Louis the Younger, the second son of …
Years: 865 - 865
Louis the Younger, the second son of Louis the German, had been deployed in military operations against the Abodrites to the east as a young mans in 858 and 862.
At the invitation of the nobles of Aquitaine opposed to Charles the Bald and Pepin II, and coaxed by his father and his cousin Charles, Archbishop of Mainz, he had crossed into Gaul in 854 at the head of an army, intent on receiving the Aquitainian crown, marching as far as Limoges before turning back.
Back home, Louis had forged close ties with the nobles of the East Francia and has become increasingly independent from his father.
He betroths himself to the daughter of Count Adalard and in 865 he and his brother Charles, called the Fat, join in rebellion against their father.
This flirtation with revolt is brief, however, and Louis, Charles, and their father are reconciled later that year, though the elder Louis is forced to make a division of the remainder of his territories between his two sons.
Carloman had already been given the subregulus of Bavaria in 864; now Louis receives Saxony, Thuringia, and Franconia, and Charles Alemannia and Rhaetia.
Locations
People
Groups
- Franks
- Papal States (Republic of St. Peter)
- Bavaria, Carolingian Duchy of
- Frankish, or Carolingian (Roman) Empire
- Francia Orientalis (East Francia), Kingdom of
- Lotharingia, Kingdom of
