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  1. 814: Prefects of Bavaria: Gerold ... Bavaria was ruled by a series of short-lasting, mostly unrelated dynasties. ... Bavaria: Matilda of England 1352 London no children

  2. The history of Bavaria for the ensuing century intertwines with that of the Carolingian empire. Bavaria, given during the partition of 817 AD to the king of the East Franks, Louis the German, formed a part of the larger territories confirmed to him in 843 AD by the Treaty of Verdun. Louis made Regensburg the center of his government and ...

  3. Holy Roman Empire - Charlemagne's Successors: Louis I the Pious (814–840) was a man in every way different from his father. For him the word empire was to be the unifying idea holding together his various dominions, and accordingly he abandoned his separate royal titles. This was the underlying notion of the Ordinatio imperii of 817; by this, Louis made his eldest son, Lothar I, emperor with ...

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  5. Sep 20, 2008 · Lothair I. King of Bavaria, 814-817. King of Italy, 822-5, 829-840. Emperor, 833-4, 840-855 (joint emperor from 817). Having briefly deposed his father Louis the Pious in 833-4, Lothair succeeded as sole emperor on the death of Louis in 840. The treaty of Verdun between Lothair and his brothers Louis (Ludwig) and Charles in 943 gave Lothair the ...

  6. Oct 11, 2019 · Charlemagne. October 11, 2019 Leave a comment. c. 747 – January 28, 814. His kingdom would unite western Europe and end the Dark Ages. Charlemagne was born in 747 as the son of Austrasian King Pepin the Short. At the age of 19, he inherited his deceased father’s territory and jointly ruled it with his brother Carloman.

  7. Oct 11, 2020 · Widely known as the “Father of Europe”, Charlemagne was the famous king of the Franks who ruled from 768 until his death in 814. This eight-century monarch’s fame remains very much unrivaled even to this day because he was the first person to rule Western and Central Europe since the fall of the Western Roman Empire in 476.

  8. Ludwig III. Former king of Bavaria. 1919. Germany adopts the democratic 'Weimar constitution' following the abolition of the German empire. This new Germany consists of the former German kingdoms and duchies, all of which have now been abolished, including Baden, Bavaria, Hesse, Lippe , Saxony and Württemberg.

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