thumb 200px Bernard Gui s Arbor genealogiae regum Francorum , showing consanguinity of the kings of France Consanguinity wikt con Italian con with together wikt sanguine sanguine blood wikt ity ..., consanguinity is the quality of being descended from the same ancestor as another person. Consanguinity is an important legal concept in that the law s of many jurisdictions consider consanguinity ... property when a deceased person has not left a will. The degree of relative consanguinity can be illustrated with a cousin consanguinity table , in which each level of lineal consanguinity i.e., generation ... row. See, e.g., http www.sleepyhollowcemetery.org PDF consanguinity.pdf table of consanguinity . The Knot System is a numerical notation that defines consanguinity. It is exact. ref H jrup, Knud ... of consanguinity arise in several aspects of the law. It is directly relevant in determining whether ... s Laws title The table of degrees of consanguinity and affinity url http www.palrb.us smithlaws 17001799 ... right thumb A table of relationships displays the relationships amongst relatives. Consanguinity is also ... in which they have a certain degree of consanguinity with the defendant . ref cite web url http codes.ohio.gov ... Causes for challenge of persons called as jurors. ref The connotations of degree of consanguinity ... a degree of consanguinity within which sexual interrelationships are regarded as incest uous the prohibited ... Harrassowitz Verlag, 2005 , p.743. ref Genetic definitions The percentage of consanguinity between .... Consanguinity means the amount of shared identical DNA , the genetics genetic material. For example, first cousins have four times the consanguinity of second cousins. First cousins once removed ... October 10, 2008 ref Finally, Cousin Double cousins double first cousin s share twice the consanguinity ... to 0.125. Rates of occurrence Historically, some Europe an nobles cited a close degree of consanguinity ..., the consanguinity law of Order of succession succession requires the next monarch to be of the same ... more details
Consanguinity Chart Created this very simple but needed chart for the Consanguinity article. GFDL with disclaimers migration relicense ... more details
orphan date February 2009 Unreferenced date November 2008 The Rule of 1 1000 common ancestry is a criterion used to create meaningful family groupings. It was first adopted by Lawrence Kestenbaum to determine which individuals should be included with specific political families on the Political Graveyard website. The rule can be made applicable to other genealogy projects. Definition The rule states that only persons sharing 1 1000 common ancestry should be grouped together as an extended family. Application For lineal ancestors, this can be approximated by 10th degree consanguinity . The reason this is approximate, and not exact, is that common ancestry is halved every time the degree of consanguinity is increased by one. For example the degree of consanguinity of a parent is one. This means that a parent provides 1 2 1 or 1 2 of a persons ancestry the other parent provides the other half . A 7th great grandparent has a 9th degree consanguinity, and therefore providing 1 2 9 or 1 512 common ancestry. An 8th great grandparent provides 1 1024 common ancestry which is as close as one can come to 1 1000, and so this is the cutoff used. For collateral relatives, 1 1000 common ancestry can be approximated by 10th degree consanguinity for relationships derived through half siblings and 11th degree consanguinity for relationships derived through full siblings. For example, siblings share 100 common ancestry, as they share 2 common parents 1 2 1 1 2 1 1 . Half siblings share 50 common ancestry. 8th great aunt uncles can also be called 7th great grand aunt uncles 1st cousins 7x removed 2nd cousins 5x removed 3rd cousins 3x removed and 4th cousins once removed are all at the 1 1024th common ancestry levels, and therefore used as the cutoffs. Complicating factors such as pedigree collapse can increase the percentage of common ancestry to a higher number than it would be otherwise. See also Cousin chart References http politicalgraveyard.com inqa.html Families The Political Gra ... more details
globalize date December 2010 In law and in cultural anthropology , affinity , as distinguished from consanguinity , is kinship by marriage . It is the relation which each party to a marriage bears to the kindred of the other. In English, affinity is usually signified by adding In law in law to the degree of kinship. See also Affinity canon law Consanguinity References See http www.newadvent.org cathen 01177c.htm Affinity In the Bible an article from the Catholic Encyclopedia 1911 Family DEFAULTSORT Affinity Law Category Kinship and descent Law term stub br Lezvab de Schw gerschaft et Sugulussuhted H imlus es Afinidad Derecho eo Boparenco fr Alliance famille it Affinit diritto lt Svainyst pl Powinowactwo prawo ru sr sv Sv gerlag tl Manugang zh ... more details
A cousin couple is a pair of cousin s who are involved in a romantic love romantic or Human sexuality sexual relationship. Main Cousin marriage List of coupled cousins See also Consanguinity Genealogy Genetic sexual attraction Westermarck effect Inbreeding Pedigree collapse Prohibited degree of kinship External links http www.nytimes.com 2009 11 26 garden 26cousins.html Shaking Off the Shame by Sarah Kershaw for the New York Times Category Family Category Kinship and descent Category Population genetics ja ... more details
Papal dispensation is a reserved right of the Pope that allows for individuals to be exempted from a specific Canon Law . Dispensations are divided into two categories general, and matrimonial. Matrimonial dispensations can be either to allow a marriage in the first place, or to dissolve one. The authority for the Pope to exempt an individual or situation from a law stems from his position as the Vicar of Christ, which implies divine authority and knowledge as well as jurisdiction. ref http www.newadvent.org cathen 05041a.htm CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA Dispensation Bot generated title ref The first marriage of Henry VIII of England to Catherine of Aragon required a Papal dispensation as it breached canon law on Affinity canon law Affinity because she was the widow of Henry s elder brother Arthur, Prince of Wales . This was obtained successfully, but when he later wished to divorce her, he was famously unable to get another one, causing his English Reformation break with Rome . In the earlier Middle Ages, especially the 11th to 12th centuries, the church had developed canon law on affinity and consanguinity the first denoting a connection by matrriage only, the second a genetic one to cover very remote relationships, so that a very high proportion of marriages between the small and inter related European elites needed expensive dispensations from either the Pope or a bishop. This was recognised as an abuse, and later the relationships covered were reduced. In 1059, the eleventh canon of the Council of Rome recognized the impediment of affinity as well as of consanguinity to extend to the seventh degree, the high point of the restrictions. Innocent III in the Fourth Council of the Lateran 1215 limited both affinity and consanguinity needing dispensation to the fourth degree, and the Council of Trent Sess. XXIV, c. iv, De Ref. in the 16th century limited the juridical effect of extra matrimonial intercourse to the second degree of affinity. Notes references Category Holy Se ... more details
Property law Frank marriage liberum maritagium , in real property law , a species of fee tail estate tail , now obsolete. When a man was seized of land in fee simple , and gave it to a daughter on marriage, the daughter and her husband were termed the donees in frank marriage, because they held the land granted to them and the heirs of their two bodies free from all manner of service, except fealty , to the donor or his heirs until the fourth degree of consanguinity from the donor was passed. This right of a Freehold English law freehold er so to give away his land at will was first recognized in the reign of Henry II of England Henry II , and became up to the reign of Elizabeth I of England Elizabeth I the most usual kind of settlement. 1911 Category Real property law Category Legal history of England ... more details
The following events related to sociology occurred in the 1870s . 1871 Pierre Guillaume Fr d ric le Play s Le Organisation de Famille is published. Carl Menger s Principles of Economics is published. Lewis Henry Morgan s Systems of Consanguinity and Affinity of the Human Family is published. Sir Edward Burnett Tylor s In Primitive Culture is published. 1873 Herbert Spencer s The Study of Sociology is published. 1874 Francis Galton s English men of science their nature and nurture is published. Pierre Guillaume Fr d ric Le Play s La r forme sociale en France d duite de l observation compar e des peuples Europ ens is published. Henry Sidgwick s The Method of Ethics is published. 1875 Francis Galton s Statistics by intercomparison, with remarks on the law of frequency of error is published. Frederic Harrison s Order and Progress is published. 1878 Friedrich Engels Anti D hring is published. Category 1870s Sociology Category Sociology timelines fr 1871 en sociologie ... more details
Unreferenced date July 2010 Notability date July 2010 Irgen Gioro manchu m v Irgen Gioro zh t p Y rg n Ju lu was a Manchu family name belongs to one of the Gioro clans. The word irgen means civilian in Manchu language Manchu which comparing to the Royal house of Aisin Gioro Golden Gioro . Gioro , a place in Ningguta area of Manchuria now in Yilan, Heilongjiang Province of China , is where they originated. In Manchu culture, family members are identified by their Hala family names or clan names firstly, and then by Muk n , an identification of closer consanguinity in the whole family. Category History of Manchuria Category Qing Dynasty Category Surnames ja zh ... more details
Degree of relationship is a measurement of kinship , and may generally be measured as either one vertical or horizontal step in a standard family tree . A first degree relative is a family member who shares about 50 percent of their genes with a particular individual in a family. ref name GHR First degree relatives include parents, offspring, and siblings. ref name GHR http ghr.nlm.nih.gov glossary firstdegreerelative Genetics Home Reference First degree relative Lister Hill National Center for Biomedical Communications. Published March 29, 2010 ref An uncle aunt, niece nephew or a grandparent is a second degree relative , and a first cousin is a third degree relative . ref http www.facingourrisk.org hereditary cancer hereditary cancer and genetics.html FORCE Facing Our Risk of Cancer Empowered Hereditary cancer and cancer genetics Retrieved on April 4, 2010 ref Degrees of relation should not be confused with degrees when referring specifically to kinship with cousins. For example, a first degree cousin is actually a third degree relative . Uses It is an important measurement in law to determine where marriage is allowed or prohibited under the laws concerning incest . ref http www.answers.com topic consanguinity Law Encyclopedia Consanguinity Retrieved on April 4, 2010 ref It is also an important measure in medicine when determining risk factors for various diseases with a strong hereditary association. It is also used in genealogy especially genetic genealogy to measure the level of genetic relationship between individuals. See also Genetic genealogy References reflist Category Genealogy ... more details
Unreferenced date March 2007 Slavn k died 981 was a Bohemian and White Croatia n nobleman, the founder of Slavn k s dynasty . He is said to have had consanguinity with the Saxon kings. He had several children by his wife St ezislava . Six of his sons are known by name Sob slav d. 1004 Sob slav his heir , Adalbert of Prague Saint Adalbert Vojt ch , Spytim r, Pobraslav , Po ej and slav. He had also a son named Radim Gaudentius Radim Gaudentius by another woman probably a concubine . According to Cosmas of Prague Cosmas chronicle, Slavn k was a happy man all his lifetime. It is supposed by some historians, that either Slavn k or his wife St ezislava had kinship with the P emyslid dynasty, who were the rulers of Bohemia. St ezislava might have been a daughter of Vratislaus I of Bohemia , Slavn k s relationship to the P emyslid family could have been through his father Vok, possibly a nephew of Borivoj I of Bohemia . DEFAULTSORT Slavnik Category 981 deaths Category 10th century rulers in Europe euro noble stub cs Slavn k de Slavn k hr Slavnik pl S awnik ... more details
The present King of Morocco is Mohammed VI . Article 20 of the Moroccan constitution of 1996 states that the Moroccan Crown and the constitutional rights thereof shall be hereditary and handed down, from father to son, to descendants in direct male line and by order of primogeniture among the offspring of His Majesty King Hassan II , unless the King should, during his lifetime, designate a successor among his sons apart from the eldest one. In case of failing descendants in direct male line, the right of succession to the Throne shall, under the same conditions, be invested in the closest male in the collateral consanguinity, currently Prince Moulay Hicham of Morocco . Therefore the current line of succession is Moulay Hassan, Crown Prince of Morocco b. 2003 Prince Moulay Rachid of Morocco b. 1970 See also List of rulers of Morocco History of Morocco Order of succession Orders of succession by country Category Lines of succession Morocco Category Politics of Morocco Category Moroccan monarchy Category Morocco related lists Line of succession ar ko it Linea di successione al trono del Marocco ... more details
Mayabangloma Indigenous Reserve lang es Resguardo Ind gena de Mayabangloma is an indigenous reserve in the municipality of Fonseca, La Guajira Fonseca , Department of La Guajira in northern Colombia . The reserve is formed by the veredas Mayalita, Banga ita, La Gloria and La Loma, occupying a farm called El Porvenir formed by Resolution 046 of November 19, 1994 . The reserve is inhabited by ethnic groups pertaining to the Wayuu people and covers approximately some 3.8 km . ref http fonseca guajira.gov.co apc aa files 62613232343862363735333365653231 PLAN DE DESARROLLO 2004 2007 FONSECA.pdf es icon Fonseca Development Plan 2004 Indigenous development ref According to a census in 2003 the population of the reserve was of approximately 1,252 inhabitants in 286 families. The base of these indigenous families is mostly based on clans, extensive families or nucleic families. Family consanguinity is considered matrilineal. ref http fonseca guajira.gov.co apc aa files 62613232343862363735333365653231 PLAN DE DESARROLLO 2004 2007 FONSECA.pdf es icon Fonseca Development Plan 2004 Indigenous development ref See also Wayuu Indigenous peoples in Colombia References reflist coord missing Colombia Category Indigenous reserves in Colombia Guajira geo stub ... more details
Cloudesley A Tale 1830 is the fifth novel published by eighteenth century philosopher and novelist William Godwin . Publication details Cloudesley was published thirteen years after Mandeville novel Mandeville , Godwin s fourth novel, and two years after the completion of his four volume History of the Commonwealth of England . He was 74 when Cloudesley was issued. ref name Allen Allen, Cloudesley A Tale . ref Plot and themes According to the literary scholar Graham Allen, Cloudesley is a story of deceit and usurpation, fraud and prolonged guilt but, far more importantly, it is the story of how a man raises himself from crime to transcend not only his own past but the apparently inexorable laws of blood relations and class divisions. ref name Allen He argues that Cloudesley is the greatest example of a theme frequently returned to in Godwin s work, a theme obviously close to his heart the ability of human beings to transcend the apparent logic of consanguinity and to form parental and filial relations with those to whom they are not related by blood. ref name Allen Notes reflist Bibliography Allen, Graham. Cloudesley A Tale . The Literary Encyclopedia . 27 September 2004. Retrieved on 22 April 2008. Category 1830 works book stub es Cloudesley ... more details
Taxobox name Euplerinae image Fossa.jpg image width 240px image caption Fossa animal Fossa regnum Animal ia phylum Chordata classis Mammal ia subordo Feliformia ordo Carnivora familia Eupleridae subfamilia Euplerinae subfamilia authority Chenu, 1850 subdivision ranks Genus biology Genera subdivision Cryptoprocta br Eupleres br Malagasy civet Fossa Euplerinae is a subfamily of carnivora ns that includes three species restricted to Madagascar . Together with the subfamily Galidiinae , which also occurs on Madagascar only, it forms the family Eupleridae . Members of this subfamily, which include the fossa animal fossa Cryptoprocta ferox , falanouc Eupleres goudotii and Malagasy civet Fossa fossana , were placed in families like Felidae and Viverridae before genetic data indicated their consanguinity with other Madagascar carnivorans. Within the subfamily, the falanouc and Malagasy civet are more closely related to each other than to the fossa. ref MSW3 Wozencraft ref See also List of mammals of Madagascar References references Category Euplerids ca Eupler es Euplerinae hu Madagaszk ri manguszt k ... more details
Eleanor Maltravers, 2nd Baroness Maltravers Mautravers suo jure 1345 c. 1346 10 12 January 1404 1405 was an England English noblewoman and heiress during the reigns of King Edward III of England and his successors. The younger daughter of Sir Baron Maltravers John Maltravers Mautravers and his wife Gwenthin or Gwenthlian, she was co heiress in 1350 to her brother, Henry Maltravers. She married before 4 August 1357 or on 17 February 1358 1359 Sir John FitzAlan, 1st Baron Arundel John FitzAlan D Arundel , 1st Baron Arundel Castle Arundel . They were parents to six children Joan FitzAlan c. 1360 1 September 1404 . She was married first to Sir William de Echingham and secondly to William de Brien. John FitzAlan, 2nd Baron Arundel 3 November 1364 14 August 1390 , who married Elizabeth le Despenser . They had three sons John FitzAlan, 13th Earl of Arundel 1385 1421 . Edmund FitzAlan. Sir Thomas FitzAlan of Beechwood died 1430 . He was married to Joan Moyns. Richard FitzAlan c. 1366 3 June 1419 . Henry Fitzlangley c. 1369 1428 . He was married to Alice Lnu. Sir William Arundel c. 1369 1400 . He was a List of Knights and Ladies of the Garter Knight of the Garter . Margaret FitzAlan c. 1372 3 July 1438 . She was married to William de Ros, 7th Baron de Ros . Eleanor succeeded to the title of 2nd Baroness Maltravers on 16 February 1364 1365 and was a legatee in the 1375 will of her step grandmother, Agnes, Lady Maltravers. She was sole heiress in or after 1383 to her sister, Joan Maltravers, wife of Robert Roos, by which she became Lady Maltravers. Sir John Fitzalan died at sea on 15 December 1379. Eleanor married secondly as his second wife Reginald de Cobham, 2nd Baron Cobham , of Sterborough died 6 July 1403 , but in 1384 they were divorced on account of their consanguinity , as they were within three degrees of consanguinity, and subsequently allowed to remarry with proper dispensation from the Archbishop of Canterbury on 9 September 1384. On her death, Eleanor was buried ... more details
The Canadian federal government has exclusive authority governing marriage and divorce in Canada under section 91 26 of the Constitution of Canada . ref cite web url http lois.justice.gc.ca en const c1867 e.html distribution title Constitution Act, 1867, Section 91 publisher Canadian Department of Justice ref However section 92 12 of the Constitution gives the provinces the power to pass laws regulating the solemnization of marriage. In 2001 there were 146,618 marriages in Canada, down 6.8 from 157,395 in 2000. ref http www.statcan.ca Daily English 031120 d031120c.htm The Daily, Thursday, November 20, 2003. Marriages Bot generated title ref Prince Edward Island had the highest crude marriage rate 6.5 per 1,000 people and Quebec had the lowest 3.0 . Marriages in Canada can be either civil marriage civil or religious. Marriages may be performed by members of the clergy, marriage commissioners, judges, justices of the peace or clerks of the court. In 2001, the majority of Canadian marriages 76.4 were religious, with the remainder 23.6 being performed by non clergy. Marriage restrictions The federal Marriage Prohibited Degrees Act S.C. 1990, c. 46 ref http laws.justice.gc.ca en m 2.1 82398.html Marriage Prohibited Degrees Act Bot generated title ref prevents the following persons from getting married 2. 1 Subject to subsection 2 , persons related by consanguinity, affinity or adoption are not prohibited from marrying each other by reason only of their relationship. 2 No person shall marry another person if they are related a lineally by consanguinity or adoption b as brother and sister by consanguinity, whether by the whole blood or by the half blood or c as brother and sister by adoption. The provinces set additional rules governing who can get married. In Alberta , anyone 18 or over can get married. A person between the ages of 16 and 18 can get married with the consent of both their parents. Anyone under 16 cannot get married this does not apply to a female if a phys ... more details
Hugh probably Scottish Gaelic Gaelic Aodh , was the third successor of Fearchar, Earl of Ross Ferchar mac in tSagairt as Mormaer of Ross 1323 1333 . Hugh was a favorite of King Robert I of Scotland , who endowed him with many lands. Aodh even married Robert s sister, Maud Bruce Maud . Aodh s young brother, Iain, was given marriage to the Margaret House of Comyn Comyn , Beneficiary heiress of Buchan although he died childless . Hugh was married twice 1 Maud, sister of Robert I the Bruce , King of Scots, and 2 Margaret de Graham, daughter of Sir David de Graham of Montrose. With Maud, Hugh had several children, including his son and successor William. By Margaret, Hugh had at least one daughter Euphemia de Ross , who married 1 John Randolph, Earl of Moray and 2 by dispensation due to affinity Robert Stewart, Earl of Strathearn, subsequently Robert II, King of Scots 1371 1390 as his second wife. Euphemia is sometimes incorrectly assigned as a daughter of Maud, but this would have involved consanguinity in the 2nd and 3rd degrees which was not stated in the dispensation for her marriage to Robert Stewart 3rd degree of affinity, and 4th degree of consanguinity Andrew Stuart, Genealogical History of the Stewarts, pp.  420 421 . Hugh and Margaret Graham are usually also assigned a daughter Janet, wife of Sir John de Monymusk Scots Peerage VII 237, cites Anderson s Dip. Scot., p. lix, and Earldom of Strathern, Nicolas . This has been found to be erroneous, as Janet was actually Janet de Barclay, daughter of Margaret de Graham by her 2nd husband, John de Barclay of Gartley see John Ravilious, The Ancestry of Euphemia, Countess of Ross Heraldry as Genealogical Evidence, in The Scottish Genealogist Vol. LV, No. 1 March 2008 . All received prestigious marriage partners including to the earls of Buchan and Moray , to Maol osa IV, Earl of Strathearn and the future king Robert II of Scotland Robert II . He was killed along many other Scottish nobles at the Battle of Halidon H ... more details
Hawaiian kinship also referred to as the Generational system is a Kinship and descent kinship system used to define family . Identified by Louis Henry Morgan in his 1871 work Systems of Consanguinity and Affinity of the Human Family , the Hawaiian system is one of the six major kinship systems Eskimo kinship Eskimo , Hawaiian, Iroquois kinship Iroquois , Crow kinship Crow , Omaha kinship Omaha , and Sudanese kinship Sudanese . Kinship system Within common typologies, the Hawaiian system is the simplest classificatory system of kinship . In it, differences are distinguished by generation and by gender. There is a parental generation and a generation of children. In this system, a person called Ego in anthropology refers to all females of his parent s generation as Mother and all of the males as Father . In the generation of children, all brothers and male cousins are referred to as Brother , all sisters and female cousins as Sister . The Hawaiian system is usually associated with Ambilineality ambilineal descent groups. It is found in approximately one third of the world s societies, although these are usually small societies. ref http anthro.palomar.edu kinship kinship 5.htm The nature of kinship ref Image Hawaiian kinship chart.png center 700px Graphic of the Hawaiian kinship system Usage The Hawaiian system is named for the pre contact kinship system of peoples in the Hawaii Hawaiian Islands . Use of the Hawaiian system is now most common in Malayo Polynesian speaking areas. This form of kinship is most common in societies with ambilineal descent groups where economic production and child rearing are shared. See also Family Kinship and descent Anthropology List of anthropologists Hawaii Sources William Haviland, Cultural Anthropology, Wadsworth Publishing, 2002. ISBN 0 534 27479 X http anthro.palomar.edu kinship The nature of kinship http archnet.asu.edu archives educat anth220 kinship hawaii.htm Archnet Hawaiian kinship references Category Kinship and descent Cat ... more details
Crow kinship is a Kinship and descent kinship system used to define family . Identified by Louis Henry Morgan in his 1871 work Systems of Consanguinity and Affinity of the Human Family , the Crow system is one of the six major kinship systems Eskimo kinship Eskimo , Hawaiian kinship Hawaiian , Iroquois kinship Iroquois , Crow, Omaha kinship Omaha , and Sudanese kinship Sudanese . Kinship system The system is somewhat similar to the Iroquois kinship Iroquois system , but further distinguishes between the mother s side and the father s side. Relatives on the mother s side of the family have more descriptive terms, and relatives on the father s side have more classificatory terms. The Crow system is distinctive because unlike most other kinship systems, it chooses not to distinguish between certain generations. The relatives of the subject s father s matrilineage are distinguished only by their sex, regardless of their age or generation. In contrast, within Ego s own matrilineage, differences of generation are noted. The system is associated with groups that have a strong tradition of Matrilineality matrilineal descent . In doing so, the system is almost a mirror image of the Omaha kinship Omaha system . The system, like the Iroquois, uses Bifurcate Merging however, only the Iroquois kinship Iroquois system uses BM as a secondary name. Image Crow kinship chart.png center 700px Graphic of the Crow kinship system Usage The system is named for the Crow Tribe Crow Indians of Montana . The system is in common usage throughout the world and is currently used by the Hopi Hopi Indians in the Southwestern United States U.S. as well as traditionally by members of the Navajo Nation . See also Family Kinship and descent Anthropology List of anthropologists Sources & external links William Haviland, Cultural Anthropology, Wadsworth Publishing, 2002. ISBN 0 534 27479 X http anthro.palomar.edu kinship The nature of kinship http archnet.asu.edu archives educat anth220 kinship crow.htm ... more details
Omaha kinship is a Kinship and descent kinship system used to define family . Identified by Louis 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 . Kinship system In function, the system is extremely similar to the Crow kinship Crow system . However, 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 together under a single term and a similar pattern is seen for Ego s mother and her sisters. Like most other kinship systems, Omaha kinship distinguishes between Parallel and Cross cousins. While Parallel cousin s are merged with 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 Iroquois kinship and uses Bifurcate merging , however, only the Iroquois system uses BM as a label. 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 from Nebraska . Currently the Omaha system is in use by the Dani people Dani tribe of Papua Indonesian province West Papua , the Mapuche people of Chile and Argentina , the Igbo people Igbo of Nigeria and some indigenous groups of Mexico . See also Family Kinship and descent Anthropology List of anthropologists Sources & External links William Haviland, Cultural Anthropology, Wadsworth Publishing, 2002. ISBN 0 ... more details
Sudanese kinship also referred to as the Descriptive system is a Kinship and descent kinship system used to define family . Identified by Louis Henry Morgan in his 1871 work Systems of Consanguinity and Affinity of the Human Family , the Sudanese system is one of the six major kinship systems Eskimo kinship Eskimo , Hawaiian kinship Hawaiian , Iroquois kinship Iroquois , Crow kinship Crow , Omaha kinship Omaha and Sudanese . The Sudanese kinship system is the most complicated of all kinship systems. It maintains a separate designation for almost every one of Ego s kin based on their distance from Ego, their relation, and their gender. Ego s Father is distinguished from his brother and from Ego s mother s brother. Ego s Mother is similarly distinguished from her sister and from Ego s father s sister. For cousins alone there are eight possible terms. Usage The system is named for the peoples of southern Sudan in Africa . The Sudanese kinship system was used in ancient Latin ref http www.umanitoba.ca faculties arts anthropology tutor kinterms latin.html ref and Anglo Saxon ref http www.umanitoba.ca faculties arts anthropology tutor kinterms oldenglish.html ref societies as well as present day Arab , Bulgarians Bulgarian , Turkish ref http www.umanitoba.ca faculties arts anthropology tutor case studies turkish turkterm.html ref and Chinese society Chinese societies. It tends to co occur with patrilineal descent and is often said to be common in complex and stratified societies. ref http anthro.palomar.edu kinship kinship 5.htm Nature of Kinship ref See also Family Kinship and descent Chinese kinship Anthropology List of anthropologists Sources and external links William Haviland, Cultural Anthropology, Wadsworth Publishing, 2002. ISBN 0 534 27479 X http anthro.palomar.edu kinship The nature of kinship http www.umanitoba.ca faculties arts anthropology tutor kinterms termsys.html Sudanese Sudanese kin terms references Category Kinship and descent Category Kinship terminol ... more details
Richard Fleming George Charles Grey, 6th Earl Grey born March 4, 1939 is the 6th and current Earl Grey , ref name thepeerage cite web url http www.thepeerage.com p30293.htm i302925 title Richard Fleming George Charles Grey, 6th Earl Grey publisher thepeerage.com accessdate 5 April 2011 ref succeeding his Consanguinity second cousin twice removed Charles Grey, 5th Earl Grey , in 1963. He married Margaret Ann Bradford in 1966 but they divorced in 1974 later the same year he married Stephanie Caroline Gaskell Brown. ref name thepeerage Richard Grey was educated at Hounslow College. ref name thepeerage He has been president of the Cremation Society of Great Britain since 1992. ref cite web url http www.srgw.demon.co.uk CremSoc Grey.html title Council Members and Officers The Rt. Hon. the Earl Grey publisher Cremation Society of Great Britain accessdate 5 April 2011 ref References reflist S start S reg uk S bef before Charles Grey, 5th Earl Grey Charles Grey S ttl title Earl Grey years 1963 &ndash present S inc end Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Grey, Richard Grey, 6th Earl ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DATE OF BIRTH March 4, 1939 DEFAULTSORT Grey, Richard Grey, 6th Earl Category Earls in the Peerage of the United Kingdom Category 1939 births Category Living people Category Grey family UK earl stub de Richard Grey, 6. Earl Grey ... more details
Amaury III de Montfort died 1137 was House of Montfort l Amaury seigneur de Montfort l Amaury from 1101 to 1137 and count of vreux comte d vreux from 1118 to 1137. He was the son of Simon I de Montfort Simon I , seigneur de Montfort, and his wife Agn s d vreux . ref P re Anselme T.IV p.31, 73 ref Life Empty section date July 2010 Marriages and children Around 1115 he married his first wife, Richilde de Hainaut, daughter of Baldwin II of Hainaut Baudouin II , count of Hainaut comte de Hainaut and of Ide de Louvain, but they separated in 1118 on grounds of consanguinity. In 1118 he remarried, to Agn s de Garlande, daughter of Anseau de Garlande, seigneur de Rochefort en Yvelines , and of B atrice or Agn s de Rochefort . Their children were Agn s de Montfort Agn s 1181 , in 1141 married Waleran de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Worcester Waleran IV de Meulan 1104 1166 , count of Meulan Simon III of Montfort Simon III 1181 , count of vreux, then seigneur de Montfort Amaury IV of Montfort Amaury IV 1140 , seigneur de Montfort Robert de Montfort Notes references start box Succession box title Liste des comtes de Montfort l Amaury seigneur de Montfort before Simon II de Montfort Simon II after Simon III de Montfort Simon III nbap 1 years 1101 1137 Succession box title Liste des comtes d vreux comte d vreux before Guillaume d vreux Guillaume after Amaury IV de Montfort Amaury IV nbap 1 years 1118 1137 end box DEFAULTSORT Amaury 03 Of Montfort Category Anglo Normans Category 1137 deaths de Amalrich III. von Montfort es Amaury III de Montfort fr Amaury III de Montfort nl Amalrik III van Montfort pt Amaury III de Montfort ru III ... more details