The Laws of Heredity. 



159 



HEREDITY FROM MOTHER TO SON. 



MOTHER. 



Olympias . . 

 Cornelia . 

 Livia . . 



Agrippina .... 

 Faustina . . 



Soemias .... 

 Mammaea . . 

 Marozia .... 

 Blanche of Castille . 

 Berengaria .... 

 Charlotte of Savoy . . . 

 Louise of Savoy . . . 

 Mary Stuart ... 

 Catherine de Medicis . 

 Jeanne d'Albret 

 Marie de Medicis . . , 

 Anne-Christine Marlin . 

 Mdlle. de Tencin 

 Genevieve de Vassau 



Santi Lomaka (Greek) . . 

 Mrs. Byron (Catherine Gordon) 



SON. 



Alexander the Great 

 The Gracchi 



Tiberius 



Nero 



Commodus 



Heliogabalus 



Alexander Severus 



^ 

 IIS II 



St. Fere 

 Charles VIII. 

 Francis I. 

 James I. (?) 

 Her sons 

 Henri IV. 

 Louis XIII. 

 Buffon 

 D'Alembert 

 Mirabeau 



iff jChenier 



Goethe 

 Byron 





Remarks. Alfonso XI., King of Castille, famed for his re- 

 ligious zeal and his love of warfare against the Moors, was the 

 father of Berengaria, Blanche, and Uraca. The first of these 

 became the mother of St. Ferdinand. The second had four sons, 

 among them St. Louis and Charles of Anjou, both ascetics, who 

 mortified their flesh with iron girdles, scourgings, extreme fastings, 

 etc. The third made her son Sancho take the monastic habit, 

 though called to the throne of Portugal. 



Buffon, who held the doctrine of cross heredity, used to say 

 that he himself took after his mother. ' He held it for a principle, 

 says He'rault de Se'chelles, ' that childen usually inherit intellectual 

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