- Conrad I of Germany
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Conrad I King Conrad, Spieghel Historiael,
Jacob van Maerlant, c. 1330King of Germany
(formally King of East Francia)Reign 10 November 911 – 23 December 918 Predecessor Louis the Child Successor Henry I Duke of Franconia Reign 27 February 906 – 23 December 918 Predecessor Conrad the Elder Successor Eberhard Consort Cunigunde of Swabia House Conradines Father Conrad the Elder Mother Glismut Born c. 881 Died 23 December 918
Weilburg CastleBurial Fulda Cathedral Religion Roman Catholic Conrad I (German: Konrad; c. 890 – 23 December 918), called the Younger, was Duke of Franconia from 906 and King of Germany from 911 to 918, the only king of the Conradine (or Franconian) dynasty. Though Conrad never used the title rex Teutonicorum ("king of the Germans") nor rex Romanorum ("King of the Romans"), he was the first king of East Francia who was elected by the rulers of the German stem duchies as successor of the last Carolingian ruler Louis the Child. His Kingdom of Germany evolved into the Holy Roman Empire upon the coronation of Emperor Otto I in 962.
Biography
Conrad the Younger was the son of Duke Conrad of Thuringia and his wife Glismut, probably akin to Ota, wife of the Carolingian emperor Arnulf of Carinthia and mother of the East Frankish king Louis the Child. The Conradines, counts in the Franconian Lahngau region, had been loyal supporters of the Carolingians; they competed vigorously for predominance in Franconia with the sons of the Babenberg duke Henry of Franconia at Bamberg Castle. In 906, the two parties battled each other near Fritzlar. Conrad the Elder was killed,[1] as had been two of the three Babenberg brothers; however, the King Louis took the Conradines' side and the third brother Adalbert of Babenberg was arrested and executed shortly thereafter, despite a promise of safe conduct by the king's chancellor Archbishop Hatto I of Mainz. Conrad the Younger became undisputed Duke of all Franconia after this, nevertheless his attempts to extend the rule of the Conradines over the western Lorraine (Lotharingian) part of former Austrasia failed after the death of his uncle Duke Gebhard.
Upon the death of King Louis the Child, Conrad was elected King of the East Frankish kingdom on 10 November 911 at Forchheim by the rulers of Saxony, Swabia (Alamannia) and Bavaria. The dukes resisted against the succession of Louis' West Frankish Carolingian relative Charles the Simple and chose the Conradine scion, who was at least maternally related with the late king. Only Conrad's rival Duke Reginar of Lorraine refused to give him his allegiance and joined West Francia.
In 913, to patch up relations, Conrad married the sister of the Swabian count Erchanger, a grandson of King Louis the German. Cunigunda, widow of Liutpold and mother of Duke Arnulf of Bavaria, gave him two children: Cunigunda and Herman, both born in 913.
His reign was a continuous and generally unsuccessful struggle to uphold the power of the kingship against the growing power of the German dukes. His military campaigns against Charles the Simple to regain the Duchy of Lorraine with the Imperial city of Aachen were failures, Archbishop Ratbod of Trier even became West Frankish chancellor in 913. Furthermore Conrad's realm was exposed to the continuous raids of the Hungarians since the disastrous defeat of the Bavarian forces at the 907 Battle of Pressburg, leading to a considerable decline in his authority. His attempt to mobilize the East Frankish episcopate led by Archbishop Unni of Bremen to his cause at the 916 synod of Hohenaltheim was not enough to compensate. After several clashes of arms, Conrad at least was able to come to terms with Duke Henry of Saxony. The revolting Swabian dukes Erchanger (executed in 917) and Burchard II however were a continuous threat, as was the Bavarian duke Arnulf the Bad. Severely injured at one of his fights with Arnulf, Conrad died on 23 December 918 at his residence Weilburg Castle. He was buried in Fulda Cathedral.
According to the Res gestae saxonicae by chronicler Widukind of Corvey, Conrad on his deathbed persuaded his younger brother Eberhard to offer the crown to Henry the Fowler, the duke of Saxony [2] and one of his principal opponents, since he considered Henry to be the only prince capable of holding the German kingdom together in the face of internal rivalries among the dukes and the continuous Hungarian raids. It was however not until May 919, when Eberhard and the other Frankish nobles accepted Conrad's advice, and Henry was elected king, as Henry I, at the Reichstag of Fritzlar.
Eberhard succeeded Conrad as duke of Franconia. He was killed in 939 at the Battle of Andernach during his rebellion against Emperor Otto I, whereafter the duchy of Franconia became a direct Imperial possession of the Ottonian dynasty until 1024.
See also
- Kings of Germany family tree. He was related to every other king of Germany.
References
Conrad I of GermanyBorn: c. 890 Died: 23 December 918Preceded by
Louis the Child
as King of East FranciaKing of Germany
911–918Succeeded by
Henry IPreceded by
Conrad the Elder
contested by BabenbergDuke of Franconia
906–918Succeeded by
Eberhard IIIMonarchs of Germany Eastern Francia (843–918) Saxon Kingdom (919–62) Kingdom of Germany
in the Holy Roman Empire
(962–1806)Otto I • Otto II • Otto III • Henry II • Conrad II • Henry III • Henry IV • Henry V • Lothair III • Conrad III • Frederick I • Henry VI • Philip • Otto IV • Frederick II • Conrad IV • Rudolf I • Adolf • Albert I • Henry VII • Louis IV • Charles IV • Wenceslaus • Rupert • Sigismund • Albert II • Frederick III • Maximilian I • Charles V • Ferdinand I • Maximilian II • Rudolph II • Matthias • Ferdinand II • Ferdinand III • Leopold I • Joseph I • Charles VI • Charles VII • Francis I • Joseph II • Leopold II • Francis IIConfederation of the Rhine (1806–1813) Napoleon IGerman Confederation (1815–1848) German Empire (1849) Frederick William IV (emperor-elect)German Confederation (1850–1866) North German Confederation (1867–1871) German Empire (1871–1918) Categories:- 890 births
- 918 deaths
- Frankish kings
- German kings
- Conradiner family members
- Dukes of Franconia
- Roman Catholic monarchs
- 10th-century rulers in Europe
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