1 Gerold I Swabia b.abt 760 m. Imma of Bavaria 2
Roricon Du Maine Count of Maine b. abt 790 m. 834 Blichilde Du Maine
3
Roricon Du Maine b. abt 835
4
Godefroi Du Maine b. 855 m. Godechild of Caroling
5
Godechild Du Maine b. 890 m. Hervey de Bretagne
6
Gerberga Du Maine. m. Fulk II Fitzwarin Anjou b. abt 909
7
Geoffrey I Grisconelle D'Anjou b.938 m. Adelaide of Vermandois b. 950
8 Ermengarde b. abt 952 m. Conan Le Tort de Bretagne b. abt 927 son Saxon Carolings
9 Duke Geoffery I de Bretagne b. abt 971 m. Hawise of Normandy
9 Judith de Rennes Bretagne b. abt 965 m. Duke of Normandy Richard II
9 Roiantelline of Dol Bretagne m Hamon I Viscount Dinan, the son of Alan IV Bretagne b. abt 900 m. Roscille D'Anjou, granddaughter of De Nantes
10 Flaad of Dol, Dapifer of Dinan b. abt 945 m. Ava Norton b.955
11 Alan of Dol Dapifer of Dinan m. (1) Gwenta verch Griffith (2?) Euda Senischal
12 Flaad of Dol (Stewart) m Fledalus Fitzalan of Cornwall
12 Alan of Dol (FitzAlan)
12 Rhiwallon of Don-Dinan, monk seigneur
Ermenbourg Du Maine b. abt 1096 m.1011 Fulk Le June K. of Jerusalem > Fulk Fitzwarin m. Hawise Dinham abt 1150 > Fulk Fitzwarin b. 1251 m. Margaret of Wales > Fulk Fitzwarin b. 1280 m. Alinora de Beauchamp>
Dol is one of the 1066 knights of the Domesday placenames.
1 Dapifer of Dol Alan FitzFlaad from Shropshire, Lochobar, MacAlpin, and Canmore-Normandy. Alan Fitzflaad m. Adeline, heir of Norman Barony of Warine. Dapifer of Dol was leader of the 1st Crusdade. Greatgreatgrandson of Malcolm I Canmore. 2 William... Earls of Arundel
2 Walter Fitzalan, son of Alan Fitzflaad and sibling of Knights Templars 1st High Steward of Scotland b. abt 1107 m. Eochyna of London.
3 2nd High Steward of Scotland Alan Fitzwalter Stewart b. abt 1126 m (1) Margaret of Fergus Galloway becomes Fitzwalters. Alan Fitzwalter (abt 1126-1177) who went to Scotland in the Service of King David I had large possessions conferred on him to Refrewshire. Under the regin of King Scotland (1097-1107) the crown authority extended south of the Forth and Clyde. The Western Islands and the north were possessed by the Norwegians. Eadger, the son of Malcolm Canmore reigned 1058-1093 and St. Margaret, sister of Eadger Aethling was sole representative of the Saxon rules of Engliand after the death of King Harold and his brothers at the Battle of Hastings 1066. Scotland and England being at peace during later reigns, Alexander I the Fierce and son of Malcolm Canmore and St. Margaret of Wessex, David I, many Dunkeld nobility entered service in the northern wars. The north, meaning Tyrone where Niall became king of Meath at Tara apart from the Desmond seate of Eberian and Ithian members of the Southern Branch of Ó Neill. Walter Fitz Alan founded the monastery of Paisley in 1160. Dunkeld was increasingly a branch of Saint Columba or the abbots of Iona and where Niall and the son of Fiachra.
The lineage of Jesus the Justus includes the Fisher Kings and Lancelot del Acqs. It descends to the Merovingian Kings of France. Godefroi established the Order of Sion which were the Knight protectors of the Holy Sepulchre and the Knights Templar. Bouillon was also a line of descent to the Stewarts. This was another conjoining line of the Kings of Loraine that lead to the pre Scotland forebear Alan, Seneschal of Dol and Dinan. Seneschal of Dol's sons were Alan and Flaad (hereditary Stewards of Dol). This was the Vine of Judah for the first 1000 years after Joseph of Arimathea and James the Justus. The original founders of the Grail Keepers/Knights Templar. The Jacobites became another link to the modern Scottish Rite of the Masons. We hear of a battle fought a few years before Gregory became bishop of Tours between king Sigibert and the Huns. The bishops of Tours from the beginning to Gregory and Among the Franks of Tournai a great feud arose because the son of one often angrily rebuked the son of another who had married his sister. The Four Masters mention Innisfallen, Kilarney the foundation of the structure, whose remains are shown above, in 1340, while some say it was established for the Franciscans in the middle of the Fifteenth century near Muckross. The Diocese of Clonfert was sometimes referred to among the Medieval Highlands as the Bishop of Hy-Many at Cloyne and Clontarf. Synods of the Diocese were constantly held in St. Peter's up to 1559, and many consecrations of Bishops and ordinations were held there and West Donegal.
St. Peter's Church of Ireland is built on a site which has been a centre of worship at least since the founding of the town of Drogheda itself. The Prior and Convent of Llanthony were the Rectors or owners of the Rectorial Tithes and Advowson of the Vicarage of the church. The Church of St. Peter's was an important ecclesiastical centre, being used as a Pro-Cathedral for Armagh Diocese for several centuries. The Primates of Ireland of the time lived either in Termonfeckin, Dromiskin or Drogheda, and very seldom visited the Northern part of the Diocese because of the unsettled state of the country. Ross Diocese in Ireland; Rossensis see was founded by St. Fachtna, and the place-name was variously known as Roscairbre and Rosailithir (Ross of the pilgrims) who lived a far distance from Gregory of Tours and only closer in years that the succession of bishops was uninterrupted till after the Reformation period. The number of parishes was 29, divided into 3 divisions; and there was a Cistercian abbey, Carrigilihy (de fonte vivo); also a Benedictine Priory at St. Mary's, Ross, probably during Stephen's reign. The Franciscans acquired a foundation at Sherkin Island from the O'Driscolls in 1460.