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  1. Charles III was a Frankish king and emperor, whose fall in 887 marked the final disintegration of the empire of Charlemagne. (Although he controlled France briefly, he is usually not reckoned among the kings of France). The youngest son of Louis the German and great-grandson of Charlemagne, Charles.

  2. Jun 4, 2017 · Known as Charles the Fat, Emperor Charles III was the last of the Carolingian line of emperors.

  3. 3 days ago · Youngest son of Louis the German and king of the West Franks from ad 882. He was crowned emperor, and during his reign there was the great siege of Paris by the Vikings in ad 885. He was deposed by a coup in ad 887 and died c .ad 887. From: Charles the Fat in The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Archaeology ».

  4. Charles III was the king of France (893–922), whose authority came to be accepted by Lorraine and who settled the Northmen in Normandy but who became the first Carolingian ruler of the western kingdom to lose his crown. The posthumous son of Louis II the Stammerer by a marriage of contested.

  5. From the reams of pages which have been devoted by historians to the practice of Carolingian kingship, perhaps only Charles the Fat has emerged with the reputation of a ‘failed king’. This judgement is all the more striking in the similarity of the terms in which it has been postulated.

  6. [Charles III, known as Charles the Fat (839-888), was the last Carolingian emperor.] The youngest son of Ludwig (Louis the German), King of the East Franks, Charles reunited Charlemagne's former empire by successively (from 876 to 884) becoming ruler of its various kingdoms and lordships.

  7. Dec 2, 2016 · Charles the Fat was elected Emperor and soon after Louis the Younger died, as well as Carloman (who had conquered the Kingdom of the Eastern Franks), and their lands were ceded to him. This effectively recreated the Carolingian Empire…until the part where, Charles the Fat, suffering from epilepsy and unable to repel Vikings from their attack ...

  8. Analyzing the collapse of the pan-European Carolingian Empire in 888 (as seen through the reign of its last ruler, Charles the Fat), this study argues against the generally pessimistic views of the vitality of late ninth-century politics.

  9. Charles III the Fat, Emperor. Carolingian King; son of Louis the German, brother of Carloman of Bavaria and Louis the Younger; inherited the kingdom of Alemannia upon his father's death (876); succeeded his brother Carloman as King of Italy when the latter had to abdicate (879), and his brother Louis as King of East Francia upon the latter's ...

  10. Charles the Fat (the nickname is convenient, but not contemporary3) was the great-grandson of the emperor Charlemagne, whose wars of conquest and cultural reforms had shaped the territory and character of the Frankish empire under the Carolingians in the late eighth and early ninth centuries. In 843 the empire was split, in traditional Frankish ...

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