Refimprove date January 2010 Patrilineality or agnatic kinship is a system in which one belongs to one s father s lineage. ref Benokraitis, N. V. Marriages and Families. 7th Edition, Pearson Education, Inc., 2011 ref It generally involves the inheritance of property, names or titles through the male line as well. A patriline is literally a father line one s patriline is one s father and his father and his father... and so on. The two corresponding adjective forms are patrilineal and father line . One s patriline is thus a line of descent from a male ancestor to a Kinship descendant of either sex in which the individuals in all intervening generations are fathers. A man s genetic Y DNA and his family name in most cultures have descended down this same line from father to son. In a patrilineal Kinship and descent descent system agnatic descent , an individual is considered to belong to the same descent group as his or her father. This patrilineal descent pattern is much more common than matrilineality matrilineal descent , see the article on family name s which are almost all patrilineal surnames. Also for an indepth treatment of current patrilineal surnames , globally, see the same article. The agnatic ancestry of an individual is that person s pure male ancestry. An agnate is one s genetic relative exclusively through males a kinsman with whom one has a common ancestor by descent in unbroken male line. In cultural anthropology , a patrilineage or patriclan is a consanguineal male and female kin group each of whom is related to the common ancestor through male forebears. Salic Law In parts of medieval and later Europe , the Salic Law was purported to be the grounds for males alone being eligible to inherit land, with particular emphasis applied to hereditary succession of monarchies and fiefs, i.e. in patrilineal or agnatic succession. The true scope and sway of the Salic Law was never defined rigidly, the original 6th century text being both ambiguously worded and originating ... more details
Unreferenced stub auto yes date December 2009 Unilineality is a system of determining descent group s in which one belongs to one s father s or mother s line, whereby one s descent is traced either exclusively through male ancestors patriline , or exclusively through female ancestors matriline . Both patrilineality and matrilineality are types of unilineal descent. The main types of the unilineal descent groups are Lineage anthropology lineage s and clan s. A lineage is a unilineal descent group that can demonstrate their common descent from a known Most recent common ancestor apical ancestor See also Ambilineality Family Cultural anthropology Category Kinship and descent Socio stub nl Unilineaire afstamming ... more details
Orphan date February 2009 Aymeric of Roug was a member of the House of Roug , a famous France French noble dynasty descendant in the Patrilineality male line of the former Kings of Brittany. Aymeric de Roug is mentioned 1220 as Lord of Les Rues, in France. His father was Bonabes de Roug , and his mother was dame de Gastines. His son was Geoffroy de Roug . ref http a.decarne.free.fr gencar dat551.htm 30 ref He was a knight and is the ancestor of all branches of the existing House of Roug . References reflist France noble stub Category Counts of Roug Category Marquesses of Roug Category 13th century French people ... more details
Tripp is a nickname also spelled Trip for a man or boy who is the third in his patrilineality male line of ancestors to bear the same name, and carries a III or 3rd after his name. Tripp is also the name of a clothing line popular amongst people involved with the gothic subculture , and rave subculture. Tripp may also refer to TOCright People For people with the surname Tripp Tripp surname Tripp Eisen , American musician Tripp Isenhour , American golfer Derrick Tribbett Derrick Tripp Tribbett , American Musician Places Tripp, South Dakota , a US city Tripp, Sunnyvale, Texas , a former US town Tripp, Wisconsin , a US town Tripp County, South Dakota , a US county See also Trip disambiguation disambig Category Place name disambiguation pages de Tripp fr Tripp it Tripp pl Tripp pt Tripp ... more details
Laws of succession govern the order of succession to various monarchy monarchies . Some laws of succession include Current monarchies United Kingdom Succession to the British throne British succession Act of Settlement 1701 Norway Norwegian Law of Succession Thailand 1924 Palace Law of Succession Spain Line of succession to the Spanish throne Former monarchies France List of French monarchs Kings of France Salic law Legitimists List of Legitimist claimants to the French throne since 1792 Legitimist claimants to the throne of France Orl anist List of Orl anist Claimants to the French throne since 1848 Orl anist claimants to the throne of France Bonapartist The Bonapartist claimants Bonapartist claimants to the throne of France Jacobitism Jacobite claimants to the thrones of England, Scotland, France , and Ireland Jacobite claimants to the throne of France Hawai i Line of succession to the Hawaiian throne Russia Russian law of succession 1797 Line of succession to the Russian throne Greece Line of succession to the Greek throne General Patrilineality Agnatic succession Agnatic succession Elective monarchy Primogeniture Proximity of blood Ultimogeniture Tanistry disambig ... more details
genetic genealogy This is a list of genetic genealogy topics . Important concepts Genetic genealogy Genealogical DNA test Human mitochondrial DNA haplogroups Human Y chromosome DNA haplogroups Allele Allele frequency Electropherogram Genetic recombination Haplogroup Haplotype haplogroup Most recent common ancestor Short tandem repeat STR Single nucleotide polymorphism SNP Y STR Y chromosome short tandem repeat Related fields Archaeogenetics Genealogy Genetics Genetic fingerprinting DNA sequencing Population genetics Molecular genetics Patrilineal relationships Patrilineality XY sex determination system Y chromosomal Adam Y chromosomal Aaron Adam s Curse Paternal mtDNA transmission RecLOH Matrilineal relationships Matrilineality Mitochondrion Mitochondrial DNA Human mitochondrial genetics Mitochondrial Eve X chromosome Biogeography, ethnicity and migration Human migration Population genetics Multiregional hypothesis Single origin hypothesis Projects Human Genome Project International HapMap Project Molecular Genealogy Research Project Surname DNA project The Genographic Project Lists List of Y STR public databases List of Y chromosome databases List of DNA tested mummies List of DNA tested historical figures List of genetic results derived from historical figures Y chromosome haplogroups by populations See also List of genetics related topics human genetics Category Genetic genealogy Category Biology lists Genetic genealogy Category Outlines Genetic genealogy topics Category Outlines ... more details
BLP sources date December 2011 Grand Rabbi Naftali Asher Yeshayahu Moscowitz is the Melitzer Rebbe of Ashdod , Israel and author of the Peiros Hailan halachic discourses on the laws of Chol HaMoed and the Nefesh Chaya a commentary and linear interpretation of the Book of Psalms . The Melitzer Rebbe is the grandson of the Shotz Hasidic dynasty Shatzer Rebbe of London , and a seventh generation patrilineality patrilineal descendent of Rebbe Yechiel Michal of Zolochiv . His saintly grandfathers also include the Baal Shem Tov , The Moshe Chaim Ephraim of Sudilkov Degel Machane Ephraim , The Elimelech of Lizhensk Noam Elimelech , Rebbe Meir of Premishlan , Rebbe Naftali of Ropshitz , and other well known tzaddikim . ref http lazerbrody.typepad.com lazer beams 2006 11 melitzer rebbe .html Visit to London ref Grand Rabbi Moscowitz is married to Mrs. Shaindel Kahana Stern of London , daughter of an understudy of the Shotzer Rov of London, the Melitzer rebbe s grandfather. ref http lazerbrody.typepad.com lazer beams 2005 12 special bulleti.html Melitzer Rebbe re marries ref References Reflist Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Moscowitz, Naftali ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Moscowitz, Naftali Category Ashkenazi Jews Category Hasidic rabbis in Israel Category Hasidic rebbes Category People from Ashdod Category Year of birth missing living people Category Living people Israel bio stub Hasidic Judaism stub Israel rabbi stub ... more details
Refimprove date July 2010 In genealogy , a top ancestor is the oldest ancestor in a continuous sequence of ancestors. This means, that a continuous line of parent child connections exists between the top ancestor and the subject of the genealogical study, such as a living person. However, the top ancestor s parents are not or not yet known. Top ancestors are sometimes used to describe the status of a genealogical research project, or in order to compare the availability of genealogical data in different times and places. Often, top ancestors are implied to be patrilineality patrilineal . If a patrilineal dynasty is considered, each such dynasty has exactly one top ancestor. Examples of patrilineal top ancestors class wikitable subject dynasty top ancestor date of top ancestor s death Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom House of Wettin Wettin Dietrich I of Wettin 10th century Charlemagne Carolingian dynasty Carolingian Bishop Arnulf of Metz 640 Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom House of Este Este Otbert I, Count Palatine of Italy 975 Queen Margrethe II of Denmark House of Oldenburg Oldenburg Christian III, Count of Oldenburg References de Category Genealogy de Stammvater ... more details
Banda is an ethnic group of the Central African Republic , some of who also live in the Democratic Republic of the Congo , Cameroon , and South Sudan . ref http www.britannica.com EBchecked topic 51441 Banda Encyclop dia Britannica Online Banda people ref The Banda speak several Banda languages Ubangian languages that are related to that of their Gbaya people Gbaya and Ngbandi people Ngbandi neighbours. The Banda numbered about 1,300,000 at the turn of the 21st century. The Banda observe Patrilineality patrilineal descent and live in hamlets of dispersed homesteads under the local governance of a headman. Rural Banda raise maize corn , cassava , peanuts , sweet potato es, and tobacco . Men hunt and fish while women gather wild foods and cultivate crops. Banda craftsmen produce carved wooden ritual and utilitarian objects they are best known for their large slit drum s carved in the shapes of animals. Citation needed date May 2010 Stateless when first encountered by Europeans, the Banda selected war chiefs only during times of crisis, after which the warrior s were divested of their power. Age grades and initiations called semali assured intergroup unity in time of war . Marriage traditionally required bridewealth , often in iron implements. Polygamy , although still practiced, has declined with the rise of a money based economy. Citation needed date May 2010 References Reflist DEFAULTSORT Banda People Category Ethnic groups in Cameroon Category Ethnic groups in the Central African Republic Category Ethnic groups in the Democratic Republic of the Congo Cameroon stub CentralAfricanRepublic stub DRCongo stub Africa ethno group stub bg de Banda Zentralafrika eo Bandaoj hr Banda narod lt Bandai tauta pt Banda povo ru sh Banda narod sv Banda folk ... more details
The term Matrilateral describes kin relatives on the mother s side . Social anthropologists have underlined that even where a social group demonstrates a strong emphasis on one or other line of inheritance Matrilineality matrilineal or Patrilineality patrilineal , relatives who fall outside this unilineal grouping will not simply be ignored. So, a strongly patrilineal orientation will be complemented by matrilateral ties with the mother s kin. Likewise within a strongly matrilineal organisation, patrilateral ties will enter the reckoning of relationships as an important balancing factor. This complementarity often has a moral or emotional tone to it Malinowski s classic studies of the matrilineal Trobriand Islands Trobriand islanders showed that matrilineal ties were associated with discipline and authority, while patrilateral ties were characterised by nurturance and kindness at least in principle . Likewise, in Chinua Achebe s novel Things Fall Apart , the hero, Okonkwo is forced into exile from his own ancestral village to the village of his matrilateral kin who should, by rights, treat him with maternal fondness. Matrilateral cross cousin marriage is typically used by anthropologists to describe a form of marriage in which the sons of one consanguineous group marry the daughters of the consanguineous group from which their mother originates. This may take the form of a preference for this kind of cousin marriage or a prescription that this is what will happen. The logical consequences of cross cousin marriage matrilateral or patrilateral for group formation were first discussed in detail by Reo Fortune ref A Note on Some Forms of Kinship Structure Oceania 1933 IV 1 1 9 ref and have provoked a great deal of debate amongst social anthropologists including Claude L vi Strauss , Edmund Leach and Rodney Needham alliance theory . Notes reflist Category Anthropology Category Anthropological categories of peoples Category Kinship and descent Category Marriage sv Matrili ... more details
orphan date March 2010 Unreferenced date November 2007 Image Maloca.jpg thumb Maloca A maloca is an ancestral long house used by the natives of the Amazon Basin Amazon , notably in Colombia and Brazil . Each community has a maloca with its own unique characteristics. For many years, these long houses were Jesuit missionaries objects of attack. Several families with Patrilineality patrilineal relations live together in a maloca, distributed around the long house in different compartments. In general, the Tribal chief chief of the local descent group lives in the compartment nearest to the back wall of the long house. As well, each family has its own furnace. During festivals and in formal ceremonies, which involve dances for males, the long house space is rearranged the centre of the long house is the most important area where the dance takes place. Each maloca has two entrances, for men and for women. Married men and women sleep together, and unmarried men sleep separately, as do unmarried women. A maloca is traditionally surrounded with two gardens the inner called the kitchen gardens growing plants such as bananas, papaya, mango and pineapple and the manioc gardens growing manioc yuca . See also Maloca is also a synonym for mal n , a Mapuche raid. http mapahumano.fiestras.com servlet ContentServer?pagename R&c Articulo&cid 1265045033588&pubid 982158433476 La Maloca de los Sabedores de Oscar Freire Category Anthropology anthropology stub es Maloca fr Maloca he pl Maloca pt Maloca sv Malocas ... more details
unreferenced date April 2009 Infobox Ethnic group image div style background color fee8ab group Bin Yarouf poptime undetermined region1 flag United Arab Emirates pop1 region2 flag Oman pop2 langs unique mixture of Gulf Arabic , Shihhi Arabic and Omani Arabic rels Sunni Islam , Hanbali Bin Yarouf is a patrilineality patrilineal clan name used by some Arabian tribes . In the United Arab Emirates , Bin Yaroufs mainly populate the cities of Dubai , Alkhan and Dibba Al Hisn , an enclave of Sharjah emirate Sharjah . Members of the clan live in Dibba Al Baya , Oman , but choose not to carry the clans name. Other members of the clan migrated to Ajman . Etymology The surname is of Arabic origin Arabic . Clan members say that it refers to a family of big ants which are known to ascend the dunes quickly. Notabe members Ali Abdulla Ali Bin Yarouf died in 1996 is the most well known member of the clan. He was more known as Ali Bin Khulaif after his mothers father. His son, Abdulla Ali Abdulla Bin Yarouf b. 1952 , is a former member of the Federal National Council . He held many governmental positions in Dibba Al Hisn and is currently the Diwan manager of the ruler of Sharjah in Dibba Al Hisn. Mohammed Ahmed bin Yarouf is the chairman of Dibba Al Hisn Sports Club . Category Arab groups Category Arab clans ethno stub ... more details
unreferenced date October 2009 Eoghan mac Eoinn Anglicization Anglicized Ewen son of John , lord of Latharna Lorne, Scotland born in est the 1330s, d before 1388 was a 14th century Scottish Highlands Scottish Highland magnate . Eoghan was the grandson of Ailean mac Eoin, a cadet of the exiled House of Ergadia the senior line descending from Somerled who was in English service in the 1320s, and son of Eoin mac Ailein, known as Gallda the Foreigner who styled himself Lord of Argyll , who made a return to Scotland, to claim or hold some of their ancestral estates. It is not known whether it was his father, or only Eoghan himself, who made a reconciliation with the kings of the House of Bruce Bruce dynasty, but in mid 14th century, such a reconciliation occurred. There are records which show that their family, in the 1350s, also made some agreement with their Patrilineality Agnatic succession agnatic kinsman, the Lord of the Isles , whose lineage a junior branch of the Somerled heirs had received a lot of the old Ergadia family lands from the victorious Bruce. Eoghan married Janet Isaac, a granddaughter of Robert I of Scotland Robert the Bruce , which signals of a reconciliation, even some favor, from the king David II of Scotland David II , heir of the Bruce, and uncle of Janet. In 1357 Eoghan had a grant of all the lands that had belonged to his great great grandfather Alasdair of Latharna Alexander de Lorne in Lorne. Between 1365 and 1369, Eoghan is recorded as having attended Councils and Parliaments of Scotland. It seems Eoghan did not have surviving sons. His heiresses were two daughters, Siobhan Janet and Iseabail Isabel , who married a couple of brothers from the House of Stewart Stewarts of Innermeath family. Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata NAME Eoghan mac Eoinn ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Eoghan mac Eoinn Category Scottish nobility Category Scottish politicians Category ... more details
Sib is a technical term in the discipline of anthropology which originally denoted a kinship Sippe group among Anglo Saxons Anglo Saxon and other Germanic peoples . In an extended sense, it then became the standard term for a variety of other kinds of lineal Matrilineality matrilineal or Patrilineality patrilineal or cognatic i.e.,descended through links of both sexes Kinship terminology kinship groups . The word may also denote a member of such a group. ref Harvnb Oxford English Dictionary 1989 p 404 ref American anthropologists often used the term sib as the generic term for a category that breaks down into the sub classifications of patri sib , referring to patrilineal clan descent, and matri sib , to refer to matrilineal clan descent. ref Harvnb Fox 1967 pp 49 50 ref Footnotes Reflist References cite book title Oxford English Dictionary publisher Clarendon Press edition 2nd year 1989 volume XV ref CITEREFOxford English Dictionary1989 cite book last Fox first Robin title Kinship and Marriage publisher Penguin year 1967 ref CITEREFFox1967 cite journal last Berreman first Gerald D. date October 1962 title Sib and Clan among the Pahari of North India journal Ethnology publisher University of Pittsburgh volume 1 issue 4 pages 524 528 ref CITEREFBerreman1962 cite journal last Lowie first Robert H. date January 1919 title Family and Sib journal American Anthropologist publisher Blackwell Publishing on behalf of the American Anthropological Association volume 21 issue 1 pages 28 40 ref CITEREFLowie1919 cite journal last Lessells first C. M. coauthors G. A. Parker date August 1999 title Parent Offspring Conflict The Full Sib Half Sib Fallacy journal Biological Sciences publisher The Royal Society volume 266 issue 1429 pages 1637 1643 ref CITEREFLessellsParker1999 DEFAULTSORT Sib Anthropology Category Anthropology ... more details
Unreferenced date December 2009 Image Blason famille Bourbon Busset ancien.svg thumb 125px Coat of arms of the House of Bourbon Busset old Bourbon, a Jerusalem chief The Bourbon Busset family is an illegitimate branch of the House of Bourbon , being thus patrilineality agnatic descendants of the Capetian dynasty . Historically they have been regarded as non dynastic since decisions rendered by Louis XI of France . Possibly, however, the family may be canon law canonically legitimate, in which case it is the most senior extant male line branch of the Capetians, and senior to the Bourbons which reign today in Spain and Luxembourg and have in the past ruled France, Naples and Sicily, as well as to the House of Braganza , also Capetians by illegitimate descent. Its head uses the title comte de Busset count of Busset since the marriage of the first Bourbon with Louise Borgia, Duchess of Valentinois heiress of the barony of Busset, daughter of Cesare Borgia , Duke of Valentinois . Origin Unreferenced section date July 2010 The line of Bourbon Busset descends in patrilineality male line from the son of Louis of Bourbon, Prince Bishop of Li ge 1438 1482 , himself a son of Charles I, Duke of Bourbon . Louis, in male line a sixth cousin of king Charles VII of France , married, without royal licence, Catherine of Guelders Catharine d Egmond , a daughter of Arnold, Duke of Gelderland probably illegitimate, as the ducal House of Egmond House of Egmont s chronicles never recognized her among princesses of Counts and Dukes of Guelders Gelderland . Citation needed date July 2010 Either from this marriage, or from a mistress of Louis of Bourbon Citation needed date July 2010 , a son was born, who then married the heiress of the barony of Busset. Although the marriage between Louis and Catherine took place before Louis was consecrated as a priest, which would have made it canon law canonically impossible for him to marry, it was kept secret, being against the interests of Louis XI of ... more details
Omaha kinship is the Kinship and descent system of terms and relationships used to define family in Omaha tribal culture. Identified by Lewis Henry Morgan in his 1871 work Systems of Consanguinity and Affinity of the Human Family , the Omaha system is one of the six major kinship systems Eskimo kinship Eskimo , Hawaiian kinship Hawaiian , Iroquois kinship Iroquois , Crow kinship Crow , Omaha, and Sudanese kinship Sudanese citation 2011 10 17 which he identified internationally. Kinship system In function, the system is extremely similar to the Crow kinship Crow system . But, whereas Crow groups are Matrilineality matrilineal , Omaha descent groups are characteristically Patrilineality patrilineal . In this system, relatives are sorted according to their descent and their gender. Ego s father and his brothers are merged and addressed by a single term, and a similar pattern is seen for Ego s mother and her sisters. Marriages take place among people of different gentes or clans in the tribe. Like most other kinship systems, Omaha kinship distinguishes between Parallel and Cross cousins. While Parallel cousin s are merged by term and addressed the same as Ego s siblings, Cross cousin s are differentiated by generational divisions. On the maternal side, Cross cousins are raised a generation making them Ego s Mother s Brother and Ego s Mother , while those on the paternal side are lowered a generation making them the generational equivalent of Ego s Children s . The system is similar to that of Iroquois kinship . It uses Bifurcate merging , but only the Iroquois system uses BM as a label. In addition, Iroquois kinship is a matrilineal system. Image Omaha kinship chart.png center 700px Graphic of the Omaha kinship system Usage The system is named for the Omaha tribe Omaha , a Native Americans in the United States Native American tribe historically located on the Northern Plains in present day Nebraska . The Omaha system has been found among some Indigenous peoples of the A ... more details
Unreferenced stub auto yes date December 2009 This line includes HM King Christian IX of Denmark Christian IX of Denmark and his Patrilineality patrilineal descendants, also known as the Gl cksburg dynasty and offshoot descendants after constitutional changes allowed female succession. Also see Line of succession to the Danish throne . Christian IX, King of Denmark 1818 1906 1842 Louise of Hesse Louise of Hesse Kassel or Hesse Cassel 1817 1898 Frederick VIII of Denmark Frederick VIII , King of Denmark 1843 1912 1869 Lovisa of Sweden Louise of Sweden 1851 1926 , also Lovisa of Sweden Christian X of Denmark Christian X , King of Denmark & Iceland 1870 1947 1898 Alexandrine of Mecklenburg Schwerin 1879 1952 Frederick IX of Denmark Frederick IX , King of Denmark 1899 1972 1935 Ingrid of Sweden 1910 2000 Margrethe II of Denmark Margaret II , Queen of Denmark b. 1940 1967 Henrik, Prince Consort of Denmark Henri de Laborde, Count of Monpezat b. 1934 , also Henrik Frederik, Crown Prince of Denmark b. 1968 2004 Mary Elizabeth Donaldson b 1972 Prince Christian of Denmark Prince Christian Valdemar Henri John b. 2005 Princess Isabella of Denmark Princess Isabella Henrietta Ingrid Margrethe b. 2007 Prince Vincent of Denmark Prince Vincent Frederik Minik Alexander b. 2011 Princess Josephine of Denmark Princess Josephine Sophia Ivalo Mathilda b. 2011 Prince Joachim of Denmark b. 1969 1995 2005 div. Alexandra Christina Manley b. 1964 Prince Nikolai of Denmark Prince Nikolai William Alexander Frederik b. 1999 Prince Felix of Denmark Prince Felix Henrik Valdemar Christian b. 2002 2008 Marie Cavallier Marie Agathe Odile Cavallier b. 1976 Prince Henrik of Denmark Prince Henrik Carl Joachim Alain b. 2009 As yet unnamed princess b. 2012 Princess Benedikte of Denmark Benedicta b. 1944 , also Benedikte 1968 Richard, Hereditary Prince of Sayn Wittgenstein Berleburg b. 1934 Queen Anne Marie of Greece Anne Marie b. 1946 , Queen Anne Marie of Greece 1964 Constantine II of Greece Constantine II ... more details
Expert subject multiple Indonesia Anthroponymy date February 2009 Javanese people have various systems for naming . Some Javanese have Mononymous person only one name and no surname . Others use their father s name as well as their own, in a similar manner to European patronymic s. For example, Abdurrahman Wahid s name is derived from Wahid Hasyim , his father, an independence fighter and minister. In turn, Wahid Hasyim s name was derived from his father named Hasyim Asyari , a famous cleric and founder of the Nahdlatul Ulama organization. Another example is former President of Indonesia president Megawati Sukarnoputri the last part of the name is a patronymic, meaning Sukarno s daughter . Culturally, Javanese people use a Patrilineality patrilineal system that traces the hierarchic lineage of the father. This system is particularly used to determine descendants rights to use royal titles before their names. However, it is not customary for Javanese to pass on a family name , except in Suriname , which has a large Javanese population. Surnames in Suriname Javanese are usually derived from the names of their ancestors who immigrated from Java island Java between 1890 1939. Suriname Javanese people usually use Western mostly Dutch given names, and Javanese surnames, many of which are archaic in Java itself. The example of Suriname Javanese surnames are Atmodikoro, Bandjar, Dasai, Hardjoprajitno, Irodikromo, Kromowidjojo, Moestadja, Pawironadi, Redjosentono, Somohardjo, etc. Other Javanese communities who have surnames are the Jatons Jawa Tondano Tondano Javanese , descendants of Prince Diponegoro s followers exiled to North Sulawesi . Some of their surnames are Arbi, Baderan, Djoyosuroto, Guret, Kiaidemak, Modjo, Ngurawan, Pulukadang, Suratinoyo, Wonopati, Zees, etc. Many Javanese have just a single name, for example, Sukarno , Suharto , or Boediono . Many names have come from traditional Javanese language , many derived from Sanskrit . Names with the prefix Su , whic ... more details
Infobox royalty monarch title Count of Wettin br Count of Brehna name Thimo full name image imgw caption succession reign coronation predecessor successor regent heir spouse Ida of Nordheim issue house House of Wettin royal anthem father Dietrich II, Margrave of Lower Lusatia Dietrich II of Wettin mother Mathilde of Meissen birth date ca. 1010 birth place death date 9 March 1090 1091 or c. 1100 death place place of burial Thimo ca. 1010 &ndash 9 March 1090 1091 or c. 1100 , was count of Wettin, Saxony Anhalt Wettin and Brehna . He was the son of Dietrich II, Margrave of Lower Lusatia , and Mathilde, daughter of Eckard I, Margrave of Meissen , and married Ida, daughter of Otto of Northeim . Thimo is buried at Niemegk Monastery, which he had founded. The exact year of Thimo s death is unclear since his son Conrad, Margrave of Meissen Conrad was born in approximately 1098, Thiemo cannot have died long before this year. Alternatively, some researchers assume that Thimo was in fact Conrad s grandfather, and that Conrad s father was an unknown son of Thimo s with the same name, making a death year of 1090 91 possible, as given in a chronicle. However, since Thimo II is not otherwise attested, this is considered unlikely. Children Dedi IV died 16 December 1124 , oldest son, died without son Conrad, Margrave of Meissen Conrad c. 1098 1157 Mathilde, married Gero I, Count of Seeburg in 1115, and Louis II, Count of Wippra in 1123 The last king of Portugal , Manuel II of Portugal Manuel II , was a direct Patrilineality patrilinear descendant of Thimo. References Reflist Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Thimo 02 Of Wettin, Count ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH ca. 1010 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 9 March 1090 1091 or ca. 1100 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Thimo 02 Of Wettin, Count Category 1010s births Category 11th century deaths Category House of Wettin Category Counts of the Holy Roman Empire euro noble stub de Thimo von Wettin fr Thimo Ier ... more details
Contains Chinese text Baixing zh c Wikt Wikt p b ix ng lit. hundred surnames or lao baixing lit. old hundred surnames in Chinese means ordinary folks , the people , or commoners. ref cite book last Lee first Philip title 250 Essential Chinese Characters for Everyday Use publisher Publisher Periplus Editions HK Ltd. date Pub. Date June 2003 pages Page 25 isbn 9780804833592 url http books.google.com books?id XclXGDyToqoC&pg PA25&dq 22laobaixing 22&lr &hl zh TW ref The word Lao Chinese is used here as an adjective, which give it a warm and friendly touch. Chinese family names are Patrilineality patrilineal , passed from father to children. Chinese women, after marriage, typically retain their birth surname. Historically, however, only Chinese men possessed x ng family name , in addition to sh the women had only the latter, and took on their husband s x ng after marriage. Legendary origin See also Yellow Emperor Shennong Chi You Jiuli tribe Thousands of years ago, along the plain of the Yellow River , there lived large tribes called Yellow Emperor Hwangdi tribes Chinese , Shennong Yandi tribes Chinese , Yi Yi tribes Chinese and Jiuli Tribe Chinese . After many years of tribal wars, the Yellow Emperor Hwangdi tribes , Shennong Yandi tribes and the Yi Yi tribes formed an alliance which consisted of roughly 100 tribes, hence the origin of the Pinyin Baixing, translation One hundred surnames . The three tribe alliance won the war over the Jiuli Tribe Chinese , and the war captives became slaves of the alliance, hence the origin of the term , who were the tribal people of Jiuli Tribe . br During the Western Zhou , Baixing came to mean Slaves owners and their slaves. Over thousands of years of history, Baixing and Limin come to mean the same thing. See also Empty section date July 2010 References Reflist External links http zhidao.baidu.com question 677426.html?fr qrl&fr2 query In Chinese The origin of Lao Baixing Categor ... more details
Infobox book title orig translator image include the file and the image size image caption author Northrop Frye illustrator cover artist Hilary Norman country Canada language English series subject Canadian literature and art genre literary criticism publisher House of Anansi pub date 1971 english pub date media type pages 256 x. isbn 0 88784 620 3 oclc dewey congress 71 152412 preceded by followed by The Bush Garden Essays on the Canadian Imagination is a collection of essays by Canadian literary critic Northrop Frye 1912 1991 . The collection was originally published in 1971 it was republished, with an introduction by Canadian postmodern theorist Linda Hutcheon , in 1995. The Bush Garden features analyzes of Canadian poetry, prose fiction and painting. According to Frye s introduction, the essays were selected to provide a composite view of the Canadian imagination, an understanding of the human imagination s reaction to and development in response to the Canadian environment. The Bush Garden includes an edited version of Frye s Conclusion to Carl F. Klinck s Literary History of Canada . In this work, Frye articulated his famous theory of garrison mentality as the defining characteristic of Canadian literature. Garrison mentality is the attitude of a community that feels isolated from cultural centres and besieged by a hostile landscape. 8 Frye maintained that such communities were peculiarly Canadian, and fostered a literature that was formally immature, that displayed deep moral discomfort with uncivilized nature, and whose narratives reinforced social norms and values ref cite book last Frye first Northrop authorlink Northrop Frye coauthors Carl F. Klinck title Conclusion, Literary History of Canada publisher University of Toronto Press date 1965 location Toronto pages 342 ref Criticism Altbhough Frye asserted that his picture of Canadian self image was unique to Canada, the picture of a civilization, led by Patrilineality patrilineal founders and establishing ... more details