J . R . R . Tolkien only once mentions her : in the genealogical tables of the Edain she appears as "'Beldis "'of the House of B�or, with the following descent presented:
22.
*" Tarzan Alive ! " 1972 " include [ s ] numerous nineteenth-century literary characters including Elizabeth Bennet and Fitzwilliam Darcy from Jane Austen's Pride & Prejudice, by means of an elaborate genealogical table ."
23.
And in Rarotongan tradition by the settlement of Rarotonga according to the genealogical table appended in Hawaikii ( Smith : 1921 : 288 ), we find that Apakura lived 875 AD, or forty two generations ago.
24.
As Emperor Francis Joseph wrote to Napoleon III Nein, ich bin ein deutscher F�rst In the genealogical table above, some younger sons who had no prospects of the throne, were given the personal title of " count of Habsburg ".
25.
He has also been active on : de ( where his own article has been deleted ), : it, : fr, : sl, : sv and : cs, similarly attempting to introduce articles about himself and his relations, and genealogical tables.
26.
In 1765, he published a genealogical table of the families entitled to claim fellowships of All Souls by virtue of a relationship to the founder, Archbishop Henry Chichele; he and Blackstone were opposed to those graduates with only family ties behind them.
27.
The similarly conservative theologian B . B . Warfield reached the same conclusion in " On The Antiquity and Unity of the Human Race ", commenting that " it is precarious in the highest degree to draw chronological inferences from genealogical tables ".
28.
Source : William Betham, " The baronetage of England : or The History of the English baronets, and such baronets of Scotland, as are of English families; with genealogical tables, and engravings of their coats of arms ", Publisher Burrell and Bransby, 1803 ( page 236)
29.
As Muslim dynasties held Baluchistan from about the 7th century, we must look to an earlier period for the date of the Sewas; and it is not improbable that they were connected with the Rai dynasty of Sind, whose genealogical table includes two rulers named Sihras.
30.
According to R . A . Torrey, the reason Mary is not implicitly mentioned by name is because the ancient Hebrews never permitted the name of a woman to enter the genealogical tables, but inserted her husband as the son of him who was, in reality, but his father-in-law.