Expanded Genealogy
- Veit Bach (about 1550–1619)
- Johann(es) „Hans“ Bach I (d. 1626) (son of Veit Bach)
- Johann(es) „Hans“ Bach III (1604–1673) - the so-called Erfurt Line
- Johann Christian Bach I (1640–1682)
- Johann Jacob Bach II (1668–1692)
- Johann Christoph Bach IV (1673–1727)
- Johann Samuel Bach (1694–1720)
- Johann Christian Bach II (1696–)
- Johann Günther Bach II (1703–1756)
- Johann Aegidius Bach I (1645–1716)
- Johann Balthasar Bach (1673–1691)
- Johann Bernhard Bach I (1676–1749)
- Johann Ernst Bach II (1722–1777)
- Johann Georg Bach I (1751–1797)
- Johann Ernst Bach II (1722–1777)
- Johann Christoph Bach VI (1685–1740)
- Johann Friedrich Bach II (1706–1743)
- Johann Aegidius Bach II (1709–1746)
- Johann Nicolaus Bach I (1653–1682)
- Johann Christian Bach I (1640–1682)
- Christoph Bach (1613–1661)
- Georg Christoph Bach (1642–1697)
- Johann Valentin Bach (1669–1720)
- Johann Lorenz Bach (1695–1773)
- Johann Elias Bach (1705–1755)
- Johann Michael Bach III (1745–1820) - the music theorist
- Johann Georg Bach II (1786–1874)
- Georg Friedrich Bach (1792–1860)
- Johann Michael Bach III (1745–1820) - the music theorist
- Johann Valentin Bach (1669–1720)
- Johann Christoph Bach II (1645–1693)
- Johann Ernst Bach I (1683–1739)
- Johann Christoph Bach VII (1689–1740)
- Johann Ambrosius Bach (1645–1695)
- Johann Christoph Bach III (1671–1721)
- Johann Andreas Bach (1713–1779)
- Johann Christoph Georg Bach (1747–1814)
- Johann Bernhard Bach II (1700–1743)
- Johann Christoph Bach VIII (1702–1756)
- Ernst Carl Gottfried Bach (1738–1801)
- Ernst Christian Bach (1747–1822)
- Philipp Christiann Georg Bach (1734–1809)
- Johann Andreas Bach (1713–1779)
- Johann Jacob Bach III (1682–1722)
- Johann Sebastian Bach (1685–1750) - wed in his first marriage to second cousin Maria Barbara Bach (1684–1720); in second marriage 1721 with Anna Magdalena Wilcke (1701–1760)
- Catharina Dorothea Bach (1708–1774)
- Wilhelm Friedemann Bach (1710–1784) - the so-called „Dresden Bach“ or „Halle Bach“
- Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach (1714–1788) - the so-called „Hamburger Bach“ or „Berlin Bach“
- Johann Sebastian Bach (1748–1778) - painter
- Johann Gottfried Bernhard Bach (1715–1739)
- Gottfried Heinrich Bach (1724–1763)
- Johann Christoph Friedrich Bach (1732–1795) - the so-called „Bückeburg Bach“
- Wilhelm Friedrich Ernst Bach (1759–1845)
- Johann Christian Bach III (1735–1782) - the so-called „Milan Bach“ or „London Bach“
- Johann Christoph Bach III (1671–1721)
- Georg Christoph Bach (1642–1697)
- Heinrich Bach I (1615–1692) - the so-called Arnstädt Line
- Johann Christoph Bach I (1642–1703)
- Johann Nikolaus Bach II (1669–1753)
- Johann Christoph Bach V (1676–)
- Johann Heinrich Bach II (1709–)
- Johann Friedrich Bach I (1682–1730)
- Johann Michael Bach II (1685–)
- Johann Michael Bach I (1648–1694)
- Maria Barbara Bach (1684–1720) - married Johann Sebastian Bach (1685–1750)
- Johann Günther Bach I (1653–1683)
- Johann Christoph Bach I (1642–1703)
- Johann(es) „Hans“ Bach III (1604–1673) - the so-called Erfurt Line
- Philippus „Lips“ Bach (1590–1620) - son of Veit Bach
- Wendel Bach (1619–1682)
- Johann Jacob Bach I (1655–1718)
- Nicolaus Ephraim Bach (1690–1760)
- Georg Michael Bach (1703–1771)
- Johann Christian Bach IV (1743–1814)
- Johann Ludwig Bach (1677–1731) - the so-called „Meininger Bach“, composer
- Gottlieb Friedrich Bach (1714–1785) - court organist, court painter Meinigen
- Johann Philipp Bach (1752–1846) - musician, painter
- Samuel Anton Bach (1713–1781)
- Gottlieb Friedrich Bach (1714–1785) - court organist, court painter Meinigen
- Johann Jacob Bach I (1655–1718)
- Johann Bach IV (1621–1686) - nephew of Lips Bach
- Johann Stephan Bach (1665–1717)
- Wendel Bach (1619–1682)
- Johann(es) „Hans“ Bach I (d. 1626) (son of Veit Bach)
- Caspar Bach I (1570–1640) (brother of Veit Bach?)
- Caspar Bach II (1600–)
- Heinrich „Blinder Jonas“ Bach (–1635)
- Johann(es) Bach II (1612–1632)
- Melchior Bach (1603–1634)
- Nicolaus Bach (1619–1637)
Read more about this topic: Bach Family
Famous quotes containing the word expanded:
“The very nursery tales of this generation were the nursery tales of primeval races. They migrate from east to west, and again from west to east; now expanded into the tale divine of bards, now shrunk into a popular rhyme.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)