man Emperor Of The West Charlemagne‏‎, son of Pépin III Le Bref Roi Des Francs and Bertrada Of Laon‏.
Born ‎ Apr 2, 742 at Aachen, Germany, died ‎ Jan 28, 813-814 at Aachen, Germany‎, -1557 years, buried ‎ at Aix La Chapelle, Aachen, Germany
He was born in 742 to Pepin the Short, who was Mayor of the Palace of Childeric III, the last of an ever degenerating line of Merovingian kings. In 751, with the support of the Pope, Pepin cut off Childeric's long hair, the mark of his kingship, and sent him to a monastery, arrogating to himself the royal power. He was an active ruler, imposing peace on his border-lands, and twice descending on Italy to protect the Pope from the Lombards, giving to him the duchy of Rome as his own state in the bargain.
In 768 Charlemagne and his brother Carloman succeeded to the joint rule of the Franks, but three years later Carloman died, and Charlemagne ruled supreme. He was as active as his father in defending and expanding his territories. In 773, when the Lombards were again putting pressure on the Pope, he crossed the Alps with astonishing speed and defeated the Lombards absolutely, putting their king in a monastery (now a family habit) and assuming the 'Iron' Crown of Lombardy himself.
He now began a systematic campaign to conquer the Saxons, and ten years of the most bitter fighting ensued. The Saxons discovered an able leader in Widukind, and in 782, managed to wipe out a substantial army of Franks. Charlemagne had 4,500 Saxons beheaded at Verden in retribution, and went on to celebrate 'The Nativity of Our Lord and Easter as he was wont to do,' says Einhard, his biographer. It took nearly three years to find Widukind, and he was then baptized---a clear declaration of submission; the rest of the Saxons gave little trouble in taking baptism, or obeying their new Frankish masters---they remembered Verden.
A feudal vassal of Charlemagne who should have learned a lesson from this was Duke Tassilo of Bavaria, but he preferred to behave as if he were independent of his overlord. Charlemagne gave him one chance to reform, but then found that he was plotting with his enemies, so in 788 he too was put into a monastery, and Bavaria was incorporated into the fast growing empire.
In Spain he was not so successful: he had been forced to call off his invasion in 778, for his troops were needed elsewhere, and anyway the Muslims turned out to be not as disunited as he had been told; it was in this retreat that Roland died. But in 793 the Muslims attacked over his borders, so he set up an enclave on the southern side of the Pyrenees to guard the area.
He now turned his attention to the Avars, relations of the Huns, who lived in the area of the middle Danube, and were phenomenally rich with tribute-money they had wrung from the Byzantine Emperors. Peaceful negotiations had failed to keep them from raiding Charlemagne's lands, and so he set out to conquer them. It was as hard a war as that against the Saxons, lasting from 791-9, and Charlemagne was wise to distribute the loot he gained from it to his war-weary people instead of keeping it for himself.
Since 476 there had been no Emperor in the West, and until recently the Popes had looked to the Byzantine Emperors for protection. In 800 the Pope was set upon and deposed, and Charlemagne had to go do to Rome to restore him. On Christmas Day of that year he was praying in St. Peter's when the Pope came up and crowned him as Emperor, taking him 'unawares.' Historians wrangle over the coronation of Charlemagne, and the results of their searches read like detective stories. Suffice it to say that Charlemagne must have known what was going to happen, but he was rather disturbed about the whole thing afterwards; possibly he was upset at not having the fiat of the Emperor of the East, though a woman was reigning there at the time, possibly he felt the Pope had arrogated to himself too great a part in the coronation. Certainly he kept a very healthy respect for the Byzantine Empire, though he was not a man to fear another's power: he had good relations with Haroun-al-Rashid, the Caliph of Baghdad, who sent him a white elephant, and arranged protection for pilgrims visiting Jerusalem, in the heart of Musl

Married/ Related to:

woman UNKNOWN Fastrada‏‎
Died ‎ 794
[blended.FTW]
[mergebase.FTW]
[Fix.FTW]
Charlemagne married Fastrada in 784, the year after the death of his third wife Hildegard. Fastrada died in 794, and that year Charlemagne married his favorite wife, Luitgard.[Attempt.FTW]
Charlemagne married Fastrada in 784, the year after the death of his third wife Hildegard. Fastrada died in 794, and that year Charlemagne married his favorite wife, Luitgard.

CHAN17 May 2004


2nd marriage
man Emperor Of The West Charlemagne‏‎, son of Pépin III Le Bref Roi Des Francs and Bertrada Of Laon‏.

Married ‎ 794 (-1609 or -1608 years married) to:

woman UNKNOWN Luitgard‏‎
Died ‎ 800
[blended.FTW]
[mergebase.FTW]
[Fix.FTW]
Charlemagne married Luitgard in 794, the year of the death of his fourth wife Fastrada. Luitgard was Charlemagne's favorite and final wife; he did not remarry when she died in 800 (he was 56 years old anyway...).[Attempt.FTW]
Charlemagne married Luitgard in 794, the year of the death of his fourth wife Fastrada. Luitgard was Charlemagne's favorite and final wife; he did not remarry when she died in 800 (he was 56 years old anyway...).

CHAN17 May 2004


3rd marriage/ relation
man Emperor Of The West Charlemagne‏‎, son of Pépin III Le Bref Roi Des Francs and Bertrada Of Laon‏.

Married/ Related to:

woman Princess Of The Lombards Desideria‏‎

Still Living.

CHAN17 May 2004


4th marriage
man Emperor Of The West Charlemagne‏‎, son of Pépin III Le Bref Roi Des Francs and Bertrada Of Laon‏.

Married ‎ 771 (-1586 or -1585 years married) to:

woman Countess Of Vinzgau Hildegarde‏‎, daughter of I Gerold, Count In The Vinzgau and Emma Of Allemania‏.
Born ‎ 758 at Aachen, Rhineland, Germany‎

CHAN17 May 2004

Children:

1.
woman Hrotrude De France‏
Born ‎ 775, died ‎ Jun 6, 810‎, 34 or 35 years
2.
woman Princess Of France Bertha‏
Born ‎ 776 at Aachen, Rhineland, Germany, died ‎between 822 and 825‎, 48 or 49 years
3.
man King Of Italy Pepin‏
Born ‎ 777 at Aachen, Rhineland, Prussia, died ‎ Jul 8, 810 at Milano, Lombardy, Italy‎, 32 or 33 years
Name Suffix: Roi D'italie
4.
man Louis I "The Fair, " Emperor Of The West‏
Born ‎ Aug 778 at Casseneuil, Lot-Et-Garonne, France, died ‎ Jun 20, 840 at Petersaue, Ingelheim, Rhinehesse, Hesse‎, 61 years
Name Suffix: " Emperor Of The West
Louis I, byname LOUIS THE PIOUS, or THE DEBONAIR, French LOUIS LE PIEUX, or LE DÉBONNAIRE, German LUDWIG DER FROMME (b. 778, Chasseneuil, near Poitiers, Aquitaine--d. June 20, 840, Petersaue, Ger.), son of the Frankish ruler Charlemagne; he was crowned as co-emperor in 813 and became emperor in 814 on his father's death. Twice deprived of his authority by his sons (Lothair, Pepin, Louis, and Charles), he recovered it each time (830 and 834), but at his death the Carolingian empire was in disarray.
Louis was the fifth child of Charlemagne's second wife, Hildegard the Swabian. From 781 until 814 Louis ruled Aquitaine with some success, though largely through counsellors. When Charlemagne died at Aachen in 814 and was succeeded by Louis, by then his only surviving legitimate son, Louis was well experienced in warfare; he was 36, married to Irmengard of Hesbaye, and was the father of three young sons, Lothair, Pepin, and Louis (Louis the German); he had inherited vast lands, which seemed to be under reasonable control; there was no other claimant to the throne; and on Sept. 11, 813, shortly before his father's death, Louis had been crowned in Aachen as heir and co-emperor.
Louis' first task was to carry out the terms of Charlemagne's will. According to the Frankish chronicler Einhard, Louis did this with great scrupulousness, although other contemporary sources tell a different story. Louis next began to allocate parts of the empire to the various members of his family, and here began the difficulties and disasters that were to beset him for the remainder of his life. In August 814 he made Lothair and Pepin nominal kings of Bavaria and Aquitaine. He also confirmed Bernard, the son of his dead brother Pepin, as king of Italy, which position Charlemagne had allowed him to inherit in 813. But when Bernard revolted in 817, Louis had him blinded, and he died as a result of it. Louis sent his sisters and half sisters to nunneries and later put his three illegitimate half brothers--Drogo, Hugo, and Theodoric--into monasteries.
At the assembly of Aachen in July 817, he confirmed Pepin in the possession of Aquitaine and gave Bavaria to Louis the German; Lothair he made his co-emperor and heir. Charlemagne had been in his 70s and within a few months of death before naming his heir, and for Louis to give such premature expectations to a youth of 22 was to ask for trouble. Moreover, Louis did not anticipate that he would become father of another child: the empress Irmengard died in 818; and four months later Louis married Judith of Bavaria, who, in June 823, bore him a son, Charles (Charles the Bald), to whom the Emperor gave Alemannia in 829.
Backed by his two brothers, Lothair rose in revolt and deposed his father. The assembly of Nijmegen in October 830, however, restored Louis to the throne; and, the following February, at the assembly of Aachen, in a second partition, Lothair was given Italy. In 832 Louis took Aquitaine away from Pepin and gave it to Charles. The three brothers revolted a second time, with the support of Pope Gregory IV, and at a meeting near Sigolsheim, in Alsace, once more deposed their father. In March 834 Louis was again restored to the throne and made peace with Pepin and with Louis the German. Later in 834, Lothair rose again, but alone, and had to retreat into Italy. Encouraged by his success, Louis made over more territories to his son Charles at the assemblies of Aachen and Nijmegen (837-838)--a move the three brothers accepted but with bad grace. In 839 Louis the German revolted but was driven back into Bavaria.
Meanwhile, Pepin had died (December 838), and, at the assembly of Worms (May 30, 839), a fourth partition was made, the empire being divided between Lothair and Charles, with Bavaria left in the hands of Louis the German. Toward the end of 839 Louis the German marched his troops for the last time against his father, who once more drove him back. The Empero


5th marriage/ relation
man Emperor Of The West Charlemagne‏‎, son of Pépin III Le Bref Roi Des Francs and Bertrada Of Laon‏.

Married/ Related to:

woman A Concubine Himiltrude‏‎

Still Living.

CHAN17 May 2004

Child:

1.
woman UNKNOWN Aupais‏

Still Living.


6th marriage/ relation
man Emperor Of The West Charlemagne‏‎, son of Pépin III Le Bref Roi Des Francs and Bertrada Of Laon‏.

Married/ Related to:

woman A Concubine Regine‏‎

Still Living.

CHAN17 May 2004

Child:

1.
man Abbott Of Saint Quentin Hugh‏
Born ‎± 810, died ‎ Jun 7, 844‎, approximately 34 years