Has no ancestors and no descendants in this family tree.
Robert I, King of France
866 - 923 (Alder 56)
Fødsel
15 Aug 866
Bourgogne, Champagne, France
Død
15 Jun 923
Soissons, Aisne, Picardie, France
Far
Robert IV "Fortis" (Rutpert) "the Strong" Duke of France f. Ca 820, of France
Slektskap
fødsel
Mor
Adelaide (Adelheid), Princess of Holy Roman Empire f. Ca 824, of Tours, Indre-et-Loire, France
Slektskap
fødsel
Familie 1
NN "sister of Adelheim" of Laon
Familie 2
Adela (Aelis) of Tours, d'Alsace f. Ca 819, of Tours, Indre-et-Loire, France
Barn
+
1. Hildebrante (Liegarde, Adele) of Neustria, Princess of France f. Ca 887, of Vermandois, Normandy, France
2. Richilde of France f. 890
Familie 3
Beatrice of Vermandois f. Ca 880, of Vermandois, Neustria
Gift
893
Denne 'mod' endrer formatet på Person-profilen på flere måter
for å gjøre det mer lesbart. For eksempel:
Den flytter noen av personens hendelser under foleldre og familiedataene,
Tilføyer overskrifter (f. eks. Foreldre, Familie eller Familier, Media, Hendelseskart) over hver datablokk, og
Flytter 'metadata' (f.eks. personID, dato for siste endring, og linker til Gruppeskjema og Familiediagram) til headinger.
Den utfører et antall tilleggsendringer, hvorav noen er kontrollert av 'mod' opsjoner.
Se the Wiki article for detaljer.
This mod changes the layout of Event dates and places,
combining them into one cell so that the date never wraps.
It also tries to move the event text (not the comment) onto that same line.
It's fairly subtle; see the mod's Wiki article for details.
The Regroup Person-Move Media mod simply moves the Media section of the Person Profile from below to above the Event Map. It has no mod options
Robert I, King of France (ID:I11927)(Alder 56) f. 15 Aug 866, Bourgogne, Champagne, France d. 15 Jun 923, Soissons, Aisne, Picardie, France(Alder 56)
Date/Place spacing for
* NN is the Latin abbreviation for "nomen nescion" or "non nominandus" meaning "name is not known" which is a standard across Europe for genealogy, newspaper reports and court affairs. This is more language neutral and globally acceptable than using the English terms "Miss", "son" or "daughter" in place of an unknown given name. It is also preferable than leaving the given name blank, as it clearly indicates the name is missing.