Em segunda-feira, 19 de junho de 2017 16:38:11 UTC+1, Stewart Baldwin escreveu: > As more and more theories of Agatha's origin appear, actual evidence > seems to become less of a requirement. In that spirit, I offer a few > additional theories of my own, which I think are just as interesting > (and perhaps even just as true) as some recent offerings. (I have no > idea how many theories have been proposed, and the numbers are pure > conjecture.) > > Agatha Theory #85: Agatha was a daughter of an Armenian Bagratid, which, > after accepting a dozen or two "dotted line" conjectural relationships, > gives you a DFA. > > Agatha Theory #86: Agatha was a daughter of the Emperor of Japan, > thereby forming an important "gateway" to Japanese royalty. > > Agatha Theory #88: Agatha was a descendant of Mayan kings who was > brought to Europe as a baby on one of Leif Eriksson's return voyages. > (After all, the collapsing Mayan cities were only a few thousand miles > from where the Vikings landed in America, and why let a few thousand > miles get in the way of genealogical guesswork?) > > Agatha Theory #89: Agatha was a daughter of Godric Gryffindor. (Hogwarts > is in Scotland, and Agatha's daughter was Queen of Scotland. Q.E.D.) > > (The missing number is due to the likelihood that someone else published > yet another theory during the time that it took me to type this.) > > Stewart Baldwin Couldn't you wait until 1th April to write that. But more seriously the Bagratid genealogies are conjectural because neither the Armenian sources neither the Byzantine sources give us a complete genealogy of them.