- Alan I, King of Brittany
Alan I ( _fr. Alain; died 907), called the Great, was the
Count of Vannes andDuke of Brittany ("dux Brittonium") from 876 until his death. He was probably also the only King of Brittany ("rex Brittaniæ") to hold that title by legitimate grant of the Emperor.Alan was the second son of Count
Ridoredh of Vannes . He succeeded his brother Pascweten in Vannes and Brittany when the latter died, probably in the middle of 876. He represented the power bloc of southeastern Brittany and had to fight, initially, against Judicael of Poher, representative of western Breton interests, for the ducal throne. Eventually he and Judicael made peace in order to fight theVikings . Judicael died in theBattle of Questembert in 888 or 889. In 890, Alan defeated the Vikings atSaint-Lô , chasing them into a river where many drowned.After the death of Judicael, Alan ruled all of Brittany as it had been during the time of Salomon. He ruled not only the Breton territories of Léon,
Domnonée ,Cornouaille , and the Vannetais, but also theFrankish counties of Rennes, Nantes,Coutances , andAvranches , as well as the western parts ofPoitou (the so-called "pays de Retz ") andAnjou . In the east his rule extended as far as the river Vire. He was the first Breton ruler to rule this entire territory without great opposition within the west and the last to rule the whole bloc of Franco-Celtic countries. His strongest opponent wasFulk I of Anjou , who disputed control of the Nantais with him, though Alan seems to have had the upper hand in his lifetime. His power base remained in the southeast and he was powerful and wealthy in land in around Vannes and Nantes.According to the
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle , after the death of Carloman II in 884,Charles the Fat succeeded to all ofWest Francia save Brittany, thus making Brittany an independent kingdom; but this does not seem to have been true. A charter datable to between 897 and 900 makes reference to the soul of "Karolus" on whose behalf Alan had ordered prayers to be said in the monastery ofRedon . This was probably Charles the Fat, who, as emperor, probably granted Alan the right to be titled "rex". As emperor he would have had that prerogative and he is known to have had contacts with Nantes in 886, making it not improbable that he came into communication with Alan. Charles also made a concerted effort to rule effectively in the entirety of his empire and to make former enemies, with dubious ties to the empire, like the Viking Godfrid, men of standing in return for their loyalty. Throughout his reign, Alan usedCarolingian symbols of regalia and Carolingian forms in his charters.Alan augmented his power during the weak reigns of Odo and Charles III. He died in 907 and Brittany was overrun by Vikings, who held the region until 936, when Alan's grandson, Alan II, succeeded in reestablishing Christian rule, but Brittany was never thenceforth as extended as in Alan's time and no future Breton rulers were called kings.
Children
By his wife Oreguen, Alan left the following issue:
*Pascweten (died c. 903)
*Guerec
*Budic
*Rudalt, Count of Vannes , fled the Viking invasion c. 919
*Unnamed daughter, who marriedMathuedoi, Count of Poher , and was the mother of Alan II
*Unnamed daughter, who marriedTangui, Count of Vannes , died before 913ee also
*
Dukes of Brittany family tree ources
*Smith, Julia M. H. "Province and Empire: Brittany and the Carolingians". Cambridge University Press: 1992.
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