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Lothair I

Lothair I or Lothar I (Dutch and Medieval Latin: Lotharius; German: Lothar; French: Lothaire; Italian: Lotario; 795 – 29 September 855) was emperor (817–855, co-ruling with his father until 840), and the governor of Bavaria (815–817), King of Italy (818–855) and Middle Francia (840–855).

Lothair I
Emperor of the Romans
Lothair I in the Gospels of Lothair, c. 849–851, now located in the Bibliothèque nationale de France
Emperor of the Carolingian Empire
Reign817–855
Coronation817, Aachen;
5 April 823, Rome
PredecessorLouis I the Pious
SuccessorLouis II
King of Italy
Reign818–855
PredecessorBernard of Italy
King of Middle Francia
Reign840–855
SuccessorLouis II (Italy)
Lothair II (Lotharingia)
Charles (Provence)
Born795
Died29 September 855 (aged 59–60)
Prüm
Burial
ConsortErmengarde of Tours
Issue
more...
Louis II
Lothair II
Charles
HouseCarolingians
FatherLouis I the Pious
MotherErmengarde of Hesbaye
Carolingian denier of Lothair I, struck in Dorestad (Middle Francia) after 850

Lothair was the eldest son of the Carolingian emperor Louis the Pious and his wife Ermengarde of Hesbaye,[1] daughter of Ingerman the duke of Hesbaye. On several occasions, Lothair led his full-brothers Pepin I of Aquitaine and Louis the German in revolt against their father to protest against attempts to make their half-brother Charles the Bald a co-heir to the Frankish domains. Upon the father's death, Charles and Louis joined forces against Lothair in a three-year civil war (840–843). The struggles between the brothers led directly to the breakup of the Frankish Empire assembled by their grandfather Charlemagne, and laid the foundation for the development of modern France and Germany.[2]

Early life and reign

 
Kingdom of Bavaria

Lothair was born in 795, to Louis the Pious and Ermengarde of Hesbaye. His father was the son of the reigning Emperor, Charlemagne. Little is known of Lothair's early life, which was probably passed at the court of his grandfather Charlemagne. In 814, the elderly emperor died, and left his sole surviving legitimate son Louis the Pious as successor to his vast empire. The next year, Lothair would be sent to govern Bavaria for his father, the new emperor.[1] In 817, Louis the Pious[1] drew up his Ordinatio Imperii.[3] In this, Louis designated Lothair as his principal heir and ordered that Lothair would be the overlord of Louis' younger sons Pippin of Aquitaine (who was 20) and Louis the German (who was 13), as well as his nephew (Lothair's cousin) Bernard of Italy. Lothair would also inherit their lands if they were to die childless. Lothair, aged 22, was then crowned joint emperor by his father at Aachen.[1] At the same time, Aquitaine and Bavaria were granted to his brothers Pippin and Louis, respectively, as subsidiary kingdoms.[3] Following the death of Bernard, brought on by his plotting against and blinding by Louis the Pious, Lothair also received the Kingdom of Italy.[citation needed] In 821, Lothair married Ermengarde (d. 851), daughter of Hugh the Count of Tours.[1]

In 822, he assumed the government of Italy, and at Easter, 5 April 823, he was crowned emperor again by Pope Paschal I, this time at Rome. In November 824, Lothair promulgated a statute, the Constitutio Romana, concerning the relations of pope and emperor, which reserved the supreme power to the secular potentate, and he afterwards issued various ordinances for the good government of Italy.[1]

On Lothair's return to his father's court, his stepmother Judith won his consent to her plan for securing a kingdom for her son Charles, a scheme which was carried out in 829,[1] when the young prince was given Alemannia as king.[citation needed] Lothair, however, soon changed his attitude and spent the succeeding decade in constant strife over the division of the Empire with his father. He was alternately master of the Empire, and banished and confined to Italy, at one time taking up arms in alliance with his brothers and at another fighting against them, whilst the bounds of his appointed kingdom were in turn extended and reduced.[1][4]

Division of the kingdom

The first rebellion began in 830. All three brothers fought their father, whom they deposed. In 831, their father was reinstated and he deprived Lothair of his imperial title and gave Italy to Charles. The second rebellion was instigated by Angilbert II, Archbishop of Milan in 833, and again Louis was deposed in 834. Lothair, through the loyalty of the Lombards and later reconciliations, retained Italy and the imperial position through all remaining divisions of the Empire by his father.[4][5]

 
Medallion portrait presumed to be of Lothair, from the binding of the Lothaire Psalter in the British Library
 
Denarius of Lothair I, from 840 to 55

When Louis the Pious was dying in 840, he sent the imperial insignia to Lothair, who, disregarding the various partitions, claimed the whole of the Empire. He was 45 years old when his father died. Negotiations with his brother Louis the German and his half-brother Charles, both of whom resisted this claim, were followed by an alliance of the younger brothers against Lothair.[2] A decisive battle was fought at Fontenay-en-Puisaye on 25 June 841, when, in spite of his[1] and his allied nephew Pepin II of Aquitaine's[citation needed] personal gallantry, Lothair was defeated and fled to Aachen. With fresh troops he began a war of plunder, but the forces of his brothers were too strong, and taking with him such treasure as he could collect, he abandoned his capital to them.[1][clarification needed] He met with the leaders of the Stellinga in Speyer and promised them his support in return for theirs, but Louis and then the native Saxon nobility put down the Stellinga in the next years.[citation needed]

Peace negotiations began, and in June 842 the brothers met on an island in the Saône. They agreed to an arrangement which developed, after much difficulty and delay, into the Treaty of Verdun, signed in August 843. By this, Lothair received the imperial title as well as northern Italy and a long stretch of territory from the North Sea to the Mediterranean, essentially along the valleys of the Rhine and the Rhône; this territory includes the regions Lorraine, Alsace, Burgundy, and Provence. He soon ceded Italy to his eldest son, Louis, and remained in his new kingdom, engaging in alternate quarrels and reconciliations with his brothers and in futile efforts to defend his lands from the attacks of the Northmen (as Vikings were known in Frankish writings) and the Saracens (as those loyal to the various Fatimids, Umayyads and Abbasides are known in Frankish writings).[1][5]

In 845 the count of Arles, Fulcrad, led a rebellion in Provence. The emperor put it down and the count joined him in an expedition against the Saracens in Italy in 846.

Death and aftermath

 
13th-century stained glass depiction of Lothair, Strasbourg Cathedral

In 855 he became seriously ill, and despairing of recovery renounced the throne, divided his lands among his three sons, and on 23 September entered the monastery of Prüm, where he died six days later. He was buried at Prüm, where his remains were found in 1860.[1] It was at Prüm that Lothair was most commemorated.[6]

The same year, Lothair's kingdom was divided between his three sons[1] in a deal called the Treaty of Prüm: the eldest, Louis II, received Italy and the title of emperor; the second, Lothair II, received Lotharingia; the youngest, Charles, received Provence.[citation needed]

Family

He married Ermengarde of Tours in 821, who died in 851.[1]

  • Louis II (825–875) Crowned as King of Italy in 844 by Pope Sergius II. Crowned Emperor in 850. Married Engelberga.
  • Hiltrude (826–865) Married Berengar of Spoleto.
  • Bertha (c. 830–852) Married to an unknown man, but later Abbess of Avenay.
  • Gisela (c. 830–856) abbess of San Salvatore at Brescia[7]
  • Lothair II (835–869) Succeeded his father. Married Teutberga, daughter of Boso the Elder, Count of Arles.
  • Rotrude (c. 840) Married Lambert III of Nantes.
  • Charles (845–863) Invested with Provence, Lyon and Transjuranian Burgundy.

One illegitimate child is known.

  • Carloman (? – d. 853)

References

Citations

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Lothair I.". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  2. ^ a b William W. Kibler; Grover A. Zinn (1995). Medieval France: An Encyclopedia. Psychology Press. pp. 1065–. ISBN 978-0-8240-4444-2.
  3. ^ a b Duckett, Eleanor (1962). Carolingian Portraits. University of Michigan Press. pp. 26, 34.
  4. ^ a b Mayke de Jong. "The Penitential State. Authority and Atonement in the Ages of Louis the Pious (814-840) - 1. Louis the Pious - A boy who became a king". Academia. Retrieved 25 January 2020.
  5. ^ a b Pierre Riche (1993). The Carolingians: A Family Who Forged Europe. University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 0-8122-1342-4.
  6. ^ Screen, Elina (May 2018). "Remembering and Forgetting Lothar I". Writing the Early Medieval West. Writing the Early Medieval West. pp. 248–260. doi:10.1017/9781108182386.017. ISBN 9781108182386. Retrieved 9 April 2019.
  7. ^ Constance Brittain Bouchard, Those of My Blood: Creating Noble Families in Medieval Francia, (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2001), 106.

Sources

  • Surviving letters of Lothar I, in Latin with English translation by Richard Matthew Pollard.
1911 Encyclopædia Britannica sources

External links

  •   Media related to Lothair I at Wikimedia Commons
Lothair I
 Died: 29 September 855
Regnal titles
Preceded by Duke of Maine
817–831
Succeeded by
Preceded by King of Italy
818 – 23 September 855
with Louis II (844–855)
Succeeded by
Preceded byas king of the Franks
and emperor
Holy Roman Emperor
817 – 23 September 855
with Louis the Pious (817–840)
Louis II (850–855)
King of Middle Francia
843 – 23 September 855
Succeeded byas king of Lotharingia
Succeeded byas king of Provence

lothair, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations March 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Lothair I news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Lothair I or Lothar I Dutch and Medieval Latin Lotharius German Lothar French Lothaire Italian Lotario 795 29 September 855 was emperor 817 855 co ruling with his father until 840 and the governor of Bavaria 815 817 King of Italy 818 855 and Middle Francia 840 855 Lothair IEmperor of the RomansLothair I in the Gospels of Lothair c 849 851 now located in the Bibliotheque nationale de FranceEmperor of the Carolingian EmpireReign817 855Coronation817 Aachen 5 April 823 RomePredecessorLouis I the PiousSuccessorLouis IIKing of ItalyReign818 855PredecessorBernard of ItalyKing of Middle FranciaReign840 855SuccessorLouis II Italy Lothair II Lotharingia Charles Provence Born795Died29 September 855 aged 59 60 PrumBurialPrumConsortErmengarde of ToursIssuemore Louis II Lothair II CharlesHouseCarolingiansFatherLouis I the PiousMotherErmengarde of HesbayeCarolingian denier of Lothair I struck in Dorestad Middle Francia after 850 Lothair was the eldest son of the Carolingian emperor Louis the Pious and his wife Ermengarde of Hesbaye 1 daughter of Ingerman the duke of Hesbaye On several occasions Lothair led his full brothers Pepin I of Aquitaine and Louis the German in revolt against their father to protest against attempts to make their half brother Charles the Bald a co heir to the Frankish domains Upon the father s death Charles and Louis joined forces against Lothair in a three year civil war 840 843 The struggles between the brothers led directly to the breakup of the Frankish Empire assembled by their grandfather Charlemagne and laid the foundation for the development of modern France and Germany 2 Contents 1 Early life and reign 2 Division of the kingdom 3 Death and aftermath 4 Family 5 References 5 1 Citations 5 2 Sources 6 External linksEarly life and reign Edit Kingdom of Bavaria Lothair was born in 795 to Louis the Pious and Ermengarde of Hesbaye His father was the son of the reigning Emperor Charlemagne Little is known of Lothair s early life which was probably passed at the court of his grandfather Charlemagne In 814 the elderly emperor died and left his sole surviving legitimate son Louis the Pious as successor to his vast empire The next year Lothair would be sent to govern Bavaria for his father the new emperor 1 In 817 Louis the Pious 1 drew up his Ordinatio Imperii 3 In this Louis designated Lothair as his principal heir and ordered that Lothair would be the overlord of Louis younger sons Pippin of Aquitaine who was 20 and Louis the German who was 13 as well as his nephew Lothair s cousin Bernard of Italy Lothair would also inherit their lands if they were to die childless Lothair aged 22 was then crowned joint emperor by his father at Aachen 1 At the same time Aquitaine and Bavaria were granted to his brothers Pippin and Louis respectively as subsidiary kingdoms 3 Following the death of Bernard brought on by his plotting against and blinding by Louis the Pious Lothair also received the Kingdom of Italy citation needed In 821 Lothair married Ermengarde d 851 daughter of Hugh the Count of Tours 1 In 822 he assumed the government of Italy and at Easter 5 April 823 he was crowned emperor again by Pope Paschal I this time at Rome In November 824 Lothair promulgated a statute the Constitutio Romana concerning the relations of pope and emperor which reserved the supreme power to the secular potentate and he afterwards issued various ordinances for the good government of Italy 1 On Lothair s return to his father s court his stepmother Judith won his consent to her plan for securing a kingdom for her son Charles a scheme which was carried out in 829 1 when the young prince was given Alemannia as king citation needed Lothair however soon changed his attitude and spent the succeeding decade in constant strife over the division of the Empire with his father He was alternately master of the Empire and banished and confined to Italy at one time taking up arms in alliance with his brothers and at another fighting against them whilst the bounds of his appointed kingdom were in turn extended and reduced 1 4 Division of the kingdom EditThe first rebellion began in 830 All three brothers fought their father whom they deposed In 831 their father was reinstated and he deprived Lothair of his imperial title and gave Italy to Charles The second rebellion was instigated by Angilbert II Archbishop of Milan in 833 and again Louis was deposed in 834 Lothair through the loyalty of the Lombards and later reconciliations retained Italy and the imperial position through all remaining divisions of the Empire by his father 4 5 Medallion portrait presumed to be of Lothair from the binding of the Lothaire Psalter in the British Library Denarius of Lothair I from 840 to 55 When Louis the Pious was dying in 840 he sent the imperial insignia to Lothair who disregarding the various partitions claimed the whole of the Empire He was 45 years old when his father died Negotiations with his brother Louis the German and his half brother Charles both of whom resisted this claim were followed by an alliance of the younger brothers against Lothair 2 A decisive battle was fought at Fontenay en Puisaye on 25 June 841 when in spite of his 1 and his allied nephew Pepin II of Aquitaine s citation needed personal gallantry Lothair was defeated and fled to Aachen With fresh troops he began a war of plunder but the forces of his brothers were too strong and taking with him such treasure as he could collect he abandoned his capital to them 1 clarification needed He met with the leaders of the Stellinga in Speyer and promised them his support in return for theirs but Louis and then the native Saxon nobility put down the Stellinga in the next years citation needed Peace negotiations began and in June 842 the brothers met on an island in the Saone They agreed to an arrangement which developed after much difficulty and delay into the Treaty of Verdun signed in August 843 By this Lothair received the imperial title as well as northern Italy and a long stretch of territory from the North Sea to the Mediterranean essentially along the valleys of the Rhine and the Rhone this territory includes the regions Lorraine Alsace Burgundy and Provence He soon ceded Italy to his eldest son Louis and remained in his new kingdom engaging in alternate quarrels and reconciliations with his brothers and in futile efforts to defend his lands from the attacks of the Northmen as Vikings were known in Frankish writings and the Saracens as those loyal to the various Fatimids Umayyads and Abbasides are known in Frankish writings 1 5 In 845 the count of Arles Fulcrad led a rebellion in Provence The emperor put it down and the count joined him in an expedition against the Saracens in Italy in 846 Death and aftermath Edit 13th century stained glass depiction of Lothair Strasbourg Cathedral In 855 he became seriously ill and despairing of recovery renounced the throne divided his lands among his three sons and on 23 September entered the monastery of Prum where he died six days later He was buried at Prum where his remains were found in 1860 1 It was at Prum that Lothair was most commemorated 6 The same year Lothair s kingdom was divided between his three sons 1 in a deal called the Treaty of Prum the eldest Louis II received Italy and the title of emperor the second Lothair II received Lotharingia the youngest Charles received Provence citation needed Family EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message He married Ermengarde of Tours in 821 who died in 851 1 Louis II 825 875 Crowned as King of Italy in 844 by Pope Sergius II Crowned Emperor in 850 Married Engelberga Hiltrude 826 865 Married Berengar of Spoleto Bertha c 830 852 Married to an unknown man but later Abbess of Avenay Gisela c 830 856 abbess of San Salvatore at Brescia 7 Lothair II 835 869 Succeeded his father Married Teutberga daughter of Boso the Elder Count of Arles Rotrude c 840 Married Lambert III of Nantes Charles 845 863 Invested with Provence Lyon and Transjuranian Burgundy One illegitimate child is known Carloman d 853 References EditCitations Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Lothair I Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press a b William W Kibler Grover A Zinn 1995 Medieval France An Encyclopedia Psychology Press pp 1065 ISBN 978 0 8240 4444 2 a b Duckett Eleanor 1962 Carolingian Portraits University of Michigan Press pp 26 34 a b Mayke de Jong The Penitential State Authority and Atonement in the Ages of Louis the Pious 814 840 1 Louis the Pious A boy who became a king Academia Retrieved 25 January 2020 a b Pierre Riche 1993 The Carolingians A Family Who Forged Europe University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 0 8122 1342 4 Screen Elina May 2018 Remembering and Forgetting Lothar I Writing the Early Medieval West Writing the Early Medieval West pp 248 260 doi 10 1017 9781108182386 017 ISBN 9781108182386 Retrieved 9 April 2019 Constance Brittain Bouchard Those of My Blood Creating Noble Families in Medieval Francia University of Pennsylvania Press 2001 106 Sources Edit Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Lothair I Surviving letters of Lothar I in Latin with English translation by Richard Matthew Pollard 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica sourcesAnnales Fuldenses Nithard Historiarum Libri both in the Monumenta Germaniae Historica Scriptores Bande i and ii Hanover and Berlin 1826 fol E Muhlbacher Die Regesten des Kaiserreichs unter den Karolingern Innsbruck 1881 E Dummler Geschichte des ostfrankischen Reichs Leipzig 1887 1888 B Simson Jahrbucher des deutschen Reiches unter Ludwig dem Frommen Leipzig 1874 1876 External links Edit Media related to Lothair I at Wikimedia Commons Lothair ICarolingian dynasty Died 29 September 855Regnal titlesPreceded byLouis the German Duke of Maine817 831 Succeeded byPepin I of AquitainePreceded byBernard King of Italy818 23 September 855with Louis II 844 855 Succeeded byLouis IIPreceded byLouis the Piousas king of the Franks and emperor Holy Roman Emperor817 23 September 855with Louis the Pious 817 840 Louis II 850 855 King of Middle Francia843 23 September 855 Succeeded byLothair IIas king of LotharingiaSucceeded byCharlesas king of Provence Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lothair I amp oldid 1151462108, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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