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Old 12-12-2021, 19:14   #1
JJ_BPK
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Family Tree/Lineage,, Any X-spurts?

Need help...

I have been using the Ancestry dot com free family tree app to build our tree. There is a lot of great help. Signed up for a trial subscription so I could get at the work completed by others. Well worth it..

I now have a tres going back 18 generations to around the 1100s

On the Johnson branch, I got stuck at Smerviemore Johnson DOB 1035 France. There were notes that he was related to King Richard I of Britanny, but no details.

So I started leaning on my google fo and found myheritage dot com with answers.

In the 1st attached pic, you can see Smer in the lower left.
His dad Arthur and mom Guinevere
Above them is GrandPa Uther, full name??
King Uther Pendragon, de Bretagne, Roi

I mapped Smer on Ancestry vs MyHeritage and it seems to match.

Oh, and the notes about Smer being related to Richard I,, it was thru his wife, Adrian according to myheritage.

HELP..
This is very Bizarro..
Opine at will..


g

PS: Here is the link. If you tap on someone a side page pops up with their details.

https://www.myheritage.com/site-fami...indID=3000076#
Attached Images
File Type: jpg Smerviemore Johnson tree 2.jpg (40.9 KB, 34 views)
File Type: jpg Johnson Clan Tree 2021 dec 3.jpg (22.5 KB, 27 views)
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Old 12-13-2021, 06:32   #2
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This is a pretty cool topic. Some of the difficulties (at the hangup point) might be that there are 2 very differing schools of thought regarding Arthurian legend when injected into a tree. Some works (Chretien de Troye, et al) seem to place him reliably in the century 400-500. However, as noted by Brad Miner in the book The Compleat Gentleman, many of the other accounts written in the mid 11th century on into the 12th evoke a detail that could only have been met by someone who had been through those times, but which conflict with reality (unless there's a 500 year old scribe somewhere with a very long beard). (Note: the book above is not about tracing Arthurian lineage but other matters which Arthur was germaine to.)

An example pointed out would be Arthur's and the Knights' participation in tournaments on horseback, which would've been extremely difficult without the use of stirrups which hadn't been introduced into Europe till much later. Miner notes that Henry & Wife/Queen Eleanor of Aquitaine did make good use of 'Arthur' in sustaining the legend because it helped them win hearts/minds of their subjects as they evoked their "Englishness." Keepers of the flame, so to speak.

I mention all this not to disparage what the companies provided you, but I wonder if the online ancestry companies commonly reach a dead-end around this point in recorded history. No dispute, historically, there are camps on both sides adamant that Arthur existed... or on the flip-side that he was a (necessary?) myth. I have a cousin who took my Mother's side of the family back to the early 1300's but then had to pretty much throw in the towel due to the difficulty of finding verifiable records. (She posed the question, if there's only 1 record of something how is it verifiable? lol)

I'd be curious to hear what you find out & what sources take you further back.
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Old 12-13-2021, 07:12   #3
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Pretty cool thanks for sharing that. I tend to lean more toward Dennis when thinking about King Arthur...
"Listen. Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government. Supreme executive power derives from a mandate from the masses, not from some farcical aquatic ceremony."
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Old 12-13-2021, 08:35   #4
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This story of Smer is starting to look/sound like the creation/documentation of the bible.

Is it fiction, non-fiction, or the truth told with an author's personal bias?

Found a couple of accidemians with THEIR take. They spend a lot of time arguing word semantics and little on facts.

Several argue that the stories of the Pendragon Clan did happen around 1000.
They also document that the stories are based in fact.
They all suggest that the recorder of these stories used a lot of leniencies



Remember that outside of the Christian Church,, 99% of the population did not read nor write. So, that fat frier in the abby creating picture books was more inclined to please the Abbot/Priorate. And the Abbot took orders from the Pope or local peerage


Reminds me of the movie The Name of the Rose (1986) with Sean Connery

I think for now I will leave the linkage and tell my kids and g-kids there may be weak points to the Grand Hertage of the Johnson Clan
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Old 12-13-2021, 15:55   #5
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Originally Posted by JJ_BPK View Post
Remember that outside of the Christian Church,, 99% of the population did not read nor write. So, that fat frier in the abby creating picture books was more inclined to please the Abbot/Priorate. And the Abbot took orders from the Pope or local peerage
Exactimundo. That factoid is lost on many who think they should just be able to run down to the Register of Deeds office and get a copy of a microfiche. When my cousin did ours this was way before this internet hoohoo and it took her years, the old-fashioned way.

But it's how I learned why "Scots-Irish" tend to be pretty irascible cusses.
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Old 12-13-2021, 20:41   #6
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JJ, Your located in NOVA which I take to mean Northern Virginia?? If so, get thee to the Library of Congress which has a whole section on genealogy.

I hit the place about 35 years ago, before the computer era when I lived in Silver Spring. Cleared up some issues regarding the family tree. Learned a lot forgotten over the years. Lotsa interesting factoids...

List of what the first guy brought with him from what is now Germany. Included "One Rifle" Names of the guys in the militias from Braddock's Defeat up through the Revolution and Civil War.

Guy by the Name of Dr Samuel Bates did the rosters for the PA regiments. That was a bit time consuming reading through. One dead at Vicksburg, one dead at Fredericksburg, one dead at Wilderness, one dead at Antietam, One dead at the James River. Two dead of disease. One severally wounded standing in a wheat field next to a Peach Orchard July 2nd 1863.

Even found some references from the Old Country!! A guy pinched for poaching the local noble's game. lol.

They have the Census records. No slaves on my family farms.
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Old 12-15-2021, 07:12   #7
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JJ_BPK View Post
This story of Smer is starting to look/sound like the creation/documentation of the bible.

Is it fiction, non-fiction, or the truth told with an author's personal bias?

Found a couple of accidemians with THEIR take. They spend a lot of time arguing word semantics and little on facts.

Several argue that the stories of the Pendragon Clan did happen around 1000.
They also document that the stories are based in fact.
They all suggest that the recorder of these stories used a lot of leniencies



Remember that outside of the Christian Church,, 99% of the population did not read nor write. So, that fat frier in the abby creating picture books was more inclined to please the Abbot/Priorate. And the Abbot took orders from the Pope or local peerage


Reminds me of the movie The Name of the Rose (1986) with Sean Connery

I think for now I will leave the linkage and tell my kids and g-kids there may be weak points to the Grand Hertage of the Johnson Clan
Just tell them your clan arose to defend against the Vikings that invaded King Arthur's Kingdom. In the end the savages became woke, changed religion, and released all their white slaves. Some of the clan did a double take and said they don't want to be woke thats why you have members of the family argue during the holidays.
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Last edited by 7624U; 12-15-2021 at 07:15.
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Old 12-15-2021, 12:27   #8
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JJ You bring up a very interesting time and place in history. The history of Brittany is quite different than I would have thought. From the first hundred years AD to the 3rd Crusade their was a lot of moving pieces. Historians and Political interests still point to Arminius and the Teutoburg Forest as a major turning point of civilization.
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Old 12-13-2021, 08:59   #9
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Badger52 View Post
I mention all this not to disparage what the companies provided you, but I wonder if the online ancestry companies commonly reach a dead-end around this point in recorded history. No dispute, historically, there are camps on both sides adamant that Arthur existed... or on the flip-side that he was a (necessary?) myth. I have a cousin who took my Mother's side of the family back to the early 1300's but then had to pretty much throw in the towel due to the difficulty of finding verifiable records. (She posed the question, if there's only 1 record of something how is it verifiable? lol)

I'd be curious to hear what you find out & what sources take you further back.
I am going to say from my experience there are dead ends and/or a point you reach where there is no way to verify the person is the person you are looking for, at which point it is a guessing game.

Also, when it comes to family Trees on Ancestry, MyHeritage, FTDNA, etc they rely subscriber input so it's garbage in garbage out.

For instance in my adopted paternal family some old hens got together in the 1950's-60' and concluded that the patriarch of the family was a former Lt. Governor of the State of Virginia who had the same name and born in the same period. They went as far as getting papers notarized to authenticate their accuracy. These documents permeated family trees for years and provided bogus data across hundreds of trees.

It took 3 YDNA to proved those documents to be wrong. Despite this there is still a family member who pollutes the Ancestry database with that inaccurate information.

Another in my maternal family member is a writer. He moved to My Heritage to 'write' his own version of the family history. He sent me a bio on a family member that was complete fiction, and that is what subscribers can and do pull into their trees.

Most of the AncestryDNA matches with family trees do well if they get back to their G-Grandparents. That's it, that's all they know about their families. Those that do get past G-Grandparents, many merely point and click on what comes up in their hints.


Family Search says my 13th G-Grandfather is an Indian Chief from back East who married a white woman...a Grand Sacum or something like that. No way for me to prove that, but it's a pretty cool possibility
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