• Descent from Antiquity for Arnulf of Metz

    From Paulo Ricardo Canedo@21:1/5 to All on Fri Jul 1 18:50:21 2022
    Arnulf of Metz is the earliest documented male line ancestor of Charlemagne. In the late 90s, http://erwan.gil.free.fr/modules/freepages/pharaons/ramses_II.pdf, which discussed a descent from Antiquity through the Armenian route also mentioned an
    alternate descent from Antiquity for Arnulf of Metz from Antiochus II of Syria through Galatian and Roman nobility
    "Generation 1 1. St. Arnulf of Metz, maiordomus in the kingdom of Austrasia (c.582–16.8.640). He married Dode (–?–), daughter of Arnold of Schelde, after 611.
    Generation 2 2. Bodogisel, ambassador to Byzantium in 589.
    Generation 3 4. Mummolin, maiordomus in 566 in Neustria.
    Generation 4 9. NN. married to Munderic.
    Generation 5 19. Artemie, married in 513to Florentinus, bishop of Geneve. Generation 6 38. Rustique, bishop of Lyon between 494 and 501
    Generation 7 76. Rurice de Limoges, bishop of Limoges c. 485-507
    Generation 8 152. NN.
    Generation 9 304. Adelphius.
    Generation 10 609. Anicia, married to Pontius.
    Generation 11 1219. Turrenia Anicia Iuliana, married to Quintus Clodius Hermogenianus Olybrius, consul in 379.
    Generation 12 2438. Anicius Auchenius Bassus, prefect in 382 in Rome, mar￾ried to Turrenia Honorata.
    Generation 13 4876. Amnius Manius Cæsonius Nicomachus Anicius Paulinus Honorius, consul in 334.
    Generation 14 9752. Amnius Anicius Iulianus, consul in 322.
    Generation 15 19504. Sextus Anicius Faustus, consul in 298.
    Generation 16 39009. Asinia Iuliana Nichomacha, married to Quintus Ani￾cius Faustus.
    Generation 17 78018. Caius Asinius Nicomachus Iulianus, proconsul in Asia
    circa 250.
    Generation 18 15603. Caius Asinius Quadratus Protimus, proconsul in A￾khaia circa 220.Generation 19 312072. Caius Asinius Quadratus, historian, c. 200.
    Generation 20 624144. Caius Iulius Asinius Quadratus.

    Generation 21 1248288. Caius Iulius Quadratus Bassus, consul in 105, mar￾ried to Asinia Marcella.
    Generation 22 2496576. Caius Iulius Bassus, proconsul in Bithynia, 98. Generation 23 4993152. Caius Iulius Severus, nobleman from Akmoneia in
    Galatia.
    Generation 24 9986304. Artemidoros, nobleman in Galatia.
    Generation 25 19972608. Amyntas, tetrarcus of Trocmes.
    Generation 26 39945217. NN., married to Brogitarix, king of Galatia c. 63–50 b.C.
    Generation 27 79890435. Berenike, married to Deiotarix I, king of Galatia, 63–41 b.C.
    Generation 28 159780871. NN. (daughter).
    Generation 29 319561742. Attalos Philometor III, king of Pergamon, 138–133 b.C.
    Generation 30 639123485. Stratonike of Kappadokia, married to Eumenes,
    king of Pergamon, 197–159 b.C.
    Generation 31 1278246970. Ariarathes IV Eusebes Philopator, king of Cap￾padokia, 220–163b.C.
    Generation 32 2556493941. Stratonike, married to Ariarathes III.
    Generation 33 5112987882. Antiochos II Theos I, king of Syria, 261–246 b.C., b. 290 b.C"
    What do you think of this possible descent from Antiquity? It bypasses the problems of the Armenian route but certainly has its own problems.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From pj.evans88@gmail.com@21:1/5 to Paulo Ricardo Canedo on Fri Jul 1 19:43:56 2022
    On Friday, July 1, 2022 at 6:50:22 PM UTC-7, Paulo Ricardo Canedo wrote:
    Arnulf of Metz is the earliest documented male line ancestor of Charlemagne. In the late 90s, http://erwan.gil.free.fr/modules/freepages/pharaons/ramses_II.pdf, which discussed a descent from Antiquity through the Armenian route also mentioned an
    alternate descent from Antiquity for Arnulf of Metz from Antiochus II of Syria through Galatian and Roman nobility
    "Generation 1 1. St. Arnulf of Metz, maiordomus in the kingdom of Austrasia (c.582–16.8.640). He married Dode (–?–), daughter of Arnold of Schelde,
    after 611.
    Generation 2 2. Bodogisel, ambassador to Byzantium in 589.
    Generation 3 4. Mummolin, maiordomus in 566 in Neustria.
    Generation 4 9. NN. married to Munderic.
    Generation 5 19. Artemie, married in 513to Florentinus, bishop of Geneve. Generation 6 38. Rustique, bishop of Lyon between 494 and 501
    Generation 7 76. Rurice de Limoges, bishop of Limoges c. 485-507
    Generation 8 152. NN.
    Generation 9 304. Adelphius.
    Generation 10 609. Anicia, married to Pontius.
    Generation 11 1219. Turrenia Anicia Iuliana, married to Quintus Clodius Hermogenianus Olybrius, consul in 379.
    Generation 12 2438. Anicius Auchenius Bassus, prefect in 382 in Rome, mar�ried to Turrenia Honorata.
    Generation 13 4876. Amnius Manius Cæsonius Nicomachus Anicius Paulinus Honorius, consul in 334.
    Generation 14 9752. Amnius Anicius Iulianus, consul in 322.
    Generation 15 19504. Sextus Anicius Faustus, consul in 298.
    Generation 16 39009. Asinia Iuliana Nichomacha, married to Quintus Ani�cius Faustus.
    Generation 17 78018. Caius Asinius Nicomachus Iulianus, proconsul in Asia circa 250.
    Generation 18 15603. Caius Asinius Quadratus Protimus, proconsul in A�khaia circa 220.Generation 19 312072. Caius Asinius Quadratus, historian, c. 200.
    Generation 20 624144. Caius Iulius Asinius Quadratus.

    Generation 21 1248288. Caius Iulius Quadratus Bassus, consul in 105, mar�ried to Asinia Marcella.
    Generation 22 2496576. Caius Iulius Bassus, proconsul in Bithynia, 98. Generation 23 4993152. Caius Iulius Severus, nobleman from Akmoneia in Galatia.
    Generation 24 9986304. Artemidoros, nobleman in Galatia.
    Generation 25 19972608. Amyntas, tetrarcus of Trocmes.
    Generation 26 39945217. NN., married to Brogitarix, king of Galatia c. 63–50
    b.C.
    Generation 27 79890435. Berenike, married to Deiotarix I, king of Galatia, 63–41 b.C.
    Generation 28 159780871. NN. (daughter).
    Generation 29 319561742. Attalos Philometor III, king of Pergamon, 138–133 b.C.
    Generation 30 639123485. Stratonike of Kappadokia, married to Eumenes,
    king of Pergamon, 197–159 b.C.
    Generation 31 1278246970. Ariarathes IV Eusebes Philopator, king of Cap�padokia, 220–163b.C.
    Generation 32 2556493941. Stratonike, married to Ariarathes III.
    Generation 33 5112987882. Antiochos II Theos I, king of Syria, 261–246 b.C.,
    b. 290 b.C"
    What do you think of this possible descent from Antiquity? It bypasses the problems of the Armenian route but certainly has its own problems.

    I think generations 2 through 9 are going to require evidence that probably doesn't exist. (And I wouldn't bet on generation 10, either.)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Will Johnson@21:1/5 to Will Johnson on Mon Jul 11 07:41:09 2022
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:37:23 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote:
    Well we *do* know that Florentius and "Artemie" existed, although her name is usually given as Armentaria. These were the parents of the famous writer Gregory of Tours.

    For the closer generation, this is copied from "Munderic", Wikipedia "He married a daughter of Florentinus (born 485), a Roman senator, and his wife Artemia, daughter of Rusticus of Lyon. They were the parents of Gondulphus of Tongeren and Mummolin,
    possibly mayor of the palace of Neustria.[citation needed]"

    Not that citation needed at the end. That means this is questioned by someone (anyone) and a citation must be provided to prove that it's not a modern invention.

    It's curious that the history of this article mentions with a bit of disdain "a Portuguese genealogist...." I wonder who that could be scattering these nuggets about?

    Now David Kelley does mention this person Munderic, and why he might have had some kind of claim to something here

    http://fmg.ac/phocadownload/userupload/foundations1/issue6/425Nibelung.pdf

    Note there is no mention of any wife, which you think if some wife were the *sister* of a quite famous author might be worth mentioning.

    Since anyone can (and everyone should) strike passages marked citation needed from Wikipedia. I have done so. There is apparently no evidence (within say a thousand years of the event) that Munderic was connected to the family of Gregory of Tours. *
    Regardless* of what a thousand online family trees have gleefully copied. And suspect sites like Geni and Wikitree have followed along like blind hungry dogs, may they die of fleas.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Will Johnson@21:1/5 to Will Johnson on Mon Jul 11 07:55:11 2022
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:41:11 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:37:23 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote:
    Well we *do* know that Florentius and "Artemie" existed, although her name is usually given as Armentaria. These were the parents of the famous writer Gregory of Tours.

    For the closer generation, this is copied from "Munderic", Wikipedia "He married a daughter of Florentinus (born 485), a Roman senator, and his wife Artemia, daughter of Rusticus of Lyon. They were the parents of Gondulphus of Tongeren and Mummolin,
    possibly mayor of the palace of Neustria.[citation needed]"

    Not that citation needed at the end. That means this is questioned by someone (anyone) and a citation must be provided to prove that it's not a modern invention.

    It's curious that the history of this article mentions with a bit of disdain "a Portuguese genealogist...." I wonder who that could be scattering these nuggets about?

    Now David Kelley does mention this person Munderic, and why he might have had some kind of claim to something here

    http://fmg.ac/phocadownload/userupload/foundations1/issue6/425Nibelung.pdf

    Note there is no mention of any wife, which you think if some wife were the *sister* of a quite famous author might be worth mentioning.
    Since anyone can (and everyone should) strike passages marked citation needed from Wikipedia. I have done so. There is apparently no evidence (within say a thousand years of the event) that Munderic was connected to the family of Gregory of Tours. *
    Regardless* of what a thousand online family trees have gleefully copied. And suspect sites like Geni and Wikitree have followed along like blind hungry dogs, may they die of fleas.

    I will also point out, that Since Gregory of Tours wrote a long, extensive, history of this time period, you might *think* that he would have mentioned, in his paragraph about Munderic, that the man was his own brother-in-law, if he were.

    Clearly this is a modern, very lame, fabrication.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Will Johnson@21:1/5 to All on Mon Jul 11 07:37:21 2022
    Well we *do* know that Florentius and "Artemie" existed, although her name is usually given as Armentaria. These were the parents of the famous writer Gregory of Tours.

    For the closer generation, this is copied from "Munderic", Wikipedia "He married a daughter of Florentinus (born 485), a Roman senator, and his wife Artemia, daughter of Rusticus of Lyon. They were the parents of Gondulphus of Tongeren and Mummolin,
    possibly mayor of the palace of Neustria.[citation needed]"

    Not that citation needed at the end. That means this is questioned by someone (anyone) and a citation must be provided to prove that it's not a modern invention.

    It's curious that the history of this article mentions with a bit of disdain "a Portuguese genealogist...." I wonder who that could be scattering these nuggets about?

    Now David Kelley does mention this person Munderic, and why he might have had some kind of claim to something here

    http://fmg.ac/phocadownload/userupload/foundations1/issue6/425Nibelung.pdf

    Note there is no mention of any wife, which you think if some wife were the *sister* of a quite famous author might be worth mentioning.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Peter Stewart@21:1/5 to Will Johnson on Tue Jul 12 14:24:34 2022
    On 12-Jul-22 12:55 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:41:11 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:37:23 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote:
    Well we *do* know that Florentius and "Artemie" existed, although her name is usually given as Armentaria. These were the parents of the famous writer Gregory of Tours.

    For the closer generation, this is copied from "Munderic", Wikipedia "He married a daughter of Florentinus (born 485), a Roman senator, and his wife Artemia, daughter of Rusticus of Lyon. They were the parents of Gondulphus of Tongeren and Mummolin,
    possibly mayor of the palace of Neustria.[citation needed]"

    Not that citation needed at the end. That means this is questioned by someone (anyone) and a citation must be provided to prove that it's not a modern invention.

    It's curious that the history of this article mentions with a bit of disdain "a Portuguese genealogist...." I wonder who that could be scattering these nuggets about?

    Now David Kelley does mention this person Munderic, and why he might have had some kind of claim to something here

    http://fmg.ac/phocadownload/userupload/foundations1/issue6/425Nibelung.pdf >>>
    Note there is no mention of any wife, which you think if some wife were the *sister* of a quite famous author might be worth mentioning.
    Since anyone can (and everyone should) strike passages marked citation needed from Wikipedia. I have done so. There is apparently no evidence (within say a thousand years of the event) that Munderic was connected to the family of Gregory of Tours. *
    Regardless* of what a thousand online family trees have gleefully copied. And suspect sites like Geni and Wikitree have followed along like blind hungry dogs, may they die of fleas.

    I will also point out, that Since Gregory of Tours wrote a long, extensive, history of this time period, you might *think* that he would have mentioned, in his paragraph about Munderic, that the man was his own brother-in-law, if he were.

    Clearly this is a modern, very lame, fabrication.

    It may be considered lame and even a fabrication, but it is not modern -
    your idea of 1,000 years after the event is out by roughly 500.

    The genealogy in question was included in a lost 12th- or perhaps
    13th-century copy of the late-10th century Vita of St Servatius written
    by Jocundus, which includes a digression about St Gundulf. The latter
    was allegedly the 22nd bishop of Tongeren and described as "filius
    deplorati Munderici" (son of the lamented Munderic). There is a legend,
    based on an inscription that can be interpreted in other ways, according
    to which Gundulf and his predecessor miraculously attended the
    dedication of Charlemagne's palace church at Aachen around two centuries
    after they had died.

    As for what Gregory of Tours knew about his own relatives, from memory
    we are told that he did not realise until it came up in conversation
    between them that Gundulf - a Merovingian magnate who may or may not be identical with the revenant bishop - was his mother's uncle.

    Peter Stewart

    --
    This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
    https://www.avg.com

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From mike davis@21:1/5 to pss...@optusnet.com.au on Tue Jul 12 07:09:35 2022
    On Tuesday, July 12, 2022 at 5:24:40 AM UTC+1, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 12-Jul-22 12:55 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:41:11 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:37:23 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote:
    Well we *do* know that Florentius and "Artemie" existed, although her name is usually given as Armentaria. These were the parents of the famous writer Gregory of Tours.

    For the closer generation, this is copied from "Munderic", Wikipedia "He married a daughter of Florentinus (born 485), a Roman senator, and his wife Artemia, daughter of Rusticus of Lyon. They were the parents of Gondulphus of Tongeren and Mummolin,
    possibly mayor of the palace of Neustria.[citation needed]"

    Not that citation needed at the end. That means this is questioned by someone (anyone) and a citation must be provided to prove that it's not a modern invention.

    It's curious that the history of this article mentions with a bit of disdain "a Portuguese genealogist...." I wonder who that could be scattering these nuggets about?

    Now David Kelley does mention this person Munderic, and why he might have had some kind of claim to something here

    http://fmg.ac/phocadownload/userupload/foundations1/issue6/425Nibelung.pdf

    Note there is no mention of any wife, which you think if some wife were the *sister* of a quite famous author might be worth mentioning.
    Since anyone can (and everyone should) strike passages marked citation needed from Wikipedia. I have done so. There is apparently no evidence (within say a thousand years of the event) that Munderic was connected to the family of Gregory of Tours. *
    Regardless* of what a thousand online family trees have gleefully copied. And suspect sites like Geni and Wikitree have followed along like blind hungry dogs, may they die of fleas.

    I will also point out, that Since Gregory of Tours wrote a long, extensive, history of this time period, you might *think* that he would have mentioned, in his paragraph about Munderic, that the man was his own brother-in-law, if he were.

    Clearly this is a modern, very lame, fabrication.
    It may be considered lame and even a fabrication, but it is not modern - your idea of 1,000 years after the event is out by roughly 500.

    The genealogy in question was included in a lost 12th- or perhaps 13th-century copy of the late-10th century Vita of St Servatius written
    by Jocundus, which includes a digression about St Gundulf. The latter
    was allegedly the 22nd bishop of Tongeren and described as "filius
    deplorati Munderici" (son of the lamented Munderic). There is a legend, based on an inscription that can be interpreted in other ways, according
    to which Gundulf and his predecessor miraculously attended the
    dedication of Charlemagne's palace church at Aachen around two centuries after they had died.

    is this the same source that names Bodogisel as St.Arnulfs father?

    Is this source preferred over Paul the deacon who wrote about
    the bishops of Metz much earlier in the late 8th? Not that I'm saying
    his version is the correct one, cos all the stories about St.Arnulfs
    origins have problems, but according to the net Gundulf doesnt
    appear in the bishops lists for Tongres.

    it seems well accepted that Ansegisel was St.Arnulf's son, but I
    notice that in many sources for this, it is spelt Anchisus, the name
    of the father of Aeneas. I can see that Ansegis-Anchisus are similar,
    so is Ansegisel not a frankish name but a take on a trojan hero?
    There was a legend that the Franks were descended from the trojans,
    and some bishops are called Aeneas and even Dido.

    Mike

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Will Johnson@21:1/5 to pss...@optusnet.com.au on Tue Jul 12 10:37:20 2022
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 9:24:40 PM UTC-7, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 12-Jul-22 12:55 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:41:11 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:37:23 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote:
    Well we *do* know that Florentius and "Artemie" existed, although her name is usually given as Armentaria. These were the parents of the famous writer Gregory of Tours.

    For the closer generation, this is copied from "Munderic", Wikipedia "He married a daughter of Florentinus (born 485), a Roman senator, and his wife Artemia, daughter of Rusticus of Lyon. They were the parents of Gondulphus of Tongeren and Mummolin,
    possibly mayor of the palace of Neustria.[citation needed]"

    Not that citation needed at the end. That means this is questioned by someone (anyone) and a citation must be provided to prove that it's not a modern invention.

    It's curious that the history of this article mentions with a bit of disdain "a Portuguese genealogist...." I wonder who that could be scattering these nuggets about?

    Now David Kelley does mention this person Munderic, and why he might have had some kind of claim to something here

    http://fmg.ac/phocadownload/userupload/foundations1/issue6/425Nibelung.pdf

    Note there is no mention of any wife, which you think if some wife were the *sister* of a quite famous author might be worth mentioning.
    Since anyone can (and everyone should) strike passages marked citation needed from Wikipedia. I have done so. There is apparently no evidence (within say a thousand years of the event) that Munderic was connected to the family of Gregory of Tours. *
    Regardless* of what a thousand online family trees have gleefully copied. And suspect sites like Geni and Wikitree have followed along like blind hungry dogs, may they die of fleas.

    I will also point out, that Since Gregory of Tours wrote a long, extensive, history of this time period, you might *think* that he would have mentioned, in his paragraph about Munderic, that the man was his own brother-in-law, if he were.

    Clearly this is a modern, very lame, fabrication.
    It may be considered lame and even a fabrication, but it is not modern - your idea of 1,000 years after the event is out by roughly 500.

    The genealogy in question was included in a lost 12th- or perhaps 13th-century copy of the late-10th century Vita of St Servatius written
    by Jocundus, which includes a digression about St Gundulf. The latter
    was allegedly the 22nd bishop of Tongeren and described as "filius
    deplorati Munderici" (son of the lamented Munderic). There is a legend, based on an inscription that can be interpreted in other ways, according
    to which Gundulf and his predecessor miraculously attended the
    dedication of Charlemagne's palace church at Aachen around two centuries after they had died.

    As for what Gregory of Tours knew about his own relatives, from memory
    we are told that he did not realise until it came up in conversation
    between them that Gundulf - a Merovingian magnate who may or may not be identical with the revenant bishop - was his mother's uncle.

    Peter Stewart

    --
    This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
    https://www.avg.com

    I'm not sure how St Gundulf being a son of Munderic (if he was), is related to the question of Munderic being the brother-in-law of Gregory of Tours, which is how we get these errorneous parents for Munderic's wife.

    My point was that this unnamed wife of Munderic did not have these parents.
    Not whether Munderic had any children.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Peter Stewart@21:1/5 to Will Johnson on Wed Jul 13 09:38:35 2022
    On 13-Jul-22 3:37 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 9:24:40 PM UTC-7, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 12-Jul-22 12:55 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:41:11 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:37:23 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote:
    Well we *do* know that Florentius and "Artemie" existed, although her name is usually given as Armentaria. These were the parents of the famous writer Gregory of Tours.

    For the closer generation, this is copied from "Munderic", Wikipedia "He married a daughter of Florentinus (born 485), a Roman senator, and his wife Artemia, daughter of Rusticus of Lyon. They were the parents of Gondulphus of Tongeren and Mummolin,
    possibly mayor of the palace of Neustria.[citation needed]"

    Not that citation needed at the end. That means this is questioned by someone (anyone) and a citation must be provided to prove that it's not a modern invention.

    It's curious that the history of this article mentions with a bit of disdain "a Portuguese genealogist...." I wonder who that could be scattering these nuggets about?

    Now David Kelley does mention this person Munderic, and why he might have had some kind of claim to something here

    http://fmg.ac/phocadownload/userupload/foundations1/issue6/425Nibelung.pdf

    Note there is no mention of any wife, which you think if some wife were the *sister* of a quite famous author might be worth mentioning.
    Since anyone can (and everyone should) strike passages marked citation needed from Wikipedia. I have done so. There is apparently no evidence (within say a thousand years of the event) that Munderic was connected to the family of Gregory of Tours. *
    Regardless* of what a thousand online family trees have gleefully copied. And suspect sites like Geni and Wikitree have followed along like blind hungry dogs, may they die of fleas.

    I will also point out, that Since Gregory of Tours wrote a long, extensive, history of this time period, you might *think* that he would have mentioned, in his paragraph about Munderic, that the man was his own brother-in-law, if he were.

    Clearly this is a modern, very lame, fabrication.
    It may be considered lame and even a fabrication, but it is not modern -
    your idea of 1,000 years after the event is out by roughly 500.

    The genealogy in question was included in a lost 12th- or perhaps
    13th-century copy of the late-10th century Vita of St Servatius written
    by Jocundus, which includes a digression about St Gundulf. The latter
    was allegedly the 22nd bishop of Tongeren and described as "filius
    deplorati Munderici" (son of the lamented Munderic). There is a legend,
    based on an inscription that can be interpreted in other ways, according
    to which Gundulf and his predecessor miraculously attended the
    dedication of Charlemagne's palace church at Aachen around two centuries
    after they had died.

    As for what Gregory of Tours knew about his own relatives, from memory
    we are told that he did not realise until it came up in conversation
    between them that Gundulf - a Merovingian magnate who may or may not be
    identical with the revenant bishop - was his mother's uncle.

    Peter Stewart

    --
    This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
    https://www.avg.com

    I'm not sure how St Gundulf being a son of Munderic (if he was), is related to the question of Munderic being the brother-in-law of Gregory of Tours, which is how we get these errorneous parents for Munderic's wife.

    My point was that this unnamed wife of Munderic did not have these parents. Not whether Munderic had any children.

    I was replying to your top-quoted statement "There is apparently no
    evidence (within say a thousand years of the event) that Munderic was
    connected to the family of Gregory of Tours". I don't think Gregory's grand-uncle Gundulf can be safely identified with the namesake bishop of Tongeren, but many do.

    When a thread consists of a welter of brief opinions, it is easier to
    reply to the latest one encompassing earlier postings rather than plod
    through several. SGM readers are not all laser-focused on the last thing
    you said.

    Peter Stewart

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Peter Stewart@21:1/5 to mike davis on Wed Jul 13 11:27:21 2022
    On 13-Jul-22 12:09 AM, mike davis wrote:
    On Tuesday, July 12, 2022 at 5:24:40 AM UTC+1, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 12-Jul-22 12:55 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:41:11 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:37:23 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote:
    Well we *do* know that Florentius and "Artemie" existed, although her name is usually given as Armentaria. These were the parents of the famous writer Gregory of Tours.

    For the closer generation, this is copied from "Munderic", Wikipedia "He married a daughter of Florentinus (born 485), a Roman senator, and his wife Artemia, daughter of Rusticus of Lyon. They were the parents of Gondulphus of Tongeren and Mummolin,
    possibly mayor of the palace of Neustria.[citation needed]"

    Not that citation needed at the end. That means this is questioned by someone (anyone) and a citation must be provided to prove that it's not a modern invention.

    It's curious that the history of this article mentions with a bit of disdain "a Portuguese genealogist...." I wonder who that could be scattering these nuggets about?

    Now David Kelley does mention this person Munderic, and why he might have had some kind of claim to something here

    http://fmg.ac/phocadownload/userupload/foundations1/issue6/425Nibelung.pdf

    Note there is no mention of any wife, which you think if some wife were the *sister* of a quite famous author might be worth mentioning.
    Since anyone can (and everyone should) strike passages marked citation needed from Wikipedia. I have done so. There is apparently no evidence (within say a thousand years of the event) that Munderic was connected to the family of Gregory of Tours. *
    Regardless* of what a thousand online family trees have gleefully copied. And suspect sites like Geni and Wikitree have followed along like blind hungry dogs, may they die of fleas.

    I will also point out, that Since Gregory of Tours wrote a long, extensive, history of this time period, you might *think* that he would have mentioned, in his paragraph about Munderic, that the man was his own brother-in-law, if he were.

    Clearly this is a modern, very lame, fabrication.
    It may be considered lame and even a fabrication, but it is not modern -
    your idea of 1,000 years after the event is out by roughly 500.

    The genealogy in question was included in a lost 12th- or perhaps
    13th-century copy of the late-10th century Vita of St Servatius written
    by Jocundus, which includes a digression about St Gundulf. The latter
    was allegedly the 22nd bishop of Tongeren and described as "filius
    deplorati Munderici" (son of the lamented Munderic). There is a legend,
    based on an inscription that can be interpreted in other ways, according
    to which Gundulf and his predecessor miraculously attended the
    dedication of Charlemagne's palace church at Aachen around two centuries
    after they had died.

    is this the same source that names Bodogisel as St.Arnulfs father?

    No, the earliest form of the Bodegisel paternity is a genealogy from Saint-Wandrille abbey in which the name occurs as 'Buotgisus', here
    (III, line 24) https://www.dmgh.de/mgh_ss_13/index.htm#page/246/mode/1up.

    Is this source preferred over Paul the deacon who wrote about
    the bishops of Metz much earlier in the late 8th? Not that I'm saying
    his version is the correct one, cos all the stories about St.Arnulfs
    origins have problems, but according to the net Gundulf doesnt
    appear in the bishops lists for Tongres.

    Some have doubted the existence of St Gundulf, others that he should be identified with the grand-uncle of Gregory of Tours.

    it seems well accepted that Ansegisel was St.Arnulf's son, but I
    notice that in many sources for this, it is spelt Anchisus, the name
    of the father of Aeneas. I can see that Ansegis-Anchisus are similar,
    so is Ansegisel not a frankish name but a take on a trojan hero?
    There was a legend that the Franks were descended from the trojans,
    and some bishops are called Aeneas and even Dido.

    This was discussed by Gerhard Lubich in 'Die Namen Ansegis(el),
    Anschis(us) und Anchises im Kontext der Karolingergenealogien und der fränkischen Geschichtsschreibung' (2014), available here: https://www.namenkundliche-informationen.de/baende/download/13443/id13442/.

    Peter Stewart


    --
    This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
    https://www.avg.com

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  • From mike davis@21:1/5 to pss...@optusnet.com.au on Wed Jul 13 05:08:27 2022
    On Wednesday, July 13, 2022 at 2:27:27 AM UTC+1, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 13-Jul-22 12:09 AM, mike davis wrote:
    On Tuesday, July 12, 2022 at 5:24:40 AM UTC+1, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 12-Jul-22 12:55 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:41:11 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:37:23 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote:
    Well we *do* know that Florentius and "Artemie" existed, although her name is usually given as Armentaria. These were the parents of the famous writer Gregory of Tours.

    For the closer generation, this is copied from "Munderic", Wikipedia "He married a daughter of Florentinus (born 485), a Roman senator, and his wife Artemia, daughter of Rusticus of Lyon. They were the parents of Gondulphus of Tongeren and
    Mummolin, possibly mayor of the palace of Neustria.[citation needed]"

    Not that citation needed at the end. That means this is questioned by someone (anyone) and a citation must be provided to prove that it's not a modern invention.

    It's curious that the history of this article mentions with a bit of disdain "a Portuguese genealogist...." I wonder who that could be scattering these nuggets about?

    Now David Kelley does mention this person Munderic, and why he might have had some kind of claim to something here

    http://fmg.ac/phocadownload/userupload/foundations1/issue6/425Nibelung.pdf

    Note there is no mention of any wife, which you think if some wife were the *sister* of a quite famous author might be worth mentioning.
    Since anyone can (and everyone should) strike passages marked citation needed from Wikipedia. I have done so. There is apparently no evidence (within say a thousand years of the event) that Munderic was connected to the family of Gregory of Tours.
    *Regardless* of what a thousand online family trees have gleefully copied. And suspect sites like Geni and Wikitree have followed along like blind hungry dogs, may they die of fleas.

    I will also point out, that Since Gregory of Tours wrote a long, extensive, history of this time period, you might *think* that he would have mentioned, in his paragraph about Munderic, that the man was his own brother-in-law, if he were.

    Clearly this is a modern, very lame, fabrication.
    It may be considered lame and even a fabrication, but it is not modern - >> your idea of 1,000 years after the event is out by roughly 500.

    The genealogy in question was included in a lost 12th- or perhaps
    13th-century copy of the late-10th century Vita of St Servatius written >> by Jocundus, which includes a digression about St Gundulf. The latter
    was allegedly the 22nd bishop of Tongeren and described as "filius
    deplorati Munderici" (son of the lamented Munderic). There is a legend, >> based on an inscription that can be interpreted in other ways, according >> to which Gundulf and his predecessor miraculously attended the
    dedication of Charlemagne's palace church at Aachen around two centuries >> after they had died.

    is this the same source that names Bodogisel as St.Arnulfs father?
    No, the earliest form of the Bodegisel paternity is a genealogy from Saint-Wandrille abbey in which the name occurs as 'Buotgisus', here
    (III, line 24) https://www.dmgh.de/mgh_ss_13/index.htm#page/246/mode/1up.

    AIUI Depoin favoured Bodegisel version becos Arnulf was a Frank, and a descent from
    Munderic gave the Carolingians a link to the former Ripuarian Frankish kings. I think
    Charlemagnes 'personal law' was the Ripuarian Code. Theres no proof to this descent,
    but at least its a coherent argument, but giving Munderic gallo roman parents destroys the point of the whole theory.

    I notice that on the same page as the link is the start of the more famous version which
    on p247 has:

    Clothar [II] begat Dagobert [I] & Blithild
    Bilichild begat Arnald with Ansbert illustrious man
    Arnald begat Arnulf later Bp of Metz
    Arnulf begat Flodulf, Walchisus & Ansegis
    Ansegis begat lord Pippin with Begga daughter of Pippin the Mayor

    This seems a short version of the longer 2 genealogies found on p245.
    I'm not sure from the intro becos its all in latin, exactly which text they
    are referring to, but 1 is called the Commemoratio Karoli dated c813 [or maybe a bit later under Louis the Pious] and hailing from Wissembourg in Alsace, I think,
    but the oldest text is from St Gall. The other is the longer Commemoratio Arnulfi,
    presumably later but the longer version is a fabrication, Pertz and Bonnell agree,
    from Fontenelle, St.Wandrille, well I think it says that in the footnotes.

    I notice they all make Walchisus the father of Wandregisel [St.Wandrille]
    into another son of St.Arnulf, whereas I think all his vita just say 2 sons.
    So do they think the origin was Fontenelle becos of the Walchisus addition
    or is there some other reason?

    However I notice they all mispell Clodulf of Metz with an F. Is this another reason they think that these all come from the same source? It seems a
    strange error to make as Clodulf was quite well known to the carolingian writers I would have thought.

    'Flodulf' is said to be the father of Martin sometimes called Duke of Laon on the net who was Pippin IIs ally at Lucofao and it says was murdered at the palace of Ecry by Mayor Ebroin.

    I believe that becos 1 of these genealogies gives Ansbert a son called Firminius,
    Settipani or someone else connects this 'senatorial family' with that of Tonnantius
    Ferreolus [d479] who was a real person in history.

    Is this source preferred over Paul the deacon who wrote about
    the bishops of Metz much earlier in the late 8th? Not that I'm saying
    his version is the correct one, cos all the stories about St.Arnulfs origins have problems, but according to the net Gundulf doesnt
    appear in the bishops lists for Tongres.
    Some have doubted the existence of St Gundulf, others that he should be identified with the grand-uncle of Gregory of Tours.
    it seems well accepted that Ansegisel was St.Arnulf's son, but I
    notice that in many sources for this, it is spelt Anchisus, the name
    of the father of Aeneas. I can see that Ansegis-Anchisus are similar,
    so is Ansegisel not a frankish name but a take on a trojan hero?
    There was a legend that the Franks were descended from the trojans,
    and some bishops are called Aeneas and even Dido.
    This was discussed by Gerhard Lubich in 'Die Namen Ansegis(el),
    Anschis(us) und Anchises im Kontext der Karolingergenealogien und der fränkischen Geschichtsschreibung' (2014), available here: https://www.namenkundliche-informationen.de/baende/download/13443/id13442/. Peter Stewart

    I only understood the abstract:

    The first Carolingian genealogy Commemoratio Karoli names one Anschisus
    as father of Pepin (“of Herstal”), thus connecting the Carolingians with the antique
    myth of Troy – Aeneas’ father was named Anschises and Rome. In a later version
    of the same genealogy, Commemoratio Arnulfi, this same person is mentioned with his
    germanic spelling Ansegis(el) as the son of Arnulf of Metz, with whom the genealogy begins, placing the family in the context of the Frankish aristocracy.
    The article focuses on these mechanisms as well as on their relations to Carolingian
    self-perception and their perception in 9th century historiography.]

    It seems clear though that these genealogies and other evidence in texts of a similar
    nature should be regarded as pieces of literature and not historical evidence, at least
    I think thats what the author says or someone called Oexle. But the fact alone that
    the original authors could take a germanic name Ansegisel and conjure up a Trojan connection shows their intentions, if I'm not being too cynical.

    Mike

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From mike davis@21:1/5 to mike davis on Wed Jul 13 05:13:41 2022
    On Wednesday, July 13, 2022 at 1:08:29 PM UTC+1, mike davis wrote:
    On Wednesday, July 13, 2022 at 2:27:27 AM UTC+1, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 13-Jul-22 12:09 AM, mike davis wrote:
    This was discussed by Gerhard Lubich in 'Die Namen Ansegis(el), Anschis(us) und Anchises im Kontext der Karolingergenealogien und der fränkischen Geschichtsschreibung' (2014), available here: https://www.namenkundliche-informationen.de/baende/download/13443/id13442/.
    Peter Stewart

    I only understood the abstract:

    i should have made this clear i was quoting this section
    The first Carolingian genealogy Commemoratio Karoli names one Anschisus
    as father of Pepin (“of Herstal”), thus connecting the Carolingians with the antique
    myth of Troy – Aeneas’ father was named Anschises and Rome. In a later version
    of the same genealogy, Commemoratio Arnulfi, this same person is mentioned with his
    germanic spelling Ansegis(el) as the son of Arnulf of Metz, with whom the genealogy begins, placing the family in the context of the Frankish aristocracy.
    The article focuses on these mechanisms as well as on their relations to Carolingian
    self-perception and their perception in 9th century historiography.]

    quote ends

    It seems clear though that these genealogies and other evidence in texts of a similar
    nature should be regarded as pieces of literature and not historical evidence, at least
    I think thats what the author says or someone called Oexle. But the fact alone that
    the original authors could take a germanic name Ansegisel and conjure up a Trojan connection shows their intentions, if I'm not being too cynical.

    Mike

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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  • From Will Johnson@21:1/5 to pss...@optusnet.com.au on Wed Jul 13 07:27:47 2022
    On Tuesday, July 12, 2022 at 4:38:40 PM UTC-7, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 13-Jul-22 3:37 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 9:24:40 PM UTC-7, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 12-Jul-22 12:55 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:41:11 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:37:23 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote:
    Well we *do* know that Florentius and "Artemie" existed, although her name is usually given as Armentaria. These were the parents of the famous writer Gregory of Tours.

    For the closer generation, this is copied from "Munderic", Wikipedia "He married a daughter of Florentinus (born 485), a Roman senator, and his wife Artemia, daughter of Rusticus of Lyon. They were the parents of Gondulphus of Tongeren and
    Mummolin, possibly mayor of the palace of Neustria.[citation needed]"

    Not that citation needed at the end. That means this is questioned by someone (anyone) and a citation must be provided to prove that it's not a modern invention.

    It's curious that the history of this article mentions with a bit of disdain "a Portuguese genealogist...." I wonder who that could be scattering these nuggets about?

    Now David Kelley does mention this person Munderic, and why he might have had some kind of claim to something here

    http://fmg.ac/phocadownload/userupload/foundations1/issue6/425Nibelung.pdf

    Note there is no mention of any wife, which you think if some wife were the *sister* of a quite famous author might be worth mentioning.
    Since anyone can (and everyone should) strike passages marked citation needed from Wikipedia. I have done so. There is apparently no evidence (within say a thousand years of the event) that Munderic was connected to the family of Gregory of Tours.
    *Regardless* of what a thousand online family trees have gleefully copied. And suspect sites like Geni and Wikitree have followed along like blind hungry dogs, may they die of fleas.

    I will also point out, that Since Gregory of Tours wrote a long, extensive, history of this time period, you might *think* that he would have mentioned, in his paragraph about Munderic, that the man was his own brother-in-law, if he were.

    Clearly this is a modern, very lame, fabrication.
    It may be considered lame and even a fabrication, but it is not modern - >> your idea of 1,000 years after the event is out by roughly 500.

    The genealogy in question was included in a lost 12th- or perhaps
    13th-century copy of the late-10th century Vita of St Servatius written >> by Jocundus, which includes a digression about St Gundulf. The latter
    was allegedly the 22nd bishop of Tongeren and described as "filius
    deplorati Munderici" (son of the lamented Munderic). There is a legend, >> based on an inscription that can be interpreted in other ways, according >> to which Gundulf and his predecessor miraculously attended the
    dedication of Charlemagne's palace church at Aachen around two centuries >> after they had died.

    As for what Gregory of Tours knew about his own relatives, from memory
    we are told that he did not realise until it came up in conversation
    between them that Gundulf - a Merovingian magnate who may or may not be >> identical with the revenant bishop - was his mother's uncle.

    Peter Stewart

    --
    This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
    https://www.avg.com

    I'm not sure how St Gundulf being a son of Munderic (if he was), is related to the question of Munderic being the brother-in-law of Gregory of Tours, which is how we get these errorneous parents for Munderic's wife.

    My point was that this unnamed wife of Munderic did not have these parents.
    Not whether Munderic had any children.
    I was replying to your top-quoted statement "There is apparently no
    evidence (within say a thousand years of the event) that Munderic was connected to the family of Gregory of Tours". I don't think Gregory's grand-uncle Gundulf can be safely identified with the namesake bishop of Tongeren, but many do.

    When a thread consists of a welter of brief opinions, it is easier to
    reply to the latest one encompassing earlier postings rather than plod through several. SGM readers are not all laser-focused on the last thing
    you said.

    Peter Stewart

    When you say "grand-uncle...."
    This reconstruction

    http://fmg.ac/phocadownload/userupload/foundations1/issue6/425Nibelung.pdf

    puts St Gundulf as the son of Munderic, and cannot possibly be a grand-uncle to Gregory who lived before him

    Did you mean to say that some people say that St Gundulf was the nephew to Gregory?
    And therefore the only possibility is that Munderic married Gregory's sister? That?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Peter Stewart@21:1/5 to Will Johnson on Thu Jul 14 08:22:23 2022
    On 14-Jul-22 12:27 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Tuesday, July 12, 2022 at 4:38:40 PM UTC-7, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 13-Jul-22 3:37 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 9:24:40 PM UTC-7, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote: >>>> On 12-Jul-22 12:55 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:41:11 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:37:23 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote: >>>>>>> Well we *do* know that Florentius and "Artemie" existed, although her name is usually given as Armentaria. These were the parents of the famous writer Gregory of Tours.

    For the closer generation, this is copied from "Munderic", Wikipedia "He married a daughter of Florentinus (born 485), a Roman senator, and his wife Artemia, daughter of Rusticus of Lyon. They were the parents of Gondulphus of Tongeren and
    Mummolin, possibly mayor of the palace of Neustria.[citation needed]"

    Not that citation needed at the end. That means this is questioned by someone (anyone) and a citation must be provided to prove that it's not a modern invention.

    It's curious that the history of this article mentions with a bit of disdain "a Portuguese genealogist...." I wonder who that could be scattering these nuggets about?

    Now David Kelley does mention this person Munderic, and why he might have had some kind of claim to something here

    http://fmg.ac/phocadownload/userupload/foundations1/issue6/425Nibelung.pdf

    Note there is no mention of any wife, which you think if some wife were the *sister* of a quite famous author might be worth mentioning.
    Since anyone can (and everyone should) strike passages marked citation needed from Wikipedia. I have done so. There is apparently no evidence (within say a thousand years of the event) that Munderic was connected to the family of Gregory of Tours.
    *Regardless* of what a thousand online family trees have gleefully copied. And suspect sites like Geni and Wikitree have followed along like blind hungry dogs, may they die of fleas.

    I will also point out, that Since Gregory of Tours wrote a long, extensive, history of this time period, you might *think* that he would have mentioned, in his paragraph about Munderic, that the man was his own brother-in-law, if he were.

    Clearly this is a modern, very lame, fabrication.
    It may be considered lame and even a fabrication, but it is not modern - >>>> your idea of 1,000 years after the event is out by roughly 500.

    The genealogy in question was included in a lost 12th- or perhaps
    13th-century copy of the late-10th century Vita of St Servatius written >>>> by Jocundus, which includes a digression about St Gundulf. The latter
    was allegedly the 22nd bishop of Tongeren and described as "filius
    deplorati Munderici" (son of the lamented Munderic). There is a legend, >>>> based on an inscription that can be interpreted in other ways, according >>>> to which Gundulf and his predecessor miraculously attended the
    dedication of Charlemagne's palace church at Aachen around two centuries >>>> after they had died.

    As for what Gregory of Tours knew about his own relatives, from memory >>>> we are told that he did not realise until it came up in conversation
    between them that Gundulf - a Merovingian magnate who may or may not be >>>> identical with the revenant bishop - was his mother's uncle.

    Peter Stewart

    --
    This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
    https://www.avg.com

    I'm not sure how St Gundulf being a son of Munderic (if he was), is related to the question of Munderic being the brother-in-law of Gregory of Tours, which is how we get these errorneous parents for Munderic's wife.

    My point was that this unnamed wife of Munderic did not have these parents. >>> Not whether Munderic had any children.
    I was replying to your top-quoted statement "There is apparently no
    evidence (within say a thousand years of the event) that Munderic was
    connected to the family of Gregory of Tours". I don't think Gregory's
    grand-uncle Gundulf can be safely identified with the namesake bishop of
    Tongeren, but many do.

    When a thread consists of a welter of brief opinions, it is easier to
    reply to the latest one encompassing earlier postings rather than plod
    through several. SGM readers are not all laser-focused on the last thing
    you said.

    Peter Stewart

    When you say "grand-uncle...."
    This reconstruction

    http://fmg.ac/phocadownload/userupload/foundations1/issue6/425Nibelung.pdf

    puts St Gundulf as the son of Munderic, and cannot possibly be a grand-uncle to Gregory who lived before him

    Did you mean to say that some people say that St Gundulf was the nephew to Gregory?
    And therefore the only possibility is that Munderic married Gregory's sister? That?

    No, I meant what I wrote.

    For someone who ticks off posters for linking to websites without
    specifics, citing a turgid screed by David Kelley as if it has enough
    value to take up readers' time is rather dicey. You do realise that the
    helpful materials for medieval genealogy are diplomatic, narrative and
    other primary sources rather than scatter-brained modern opinions -
    don't you?

    Last week I attended the funeral of a cousin whose aunt had been present
    at her 90th birthday party some years ago: generations do not follow
    strict chronological rules, of course, and even by Kelley's datings it
    is possible for St Gundulf (whose birth he placed ca 524) to have been
    the grand-uncle of Gregory (who was born ca 538, not exactly the latter
    living before the former by my rudimentary arithmetic). How is it
    plausible to you that Gregory's sister was married to a man said to have
    been murdered ca 532?

    Peter Stewart

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Will Johnson@21:1/5 to pss...@optusnet.com.au on Wed Jul 13 16:29:12 2022
    On Wednesday, July 13, 2022 at 3:22:29 PM UTC-7, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 14-Jul-22 12:27 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Tuesday, July 12, 2022 at 4:38:40 PM UTC-7, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 13-Jul-22 3:37 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 9:24:40 PM UTC-7, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 12-Jul-22 12:55 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:41:11 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote: >>>>>> On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:37:23 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote: >>>>>>> Well we *do* know that Florentius and "Artemie" existed, although her name is usually given as Armentaria. These were the parents of the famous writer Gregory of Tours.

    For the closer generation, this is copied from "Munderic", Wikipedia "He married a daughter of Florentinus (born 485), a Roman senator, and his wife Artemia, daughter of Rusticus of Lyon. They were the parents of Gondulphus of Tongeren and
    Mummolin, possibly mayor of the palace of Neustria.[citation needed]"

    Not that citation needed at the end. That means this is questioned by someone (anyone) and a citation must be provided to prove that it's not a modern invention.

    It's curious that the history of this article mentions with a bit of disdain "a Portuguese genealogist...." I wonder who that could be scattering these nuggets about?

    Now David Kelley does mention this person Munderic, and why he might have had some kind of claim to something here

    http://fmg.ac/phocadownload/userupload/foundations1/issue6/425Nibelung.pdf

    Note there is no mention of any wife, which you think if some wife were the *sister* of a quite famous author might be worth mentioning.
    Since anyone can (and everyone should) strike passages marked citation needed from Wikipedia. I have done so. There is apparently no evidence (within say a thousand years of the event) that Munderic was connected to the family of Gregory of
    Tours. *Regardless* of what a thousand online family trees have gleefully copied. And suspect sites like Geni and Wikitree have followed along like blind hungry dogs, may they die of fleas.

    I will also point out, that Since Gregory of Tours wrote a long, extensive, history of this time period, you might *think* that he would have mentioned, in his paragraph about Munderic, that the man was his own brother-in-law, if he were.

    Clearly this is a modern, very lame, fabrication.
    It may be considered lame and even a fabrication, but it is not modern -
    your idea of 1,000 years after the event is out by roughly 500.

    The genealogy in question was included in a lost 12th- or perhaps
    13th-century copy of the late-10th century Vita of St Servatius written >>>> by Jocundus, which includes a digression about St Gundulf. The latter >>>> was allegedly the 22nd bishop of Tongeren and described as "filius
    deplorati Munderici" (son of the lamented Munderic). There is a legend, >>>> based on an inscription that can be interpreted in other ways, according
    to which Gundulf and his predecessor miraculously attended the
    dedication of Charlemagne's palace church at Aachen around two centuries
    after they had died.

    As for what Gregory of Tours knew about his own relatives, from memory >>>> we are told that he did not realise until it came up in conversation >>>> between them that Gundulf - a Merovingian magnate who may or may not be >>>> identical with the revenant bishop - was his mother's uncle.

    Peter Stewart

    --
    This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
    https://www.avg.com

    I'm not sure how St Gundulf being a son of Munderic (if he was), is related to the question of Munderic being the brother-in-law of Gregory of Tours, which is how we get these errorneous parents for Munderic's wife.

    My point was that this unnamed wife of Munderic did not have these parents.
    Not whether Munderic had any children.
    I was replying to your top-quoted statement "There is apparently no
    evidence (within say a thousand years of the event) that Munderic was
    connected to the family of Gregory of Tours". I don't think Gregory's
    grand-uncle Gundulf can be safely identified with the namesake bishop of >> Tongeren, but many do.

    When a thread consists of a welter of brief opinions, it is easier to
    reply to the latest one encompassing earlier postings rather than plod
    through several. SGM readers are not all laser-focused on the last thing >> you said.

    Peter Stewart

    When you say "grand-uncle...."
    This reconstruction

    http://fmg.ac/phocadownload/userupload/foundations1/issue6/425Nibelung.pdf

    puts St Gundulf as the son of Munderic, and cannot possibly be a grand-uncle to Gregory who lived before him

    Did you mean to say that some people say that St Gundulf was the nephew to Gregory?
    And therefore the only possibility is that Munderic married Gregory's sister?
    That?
    No, I meant what I wrote.

    For someone who ticks off posters for linking to websites without
    specifics, citing a turgid screed by David Kelley as if it has enough
    value to take up readers' time is rather dicey. You do realise that the helpful materials for medieval genealogy are diplomatic, narrative and
    other primary sources rather than scatter-brained modern opinions -
    don't you?

    Last week I attended the funeral of a cousin whose aunt had been present
    at her 90th birthday party some years ago: generations do not follow
    strict chronological rules, of course, and even by Kelley's datings it
    is possible for St Gundulf (whose birth he placed ca 524) to have been
    the grand-uncle of Gregory (who was born ca 538, not exactly the latter living before the former by my rudimentary arithmetic). How is it
    plausible to you that Gregory's sister was married to a man said to have been murdered ca 532?

    Peter Stewart

    I never said it was plausible.
    My own argument is that if the man was Gregory's own brother in law he would certainly have known it and stated it when discussing Munderic. yet he didn't

    I'm not posting David Kelley's work because I think it's true or plausible
    Only that it exists, discusses this point, and has a chronological table, even if mostly guesswork
    So it's a useful item, even if it's entirely incorrect

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  • From Peter Stewart@21:1/5 to Will Johnson on Thu Jul 14 09:54:14 2022
    On 14-Jul-22 9:29 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Wednesday, July 13, 2022 at 3:22:29 PM UTC-7, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 14-Jul-22 12:27 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Tuesday, July 12, 2022 at 4:38:40 PM UTC-7, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 13-Jul-22 3:37 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 9:24:40 PM UTC-7, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 12-Jul-22 12:55 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:41:11 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote: >>>>>>>> On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:37:23 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote: >>>>>>>>> Well we *do* know that Florentius and "Artemie" existed, although her name is usually given as Armentaria. These were the parents of the famous writer Gregory of Tours.

    For the closer generation, this is copied from "Munderic", Wikipedia "He married a daughter of Florentinus (born 485), a Roman senator, and his wife Artemia, daughter of Rusticus of Lyon. They were the parents of Gondulphus of Tongeren and
    Mummolin, possibly mayor of the palace of Neustria.[citation needed]"

    Not that citation needed at the end. That means this is questioned by someone (anyone) and a citation must be provided to prove that it's not a modern invention.

    It's curious that the history of this article mentions with a bit of disdain "a Portuguese genealogist...." I wonder who that could be scattering these nuggets about?

    Now David Kelley does mention this person Munderic, and why he might have had some kind of claim to something here

    http://fmg.ac/phocadownload/userupload/foundations1/issue6/425Nibelung.pdf

    Note there is no mention of any wife, which you think if some wife were the *sister* of a quite famous author might be worth mentioning.
    Since anyone can (and everyone should) strike passages marked citation needed from Wikipedia. I have done so. There is apparently no evidence (within say a thousand years of the event) that Munderic was connected to the family of Gregory of
    Tours. *Regardless* of what a thousand online family trees have gleefully copied. And suspect sites like Geni and Wikitree have followed along like blind hungry dogs, may they die of fleas.

    I will also point out, that Since Gregory of Tours wrote a long, extensive, history of this time period, you might *think* that he would have mentioned, in his paragraph about Munderic, that the man was his own brother-in-law, if he were.

    Clearly this is a modern, very lame, fabrication.
    It may be considered lame and even a fabrication, but it is not modern - >>>>>> your idea of 1,000 years after the event is out by roughly 500.

    The genealogy in question was included in a lost 12th- or perhaps
    13th-century copy of the late-10th century Vita of St Servatius written >>>>>> by Jocundus, which includes a digression about St Gundulf. The latter >>>>>> was allegedly the 22nd bishop of Tongeren and described as "filius >>>>>> deplorati Munderici" (son of the lamented Munderic). There is a legend, >>>>>> based on an inscription that can be interpreted in other ways, according >>>>>> to which Gundulf and his predecessor miraculously attended the
    dedication of Charlemagne's palace church at Aachen around two centuries >>>>>> after they had died.

    As for what Gregory of Tours knew about his own relatives, from memory >>>>>> we are told that he did not realise until it came up in conversation >>>>>> between them that Gundulf - a Merovingian magnate who may or may not be >>>>>> identical with the revenant bishop - was his mother's uncle.

    Peter Stewart

    --
    This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
    https://www.avg.com

    I'm not sure how St Gundulf being a son of Munderic (if he was), is related to the question of Munderic being the brother-in-law of Gregory of Tours, which is how we get these errorneous parents for Munderic's wife.

    My point was that this unnamed wife of Munderic did not have these parents.
    Not whether Munderic had any children.
    I was replying to your top-quoted statement "There is apparently no
    evidence (within say a thousand years of the event) that Munderic was
    connected to the family of Gregory of Tours". I don't think Gregory's
    grand-uncle Gundulf can be safely identified with the namesake bishop of >>>> Tongeren, but many do.

    When a thread consists of a welter of brief opinions, it is easier to
    reply to the latest one encompassing earlier postings rather than plod >>>> through several. SGM readers are not all laser-focused on the last thing >>>> you said.

    Peter Stewart

    When you say "grand-uncle...."
    This reconstruction

    http://fmg.ac/phocadownload/userupload/foundations1/issue6/425Nibelung.pdf >>>
    puts St Gundulf as the son of Munderic, and cannot possibly be a grand-uncle to Gregory who lived before him

    Did you mean to say that some people say that St Gundulf was the nephew to Gregory?
    And therefore the only possibility is that Munderic married Gregory's sister?
    That?
    No, I meant what I wrote.

    For someone who ticks off posters for linking to websites without
    specifics, citing a turgid screed by David Kelley as if it has enough
    value to take up readers' time is rather dicey. You do realise that the
    helpful materials for medieval genealogy are diplomatic, narrative and
    other primary sources rather than scatter-brained modern opinions -
    don't you?

    Last week I attended the funeral of a cousin whose aunt had been present
    at her 90th birthday party some years ago: generations do not follow
    strict chronological rules, of course, and even by Kelley's datings it
    is possible for St Gundulf (whose birth he placed ca 524) to have been
    the grand-uncle of Gregory (who was born ca 538, not exactly the latter
    living before the former by my rudimentary arithmetic). How is it
    plausible to you that Gregory's sister was married to a man said to have
    been murdered ca 532?

    Peter Stewart

    I never said it was plausible.
    My own argument is that if the man was Gregory's own brother in law he would certainly have known it and stated it when discussing Munderic. yet he didn't

    So when you write "And therefore the only possibility is ..." we are not
    to take this as indicating you consider the thing plausible? How then
    are we to make worthwhile sense of anything you post?

    I'm not posting David Kelley's work because I think it's true or plausible Only that it exists, discusses this point, and has a chronological table, even if mostly guesswork
    So it's a useful item, even if it's entirely incorrect

    A vast number of websites that you dismiss outright do just as much. An
    item is not useful just because it is available if the object is getting
    at what can be proved rather than merely what can be supposed.

    And anyway, if Kelley's chronology is thought useful why ignore it to
    regard Gregory as living before Gundulf?

    If you took a little more time and trouble - as you admonish others for
    not doing - before posting you may be read with more patient interest by
    SGM participants.

    Peter Stewart

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  • From Peter Stewart@21:1/5 to mike davis on Thu Jul 14 10:06:44 2022
    On 13-Jul-22 10:08 PM, mike davis wrote:
    On Wednesday, July 13, 2022 at 2:27:27 AM UTC+1, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 13-Jul-22 12:09 AM, mike davis wrote:
    On Tuesday, July 12, 2022 at 5:24:40 AM UTC+1, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 12-Jul-22 12:55 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:41:11 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:37:23 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote: >>>>>>> Well we *do* know that Florentius and "Artemie" existed, although her name is usually given as Armentaria. These were the parents of the famous writer Gregory of Tours.

    For the closer generation, this is copied from "Munderic", Wikipedia "He married a daughter of Florentinus (born 485), a Roman senator, and his wife Artemia, daughter of Rusticus of Lyon. They were the parents of Gondulphus of Tongeren and
    Mummolin, possibly mayor of the palace of Neustria.[citation needed]"

    Not that citation needed at the end. That means this is questioned by someone (anyone) and a citation must be provided to prove that it's not a modern invention.

    It's curious that the history of this article mentions with a bit of disdain "a Portuguese genealogist...." I wonder who that could be scattering these nuggets about?

    Now David Kelley does mention this person Munderic, and why he might have had some kind of claim to something here

    http://fmg.ac/phocadownload/userupload/foundations1/issue6/425Nibelung.pdf

    Note there is no mention of any wife, which you think if some wife were the *sister* of a quite famous author might be worth mentioning.
    Since anyone can (and everyone should) strike passages marked citation needed from Wikipedia. I have done so. There is apparently no evidence (within say a thousand years of the event) that Munderic was connected to the family of Gregory of Tours.
    *Regardless* of what a thousand online family trees have gleefully copied. And suspect sites like Geni and Wikitree have followed along like blind hungry dogs, may they die of fleas.

    I will also point out, that Since Gregory of Tours wrote a long, extensive, history of this time period, you might *think* that he would have mentioned, in his paragraph about Munderic, that the man was his own brother-in-law, if he were.

    Clearly this is a modern, very lame, fabrication.
    It may be considered lame and even a fabrication, but it is not modern - >>>> your idea of 1,000 years after the event is out by roughly 500.

    The genealogy in question was included in a lost 12th- or perhaps
    13th-century copy of the late-10th century Vita of St Servatius written >>>> by Jocundus, which includes a digression about St Gundulf. The latter
    was allegedly the 22nd bishop of Tongeren and described as "filius
    deplorati Munderici" (son of the lamented Munderic). There is a legend, >>>> based on an inscription that can be interpreted in other ways, according >>>> to which Gundulf and his predecessor miraculously attended the
    dedication of Charlemagne's palace church at Aachen around two centuries >>>> after they had died.

    is this the same source that names Bodogisel as St.Arnulfs father?
    No, the earliest form of the Bodegisel paternity is a genealogy from
    Saint-Wandrille abbey in which the name occurs as 'Buotgisus', here
    (III, line 24) https://www.dmgh.de/mgh_ss_13/index.htm#page/246/mode/1up.

    AIUI Depoin favoured Bodegisel version becos Arnulf was a Frank, and a descent from
    Munderic gave the Carolingians a link to the former Ripuarian Frankish kings. I think
    Charlemagnes 'personal law' was the Ripuarian Code. Theres no proof to this descent,
    but at least its a coherent argument, but giving Munderic gallo roman parents destroys the point of the whole theory.

    I notice that on the same page as the link is the start of the more famous version which
    on p247 has:

    Clothar [II] begat Dagobert [I] & Blithild
    Bilichild begat Arnald with Ansbert illustrious man
    Arnald begat Arnulf later Bp of Metz
    Arnulf begat Flodulf, Walchisus & Ansegis
    Ansegis begat lord Pippin with Begga daughter of Pippin the Mayor

    This seems a short version of the longer 2 genealogies found on p245.
    I'm not sure from the intro becos its all in latin, exactly which text they are referring to, but 1 is called the Commemoratio Karoli dated c813 [or maybe
    a bit later under Louis the Pious] and hailing from Wissembourg in Alsace, I think,
    but the oldest text is from St Gall. The other is the longer Commemoratio Arnulfi,
    presumably later but the longer version is a fabrication, Pertz and Bonnell agree,
    from Fontenelle, St.Wandrille, well I think it says that in the footnotes.

    I notice they all make Walchisus the father of Wandregisel [St.Wandrille] into another son of St.Arnulf, whereas I think all his vita just say 2 sons. So do they think the origin was Fontenelle becos of the Walchisus addition
    or is there some other reason?

    However I notice they all mispell Clodulf of Metz with an F. Is this another reason they think that these all come from the same source? It seems a strange error to make as Clodulf was quite well known to the carolingian writers I would have thought.

    'Flodulf' is said to be the father of Martin sometimes called Duke of Laon on the net who was Pippin IIs ally at Lucofao and it says was murdered at the palace of Ecry by Mayor Ebroin.

    I believe that becos 1 of these genealogies gives Ansbert a son called Firminius,
    Settipani or someone else connects this 'senatorial family' with that of Tonnantius
    Ferreolus [d479] who was a real person in history.

    You may find useful discussion of some points raised here, and much
    else, in Richard Gerberding's _The rise of the Carolingians and the
    'Liber historiae Francorum'_ (Oxford, 1987) as well as in his 1977
    University of Manitoba MA thesis, 'The Arnulfings before 687: a study of
    the house of Pepin in the seventh century' (https://mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca/xmlui/handle/1993/14025).

    Peter Stewart

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  • From Peter Stewart@21:1/5 to Peter Stewart on Thu Jul 14 10:33:48 2022
    On 14-Jul-22 10:06 AM, Peter Stewart wrote:

    You may find useful discussion of some points raised here, and much
    else, in Richard Gerberding's _The rise of the Carolingians and the
    'Liber historiae Francorum'_ (Oxford, 1987) as well as in his 1977
    University of Manitoba MA thesis, 'The Arnulfings before 687: a study of
    the house of Pepin in the seventh century' (https://mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca/xmlui/handle/1993/14025).

    In case you find the 1987 book hard to get, you can download
    Gerberding's 1983 Oxford DPhil thesis _A Critical Study of the ‘Liber historiae Francorum'_ here: https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:b62a7080-8344-42a2-8234-6b3f94435429.

    Peter Stewart


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  • From Will Johnson@21:1/5 to pss...@optusnet.com.au on Wed Jul 13 17:46:36 2022
    On Wednesday, July 13, 2022 at 4:54:20 PM UTC-7, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 14-Jul-22 9:29 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Wednesday, July 13, 2022 at 3:22:29 PM UTC-7, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 14-Jul-22 12:27 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Tuesday, July 12, 2022 at 4:38:40 PM UTC-7, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 13-Jul-22 3:37 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 9:24:40 PM UTC-7, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 12-Jul-22 12:55 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:41:11 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote: >>>>>>>> On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:37:23 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote: >>>>>>>>> Well we *do* know that Florentius and "Artemie" existed, although her name is usually given as Armentaria. These were the parents of the famous writer Gregory of Tours.

    For the closer generation, this is copied from "Munderic", Wikipedia "He married a daughter of Florentinus (born 485), a Roman senator, and his wife Artemia, daughter of Rusticus of Lyon. They were the parents of Gondulphus of Tongeren and
    Mummolin, possibly mayor of the palace of Neustria.[citation needed]"

    Not that citation needed at the end. That means this is questioned by someone (anyone) and a citation must be provided to prove that it's not a modern invention.

    It's curious that the history of this article mentions with a bit of disdain "a Portuguese genealogist...." I wonder who that could be scattering these nuggets about?

    Now David Kelley does mention this person Munderic, and why he might have had some kind of claim to something here

    http://fmg.ac/phocadownload/userupload/foundations1/issue6/425Nibelung.pdf

    Note there is no mention of any wife, which you think if some wife were the *sister* of a quite famous author might be worth mentioning.
    Since anyone can (and everyone should) strike passages marked citation needed from Wikipedia. I have done so. There is apparently no evidence (within say a thousand years of the event) that Munderic was connected to the family of Gregory of
    Tours. *Regardless* of what a thousand online family trees have gleefully copied. And suspect sites like Geni and Wikitree have followed along like blind hungry dogs, may they die of fleas.

    I will also point out, that Since Gregory of Tours wrote a long, extensive, history of this time period, you might *think* that he would have mentioned, in his paragraph about Munderic, that the man was his own brother-in-law, if he were.

    Clearly this is a modern, very lame, fabrication.
    It may be considered lame and even a fabrication, but it is not modern -
    your idea of 1,000 years after the event is out by roughly 500. >>>>>>
    The genealogy in question was included in a lost 12th- or perhaps >>>>>> 13th-century copy of the late-10th century Vita of St Servatius written
    by Jocundus, which includes a digression about St Gundulf. The latter >>>>>> was allegedly the 22nd bishop of Tongeren and described as "filius >>>>>> deplorati Munderici" (son of the lamented Munderic). There is a legend,
    based on an inscription that can be interpreted in other ways, according
    to which Gundulf and his predecessor miraculously attended the
    dedication of Charlemagne's palace church at Aachen around two centuries
    after they had died.

    As for what Gregory of Tours knew about his own relatives, from memory
    we are told that he did not realise until it came up in conversation >>>>>> between them that Gundulf - a Merovingian magnate who may or may not be
    identical with the revenant bishop - was his mother's uncle.

    Peter Stewart

    --
    This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
    https://www.avg.com

    I'm not sure how St Gundulf being a son of Munderic (if he was), is related to the question of Munderic being the brother-in-law of Gregory of Tours, which is how we get these errorneous parents for Munderic's wife.

    My point was that this unnamed wife of Munderic did not have these parents.
    Not whether Munderic had any children.
    I was replying to your top-quoted statement "There is apparently no >>>> evidence (within say a thousand years of the event) that Munderic was >>>> connected to the family of Gregory of Tours". I don't think Gregory's >>>> grand-uncle Gundulf can be safely identified with the namesake bishop of
    Tongeren, but many do.

    When a thread consists of a welter of brief opinions, it is easier to >>>> reply to the latest one encompassing earlier postings rather than plod >>>> through several. SGM readers are not all laser-focused on the last thing
    you said.

    Peter Stewart

    When you say "grand-uncle...."
    This reconstruction

    http://fmg.ac/phocadownload/userupload/foundations1/issue6/425Nibelung.pdf

    puts St Gundulf as the son of Munderic, and cannot possibly be a grand-uncle to Gregory who lived before him

    Did you mean to say that some people say that St Gundulf was the nephew to Gregory?
    And therefore the only possibility is that Munderic married Gregory's sister?
    That?
    No, I meant what I wrote.

    For someone who ticks off posters for linking to websites without
    specifics, citing a turgid screed by David Kelley as if it has enough
    value to take up readers' time is rather dicey. You do realise that the >> helpful materials for medieval genealogy are diplomatic, narrative and
    other primary sources rather than scatter-brained modern opinions -
    don't you?

    Last week I attended the funeral of a cousin whose aunt had been present >> at her 90th birthday party some years ago: generations do not follow
    strict chronological rules, of course, and even by Kelley's datings it
    is possible for St Gundulf (whose birth he placed ca 524) to have been
    the grand-uncle of Gregory (who was born ca 538, not exactly the latter >> living before the former by my rudimentary arithmetic). How is it
    plausible to you that Gregory's sister was married to a man said to have >> been murdered ca 532?

    Peter Stewart

    I never said it was plausible.
    My own argument is that if the man was Gregory's own brother in law he would certainly have known it and stated it when discussing Munderic. yet he didn't
    So when you write "And therefore the only possibility is ..." we are not
    to take this as indicating you consider the thing plausible? How then
    are we to make worthwhile sense of anything you post?
    I'm not posting David Kelley's work because I think it's true or plausible Only that it exists, discusses this point, and has a chronological table, even if mostly guesswork
    So it's a useful item, even if it's entirely incorrect
    A vast number of websites that you dismiss outright do just as much. An
    item is not useful just because it is available if the object is getting
    at what can be proved rather than merely what can be supposed.

    And anyway, if Kelley's chronology is thought useful why ignore it to
    regard Gregory as living before Gundulf?

    If you took a little more time and trouble - as you admonish others for
    not doing - before posting you may be read with more patient interest by
    SGM participants.

    Peter Stewart

    When I wrote "therefore the only possibility is" I was trying to make sense out of what *you* were saying
    I was not positing any solution, only trying to interpret it.

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  • From Peter Stewart@21:1/5 to mike davis on Thu Jul 14 10:47:11 2022
    On 13-Jul-22 10:08 PM, mike davis wrote:
    On Wednesday, July 13, 2022 at 2:27:27 AM UTC+1, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:

    Is this source preferred over Paul the deacon who wrote about
    the bishops of Metz much earlier in the late 8th? Not that I'm saying
    his version is the correct one, cos all the stories about St.Arnulfs
    origins have problems, but according to the net Gundulf doesnt
    appear in the bishops lists for Tongres.
    Some have doubted the existence of St Gundulf, others that he should be
    identified with the grand-uncle of Gregory of Tours.
    it seems well accepted that Ansegisel was St.Arnulf's son, but I
    notice that in many sources for this, it is spelt Anchisus, the name
    of the father of Aeneas. I can see that Ansegis-Anchisus are similar,
    so is Ansegisel not a frankish name but a take on a trojan hero?
    There was a legend that the Franks were descended from the trojans,
    and some bishops are called Aeneas and even Dido.
    This was discussed by Gerhard Lubich in 'Die Namen Ansegis(el),
    Anschis(us) und Anchises im Kontext der Karolingergenealogien und der
    fränkischen Geschichtsschreibung' (2014), available here:
    https://www.namenkundliche-informationen.de/baende/download/13443/id13442/. >> Peter Stewart

    I only understood the abstract:

    The first Carolingian genealogy Commemoratio Karoli names one Anschisus
    as father of Pepin (“of Herstal”), thus connecting the Carolingians with the antique
    myth of Troy – Aeneas’ father was named Anschises and Rome. In a later version
    of the same genealogy, Commemoratio Arnulfi, this same person is mentioned with his
    germanic spelling Ansegis(el) as the son of Arnulf of Metz, with whom the genealogy begins, placing the family in the context of the Frankish aristocracy.
    The article focuses on these mechanisms as well as on their relations to Carolingian
    self-perception and their perception in 9th century historiography.]

    It seems clear though that these genealogies and other evidence in texts of a similar
    nature should be regarded as pieces of literature and not historical evidence, at least
    I think thats what the author says or someone called Oexle. But the fact alone that
    the original authors could take a germanic name Ansegisel and conjure up a Trojan connection shows their intentions, if I'm not being too cynical.

    Apologies, I overlooked this before - you may find useful an article on
    the subject in English https://www.academia.edu/38344808/From_Caesar_to_Charlemagne_The_Tradition_of_Trojan_Origins.

    Peter Stewart

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  • From Will Johnson@21:1/5 to pss...@optusnet.com.au on Wed Jul 13 17:48:41 2022
    On Wednesday, July 13, 2022 at 4:54:20 PM UTC-7, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 14-Jul-22 9:29 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Wednesday, July 13, 2022 at 3:22:29 PM UTC-7, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 14-Jul-22 12:27 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Tuesday, July 12, 2022 at 4:38:40 PM UTC-7, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 13-Jul-22 3:37 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 9:24:40 PM UTC-7, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 12-Jul-22 12:55 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:41:11 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote: >>>>>>>> On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:37:23 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote: >>>>>>>>> Well we *do* know that Florentius and "Artemie" existed, although her name is usually given as Armentaria. These were the parents of the famous writer Gregory of Tours.

    For the closer generation, this is copied from "Munderic", Wikipedia "He married a daughter of Florentinus (born 485), a Roman senator, and his wife Artemia, daughter of Rusticus of Lyon. They were the parents of Gondulphus of Tongeren and
    Mummolin, possibly mayor of the palace of Neustria.[citation needed]"

    Not that citation needed at the end. That means this is questioned by someone (anyone) and a citation must be provided to prove that it's not a modern invention.

    It's curious that the history of this article mentions with a bit of disdain "a Portuguese genealogist...." I wonder who that could be scattering these nuggets about?

    Now David Kelley does mention this person Munderic, and why he might have had some kind of claim to something here

    http://fmg.ac/phocadownload/userupload/foundations1/issue6/425Nibelung.pdf

    Note there is no mention of any wife, which you think if some wife were the *sister* of a quite famous author might be worth mentioning.
    Since anyone can (and everyone should) strike passages marked citation needed from Wikipedia. I have done so. There is apparently no evidence (within say a thousand years of the event) that Munderic was connected to the family of Gregory of
    Tours. *Regardless* of what a thousand online family trees have gleefully copied. And suspect sites like Geni and Wikitree have followed along like blind hungry dogs, may they die of fleas.

    I will also point out, that Since Gregory of Tours wrote a long, extensive, history of this time period, you might *think* that he would have mentioned, in his paragraph about Munderic, that the man was his own brother-in-law, if he were.

    Clearly this is a modern, very lame, fabrication.
    It may be considered lame and even a fabrication, but it is not modern -
    your idea of 1,000 years after the event is out by roughly 500. >>>>>>
    The genealogy in question was included in a lost 12th- or perhaps >>>>>> 13th-century copy of the late-10th century Vita of St Servatius written
    by Jocundus, which includes a digression about St Gundulf. The latter >>>>>> was allegedly the 22nd bishop of Tongeren and described as "filius >>>>>> deplorati Munderici" (son of the lamented Munderic). There is a legend,
    based on an inscription that can be interpreted in other ways, according
    to which Gundulf and his predecessor miraculously attended the
    dedication of Charlemagne's palace church at Aachen around two centuries
    after they had died.

    As for what Gregory of Tours knew about his own relatives, from memory
    we are told that he did not realise until it came up in conversation >>>>>> between them that Gundulf - a Merovingian magnate who may or may not be
    identical with the revenant bishop - was his mother's uncle.

    Peter Stewart

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    I'm not sure how St Gundulf being a son of Munderic (if he was), is related to the question of Munderic being the brother-in-law of Gregory of Tours, which is how we get these errorneous parents for Munderic's wife.

    My point was that this unnamed wife of Munderic did not have these parents.
    Not whether Munderic had any children.
    I was replying to your top-quoted statement "There is apparently no >>>> evidence (within say a thousand years of the event) that Munderic was >>>> connected to the family of Gregory of Tours". I don't think Gregory's >>>> grand-uncle Gundulf can be safely identified with the namesake bishop of
    Tongeren, but many do.

    When a thread consists of a welter of brief opinions, it is easier to >>>> reply to the latest one encompassing earlier postings rather than plod >>>> through several. SGM readers are not all laser-focused on the last thing
    you said.

    Peter Stewart

    When you say "grand-uncle...."
    This reconstruction

    http://fmg.ac/phocadownload/userupload/foundations1/issue6/425Nibelung.pdf

    puts St Gundulf as the son of Munderic, and cannot possibly be a grand-uncle to Gregory who lived before him

    Did you mean to say that some people say that St Gundulf was the nephew to Gregory?
    And therefore the only possibility is that Munderic married Gregory's sister?
    That?
    No, I meant what I wrote.

    For someone who ticks off posters for linking to websites without
    specifics, citing a turgid screed by David Kelley as if it has enough
    value to take up readers' time is rather dicey. You do realise that the >> helpful materials for medieval genealogy are diplomatic, narrative and
    other primary sources rather than scatter-brained modern opinions -
    don't you?

    Last week I attended the funeral of a cousin whose aunt had been present >> at her 90th birthday party some years ago: generations do not follow
    strict chronological rules, of course, and even by Kelley's datings it
    is possible for St Gundulf (whose birth he placed ca 524) to have been
    the grand-uncle of Gregory (who was born ca 538, not exactly the latter >> living before the former by my rudimentary arithmetic). How is it
    plausible to you that Gregory's sister was married to a man said to have >> been murdered ca 532?

    Peter Stewart

    I never said it was plausible.
    My own argument is that if the man was Gregory's own brother in law he would certainly have known it and stated it when discussing Munderic. yet he didn't
    So when you write "And therefore the only possibility is ..." we are not
    to take this as indicating you consider the thing plausible? How then
    are we to make worthwhile sense of anything you post?
    I'm not posting David Kelley's work because I think it's true or plausible Only that it exists, discusses this point, and has a chronological table, even if mostly guesswork
    So it's a useful item, even if it's entirely incorrect
    A vast number of websites that you dismiss outright do just as much. An
    item is not useful just because it is available if the object is getting
    at what can be proved rather than merely what can be supposed.

    And anyway, if Kelley's chronology is thought useful why ignore it to
    regard Gregory as living before Gundulf?

    If you took a little more time and trouble - as you admonish others for
    not doing - before posting you may be read with more patient interest by
    SGM participants.

    Peter Stewart

    I did not say that I thought his chronology was useful
    I said that he has a paper stating various things germane to this discussion Whether right or wrong or ridiculously wrong

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  • From Peter Stewart@21:1/5 to Will Johnson on Thu Jul 14 11:53:47 2022
    On 14-Jul-22 10:46 AM, Will Johnson wrote:

    When I wrote "therefore the only possibility is" I was trying to make sense out of what *you* were saying
    I was not positing any solution, only trying to interpret it.

    This is the splutter of someone trying in vain to dig himself out of a
    hole of his own making. What I wrote was perfectly straightforward and
    only needed comprehending (at which you failed), not interpreting.

    You were attempting to square it with some gibberish you had found on
    Wikipedia but you made a bigger mess in the process.

    Just stop.

    Peter Stewart

    --
    This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
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  • From mike davis@21:1/5 to pss...@optusnet.com.au on Thu Jul 14 03:40:50 2022
    On Thursday, July 14, 2022 at 1:47:14 AM UTC+1, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 13-Jul-22 10:08 PM, mike davis wrote:
    On Wednesday, July 13, 2022 at 2:27:27 AM UTC+1, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:

    Is this source preferred over Paul the deacon who wrote about
    the bishops of Metz much earlier in the late 8th? Not that I'm saying >>> his version is the correct one, cos all the stories about St.Arnulfs
    origins have problems, but according to the net Gundulf doesnt
    appear in the bishops lists for Tongres.
    Some have doubted the existence of St Gundulf, others that he should be >> identified with the grand-uncle of Gregory of Tours.
    it seems well accepted that Ansegisel was St.Arnulf's son, but I
    notice that in many sources for this, it is spelt Anchisus, the name
    of the father of Aeneas. I can see that Ansegis-Anchisus are similar, >>> so is Ansegisel not a frankish name but a take on a trojan hero?
    There was a legend that the Franks were descended from the trojans,
    and some bishops are called Aeneas and even Dido.
    This was discussed by Gerhard Lubich in 'Die Namen Ansegis(el),
    Anschis(us) und Anchises im Kontext der Karolingergenealogien und der
    fränkischen Geschichtsschreibung' (2014), available here:
    https://www.namenkundliche-informationen.de/baende/download/13443/id13442/.
    Peter Stewart

    I only understood the abstract:

    The first Carolingian genealogy Commemoratio Karoli names one Anschisus
    as father of Pepin (“of Herstal”), thus connecting the Carolingians with the antique
    myth of Troy – Aeneas’ father was named Anschises and Rome. In a later version
    of the same genealogy, Commemoratio Arnulfi, this same person is mentioned with his
    germanic spelling Ansegis(el) as the son of Arnulf of Metz, with whom the genealogy begins, placing the family in the context of the Frankish aristocracy.
    The article focuses on these mechanisms as well as on their relations to Carolingian
    self-perception and their perception in 9th century historiography.]

    It seems clear though that these genealogies and other evidence in texts of a similar
    nature should be regarded as pieces of literature and not historical evidence, at least
    I think thats what the author says or someone called Oexle. But the fact alone that
    the original authors could take a germanic name Ansegisel and conjure up a Trojan connection shows their intentions, if I'm not being too cynical.
    Apologies, I overlooked this before - you may find useful an article on
    the subject in English https://www.academia.edu/38344808/From_Caesar_to_Charlemagne_The_Tradition_of_Trojan_Origins.
    Peter Stewart

    --

    thanks theres a mine of interesting articles here. But the specific thing q i had was if
    the monks at Fontenelle kept or fabricated 2 different traditions concerning St.Arnulf.

    1. he was the son of a Buotgisus
    2. He was the son of Ansbert from a senatorial family etc

    It wasnt clear to me cos the intro to the texts was in latin, whether this was the case.

    Mike

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  • From Will Johnson@21:1/5 to pss...@optusnet.com.au on Thu Jul 14 07:24:52 2022
    On Wednesday, July 13, 2022 at 6:53:52 PM UTC-7, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 14-Jul-22 10:46 AM, Will Johnson wrote:

    When I wrote "therefore the only possibility is" I was trying to make sense out of what *you* were saying
    I was not positing any solution, only trying to interpret it.
    This is the splutter of someone trying in vain to dig himself out of a
    hole of his own making. What I wrote was perfectly straightforward and
    only needed comprehending (at which you failed), not interpreting.

    You were attempting to square it with some gibberish you had found on Wikipedia but you made a bigger mess in the process.

    Just stop.
    Peter Stewart

    --
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    https://www.avg.com


    Not Correct.
    Leo cites the Wikipedia article, on his page for Hugobert.
    That article cites this alleged marriage as "some genealogists say" but solely citing the Addendum by Settipani
    Which I then cited, and read, and which does not have this information in the first place.

    I am not the person who created this mess.
    I am merely citing the various portions of the mess.

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  • From Peter Stewart@21:1/5 to Will Johnson on Fri Jul 15 07:43:44 2022
    On 15-Jul-22 12:24 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Wednesday, July 13, 2022 at 6:53:52 PM UTC-7, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 14-Jul-22 10:46 AM, Will Johnson wrote:

    When I wrote "therefore the only possibility is" I was trying to make sense out of what *you* were saying
    I was not positing any solution, only trying to interpret it.
    This is the splutter of someone trying in vain to dig himself out of a
    hole of his own making. What I wrote was perfectly straightforward and
    only needed comprehending (at which you failed), not interpreting.

    You were attempting to square it with some gibberish you had found on
    Wikipedia but you made a bigger mess in the process.

    Just stop.
    Peter Stewart

    --
    This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
    https://www.avg.com


    Not Correct.
    Leo cites the Wikipedia article, on his page for Hugobert.
    That article cites this alleged marriage as "some genealogists say" but solely citing the Addendum by Settipani
    Which I then cited, and read, and which does not have this information in the first place.

    I am not the person who created this mess.
    I am merely citing the various portions of the mess.

    There is (as so often) not enough information in your post to make sense
    to someone who like me has not been paying close attention to the whole
    of this dreary thread.

    As far as I can see it went off the rails on this question because you
    tried to "interpret" a post of mine by the misleading light of Wikipedia
    - I'm not sure where Leo comes into it, and don't have time now to find out.

    The problem seems to be that you took the nonsense about Munderic as brother-in-law to Gregory of Tours as a basis for assessing any
    information that didn't directly fit with it, making up a wonky
    chronology of your own despite seeing a more reasonable one set out by
    David Kelley.

    If you had sensibly put the Wikipedia (or wherever it cam from)
    assertion to one side and looked for what can be established from
    primary sources, you would have found that Gregory's parents had three
    recorded children - himself, his brother Peter and their sister of
    unknown name whose only recorded husband was named Justinus not Munderic.

    Another problem seems to be that others have simplistically assumed
    Munderic's son Gundulf to be identical with Gregory's grand-uncle of the
    same name, and you have not made allowance for this as a red herring.
    There was a second Munderic, younger than Gundulf's father, who was
    supported to become a bishop by Gregory's brother Peter - perhaps this connection has been hyped into a false brother-in-law relationship, but
    that is just a guess as I haven't checked further.

    Peter Stewart

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  • From Will Johnson@21:1/5 to All on Thu Jul 14 15:03:58 2022
    And again since you *constantly* want to attribute to ME that Munderic married the sister of Gregory.
    I never said that.
    This thread posted the OP said that. I only pointed out that it was highly UNlikely. Not likely. UNlikely.

    I am NOT saying that it is likely
    I am saying and have been saying that is it UNlikely.

    Is that more clear?

    of this dreary thread.

    As far as I can see it went off the rails on this question because you
    tried to "interpret" a post of mine by the misleading light of Wikipedia
    - I'm not sure where Leo comes into it, and don't have time now to find out.

    The problem seems to be that you took the nonsense about Munderic as brother-in-law to Gregory of Tours as a basis for assessing any
    information that didn't directly fit with it, making up a wonky
    chronology of your own despite seeing a more reasonable one set out by
    David Kelley.

    If you had sensibly put the Wikipedia (or wherever it cam from)
    assertion to one side and looked for what can be established from
    primary sources, you would have found that Gregory's parents had three recorded children - himself, his brother Peter and their sister of
    unknown name whose only recorded husband was named Justinus not Munderic.

    Another problem seems to be that others have simplistically assumed Munderic's son Gundulf to be identical with Gregory's grand-uncle of the
    same name, and you have not made allowance for this as a red herring.
    There was a second Munderic, younger than Gundulf's father, who was
    supported to become a bishop by Gregory's brother Peter - perhaps this connection has been hyped into a false brother-in-law relationship, but
    that is just a guess as I haven't checked further.

    Peter Stewart

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  • From Will Johnson@21:1/5 to pss...@optusnet.com.au on Thu Jul 14 15:02:04 2022
    On Thursday, July 14, 2022 at 2:43:49 PM UTC-7, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 15-Jul-22 12:24 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Wednesday, July 13, 2022 at 6:53:52 PM UTC-7, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 14-Jul-22 10:46 AM, Will Johnson wrote:

    When I wrote "therefore the only possibility is" I was trying to make sense out of what *you* were saying
    I was not positing any solution, only trying to interpret it.
    This is the splutter of someone trying in vain to dig himself out of a
    hole of his own making. What I wrote was perfectly straightforward and
    only needed comprehending (at which you failed), not interpreting.

    You were attempting to square it with some gibberish you had found on
    Wikipedia but you made a bigger mess in the process.

    Just stop.
    Peter Stewart

    --
    This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
    https://www.avg.com


    Not Correct.
    Leo cites the Wikipedia article, on his page for Hugobert.
    That article cites this alleged marriage as "some genealogists say" but solely citing the Addendum by Settipani
    Which I then cited, and read, and which does not have this information in the first place.

    I am not the person who created this mess.
    I am merely citing the various portions of the mess.
    There is (as so often) not enough information in your post to make sense
    to someone who like me has not been paying close attention to the whole
    of this dreary thread.

    As far as I can see it went off the rails on this question because you
    tried to "interpret" a post of mine by the misleading light of Wikipedia
    - I'm not sure where Leo comes into it, and don't have time now to find out.

    The problem seems to be that you took the nonsense about Munderic as brother-in-law to Gregory of Tours as a basis for assessing any
    information that didn't directly fit with it, making up a wonky
    chronology of your own despite seeing a more reasonable one set out by
    David Kelley.

    If you had sensibly put the Wikipedia (or wherever it cam from)
    assertion to one side and looked for what can be established from
    primary sources, you would have found that Gregory's parents had three recorded children - himself, his brother Peter and their sister of
    unknown name whose only recorded husband was named Justinus not Munderic.

    Another problem seems to be that others have simplistically assumed Munderic's son Gundulf to be identical with Gregory's grand-uncle of the
    same name, and you have not made allowance for this as a red herring.
    There was a second Munderic, younger than Gundulf's father, who was
    supported to become a bishop by Gregory's brother Peter - perhaps this connection has been hyped into a false brother-in-law relationship, but
    that is just a guess as I haven't checked further.

    Peter Stewart

    Incorrect again.
    I was *led* to the Wikipedia article about Hugobert because Leo cites this article in his website.
    This is how Leo is related.

    I did not base anything I said whatsoever (from a to z to outer space) on what the Wikipedia article said.
    I have repeated this several times.
    That Wikipedia article solely cited Settipani.
    Set-ta-pa-ni. Set your panny.
    Settipani.
    Sett........

    Got it yet?

    I THEN read that article BY Settipani, and stated that it did NOT say what the Wikipedia article said.
    I don't know how many times you want me to repeat that NOTHING I said, Not A Single Thing, is based on any belief in that Wikipedia article. Nothing. Not a Thing.

    The article BY Settipani.
    Is that clear now?

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  • From Peter Stewart@21:1/5 to mike davis on Fri Jul 15 07:28:24 2022
    On 14-Jul-22 8:40 PM, mike davis wrote:
    On Thursday, July 14, 2022 at 1:47:14 AM UTC+1, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 13-Jul-22 10:08 PM, mike davis wrote:
    On Wednesday, July 13, 2022 at 2:27:27 AM UTC+1, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:

    Is this source preferred over Paul the deacon who wrote about
    the bishops of Metz much earlier in the late 8th? Not that I'm saying >>>>> his version is the correct one, cos all the stories about St.Arnulfs >>>>> origins have problems, but according to the net Gundulf doesnt
    appear in the bishops lists for Tongres.
    Some have doubted the existence of St Gundulf, others that he should be >>>> identified with the grand-uncle of Gregory of Tours.
    it seems well accepted that Ansegisel was St.Arnulf's son, but I
    notice that in many sources for this, it is spelt Anchisus, the name >>>>> of the father of Aeneas. I can see that Ansegis-Anchisus are similar, >>>>> so is Ansegisel not a frankish name but a take on a trojan hero?
    There was a legend that the Franks were descended from the trojans,
    and some bishops are called Aeneas and even Dido.
    This was discussed by Gerhard Lubich in 'Die Namen Ansegis(el),
    Anschis(us) und Anchises im Kontext der Karolingergenealogien und der
    fränkischen Geschichtsschreibung' (2014), available here:
    https://www.namenkundliche-informationen.de/baende/download/13443/id13442/.
    Peter Stewart

    I only understood the abstract:

    The first Carolingian genealogy Commemoratio Karoli names one Anschisus
    as father of Pepin (“of Herstal”), thus connecting the Carolingians with the antique
    myth of Troy – Aeneas’ father was named Anschises and Rome. In a later version
    of the same genealogy, Commemoratio Arnulfi, this same person is mentioned with his
    germanic spelling Ansegis(el) as the son of Arnulf of Metz, with whom the >>> genealogy begins, placing the family in the context of the Frankish aristocracy.
    The article focuses on these mechanisms as well as on their relations to Carolingian
    self-perception and their perception in 9th century historiography.]

    It seems clear though that these genealogies and other evidence in texts of a similar
    nature should be regarded as pieces of literature and not historical evidence, at least
    I think thats what the author says or someone called Oexle. But the fact alone that
    the original authors could take a germanic name Ansegisel and conjure up a >>> Trojan connection shows their intentions, if I'm not being too cynical.
    Apologies, I overlooked this before - you may find useful an article on
    the subject in English
    https://www.academia.edu/38344808/From_Caesar_to_Charlemagne_The_Tradition_of_Trojan_Origins.
    Peter Stewart

    --

    thanks theres a mine of interesting articles here. But the specific thing q i had was if
    the monks at Fontenelle kept or fabricated 2 different traditions concerning St.Arnulf.

    1. he was the son of a Buotgisus
    2. He was the son of Ansbert from a senatorial family etc

    It wasnt clear to me cos the intro to the texts was in latin, whether this was the case.

    I don't have time to refresh my poor memory at present, but as far as I
    recall the Buotgisus/Bodegisel version came from Saint-Wandrille
    (Fontenelle) and the Ansbert version from Metz. What makes you think
    both of these contradictory traditions may have originated from Saint-Wandrille?

    Peter Stewart

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  • From Peter Stewart@21:1/5 to Will Johnson on Fri Jul 15 08:26:23 2022
    On 15-Jul-22 8:03 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    And again since you *constantly* want to attribute to ME that Munderic married the sister of Gregory.
    I never said that.
    This thread posted the OP said that. I only pointed out that it was highly UNlikely. Not likely. UNlikely.

    I am NOT saying that it is likely
    I am saying and have been saying that is it UNlikely.

    Is that more clear?

    Of course not, since you are twisting yet again to avoid responsibility
    for what you posted. You seem to think you have some sort of
    provocateur's licence to say anything that comes into your head with no accountability. You lambast others for posting links to websites without sources and yet you boast of posting links to articles that may for all
    you know be "ridiculously" wrong and baseless, just because they are there.

    After reading my post clearly stating that a Gundulf was grand-uncle to
    Gregory of Tours you replied asking

    Did you mean to say that some people say that St Gundulf was the
    nephew to Gregory?
    And therefore the only possibility is that Munderic married
    Gregory's sister?"

    Of course I meant no such things.

    St Gundulf of Tongeren was son of "the lamented Munderic" (an
    unsuccessful throne pretender), and (I think another) Gundulf was
    brother to Gregory's maternal grandmother. I still have no idea where
    you came by the absurd notion of St Gundulf as nephew to Gregory.

    If you took the trouble to top-quote whatever you are responding to, and
    then to address it more cogently, whatever you do or do not mean might
    be more readily understood.

    Peter Stewart

    --
    This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
    https://www.avg.com

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  • From Will Johnson@21:1/5 to Will Johnson on Thu Jul 14 15:35:45 2022
    On Thursday, July 14, 2022 at 3:34:00 PM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Thursday, July 14, 2022 at 3:26:28 PM UTC-7, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 15-Jul-22 8:03 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    And again since you *constantly* want to attribute to ME that Munderic married the sister of Gregory.
    I never said that.
    This thread posted the OP said that. I only pointed out that it was highly UNlikely. Not likely. UNlikely.

    I am NOT saying that it is likely
    I am saying and have been saying that is it UNlikely.

    Is that more clear?
    Of course not, since you are twisting yet again to avoid responsibility for what you posted. You seem to think you have some sort of
    provocateur's licence to say anything that comes into your head with no accountability. You lambast others for posting links to websites without sources and yet you boast of posting links to articles that may for all you know be "ridiculously" wrong and baseless, just because they are there.

    After reading my post clearly stating that a Gundulf was grand-uncle to Gregory of Tours you replied asking
    Did you mean to say that some people say that St Gundulf was the
    nephew to Gregory?
    And therefore the only possibility is that Munderic married
    Gregory's sister?"
    Of course I meant no such things.

    St Gundulf of Tongeren was son of "the lamented Munderic" (an
    unsuccessful throne pretender), and (I think another) Gundulf was
    brother to Gregory's maternal grandmother. I still have no idea where
    you came by the absurd notion of St Gundulf as nephew to Gregory.

    If you took the trouble to top-quote whatever you are responding to, and then to address it more cogently, whatever you do or do not mean might
    be more readily understood.
    Peter Stewart

    --
    This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
    https://www.avg.com
    And since you seem to constantly wish to reply *without* reading the *tedious* thread you clearly have no clue what I was saying and yet insisted to reply with vitriol to what you clearly did not understand.

    I was NOT stating this as a fact, guess, hypothesis or anything else of my OWN
    I was asking You if you had confused the two things since two prior claims in THIs thread stated that he was a nephew, or he was a brother in law.

    IF you had bothered whatsoever to read the actual thread, you would have realized that I was asking for clarification on that point, to make sure that you had meant what you wrote. And I was NOT in the slightest stating a preferred position on anything
    at all.

    I did not realize that you could not be bothered at all, with reading anything actually in the thread, to bring yourself up to speed with what was being discussed and yet wanted to throw more obsfucation into the mix. And heap ridicule upon people you
    think are not as erudite as your highness.


    And mister all knowing genie, you may *think* that you can *post* a claim without any sources and not receive any argument because you are on your high pedestal, but I assure you that you cannot.

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  • From Will Johnson@21:1/5 to pss...@optusnet.com.au on Thu Jul 14 15:33:58 2022
    On Thursday, July 14, 2022 at 3:26:28 PM UTC-7, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 15-Jul-22 8:03 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    And again since you *constantly* want to attribute to ME that Munderic married the sister of Gregory.
    I never said that.
    This thread posted the OP said that. I only pointed out that it was highly UNlikely. Not likely. UNlikely.

    I am NOT saying that it is likely
    I am saying and have been saying that is it UNlikely.

    Is that more clear?
    Of course not, since you are twisting yet again to avoid responsibility
    for what you posted. You seem to think you have some sort of
    provocateur's licence to say anything that comes into your head with no accountability. You lambast others for posting links to websites without sources and yet you boast of posting links to articles that may for all
    you know be "ridiculously" wrong and baseless, just because they are there.

    After reading my post clearly stating that a Gundulf was grand-uncle to Gregory of Tours you replied asking
    Did you mean to say that some people say that St Gundulf was the
    nephew to Gregory?
    And therefore the only possibility is that Munderic married
    Gregory's sister?"
    Of course I meant no such things.

    St Gundulf of Tongeren was son of "the lamented Munderic" (an
    unsuccessful throne pretender), and (I think another) Gundulf was
    brother to Gregory's maternal grandmother. I still have no idea where
    you came by the absurd notion of St Gundulf as nephew to Gregory.

    If you took the trouble to top-quote whatever you are responding to, and then to address it more cogently, whatever you do or do not mean might
    be more readily understood.
    Peter Stewart

    --
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    And since you seem to constantly wish to reply *without* reading the *tedious* thread you clearly have no clue what I was saying and yet insisted to reply with vitriol to what you clearly did not understand.

    I was NOT stating this as a fact, guess, hypothesis or anything else of my OWN I was asking You if you had confused the two things since two prior claims in THIs thread stated that he was a nephew, or he was a brother in law.

    IF you had bothered whatsoever to read the actual thread, you would have realized that I was asking for clarification on that point, to make sure that you had meant what you wrote. And I was NOT in the slightest stating a preferred position on anything
    at all.

    I did not realize that you could not be bothered at all, with reading anything actually in the thread, to bring yourself up to speed with what was being discussed and yet wanted to throw more obsfucation into the mix. And heap ridicule upon people you
    think are not as erudite as your highness.

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  • From Peter Stewart@21:1/5 to Will Johnson on Fri Jul 15 12:51:46 2022
    On 15-Jul-22 8:35 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Thursday, July 14, 2022 at 3:34:00 PM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Thursday, July 14, 2022 at 3:26:28 PM UTC-7, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 15-Jul-22 8:03 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    And again since you *constantly* want to attribute to ME that Munderic married the sister of Gregory.
    I never said that.
    This thread posted the OP said that. I only pointed out that it was highly UNlikely. Not likely. UNlikely.

    I am NOT saying that it is likely
    I am saying and have been saying that is it UNlikely.

    Is that more clear?
    Of course not, since you are twisting yet again to avoid responsibility
    for what you posted. You seem to think you have some sort of
    provocateur's licence to say anything that comes into your head with no
    accountability. You lambast others for posting links to websites without >>> sources and yet you boast of posting links to articles that may for all
    you know be "ridiculously" wrong and baseless, just because they are there. >>>
    After reading my post clearly stating that a Gundulf was grand-uncle to
    Gregory of Tours you replied asking
    Did you mean to say that some people say that St Gundulf was the
    nephew to Gregory?
    And therefore the only possibility is that Munderic married
    Gregory's sister?"
    Of course I meant no such things.

    St Gundulf of Tongeren was son of "the lamented Munderic" (an
    unsuccessful throne pretender), and (I think another) Gundulf was
    brother to Gregory's maternal grandmother. I still have no idea where
    you came by the absurd notion of St Gundulf as nephew to Gregory.

    If you took the trouble to top-quote whatever you are responding to, and >>> then to address it more cogently, whatever you do or do not mean might
    be more readily understood.
    Peter Stewart

    --
    This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
    https://www.avg.com
    And since you seem to constantly wish to reply *without* reading the *tedious* thread you clearly have no clue what I was saying and yet insisted to reply with vitriol to what you clearly did not understand.

    I was NOT stating this as a fact, guess, hypothesis or anything else of my OWN
    I was asking You if you had confused the two things since two prior claims in THIs thread stated that he was a nephew, or he was a brother in law.

    IF you had bothered whatsoever to read the actual thread, you would have realized that I was asking for clarification on that point, to make sure that you had meant what you wrote. And I was NOT in the slightest stating a preferred position on
    anything at all.

    I did not realize that you could not be bothered at all, with reading anything actually in the thread, to bring yourself up to speed with what was being discussed and yet wanted to throw more obsfucation into the mix. And heap ridicule upon people you
    think are not as erudite as your highness.


    And mister all knowing genie, you may *think* that you can *post* a claim without any sources and not receive any argument because you are on your high pedestal, but I assure you that you cannot.

    If this is directed at me, I can't imagine what you think you are
    talking about. Probably no-one in the past 20+ years has posted more
    sources than I have, or for that matter fewer than you in proportion to
    the number of postings you have made; and naturally anyone who is
    interested in details (a diminishing group in SGM nowadays) can ask for
    proof of whatever is said here.

    There is no value in lashing out when you have made a conceited goof of yourself.

    Peter Stewart

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  • From Peter Stewart@21:1/5 to Peter Stewart on Fri Jul 15 16:42:23 2022
    On 12-Jul-22 2:24 PM, Peter Stewart wrote:
    On 12-Jul-22 12:55 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:41:11 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:37:23 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote:
    Well we *do* know that Florentius and "Artemie" existed, although
    her name is usually given as Armentaria. These were the parents of
    the famous writer Gregory of Tours.

    For the closer generation, this is copied from "Munderic", Wikipedia
    "He married a daughter of Florentinus (born 485), a Roman senator,
    and his wife Artemia, daughter of Rusticus of Lyon. They were the
    parents of Gondulphus of Tongeren and Mummolin, possibly mayor of
    the palace of Neustria.[citation needed]"

    Not that citation needed at the end. That means this is questioned
    by someone (anyone) and a citation must be provided to prove that
    it's not a modern invention.

    It's curious that the history of this article mentions with a bit of
    disdain "a Portuguese genealogist...." I wonder who that could be
    scattering these nuggets about?

    Now David Kelley does mention this person Munderic, and why he might
    have had some kind of claim to something here

    http://fmg.ac/phocadownload/userupload/foundations1/issue6/425Nibelung.pdf >>>>

    Note there is no mention of any wife, which you think if some wife
    were the *sister* of a quite famous author might be worth mentioning.
    Since anyone can (and everyone should) strike passages marked
    citation needed from Wikipedia. I have done so. There is apparently
    no evidence (within say a thousand years of the event) that Munderic
    was connected to the family of Gregory of Tours. *Regardless* of what
    a thousand online family trees have gleefully copied. And suspect
    sites like Geni and Wikitree have followed along like blind hungry
    dogs, may they die of fleas.

    I will also point out, that Since Gregory of Tours wrote a long,
    extensive, history of this time period, you might *think* that he
    would have mentioned, in his paragraph about Munderic, that the man
    was his own brother-in-law, if he were.

    Clearly this is a modern, very lame, fabrication.

    It may be considered lame and even a fabrication, but it is not modern -
    your idea of 1,000 years after the event is out by roughly 500.

    The genealogy in question was included in a lost 12th- or perhaps 13th-century copy of the late-10th century Vita of St Servatius written
    by Jocundus, which includes a digression about St Gundulf. The latter
    was allegedly the 22nd bishop of Tongeren and described as "filius
    deplorati Munderici" (son of the lamented Munderic). There is a legend,
    based on an inscription that can be interpreted in other ways, according
    to which Gundulf and his predecessor miraculously attended the
    dedication of Charlemagne's palace church at Aachen around two centuries after they had died.

    As for what Gregory of Tours knew about his own relatives, from memory
    we are told that he did not realise until it came up in conversation
    between them that Gundulf - a Merovingian magnate who may or may not be identical with the revenant bishop - was his mother's uncle.

    The magnate Gundulf, great-uncle to Gregory of Tours, was definitely not identical with St Gundulf of Tongeren the son of Munderic.

    Some confusion may have stemmed from the similar names of the respective parents of the great-uncle Gundulf and the grand-nephew Gregory.

    Gundulf was a son of Florentinus, senator in Geneva at the beginning of
    the 6th century, and his wife Artemia - or perhaps her son by an earlier husband that may account for the Germanic name Gundulf, which is very
    unlikely to have been given to the child of two Gallo-Roman aristocrats. Florentinus and Artemia had two (if not three) children together:
    Nicetius, bishop of Lyon, and a daughter who was the maternal
    grandmother of Gregory. A half-blood connection may partly explain why
    Gregory was unaware until told by the man himself that Gundulf was his great-uncle, when he had spent part of his childhood in the home of
    Nicetius.

    Gregory's parents were named Florentius and Armentaria.

    It is possible that his great-uncle Gundulf was related to the namesake
    bishop of Tongeren, and perhaps a discreditable connection to the
    latter's father Munderic (of whom Gregory wrote disparagingly) may have
    caused the son of Armentaria to be kept ignorant of her part-Germanic uncle.

    Peter Stewart

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  • From mike davis@21:1/5 to pss...@optusnet.com.au on Fri Jul 15 04:59:31 2022
    On Thursday, July 14, 2022 at 10:28:30 PM UTC+1, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 14-Jul-22 8:40 PM, mike davis wrote:
    On Thursday, July 14, 2022 at 1:47:14 AM UTC+1, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 13-Jul-22 10:08 PM, mike davis wrote:
    On Wednesday, July 13, 2022 at 2:27:27 AM UTC+1, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:

    Is this source preferred over Paul the deacon who wrote about
    the bishops of Metz much earlier in the late 8th? Not that I'm saying >>>>> his version is the correct one, cos all the stories about St.Arnulfs >>>>> origins have problems, but according to the net Gundulf doesnt
    appear in the bishops lists for Tongres.
    Some have doubted the existence of St Gundulf, others that he should be >>>> identified with the grand-uncle of Gregory of Tours.
    it seems well accepted that Ansegisel was St.Arnulf's son, but I
    notice that in many sources for this, it is spelt Anchisus, the name >>>>> of the father of Aeneas. I can see that Ansegis-Anchisus are similar, >>>>> so is Ansegisel not a frankish name but a take on a trojan hero?
    There was a legend that the Franks were descended from the trojans, >>>>> and some bishops are called Aeneas and even Dido.
    This was discussed by Gerhard Lubich in 'Die Namen Ansegis(el),
    Anschis(us) und Anchises im Kontext der Karolingergenealogien und der >>>> fränkischen Geschichtsschreibung' (2014), available here:
    https://www.namenkundliche-informationen.de/baende/download/13443/id13442/.
    Peter Stewart

    I only understood the abstract:

    The first Carolingian genealogy Commemoratio Karoli names one Anschisus >>> as father of Pepin (“of Herstal”), thus connecting the Carolingians with the antique
    myth of Troy – Aeneas’ father was named Anschises and Rome. In a later version
    of the same genealogy, Commemoratio Arnulfi, this same person is mentioned with his
    germanic spelling Ansegis(el) as the son of Arnulf of Metz, with whom the
    genealogy begins, placing the family in the context of the Frankish aristocracy.
    The article focuses on these mechanisms as well as on their relations to Carolingian
    self-perception and their perception in 9th century historiography.]

    It seems clear though that these genealogies and other evidence in texts of a similar
    nature should be regarded as pieces of literature and not historical evidence, at least
    I think thats what the author says or someone called Oexle. But the fact alone that
    the original authors could take a germanic name Ansegisel and conjure up a
    Trojan connection shows their intentions, if I'm not being too cynical. >> Apologies, I overlooked this before - you may find useful an article on >> the subject in English
    https://www.academia.edu/38344808/From_Caesar_to_Charlemagne_The_Tradition_of_Trojan_Origins.
    Peter Stewart

    --

    thanks theres a mine of interesting articles here. But the specific thing q i had was if
    the monks at Fontenelle kept or fabricated 2 different traditions concerning St.Arnulf.

    1. he was the son of a Buotgisus
    2. He was the son of Ansbert from a senatorial family etc

    It wasnt clear to me cos the intro to the texts was in latin, whether this was the case.
    I don't have time to refresh my poor memory at present, but as far as I recall the Buotgisus/Bodegisel version came from Saint-Wandrille (Fontenelle) and the Ansbert version from Metz. What makes you think
    both of these contradictory traditions may have originated from Saint-Wandrille?

    You are right, I misposted, I should have said, there seem 2 contradictory opinions from
    Metz. I think the intro says it was Paul the deacon in his history of the bps of Metz, who
    first said

    Ansbert
    |
    Arnoald
    |
    Arnulf

    whereas the intro on p242 seems to say that Pertz & co considered the
    2 expanded versions of this descent which are printed on p245, to both
    come from Fontenelle, St.Wandrille, presumably becos they make
    Walchisus a 3rd son of Arnulf and mispell Clodulf as Flodulf.

    The Buotgisus descent according to a fnote on p245 comes from
    another codex from Metz now in Vienna. But it also says he is named
    as the father of St.Arnulf in another Vita. A 17th historian called Meurisse combined these 2 traditions and seems to think Buotgisus who he
    calls Burtgisus was just another name for Arnoald. I dont know the
    date for this tradition but I assume its later than Paul the Deacon,
    but none of it is very convincing. I'm surprised that so many theories
    have been based on such 'evidence'.

    Mike

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  • From Peter Stewart@21:1/5 to mike davis on Sat Jul 16 12:10:32 2022
    On 15-Jul-22 9:59 PM, mike davis wrote:
    On Thursday, July 14, 2022 at 10:28:30 PM UTC+1, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 14-Jul-22 8:40 PM, mike davis wrote:
    On Thursday, July 14, 2022 at 1:47:14 AM UTC+1, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 13-Jul-22 10:08 PM, mike davis wrote:
    On Wednesday, July 13, 2022 at 2:27:27 AM UTC+1, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:

    Is this source preferred over Paul the deacon who wrote about
    the bishops of Metz much earlier in the late 8th? Not that I'm saying >>>>>>> his version is the correct one, cos all the stories about St.Arnulfs >>>>>>> origins have problems, but according to the net Gundulf doesnt
    appear in the bishops lists for Tongres.
    Some have doubted the existence of St Gundulf, others that he should be >>>>>> identified with the grand-uncle of Gregory of Tours.
    it seems well accepted that Ansegisel was St.Arnulf's son, but I >>>>>>> notice that in many sources for this, it is spelt Anchisus, the name >>>>>>> of the father of Aeneas. I can see that Ansegis-Anchisus are similar, >>>>>>> so is Ansegisel not a frankish name but a take on a trojan hero? >>>>>>> There was a legend that the Franks were descended from the trojans, >>>>>>> and some bishops are called Aeneas and even Dido.
    This was discussed by Gerhard Lubich in 'Die Namen Ansegis(el),
    Anschis(us) und Anchises im Kontext der Karolingergenealogien und der >>>>>> fränkischen Geschichtsschreibung' (2014), available here:
    https://www.namenkundliche-informationen.de/baende/download/13443/id13442/.
    Peter Stewart

    I only understood the abstract:

    The first Carolingian genealogy Commemoratio Karoli names one Anschisus >>>>> as father of Pepin (“of Herstal”), thus connecting the Carolingians with the antique
    myth of Troy – Aeneas’ father was named Anschises and Rome. In a later version
    of the same genealogy, Commemoratio Arnulfi, this same person is mentioned with his
    germanic spelling Ansegis(el) as the son of Arnulf of Metz, with whom the >>>>> genealogy begins, placing the family in the context of the Frankish aristocracy.
    The article focuses on these mechanisms as well as on their relations to Carolingian
    self-perception and their perception in 9th century historiography.] >>>>>
    It seems clear though that these genealogies and other evidence in texts of a similar
    nature should be regarded as pieces of literature and not historical evidence, at least
    I think thats what the author says or someone called Oexle. But the fact alone that
    the original authors could take a germanic name Ansegisel and conjure up a
    Trojan connection shows their intentions, if I'm not being too cynical. >>>> Apologies, I overlooked this before - you may find useful an article on >>>> the subject in English
    https://www.academia.edu/38344808/From_Caesar_to_Charlemagne_The_Tradition_of_Trojan_Origins.
    Peter Stewart

    --

    thanks theres a mine of interesting articles here. But the specific thing q i had was if
    the monks at Fontenelle kept or fabricated 2 different traditions concerning St.Arnulf.

    1. he was the son of a Buotgisus
    2. He was the son of Ansbert from a senatorial family etc

    It wasnt clear to me cos the intro to the texts was in latin, whether this was the case.
    I don't have time to refresh my poor memory at present, but as far as I
    recall the Buotgisus/Bodegisel version came from Saint-Wandrille
    (Fontenelle) and the Ansbert version from Metz. What makes you think
    both of these contradictory traditions may have originated from
    Saint-Wandrille?

    You are right, I misposted, I should have said, there seem 2 contradictory opinions from
    Metz. I think the intro says it was Paul the deacon in his history of the bps of Metz, who
    first said

    Ansbert
    |
    Arnoald
    |
    Arnulf

    whereas the intro on p242 seems to say that Pertz & co considered the
    2 expanded versions of this descent which are printed on p245, to both
    come from Fontenelle, St.Wandrille, presumably becos they make
    Walchisus a 3rd son of Arnulf and mispell Clodulf as Flodulf.

    On p. 242 (here
    https://www.dmgh.de/mgh_ss_13/index.htm#page/242/mode/1up) it says that
    no. I (p. 245 lines 2-28) contains material of which only a small part
    was present in older versions and some which was later interpolated at Fontanelle - this does not mean that it was all incorporated into the
    tradition there but refers particularly to the added text on p. 245
    lines 23-25 where it says that Arnulf's eldest son Flodulf was father of
    Martin who was murdered by Ebroin and that his second son Waltchis was
    father of St Wandrille.

    In any case, Paul the Deacon stated that Arnoald was bishop of Metz and
    'nepos' to his predecessor Agiulf who was a grandson of Clovis, and that Arnoald's next-but-one successor was Charlemagne's agnatic ancestor St
    Arnulf - see here (p. 264 lines 7-10) https://www.dmgh.de/mgh_ss_2/index.htm#page/264/mode/1up. Further down
    the page he says that Arnulf's elder son was named Anschisus and that
    this was believed to be derived from the name of Aeneas' father Anchises (legendary ancestor of the Franks) who went from Troy to Italy (lines
    37-39).

    Paul's work was later used as a source by an anonymous writer who made
    Arnoald into the father of Arnulf, here (p. 309, left column lines
    15-18) https://www.dmgh.de/mgh_ss_2/index.htm#page/309/mode/1up). This genealogy, creating a Merovingian ancestry for Charlemagne's family that
    was believed even by Hincmar, was long ago discredited as unreliable.

    The Buotgisus descent according to a fnote on p245 comes from
    another codex from Metz now in Vienna. But it also says he is named
    as the father of St.Arnulf in another Vita. A 17th historian called Meurisse combined these 2 traditions and seems to think Buotgisus who he
    calls Burtgisus was just another name for Arnoald. I dont know the
    date for this tradition but I assume its later than Paul the Deacon,
    but none of it is very convincing. I'm surprised that so many theories
    have been based on such 'evidence'.

    Not edited from the Vienna codex - this is noted as another copy of the
    text, which is edited from a codex in the Bibliothèque nationale that
    once belonged to Jacques-Auguste de Thou ("ex codice Thuaneo", p. 243),
    see here: https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/btv1b10548489w/f133.

    The Vita of Arnulf mentioned in footnote 45 would appear to be the
    redaction that was wrongly attributed to "Umno" from a misreading of the
    word "immo". This is printed in _Acta sanctorum_, July vol. 4 pp.
    440-444. However, it does not name Arnulf's father Buotgisus as
    suggested by the MGH footnote - it describes him namelessly as an
    Aquitanian ("Natus est autem beatus Arnulphus Aquitanico patre"). Martin Meurisse in _Histoire des évesques de l'église de Metz_ (1634) p. 86
    printed an account, based in part on the pseudo-Umno story, according to
    which Arnulf's father Burtgisus whom many call Arnoald was the third son
    of Ansbert by a Merovingian princess and that he left Aquitaine for
    northern parts where he was received by his mother's brother King
    "Gunthar". This is quite worthless.

    Peter Stewart


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  • From Peter Stewart@21:1/5 to Peter Stewart on Sat Jul 16 14:42:16 2022
    On 16-Jul-22 12:10 PM, Peter Stewart wrote:
    On 15-Jul-22 9:59 PM, mike davis wrote:

    <snip>

    You are right, I misposted, I should have said, there seem 2
    contradictory opinions from
    Metz. I think the intro says it was Paul the deacon in his history of
    the bps of Metz, who
    first said

    Ansbert
    |
    Arnoald
    |
    Arnulf

    whereas the intro on p242 seems to say that Pertz & co considered the
    2 expanded versions of this descent which are printed on p245, to both
    come from Fontenelle, St.Wandrille, presumably becos they make
    Walchisus a 3rd son of Arnulf and mispell Clodulf as Flodulf.

    On p. 242 (here
    https://www.dmgh.de/mgh_ss_13/index.htm#page/242/mode/1up) it says that
    no. I (p. 245 lines 2-28) contains material of which only a small part
    was present in older versions and some which was later interpolated at Fontanelle - this does not mean that it was all incorporated into the tradition there but refers particularly to the added text on p. 245
    lines 23-25 where it says that Arnulf's eldest son Flodulf was father of Martin who was murdered by Ebroin and that his second son Waltchis was
    father of St Wandrille.

    Apologies, I was forgetting this before: the genealogy no. I in MGH vol
    13 p. 245 (here:
    https://www.dmgh.de/mgh_ss_13/index.htm#page/245/mode/1up), that was
    ostensibly written by 768, is actually a 17th-century forgery by Jérôme Vignier. Whether or not the part regarding sons of Arnulf's sons Flodulf
    and Waltchis in lines 23-25 was drawn from an interpolation made at Saint-Wandrille or based on some other material originating from there I
    don't know, but it would seem a futile invention by Vignier if he had
    not found it somewhere.

    In any case, Paul the Deacon stated that Arnoald was bishop of Metz and 'nepos' to his predecessor Agiulf who was a grandson of Clovis, and that Arnoald's next-but-one successor was Charlemagne's agnatic ancestor St
    Arnulf - see here (p. 264 lines 7-10) https://www.dmgh.de/mgh_ss_2/index.htm#page/264/mode/1up. Further down
    the page he says that Arnulf's elder son was named Anschisus and that
    this was believed to be derived from the name of Aeneas' father Anchises (legendary ancestor of the Franks) who went from Troy to Italy (lines
    37-39).

    Paul's work was later used as a source by an anonymous writer who made Arnoald into the father of Arnulf, here (p. 309, left column lines
    15-18) https://www.dmgh.de/mgh_ss_2/index.htm#page/309/mode/1up). This genealogy, creating a Merovingian ancestry for Charlemagne's family that
    was believed even by Hincmar, was long ago discredited as unreliable.

    The Buotgisus descent according to a fnote on p245 comes from
    another codex from Metz now in Vienna. But it also says he is named
    as the father of St.Arnulf in another Vita. A 17th historian called
    Meurisse
    combined these 2 traditions and seems to think Buotgisus who he
    calls Burtgisus was just another name for Arnoald. I dont know the
    date for this tradition but I assume its later than Paul the Deacon,
    but none of it is very convincing. I'm surprised that so many theories
    have been based on such 'evidence'.

    Not edited from the Vienna codex - this is noted as another copy of the
    text, which is edited from a codex in the Bibliothèque nationale that
    once belonged to Jacques-Auguste de Thou ("ex codice Thuaneo", p. 243),
    see here: https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/btv1b10548489w/f133.

    I should have mentioned that this is not the original version from Saint-Wandrille, but a copy from Saint-Bertin made in the first half of
    the 11th century inserted at the end of Einhard's Vita of Charlemagne.

    Peter Stewart


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  • From Peter Stewart@21:1/5 to Peter Stewart on Sun Jul 17 09:07:23 2022
    On 16-Jul-22 12:10 PM, Peter Stewart wrote:
    On 15-Jul-22 9:59 PM, mike davis wrote:

    <snip>

    The Buotgisus descent according to a fnote on p245 comes from
    another codex from Metz now in Vienna. But it also says he is named
    as the father of St.Arnulf in another Vita. A 17th historian called
    Meurisse
    combined these 2 traditions and seems to think Buotgisus who he
    calls Burtgisus was just another name for Arnoald. I dont know the
    date for this tradition but I assume its later than Paul the Deacon,
    but none of it is very convincing. I'm surprised that so many theories
    have been based on such 'evidence'.

    Not edited from the Vienna codex - this is noted as another copy of the
    text, which is edited from a codex in the Bibliothèque nationale that
    once belonged to Jacques-Auguste de Thou ("ex codice Thuaneo", p. 243),
    see here: https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/btv1b10548489w/f133.

    I must have been half-asleep - the Vienna codex is not said to have
    contained a copy of the Saint-Wandrille genealogy (no. III in the MGH
    edition, to which the footnote is a gloss), but rather a copy of the
    work full of fictitious tales ("in opere fabulis pleno" as the footnote
    has it) of which a fragment was printed by Meurisse in the book cited
    upthread.

    This is where the name of Arnulf's putative father occurs as Burtgisus.
    A copy (or pseudo-original) was in the library of Saint-Vincent at Metz.
    I'm not certain where it came from but it may be the prologue "found"
    and most probably forged by Jérôme Vignier (who also forged the
    genealogy no. I) to the 'Vita altera' of Arnulf wrongly ascribed to
    "Umno". This Vita itself, where Arnulf's father is not named but said to
    have come from Aquitaine, is a loose redaction of the Merovingian Vita
    (said to have been written by a young boy descended from Arnulf) with
    some additional information that seems to have originated in Metz. For instance, Arnulf is said to have been born at Lay in the Chaumontois:
    Lay was purportedly given to Saint-Arnoul abbey at Metz (the
    burial-place of St Arnulf) by a countess Eva - her charter for this
    donation, anachronistically dated 950 in the cartulary of Saint-Arnoul
    and more plausibly 965 in the copy printed in _Gallia christiana_ vol.
    10, also states that Arnulf had been born at Lay. However, this was
    forged or extensively falsified ca 1073.

    The Saint-Vincent narrative printed by Meurisse, that I guess was forged
    by Vignier, is an attempt to synthesise conflicting information from
    Metz and from Saint-Wandrille. "Burtgisus" is said to have been called "Arnoaldus" by many, and the pseudo-Umno's claim that he came from
    Aquitaine is amplified into a story that when his childless maternal
    uncle "King Guntharius" received him in the north he was made heir to
    the throne. This crude fabrication of a Merovingian hereditary right for
    the Carolingians was evidently not credible enough for most historians
    even in the 17th century.

    Peter Stewart

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  • From Paulo Ricardo Canedo@21:1/5 to All on Sun Jul 17 04:32:25 2022
    A quarta-feira, 13 de julho de 2022 à(s) 00:38:40 UTC+1, pss...@optusnet.com.au escreveu:
    On 13-Jul-22 3:37 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 9:24:40 PM UTC-7, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote:
    On 12-Jul-22 12:55 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:41:11 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:37:23 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote:
    Well we *do* know that Florentius and "Artemie" existed, although her name is usually given as Armentaria. These were the parents of the famous writer Gregory of Tours.

    For the closer generation, this is copied from "Munderic", Wikipedia "He married a daughter of Florentinus (born 485), a Roman senator, and his wife Artemia, daughter of Rusticus of Lyon. They were the parents of Gondulphus of Tongeren and
    Mummolin, possibly mayor of the palace of Neustria.[citation needed]"

    Not that citation needed at the end. That means this is questioned by someone (anyone) and a citation must be provided to prove that it's not a modern invention.

    It's curious that the history of this article mentions with a bit of disdain "a Portuguese genealogist...." I wonder who that could be scattering these nuggets about?

    Now David Kelley does mention this person Munderic, and why he might have had some kind of claim to something here

    http://fmg.ac/phocadownload/userupload/foundations1/issue6/425Nibelung.pdf

    Note there is no mention of any wife, which you think if some wife were the *sister* of a quite famous author might be worth mentioning.
    Since anyone can (and everyone should) strike passages marked citation needed from Wikipedia. I have done so. There is apparently no evidence (within say a thousand years of the event) that Munderic was connected to the family of Gregory of Tours.
    *Regardless* of what a thousand online family trees have gleefully copied. And suspect sites like Geni and Wikitree have followed along like blind hungry dogs, may they die of fleas.

    I will also point out, that Since Gregory of Tours wrote a long, extensive, history of this time period, you might *think* that he would have mentioned, in his paragraph about Munderic, that the man was his own brother-in-law, if he were.

    Clearly this is a modern, very lame, fabrication.
    It may be considered lame and even a fabrication, but it is not modern - >> your idea of 1,000 years after the event is out by roughly 500.

    The genealogy in question was included in a lost 12th- or perhaps
    13th-century copy of the late-10th century Vita of St Servatius written >> by Jocundus, which includes a digression about St Gundulf. The latter
    was allegedly the 22nd bishop of Tongeren and described as "filius
    deplorati Munderici" (son of the lamented Munderic). There is a legend, >> based on an inscription that can be interpreted in other ways, according >> to which Gundulf and his predecessor miraculously attended the
    dedication of Charlemagne's palace church at Aachen around two centuries >> after they had died.

    As for what Gregory of Tours knew about his own relatives, from memory
    we are told that he did not realise until it came up in conversation
    between them that Gundulf - a Merovingian magnate who may or may not be >> identical with the revenant bishop - was his mother's uncle.

    Peter Stewart

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    I'm not sure how St Gundulf being a son of Munderic (if he was), is related to the question of Munderic being the brother-in-law of Gregory of Tours, which is how we get these errorneous parents for Munderic's wife.

    My point was that this unnamed wife of Munderic did not have these parents.
    Not whether Munderic had any children.
    I was replying to your top-quoted statement "There is apparently no
    evidence (within say a thousand years of the event) that Munderic was connected to the family of Gregory of Tours". I don't think Gregory's grand-uncle Gundulf can be safely identified with the namesake bishop of Tongeren, but many do.

    When a thread consists of a welter of brief opinions, it is easier to
    reply to the latest one encompassing earlier postings rather than plod through several. SGM readers are not all laser-focused on the last thing
    you said.

    Peter Stewart
    Dear Peter, Settipani's theory is not that Gregory of Tours's uncle was Bishop Gundulf of Tongeren. Instead, he believes he was Patrician Gundulf of Provence. He theorizes Gundulf of Tongeren was Gundulf of Provence's maternal nephew. See the
    genealogical table at https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mund%C3%A9ric. Note Gundulf of Provence was Roman while Gundulf of Tongeren was Frankish.

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  • From Peter Stewart@21:1/5 to Paulo Ricardo Canedo on Sun Jul 17 23:09:50 2022
    On 17-Jul-22 9:32 PM, Paulo Ricardo Canedo wrote:
    A quarta-feira, 13 de julho de 2022 à(s) 00:38:40 UTC+1, pss...@optusnet.com.au escreveu:
    On 13-Jul-22 3:37 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 9:24:40 PM UTC-7, pss...@optusnet.com.au wrote: >>>> On 12-Jul-22 12:55 AM, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:41:11 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote:
    On Monday, July 11, 2022 at 7:37:23 AM UTC-7, Will Johnson wrote: >>>>>>> Well we *do* know that Florentius and "Artemie" existed, although her name is usually given as Armentaria. These were the parents of the famous writer Gregory of Tours.

    For the closer generation, this is copied from "Munderic", Wikipedia "He married a daughter of Florentinus (born 485), a Roman senator, and his wife Artemia, daughter of Rusticus of Lyon. They were the parents of Gondulphus of Tongeren and
    Mummolin, possibly mayor of the palace of Neustria.[citation needed]"

    Not that citation needed at the end. That means this is questioned by someone (anyone) and a citation must be provided to prove that it's not a modern invention.

    It's curious that the history of this article mentions with a bit of disdain "a Portuguese genealogist...." I wonder who that could be scattering these nuggets about?

    Now David Kelley does mention this person Munderic, and why he might have had some kind of claim to something here

    http://fmg.ac/phocadownload/userupload/foundations1/issue6/425Nibelung.pdf

    Note there is no mention of any wife, which you think if some wife were the *sister* of a quite famous author might be worth mentioning.
    Since anyone can (and everyone should) strike passages marked citation needed from Wikipedia. I have done so. There is apparently no evidence (within say a thousand years of the event) that Munderic was connected to the family of Gregory of Tours.
    *Regardless* of what a thousand online family trees have gleefully copied. And suspect sites like Geni and Wikitree have followed along like blind hungry dogs, may they die of fleas.

    I will also point out, that Since Gregory of Tours wrote a long, extensive, history of this time period, you might *think* that he would have mentioned, in his paragraph about Munderic, that the man was his own brother-in-law, if he were.

    Clearly this is a modern, very lame, fabrication.
    It may be considered lame and even a fabrication, but it is not modern - >>>> your idea of 1,000 years after the event is out by roughly 500.

    The genealogy in question was included in a lost 12th- or perhaps
    13th-century copy of the late-10th century Vita of St Servatius written >>>> by Jocundus, which includes a digression about St Gundulf. The latter
    was allegedly the 22nd bishop of Tongeren and described as "filius
    deplorati Munderici" (son of the lamented Munderic). There is a legend, >>>> based on an inscription that can be interpreted in other ways, according >>>> to which Gundulf and his predecessor miraculously attended the
    dedication of Charlemagne's palace church at Aachen around two centuries >>>> after they had died.

    As for what Gregory of Tours knew about his own relatives, from memory >>>> we are told that he did not realise until it came up in conversation
    between them that Gundulf - a Merovingian magnate who may or may not be >>>> identical with the revenant bishop - was his mother's uncle.

    Peter Stewart

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    This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
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    I'm not sure how St Gundulf being a son of Munderic (if he was), is related to the question of Munderic being the brother-in-law of Gregory of Tours, which is how we get these errorneous parents for Munderic's wife.

    My point was that this unnamed wife of Munderic did not have these parents. >>> Not whether Munderic had any children.
    I was replying to your top-quoted statement "There is apparently no
    evidence (within say a thousand years of the event) that Munderic was
    connected to the family of Gregory of Tours". I don't think Gregory's
    grand-uncle Gundulf can be safely identified with the namesake bishop of
    Tongeren, but many do.

    When a thread consists of a welter of brief opinions, it is easier to
    reply to the latest one encompassing earlier postings rather than plod
    through several. SGM readers are not all laser-focused on the last thing
    you said.

    Peter Stewart
    Dear Peter, Settipani's theory is not that Gregory of Tours's uncle was Bishop Gundulf of Tongeren. Instead, he believes he was Patrician Gundulf of Provence. He theorizes Gundulf of Tongeren was Gundulf of Provence's maternal nephew. See the
    genealogical table at https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mund%C3%A9ric. Note Gundulf of Provence was Roman while Gundulf of Tongeren was Frankish.

    Is this Wikipedia page an accurate reflection of Settipani's coverage of
    the subject? It would need some convincing argument to explain why a Gallo-Roman couple (Florentinus and Artemia) would give their son the
    Germanic name Gundulf - it seems far more plausible to me that this was
    a son of Artemia by a prior marriage, that also goes some way to
    accounting for the ignorance of their sister's grandson Gregory when an
    adult of his relationship to Gundulf although he had known Nicetius of
    Lyon well since childhood. Also Florentinus was not bishop of Geneva, he declined to take up his appointment to the bishopric at Artemia's
    bidding when she was pregnant with Nicetius.

    Peter Stewart

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  • From Peter Stewart@21:1/5 to Peter Stewart on Mon Jul 18 09:18:26 2022
    On 17-Jul-22 11:09 PM, Peter Stewart wrote:

    Is this Wikipedia page an accurate reflection of Settipani's coverage of
    the subject? It would need some convincing argument to explain why a Gallo-Roman couple (Florentinus and Artemia) would give their son the Germanic name Gundulf - it seems far more plausible to me that this was
    a son of Artemia by a prior marriage,  that also goes some way to
    accounting for the ignorance of their sister's grandson Gregory when an
    adult of his relationship to Gundulf

    This is poorly written - I was thinking of the sister of the brothers
    Gundulf and Nicetius, but from the phrasing I should have written "their daughter's grandson ..." referring instead to the lady's parents
    Florentinus and Artemia.

    Peter Stewart

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  • From Peter Stewart@21:1/5 to Paulo Ricardo Canedo on Mon Jul 18 14:10:46 2022
    On 17-Jul-22 9:32 PM, Paulo Ricardo Canedo wrote:

    Dear Peter, Settipani's theory is not that Gregory of Tours's uncle was Bishop Gundulf of Tongeren. Instead, he believes he was Patrician Gundulf of Provence. He theorizes Gundulf of Tongeren was Gundulf of Provence's maternal nephew. See the
    genealogical table at https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mund%C3%A9ric. Note Gundulf of Provence was Roman while Gundulf of Tongeren was Frankish.

    Apart from the question of a Germanic name for a Gallo-Roman, the identification of Gregory of Tours' great-uncle Gundulf with the bishop
    of Tongeren was made (among others) by Heike Grahn-Hoeck in 'Gundulfus subregulus' - eine genealogische Brücke zwischen Merowingern und
    Karolingern?, _Deutsches Archiv für Erforschung des Mittelalters_ 59
    (2003) 1-47.

    According to her speculation, Gundulf may have been the son of Gregory's great-grandmother Artemia by a marriage to "the lamented Munderic", the defeated Merovingian throne claimant. She proposed that he was the
    boyhood companion of Gunthar, the eldest son of Chlothar I, that he
    broke a leg by falling from an apple tree and later the other leg in a
    second accident - after which he was miraculously healed by St Martin in
    Tours, where he subsequently took up a career in the church that did not prevent him from pursuing a secular political role as 'dux' or military
    leader and royal counsellor, in which capacity he visited Gregory in 581
    when he revealed their relationship. She thought he became bishop of
    Metz in a sort of pension scheme for important Merovingian officials,
    that his name was later transferred to the neighbouring diocese of Tongeren/Maastricht, and that as well as being Gregory's great-uncle he
    was a paternal uncle of Arnulf whose father (Bodegisel in her view) was
    also a son of Munderic.

    I think she fudged some of the chronology supporting her conclusions,
    but the idea that the Carolingians may have suppressed such an agnatic ancestry, perhaps for the same reason that Gregory grew up not knowing
    of his own maternal connection to Munderic, possibly has enough merit to deserve a bit of reworking. Settipani's hypthesising is not the only
    game in town.

    Peter Stewart

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  • From Peter Stewart@21:1/5 to Peter Stewart on Sat Jul 23 16:30:26 2022
    On 18-Jul-22 2:10 PM, Peter Stewart wrote:
    On 17-Jul-22 9:32 PM, Paulo Ricardo Canedo wrote:

    Dear Peter, Settipani's theory is not that Gregory of Tours's uncle
    was Bishop Gundulf of Tongeren. Instead, he believes he was Patrician
    Gundulf of Provence. He theorizes Gundulf of Tongeren was Gundulf of
    Provence's maternal nephew. See the genealogical table at
    https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mund%C3%A9ric. Note Gundulf of Provence
    was Roman while Gundulf of Tongeren was Frankish.

    Apart from the question of a Germanic name for a Gallo-Roman, the identification of Gregory of Tours' great-uncle Gundulf with the bishop
    of Tongeren was made (among others) by Heike Grahn-Hoeck in 'Gundulfus subregulus' - eine genealogische Brücke zwischen Merowingern und Karolingern?, _Deutsches Archiv für Erforschung des Mittelalters_ 59
    (2003) 1-47.

    On the question of a Germanic name for a Gallo-Roman, it appears that Grahn-Hoek (not Hoeck) was at odds with quite a few other German
    historians, though I think she had stronger case than any of those I
    have seen. In their view that a Gallo-Roman couple in the 6th century
    are likely to have chosen a Germanic name for their son there is a very
    faint echo of the chauvinistic ideas of Wilhelm Kammeier, who thought
    that history had been falsified by the popes because the ancestors of
    the German people cannot have been illiterate tribal warriors when Rome
    was producing poets such as Virgil.

    Martin Heinzelman wrote of the problem posed by the "fact" that a large
    number of sixth-century senatorial families would have adopted Germanic
    names, but Grahn-Hoek cited the same work (Stroheker's prosopography in
    _Der senatorische Adel im spätantiken Gallien_) for her finding that
    Gundulfus was one of just three people with Germanic names among 411
    members of the Gallo-Roman senatorial class up to the end of the 6th
    century, and she reasonably thought it probable that these few Germanic
    names were the result of mixed marriages.

    Horst Ebling thought that Gundulfus was born to Florentinus and Artemia
    but that it could not be determined whether his name was given to him at
    birth or baptism or if it was changed later. Wolfgang Haubrichs
    considered that the name represented a kind of spiritual affinity with
    the Burgundian royal lineage of the Gibichungs, whose name elements were
    also used by the Merovingians to assert rights after conquering the
    Burgundian kingdom. It is scarcely credible that Florentinus had any
    such motive, any more than that he was himself related to the Gibichungs
    since Gundulf is the only Germanic name known in connection with his family.

    Christa Jochum-Godglück proposed that the name Gundulf was chosen in
    order to ingratiate the family of Florentinus with the Burgundian ruling
    elite, and that a Gallo-Roman may have given his son a Germanic name to
    signal his willingness to seek advantage through cultural assimilation. However, Gregory tells us that he and Artemia chose the (Greek-derived)
    name Nicetius with careful deliberation for their son evidently born
    after Gundulf, so they would have been spoiling their own earlier effort
    - and in any case, what use would it be to go round boasting of an
    infant at home with a name that when the child eventually becomes known
    to the world will show that his parents were once receptive to Germanic
    ways. Either that, or Florentinus would have made himself a pushy bore
    by nagging the people he sought to please with news about his baby and
    the toadying sentiment behind the boy's naming.

    Gregory does not tell us very much about his family, and when he says
    that there were two children before the birth of Nicetius he used a
    singular verb for one parent rather than a plural for both Florentinus
    and Artemia. This may have been taken as referring to Florentinus as the singular parent, since fathers were often mentioned solely, though it
    could equally refer to Artemia allowing for a literally truthful report
    on Gregory's part if Nicetius had been the only offspring of Florentinus.

    The likelihood that Artemia had been married to the unknown father of
    Gundulf - and perhaps of Gregory's maternal grandmother - before she
    married Florentinus (by whom she had a third child, Nicetius) seems
    stronger to me than the alternatives. I don't think Grahn-Hoek made a convincing case for Munderic as the father of Gregory's great-uncle
    Gundulf, and consequently for the latter being identical with the bishop
    of Tongeren who in turn was the paternal uncle of St Arnulf. I think it
    is more plausible that Artemia had been married to the unknown father of Munderic, so that this mysterious and despised throne-pretender was half-brother to her son Gundulf and father to a namesake of his.

    Peter Stewart


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  • From Hans Vogels@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jul 23 04:17:22 2022
    Op zaterdag 23 juli 2022 om 08:30:30 UTC+2 schreef pss...@optusnet.com.au:
    On 18-Jul-22 2:10 PM, Peter Stewart wrote:
    On 17-Jul-22 9:32 PM, Paulo Ricardo Canedo wrote:

    Dear Peter, Settipani's theory is not that Gregory of Tours's uncle
    was Bishop Gundulf of Tongeren. Instead, he believes he was Patrician
    Gundulf of Provence. He theorizes Gundulf of Tongeren was Gundulf of
    Provence's maternal nephew. See the genealogical table at
    https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mund%C3%A9ric. Note Gundulf of Provence
    was Roman while Gundulf of Tongeren was Frankish.

    Apart from the question of a Germanic name for a Gallo-Roman, the identification of Gregory of Tours' great-uncle Gundulf with the bishop
    of Tongeren was made (among others) by Heike Grahn-Hoeck in 'Gundulfus subregulus' - eine genealogische Brücke zwischen Merowingern und Karolingern?, _Deutsches Archiv für Erforschung des Mittelalters_ 59 (2003) 1-47.
    On the question of a Germanic name for a Gallo-Roman, it appears that Grahn-Hoek (not Hoeck) was at odds with quite a few other German
    historians, though I think she had stronger case than any of those I
    have seen. In their view that a Gallo-Roman couple in the 6th century
    are likely to have chosen a Germanic name for their son there is a very faint echo of the chauvinistic ideas of Wilhelm Kammeier, who thought
    that history had been falsified by the popes because the ancestors of
    the German people cannot have been illiterate tribal warriors when Rome
    was producing poets such as Virgil.

    Martin Heinzelman wrote of the problem posed by the "fact" that a large number of sixth-century senatorial families would have adopted Germanic names, but Grahn-Hoek cited the same work (Stroheker's prosopography in
    _Der senatorische Adel im spätantiken Gallien_) for her finding that Gundulfus was one of just three people with Germanic names among 411
    members of the Gallo-Roman senatorial class up to the end of the 6th century, and she reasonably thought it probable that these few Germanic names were the result of mixed marriages.

    Horst Ebling thought that Gundulfus was born to Florentinus and Artemia
    but that it could not be determined whether his name was given to him at birth or baptism or if it was changed later. Wolfgang Haubrichs
    considered that the name represented a kind of spiritual affinity with
    the Burgundian royal lineage of the Gibichungs, whose name elements were also used by the Merovingians to assert rights after conquering the Burgundian kingdom. It is scarcely credible that Florentinus had any
    such motive, any more than that he was himself related to the Gibichungs since Gundulf is the only Germanic name known in connection with his family.

    Christa Jochum-Godglück proposed that the name Gundulf was chosen in
    order to ingratiate the family of Florentinus with the Burgundian ruling elite, and that a Gallo-Roman may have given his son a Germanic name to signal his willingness to seek advantage through cultural assimilation. However, Gregory tells us that he and Artemia chose the (Greek-derived)
    name Nicetius with careful deliberation for their son evidently born
    after Gundulf, so they would have been spoiling their own earlier effort
    - and in any case, what use would it be to go round boasting of an
    infant at home with a name that when the child eventually becomes known
    to the world will show that his parents were once receptive to Germanic ways. Either that, or Florentinus would have made himself a pushy bore
    by nagging the people he sought to please with news about his baby and
    the toadying sentiment behind the boy's naming.

    Gregory does not tell us very much about his family, and when he says
    that there were two children before the birth of Nicetius he used a
    singular verb for one parent rather than a plural for both Florentinus
    and Artemia. This may have been taken as referring to Florentinus as the singular parent, since fathers were often mentioned solely, though it
    could equally refer to Artemia allowing for a literally truthful report
    on Gregory's part if Nicetius had been the only offspring of Florentinus.

    The likelihood that Artemia had been married to the unknown father of Gundulf - and perhaps of Gregory's maternal grandmother - before she
    married Florentinus (by whom she had a third child, Nicetius) seems
    stronger to me than the alternatives. I don't think Grahn-Hoek made a convincing case for Munderic as the father of Gregory's great-uncle
    Gundulf, and consequently for the latter being identical with the bishop
    of Tongeren who in turn was the paternal uncle of St Arnulf. I think it
    is more plausible that Artemia had been married to the unknown father of Munderic, so that this mysterious and despised throne-pretender was half-brother to her son Gundulf and father to a namesake of his.
    Peter Stewart

    I think it is more plausible that Artemia had been married to the unknown father of
    Munderic, so that this mysterious and despised throne-pretender was half-brother to her son Gundulf and father to a namesake of his. <<

    Would that not mean that Artemia married three times?
    x (1) N.N. father of Munderic (throne-pretender).
    x (2) N.N. father of Gundulf.
    x (3) Florentius, father of Nicetius and a daughter (maternal grandmother of Gregory),

    or

    x (1) N.N. father of Munderic (throne-pretender).
    x (2) N.N. father of Gundulf and a daughter (maternal grandmother of Gregory). x (3) Florentius, father of Nicetius.

    Hans Vogels

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  • From Peter Stewart@21:1/5 to Hans Vogels on Sat Jul 23 22:17:54 2022
    On 23-Jul-22 9:17 PM, Hans Vogels wrote:
    Op zaterdag 23 juli 2022 om 08:30:30 UTC+2 schreef pss...@optusnet.com.au:
    On 18-Jul-22 2:10 PM, Peter Stewart wrote:
    On 17-Jul-22 9:32 PM, Paulo Ricardo Canedo wrote:

    Dear Peter, Settipani's theory is not that Gregory of Tours's uncle
    was Bishop Gundulf of Tongeren. Instead, he believes he was Patrician
    Gundulf of Provence. He theorizes Gundulf of Tongeren was Gundulf of
    Provence's maternal nephew. See the genealogical table at
    https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mund%C3%A9ric. Note Gundulf of Provence
    was Roman while Gundulf of Tongeren was Frankish.

    Apart from the question of a Germanic name for a Gallo-Roman, the
    identification of Gregory of Tours' great-uncle Gundulf with the bishop
    of Tongeren was made (among others) by Heike Grahn-Hoeck in 'Gundulfus
    subregulus' - eine genealogische Brücke zwischen Merowingern und
    Karolingern?, _Deutsches Archiv für Erforschung des Mittelalters_ 59
    (2003) 1-47.
    On the question of a Germanic name for a Gallo-Roman, it appears that
    Grahn-Hoek (not Hoeck) was at odds with quite a few other German
    historians, though I think she had stronger case than any of those I
    have seen. In their view that a Gallo-Roman couple in the 6th century
    are likely to have chosen a Germanic name for their son there is a very
    faint echo of the chauvinistic ideas of Wilhelm Kammeier, who thought
    that history had been falsified by the popes because the ancestors of
    the German people cannot have been illiterate tribal warriors when Rome
    was producing poets such as Virgil.

    Martin Heinzelman wrote of the problem posed by the "fact" that a large
    number of sixth-century senatorial families would have adopted Germanic
    names, but Grahn-Hoek cited the same work (Stroheker's prosopography in
    _Der senatorische Adel im spätantiken Gallien_) for her finding that
    Gundulfus was one of just three people with Germanic names among 411
    members of the Gallo-Roman senatorial class up to the end of the 6th
    century, and she reasonably thought it probable that these few Germanic
    names were the result of mixed marriages.

    Horst Ebling thought that Gundulfus was born to Florentinus and Artemia
    but that it could not be determined whether his name was given to him at
    birth or baptism or if it was changed later. Wolfgang Haubrichs
    considered that the name represented a kind of spiritual affinity with
    the Burgundian royal lineage of the Gibichungs, whose name elements were
    also used by the Merovingians to assert rights after conquering the
    Burgundian kingdom. It is scarcely credible that Florentinus had any
    such motive, any more than that he was himself related to the Gibichungs
    since Gundulf is the only Germanic name known in connection with his family. >>
    Christa Jochum-Godglück proposed that the name Gundulf was chosen in
    order to ingratiate the family of Florentinus with the Burgundian ruling
    elite, and that a Gallo-Roman may have given his son a Germanic name to
    signal his willingness to seek advantage through cultural assimilation.
    However, Gregory tells us that he and Artemia chose the (Greek-derived)
    name Nicetius with careful deliberation for their son evidently born
    after Gundulf, so they would have been spoiling their own earlier effort
    - and in any case, what use would it be to go round boasting of an
    infant at home with a name that when the child eventually becomes known
    to the world will show that his parents were once receptive to Germanic
    ways. Either that, or Florentinus would have made himself a pushy bore
    by nagging the people he sought to please with news about his baby and
    the toadying sentiment behind the boy's naming.

    Gregory does not tell us very much about his family, and when he says
    that there were two children before the birth of Nicetius he used a
    singular verb for one parent rather than a plural for both Florentinus
    and Artemia. This may have been taken as referring to Florentinus as the
    singular parent, since fathers were often mentioned solely, though it
    could equally refer to Artemia allowing for a literally truthful report
    on Gregory's part if Nicetius had been the only offspring of Florentinus.

    The likelihood that Artemia had been married to the unknown father of
    Gundulf - and perhaps of Gregory's maternal grandmother - before she
    married Florentinus (by whom she had a third child, Nicetius) seems
    stronger to me than the alternatives. I don't think Grahn-Hoek made a
    convincing case for Munderic as the father of Gregory's great-uncle
    Gundulf, and consequently for the latter being identical with the bishop
    of Tongeren who in turn was the paternal uncle of St Arnulf. I think it
    is more plausible that Artemia had been married to the unknown father of
    Munderic, so that this mysterious and despised throne-pretender was
    half-brother to her son Gundulf and father to a namesake of his.
    Peter Stewart

    I think it is more plausible that Artemia had been married to the unknown father of
    Munderic, so that this mysterious and despised throne-pretender was half-brother to her son Gundulf and father to a namesake of his. <<

    Would that not mean that Artemia married three times?
    x (1) N.N. father of Munderic (throne-pretender).
    x (2) N.N. father of Gundulf.
    x (3) Florentius, father of Nicetius and a daughter (maternal grandmother of Gregory),

    or

    x (1) N.N. father of Munderic (throne-pretender).
    x (2) N.N. father of Gundulf and a daughter (maternal grandmother of Gregory).
    x (3) Florentius, father of Nicetius.

    This is not the scenario I meant to outline, which involved just two
    marriages for Artemia:

    x (1) NN father of Munderic by a prior wife, father of Gundulf and
    probably of Gregory's maternal grandmother by Artemia
    x (2) Florentinus, father of Nicetius by Artemia

    Peter Stewart



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