Wouldn't you agree the descent is fantasy, though?

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  • From Peter Stewart@21:1/5 to Paulo Ricardo Canedo on Mon May 2 12:10:41 2022
    On 02-May-22 11:31 AM, Paulo Ricardo Canedo wrote:
    A domingo, 1 de maio de 2022 à(s) 23:16:47 UTC+1, pss...@optusnet.com.au escreveu:
    On 02-May-22 2:31 AM, Paulo Ricardo Canedo wrote:
    A domingo, 1 de maio de 2022 à(s) 10:11:32 UTC+1, Trent Hatten escreveu: >>>> On Wednesday, April 27, 2022 at 12:28:03 PM UTC-5, taf wrote:
    On Tuesday, April 26, 2022 at 11:04:41 AM UTC-7, taf wrote:
    On Monday, April 25, 2022 at 8:38:45 PM UTC-7, Trent Hatten wrote: >>>>>>
    I have tons of questions, actually. I've been researching my family tree for about 3 years, and I think my family may be the last descendants in the male line.
    I think I know where you are going with this and I have to warn you, there are probably at least three problematic/unsupported genealogical links that underly this conclusion.

    Lest it be unclear to people new to this area why I am saying this, the three problematic connections I had in mind are:

    1) the suppositition that the Nigel who was father of baron WIlliam fitz Nigel was the same man as Neel de St Sauveur. This is just a name's-the-same identification, without solid foundation, and not accepted by any recent scholars I am aware of.
    Nigel, father of William, is a mysterious person, entirely undocumented except in his son's patronymic.

    2) that the Hatton founder was brother of Nigel, WIlliam's father. This claim is based on a monastic foundation myth that reports that the father of William was accompanied from Normandy by five brothers. One of these, Wulfatus, in later
    genealogies morfed into an entirely undocumented Wolfric de Hatton, founder of the Hatton family. There seems to be no authentic history here, particularly given that the five claimed brothers of Nigel all bore Anglo-Saxon names (i.e. they were native
    men, presumably early landholders under the Norman William fitz Nigel)

    3) that the Hattons descend from Wolfric. The earliest versions of the pedigrees connecting to 'Wolfric' make that man father of William de Hatton, who died almost 150 later (subsequently modified by insertion of additional generations). This seems
    to just be a made up connection, to attach the later family to the Wulfatus of the monastic foundation legend (not there associated with Hatton).

    I could add another one, but have insufficient information to evaluate the situation.

    4) that the poster's Hatten family descends in the male line from the Hatton lords, which I take to be the basis of the proposed male-line descent. The senior male line of the Hattons went extinct at the start of the 14th century, and though most
    of these families produced lines from younger sons, these lines are usually poorly documented, and the presumption that a later person with a similar surname must have descended from the earlier landed family of the same name is unsafe, to say the least.

    taf
    I am certainly not trying to falsely establish a connection. I have spent hundreds of hours researching the history, and I do admi I'm still no where near a definitive conclusion. I am confident that I have perused the paternal line all the way back
    to Malahuc, the Uncle of Rollo. I have found several instances that the family changed their name. I am simply asking for help, and this is a purely personal/academic journey!
    We don't know Rollo's parentage, so any claim that they were descended from a paternal uncle of his named Mahaluc (I never heard of such an uncle of Rollo in any of his supposed parentages, BTW), is fantasy.
    The name is Malahulc, and the source stating that he was a paternal
    uncle of Rollo is an interpolation by Orderic in William of Jumièges'
    _Gesta Normannorum ducum_ ("Rogerius Toenites de stirpe Malahulcii, qui
    Rollonis ducis patruus fuerat"). Since Orderic did not name any brother
    of Malahulc, this of course does not help in identifying Rollo's father.

    As for a line of agnatic descent from Malahulc - assuming he was
    correctly described in the 12th century - for any family other than the
    Tosnys, to whom Orderic drew the bare connection, I don't know of a source. >>
    Peter Stewart



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    This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
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    Wouldn't you agree the descent is fantasy, though?

    If you mean the descent from Malahulc to Saint-Sauveur, this appears to
    be a fantasy of English busy-bodies and genealogists-for-hire such as
    John Pym Yeatman (whose works I never consult without a nose-peg handy)
    hawking "ancient" bloodlines to gullible patrons or for pretentious
    wannabes. There was no shortage of these nuisances in the 19th century.
    His claim that Malahulc was also known as "Halduc de Tresney" is rotten garbage.

    If you mean the agnatic descent stated by Orderic from Malahulc to the
    Tosny family, I have no reason to doubt that this was accepted as true
    in the 12th century and probably for a long time before it was briefly documented. The story seems quite plausible to me, accounting for the
    special status of the early Tosny family and the otherwise mysterious
    promotion by Rollo's son William of their kinsman Hugo from a mere monk
    at Saint-Denis to be archbishop of Rouen in 942. The objection that the
    name Hugo indicates the man must have been a Frank rather than a Norman
    is - frankly - barking: Rollo was baptised as Robert, we don't know any
    pagan name for his son William, and Hugo was another Frankish magnate's
    name very likely to have been given to a convert. Hostages were
    freqently exchanged between Normans and Franks, as well as captives
    taken, and I see no particular difficulty with a grandson of Rollo's
    uncle being educated as a monk at Saint-Denis.

    Peter Stewart

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Peter Stewart@21:1/5 to Peter Stewart on Mon May 2 14:48:08 2022
    On 02-May-22 12:10 PM, Peter Stewart wrote:
    On 02-May-22 11:31 AM, Paulo Ricardo Canedo wrote:
    A domingo, 1 de maio de 2022 à(s) 23:16:47 UTC+1,
    pss...@optusnet.com.au escreveu:
    On 02-May-22 2:31 AM, Paulo Ricardo Canedo wrote:
    A domingo, 1 de maio de 2022 à(s) 10:11:32 UTC+1, Trent Hatten
    escreveu:
    On Wednesday, April 27, 2022 at 12:28:03 PM UTC-5, taf wrote:
    On Tuesday, April 26, 2022 at 11:04:41 AM UTC-7, taf wrote:
    On Monday, April 25, 2022 at 8:38:45 PM UTC-7, Trent Hatten wrote: >>>>>>>
    I have tons of questions, actually. I've been researching my
    family tree for about 3 years, and I think my family may be the >>>>>>>> last descendants in the male line.
    I think I know where you are going with this and I have to warn
    you, there are probably at least three problematic/unsupported
    genealogical links that underly this conclusion.

    Lest it be unclear to people new to this area why I am saying
    this, the three problematic connections I had in mind are:

    1) the suppositition that the Nigel who was father of baron
    WIlliam fitz Nigel was the same man as Neel de St Sauveur. This is >>>>>> just a name's-the-same identification, without solid foundation,
    and not accepted by any recent scholars I am aware of. Nigel,
    father of William, is a mysterious person, entirely undocumented
    except in his son's patronymic.

    2) that the Hatton founder was brother of Nigel, WIlliam's father. >>>>>> This claim is based on a monastic foundation myth that reports
    that the father of William was accompanied from Normandy by five
    brothers. One of these, Wulfatus, in later genealogies morfed into >>>>>> an entirely undocumented Wolfric de Hatton, founder of the Hatton
    family. There seems to be no authentic history here, particularly
    given that the five claimed brothers of Nigel all bore Anglo-Saxon >>>>>> names (i.e. they were native men, presumably early landholders
    under the Norman William fitz Nigel)

    3) that the Hattons descend from Wolfric. The earliest versions of >>>>>> the pedigrees connecting to 'Wolfric' make that man father of
    William de Hatton, who died almost 150 later (subsequently
    modified by insertion of additional generations). This seems to
    just be a made up connection, to attach the later family to the
    Wulfatus of the monastic foundation legend (not there associated
    with Hatton).

    I could add another one, but have insufficient information to
    evaluate the situation.

    4) that the poster's Hatten family descends in the male line from
    the Hatton lords, which I take to be the basis of the proposed
    male-line descent. The senior male line of the Hattons went
    extinct at the start of the 14th century, and though most of these >>>>>> families produced lines from younger sons, these lines are usually >>>>>> poorly documented, and the presumption that a later person with a
    similar surname must have descended from the earlier landed family >>>>>> of the same name is unsafe, to say the least.

    taf
    I am certainly not trying to falsely establish a connection. I have
    spent hundreds of hours researching the history, and I do admi I'm
    still no where near a definitive conclusion. I am confident that I
    have perused the paternal line all the way back to Malahuc, the
    Uncle of Rollo. I have found several instances that the family
    changed their name. I am simply asking for help, and this is a
    purely personal/academic journey!
    We don't know Rollo's parentage, so any claim that they were
    descended from a paternal uncle of his named Mahaluc (I never heard
    of such an uncle of Rollo in any of his supposed parentages, BTW),
    is fantasy.
    The name is Malahulc, and the source stating that he was a paternal
    uncle of Rollo is an interpolation by Orderic in William of Jumièges'
    _Gesta Normannorum ducum_ ("Rogerius Toenites de stirpe Malahulcii, qui
    Rollonis ducis patruus fuerat"). Since Orderic did not name any brother
    of Malahulc, this of course does not help in identifying Rollo's father. >>>
    As for a line of agnatic descent from Malahulc - assuming he was
    correctly described in the 12th century - for any family other than the
    Tosnys, to whom Orderic drew the bare connection, I don't know of a
    source.

    Peter Stewart



    --
    This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
    https://www.avg.com
    Wouldn't you agree the descent is fantasy, though?

    If you mean the descent from Malahulc to Saint-Sauveur, this appears to
    be a fantasy of English busy-bodies and genealogists-for-hire such as
    John Pym Yeatman (whose works I never consult without a nose-peg handy) hawking "ancient" bloodlines to gullible patrons or for pretentious
    wannabes. There was no shortage of these nuisances in the 19th century.
    His claim that Malahulc was also known as "Halduc de Tresney" is rotten garbage.

    This "Tresney" garbage may have originated from a life of William I by
    Sir John Hayward published in 1613, where he called Roger de Tosny
    "Roger Tresuye" - at any rate, that is the earliest approximation I can
    find to name Yeatman misrepresented as belonging to Rollo's uncle and a
    variant of Tosny (p. 73 of the book cited upthread by Todd: "The
    chronicle of Normandy states that another name of this uncle was Halduc
    de Tresney, another form of the name Toesni").

    Citing "The chronicle of Normandy" is a shameless imposture even by
    Yeatman's self-serving standards.

    Peter Stewart

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Peter Stewart@21:1/5 to Peter Stewart on Mon May 2 15:25:03 2022
    On 02-May-22 2:48 PM, Peter Stewart wrote:
    On 02-May-22 12:10 PM, Peter Stewart wrote:
    On 02-May-22 11:31 AM, Paulo Ricardo Canedo wrote:
    A domingo, 1 de maio de 2022 à(s) 23:16:47 UTC+1,
    pss...@optusnet.com.au escreveu:
    On 02-May-22 2:31 AM, Paulo Ricardo Canedo wrote:
    A domingo, 1 de maio de 2022 à(s) 10:11:32 UTC+1, Trent Hatten
    escreveu:
    On Wednesday, April 27, 2022 at 12:28:03 PM UTC-5, taf wrote:
    On Tuesday, April 26, 2022 at 11:04:41 AM UTC-7, taf wrote:
    On Monday, April 25, 2022 at 8:38:45 PM UTC-7, Trent Hatten wrote: >>>>>>>>
    I have tons of questions, actually. I've been researching my >>>>>>>>> family tree for about 3 years, and I think my family may be the >>>>>>>>> last descendants in the male line.
    I think I know where you are going with this and I have to warn >>>>>>>> you, there are probably at least three problematic/unsupported >>>>>>>> genealogical links that underly this conclusion.

    Lest it be unclear to people new to this area why I am saying
    this, the three problematic connections I had in mind are:

    1) the suppositition that the Nigel who was father of baron
    WIlliam fitz Nigel was the same man as Neel de St Sauveur. This
    is just a name's-the-same identification, without solid
    foundation, and not accepted by any recent scholars I am aware
    of. Nigel, father of William, is a mysterious person, entirely
    undocumented except in his son's patronymic.

    2) that the Hatton founder was brother of Nigel, WIlliam's
    father. This claim is based on a monastic foundation myth that
    reports that the father of William was accompanied from Normandy >>>>>>> by five brothers. One of these, Wulfatus, in later genealogies
    morfed into an entirely undocumented Wolfric de Hatton, founder
    of the Hatton family. There seems to be no authentic history
    here, particularly given that the five claimed brothers of Nigel >>>>>>> all bore Anglo-Saxon names (i.e. they were native men, presumably >>>>>>> early landholders under the Norman William fitz Nigel)

    3) that the Hattons descend from Wolfric. The earliest versions
    of the pedigrees connecting to 'Wolfric' make that man father of >>>>>>> William de Hatton, who died almost 150 later (subsequently
    modified by insertion of additional generations). This seems to
    just be a made up connection, to attach the later family to the
    Wulfatus of the monastic foundation legend (not there associated >>>>>>> with Hatton).

    I could add another one, but have insufficient information to
    evaluate the situation.

    4) that the poster's Hatten family descends in the male line from >>>>>>> the Hatton lords, which I take to be the basis of the proposed
    male-line descent. The senior male line of the Hattons went
    extinct at the start of the 14th century, and though most of
    these families produced lines from younger sons, these lines are >>>>>>> usually poorly documented, and the presumption that a later
    person with a similar surname must have descended from the
    earlier landed family of the same name is unsafe, to say the least. >>>>>>>
    taf
    I am certainly not trying to falsely establish a connection. I
    have spent hundreds of hours researching the history, and I do
    admi I'm still no where near a definitive conclusion. I am
    confident that I have perused the paternal line all the way back
    to Malahuc, the Uncle of Rollo. I have found several instances
    that the family changed their name. I am simply asking for help,
    and this is a purely personal/academic journey!
    We don't know Rollo's parentage, so any claim that they were
    descended from a paternal uncle of his named Mahaluc (I never heard
    of such an uncle of Rollo in any of his supposed parentages, BTW),
    is fantasy.
    The name is Malahulc, and the source stating that he was a paternal
    uncle of Rollo is an interpolation by Orderic in William of Jumièges' >>>> _Gesta Normannorum ducum_ ("Rogerius Toenites de stirpe Malahulcii, qui >>>> Rollonis ducis patruus fuerat"). Since Orderic did not name any brother >>>> of Malahulc, this of course does not help in identifying Rollo's
    father.

    As for a line of agnatic descent from Malahulc - assuming he was
    correctly described in the 12th century - for any family other than the >>>> Tosnys, to whom Orderic drew the bare connection, I don't know of a
    source.

    Peter Stewart



    --
    This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
    https://www.avg.com
    Wouldn't you agree the descent is fantasy, though?

    If you mean the descent from Malahulc to Saint-Sauveur, this appears
    to be a fantasy of English busy-bodies and genealogists-for-hire such
    as John Pym Yeatman (whose works I never consult without a nose-peg
    handy) hawking "ancient" bloodlines to gullible patrons or for
    pretentious wannabes. There was no shortage of these nuisances in the
    19th century. His claim that Malahulc was also known as "Halduc de
    Tresney" is rotten garbage.

    This "Tresney" garbage may have originated from a life of William I by
    Sir John Hayward published in 1613, where he called Roger de Tosny
    "Roger Tresuye" - at any rate, that is the earliest approximation I can
    find to name Yeatman misrepresented as belonging to Rollo's uncle and a variant of Tosny (p. 73 of the book cited upthread by Todd: "The
    chronicle of Normandy states that another name of this uncle was Halduc
    de Tresney, another form of the name Toesni").

    To be clearer, Roger de Tosny is named "Roger Tresuye" in the 1613
    edition of Hayward's life (here: https://books.google.com.au/books?id=qC08AAAAcAAJ&pg=PA12), but Yeatman
    more probably came across the name as "Tresny" in an edition from 1809
    (here: https://books.google.com.au/books?id=MMY_AAAAcAAJ&pg=PA443).

    Peter Stewart

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Paulo Ricardo Canedo@21:1/5 to All on Mon May 2 08:13:33 2022
    A segunda-feira, 2 de maio de 2022 à(s) 03:10:45 UTC+1, pss...@optusnet.com.au escreveu:
    On 02-May-22 11:31 AM, Paulo Ricardo Canedo wrote:
    A domingo, 1 de maio de 2022 à(s) 23:16:47 UTC+1, pss...@optusnet.com.au escreveu:
    On 02-May-22 2:31 AM, Paulo Ricardo Canedo wrote:
    A domingo, 1 de maio de 2022 à(s) 10:11:32 UTC+1, Trent Hatten escreveu:
    On Wednesday, April 27, 2022 at 12:28:03 PM UTC-5, taf wrote:
    On Tuesday, April 26, 2022 at 11:04:41 AM UTC-7, taf wrote:
    On Monday, April 25, 2022 at 8:38:45 PM UTC-7, Trent Hatten wrote: >>>>>>
    I have tons of questions, actually. I've been researching my family tree for about 3 years, and I think my family may be the last descendants in the male line.
    I think I know where you are going with this and I have to warn you, there are probably at least three problematic/unsupported genealogical links that underly this conclusion.

    Lest it be unclear to people new to this area why I am saying this, the three problematic connections I had in mind are:

    1) the suppositition that the Nigel who was father of baron WIlliam fitz Nigel was the same man as Neel de St Sauveur. This is just a name's-the-same identification, without solid foundation, and not accepted by any recent scholars I am aware of.
    Nigel, father of William, is a mysterious person, entirely undocumented except in his son's patronymic.

    2) that the Hatton founder was brother of Nigel, WIlliam's father. This claim is based on a monastic foundation myth that reports that the father of William was accompanied from Normandy by five brothers. One of these, Wulfatus, in later
    genealogies morfed into an entirely undocumented Wolfric de Hatton, founder of the Hatton family. There seems to be no authentic history here, particularly given that the five claimed brothers of Nigel all bore Anglo-Saxon names (i.e. they were native
    men, presumably early landholders under the Norman William fitz Nigel)

    3) that the Hattons descend from Wolfric. The earliest versions of the pedigrees connecting to 'Wolfric' make that man father of William de Hatton, who died almost 150 later (subsequently modified by insertion of additional generations). This
    seems to just be a made up connection, to attach the later family to the Wulfatus of the monastic foundation legend (not there associated with Hatton).

    I could add another one, but have insufficient information to evaluate the situation.

    4) that the poster's Hatten family descends in the male line from the Hatton lords, which I take to be the basis of the proposed male-line descent. The senior male line of the Hattons went extinct at the start of the 14th century, and though most
    of these families produced lines from younger sons, these lines are usually poorly documented, and the presumption that a later person with a similar surname must have descended from the earlier landed family of the same name is unsafe, to say the least.

    taf
    I am certainly not trying to falsely establish a connection. I have spent hundreds of hours researching the history, and I do admi I'm still no where near a definitive conclusion. I am confident that I have perused the paternal line all the way
    back to Malahuc, the Uncle of Rollo. I have found several instances that the family changed their name. I am simply asking for help, and this is a purely personal/academic journey!
    We don't know Rollo's parentage, so any claim that they were descended from a paternal uncle of his named Mahaluc (I never heard of such an uncle of Rollo in any of his supposed parentages, BTW), is fantasy.
    The name is Malahulc, and the source stating that he was a paternal
    uncle of Rollo is an interpolation by Orderic in William of Jumièges'
    _Gesta Normannorum ducum_ ("Rogerius Toenites de stirpe Malahulcii, qui >> Rollonis ducis patruus fuerat"). Since Orderic did not name any brother >> of Malahulc, this of course does not help in identifying Rollo's father. >>
    As for a line of agnatic descent from Malahulc - assuming he was
    correctly described in the 12th century - for any family other than the >> Tosnys, to whom Orderic drew the bare connection, I don't know of a source.

    Peter Stewart



    --
    This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
    https://www.avg.com
    Wouldn't you agree the descent is fantasy, though?
    If you mean the descent from Malahulc to Saint-Sauveur, this appears to
    be a fantasy of English busy-bodies and genealogists-for-hire such as
    John Pym Yeatman (whose works I never consult without a nose-peg handy) hawking "ancient" bloodlines to gullible patrons or for pretentious wannabes. There was no shortage of these nuisances in the 19th century.
    His claim that Malahulc was also known as "Halduc de Tresney" is rotten garbage.

    If you mean the agnatic descent stated by Orderic from Malahulc to the
    Tosny family, I have no reason to doubt that this was accepted as true
    in the 12th century and probably for a long time before it was briefly documented. The story seems quite plausible to me, accounting for the special status of the early Tosny family and the otherwise mysterious promotion by Rollo's son William of their kinsman Hugo from a mere monk
    at Saint-Denis to be archbishop of Rouen in 942. The objection that the
    name Hugo indicates the man must have been a Frank rather than a Norman
    is - frankly - barking: Rollo was baptised as Robert, we don't know any pagan name for his son William, and Hugo was another Frankish magnate's
    name very likely to have been given to a convert. Hostages were
    freqently exchanged between Normans and Franks, as well as captives
    taken, and I see no particular difficulty with a grandson of Rollo's
    uncle being educated as a monk at Saint-Denis.

    Peter Stewart
    Thanks for this, Peter.
    I was refering to the Saint-Sauveur descent.
    I am surprised to learn that the Tosny descent is plausible.

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