Jump to content

List of coupled cousins

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Khin2718 (talk | contribs) at 23:59, 20 January 2010 (Outside Europe). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

This is a list of prominent individuals who have been romantically or maritally coupled with a cousin, niece, nephew, aunt or uncle.

Cousin-couple marriage increases the probability of the issue's having a genetic disease. However, the probability is still relatively small—roughly 6%. The same probability is present in issue of women who give birth over the age of 40. Since many of these marriages took place before the 20th century, most women gave birth before the age of 30.

Because many people regard cousin couplings as taboo, they mistakenly assume that an infrequent presence of coupled cousins in a lineage means that the descendants must have one or more genetic diseases. The risk of such diseases does rise, however, when a lineage includes many cousin couplings.

Most historians consider the House of Habsburg as an example of genetically-induced disease as the direct result of pedigree collapse. The last Habsburg King of Spain, Charles II, makes an instructive case. In anyone's family tree, there are seven unions in the previous three generations. In Charles' case, there were three uncle-niece marriages in those seven unions. His father and two of his great-grandfathers married their nieces. His paternal grandparents were first cousins, once removed, but they comprised two of the seven marriages because they were also parents to his maternal grandmother. His maternal grandparents' marriage and the final marriage of great-grandparents was between first cousins. Like most people, the family tree of Elizabeth II to five generations has 62 different people in the 62 different positions. The family tree of Charles II had only 32 different persons in the 62 positions. Going back two more generations, he had only 82 different people in 254 positions. Charles II was born with extensive physical, intellectual and emotional problems and was incapable of producing an heir, a fact which resulted in the War of Spanish Succession. His lineage was so intermarried that he had a higher inbreeding ratio than if he had been born to a brother-sister couple.

Royalty

Europe

The royal couples listed here are but a small representation of the innumerable cousins of varying degrees who have married between royal or noble houses.

Isabella
Mary, Queen of Scots
Catherine II
Marie Antoinette
Napoleon III
Victor Emmanuel II
Emperor Franz Joseph of Austria
Kaiser Wilhelm II
File:Tsar Nicholas II -1898.JPG
Tsar Nicholas II
Kamehameha the Great
Kamehameha IV
Queen Emma
Guangxu Emperor
Prince Shōtoku

Outside Europe

Notable commoners

Bach
von Braun
Darwin
Einstein
Malthus
File:Otomonoyakamochi.jpg
Ōtomo no Yakamochi
Poe
Prus
Rachmaninoff
File:Ray stu.gif
Ray
Roosevelt
Stravinsky
Voltaire
Wells

A

B

C

D

E

F

G

H

  • Benjamin Harrison V, American revolutionary leader, and his second cousin, Elizabeth Bassett[22]
  • Alexander Herzen, Russian writer and political activist, and his cousin, Natalya Zakharina.[citation needed]
  • Klara Hitler, daughter of Johann Pölzl and Johanna Hiedler. Either her grandfather Johann Nepomuk Hiedler or his brother was likely her husband Alois Hitler's biological father. Moreover, Johann was her future husband's step-uncle. Even after they were married, Klara still called her husband "Uncle". [2] [3]
  • Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr., the poet, and his second cousin, Amelia Lee Jackson[23]
  • Stephen Hopkins, signer of the Declaration of Independence, and his second cousin, Sarah Scott[24]

J

K

L

M

N

O

P

R

S

T

V

W

  • H. G. Wells, author, and his first cousin, Isabel Mary Wells (first wife)[45]
  • William Whipple, signer of the Declaration of Independence, and his first cousin, Catherine Moffatt[46]

See also

References

  1. ^ http://elysiumgates.com/~helena/leonidas.html
  2. ^ This Day in History in 1828, www.history.com, retrieved 3-13-2008
  3. ^ Durant, Will (1965). The Age of Voltaire: a History of Civilization in Western Europe from 1715 to 1756, with Special Emphasis on the Conflict between Religion and Philosophy. New York: Simon and Schuster. pp. 391–93. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  4. ^ HOASM: Johann Sebastian Bach, Here of a Sunday Morning, retrieved 3-13-2008
  5. ^ Charles Bulfinch biography, nndb, retrieved 3-13-2008
  6. ^ Floride Bonneau Colhoun Calhoun (Mrs. John C. Calhoun), Clemson University, retrieved 3-13-2008
  7. ^ Jeanne Calment, World's Elder, Dies at 122, The New York Times, retrieved 3-13-2008
  8. ^ THREE GENERATIONS OF CARROLLS, Charles Carroll House, retrieved 3-13-2008
  9. ^ Intimate Disclosures in Darwin Letters, The New York Times, 8-29-1915, retrieved 3-13-2008
  10. ^ Peter Raven & George Johnson (1995). Understanding Biology 3rd Edition. Wm. C. Brown Communications. p. 287. ISBN 0-697-22213-6.
  11. ^ "Alfred I. duPont Papers" (PDF). Retrieved 2008-05-19.
  12. ^ Albert Einstein -- Great Minds, Great Thinkers, edInformatics, retrieved 3-13-2008
  13. ^ Notable Kin: NEW HAMPSHIRE, RHODE ISLAND, AND CONSTITUTION SIGNERS, New England Historic Genealogical Society, retrieved 3-13-2008
  14. ^ Notable Kin: Boston Cousins of Queen Victoria and Yankee Ancestors of Mrs. Thomas Philip, New England Historic Genealogical Society, retrieved 3-13-2008
  15. ^ Goodwin, Doris Kearns (2001). The Fitzgeralds and the Kennedys: An American Saga. Simon and Schuster. pp.88-89.
  16. ^ Carlo Gambino, His Rise As New York's Mafia King, John J. Flood and Jim McGough, retrieved 3-13-2008
  17. ^ Biographies - Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Gale Group, retrieved 3-13-2008
  18. ^ Rudy Giuliani, nndb, retrieved 3-13-2008
  19. ^ Spalding, Frances. Duncan Grant: A Biography. Random House. ISBN 0712666400.
  20. ^ Edward and Nina Grieg, Peter Hughes, retrieved 3-13-2008
  21. ^ Abdullah Gül, nndb, retrieved 3-13-2008
  22. ^ The Bloodlines of Statesment and Noblemen, Pat Roberts, retrieved 3-13-2008
  23. ^ Notable Kin - The Flowering of New England, Part Two: The Poets Bryant, Holmes, Longfellow, J.R. Lowell, and Whittier, Gary Boyd Roberts, retrieved 3-13-2008
  24. ^ Notable Kin: NEW HAMPSHIRE, RHODE ISLAND, AND CONSTITUTION SIGNERS, New England Historic and Genealogical Society, retrieved 3-13-2008
  25. ^ Zee James - Wife of Jesse James, Kathy Weiser, retrieved 3-13-2008
  26. ^ Nobusuke Kishi Biography, Encyclopedia of World Biography, retrieved 3-13-2008
  27. ^ Jerry Lee Lewis, Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, retrieved 3-13-2008
  28. ^ Harvard's Unitarian Presidents - Abbott Lawrence Lowell, Katia Savchuk, retrieved 3-13-2008
  29. ^ The Great Enterprise, CBC, retrieved 3-13-2008
  30. ^ Conversations with Maltus, Dr Suzanne Rickard, retrieved 3-13-2008
  31. ^ [1], Delarivier Manely
  32. ^ Brigadier General Francis Marion of the American Army, myrevolutionarywar.com, retrieved 3-13-2008
  33. ^ Abraham Maslow, nndb, retrieved 3-13-2008
  34. ^ Morse Papers, Library of Congress, retrieved 3-13-2008
  35. ^ Outlines of English and American Literature, William J. Long, retrieved 3-13-2008
  36. ^ Tyszkiewicz, Teresa (1971). Bolesław Prus. Warsaw: Państwowe Zakłady Wydawnictw Szkolnych. pp. 28–30.
  37. ^ Biography of Sergei Rachmaninoff, Sonal Panse, retrieved 3-13-2008
  38. ^ Biography of Eleanor Roosevelt, FDR Library, retrieved 3-13-2008
  39. ^ The Wife Tells All, Time Magazine, retrieved 3-13-2008
  40. ^ This much I know: Greta Scacchi, actor, 48, Sussex, The Observer, retrieved 1-04-2009
  41. ^ They married in 1904. See the Polish Wikipedia article on "Henryk Sienkiewicz."
  42. ^ Igor Stravinsky, nndb, retrieved 3-13-2008
  43. ^ Shogun and Samurai - Tales of Nobunaga, Hideyoshi, and Ieyasu, Okanoya Shigezane, retrieved 3-13-2008
  44. ^ Martin van Buren, The New Netherland Institute, retrieved 3-13-2008
  45. ^ H.G. Wells, Free Online Library, retrieved 3-13-2008
  46. ^ William Whipple and the Declaration of Independence, Speech given by Comrade Joseph Foster, Paymaster U.S. Navy, Portsmouth, New Hampshire, 11-20-1892, retrieved 3-13-2008