_Charles Duke of Ingelheim_ _Roland of Neustria_|_Juliana of Tonsburgh______ _Godfrey of Neustria_| | | ___________________________ | |____________________|___________________________ _Baldwin I Baron Tonsburgh_| | | ___________________________ | | ____________________|___________________________ | |_____________________| | | ___________________________ | |____________________|___________________________ _Baldwin II Baron Tonsburgh_| | | ___________________________ | | ____________________|___________________________ | | _____________________| | | | | ___________________________ | | | |____________________|___________________________ | |___________________________| | | ___________________________ | | ____________________|___________________________ | |_____________________| | | ___________________________ | |____________________|___________________________ | |--Jean de BURGO Baron Tonsburgh | | ___________________________ | ____________________|___________________________ | _____________________| | | | ___________________________ | | |____________________|___________________________ | ___________________________| | | | ___________________________ | | | ____________________|___________________________ | | |_____________________| | | | ___________________________ | | |____________________|___________________________ |____________________________| | ___________________________ | ____________________|___________________________ | _____________________| | | | ___________________________ | | |____________________|___________________________ |___________________________| | ___________________________ | ____________________|___________________________ |_____________________| | ___________________________ |____________________|___________________________
CHARLEMAGNE is not generally accepted and is still in the early stages of
serious research. It may or may not prove to be viable.
Most often referred to as John/Jean de Conteville.
Stuart's "Royalty for Commoners" (160:33), does not identify his parents.
Sir Bernard Burke, C.B., LL.D., Ulster King of Arms, Genealogical History of
the Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages of the British
Empire, Burke's Peerage/Genealogical Publishing Co., 1883, Reprinted
1985. 1996, p. 88-89.
From the "Burke-Ansley Two Great Families" database at RootsWeb
WorldConnect:
. "John, Earl of Comyn, and Baron of Tonsburgh, in Normandy, being
general of the king's forces and governor of his chief towns, there obtained
the surname "De Burgh," and took his motto, "Ung roy, ung foy, ung loy,"
from that of Caen, a chief town in his jurisdiction."