Fantasy genealogy


Fantasy genealogies are mythical, fictional or fabricated pedigrees, usually to enhance the status of the descendant.
Many claimed ancestries are considered by modern scholars to be fabrications, especially the claims of kings and emperors who trace their ancestry to gods or the founders of their civilization. Such pedigrees also have a moral message to their subjects, allies and enemies. Some national epics or holy scriptures associate success, blessing and good with the "rightful dynasty" and wars, catastrophes and diseases with usurper rulers. In this moralism, fictional genealogies have analogies with allegory, fable and parable.

Examples

Elizabeth II

Chroniclers of Germanic peoples traced the ancestry of their kings back to the god Wōden. If such descents were true, Queen Elizabeth II would be a descendant of Woden, via the kings of Wessex.
According to Burkes Peerage Queen Elizabeth II is also a descendant of Muhammad via Maria de Padilla who had children with King Peter of Castille, two of whom married sons of King Edward III of England.
It has also been said Elizabeth II is a descendant of Genghis Khan via Ottoman royalty.

Emperors of Japan

is mythically descended from Amaterasu, the Sun goddess.

Fraudulent Genealogies

Fraudulent genealogies are created through honest mistakes, exaggerations, and deceit. The fraudulent pedigrees of Gustave Anjou are one example of deceit.

Genealogies of the fictional characters

invented many family trees of the characters from his high fantasy novel The Lord of the Rings.
One notable fictional pedigree is the family tree of The Noble and Most Ancient House of Black from Harry Potter, invented by J. K. Rowling.
George R. R. Martin's Epic A Song of Ice and Fire features a significant quantity of fictional noble families, most of them with documented in-universe ancestry.