Obituary Collection
Charlemagne
Alexander Hamilton

Family Relationship of

Charlemagne

King of the Franks

32nd Great-Grandfather to

Alexander Hamilton

1st U.S. Treasury Secretary



(Names on the left-side of each line are the direct descendant)


Charlemagne

Louis the Pious, Holy Roman Emperor — Judith of Bavaria

Charles II, King of France — Ermentrude of Orleans

Louis II, King of France — Adelaide of Paris

Ermentrude — - - - - - - - - - - - -

Cunigunda — Wigeric of Lotharingia

Siegfried of Luxembourg — Hedwig of Nordgau

Frederick of Luxembourg — - - - - - - - - - - - -

Ogive of Luxembourg — Baldwin IV, Count of Flanders

Baldwin V, Count of Flanders — Adela of France

Matilda of Flanders — William I, King of England

Henry I, King of England — Matilda of Scotland

Matilda of England — Geoffrey Plantagenet, Count of Anjou

Henry II, King of England — Eleanor of Aquitaine

John, King of England — Isabelle of Angouleme

Henry III, King of England — Eleanor of Provence

Edward I, King of England — Eleanor of Castile

Edward II, King of England — Isabella of France

Edward III, King of England — Philippa of Hainault

John of Gaunt — Katherine Roet

John Beaufort — Margaret Holland

Joan Beaufort — James I, King of Scotland

James II, King of Scotland — Mary of Guelders

Mary Stewart of Scotland — James Hamilton

James Hamilton — Janet Bethune

Janet Hamilton — Alexander Cunningham

William Cunningham — Janet Gordon

Elizabeth Cunningham — Alexander Cunningham

William Cunningham — Elizabeth Stewart

William Cunningham — Elizabeth Napier

Alexander Cunningham — Janet Cunningham

Rebecca Cunningham — John Hamilton

Alexander Cunningham — Elizabeth Pollock

James A. Hamilton — Rachel Fawcett

Alexander Hamilton (1st U.S. Treasury Secretary)



Explanation of the Ahnentafel Numbering System

The ancestor reports on FamousKin.com use 'Ahnentafel' numbering. This means that the starting person is always number 1. That person's parents are always numbers 2 and 3. Each ancestor's parents are calculated by multiplying their number by 2 for the father, and adding one to that result to get the mother. Except for the starting individual, males are always even numbers, and females are always odd numbers. To determine a person's child, divide their number by 2 and drop any remainder.