Warin II of Thurgau Adelinde of Spoleto Bernard of Heristal

Isembart of Thurgau Theodrada of St. Quentin

Hedwig of Chelles

f a m i l i a
Hijes con:
Welf I of Swabia

Hijes:
Conrad «le Vieux» d'Auxerre
Emma of Altdorf
Hedwig of Chelles
  • Nacimiento: Alrededor de 770, Altdorf, Mittelfranken, Bayern, Frankish Empire, Alemania
  • Casado/a 7??, ?, Francia, con Welf I of Swabia
  • Fallecido/a: 19 Apr 843, Bayern, Frankish Empire, Francia
  • Ocupación: Abbess of Chelles
  • Fuente: geni.com
  • https://www.geni.com/people/Helwige-Abbesse-de-Chelles-Saint-Berthour/6000000005895908004?through=6000000002198362511

    Enterrado/a en: BY, Germany

    Madre de Conrad I "the Elder", count of Auxerre; Judith of Bavaria; Emma of Altdorf; Mathilda d'Andech von Altdorf and Raoul (Rodolphe) I, comte de Sens
    Hermana de: Adalung des Franken Alrededor de von Lorsch; Imma aus Sachsen, Äbtissen von Soisson; Wigbert (Weybrecht) de Saxe and Gerswinde de Saxe
    Medio Hermana de: Erchemnar von Thurgau and Guérin, comte de Châlon et de Mâcon

    Hedwig, Duchess of Bavaria

    Hedwig (c. 778 – after 833) was a Saxon noble woman, the wife of Count Welf I and mother-in-law of Emperor Louis the Pious through his marriage to Judith, her daughter.

    Tunnettu myös nimellä: Eigilwich of Bavaria HEDWIG or EDITH Ava Bava de Morvois

    Life

    She was possibly born at Altdorf in the Frankish lands of Alamannia (present-day Germany). According to Bishop Thegan of Trier, she was a member of the Saxon high nobility, the daughter of Count Isambart. She had a sister Adalung des Franken, half brother Hunfrid I de Recia e de Istria, and brother Guelph, Count of Andech.

    In her later life (about 826) she appears as abbess of Chelles near Paris,[1][2][3] however, it is uncertain if she had already become a widow by then.

    Family

    Hedwig married Count Welf I and together they had the following children:

    Judith, Roman Empress and Frankish Queen, died 843;
    Rudolph, died 866;
    Conrad,] Count of Paris, ancestor of the Welf kings of Burgundy;
    Hemma, Frankish Queen, married to Louis the German, son of Louis the Pious, died 876.
    Mathilda d'Andech von Altdorf
    Through her marriage to Welf she is the matriarch of the Dynastic Welf Family[7] and is an ancestor of the Carolingian dynasty, the Kings of Italy, Russia, Brittan, the Hagenéter rulers of Piedmont and the Bavarian Welfs.

    Hedwig died 19 April 843 in Bayern, Frankish Empire (present Germany) and was buried in Bayern Lande.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hedwig,_Duchess_of_Bavaria

    m HEILWIG, daughter of ---. Thegan's Vita Hludowici Imperatoris names "filiam Hwelfi ducis sui, qui erat de nobilissima progenie Bawariorum…Iudith…ex parte matris…Eigilwi nobilissimi generic Saxonici" as second wife of Emperor Ludwig[1247]. She was installed as Abbess of Chelles, near Paris, through the influence of her daughter Empress Judith.

    http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/SWABIAN%20NOBILITY.htm#WelfIdied824B

    enWikipedia Chelles Abbey: Abbesses
    "Hedwig, Duchess of Bavaria, d. after 835, mother of the Empress Judith"


    Louis I, The Pious m secondly (Aix-la-Chapelle Feb 819) JUDITH, daughter of WELF [I] Graf [von Altdorf] & his wife Heilwig --- ([805]-Tours 19 Apr 843, bur Tours Saint-Martin). The Annales Xantenses record the marriage in Feb 819 of "Ludewicus imperator" and "Iudith"[205]. Thegan names "filiam Hwelfi ducis sui, qui erat de nobolissima progenie Bawariorum…Iudith…ex parte matris…Eigilwi nobilissimi generic Saxonici" as second wife of Emperor Ludwig, specifying that she was "enim pulchra valde"[206]. Einhard's Annales record that Emperor Louis chose "Huelpi comitis filiam…Judith" as his wife in 819 after "inspectis plerisque nobelium filiabus"[207]. Judith was influential with her husband, which increased the tensions with the emperor's sons by his first marriage. Thegan's Vita Hludowici Imperatoris records that "quondam duce Bernhardo, qui erat de stirpe regali" was accused of violating "Iudith reginam" but comments that this was all lies[208]. Judith was exiled to the monastery of Sainte-Croix de Poitiers during the first rebellion of her stepsons in 830, was released in 831, but exiled again to Tortona in Italy in 833 from where she was brought back in Apr 834[209]. The necrology of the abbey of Saint-Denis records the death "XIII Kal Mai" of "Judith regina"[210]. The Annales Xantenses record the death in 843 of "Iudhit imperatrix mater Karoli" at Tours[211]. The necrology of Saint-Germain-des-Prés records the death 843 “XIII Kal Mai” of “Judidh imperatricis”[212]. http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/CAROLINGIANS.htm#LouisIEmperorB Emperor Louis I & his second wife had [three] children

    Lescure, Mathurin François Adolphe de (1863). Les Confessions de l'abbesse de Chelles, fille du Régent. https://archive.org/details/lesconfessionsde00lesc/page/306/mode/2up