Lothar II of Arles

f a m i l i a
Hijes con:
Adelais of Burgundy

Hijes:
Richlind von Sachsen
Lothar II of Arles
  • Nacimiento: Alrededor de 926, Sachsen, Alemania
  • Casado/a Antes de 27 Jun 947, ?, Francia?, con Adelais of Burgundy
  • Fallecido/a: 22 Nov 950, Turin, Piémont, Italia
  • Ocupación: King of Italy
  • Fuente: geni.com
  • https://www.geni.com/people/Lothar-II-of-Arles-King-of-Italy/6000000207660740828?through=6000000207660649863

    Es posible que haya sido envenenado por Berengario d'Ivrea, quien se proclamó rey de Italia después de la muerte de Lotario.

    Esposo de: Adelais, of Burgundy
    Padre de Richlind

    https://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/SWABIA.htm

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lothair_II_of_Italy

    http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/ITALY,%20Kings%20to%20962.htm#LotharKingItalydied950

    2. LOTHAR ([926/28]-Turin 22 Nov 950). Lothar is named son of King Ugo and "Aldam…ex Francorum genere Teutonicorum" by Liutprand[711]. "Lautharius" is named as son of "Ugo rex"[712]. "Hugo et Lotharius…reges" name "patris et matris nostræ Teubaldi…et Berte" in their donation to Cluny dated 8 Mar 934[713], which incorrectly implies that Ugo and Lothar were brothers. Joint King of Italy 931. He succeeded his father in 947 as LOTHAR King of Italy. He may have been poisoned by Berengario d´Ivrea, who proclaimed himself King of Italy after Lothar died.

    m (947 before 27 Jun) as her first husband, ADELAIS of Burgundy, daughter of RUDOLF II King of Burgundy [Welf] & his wife Berta of Swabia (-Kloster Selz, Alsace 16 Dec 999, bur Kloster Selz). Luitprand names "Adelegidam" daughter of Rudolf & Berta, when recording her marriage to "regi Lothario"[714]. She claimed the kingdom of Italy on the death of her husband, as the daughter of one of the rival claimants for the throne earlier in the century. Willa, wife of Berengario d´Ivrea who had been proclaimed king at Pavia 15 Dec 950, ordered Adelais's imprisonment at Como 20 Apr 951 and "afflicted her with imprisonment and hunger" according to Thietmar[715]. Otto I King of Germany used her ill-treatment as an excuse to invade Italy in Sep 951, although Adelais had succeeded in escaping 20 Aug 951 to Reggio[716]. She married secondly (Pavia [Oct/Nov] 951) as his second wife, Otto I King of Germany. King Otto entered Pavia 23 Sep 951, proclaimed himself King of Italy, and married Adelais as her second husband. The Annalista Saxo records "Adelheidam reginam" as "coniuge rege Lothario" when she married Otto[717]. Flodoard refers to "uxorem quoque Lotharii regis defuncti, filii Hugonis, sororem Chonradi regis" when recording her second marriage[718]. She was crowned Empress at Rome with her husband 2 Feb 962[719]. "Aleidis sororis" is named in the charter of "Chuonradus rex" dated 8 Apr 962[720]. "Adelheidis imperatrix cum filia Athelheidhe abbatissa in Italiam profecta est propter quasdam discordias inter se et filium factas", although it is unclear to whom "filia Athelheidhe" refers unless this is an error for Mathilde[721]. She replaced her daughter-in-law as regent for her grandson King Otto III in 991[722]. The necrology of Fulda records the death "999 17 Kal Ian" of "Adalheid imperatrix"[723]. King Lothar & his wife had one child:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lothair_II_of_Italy#Bibliography
    Lothair II (926/8 – 22 November 950), often Lothair of Arles, was the King of Italy from 947 to his death. He was of the noble Frankish lineage of the Bosonids ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bosonids ), descended from Boso the Elder. His father and predecessor was Hugh of Provence, great-grandson of Lothair II, King of Lotharingia, and his mother was a German princess named Alda (or Hilda).

    Although he held the title of rex Italiae, he never succeeded in exercising power there. In 931, Lothair's father, Hugh, made him co-regent.[1] He was married, 12 December 947, to the fifteen-year-old Adelaide,[2] the spirited and intelligent[according to whom?] daughter of Rudolph II of Burgundy and Bertha of Swabia.[3]

    Their marriage was part of a political settlement designed to conclude a peace between her father and his. In 933, Hugh of Arles had given up his kingdom (Provence) to his inveterate enemy Rudolph II, who merged the two kingdoms into a new Kingdom of Burgundy, but died in 937. The couple had a daughter, Emma,[4] born as early as 948, who was married in 966 to the Carolingian Lothair of France.

    Lothair's power in Italy was nominal. From the time of the successful uprising of the nobles in 945, when Hugh was forced into exile, Berengar of Ivrea kept all real power and patronage in his hands. In 950, Lothair died at Turin,[5] perhaps poisoned by Berengar, who attempted to cement his usurped political power in Lombardy by forcing Lothair's widow to marry his son Adalbert. Instead she entreated the protection of Otto I of Germany, whom she married.

    Lothair figures briefly in the part related to Adelaide in the Gesta Ottonis, an epic poem about Otto I of Germany, an epic poem about written ca. 960 by Hroswitha of Gandersheim.

    References
    Previte-Orton 1922, p. 154.
    Bouchard 1988, p. 409.
    Duckett 1988, p. 327.
    Bouchard 1988, p. 417.
    Flodoard of Reims 2004, p. xxv.
    Bibliography
    Bouchard, Constance B. (1988). "The Bosonids or Rising to Power in the Late Carolingian Age". French Historical Studies. 15, No. 3 (Spring): 407–431. doi:10.2307/286367. JSTOR 286367.
    Duckett, Eleanor Shipley (1988). Death and Life in the Tenth Century. University of Michigan Press.
    Flodoard of Reims (2004). Bachrach, Bernard S.; Fanning, Steven (eds.). The Annals of Flodoard of Reims, 919-966. University of Toronto Press.
    Previte-Orton, C.W. (1922). "Italy in the Tenth Century". In Gwatkin, H.M.; Whitney, J.P.; Tanner, J.R.; Previte-Orton, C.W. (eds.). The Cambridge Medieval History. Vol. III: Germany and the Western empire. The Macmillan Company. pp. 148–178.
    Pierre Riché. Les Carolingiens, une famille qui fit l'Europe. Paris: 1983. ISBN 2-01-009737-8 (in French)
    Jean-Charles Volkmann. Bien Connaître les généalogies des rois de France. ISBN 2-87747-208-6 (in French)
    "Lothar II." Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved April 25, 2007, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online: http://www.search.eb.com/eb/article-9049021.
    "Lothar koenig von Italien" Genealogical references (in German).