Topic hub
Medieval Genealogy
Lineages are storiesโstitched together from charters, necrologies, seals, and the margins of manuscripts. Here youโll find case studies that trace families across borders, titles, and centuries, with sources explained as we go.
How this topic is researched
From names on parchment to networks of kinship
Medieval genealogy is rarely a neat family tree. Itโs a reconstructionโbuilt from scattered references, shifting spellings, and political motives that shaped how people recorded descent.
Each piece here focuses on what the sources actually say, how to weigh contradictions, and how to avoid common traps (later pedigrees, anachronistic titles, and โtoo-perfectโ lineages).
What youโll find here
Case studies, methods, and source guides
Use this page as a starting point for reading and for learning the tools of medieval genealogical workโwithout requiring specialist training.
Case studies
Focused investigations that follow a single problemโan identity, a marriage, an inheritance disputeโand show how the evidence fits (or fails to fit).
Source walkthroughs
Plain-language guides to charters, cartularies, necrologies, chronicles, seals, and onomasticsโwhat theyโre good for and where they mislead.
Name & place puzzles
Spelling drift, Latinization, bynames, and toponyms: how to track the same person across documents that donโt agree.
Working hypotheses
How to propose a lineage responsibly: degrees of certainty, alternative models, and what evidence would change the conclusion.
Medieval genealogy FAQ
Quick answers to common questions about evidence, uncertainty, and best practices.
What counts as โgoodโ evidence for a relationship?
Contemporary documents that name the relationship (e.g., โson of,โ โwife ofโ), or that imply it strongly through repeated association (witness lists, shared property, consistent patronymics) across time.
Why do medieval pedigrees disagree so often?
Because later writers simplified messy realities, copied earlier errors, or reshaped ancestry to serve politics, prestige, or legal claims. We treat pedigrees as claims that must be tested against earlier sources.
How do you handle uncertain identifications?
By stating confidence levels, presenting competing models, and showing which sources support each. Uncertainty is not failureโitโs honest scholarship.
Do names alone prove identity?
Rarely. Names are starting points. Identity depends on context: place, associates, offices, chronology, and how a person appears in multiple records.
Whatโs the biggest beginner mistake?
Treating a single late compilation as definitive. The safer path is to work forward from the earliest attestations and keep a paper trail of citations.
Can I suggest a topic or share a source?
Yesโuse the contact page to propose a question, a document, or a local tradition youโd like investigated. Please include where you found it and any relevant dates or place-names.