http://www.geni.com/projects/HistoryLink/14021 will show you that, when you get here, you have to click till you get to a page to give permission for the app to anylize your ancestors.
You then need to select different options.
I do 4 reports, as it seems like options do not overlap.
You can go as far back as you like.
This is where projects come in to their own, when you see the results, you will see what I mean, and start adding profiles to projects :)
Message me if you get stuck.
Well that is fun. It can't do much but it is fascinating.
For 1320 hits, I have a 2.6% count of historic figures and about a 6% count of MPs.
There are so many projects listed I'll have to study it for quite a while.
Interesting how I have so few ancestors (1%) way back then but then it taps into all these MPs that grow exponentially.
I don't understand the colour coding on the graph of ancestors. But I do see huge gaps in my tree after the 4th and 5th generations that I need to work at filling.
I knew this from what I'd found. Only three of my ancestors from four generations back tap into all the historic figures.
There may be more :-)
I'll follow the projects for which I got most hits.
I already was following Court of Henry VII (33)
Kings of Scotland: House of Stewart (12 hits)
English and British Monarchs (27)
I am now also following:
The d'Aubigny and de Albini families of Norman England, Lords of Arundel and Belvoir (39 hits)
British Peers and Baronets (561 hits)
Swedish monarchs (11 hits)
Kings and Queens of France (32 hits)
Italian wars (18) I should think about
Exciting stuff!
For no one do I have more than one path, as far as I've seen
A vast amount is known about Joan Beaufort, whose ancestry is not considered controversial. See the well-researched biography of Katherine Swynford by the historian Alison Weir, for starters. Joan Beaufort's Wikipedia entry is quite informative. She was certainly Katherine's daughter, or she would not have been given the name of Beaufort.
Joan Beaufort is also my ancestor, at least seven times over.