List of Frankish kings
The
A timeline of Frankish rulers is difficult since the realm was, according to old Germanic practice, frequently divided among the sons of a leader upon his death and then eventually reunited.
Dukes and reguli
Early rulers
This list of early rulers is incomplete, as our sources leave open many gaps.
- Ascaric
- Merogais
- Mallobaudes
Genobaud Sunno - Marcomer
- Pharamond, son of Marcomer, semi-legendary king of the Salian Franks (circa 410–426)
Theudemeres , son ofRichomeres , King circa 422Aegidius Sigobert the Lame , King 483–507, killed by his son Chloderic the ParricideChlodoric the Parricide , son of Sigebert, King 507, dethroned by Clovis
Rulers of the Salians
- Clodio, possible son of Pharamond, King at Dispargum and later Tournai (426–447)
Merovech , son of Chlodio, King at Tournai (447–458)Childeric I , son of Merovech, King at Tournai (458–481)- Clovis I, son of Childeric I, King at Tournai (481–511), later united most of the Franks and Roman Gaul
All of the following may have been related to Clovis in some degree and eventually removed by before 509:
Chararic - Ragnachar, probably king at
Cambrai from before 486, killed by Clovis - Ricchar, brother of Ragnachar, killed by Clovis at Cambrai
- Rignomer, brother of Ragnachar, killed by Clovis at Mans
Merovingian kings of the Franks
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All the Franks |
Clovis I united all the Frankish petty kingdoms as well as most of
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Soissons
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Paris
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Orléans
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Reims
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Chlothar I eventually inherited all of the Frankish kingdoms after the deaths of his brothers or their successors. After his own death, the kingdom was once again split among his four sons:
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Soissons (eventually Neustria)
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Paris
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Orléans (eventually Burgundy)
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Reims and Metz (eventually Austrasia)
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Chlothar II defeated
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Neustria and Burgundy
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Aquitaine
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Austrasia
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Theuderic III was recognized as king of all the Franks in 679. From then on, the kingdom of the Franks can be treated as a unity again for all but a very brief period of civil war.
- Clovis IV, 691–695
- Childebert III, 695–
711 Chlothar IV ,717 –720 - Dagobert III,
711 –715 - Chilperic II,
715 –721Chlothar IV ,717 –720 , rival king in Austrasia
Theuderic IV , 721–737 - interregnum
737 –743 Childeric III , 743–751
Carolingians
Mayors of the palace
The Carolingians were initially
Pippin I (Austrasia: 623–629 and 639–640)- Grimoald I (Austrasia: 643–656; died 662)
- Pippin II (Austrasia: 680–714, Neustria and Burgundy: 687–695)
- Drogo (Burgundy: 695–708)
Grimoald II (Neustria: 695–714, Burgundy: 708–714)- Theudoald (Austrasia, Neustria, and Burgundy: 714–716)
- Charles Martel (Austrasia: 715–741, Neustria and Burgundy: 718–741)
Carloman (Austrasia: 741–747; died 754 or 755)Pippin III (Neustria and Burgundy: 741–751, Austrasia: 747–751)
In 751, Pippin III became the King of the Franks and the office of mayor disappeared. The Carolingians displaced the Merovingians as the ruling dynasty.
Kings of the Franks
Pippin the Short , 751–768Carloman , 768–771 (Burgundy, Alemannia, southern Austrasia)Charlemagne , 768–814 (at first only Neustria, Aquitaine, northern Austrasia), King of the Lombards 774, Emperor 800Louis the Pious , Emperor, King of the Franks 814–840- Italy:
Lothair I , 817–839 - Bavaria:
Lothair I , 815–817;Louis the German , 817–843 - Aquitaine: Pepin I, 817–838; Charles the
Bald, 838–855, in opposition to
Pepin II , 838–851
- Italy:
Louis the Pious made many divisions of his empire during his lifetime. The final division, pronounced at Crémieux in 838, made Charles the Bald heir to the west, including Aqutiaine, and Lothair heir to the east, including Italy and excluding Bavaria, which was left for Louis the German. However, following the emperor's death in 840, the empire was plunged into a civil war that lasted three years. The Frankish kingdom was then divided by the Treaty of Verdun in 843. Lothair was allowed to keep his imperial title and his kingdom of Italy. Charles was confirmed in West Francia and in Aquitaine, where Pepin I's son Pepin II was opposing him, while Louis the German was granted the whole of East Francia save the Low Countries and the Rhineland, Burgundy, and Provence, which corridor from Pavia to Aachen was created into a kingdom of Middle Francia for Lothair.
The following table does not provide a complete listing for some of the various regna of the empire, especially those
which were subregna of the Western, Middle, or Eastern kingdom such as
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Western Kingdom (eventually |
Eastern Kingdom (eventually |
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|---|---|---|
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Names marked with an asterisk (*) were not Carolingians, but
After this, the House of Capet ruled France. For the continuation, see the
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After Lothair's death in 855, his realm was divided between his sons:
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Louis divided his lands between his three sons, but they all ended up in the hands of the youngest by 882:
On the deposition of Charles the Fat, East Francia went to his nephew:
Louis the Child was the last East Frankish Carolingian ruler. He was succeeded by |
External links
Further reading
- The history of
France as recounted in the "Grandes Chroniques de France", and particularly in the personal copy produced forKing Charles V between 1370 and 1380 that is the saga of the three great dynasties, theMerovingians , Carolingians, and the Capetians, that shaped the institutions and the frontiers of the realm. This document was produced and likely commissioned during the Hundred Years' War, a dynastic struggle between the rulers of France and England with rival claims to the French throne. It should therefore be read and considered carefully as a source, due to the inherent bias in the context of its origins. - The Cambridge Illustrated History of France -
Cambridge University Press - The Origins of France: Clovis to the Capetians 500-1000 by Edward James ISBN 0-333-27052-5
- Late Merovingian France: History and Hagiography, 640-720 (Manchester Medieval Sources); Paul Fouracre (Editor), Richard A. Gerberding (Editor) ISBN 0-7190-4791-9
- Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Merovingian Dynasty: [1].
- Medieval France: An Encyclopedia, eds. W. Kibler and G. Zinn. New York: Garland Publishing, 1995.
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