Individual Details
Charles II, King of France "theBald"
(13 Jun 823 - 6 Oct 877)
Ruled France as Charles I
Holy Roman Emperor as Charles II
***************
thePeerage.com
Charles I, Roi de France1
M, #102622, b. 13 June 823, d. 6 October 877
Last Edited=6 Dec 2015
Consanguinity Index=0.52%
Charles I, Roi de France was born on 13 June 823 at Frankfurt, Hessen, Germany.2 He was the son of Louis I, Roi de France and Judith von Bayern.1 He married Ermentrude d'Orléans, daughter of Odo, Comte de Orléans and Ergetrude (?), in 842. He married Irmentrud von Orleans, daughter of Odo Graf von Orleans and Ingeltrud von Fézensac von Paris, on 13 December 846.3 He married Richilde Gräfin von Metz, daughter of Beuve Graf von Metz, on 22 January 870 in a Aix-la-Chapelle, France marriage.2 He died on 6 October 877 at age 54 at Brides-les-Bains, Bourgogne, France.2
Charles I, Roi de France also went by the nick-name of Charles 'the Bald'.4 He gained the title of Roi Charles I de France in 840.1 He was crowned Holy Roman Emperor in 875.5 He succeeded to the title of Emperor Charles II of the Holy Roman Empire in 875.5
Children of Charles I, Roi de France and Ermentrude d'Orléans
Charles, Roi d'Aquitaine d. 866
Carloman (?) d. 876
Judith, Princesse de France+6 b. bt 843 - 844, d. Apr 870
Louis II 'the Stammerer', Roi de France+1 b. 1 Nov 843, d. 10 Apr 879
Citations
[S38] John Morby, Dynasties of the World: a chronological and genealogical handbook (Oxford, Oxfordshire, U.K.: Oxford University Press, 1989). Hereinafter cited as Dynasties of the World.
[S125] Richard Glanville-Brown, online, Richard Glanville-Brown (RR 2, Milton, Ontario, Canada), downloaded 17 August 2005.
[S7803] Christof Steineg von Steinig, online unknown url, Christof Steineg von Steinig (unknown location).
[S38] John Morby, Dynasties of the World, page 78.
[S38] John Morby, Dynasties of the World, page 122.
[S11] Alison Weir, Britain's Royal Families: The Complete Genealogy (London, U.K.: The Bodley Head, 1999), page 5. Hereinafter cited as Britain's Royal Families.
*********************
Wikipedia
Charles the Bald
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Not to be confused with Charles the Bold.
Charles the Bald
Carlo calvo.jpg
Charles the Bald in old age; picture from his Psalter
King of the Franks
Reign 840–877
Predecessor Louis I
Holy Roman Emperor
Reign 875–877
Coronation 29 December 875, Pavia
Predecessor Louis II
Successor Charles III
Born 13 June 823
Died 6 October 877 (aged 54)
Spouse Ermentrude of Orleans
Richilde of Provence
Issue
Judith of Flanders
Louis the Stammerer
Charles the Child
Lothar the Lame
Carloman
House Carolingian
Father Louis the Pious
Mother Judith
Denier of Charles the Bald struck at Paris
Charles the Bald (13 June 823 – 6 October 877) was the King of West Francia (843–77), King of Italy (875–77) and Holy Roman Emperor (875–77, as Charles II). After a series of civil wars that began during the reign of his father, Louis the Pious, Charles succeeded by the Treaty of Verdun (843) in acquiring the western third of the Carolingian Empire. He was a grandson of Charlemagne and the youngest son of Louis the Pious by his second wife, Judith.
Contents
1 Struggle against his brothers
2 Reign in the West
3 Reign as emperor
4 Baldness
5 Marriages and children
6 Ancestry
7 See also
8 Notes
9 References
10 External links
Struggle against his brothers
He was born on 13 June 823 in Frankfurt,[1] when his elder brothers were already adults and had been assigned their own regna, or subkingdoms, by their father. The attempts made by Louis the Pious to assign Charles a subkingdom, first Alemannia and then the country between the Meuse and the Pyrenees (in 832, after the rising of Pepin I of Aquitaine) were unsuccessful. The numerous reconciliations with the rebellious Lothair and Pepin, as well as their brother Louis the German, King of Bavaria, made Charles's share in Aquitaine and Italy only temporary, but his father did not give up and made Charles the heir of the entire land which was once Gaul and would eventually be France. At a diet in Aachen in 837, Louis the Pious bade the nobles do homage to Charles as his heir.[2] Pepin of Aquitaine died in 838, whereupon Charles at last received that kingdom,[2] which angered Pepin's heirs and the Aquitainian nobles.[3]
The death of the emperor in 840 led to the outbreak of war between his sons. Charles allied himself with his brother Louis the German to resist the pretensions of the new emperor Lothair I, and the two allies defeated Lothair at the Battle of Fontenoy-en-Puisaye on 25 June 841.[4] In the following year, the two brothers confirmed their alliance by the celebrated Oaths of Strasbourg. The war was brought to an end by the Treaty of Verdun in August 843. The settlement gave Charles the Bald the kingdom of the West Franks, which he had been up until then governing and which practically corresponded with what is now France, as far as the Meuse, the Saône, and the Rhône, with the addition of the Spanish March as far as the Ebro. Louis received the eastern part of the Carolingian Empire, known then as East Francia and later as Germany. Lothair retained the imperial title and the Kingdom of Italy. He also received the central regions from Flanders through the Rhineland and Burgundy as king of Middle Francia.
Reign in the West
This section does not cite any sources. Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (December 2015)
Denier (type Temple and cross) of Charles the Bald, minted at Reims between 840-864 (pre-Edict of Pistres).
Seal of Charles the Bald
The first years of Charles's reign, up to the death of Lothair I in 855, were comparatively peaceful. During these years the three brothers continued the system of "confraternal government", meeting repeatedly with one another, at Koblenz (848), at Meerssen (851), and at Attigny (854). In 858, Louis the German, invited by disaffected nobles eager to oust Charles, invaded the West Frankish kingdom. Charles was so unpopular that he was unable to summon an army, and he fled to Burgundy. He was saved only by the support of the bishops, who refused to crown Louis the German king, and by the fidelity of the Welfs, who were related to his mother, Judith. In 860, he in his turn tried to seize the kingdom of his nephew, Charles of Provence, but was repulsed. On the death of his nephew Lothair II in 869, Charles tried to seize Lothair's dominions, but by the Treaty of Mersen (870) was compelled to share them with Louis the German.
Besides these family disputes, Charles had to struggle against repeated rebellions in Aquitaine and against the Bretons. Led by their chiefs Nomenoë and Erispoë, who defeated the king at the Battle of Ballon (845) and the Battle of Jengland (851), the Bretons were successful in obtaining a de facto independence. Charles also fought against the Vikings, who devastated the country of the north, the valleys of the Seine and Loire, and even up to the borders of Aquitaine. Several times Charles was forced to purchase their retreat at a heavy price. Charles led various expeditions against the invaders and, by the Edict of Pistres of 864, made the army more mobile by providing for a cavalry element, the predecessor of the French chivalry so famous during the next 600 years. By the same edict, he ordered fortified bridges to be put up at all rivers to block the Viking incursions. Two of these bridges at Paris saved the city during its siege of 885–886.
Reign as emperor
Apparition of Charles the Bald after his death and burial in Saint Denis
In 875, after the death of the Emperor Louis II (son of his half-brother Lothair), Charles the Bald, supported by Pope John VIII, traveled to Italy, receiving the royal crown at Pavia and the imperial insignia in Rome on 29 December. Louis the German, also a candidate for the succession of Louis II, revenged himself by invading and devastating Charles' dominions, and Charles had to return hastily to West Francia. After the death of Louis the German (28 August 876), Charles in his turn attempted to seize Louis's kingdom, but was decisively beaten at Andernach on 8 October 876.
In the meantime, John VIII, menaced by the Saracens, was urging Charles to come to his defence in Italy. Charles again crossed the Alps, but this expedition was received with little enthusiasm by the nobles, and even by his regent in Lombardy, Boso, and they refused to join his army. At the same time Carloman, son of Louis the German, entered northern Italy. Charles, ill and in great distress, started on his way back to Gaul, but died while crossing the pass of Mont Cenis at Brides-les-Bains, on 6 October 877.[5]
According to the Annals of St-Bertin, Charles was hastily buried at the abbey of Nantua, Burgundy because the bearers were unable to withstand the stench of his decaying body. He was to have been buried in the Basilique Saint-Denis and may have been transferred there later. It was recorded that there was a memorial brass there that was melted down at the Revolution.
Charles was succeeded by his son, Louis. Charles was a prince of education and letters, a friend of the church, and conscious of the support he could find in the episcopate against his unruly nobles, for he chose his councillors from among the higher clergy, as in the case of Guenelon of Sens, who betrayed him, and of Hincmar of Reims.
Baldness
It has been suggested that Charles' nickname was used ironically and not descriptively; i.e. that he was not in fact bald, but rather that he was extremely hairy.[6] In support of this idea is the fact that none of his enemies commented on what would be an easy target. However, none of the voluble members of his court comments on his being hairy; and the Genealogy of Frankish Kings, a text from Fontanelle dating from possibly as early as 869, and a text without a trace of irony, names him as Karolus Caluus ("Charles the Bald"). Certainly, by the end of the 10th century, Richier of Reims and Adhemar of Chabannes refer to him in all seriousness as "Charles the Bald".[7]
An alternative or additional interpretation is based on Charles' initial lack of a regnum. "Bald" would in this case be a tongue-in-cheek reference to his landlessness, at an age where his brothers already had been sub-kings for some years.[8]
Marriages and children
Charles married Ermentrude, daughter of Odo I, Count of Orléans, in 842. She died in 869. In 870, Charles married Richilde of Provence, who was descended from a noble family of Lorraine.
With Ermentrude:
Judith (844–870), married firstly with Ethelwulf of Wessex, secondly with Ethelbald of Wessex (her stepson) and thirdly with Baldwin I of Flanders
Louis the Stammerer (846–879)
Charles the Child (847–866)
Lothar the Lame (848–866), monk in 861, became Abbot of Saint-Germain
Carloman (849–876)
Rotrude (852–912), a nun, Abbess of Saint-Radegunde
Ermentrud (854–877), a nun, Abbess of Hasnon
Hildegarde (born 856, died young)
Gisela (857–874)
Godehilde (864-907)
With Richilde:
Rothilde (871–929), married firstly to Hugues, Count of Bourges and secondly to Reginald of Neustria.[9]
Drogo (872–873)
Pippin (873–874)
a son (born and died 875)
Charles (876–877)
Ancestry
[show]Ancestors of Charles the Bald
See also
First Bible of Charles the Bald
Crown of Charlemagne
Notes
Riche 1983, p. 150.
Riche 1983, p. 157.
Riche 1983, p. 158.
Bradbury 2007, p. 14.
Riche 1983, p. 204.
Nelson 1992, p. 13.
Dutton 2008.
Lebe 2003.
Riche 1983, p. 237.
References
Bradbury, Jim (2007). The Capetians: Kings of France 987-1328. Hambledon Continuum.
Dutton, Paul E. (2008). Charlemagne's Mustache. Palgrave Macmillan.
Lebe, Reinhard (2003). War Karl der Kahle wirklich kahl? Historische Beinamen und was dahintersteckt. Dt. Taschenbuch-Verlag.
Nelson, Janet (1992). Charles the Bald. Essex.
Riche, Pierre (1983). The Carolingians:The Family who forged Europe. University of Pennsylvania Press.
*************
Sources for Charles II, King of France
1 Luther, George A., editor and compiler, The Luther Genealogy: A History of the Descendants of Captain John Luther, Who Arrived in the Massachusetts Bay Colony, 1630-1635, Penobscot Press (2001), 80.
2 Richardson, Douglas, Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, Salt Lake City, Utah: Douglas Richardson (2013), Vol. V, p. 481.
3 Wikipedia, "Charles the Bald", (accessed 02/21/2010).
Holy Roman Emperor as Charles II
***************
thePeerage.com
Charles I, Roi de France1
M, #102622, b. 13 June 823, d. 6 October 877
Last Edited=6 Dec 2015
Consanguinity Index=0.52%
Charles I, Roi de France was born on 13 June 823 at Frankfurt, Hessen, Germany.2 He was the son of Louis I, Roi de France and Judith von Bayern.1 He married Ermentrude d'Orléans, daughter of Odo, Comte de Orléans and Ergetrude (?), in 842. He married Irmentrud von Orleans, daughter of Odo Graf von Orleans and Ingeltrud von Fézensac von Paris, on 13 December 846.3 He married Richilde Gräfin von Metz, daughter of Beuve Graf von Metz, on 22 January 870 in a Aix-la-Chapelle, France marriage.2 He died on 6 October 877 at age 54 at Brides-les-Bains, Bourgogne, France.2
Charles I, Roi de France also went by the nick-name of Charles 'the Bald'.4 He gained the title of Roi Charles I de France in 840.1 He was crowned Holy Roman Emperor in 875.5 He succeeded to the title of Emperor Charles II of the Holy Roman Empire in 875.5
Children of Charles I, Roi de France and Ermentrude d'Orléans
Charles, Roi d'Aquitaine d. 866
Carloman (?) d. 876
Judith, Princesse de France+6 b. bt 843 - 844, d. Apr 870
Louis II 'the Stammerer', Roi de France+1 b. 1 Nov 843, d. 10 Apr 879
Citations
[S38] John Morby, Dynasties of the World: a chronological and genealogical handbook (Oxford, Oxfordshire, U.K.: Oxford University Press, 1989). Hereinafter cited as Dynasties of the World.
[S125] Richard Glanville-Brown, online
[S7803] Christof Steineg von Steinig, online unknown url, Christof Steineg von Steinig (unknown location).
[S38] John Morby, Dynasties of the World, page 78.
[S38] John Morby, Dynasties of the World, page 122.
[S11] Alison Weir, Britain's Royal Families: The Complete Genealogy (London, U.K.: The Bodley Head, 1999), page 5. Hereinafter cited as Britain's Royal Families.
*********************
Wikipedia
Charles the Bald
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Not to be confused with Charles the Bold.
Charles the Bald
Carlo calvo.jpg
Charles the Bald in old age; picture from his Psalter
King of the Franks
Reign 840–877
Predecessor Louis I
Holy Roman Emperor
Reign 875–877
Coronation 29 December 875, Pavia
Predecessor Louis II
Successor Charles III
Born 13 June 823
Died 6 October 877 (aged 54)
Spouse Ermentrude of Orleans
Richilde of Provence
Issue
Judith of Flanders
Louis the Stammerer
Charles the Child
Lothar the Lame
Carloman
House Carolingian
Father Louis the Pious
Mother Judith
Denier of Charles the Bald struck at Paris
Charles the Bald (13 June 823 – 6 October 877) was the King of West Francia (843–77), King of Italy (875–77) and Holy Roman Emperor (875–77, as Charles II). After a series of civil wars that began during the reign of his father, Louis the Pious, Charles succeeded by the Treaty of Verdun (843) in acquiring the western third of the Carolingian Empire. He was a grandson of Charlemagne and the youngest son of Louis the Pious by his second wife, Judith.
Contents
1 Struggle against his brothers
2 Reign in the West
3 Reign as emperor
4 Baldness
5 Marriages and children
6 Ancestry
7 See also
8 Notes
9 References
10 External links
Struggle against his brothers
He was born on 13 June 823 in Frankfurt,[1] when his elder brothers were already adults and had been assigned their own regna, or subkingdoms, by their father. The attempts made by Louis the Pious to assign Charles a subkingdom, first Alemannia and then the country between the Meuse and the Pyrenees (in 832, after the rising of Pepin I of Aquitaine) were unsuccessful. The numerous reconciliations with the rebellious Lothair and Pepin, as well as their brother Louis the German, King of Bavaria, made Charles's share in Aquitaine and Italy only temporary, but his father did not give up and made Charles the heir of the entire land which was once Gaul and would eventually be France. At a diet in Aachen in 837, Louis the Pious bade the nobles do homage to Charles as his heir.[2] Pepin of Aquitaine died in 838, whereupon Charles at last received that kingdom,[2] which angered Pepin's heirs and the Aquitainian nobles.[3]
The death of the emperor in 840 led to the outbreak of war between his sons. Charles allied himself with his brother Louis the German to resist the pretensions of the new emperor Lothair I, and the two allies defeated Lothair at the Battle of Fontenoy-en-Puisaye on 25 June 841.[4] In the following year, the two brothers confirmed their alliance by the celebrated Oaths of Strasbourg. The war was brought to an end by the Treaty of Verdun in August 843. The settlement gave Charles the Bald the kingdom of the West Franks, which he had been up until then governing and which practically corresponded with what is now France, as far as the Meuse, the Saône, and the Rhône, with the addition of the Spanish March as far as the Ebro. Louis received the eastern part of the Carolingian Empire, known then as East Francia and later as Germany. Lothair retained the imperial title and the Kingdom of Italy. He also received the central regions from Flanders through the Rhineland and Burgundy as king of Middle Francia.
Reign in the West
This section does not cite any sources. Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (December 2015)
Denier (type Temple and cross) of Charles the Bald, minted at Reims between 840-864 (pre-Edict of Pistres).
Seal of Charles the Bald
The first years of Charles's reign, up to the death of Lothair I in 855, were comparatively peaceful. During these years the three brothers continued the system of "confraternal government", meeting repeatedly with one another, at Koblenz (848), at Meerssen (851), and at Attigny (854). In 858, Louis the German, invited by disaffected nobles eager to oust Charles, invaded the West Frankish kingdom. Charles was so unpopular that he was unable to summon an army, and he fled to Burgundy. He was saved only by the support of the bishops, who refused to crown Louis the German king, and by the fidelity of the Welfs, who were related to his mother, Judith. In 860, he in his turn tried to seize the kingdom of his nephew, Charles of Provence, but was repulsed. On the death of his nephew Lothair II in 869, Charles tried to seize Lothair's dominions, but by the Treaty of Mersen (870) was compelled to share them with Louis the German.
Besides these family disputes, Charles had to struggle against repeated rebellions in Aquitaine and against the Bretons. Led by their chiefs Nomenoë and Erispoë, who defeated the king at the Battle of Ballon (845) and the Battle of Jengland (851), the Bretons were successful in obtaining a de facto independence. Charles also fought against the Vikings, who devastated the country of the north, the valleys of the Seine and Loire, and even up to the borders of Aquitaine. Several times Charles was forced to purchase their retreat at a heavy price. Charles led various expeditions against the invaders and, by the Edict of Pistres of 864, made the army more mobile by providing for a cavalry element, the predecessor of the French chivalry so famous during the next 600 years. By the same edict, he ordered fortified bridges to be put up at all rivers to block the Viking incursions. Two of these bridges at Paris saved the city during its siege of 885–886.
Reign as emperor
Apparition of Charles the Bald after his death and burial in Saint Denis
In 875, after the death of the Emperor Louis II (son of his half-brother Lothair), Charles the Bald, supported by Pope John VIII, traveled to Italy, receiving the royal crown at Pavia and the imperial insignia in Rome on 29 December. Louis the German, also a candidate for the succession of Louis II, revenged himself by invading and devastating Charles' dominions, and Charles had to return hastily to West Francia. After the death of Louis the German (28 August 876), Charles in his turn attempted to seize Louis's kingdom, but was decisively beaten at Andernach on 8 October 876.
In the meantime, John VIII, menaced by the Saracens, was urging Charles to come to his defence in Italy. Charles again crossed the Alps, but this expedition was received with little enthusiasm by the nobles, and even by his regent in Lombardy, Boso, and they refused to join his army. At the same time Carloman, son of Louis the German, entered northern Italy. Charles, ill and in great distress, started on his way back to Gaul, but died while crossing the pass of Mont Cenis at Brides-les-Bains, on 6 October 877.[5]
According to the Annals of St-Bertin, Charles was hastily buried at the abbey of Nantua, Burgundy because the bearers were unable to withstand the stench of his decaying body. He was to have been buried in the Basilique Saint-Denis and may have been transferred there later. It was recorded that there was a memorial brass there that was melted down at the Revolution.
Charles was succeeded by his son, Louis. Charles was a prince of education and letters, a friend of the church, and conscious of the support he could find in the episcopate against his unruly nobles, for he chose his councillors from among the higher clergy, as in the case of Guenelon of Sens, who betrayed him, and of Hincmar of Reims.
Baldness
It has been suggested that Charles' nickname was used ironically and not descriptively; i.e. that he was not in fact bald, but rather that he was extremely hairy.[6] In support of this idea is the fact that none of his enemies commented on what would be an easy target. However, none of the voluble members of his court comments on his being hairy; and the Genealogy of Frankish Kings, a text from Fontanelle dating from possibly as early as 869, and a text without a trace of irony, names him as Karolus Caluus ("Charles the Bald"). Certainly, by the end of the 10th century, Richier of Reims and Adhemar of Chabannes refer to him in all seriousness as "Charles the Bald".[7]
An alternative or additional interpretation is based on Charles' initial lack of a regnum. "Bald" would in this case be a tongue-in-cheek reference to his landlessness, at an age where his brothers already had been sub-kings for some years.[8]
Marriages and children
Charles married Ermentrude, daughter of Odo I, Count of Orléans, in 842. She died in 869. In 870, Charles married Richilde of Provence, who was descended from a noble family of Lorraine.
With Ermentrude:
Judith (844–870), married firstly with Ethelwulf of Wessex, secondly with Ethelbald of Wessex (her stepson) and thirdly with Baldwin I of Flanders
Louis the Stammerer (846–879)
Charles the Child (847–866)
Lothar the Lame (848–866), monk in 861, became Abbot of Saint-Germain
Carloman (849–876)
Rotrude (852–912), a nun, Abbess of Saint-Radegunde
Ermentrud (854–877), a nun, Abbess of Hasnon
Hildegarde (born 856, died young)
Gisela (857–874)
Godehilde (864-907)
With Richilde:
Rothilde (871–929), married firstly to Hugues, Count of Bourges and secondly to Reginald of Neustria.[9]
Drogo (872–873)
Pippin (873–874)
a son (born and died 875)
Charles (876–877)
Ancestry
[show]Ancestors of Charles the Bald
See also
First Bible of Charles the Bald
Crown of Charlemagne
Notes
Riche 1983, p. 150.
Riche 1983, p. 157.
Riche 1983, p. 158.
Bradbury 2007, p. 14.
Riche 1983, p. 204.
Nelson 1992, p. 13.
Dutton 2008.
Lebe 2003.
Riche 1983, p. 237.
References
Bradbury, Jim (2007). The Capetians: Kings of France 987-1328. Hambledon Continuum.
Dutton, Paul E. (2008). Charlemagne's Mustache. Palgrave Macmillan.
Lebe, Reinhard (2003). War Karl der Kahle wirklich kahl? Historische Beinamen und was dahintersteckt. Dt. Taschenbuch-Verlag.
Nelson, Janet (1992). Charles the Bald. Essex.
Riche, Pierre (1983). The Carolingians:The Family who forged Europe. University of Pennsylvania Press.
*************
Sources for Charles II, King of France
1 Luther, George A., editor and compiler, The Luther Genealogy: A History of the Descendants of Captain John Luther, Who Arrived in the Massachusetts Bay Colony, 1630-1635, Penobscot Press (2001), 80.
2 Richardson, Douglas, Royal Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, Salt Lake City, Utah: Douglas Richardson (2013), Vol. V, p. 481.
3 Wikipedia, "Charles the Bald", (accessed 02/21/2010).
Events
Birth | 13 Jun 823 | Frankfurt, Hessen, Germany | |||
Title (Nobility) | 840 | King of France (as Charles I) | |||
Title (Nobility) | 875 | Holy Roman Emperor (as Charles II) | |||
Death | 6 Oct 877 | Brides-les-Bains, Bourgogne, France. | |||
Title (Nobility) | King of Aquitaine | ||||
Title (Nobility) | King of Italy | ||||
Title (Nobility) | King of Western Francia |
Families
Spouse | Ermentrude of Orleans (823 - 869) |
Child | Louis II, King of France "the Stammerer" ( - ) |
Child | Judith of France (843 - 870) |
Father | Louis I "the Pious" (778 - 840) |
Mother | Judith of Bavaria (797 - 843) |
Sibling | Gisela (821 - ) |
Sibling | Gisela d'Aquitaine (819 - 874) |
Sibling | Charles the Bald (823 - 877) |