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Beowulf

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Line 3: Line 3:
<sex>m</sex> <sex>m</sex>
<clan>[[Clan:Sceafing]]</clan> <clan>[[Clan:Sceafing]]</clan>
- <fname>?+ <name>Beawius I (Beowulf)
-Beowulf I Skjoldsson</fname>+Beowulf I (See Notes)
- <name>Beawius I+Beawius</name>
-Beowulf I (See Notes)</name>+
<parents>121789,279886,324205,388846</parents> <parents>121789,279886,324205,388846</parents>
<children>121787,134909</children> <children>121787,134909</children>

Revision as of 16:15, 18 October 2011

Lineage Sceafing
Sex Male
Full name (at birth) Beawius I (Beowulf)
Other given names Beowulf I (See Notes), Beawius
Parents

Huochapur II (Shapur) [Sassanid]

Shapur II ? (The Great) [Sassanid]

Shapur II 'The Great' [Sassanid]

Ψ Person:121789 [?]

Events

320 birth: Dacia

child birth: w Guthorm [Scyldings]

child birth: Gram of Denmark [Scyldings]

Notes

Please note that this does not represent a northern origin for Iranian People but rather an Eastern or Aryan origin for some of the Nordic Lineages. This connection represents migration during the crisis of the third century along established trade routes and is substantiated by mDNA testing.

It is clear that some of the boundaries of the Persian Empire (and its relationship with Rome) will have to be rethought in light of recent findings with regard to alliances in the Northern and Western Europe.

Beowulf

Literary scholars and historians are split with regard to the persons identified in the sagas of Beowulf (unearthed in Sutton Hoo, England). Some argue that the stories were written about the same individual but by different authors (one Pagan, one Christian) or that the saga itself represents two individuals; One from the Christian era and an earlier pre-Christian era, whose separate stories were hastily abridged prior to inclusion in the burial site by a single anglo-saxon author. While the text supports either theory, archaeology and textual evidence from other sources tend to support the latter theory. The issue is still being researched. It is interesting to note that Beowulf [Beawis, Beoulv) does appear twice in the genealogies of the Anglo-saxons, Danes, and Rosomoni (Persian Rusids).


From grandparents to grandchildren

Grandparents
Hormizud II (Hermeric) Getae (Getae)
title: between 302 and 309, King of the Grethungi
Vasudeva III
title: Kushan emperor
Grandparents
Parents
Huochapur II (Shapur)
title: between 309 and 379, King of the Grethungi
Shapur II ? (The Great)
title: between 309 and 379, King of Persia
Parents
 
== 3 ==
Beawius I (Beowulf)
birth: 320, Dacia
== 3 ==
Children
Gram of Denmark
birth: Denmark
Children
Grandchildren
Hadding Gramsson
birth: 345, Denmark, Hadding died by hanging as a ritual sacrifice for his people, according to the customs of the Hasdinga.
Grandchildren

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