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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Lothair_ILothair I - Wikipedia

    Lothair I ( Dutch and Medieval Latin: Lotharius; German: Lothar; French: Lothaire; Italian: Lotario; 795 – 29 September 855) was a 9th-century Carolingian emperor (817–855, with his father until 840) and king of Italy (818–855) and Middle Francia (843–855). Lothair I was the eldest son of the Carolingian emperor Louis I and his wife ...

  2. Lothair (1870) was a late novel by Benjamin Disraeli, the first he wrote after his first term as Prime Minister. It deals with the comparative merits of the Catholic and Anglican churches as heirs of Judaism , and with the topical question of Italian unification .

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  4. Feb 22, 2024 · Quick Reference. (795–855), King of the Franks 814–855, Holy Roman Emperor 817–855. The political life of Lothair I was shaped by the decision of his father, Louis I the Pious, to revise ... From: Lothair I in The Oxford Encyclopedia of Medieval Warfare and Military Technology ». Subjects: History — Early history (500 CE to 1500)

  5. LOTHAIR I, MEDIEVAL EMPEROR. Reigned: 817 – 855. b. 795. The oldest son of Emperor Louis the Pious and a key figure, with his brothers, in the civil wars that marked both the later years of his father's reign and the period immediately following his death. In 814, Lothair was appointed king of Bavaria.

  6. Grant Piper. ·. Follow. 5 min read. ·. May 6, 2024. 385. 1. ( Toshko Vihrenski — Own work / CC BY 4.0) In 855 CE, the Kingdom of Lotharingia came into existence. Lotharingia is one of the least...

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  7. www.jstor.org › stable › 2933502Reviews - JSTOR

    J. A. Froude, writing some twenty years afterward (Lord Beaconsfield, London 1890, p. 215), found Lothair "immeasurably superior" to Disraeli's other fiction-a view which is shared by his most recent biographer, Robert Blake (Disraeli, London, 1966, p. 518). Like all of Disraeli's novels Lothair is concerned with a young man

  8. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › LotharingiaLotharingia - Wikipedia

    Lotharingia was known as regnum quondam Lotharii or regnum Lotharii ("kingdom [once] Lothair's") and its inhabitants Lotharii (from Lotharius), Lotharienses (from Lothariensis), or Lotharingi (which gives the modern Dutch, German, and Luxembourgish names for the province Lotharingen, Lothringen, and Lothringen respectively).

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