Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Little is known about the life of Count Hardrad, even from contemporary Frankish sources. In 771, the Cartulary of Lorraine, Abbey Gorze, identified a deceased Hardrad, father of Ratard (Rothard of the Argengau, father of Welf I of Bavaria), who could have been the father or
Nevertheless, an early ancestor may have been the Frankish nobleman Ruthard (d. before 790), a count in the Argengau and administrator of the Carolingian king Pepin the Younger in Alamannia. The origin of the name Welf (also Guelph, from Italian: Guelfi) has not been conclusively established. A late medieval legend first documented in 1475 ...
Son of Rothard of the Argengau: c. 800 – 3 October 825: County of Altdorf: Hedwig of Bavaria four children 3 October 825 aged 49-50: Eponymous founder of the family. Conrad I the Elder: c. 800 Son of Welf I (a) and Hedwig of Bavaria: 3 October 825 – 864: County of Altdorf: Adelaide of Tours three children 864 aged 63-64: Welf I (b) c. 835
Argengau was a territory of Alemannia within East Francia in the 8th and 9th centuries, being a county in the 9th century, [1] and of the Duchy of Swabia in the 10th. It was situated north of Lake Constance, comprising Lindau. It was named for the Argen river. Later area divisions. Notes
He is the son of Rothard of the Argengau and grandson of Hardrad. ... (c. 803 –876); married King Louis the German, [1] King of East Francia and son of Louis the Pious.
Pepin (or Pippin) (781–810), king under authority of Charlemagne; Bernard (810–818) Lothair I (818–839) Louis II (839–875) The title rex Langobardorum, synonymous with rex Italiae, lasted well into the High Middle Ages, [1] but subsequent holders are found at King of Italy.
632–642 Radulf I, "King of Thuringia" after 641 [4] 642–687 Heden I; 687–689 Gozbert; 689–719 Heden II, son; Carolingian dukes. 849–873 Thachulf, Margrave of the Sorbian March; 874–880 Radulf II, son; 880–892 Poppo, House of Babenberg, dux Thuringorum in 892, deposed 882–886 Egino, brother; 892–906 Conrad, ancestor of the ...
The House of Ingelger (French: Ingelgeriens), also known as The Ingelgerians, was a lineage of the Frankish nobility, and the first dynasty in Anjou, where they established the autonomy and power of the county of Anjou between 930 and 1060. [1]