Some of you will want an easy way to look at the data. There are two ways to do view this from two different sources. It is difficult to find ways to display the data in interesting and informative ways.
Ancestris data output
This data is generated through a program called Ancestris which is admittedly hard to use. Please find:
- A simple graphical image of the direct male lineage of Sir Philip.
- A PDF of the family lineage over 13 generations from around 1490 to the eleven children of Sir Philip Pullicino.
This core data for the Ancestris output was sourced from John Pullicino’s old website, noting that all errors and omissions are my own. The data needs tidying and more information.
‘maltagenealogy’ nested output
Here is the html-based nested output from an external source.
This data from this family tree is from ‘Malta Genealogy’ (https://maltagenealogy.com/, attribution: Said-Vassallo Group) which I found on the Internet Archive. I have colour coded and introduced indentation, instead of numbering, so it is easier to read. Whoever created this list included valuable data on other branches of the family.
Commentary
There is other data on the web you may find, such as earlier ancestors, but without verification of the notarial or church records from trusted members of the family.
Our family geneaology as transcribed by our recent family, from actual records they have sighted, does not go back further than Francesco Giovanni Pullicino born around 1490.
As my father wrote, other significant family branches are truncated to focus on the male line to the generation Sir Phillip Pullicino (1885-1960).
One example for interest’s sake: Vincenzo’s son, Lorenzo, who is in our lineage, married Maria Briffa (‘Mariuccia’) who died in childbirth in 1620, but not before she bore several sons, one of whom was Gio Petro. We do not really know what happened to those other sons. In addition, Lorenzo Pullicino remarried twice after Maria’s death to two Maltese widows. There were no children from his 2nd marriage. His 3rd marriage to Caterina Debono produced at least one son (eg. Luca Pullicino who married Grazia Pace in 1671). This son is part of our family tree in a tangential way.
Note that sometimes I have (mostly) cut the data to exclude the current living generation for privacy.