Hereditary Genius
147
I now give tables on precisely the same principle as those in
previous chapters.
TABLE I.
SUMMARY OF RELATIONSHIPS OF 32 COMMANDERS, GROUPED
INTO 27 (O® ?24¹) FAMILIES.
One relation (or two in family).
Berwick, Duke (see Marlborough).
Pyrrhus (see Alexander).
Doria
N. &c.
Titus
F.
Hyder Ali
S.
Tromp
S.
Lawrence, Sir H.
B.
Two or three relations (or three or four in family).
2. Charlemagne & Chas.
Martel
F. G. GF.
Eugene
gB. gN.
Charles Martel (see
Charlemagne)
2. Marlborough and Duke
of Berwick
n. UP.
Clive
GB. GN.
Moore, Sir John
F. B.
Coligny (but see Maurice)
F. u. PP.
Nelson
uP.gu.
Cromwell
S. uS. uP.
Runjeet Singh
G. F.
Saxe, Marshal
F. u. ps.
Wellington
B. 2N.
Four or more relations (or five or more in family).
3.
Alexander, Philip, and Pyrrhus
F. f. B. N. gBP.
Bonaparte
f. B. b. S. 2N.
Caesar
s. f. n. nS.
Charles XII. (see Gustavus Adolphus)
2.
Gustavus Adolphus and Charles XII
s. GF. Gb. NP.
Hannibal
F. 3 B.
(?4).
Maurice of Nassau, William the Silent,
Coligny, and Turenne
F. g. n. NS.
Napier
GGF. F. US. 2 B. n. US. &c.
Napoleon (see Bonaparte)
Philip and Pyrrhus (see Alexander)
Raleigh
3B. 2uS.
Scipio
F. G. 2S. 2 P. GN.
Turenne (but see Maurice)
F. &c.
William I. (but see Maurice)
2S. P. PS.
1
Coligny, Maurice, Turenne, and William I. are impossible either to separate or to
reckon as one family. If they were considered as only one family, the number of groups
would be reduced from 27 to 24.