Judith Welf (Guelph) of BAVARIA

Judith Welf (Guelph) of BAVARIA

Eigenschaften

Art Wert Datum Ort Quellenangaben
Name Judith Welf (Guelph) of BAVARIA
Beruf Holy Roman Empress, Queen of the Franks zu einem Zeitpunkt zwischen 819 und 840

Ereignisse

Art Datum Ort Quellenangaben
Geburt zu einem Zeitpunkt zwischen 795 und 805 Bavaria (now in Germany) nach diesem Ort suchen
Bestattung 843 Tours, Neustria (now in France) nach diesem Ort suchen
Tod 19. April 843
Heirat 819

Ehepartner und Kinder

Heirat Ehepartner Kinder
819
Louis I "the Pious" (King) of FRANKS

Notizen zu dieser Person

Queen Judith (795/797 or 805 - 19 April 843), also known as Judith of Bavaria, was the daughter of Count Welf and Saxon noblewoman, Hedwig, Duchess of Bavaria (780-826). She was the second wife of King Louis the Pious, which garnered her the title of Empress of the Franks. Indeed, this marriage to Louis marks the beginning of her rise as an influential figure in the Carolingian court. She had two children with Louis, a daughter named Gisela and a son named Charles, more famously known as Charles the Bald. The birth of her son led to a major dispute in imperial succession, which led to tensions between her and Charles' half-brothers from Louis' first marriage. She would eventually fall from grace when Charles' wife, the new empress Ermentrude of Orléans, rose to power. She was laid to rest in 843 in Tours. Early life Date and Place of Birth No surviving sources provide a record of Judith’s exact date and year of birth. Yet, we can deduce that Judith was born in or before 795 or 805 given that girls in the Carolingian world would be eligible for marriage at around the age of twelve,[1] and her marriage to King Louis occurred in 819. Kin group/Ancestry Judith was the daughter of the noble Saxon Heilwig and Count Welf I, and belonged to the ancestor of the kin-group known to historians as the Welfs. Though the The Welf clan was noble, they were not part of the '"Imperial Aristocracy'" (Reichsaristokratie)that dominated high office throughout the Carolingian empire. The Welf clan’s leaders, having lost influence in their home region of Alemannia (present-day southwestern Germany and northern Switzerland) eventually rose to power though cementing familial ties with the Carolingian Imperial Aristocracy in the 770's.[1] Nonetheless, they remained a part of the upper aristocracy (Hochadel) of their region, given the numerous appearance of the noble titles of ducal (duke) and comital (counts) in primary sources. This noble status made Judith a suitable marriage prospect for the imperial family,[1] and the Welf clan as a whole saw its prestige and power increase after Judith’s marriage to the Carolingian emperor Louis the Pious in 819. Marriage and Queenship After the death of Louis first wife and mother of his sons, Louis the German, Peppin and Lothar, Queen Ermengard, on the 3rd of October 818 Louis was urged by his counselors to remarry.[2] Shortly after Christmas in 819 he married Judith in Aachen (North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany).[3] Like many of the royal marriages of the time Judith was selected, prior to the marriage through a bridal show. It is at the bride show that, at the age of forty, Louis chose the teen-aged Judith “after inspecting noble maidens who were brought to his court from all districts”.[4] In Frankish society, only women of the nobility were eligible to compete; this specific trait is highlighted in the Regesta Imperii, where Judith is referred to as stemming from a noble lineage (Edlen Geschlecht). Contemporary witnesses such as Ermoldus Nigellus, Walahfried Strabo, and Louis’ biographer Thegan attributed Judith’s selection to her extraordinary beauty,[5] intelligence, and musical ability.[1] It is just as likely, however, that Louis was attracted to the geographical and political advantages offered by Judith’s family. While scholars differ as to whether the Welfs were of Frankish or Alemannian descent, it is clear that they controlled significant territories to the east of the Rhine, and were predominant political actors in both Bavaria and Alemannia.[1] This fact would have made them desirable allies for Louis, since any military campaign in the empire’s eastern frontiers would require the emperor to travel through this region. By marrying Judith, in other words, the emperor would effectively gain friends and allies, an important military and political stronghold, and the support of the nobility in that region.[1] Marriage Judith married Louis in 819 in Aachen. It was not uncommon that brides were given some form of dowry upon marrying into royalty. Judith’s marriage was no exception to this practise and she received, according to soucres, The monastery San Salvatore, which was located in Brescia (in the region of Lombardy in northern Italy). The monastery of San Salvatore and all the assets that fall under its jurisdiction, would fall under the protection with the protection of the King "laut der vorgelegten urkunde seines vaters k. Karl immunität mit königschutz und den in dessen gewere stehenden besitz".[5] Although, according to modern sources, the dowry was indicative that the marriage was in fact a “Vollehe”, it did not mean that the dowry was static, insofar that it would remaine solely within the possession of the Queen in perpetuity; rather it could be taken from her depending on the political climate, as would later be the case in Judith’s life, after her fall from power and influence. Coronation In later Carolingian societies the act of coronation was closely tied with the marriage. It was only upon the completion of the marriage that queenhood and thus legitimacy was bestowed. When Louis married his first wife Ermengard in 794, she was crowned and called “Augusta”, a title that harkens back to the Roman “Augustus”. This bestowed on Ermengard the title of empress as it would Judith when she married Louis and was “crowned as empress and acclaimed Augusta by all”.[2] Role in the Palace Historical sources show a gap in information available on Judith in the 4 years between her marriage in 819 and the birth of Charles in 823. The most likely cause of this gap is that Judith's would only rise to historical prominence when she became involved in her sons, Charles The Bald, life as an advocate for his career as successor to the throne. However, various sources like the Capitulare de villis and the De ordine palatii of Hincmar von Reims can be drawn upon to provide information on roles and responsibilities that Judith would have most likely played in court. Specifically, the Capitulare de villis and the De ordine palatii define the role and consequently the realm of influence of the empress to that of the court. If these documents are indicative of empresses role in the court and palace in general, then it may be reasonably inferred what roles Judith would have acted in. Sources tell us that Judith’s and the steward of the court (Kämmerer)[1] duties included, among others: caring that she, her servants and the King himself, particularly his jewelry, looked presentable and of appropriate appearance, overseeing the transfer of the yearly tribute (Abgabe der Vasallen)[1] and ensuring that the emperor was free to focus on ruling the kingdom, without distraction of minor details like the courts appearance.[1] It is not to be inferred from this brief sketch however, that her role was in any sense superfluous and relegated to the realm of aesthetics. She had a working relationship with the Kämmerer of the court,[1] who, when one considers that he was the top administrator for the incomes, goods and running of the household, means that she was in an influential position when it came to the functioning and the running of the court.[1] It is not unlikely that, in order to complete these tasks, Judith would have had her own court personnel. This was not an uncommon phenomenon, it having existed according to sources since the time of the Merovingians.[1] Having her own administration was not only instrumentally important in ensuring a smooth running of the court and the daily affairs of the palace, but also a political necessity. The King and Queen were technically seen as a single entity,[1] them often being mentioned together in the Capitulare de villis. Her command was therefore no less significant or important than that of the King. However, in time of separation, be it war, sickness or pregnancy, this single ruling couple/entity would be separated. Consequently, when Louis endeavoured on his campaign in 824 against the Bretons or a similar campaign in the same region in 830[1] Judith would not only have to take care of the running of the courtly society, but also step in as a representative of the King. In this capacity she would come to be involved in the politics of the realm. But, she also had other avenues to influence the politics of the realm and the court. It is not unreasonable to consider that she had some influence acting as a counsel women for her husband. Judith’s very position and proximity to the emperor as his wife and meant she was in immediate proximity to him and consequently had the ability and opportunity to influence the decisions of her husband. Judith’s role and prominence in court would see a dramatic rise after the birth of her son, as she sought to establish a political and courtly base for Charles, against the threat that Lothar posed for his succession. Children Judith had two children with Louis. Her first child was a daughter named Gisela, born in 820. Gisela would eventually be married off by Judith to Eberhard of Friaul, a significant supporter of Lothar. Gisela was the mother of Berengars I.[5] After having spent most of her second pregnancy in Frankfurt, she had another child named Charles, who was born on June 13, 823. More commonly known as “Charles the Bald”, he would eventually become emperor, following in the footsteps of his father Louis. The birth of Charles’ had a significant effect on Judith’s life, because Charles was the only male heir of Louis’ second marriage. His birth put the ordinatti imperii and its designations for successor under question. The ordinatti imperii outlined that only a full heir could rule, but since there were several viable candidates that met the requirements, (mainly Lothar, Peppin and Louis the German from the marriage to Ermengard and Charles from the marriage to Judith) an eventual strain on rightful succession was inevitable. Consequently, it became of the utmost importance for Judith to secure the throne for her son and protect him from the attacks and threats that his half-brothers posed. Lothar, being the most prominent and the oldest of Ermengard children, presented the greatest threat to Judith and Charles. Yet, realizing this, Judith selected Lothar as Charles’ godfather. This strategic move meant Charles would have a political tie in the eventual disputes succession that would inevitably follow Louis’ death. The Civil War Imperial succession and partition: Charles's role Sources tell us that on the 9th of April 817 a timber roof collapsed on Louis and his men in Aachen. The event, we are told, shocked Louis and lead the emperor to reconsider the distribution of his power and succession for his heirs. The ordinatio Imperii was a reconfiguration and re-imagining of in the division of Charlemagne’s inheritance, which he had always envisioned but never fully implemented. The ordinatio imperii stated that Louis oldest son Lothar would become co-emperor upon the death of Charlemagne, and would receive the whole of Frankia. It also stated that Lothar’s younger brothers, Pippin, aged 19, and Louis the German, aged 10, would inherit Aquitaine and Bavaria respectively (the regna). A major sticking point that concerned Lothar was Louis’ nineteen-year-old nephew Bernard of Italy getting in the way of his eventual rise to power. Bernard had been ruling Italy since 810. Yet, the ordinatio imperii did not specify Bernard as the immediate successor and continued ruler of Italy. Consequently Bernard, alarmed by the fact that his future inheritance at stake, rose up against Louis. The rebellion was swiftly quelled by Louis’ forces. Bernard was blinded and would eventually die on April 17 818[6] The birth of Charles as well as Lothar’s marriage in 821 meant that two imperial households were now vying for control.[6] Thus, the strain over how to interpret the ordinatio imperii coupled with the fact that Judith would most likely outlive her husband, meant that it became imperative for Judith to establish a political base of her own, not only for her own safety and the continuation of her queenship, but also for the safety of her son. In a letter written by Agobard of Lyons to Louis, Agobard articulates the way in which Louis altered the division of power amongst his sons. Here we see that Judith’s son Charles is granted more power than Louis’ other sons, which places Judith and the kingdom in a precarious state of affairs And thus you carried out everything that should have been done in such a situation, with such faith, with such hope, that no one would doubt that this was infused and inspired in you by God. You assigned parts of your kingdom to the rest of your sons but - that the kingdom might be one and not three - you set [the son] whom you made the sharer in your title, over the others. And then you ordered these actions to be written down and, once written, to be signed and corroborated. Then, you sent [the son, Charles] who had been made consort in your title to Rome, your deeds to be approved and confirmed by the highest pontiff. Then you ordered all to swear that they would all follow and preserve such an election and division. No one considered this oath irrelevant or worthy of scorn but rather timely and legitimate, since it seemed to pertain to peace and concord. And over the course of time, whenever and wherever imperial letters were sent, they contained the names of both emperors. -Agobard of Lyons Judith as advocate for Charles Most information on Judith surrounds the activities for her son and her attempts to ensure his succession to the throne. Their political futures depended on each other being that if Judith were widowed, her future as an empress could potentially be threatened by stepsons that no longer had familial or political concerns for her wellbeing.[7] Outlined in a letter to Pope Nicholas 1 Judith, upon Charles’s birth, sent a ring to Eboo, the archbishop of Rheims, asking him to pray for the health of Charles, but also promising that if he ever sent the ring back to her in times of trouble she would help him.[1] Politically this move is significant given that Eboo was one of the most powerful people in the land and a “milkbrother” and friend of Louis.[1] This marks a distinct effort on the part of Judith to bolster her influence and secure the political future of her son. The poem by a court poet Ermoldus Nigellus, Poem in Honor of Louis, provides insight into Judith’s influence over her son Charles. The scene describes Judith and Charles interacting while Louis goes on a hunt: Judith, who has with her the young Charles; In a twinkling she passes by, placing her faith in her feet--If flight does not give her aid, surely she will perish.Seeing this, the young Charles begs for a horse,For he desires to do as his father does;Earnestly he pleads for weapons, for a quiver and quick-striking arrows,And wishes to go in pursuit, as his father so often does.He pours prayers upon prayers, but his beautiful motherPrevents him from leaving, and refuses his wishes.If his teacher and his mother do not restrain the impetuous youth (As youths are wont to do), he shall chase after on foot -Ermoldus Nigellus, Agobard of Lyons [8] Not only does this highlight Judith’s role as an influential force in Charles’ life, but it also establishes an ambitious young Charles as a son that follows in the footsteps of his father Louis-which aligns Charles as the natural heir to Louis throne. Later on Charles is showcased in procession in a collection of poetry by Ermold the Black. In the procession described by Ermold, Judith follows her son, but is flanked on either side by the magnates Hugh count of Tours, and Lothars father in law, and Matrfrid count of Orleans. This might be suggestive of two things: first, it might signify Charles dynastic right to rule and second that Judith was already by 826, during the childhood of Charles, attempting to cultivate Lothars sympathies and place herself and her son in a politically favourable position, given that both magnates had extremely close ties with Lothar.[1] The three sons of Louis the Pious revolted against their father in order to control the ordering of the Carolingian succession.It was Judith’s dominance and control of the court, thereby being able to dictate who saw Louis and influence him, that was the focus of their revolt. In order to seize control of the king and consequently the Carolingian succession they had to replace the current court, controlled by Judith, with their own. Judith was accused of having an incestiouse relationship with Louis the Pious’s godson Bernard of Septimania (who was the lynchpin of her court). This led to her capture and exile to Italy at the nunnery of Saint Radegund in 830. After the crisis she returned to Aachen continued her effort to see that Charles would take control.[2] Given Judith’s role in court and her rise in power, especially in the waning year of Louis life, the political ties that Judith had built in court became the political ties of Charles. These included, amongst others, Walahfrid, Lupus of Ferriers, the palace clerics Prudentius, Wenilo and Berno, and the seneschal Adalard.[6] Several marriages in 839 sought to solidify a future for Charles and an entenete with Lothar. The first was the marriage of Gisele, the daughter of Louis and Judith, to Eberhard, the duke of Friuli, who was a leading supporter of Lothar. A second such marriage was that between Judith’s brother Conrad with Adelaide, Lothar’s sister in law.[6] Judith also collaborated with the magnates that worked on the will of Louis in order to promote Charles. Fearing that Louis would pass before the matter was settled and thereby incur the wrath of his step brothers, Judith advised that Louis take to his aid one of his three sons (Pippin, Lothar or Louis) in order to unite Charles and one of the brothers in mutual interest should a revolt to happen after Louis death.[6] After Louis death Judith helped and assisted Charles in his campaigns against Lothar. She sent troops to assist Charles in his endeavour to secure Aquitaine and the majority of Frankia was to reduce the number of competitors.[6] Judith however did have influence over her son Charles. When archbishop George was taken prisoner after a battle in which 40,000 men fell on the side of Lothar and Pippin, Judith counselled Charles to be merciful towards the archbishop, which Andreas Agnellus of Ravenna recalled as For my part I’ll let you go-as my mother tells me to.[6] Scandals: Contemporary criticisms of Judith's role and behavior[edit] However, the rise of Judith’s power, influence and activity in the court did sparked resentment towards her. Agobard of Lyons, a supporter of Lothar, wrote two tracts Two Books in Favor of the Sons and against Judith the Wife of Louis in 833. These tracts were meant as propaganda against Judith from the court of Lothar in order to undermine her court and influence. The tracts themselves attack her character, claiming her to be of a cunning and underhanded nature and of corrupting her husband. These attacks were predominantly anti feminist in nature. When Louis still did not sever marital ties with Judith, Agobard claimed that Judith’s extramarital affairs were carried out “first secretly and later impudently”.[4] Paschasis Radbertus accused Judith by associating her with the engagement in debauchery and witchcraft. of filling the palace with “soothsayers... seers and mutes as well as dream interpreters and those who consult entrail, indeed all those skilled in malign craft” Characterized as a jezeble and a Justina, Judith was accused by one of her enemies, Paschasius Radberus, of engaging in debauchery and witchcraft with her puported lover, Count Bernard of Septimania, Louis’ chamberlain and trusted adviser. This portrayal and image stands in contrast to poems about Judith.[2] The poems depict her as “a second biblical Judith, a Mary sister of Aaron in her musical abilities, a Saphho, a prophetess, cultivated, chaste, intelligent, pious, strong in spirit, and sweet in conversation”[2] However, Judith also garnered devotion and respect. Hrabanus Maurus wrote a dedicatory letter to Judith, exalting her ”praiseworthy intellect”[9] and for her “good works”.[9] The letter commends her in the turbulent times amidst battles, wishing that she may see victory amidst the struggles she is facing. It also implores her “to follow through with a good deed once you have begun it”[9] and “to improve yourself at all times”. Most strikingly the letter wishes Judith to look to the biblical Queen Esther, the wife of King Xerxes I as inspiration and as a role model Likewise, O queen, forever keep your eyes of your heart fixed upon Queen Esther as a model of dutiful and holy behaviour so that by equalling her holiness you might be able to climb from this earthly kingdom to the heights of the heavenly kingdom -Hrabanus Maurus Disgrace and exile Judith was left alone in 830 in Aachen, as Louis decided to undertake a campaign into the Brittany. The campaign itself, however, was greatly opposed, because of its difficulties. (The Annals of St Bertin). Some of the magnates attempted to alter the attitudes of the people and turn them against Louis. The plot was to dispose of the Louis the Pious, “to destroy their stepmother and kill Bernard”.[6] Prior to Easter Week in 830 (17-24 April) Pippin, with Lothars consent, and with a large proportion of the people “ took away from the Emperor his royal power, and also his wife”. Judith was veiled (“the female equivalent of tonsuring rival claimants to the throne”[6] and sent to the convent of St- Radegund at Poitiers in the same year. At an assembly held on the October 1st at Nijmegen, between the Emperor, the Saxons and East Franks, it was adjudged, by “all the bishops, abbots, counts and other Franks” that Judith, even though she was taken unjustly, should be brought back and made to either stand trial for any crime she may have committed to “undergo the judgment of the Franks”[6] in 831, around the 1st of February Judith stood trial at the assembly arranged by the Lord Emperor. At the assembly she “declared her willingness to purge herself on all the charges levelled against her”. No one was found in the general assembly who wanted to charge her for any crime. She purged herself, by the customs of the Franks, of all the things that she had been accused of.[6] Later life Louis' restoration to the throne and Judith's return In 833 Louis heard news of his sons, Pippin, Lothar and Louis the German, allying in order to orchestrate a revolt against him. Louis, however, failed to prevent the revolt and was overthrown, resulting in Lothar seizing power.[5] For Judith the coup resulted in her exile in Italy at the civitas of Tortona.[10] Louis spent the next year in Aachen as a captive of Lothar. Pippin and Louis the German, however, condemned the treatment of their father by Lothar and in 834 summoned armies from Aquitaine, Bavarians, Austrasians, Saxons, Alemans and the Franks to rise up against Lothar. Hearing of the vast armies approaching him Lothar fled, leaving his father behind. Louis thus regained control and offered to forgive Lothar for his actions. Lothar, however, scorned the offer. It was during this turbulent political to-and-fro that followers of Louis the Pious who were in Italy, Bishop Ratold, Count Boniface and Pippin among them, heard of a plot to kill Judith. With their help Judith escaped and returned to Aachen in the same year.[10] Death of Louis and Judith's career as widow Louis died in 840 at his palace in Ingelheim, leaving Judith a widow. She, however, continued to support her son Charles in his military campaigns and endeavours, gathering troops from Aquentine in 841. In April of that same year Charles received his crown and all of his royal attire, which contemporaries of the time herald as a divine act.[3] Most likely, however, Judith was well aware of Charles’s location and had sent the royal artifacts to meet up with her son. Death Charles married Ermentrude in 842 and fathered a daughter in 844, which he named “Judith” after his mother. This marriage, however, proved futile for Judith’s career, power and influence. With the introduction of a new queen Judith became of ex officio importance, resulting in her forced retirement as well as withdrawal of the lands and wealth under her control. She would eventually die on the 19th of April 843 in Tours, outliving her husband by three years. It is believed that she was around 40 years of age when she passed, compared to her husband who at the time of his death, was closer to 62.[2] She was buried at the Basilica of St-Martins.[1] References ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Koch, Armin. Kaiserin Judith: Eine Politische Biographie. Husum: Matthiesen, 2005. Print. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f Stafford, Pauline. Queens, Concubines and Dowagers: The King's Wife in the Early Middle Ages. London, Leicester UP, 1998. Print. ^ Jump up to: a b Rogers, Barbara, Bernhard W. Scholz, and Nithardus. Carolingian Chronicles, Royal Frankish Annals Nithard’s Histories. Ann Arbor: Univ. of Michigan, 1972. Print. ^ Jump up to: a b Wemple, Suzanne Fonay. Women in Frankish Society: Marriage and the Cloister, 500 to 900. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania, 1981. Print. ^ Jump up to: a b c d RI I n. 683a, in: Regesta Imperii Online, URI: http://www.regesta-imperii.de/id/0819-02-00_1_0_1_1_0_1610_683a. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k Nelson, Janet L. Charles the Bald. London: Longman, 1992. Print. Jump up ^ Elizabeth Ward: Caesar's Wife. The Career of the Empress Judith 819-829. In: Peter Goodman, Roger Collins. Print. Jump up ^ Ermoldus Nigellus, Poem in Honor of Louis, Sean Gilsdorf. ^ Jump up to: a b c Hrabanus Maurus (856), Dedicatory letter to the Expositio in librum Judith (in Migne, Patrologia latina, vol. 109; transl. Sean Gilsdorf. ^ Jump up to: a b Nelson, Janet L. The Annals of St-Bertin. Manchester: Manchester UP, 1991. Print. Sources Hrabanus Maurus (856), Dedicatory letter to the Expositio in librum Judith (in Migne, Patrologia Latina, vol. 109; transl. Sean Gilsdorf Agobard of Lyons: On the Division of the Empire (to Louis the Pious) c. 830 Nelson, Janet L. The Annals of St-Bertin. Manchester: Manchester UP, 1991. Print. p. 21-24 (830-831), 27 (833), 29-30 (834) Koch, Armin. Kaiserin Judith: Eine Politische Biographie. Husum: Matthiesen, 2005. Print. p. 26, 27, 28, 35, 37, 39, 44, 77, 130 Rogers, Barbara, Bernhard W. Scholz, and Nithardus. Carolingian Chronicles, Royal Frankish Annals Nithard’s Histories. Ann Arbor: Univ. of Michigan, 1972. Print. p. 105 (819), 149 (841) Stafford, Pauline. Queens, Concubines and Dowagers: The King's Wife in the Early Middle Ages. London, Leicester UP, 1998. Print. p. 18, 19, 20, 93, 94 130, 145, 166, 180 Depreux, Philippe. Prosopographie De L'entourage De Louis Le Pieux (781-840). Sigmaringen: Thorbecke, 1997. Print. Elizabeth Ward: Caesar's Wife. The Career of the Empress Judith 819-829. In: Peter Goodman, Roger Collins p. 214 Wemple, Suzanne Fonay. Women in Frankish Society: Marriage and the Cloister, 500 to 900. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania, 1981. Print. p. 80, 90 Nelson, Janet L. Charles the Bald. London: Longman, 1992. Print.p. 74-75 (818), 93, 98, 100, 116, 119 Lupus, and Graydon W. Regenos. The Letters of Lupus of Ferrières. The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 1966. Print. Regesta Imperii: http://www.regesta-imperii.de Ermoldus Nigellus, Poem in Honor of Louis, Sean Gilsdorf Geneviève Bührer-Thierry, The Adulterous Queen, Translated by Sean Gilsdorf from Geneviève Bührer-Thierry, "La reine adultère," Cahiers de civilisation médiévale 35 (1992): 299-312. Translations of original texts follow those made by Bührer-Thierry Welf, English Guelf , or Guelph , Italian Guelpho dynasty of German nobles and rulers who were the chief rivals of the Hohenstaufens in Italy and central Europe in the Middle Ages and who later included the Hanoverian Welfs, who, with the accession of George I to the British throne, became rulers of Great Britain. The origin of the “Elder House” of Welf is a matter of controversy, since Welf in the Carolingian period seems to have been rather widespread as a baptismal name. The first clearly discernible ancestor of the dynasty is the Count Welf who had possessions in Bavaria in the first quarter of the 9th century and whose daughters Judith and Emma married, respectively, the Frankish emperor Louis I the Pious and the East Frankish king Louis the German. The best analyses of the evidence trace the Burgundian and the Swabian Welfs to two nephews of Judith and Emma, namely Conrad (d. c. 876) and the so-numbered Welf I (d. before 876). Conrad's son Rudolf (d. 911 or 912) became king of Burgundy in 888, and this kingdom remained with his descendants until 1032. Welf II (d. 1030), who was probably of the fifth generation from Welf I, had so strong a position in southern Germany that he and his son Welf III could occasionally defy the German kings. More on origin: The original house of Welf descended from Count (Graf) Welf I, and ended in 1055, whereupon the heiress of the house married Azzo II d'Este, an Italian lord. From their marriage descended Dukes of Bavaria and Saxony, and the later Dukes of Braunschweig (Brunswick) and Kings of Hanover and Great Britain. It also included one short-term tsar of Russia: Ivan VI. From Azzo's second marriage descended the family known as d'Este, which ruled Modena and Ferrara in Italy. Interestingly, when Pr Augustus, Duke of Sussex, had morganatic children in the 19th century, they took the surname of d'Este. The finaly name took on political significance during the battles between the Guelphs and the Ghibellines. Those who generally opposed the Hohenstaufen emperors were known as Guelphs, since that family usually led them, and the Hohenstaufen supporters were known as Ghibellines, from the Italian name of the Hohenstaufen castle, Waibling. Welf, English Guelf , or Guelph , Italian Guelpho, dynasty of German nobles and rulers who were the chief rivals of the Hohenstaufens in Italy and central Europe in the Middle Ages and who later included the Hanoverian Welfs, who, with the accession of George I to the British throne, became rulers of Great Britain. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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