LOTHARINGIA

lŏthərĭnˈjə, name given to the northern portion of the lands assigned (843) to Emperor of the West Lothair I in the first division of the Carolingian empire (see Verdun, Treaty of). It comprised, roughly, the present Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, Lorraine, Alsace, and NW Germany, including Aachen and Cologne. Lothair also received Italy and Burgundy (including Provence and W Switzerland) in the division of 843. Before his death (855), Lothair subdivided his lands among his three sons. His son, King Lothair (for whom the region is named), was given Lotharingia as a kingdom, while Italy and Burgundy went to Louis II and Charles. King Lothair died in 869, and in 870 his lands were fairly evenly divided between the East Frankish and West Frankish kingdoms (i.e., Germany and France) in the Treaty of Mersen. After a period of confusion and warfare, Holy Roman Emperor Otto I, whose predecessor, the German King Henry I, had gained (925) control over all Lotharingia, gave it in 953 to his brother St. Bruno, archbishop of Cologne. Bruno's difficulties with the Lotharingian nobles caused him to divide (959) the country into the duchies of Lower Lorraine, in the north, and Upper Lorraine, in the south (the name Lorraine being the modern form of Lotharingia). The ducal titles in both duchies subsequently were awarded in confusing succession to various noble houses, but their significance became nothing as the great feudal lords gained in power. In Upper Lorraine, the ducal title continued until 1766 in what became known simply as the duchy of Lorraine; this was greatly restricted in extent and did not include Alsace, Luxembourg, the bishoprics of Metz, Toul, and Verdun, and the archbishopric of Trier, all of which were originally in Upper Lorraine. In Lower Lorraine, the title soon lapsed completely; chief among the fiefs that emerged here were the duchies of Brabant, Bouillon, Limburg, Jülich, Cleves, and Berg, the county of Hainaut, and the bishopric of Liège. Cologne and Aachen became free imperial cities. Thus the history of both Upper Lorraine and Lower Lorraine grew increasingly fragmented from the 11 cent. onward. From the Treaty of Verdun until the present time the territories comprised in Lotharingia, particularly Upper Lorraine, have been contested between Germany and France.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Lotharingia
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books on: Lotharingia  - 257 results

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...kingdoms c. 912 389 Map 18. Lotharingia 390 Map 19. The Frankish...fortunes of the Carolingian kings. 14 Regino of Prum in Lotharingia also wrote a Chronicle for the years 876-906; it is not...
...Carinthia, Saxony, Upper and Lower Lotharingia), with the duty of leading the nobles...In designating dukes in the two Lotharingian duchies Henry respected the rights of the Chatenois (Upper Lotharingia) and the house of Verdun (Lower...
...consisted of two very distinct parts, Lotharingia in the east, Flanders in the...separated by the river Scheldt. Lotharingia was, politically speaking, a part...kingdom of France. Each succeeded --Lotharingia first, then Flanders--in evading...
...west Frankish kings for control of Lotharingia and the renewed Northmen attacks are...appointment of lay abbots on the frontiers of Lotharingia in order to defend the northern portion...kingdom and to acquire control of Lotharingia.1 His policy was continued by his successors...
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journal articles on: Lotharingia  - 3 results

 
 
...parts. The central part, to be known as Lotharingia, went to Lothar to whom also went both...with the Treaty of Mersen, in 870, Lotharingia was dissolved and divided between the...eternal peace to the ancient province of Lotharingia, we must seriously question if this...
...Monasteries and Patrons in the Gorge Reform: Lotharingia c. 850-1000 (Oxford: Clarendon Press...for monastic reform in tenth-century Lotharingia by focusing on the regions three greatest...implications for our understanding of the Lotharingian monastic reforms and especially of the...
...over geographic space: arms and figures. A particularly dramatic example of the former can be seen in the printed map of Lotharingia from the 1513 Strasbourg edition of Ptolemys Geography in which arms mark specific dominions on the map as well as decorate...


 

newspaper articles on: Lotharingia  - 1 result

 
 
...king, Henry II. Edith-Matilda had died in 1118 and Henry married Adeliza, daughter of Godfrey I of Leuven, Duke of Lower Lotharingia and Landgrave of Brabant, on January 29, 1121. There were no children from this marriage. Henry had a string of mistresses...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Lotharingia  - 27 results

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LOTHAIR , king of Lotharingia sometimes called Lothair II, d. 869, king of Lotharingia (855 69), second son of Emperor of the...and North Sea, which became known as Lotharingia (Lorraine). He was joined to Theutberga...
LOTHARINGIA loth rin j , name given to the northern portion of...Lothair (for whom the region is named), was given Lotharingia as a kingdom, while Italy and Burgundy went to Louis...German King Henry I, had gained (925) control over all Lotharingia, gave it in 953 to his brother St. Bruno, archbishop...
CONRAD THE RED d. 955, duke of Lotharingia (Lorraine; 944 53). A Franconian adherent of the German king Otto I (later Holy Roman emperor), he was made duke of Lotharingia and married Ottos daughter Liutgard. He accompanied (951) his father-in-law...
LORRAINE, LOWER AND UPPER see Lotharingia . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...including Italy, Burgundy, and Lotharingia , under German influence and broke the...King Louis IV of France, hoping to gain Lotharingia, had assisted the rebels, and Otto campaigned...archbishop of Cologne, whom Otto made duke of Lotharingia. Meanwhile, in Italy, Berengar II resumed...
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