reply to post by ThirdEyeofHorus
I think it would be really hard to answer the question without some real digging. Usually the more pure the bloodline the more hidden and complex the
genealogies are.
I am pretty sure many bloodline people for one, don't know they are and two, even if they or others go looking get tangle in the web of trying to
prove it.
Over the centuries names have changed and variations sprouted up. Certain families change their names intentionally- as many Collins changed their
surname to Todd. If I use these two names for examples, if say the mid west Todd pioneers traveled and settled with the Smiths and much intermarrying
went on with them and Jones (other affiliated family) Then if other Collins and or Todd's were settlers on the west coast, traveling and
intermarrying with Williams and Peters. You now have Collins Todd Smith Jones Williams and Peters all carrying the bloodline and in their own
generation- moving and settling in other places... In our more modern times travel became easier so if some of these surnames end up on the east coast
and intermarry with other than Collins bloodline families you suddenly have many many names that on the surface do not appear to be bloodline or even
connected...all still very pure blood.
Since Sorros is adopted you would have to really be lucky to determine his true ancestry.... if his sons then in turn marry women that do not *seem*
to be of any special bloodline you can draw the obvious conclusion and move on. Without deeply researching the girls his sons married it could easily
be the wrong conclusion though