France, King of the Franks Louis II "The Stammerer" King of

France, King of the Franks Louis II "The Stammerer" King of

Male 846 - 879  (33 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  France, King of the Franks Louis II "The Stammerer" King of was born in 846 in France (son of Bald", King Charles II "The and Orleans, QUEEN OF THE WEST FRANKS Ermentrude Countess of); died on 10 Apr 879 in Compiègne, Neustria.

    Louis married Paris, Adélaïde of about 868. Adélaïde (daughter of Paris, Adelhard of) died about 10 Nov 901. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Simple", King of the Franks Charles III "the was born on 17 Sep 879; died on 7 Oct 929 in Peronne.
    2. France, Ermentrude of

    Louis married Burgundy, QUEEN OF THE FRANKS Ansgarde Princess of between 868 and 870 in France. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Bald", King Charles II "The was born on 13 Jun 823 in Frankfort-am-Main (son of Empire, EMPEROR Louis I "The Fair" Emperor Holy Roman and Bavaria, EMPRESS OF HOLY ROMAN EMP Judith Princess of); died on 6 Oct 877 in Mt. Cenis in the Alps; was buried in St Denis, France.

    Notes:



    Charles II or Charles the Bald

    823-77, emperor of the West (875-77) and king of the West Franks (843-77); son of Emperor Louis I by a second marriage. The efforts of Louis to create a kingdom for Charles were responsible for the repeated revolts of Louis's elder sons that disturbed the latter part of Louis's reign. When Lothair I, the eldest and heir to the imperial title, attempted to reunite the empire after Louis's death (840), Charles and Louis the German marched against their brother and defeated him at Fontenoy (841). Reaffirming their alliance in 842 (see Strasbourg, Oath of), they signed (843) with Lothair the Treaty of Verdun (see Verdun, Treaty of), which divided the empire into three parts. The part roughly corresponding to modern France fell to Charles. He was almost continuously at war with his brothers and their sons, with the Norsemen (or Normans, as they came to be known in France), and with rebellious subjects. When Charles's nephew Lothair, son of Lothair I and king of Lotharingia, died in 869, Charles seized his kingdom but was forced by the Treaty of Mersen (870) to divide it with Louis the German. In 875, at the death of his nephew Louis II, who had succeeded Lothair I as emperor, Charles secured the imperial crown. His reign witnessed the growth of the power of the nobles at the expense of the royal power and thus marked the rise of local feudalism. Charles's chief adviser was Archbishop Hincmar.

    Charles married Orleans, QUEEN OF THE WEST FRANKS Ermentrude Countess of on 13 Dec 842 in , CrecyFrance. Ermentrude (daughter of of Orleans, Eudes (Odo) Count and Ingeltrude, Countess of Orleans) was born on 27 Sep 830 in Of, Orléans, Neustria; died on 6 Oct 869; was buried in St Denis, France. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Orleans, QUEEN OF THE WEST FRANKS Ermentrude Countess of was born on 27 Sep 830 in Of, Orléans, Neustria (daughter of of Orleans, Eudes (Odo) Count and Ingeltrude, Countess of Orleans); died on 6 Oct 869; was buried in St Denis, France.
    Children:
    1. 1. France, King of the Franks Louis II "The Stammerer" King of was born in 846 in France; died on 10 Apr 879 in Compiègne, Neustria.
    2. France, Queen of England Judith Princess of was born in 844 in France; died after 870.
    3. France, ABBOT OF ECHTERNACH Carloman Prince of was born about Jun 845 in France; died in 876 in Epternac, France.
    4. France, "The Lame" Lothaire Prince of was born about 847 in Of, France; died in 865.
    5. Aquitaine, Charles King of was born in 847 in France; died on 29 Sep 865 in Buzançais, France.
    6. France, AbbesStRadegonde Rotrude Princess of was born in 850 in France.
    7. France, ABBESS OF HASNON Ermentrud Princess of was born about 854 in Of, France.
    8. France, Hildegarde Princess of was born about 856 in Of, France.
    9. France, Gisèle Princess of was born about 858 in France; died on 1 Jul 874.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Empire, EMPEROR Louis I "The Fair" Emperor Holy Roman was born in Aug 778 in Casseneuil, France (son of Holy Roman Empire, King of France Charlemagne Emperor of The and Swabia, COUNTESS OF VINZGAU Hildegard of); died on 20 Jun 840 in Manz; was buried in Cathédrale D'Aachen, Aachen, Rheinland, Prussia.

    Notes:



    Louis I or Louis the Pious

    Fr. Louis le Pieux or Louis le Débonnaire, 778-840, emperor of the West (814-40), son and successor of Charlemagne. He was crowned king of Aquitaine in 781 and co-emperor with his father in 813. His court was a learned one; his advisers included Benedict of Aniane. At the Assembly of Aachen (817) he issued an imperial order that sought to preserve the unity of the empire by breaking with tradition and not dividing the empire among his heirs. He thus made his eldest son, Lothair I, co-emperor and gave Aquitaine and Bavaria to his sons Pepin I and Louis the German. Louis's attempts to create a kingdom for Charles (later Emperor of the West Charles II), his son by a second marriage, provoked several revolts by his older sons. In 822, Louis repented publicly for his persecution of the rebels. In 830, Lothair rebelled and became virtually sole ruler of the empire. However, Pepin and Louis the German, fearing Lothair's supremacy, soon restored their father to power. Another revolt by all three sons occurred in 833. Louis met the rebels near Colmar on a field known since then as the Field of Lies (Ger. Lügenfeld) because of the general defection of the imperial troops. Louis, compelled to surrender, was formally deposed, and Lothair became sole emperor. Yet in 834, Louis the German and Pepin once more joined against Lothair and restored Louis. Later he partitioned his empire between Lothair and Charles and died while attempting to uphold the partition against the Aquitanians and Louis the German.

    Bibliography:

    See F. L. Ganshof, The Carolingians and the Frankish Monarchy (1971).

    Louis married Bavaria, EMPRESS OF HOLY ROMAN EMP Judith Princess of in Feb 819 in Aix La Chapelle, Austrasia. Judith (daughter of Bavaria, Guelph I (Welf I) Duke of and Bavaria, Hedwig Duchess of) was born about 800 in Of, Altdorf, Bavaria; died on 19 Apr 843 in , Tours, France. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Bavaria, EMPRESS OF HOLY ROMAN EMP Judith Princess of was born about 800 in Of, Altdorf, Bavaria (daughter of Bavaria, Guelph I (Welf I) Duke of and Bavaria, Hedwig Duchess of); died on 19 Apr 843 in , Tours, France.
    Children:
    1. 2. Bald", King Charles II "The was born on 13 Jun 823 in Frankfort-am-Main; died on 6 Oct 877 in Mt. Cenis in the Alps; was buried in St Denis, France.
    2. Holy Roman Empire, Gisela Princess of The was born in 820; died on 1 Jul 874.

  3. 6.  of Orleans, Eudes (Odo) Count was born about 800 in , Orleans, Loiret, France.

    Eudes married Ingeltrude, Countess of Orleans. Countess was born about 805 in Of, Orleans, Loiret, France. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Ingeltrude, Countess of Orleans was born about 805 in Of, Orleans, Loiret, France.
    Children:
    1. 3. Orleans, QUEEN OF THE WEST FRANKS Ermentrude Countess of was born on 27 Sep 830 in Of, Orléans, Neustria; died on 6 Oct 869; was buried in St Denis, France.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Holy Roman Empire, King of France Charlemagne Emperor of The was born on 2 Apr 747 in Aachen, Rhineland, Germany; was christened in in St Denis, France (son of France, Mayor of the Palace of Austrasia Pépin "The Short" King of and Laon, QUEEN OF FRANCE Berthe (Bertrade) Countess of); died on 28 Jan 813/14 in Aix la Chapelle; was buried in Notre Dame D'Aix La ChapelleAustrasia.

    Notes:



    "By the sword and the cross," Charlemagne (Charles the Great) became master of Western Europe. It was falling into decay when Charlemagne became joint king of the Franks in 768. Except in the monasteries, people had all but forgotten education and the arts. Boldly Charlemagne conquered barbarians and kings alike. By restoring the roots of learning and order, he preserved many political rights and revived culture.
    Charlemagne's grandfather was Charles Martel, the warrior who crushed the Saracens (see Charles Martel). Charlemagne was the elder son of Bertrade ("Bertha Greatfoot") and Pepin the Short, first "mayor of the palace" to become king of the Franks. Although schools had almost disappeared in the 8th century, historians believe that Bertrade gave young Charles some education and that he learned to read. His devotion to the church became the great driving force of his remarkable life.

    Charlemagne was tall, powerful, and tireless. His secretary, Eginhard, wrote that Charlemagne had fair hair and a "face laughing and merry . . . his appearance was always stately and dignified." He had a ready wit, but could be stern. His tastes were simple and moderate. He delighted in hunting, riding, and swimming. He wore the Frankish dress: linen shirt and breeches, a silk-fringed tunic, hose wrapped with bands, and, in winter, a tight coat of otter or marten skins. Over all these garments "he flung a blue cloak, and he always had a sword girt about him."

    Charlemagne's character was contradictory. In an age when the usual penalty for defeat was death, Charlemagne several times spared the lives of his defeated foes; yet in 782 at Verden, after a Saxon uprising, he ordered 4,500 Saxons beheaded. He compelled the clergy and nobles to reform, but he divorced two of his four wives without any cause. He forced kings and princes to kneel at his feet, yet his mother and his two favorite wives often overruled him in his own household.

    Charlemagne Begins His Reign
    In 768, when Charlemagne was 26, he and his brother Carloman inherited the kingdom of the Franks. In 771 Carloman died, and Charlemagne became sole ruler of the kingdom. At that time the northern half of Europe was still pagan and lawless. In the south, the Roman Catholic church was striving to assert its power against the Lombard kingdom in Italy. In Charlemagne's own realm, the Franks were falling back into barbarian ways, neglecting their education and religion.
    Charlemagne was determined to strengthen his realm and to bring order to Europe. In 772 he launched a 30-year campaign that conquered and Christianized the powerful pagan Saxons in the north. He subdued the Avars, a huge Tatar tribe on the Danube. He compelled the rebellious Bavarian dukes to submit to him. When possible he preferred to settle matters peacefully, however. For example, Charlemagne offered to pay the Lombard king Desiderius for return of lands to the pope, but, when Desiderius refused, Charlemagne seized his kingdom in 773 to 774 and restored the Papal States.

    The key to Charlemagne's amazing conquests was his ability to organize. During his reign he sent out more than 50 military expeditions. He rode as commander at the head of at least half of them. He moved his armies over wide reaches of country with unbelievable speed, but every move was planned in advance. Before a campaign he told the counts, princes, and bishops throughout his realm how many men they should bring, what arms they were to carry, and even what to load in the supply wagons. These feats of organization and the swift marches later led Napoleon to study his tactics.

    One of Charlemagne's minor campaigns has become the most famous. In 778 he led his army into Spain to battle the infidel Saracens. On its return, Basques ambushed the rear guard at Roncesvalles, in northern Spain, and killed "Count Roland." Roland became a great hero of medieval songs and romances (see Roland).

    By 800 Charlemagne was the undisputed ruler of Western Europe. His vast realm covered what are now France, Switzerland, Belgium, and The Netherlands. It included half of present-day Italy and Germany, part of Austria, and the Spanish March ("border"). The broad March reached to the Ebro River. By thus establishing a central government over Western Europe, Charlemagne restored much of the unity of the old Roman Empire and paved the way for the development of modern Europe.

    Crowned Emperor
    On Christmas Day in 800, while Charlemagne knelt in prayer in Saint Peter's in Rome, Pope Leo III seized a golden crown from the altar and placed it on the bowed head of the king. The throng in the church shouted, "To Charles the August, crowned by God, great and pacific emperor, long life and victory!"
    Charlemagne is said to have been surprised by the coronation, declaring that he would not have come into the church had he known the pope's plan. However, some historians say the pope would not have dared to act without Charlemagne's knowledge.

    The coronation was the foundation of the Holy Roman Empire. Though Charlemagne did not use the title, he is considered the first Holy Roman emperor (see Holy Roman Empire).

    Reform and Renaissance
    Charlemagne had deep sympathy for the peasants and believed that government should be for the benefit of the governed. When he came to the throne, various local governors, called "counts," had become lax and oppressive. To reform them, he expanded the work of investigators, called missi dominici. He prescribed their duties in documents called capitularies and sent them out in teams of two; a churchman and a noble. They rode to all parts of the realm, inspecting government, administering justice, and reawakening all citizens to their civil and religious duties.
    Twice a year Charlemagne summoned the chief men of the empire to discuss its affairs. In all problems he was the final arbiter, even in church issues, and he largely unified church and state.

    Charlemagne was a tireless reformer who tried to improve his people's lot in many ways. He set up money standards to encourage commerce, tried to build a Rhine-Danube canal, and urged better farming methods. He especially worked to spread education and Christianity in every class of people.

    He revived the Palace School at Aachen, his capital. He set up other schools, opening them to peasant boys as well as nobles.

    Charlemagne never stopped studying. He brought an English monk, Alcuin, and other scholars to his court. He learned to read Latin and some Greek but apparently did not master writing. At meals, instead of having jesters perform, he listened to men reading from learned works.

    To revive church music, Charlemagne had monks sent from Rome to train his Frankish singers. To restore some appreciation of art, he brought valuable pieces from Italy. An impressive monument to his religious devotion is the cathedral at Aachen, which he built and where he was buried (see Aachen).

    At Charlemagne's death in 814 only one of his three sons, Louis, was living. Louis's weak rule brought on the rise of civil wars and revolts. After his death his three quarreling sons split the empire between them by the Partition of Verdun in 843.

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    Source:Compton's Learning Company

    Charlemagne married Swabia, COUNTESS OF VINZGAU Hildegard of about 772 in Aachen, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany. Hildegard (daughter of Vinzgau, DUKE OF SWABIA Gerold I Count of and Emma) was born about 758 in Of, Aachen, Rhineland, Prussia; died on 30 Apr 783 in , Thionville, Austrasia; was buried in Abbaye De St Arnoul, Metz, Austrasia. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Swabia, COUNTESS OF VINZGAU Hildegard of was born about 758 in Of, Aachen, Rhineland, Prussia (daughter of Vinzgau, DUKE OF SWABIA Gerold I Count of and Emma); died on 30 Apr 783 in , Thionville, Austrasia; was buried in Abbaye De St Arnoul, Metz, Austrasia.
    Children:
    1. Holy Roman Empire, Charles Emperor of The was born in 772 in Of, Aachen, Rhineland, Prussia; died on 4 Dec 811.
    2. Lombardy, King of Lombardy Pippin King of was born in Apr 773 in Aachen, Rhineland, Prussia; was christened on 12 Apr 781 in , Rome, Italy; died on 8 Jul 810 in , Milan, Italy.
    3. Holy Roman Empire, Rotrude Princess of The was born in Aug 774 in Of, Aachen, Rhineland, Prussia; died on 6 Jun 810.
    4. Holy Roman Empire, Bertha Princess of The was born in 775 in Of, Aachen, Rhineland, Prussia; died on 11 Mar 826.
    5. 4. Empire, EMPEROR Louis I "The Fair" Emperor Holy Roman was born in Aug 778 in Casseneuil, France; died on 20 Jun 840 in Manz; was buried in Cathédrale D'Aachen, Aachen, Rheinland, Prussia.
    6. Holy Roman Empire, Lothaire Prince of was born in Aug 778 in , Casseneuil, Lot-et-Garonne, France; died in Aug 778.
    7. Holy Roman Empire, Gisèle Princess of was born in 781 in , Milano, Lombardy, Italy.
    8. Holy Roman Empire, Hildegarde Princess of was born in 782 in Of, Aachen, Rhineland, Prussia; died on 9 Jun 783.

  3. 10.  Bavaria, Guelph I (Welf I) Duke of was born about 776 in Of, Altdorf, Bavaria (son of (Raduald), Duke of Fruili Ruthardus); died about 830.

    Guelph married Bavaria, Hedwig Duchess of. Hedwig was born about 780 in Of, Bavaria. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  Bavaria, Hedwig Duchess of was born about 780 in Of, Bavaria.
    Children:
    1. Bavaria, QUEEN OF THE GERMANS Emma Princess of was born about 810 in Of, Altdorf, Bavaria; died on 31 Jan 876 in , Careme, Saxony.
    2. 5. Bavaria, EMPRESS OF HOLY ROMAN EMP Judith Princess of was born about 800 in Of, Altdorf, Bavaria; died on 19 Apr 843 in , Tours, France.