Obituary Collection
President Thomas Jefferson
Charlemagne

Family Relationship of

Thomas Jefferson

3rd U.S. President

31st Great-Grandson to

Charlemagne

King of the Franks



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


Charlemagne

Louis the Pious, Holy Roman Emperor — Emengarde of Hesbaye

Lothair I, King of Italy — - - - - - - - - - - -

Daughter of Lothair I — Gilbert of Maasgau

Reginar I of Lorraine — Hersinda

Reginar II of Hainaut — Adelaide (Alice) of Burgundy

Reginar III of Hainaut — Adela

Lambert I, Count of Leuven — Gerberga of Lower Lorraine

Matilda (Maude) of Leuven — Eustace I of Boulogne

Lambert II of Lens — Adelaide of Normandy

Judith of Lens — Waltheof of Northumbria

Maud (Matilda) of Northumbria — Simon I de Saint Liz

Maud de Saint Liz — Saer de Quincy

Robert de Quincy — Hawise of Chester

Margaret de Quincy — John de Lacy

Maud de Lacy — Richard de Clare

Thomas de Clare — Juliana FitzMaurice

Margaret de Clare — Bartholomew de Badlesmere

Margery de Badlesmere — Sir John de Tibetot

Robert de Tibetot — Margaret Deincourt

Elizabeth de Tibetot — Sir Philip le Despencer

Margery Despencer — Sir Roger Wentworth

Margaret Wentworth — Sir William Hopton

Margaret Hopton — Sir Philip Booth

Audrey Booth — Sir William de Lytton

Sir Robert Lytton — Frances Cavalery

Anne Lytton — Sir John Borlase

Anne Borlase — Sir Euseby Isham

William Isham — Mary Brett

Henry Isham — Katherine Banks

Mary Isham — William Randolph

Isham Randolph — Jane Rogers

Jane Randolph — Peter Jefferson

Thomas Jefferson (3rd U.S. President)



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.