LSA Families and Individuals

Notes


Ali

References:

(1) Royal Ancestors of Some American Families, compiled by Michel L. Call.

(2) The Plantagenet Ancestry of King Edward III and Queen Philippa, George
   Andrews Moriarty.

(3) Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, Frederick Lewis Weis.

(4) Stammtafeln Zur Geschichte Der Europaischen Staaten, Wilhelm Karl, Prinz
   Von Isenburg.

(5) Complete Peerage, G. E. Cokayne.

(6) The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Gerald
   Paget.

(7) The American Genealogist.

(8) The Genealogist.
(9) The New England Historical and Genealogical Register.

(10) The Ancestry of Richard Plantagenet and Cecily Neville, Ernst Friedrick
    Kraentzler.

(11) The Plantagenet Ancestry, W. H. Turton.

(12) Tableaux Genealogiques des Souverains de la France et de seu Grands
    Feudataires,  Paris, 1863.

(13) The House of Adam, Georgia B. Schwartz, 4 volumes.

(14) Archive Records, The Genealogical Society, Salt Lake City, Utah.

(15) Tablettes Chronologiques.

(16) From Whence We Came, Burdick.

(17) Royalty for Commoners, Roderick Stuart.

Historical Notes:

(1) It is now well known that genealogies of many important Spanish families
have been altered in the past through a process of "limpieza" or "cleansing" to
reflect only pure Christian (Catholic) lines.  The Judeo-Christian lines
steming from the Spanish Inquisition and Moslem lineages from the Crusades have
been dropped as though they never existed.

Competent researchers of the 20th Century have been restoring these lines using
Arabic records which were always available, the Moslems not finding Christian
converts objectionable.

The Lineage of Elisabeth of Seville, also known by her Arabic name of Zayda was
developed by Forest E. Barber of Long Beach California.  Mr. Barber spent 32
years of research in Europe, America, and Morocco, developing the presentation
which appears here and elsewhere, i.e., The Augustan Magazine.  His
bibliography with 23 entries include many of the great Arab works.  His
correspondence and personal contacts include the greatest authorities, amongst
them Sir Ian Moncreiffe of that Ilk, who himself uncovered several Jewish,
Moslem, and Oriental lines before his death in 1985.


Ali

References:

(1) Royal Ancestors of Some American Families, compiled by Michel L. Call.

(2) The Plantagenet Ancestry of King Edward III and Queen Philippa, George
   Andrews Moriarty.

(3) Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, Frederick Lewis Weis.

(4) Stammtafeln Zur Geschichte Der Europaischen Staaten, Wilhelm Karl, Prinz
   Von Isenburg.

(5) Complete Peerage, G. E. Cokayne.

(6) The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Gerald
   Paget.

(7) The American Genealogist.

(8) The Genealogist.
(9) The New England Historical and Genealogical Register.

(10) The Ancestry of Richard Plantagenet and Cecily Neville, Ernst Friedrick
    Kraentzler.

(11) The Plantagenet Ancestry, W. H. Turton.

(12) Tableaux Genealogiques des Souverains de la France et de seu Grands
    Feudataires,  Paris, 1863.

(13) The House of Adam, Georgia B. Schwartz, 4 volumes.

(14) Archive Records, The Genealogical Society, Salt Lake City, Utah.

(15) Tablettes Chronologiques.

(16) From Whence We Came, Burdick.

(17) Royalty for Commoners, Roderick Stuart.

Historical Notes:

(1) It is now well known that genealogies of many important Spanish families
have been altered in the past through a process of "limpieza" or "cleansing" to
reflect only pure Christian (Catholic) lines.  The Judeo-Christian lines
steming from the Spanish Inquisition and Moslem lineages from the Crusades have
been dropped as though they never existed.

Competent researchers of the 20th Century have been restoring these lines using
Arabic records which were always available, the Moslems not finding Christian
converts objectionable.

The Lineage of Elisabeth of Seville, also known by her Arabic name of Zayda was
developed by Forest E. Barber of Long Beach California.  Mr. Barber spent 32
years of research in Europe, America, and Morocco, developing the presentation
which appears here and elsewhere, i.e., The Augustan Magazine.  His
bibliography with 23 entries include many of the great Arab works.  His
correspondence and personal contacts include the greatest authorities, amongst
them Sir Ian Moncreiffe of that Ilk, who himself uncovered several Jewish,
Moslem, and Oriental lines before his death in 1985.


Ali

References:

(1) Royal Ancestors of Some American Families, compiled by Michel L. Call.

(2) The Plantagenet Ancestry of King Edward III and Queen Philippa, George
   Andrews Moriarty.

(3) Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, Frederick Lewis Weis.

(4) Stammtafeln Zur Geschichte Der Europaischen Staaten, Wilhelm Karl, Prinz
   Von Isenburg.

(5) Complete Peerage, G. E. Cokayne.

(6) The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Gerald
   Paget.

(7) The American Genealogist.

(8) The Genealogist.
(9) The New England Historical and Genealogical Register.

(10) The Ancestry of Richard Plantagenet and Cecily Neville, Ernst Friedrick
    Kraentzler.

(11) The Plantagenet Ancestry, W. H. Turton.

(12) Tableaux Genealogiques des Souverains de la France et de seu Grands
    Feudataires,  Paris, 1863.

(13) The House of Adam, Georgia B. Schwartz, 4 volumes.

(14) Archive Records, The Genealogical Society, Salt Lake City, Utah.

(15) Tablettes Chronologiques.

(16) From Whence We Came, Burdick.

(17) Royalty for Commoners, Roderick Stuart.

Historical Notes:

(1) It is now well known that genealogies of many important Spanish families
have been altered in the past through a process of "limpieza" or "cleansing" to
reflect only pure Christian (Catholic) lines.  The Judeo-Christian lines
steming from the Spanish Inquisition and Moslem lineages from the Crusades have
been dropped as though they never existed.

Competent researchers of the 20th Century have been restoring these lines using
Arabic records which were always available, the Moslems not finding Christian
converts objectionable.

The Lineage of Elisabeth of Seville, also known by her Arabic name of Zayda was
developed by Forest E. Barber of Long Beach California.  Mr. Barber spent 32
years of research in Europe, America, and Morocco, developing the presentation
which appears here and elsewhere, i.e., The Augustan Magazine.  His
bibliography with 23 entries include many of the great Arab works.  His
correspondence and personal contacts include the greatest authorities, amongst
them Sir Ian Moncreiffe of that Ilk, who himself uncovered several Jewish,
Moslem, and Oriental lines before his death in 1985.


Ali

References:

(1) Royal Ancestors of Some American Families, compiled by Michel L. Call.

(2) The Plantagenet Ancestry of King Edward III and Queen Philippa, George
   Andrews Moriarty.

(3) Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, Frederick Lewis Weis.

(4) Stammtafeln Zur Geschichte Der Europaischen Staaten, Wilhelm Karl, Prinz
   Von Isenburg.

(5) Complete Peerage, G. E. Cokayne.

(6) The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Gerald
   Paget.

(7) The American Genealogist.

(8) The Genealogist.
(9) The New England Historical and Genealogical Register.

(10) The Ancestry of Richard Plantagenet and Cecily Neville, Ernst Friedrick
    Kraentzler.

(11) The Plantagenet Ancestry, W. H. Turton.

(12) Tableaux Genealogiques des Souverains de la France et de seu Grands
    Feudataires,  Paris, 1863.

(13) The House of Adam, Georgia B. Schwartz, 4 volumes.

(14) Archive Records, The Genealogical Society, Salt Lake City, Utah.

(15) Tablettes Chronologiques.

(16) From Whence We Came, Burdick.

(17) Royalty for Commoners, Roderick Stuart.

Historical Notes:

(1) It is now well known that genealogies of many important Spanish families
have been altered in the past through a process of "limpieza" or "cleansing" to
reflect only pure Christian (Catholic) lines.  The Judeo-Christian lines
steming from the Spanish Inquisition and Moslem lineages from the Crusades have
been dropped as though they never existed.

Competent researchers of the 20th Century have been restoring these lines using
Arabic records which were always available, the Moslems not finding Christian
converts objectionable.

The Lineage of Elisabeth of Seville, also known by her Arabic name of Zayda was
developed by Forest E. Barber of Long Beach California.  Mr. Barber spent 32
years of research in Europe, America, and Morocco, developing the presentation
which appears here and elsewhere, i.e., The Augustan Magazine.  His
bibliography with 23 entries include many of the great Arab works.  His
correspondence and personal contacts include the greatest authorities, amongst
them Sir Ian Moncreiffe of that Ilk, who himself uncovered several Jewish,
Moslem, and Oriental lines before his death in 1985.


Ali

References:

(1) Royal Ancestors of Some American Families, compiled by Michel L. Call.

(2) The Plantagenet Ancestry of King Edward III and Queen Philippa, George
   Andrews Moriarty.

(3) Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, Frederick Lewis Weis.

(4) Stammtafeln Zur Geschichte Der Europaischen Staaten, Wilhelm Karl, Prinz
   Von Isenburg.

(5) Complete Peerage, G. E. Cokayne.

(6) The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Gerald
   Paget.

(7) The American Genealogist.

(8) The Genealogist.
(9) The New England Historical and Genealogical Register.

(10) The Ancestry of Richard Plantagenet and Cecily Neville, Ernst Friedrick
    Kraentzler.

(11) The Plantagenet Ancestry, W. H. Turton.

(12) Tableaux Genealogiques des Souverains de la France et de seu Grands
    Feudataires,  Paris, 1863.

(13) The House of Adam, Georgia B. Schwartz, 4 volumes.

(14) Archive Records, The Genealogical Society, Salt Lake City, Utah.

(15) Tablettes Chronologiques.

(16) From Whence We Came, Burdick.

(17) Royalty for Commoners, Roderick Stuart.

Historical Notes:

(1) It is now well known that genealogies of many important Spanish families
have been altered in the past through a process of "limpieza" or "cleansing" to
reflect only pure Christian (Catholic) lines.  The Judeo-Christian lines
steming from the Spanish Inquisition and Moslem lineages from the Crusades have
been dropped as though they never existed.

Competent researchers of the 20th Century have been restoring these lines using
Arabic records which were always available, the Moslems not finding Christian
converts objectionable.

The Lineage of Elisabeth of Seville, also known by her Arabic name of Zayda was
developed by Forest E. Barber of Long Beach California.  Mr. Barber spent 32
years of research in Europe, America, and Morocco, developing the presentation
which appears here and elsewhere, i.e., The Augustan Magazine.  His
bibliography with 23 entries include many of the great Arab works.  His
correspondence and personal contacts include the greatest authorities, amongst
them Sir Ian Moncreiffe of that Ilk, who himself uncovered several Jewish,
Moslem, and Oriental lines before his death in 1985.


Ali

References:

(1) Royal Ancestors of Some American Families, compiled by Michel L. Call.

(2) The Plantagenet Ancestry of King Edward III and Queen Philippa, George
   Andrews Moriarty.

(3) Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, Frederick Lewis Weis.

(4) Stammtafeln Zur Geschichte Der Europaischen Staaten, Wilhelm Karl, Prinz
   Von Isenburg.

(5) Complete Peerage, G. E. Cokayne.

(6) The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Gerald
   Paget.

(7) The American Genealogist.

(8) The Genealogist.
(9) The New England Historical and Genealogical Register.

(10) The Ancestry of Richard Plantagenet and Cecily Neville, Ernst Friedrick
    Kraentzler.

(11) The Plantagenet Ancestry, W. H. Turton.

(12) Tableaux Genealogiques des Souverains de la France et de seu Grands
    Feudataires,  Paris, 1863.

(13) The House of Adam, Georgia B. Schwartz, 4 volumes.

(14) Archive Records, The Genealogical Society, Salt Lake City, Utah.

(15) Tablettes Chronologiques.

(16) From Whence We Came, Burdick.

(17) Royalty for Commoners, Roderick Stuart.

Historical Notes:

(1) It is now well known that genealogies of many important Spanish families
have been altered in the past through a process of "limpieza" or "cleansing" to
reflect only pure Christian (Catholic) lines.  The Judeo-Christian lines
steming from the Spanish Inquisition and Moslem lineages from the Crusades have
been dropped as though they never existed.

Competent researchers of the 20th Century have been restoring these lines using
Arabic records which were always available, the Moslems not finding Christian
converts objectionable.

The Lineage of Elisabeth of Seville, also known by her Arabic name of Zayda was
developed by Forest E. Barber of Long Beach California.  Mr. Barber spent 32
years of research in Europe, America, and Morocco, developing the presentation
which appears here and elsewhere, i.e., The Augustan Magazine.  His
bibliography with 23 entries include many of the great Arab works.  His
correspondence and personal contacts include the greatest authorities, amongst
them Sir Ian Moncreiffe of that Ilk, who himself uncovered several Jewish,
Moslem, and Oriental lines before his death in 1985.


Ali

References:

(1) Royal Ancestors of Some American Families, compiled by Michel L. Call.

(2) The Plantagenet Ancestry of King Edward III and Queen Philippa, George
   Andrews Moriarty.

(3) Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, Frederick Lewis Weis.

(4) Stammtafeln Zur Geschichte Der Europaischen Staaten, Wilhelm Karl, Prinz
   Von Isenburg.

(5) Complete Peerage, G. E. Cokayne.

(6) The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Gerald
   Paget.

(7) The American Genealogist.

(8) The Genealogist.
(9) The New England Historical and Genealogical Register.

(10) The Ancestry of Richard Plantagenet and Cecily Neville, Ernst Friedrick
    Kraentzler.

(11) The Plantagenet Ancestry, W. H. Turton.

(12) Tableaux Genealogiques des Souverains de la France et de seu Grands
    Feudataires,  Paris, 1863.

(13) The House of Adam, Georgia B. Schwartz, 4 volumes.

(14) Archive Records, The Genealogical Society, Salt Lake City, Utah.

(15) Tablettes Chronologiques.

(16) From Whence We Came, Burdick.

(17) Royalty for Commoners, Roderick Stuart.

Historical Notes:

(1) It is now well known that genealogies of many important Spanish families
have been altered in the past through a process of "limpieza" or "cleansing" to
reflect only pure Christian (Catholic) lines.  The Judeo-Christian lines
steming from the Spanish Inquisition and Moslem lineages from the Crusades have
been dropped as though they never existed.

Competent researchers of the 20th Century have been restoring these lines using
Arabic records which were always available, the Moslems not finding Christian
converts objectionable.

The Lineage of Elisabeth of Seville, also known by her Arabic name of Zayda was
developed by Forest E. Barber of Long Beach California.  Mr. Barber spent 32
years of research in Europe, America, and Morocco, developing the presentation
which appears here and elsewhere, i.e., The Augustan Magazine.  His
bibliography with 23 entries include many of the great Arab works.  His
correspondence and personal contacts include the greatest authorities, amongst
them Sir Ian Moncreiffe of that Ilk, who himself uncovered several Jewish,
Moslem, and Oriental lines before his death in 1985.


Abu TALIB

References:

(1) Royal Ancestors of Some American Families, compiled by Michel L. Call.

(2) The Plantagenet Ancestry of King Edward III and Queen Philippa, George
   Andrews Moriarty.

(3) Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, Frederick Lewis Weis.

(4) Stammtafeln Zur Geschichte Der Europaischen Staaten, Wilhelm Karl, Prinz
   Von Isenburg.

(5) Complete Peerage, G. E. Cokayne.

(6) The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Gerald
   Paget.

(7) The American Genealogist.

(8) The Genealogist.
(9) The New England Historical and Genealogical Register.

(10) The Ancestry of Richard Plantagenet and Cecily Neville, Ernst Friedrick
    Kraentzler.

(11) The Plantagenet Ancestry, W. H. Turton.

(12) Tableaux Genealogiques des Souverains de la France et de seu Grands
    Feudataires,  Paris, 1863.

(13) The House of Adam, Georgia B. Schwartz, 4 volumes.

(14) Archive Records, The Genealogical Society, Salt Lake City, Utah.

(15) Tablettes Chronologiques.

(16) From Whence We Came, Burdick.

(17) Royalty for Commoners, Roderick Stuart.

Historical Notes:

(1) It is now well known that genealogies of many important Spanish families
have been altered in the past through a process of "limpieza" or "cleansing" to
reflect only pure Christian (Catholic) lines.  The Judeo-Christian lines
steming from the Spanish Inquisition and Moslem lineages from the Crusades have
been dropped as though they never existed.

Competent researchers of the 20th Century have been restoring these lines using
Arabic records which were always available, the Moslems not finding Christian
converts objectionable.

This Lineage of Elisabeth of Seville, also known by her Arabic name of Zayda was
developed by Forest E. Barber of Long Beach California.  Mr. Barber spent 32
years of research in Europe, America, and Morocco, developing the presentation
which appears here and elsewhere, i.e., The Augustan Magazine.  His
bibliography with 23 entries include many of the great Arab works.  His
correspondence and personal contacts include the greatest authorities, amongst
them Sir Ian Moncreiffe of that Ilk, who himself uncovered several Jewish,
Moslem, and Oriental lines before his death in 1985.


Fatema

References:

(1) Royal Ancestors of Some American Families, compiled by Michel L. Call.

(2) The Plantagenet Ancestry of King Edward III and Queen Philippa, George
   Andrews Moriarty.

(3) Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, Frederick Lewis Weis.

(4) Stammtafeln Zur Geschichte Der Europaischen Staaten, Wilhelm Karl, Prinz
   Von Isenburg.

(5) Complete Peerage, G. E. Cokayne.

(6) The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Gerald
   Paget.

(7) The American Genealogist.

(8) The Genealogist.
(9) The New England Historical and Genealogical Register.

(10) The Ancestry of Richard Plantagenet and Cecily Neville, Ernst Friedrick
    Kraentzler.

(11) The Plantagenet Ancestry, W. H. Turton.

(12) Tableaux Genealogiques des Souverains de la France et de seu Grands
    Feudataires,  Paris, 1863.

(13) The House of Adam, Georgia B. Schwartz, 4 volumes.

(14) Archive Records, The Genealogical Society, Salt Lake City, Utah.

(15) Tablettes Chronologiques.

(16) From Whence We Came, Burdick.

(17) Royalty for Commoners, Roderick Stuart.

Historical Notes:

(1) It is now well known that genealogies of many important Spanish families
have been altered in the past through a process of "limpieza" or "cleansing" to
reflect only pure Christian (Catholic) lines.  The Judeo-Christian lines
steming from the Spanish Inquisition and Moslem lineages from the Crusades have
been dropped as though they never existed.

Competent researchers of the 20th Century have been restoring these lines using
Arabic records which were always available, the Moslems not finding Christian
converts objectionable.

This Lineage of Elisabeth of Seville, also known by her Arabic name of Zayda was
developed by Forest E. Barber of Long Beach California.  Mr. Barber spent 32
years of research in Europe, America, and Morocco, developing the presentation
which appears here and elsewhere, i.e., The Augustan Magazine.  His
bibliography with 23 entries include many of the great Arab works.  His
correspondence and personal contacts include the greatest authorities, amongst
them Sir Ian Moncreiffe of that Ilk, who himself uncovered several Jewish,
Moslem, and Oriental lines before his death in 1985.


Mohammed (or Muhammad) "the Prophet"

References:

(1) Royal Ancestors of Some American Families, compiled by Michel L. Call.

(2) The Plantagenet Ancestry of King Edward III and Queen Philippa, George
   Andrews Moriarty.

(3) Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, Frederick Lewis Weis.

(4) Stammtafeln Zur Geschichte Der Europaischen Staaten, Wilhelm Karl, Prinz
   Von Isenburg.

(5) Complete Peerage, G. E. Cokayne.

(6) The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Gerald
   Paget.

(7) The American Genealogist.

(8) The Genealogist.
(9) The New England Historical and Genealogical Register.

(10) The Ancestry of Richard Plantagenet and Cecily Neville, Ernst Friedrick
    Kraentzler.

(11) The Plantagenet Ancestry, W. H. Turton.

(12) Tableaux Genealogiques des Souverains de la France et de seu Grands
    Feudataires,  Paris, 1863.

(13) The House of Adam, Georgia B. Schwartz, 4 volumes.

(14) Archive Records, The Genealogical Society, Salt Lake City, Utah.

(15) Tablettes Chronologiques.

(16) From Whence We Came, Burdick.

(17) Royalty for Commoners, Roderick Stuart.

Historical Notes:

(1) It is now well known that genealogies of many important Spanish families
have been altered in the past through a process of "limpieza" or "cleansing" to
reflect only pure Christian (Catholic) lines.  The Judeo-Christian lines
steming from the Spanish Inquisition and Moslem lineages from the Crusades have
been dropped as though they never existed.

Competent researchers of the 20th Century have been restoring these lines using
Arabic records which were always available, the Moslems not finding Christian
converts objectionable.

The Lineage of Elisabeth of Seville, also known by her Arabic name of Zayda was
developed by Forest E. Barber of Long Beach California.  Mr. Barber spent 32
years of research in Europe, America, and Morocco, developing the presentation
which appears here and elsewhere, i.e., The Augustan Magazine.  His
bibliography with 23 entries include many of the great Arab works.  His
correspondence and personal contacts include the greatest authorities, amongst
them Sir Ian Moncreiffe of that Ilk, who himself uncovered several Jewish,
Moslem, and Oriental lines before his death in 1985.

(2) Mohammad the Prophet, of whom there are thousands of authenticated
descendants.

Necessary Explanations:

(1) The Full form of the name of Mohammed is: Abulqasim Mohammed Ibn Abdullah
   ibn Abd Al-Muttalib Ibn Hashim.


Khadijah

References:

(1) Royal Ancestors of Some American Families, compiled by Michel L. Call.

(2) The Plantagenet Ancestry of King Edward III and Queen Philippa, George
   Andrews Moriarty.

(3) Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, Frederick Lewis Weis.

(4) Stammtafeln Zur Geschichte Der Europaischen Staaten, Wilhelm Karl, Prinz
   Von Isenburg.

(5) Complete Peerage, G. E. Cokayne.

(6) The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Gerald
   Paget.

(7) The American Genealogist.

(8) The Genealogist.
(9) The New England Historical and Genealogical Register.

(10) The Ancestry of Richard Plantagenet and Cecily Neville, Ernst Friedrick
    Kraentzler.

(11) The Plantagenet Ancestry, W. H. Turton.

(12) Tableaux Genealogiques des Souverains de la France et de seu Grands
    Feudataires,  Paris, 1863.

(13) The House of Adam, Georgia B. Schwartz, 4 volumes.

(14) Archive Records, The Genealogical Society, Salt Lake City, Utah.

(15) Tablettes Chronologiques.

(16) From Whence We Came, Burdick.

(17) Royalty for Commoners, Roderick Stuart.

Historical Notes:

(1) It is now well known that genealogies of many important Spanish families
have been altered in the past through a process of "limpieza" or "cleansing" to
reflect only pure Christian (Catholic) lines.  The Judeo-Christian lines
steming from the Spanish Inquisition and Moslem lineages from the Crusades have
been dropped as though they never existed.

Competent researchers of the 20th Century have been restoring these lines using
Arabic records which were always available, the Moslems not finding Christian
converts objectionable.

This Lineage of Elisabeth of Seville, also known by her Arabic name of Zayda was
developed by Forest E. Barber of Long Beach California.  Mr. Barber spent 32
years of research in Europe, America, and Morocco, developing the presentation
which appears here and elsewhere, i.e., The Augustan Magazine.  His
bibliography with 23 entries include many of the great Arab works.  His
correspondence and personal contacts include the greatest authorities, amongst
them Sir Ian Moncreiffe of that Ilk, who himself uncovered several Jewish,
Moslem, and Oriental lines before his death in 1985.


Abd AL-MUTTALIB

References:

(1) Royal Ancestors of Some American Families, compiled by Michel L. Call.
(2) The Plantagenet Ancestry of King Edward III and Queen Philippa, George
   Andrews Moriarty.
(3) Ancestral Roots of Sixty Colonists, Frederick Lewis Weis.
(4) Stammtafeln Zur Geschichte Der Europaischen Staaten, Wilhelm Karl, Prinz
   Von Isenburg.
(5) Complete Peerage, G. E. Cokayne.
(6) The Lineage and Ancestry of H.R.H. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Gerald Paget.
(7) The American Genealogist.
(8) The Genealogist.
(9) The New England Historical and Genealogical Register.
(10) The Ancestry of Richard Plantagenet and Cecily Neville, Ernst Friedrick
    Kraentzler.
(11) The Plantagenet Ancestry, W. H. Turton.
(12) Tableaux Genealogiques des Souverains de la France et de seu Grands
    Feudataires,  Paris, 1863.
(13) The House of Adam, Georgia B. Schwartz, 4 volumes.
(14) Archive Records, The Genealogical Society, Salt Lake City, Utah.
(15) Tablettes Chronologiques.
(16) From Whence We Came, Burdick.
(17) Royalty for Commoners, Roderick Stuart.

Historical Notes:

(1) It is now well known that genealogies of many important Spanish families
have been altered in the past through a process of "limpieza" or "cleansing" to reflect only pure Christian (Catholic) lines.  The Judeo-Christian lines
steming from the Spanish Inquisition and Moslem lineages from the Crusades have been dropped as though they never existed.

Competent researchers of the 20th Century have been restoring these lines using Arabic records which were always available, the Moslems not finding Christian converts objectionable.

This Lineage of Elisabeth of Seville, also known by her Arabic name of Zayda was developed by Forest E. Barber of Long Beach California.  Mr. Barber spent 32 years of research in Europe, America, and Morocco, developing the presentation which appears here and elsewhere, i.e., The Augustan Magazine.  His bibliography with 23 entries include many of the great Arab works.  His
correspondence and personal contacts include the greatest authorities, amongst them Sir Ian Moncreiffe of that Ilk, who himself uncovered several Jewish, Moslem, and Oriental lines before his death in 1985.


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