of the Franks, King Clothar

of the Franks, King Clothar

Male 497 - 561  (64 years)

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  • Name of the Franks, Clothar  [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9
    Map of Neustria
    Map of Neustria
    Title King 
    Birth 497  Soissons, Aisne, Picardie, France Find all individuals with events at this location  [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9
    Christening 497  Reims, Marne, Champagne-Ardenne, France Find all individuals with events at this location  [1, 3, 4
    Gender Male 
    Appointments / Titles 511  [1, 3, 4
    He succeeded his father as King of the Franks at Soissons, his territory covering Soissons, Laon, Noyon, Arras, Cambrai, Tournai and the lower Meuse, the lands that later were to become the kingdom of Neustria. 
    Appointments / Titles Between 27 Nov 511 and 31 Dec 558  Kingdom of Neustria (Historical) Find all individuals with events at this location  [3, 4
    King of Neustra 
    Appointments / Titles Between 27 Nov 511 and 31 Dec 558  Soissons, Aisne, Picardie, France Find all individuals with events at this location  [1, 3, 4
    King of Soissons 
    Appointments / Titles Between 524 and 558  [1, 3, 4
    King of Orléans 
    Appointments / Titles Between 23 Dec 558 and 29 Nov 561  [3, 4
    King of the Franks 
    House Merovingian  [1, 3, 4
    Nickname The Old 
    FSID 9MTD-7C8  [1, 3, 4
    Religion Catholic  [1, 3, 4
    Death 29 Nov 561  Orléans, Loiret, Centre, France Find all individuals with events at this location  [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9
    Burial 31 Dec 561  Abbey of Saint-Médard de Soissons, Soissons, Aisne, Picardie, France Find all individuals with events at this location  [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6
    Abbey of Saint-Médard de Soissons
    Abbey of Saint-Médard de Soissons
    Person ID I32189  The Thoma Family
    Last Modified 20 Sep 2023 

    Father of the Franks, King of France Clovis I,   b. 16 Dec 466, Loire-Atlantique, Pays de la Loire, France Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 11 Nov 511, St Pierre, Puy-de-Dôme, Auvergne, France Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 44 years) 
    Relationship natural 
    Mother de France, Saint Clotilda,   b. 474, Lyon, Rhône, Rhône-Alpes, France Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 545, Tours, Indre-et-Loire, Centre, France Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 71 years) 
    Relationship natural 
    Family ID F12407  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family of Thüringia, Queen Aregunda,   b. 515, Rheims, Marne, Champagne-Ardenne, France Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 13 Aug 563, Soissons, Aisne, Picardie, France Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 48 years) 
    Marriage 533  [1, 3, 4
    Children 
     1. de Neustria, King Chilperic I,   b. 539, Soissons, Aisne, Picardie, France Find all individuals with events at this locationd. Sep 584, Chelles, Seine-et-Marne, Île-de-France, France Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 45 years)  [natural]
    Family ID F12406  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 20 Sep 2023 

  • Event Map
    Link to Google MapsBirth - 497 - Soissons, Aisne, Picardie, France Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsChristening - 497 - Reims, Marne, Champagne-Ardenne, France Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsAppointments / Titles - King of Neustra - Between 27 Nov 511 and 31 Dec 558 - Kingdom of Neustria (Historical) Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsAppointments / Titles - King of Soissons - Between 27 Nov 511 and 31 Dec 558 - Soissons, Aisne, Picardie, France Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsDeath - 29 Nov 561 - Orléans, Loiret, Centre, France Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsBurial - 31 Dec 561 - Abbey of Saint-Médard de Soissons, Soissons, Aisne, Picardie, France Link to Google Earth
     = Link to Google Earth 

  • Photos
    Clotaire
    Clotaire

  • Notes 
    • Chlothar I
      From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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      Chlothar I
      Monnaie d'argent de Clotaire Ier.jpeg
      Silver coin of Chlothar I
      King of Soissons
      Reign 511–558
      Predecessor Clovis I
      Successor Chilperic I
      King of Orléans
      Reign 524–558
      Predecessor Chlodomer
      Successor St. Guntram
      King of Reims
      Reign 555–558
      Predecessor Theudebald
      Successor Sigebert I
      King of Paris
      Reign 558
      Predecessor Childebert I
      Successor Charibert I
      King of the Franks
      Reign 558–561
      Predecessor Vacant (last held by Clovis I)
      Successor Vacant (next held by Clotaire II)
      Born c. 497
      Died 29 November 561
      Compiègne
      Spouse Guntheuc
      Radegund
      Ingund
      Aregund
      Chunsina
      Issue Gunthar
      Childeric
      Charibert
      St. Guntram
      Sigebert
      Chilperic
      Chlothsind
      Chram
      Dynasty Merovingian
      Father Clovis I
      Mother Clotilde
      Religion Roman Catholic
      Chlothar I (c. 497 – 29 November 561)[a] was a king of the Franks of the Merovingian dynasty and one of the four sons of Clovis I.

      Chlothar's father, Clovis I, divided the kingdom between his four sons. In 511, Clothar I inherited two large territories on the Western coast of Francia, separated by the lands of his brother Childebert I's Kingdom of Paris. Chlothar spent most of his life in a campaign to expand his territories at the expense of his relatives and neighbouring realms in all directions.

      His brothers avoided outright war by cooperating with his attacks on neighbouring lands in concert or by invading lands when their rulers died. The spoils were shared between the participating brothers. By the end of his life, Chlothar had managed to reunite Francia by surviving his brothers and seizing their territories after they died. But upon his own death, the Kingdom of the Franks was once again divided between his own four surviving sons. A fifth son had rebelled and was killed, along with his family.

      Chlothar's father, Clovis I, had converted to Nicene Christianity, but Chlothar, like other Merovingians, did not consider that the Christian doctrine of monogamy should be expected of royalty: he had five wives, more from political expediency, for the purpose of forming alliances, than for personal motives. Although at the instigation of his queens he gave money for several new ecclesiastical edifices, he was a less than enthusiastic Christian and succeeded in introducing taxes on ecclesiastical property.

      Contents
      1 Introduction
      2 Life
      2.1 Early life
      2.2 Accession to the throne
      2.3 First Burgundian war
      2.4 Marriage with Guntheuc
      2.5 Marriage with Aregund
      2.6 Thuringian conquest
      2.7 Princess Radegund
      2.8 Acquisition of the kingdom of Orléans
      2.9 Second Burgundian war
      2.10 First Visigoth war
      2.11 Civil war
      2.12 Ceding of Provence
      2.13 Second Visigoth war
      2.14 Tuscan tribute
      2.15 Death of Clotilde
      2.16 Acquisition of Metz
      2.17 Saxon war
      2.18 Submission of Auvergne
      2.19 War with Chram
      2.20 Unification of all Francia
      2.21 Relations with the church
      3 Death
      3.1 Succession
      3.2 Female monasticism
      4 Family
      5 Notes
      6 References
      7 Further reading
      Introduction

      The expansion of Clothar's territories, shown in brown
      Frankish customs of the day allowed for the practice of polygamy, especially among royalty. So it was not uncommon for a king to have multiple wives and several competing heirs upon his death. This was a major deviation from the monogamy of late Roman customs, influenced by the Church. Frankish rulers followed this practice mainly to increase their influence across larger areas of land in the wake of the Roman empire's collapse. The aim was to maintain peace and ensure the preservation of the kingdom by appeasing local leaders.[1] In the Germanic tradition succession fell, not to sons, but to younger brothers, uncles, and cousins. But under Salic law, Clovis I instituted the custom of sons being the primary heirs in all respects. However, it was not a system of primogeniture, with the eldest son receiving the vast majority of an inheritance, rather the inheritance was split evenly between all the sons. Therefore, the greater Frankish Kingdom was often splintered into smaller sub-kingdoms.[1]

      Life
      Early life
      Chlothar was the fifth son of Clovis I and the fourth son of Queen Clotilde. The name 'Chlothar' means "glory".[2] Chlothar was born around 497 in Soissons. Upon the death of his father on 27 November 511, he received as his share of the kingdom: the town of Soissons, which he made his capital; the cities of Laon, Noyon, Cambrai, and Maastricht; and the lower course of the Meuse River. But he was very ambitious and sought to extend his domain.

      Bust of Chlothar
      Accession to the throne
      Upon the death of Clovis I in the year 511, the Frankish kingdom was divided between Chlothar and his brothers, Theuderic, Childebert, and Chlodomer.[3] Because of the rights of mothers, queens were granted a portion of their son's kingdom. Clovis I, who had two wives, divided his kingdom into two for each of his wives, then parceled out pieces to his respective sons. The eldest, Theuderic, son of the first wife, had the benefit of receiving one half of the kingdom of Francia, Reims. Chlothar shared the second half of the kingdom with his brothers Childebert and Chlodomer. Chlothar received the northern portion, Childebert the central kingdom of Paris, and Chlodomer the southern Kingdom of Orléans.[1] The domain inherited by Chlothar consisted of two distinct parts: one in Gaulic Belgium, corresponding to the kingdom of the Salian Franks, where he established his capital at Soissons and included the dioceses of Amiens, Arras, Saint-Quentin and Tournai; and the other in Aquitane including the dioceses of Agen, Bazas, and Périgueux.[1]

      First Burgundian war
      In 516 Gundobad, king of Burgundy, died, and the throne passed to his son Sigismund, who converted to Catholicism. Sigismund adopted an extreme anti-Arian policy, going so far as to execute his Arian son Sigeric, who was the grandson of the Ostrogoth King Theoderic the Great. Sigismund also nearly prompted the Franks to launch an offensive against him, but he avoided a conflict by giving one of his daughters, Suavegotha, in marriage to Chlothar's older half-brother, Theuderic I.

      In 523, at the instigation of their mother, Clotilde, Chlothar, Childebert, and Chlodomer joined forces in an expedition against the Burgundians. The Burgundian army was defeated, and Sigismund was captured and executed. Sigismund's brother Godomar replaced him on the throne, with the support of the aristocracy, and the Franks were forced to leave.

      In 524 Chlothar and his brothers, including Theuderic, began a new campaign, advancing to the Isère Valley. But on 25 June 524, they suffered a serious defeat at the Battle of Vézeronce, and Chlodomer was killed. The Franks left Burgundy, and Godomar resumed his rule until 534.[4]

      Marriage with Guntheuc

      Radegonde's wedding, depiction of her praying, and prostrate in the marital bed
      Chlothar married Guntheuc, Queen of Orléans and widow of Chlodomer, his brother. This union gave Chlothar access to Chlodomer's treasury and ensured Guntheuc's position as sole heiress to King Godegisel lands; Frankish law allowed a woman to inherit land if she had no sons.[5]

      Marriage with Aregund
      Chlothar's wife Ingund requested that he find a husband worthy of her sister, Aregund. Finding no one suitable, Chlothar took Aregund as one of his own wives. The year was c. 533–538. She remained his wife until the death of her sister, Ingund, in 546, after which she fell out of favor with Chlothar.[6]

      Thuringian conquest
      In 531 Hermanafrid, king of the Thuringians, promised to give Chlothar's half-brother, Theuderic, part of the Kingdom of Thuringia if he would help to depose Baderic, Hermanafrid's rival and brother. Theuderic accepted. However, having been injured after a victory, he appealed to Chlothar to continue the war. Hermanafrid died around this time, and the goal became simply to conquer Thuringia.

      The alliance, along with the aid of his nephew Theudebert I, conquered Thuringia, and it became a part of the Frankish domain. During the division of the spoils, Chlothar and Theuderic argued fiercely over the hand of Princess Radegund, but eventually Chlothar won the dispute on the grounds that it had been his men who had captured her.[7]

      Princess Radegund

      Radegund is brought before Chlothar
      In 538, Radegund was brought to Soissons to marry Chlothar, as "not illegitimate but legitimate queen," who could help consolidate his dominance over Thuringia.

      While her title and status were necessary for Chlothar to attain authority over Thuringia, Radegund remained in simple clothing and was not treated in the customary manner of a queen. This was largely due to her Christian faith; she did not want to appear luxurious.

      Radegund did not eat to excess. She insisted that much of her food be given to the poor. She spent most of her time praying and singing psalms but spent very little time with the king. Her allegiance was to God first and to Chlothar second. Chlothar became irritated and had many disputes with her.[8]

      She retired to a convent and went on to found the abbey in Poitiers St. Croix, the first nunnery in Europe. She was canonized Saint Radegund.[9]

      Acquisition of the kingdom of Orléans
      Chlothar was the chief instigator in the murder of his brother Chlodomer's children in 524, and his share of the spoils consisted of the cities of Tours and Poitiers. Chlothar's brother, Chlodomer was killed on 25 June 524 during an expedition against the Burgundians at the Battle of Vezeronce. Upon Chlodomer's death, his three sons, Theodebald, Gunther, and Clodoald, were entrusted to care of their grandmother, hence the young princes were raised in Paris by Chlodomer's mother, Chlotilde.

      To prevent the kingdom of Orleans from returning to his nephews, Chlothar joined with his brother Childebert in 532 to threaten the young heirs with death unless they agreed to join a monastery. They sent Arcadius, grandson of Sidonius Apollinaris, to their mother, Clotilde, with a pair of scissors and a sword. He gave the queen an ultimatum: the boys could either live as monks or die.

      Germanic traditions gave Queen Clotilde, as the mother, the right as head of her household. However, among kings the lineage passed to younger brothers before it passed to the next generation. Due to tribal politics, shearing of the boys' hair could lead to a civil war; long hair was a symbol of Frankish royalty, and to remove it was considered a grave insult. But Theodebald, Gunthar, and Clodoald could someday lay claim to the throne, and it was Chlothar and Childebert's duty to pass authority on to them.

      Clotilde was disgusted and shocked at the demands relayed by Arcadius and stated that she would rather see her sons dead than see their hair shorn.[10]

      Assassination of Thibaut and Gunthar
      The two uncles went through with their plan to murder the children. Chlothar stabbed Theodebald in the armpit. Gunthar threw himself at the feet of Childebert, who began to cry and almost gave in to the pleas of his nephew. Chlothar, however, demanded that Childebert carry through with the murder, stating that it was the only way to consolidate power. Childebert gave Gunthar up to Chlothar, who stabbed him.[11] Theodebald and Gunthar were ten and seven years old respectively.

      Clodoald remained alive by managing to escape, hidden by loyal supporters. He renounced all claims and chose a monastic life. Childebert and Chlothar could then freely share their acquired territory. Meanwhile, Theuderic captured a parcel consisting of Auxerrois, Berry and Sens.

      Second Burgundian war
      In 532, Childebert and Chlothar seized Autun. They hunted for Godomar III, brother of Sigismund, with the help of his father and ally, the king of the Ostrogoths Theoderic the Great.

      The death of Athalaric, the grandson and successor of Theodoric the Great, in 534 generated a succession crisis in the Ostrogothic kingdom, the Burgundian ally. Chlothar, Theudebert, and Childebert took the opportunity to invade the Burgundian kingdom, now devoid of Ostrogothic protection. The Burgundian kingdom was overtaken and divided between the three Frankish rulers. Chlothar received Grenoble, Die and many of the neighbouring cities.[12]

      First Visigoth war

      Imagined Bust of Chlothar on coin minted by Louis XVIII
      Over the years, the Spanish Visigoths had made many incursions into Frankish territories and had taken lands. Clovis had retrieved them and even made further conquests of Gothic territories. Chlothar sent his eldest sons to reclaim lost territories. Although there was some success, for some unknown reason Gunthar, his second eldest, ended his campaign and returned home. Theudebert, the eldest, continued the war and took the strongholds of Dio-et-Valquières and Cabrières. Most of the lost Frankish lands were recovered.[13]

      Civil war
      Chlothar attempted to take advantage of Theuderic's illness during this time, trying to attain his kingdom with the help of Childebert. However Theudebert, who was busy securing Arles, rushed back to his father Theuderic's aid. Theuderic died a few days later. And Theudebert, supported by his vassals, managed to keep his kingdom and restrained his uncles from taking over.

      Childebert and Theudebert joined forces and declared war on Chlothar. They initially defeated him, forcing him to take refuge in a forest for protection against the alliance. While Chlothar was besieged, a storm ravaged equipment, roads, and horses and disorganized the allied army. Childebert and Theudebert were forced to abandon the siege and make peace with Chlothar.[14]

      Ceding of Provence
      In 537, a conflict broke out between the Eastern Roman Empire and the Ostrogothic kingdom. To ensure Frankish neutrality in the conflict, King Vitiges offered Provence, which the Frankish Kings shared between them, along with the northern Alps with sovereignty over the Alemanni, by grabbing the upper Rhine valley, Main, and high Danube.[15] When the Ostrogoths ceded Provence to the Franks, he received the cities of Orange, Carpentras, and Gap.

      Second Visigoth war
      In spring 542, Childebert and Chlothar, accompanied by three of his sons, led an army into Visigoth Hispania. They seized Pamplona and Zaragoza but were finally forced to abandon after conquering most of the country. Since most of the king's army was still with Theudis and there was still enough power to be shown, they were ceded some major lands beyond the Pyrénées, although not as much as they had occupied.[13]

      Tuscan tribute
      The murder of Amalasuntha, the daughter of Theodoric the Great, and of Audofleda, sister of Clovis I, at the hands of King Theodahad of Tuscany caused Chlothar to threaten invasion if he did not receive a payment. The agreement that averted the war was for the Tuscan king to offer gold and land. However, Childebert and Theudebert cheated Chlothar, Childebert taking the money and Theudebert the land that Theodahad's successor, Vitiges turned over.[16] Chlothar's treasury was still much larger than either Childebert's or Theudebert's.

      Death of Clotilde

      Frankish Realm in 548
      On 3 June 548, Clotilde, Chlothar's mother, died in the city of Tours. Chlothar and his brother Childebert transported her body by funeral procession to the Basilica of St. Apostles to be buried alongside her husband, Clovis I, and St. Genevieve.

      Acquisition of Metz
      Theudebald, Chlothar's great-nephew and the grandson of the late Theuderic, died childless in 555. So Chlothar immediately went to Metz to take possession of the kingdom from his late nephew, but under Salic Law he had to share it with his brother. So he married Vuldetrade, Theudebald's widow and the daughter of the Lombard king Wacho. This ensured the smooth succession to the kingdom of Metz, as well as an alliance with the Lombards, established since the reign of Theudebert. But the bishops condemned this incestuous marriage and forced Chlothar to divorce her. They gave her in marriage to the Bavarian Duke Garibald. To compensate for the breakdown of the marriage with Vuldetrade (Waldrada), Chlothar gave Chlothsind, his daughter, to the Lombard prince and future king, Alboin. Condat the Domesticus, great administrator of the palace of King Theudebald, retained his position after the annexation of the kingdom of Metz.[17]

      Saxon war
      In 555, Chlothar attacked and conquered the Saxons, who had revolted, in the upper valley of the Weser, Elbe, and the coast of the North Sea. As a submission, Chlothar required them to pay a substantial annual tribute and for some time exacted from the Saxons an annual tribute of 500 cows.[18]

      Between 555 and 556, the Saxons revolted again, perhaps instigated by Childebert. Faced with the Saxon revolt and threat of a massacre, Chlothar preferred peace talks. He offered to forego battle if they would accept his demand to continue to pay him tribute, despite a previous rejection. But his men, aggressive, eager for battle, contested the decision. Talks were cut short when the soldiers forced him, with insults and death threats, to take on the Saxons. After an incredibly bloody battle, the Saxons and Franks made peace.[19]

      Frankish Real from 556–560
      Submission of Auvergne
      Auvergne, a once prosperous Roman province, which had resisted the Visigoths and Franks, had hoped they could avoid destruction by offering their loyalty. Theuderic had devastated much of the land, and Theudebert pacified the land by marrying a Gallo-Roman woman of Senatorial descent. In anticipation of the death of Theodebald, Chlothar sent his son Chram to take possession of the area. In time, Chram came to control a larger area and desired to break away from his father entirely. To achieve this, he joined politically with Childebert who encouraged his dissent. In time his influence was expanded over Poitiers, Tours, Limoges, Clermont, Bourges, Le Puy, Javols, Rodez, Cahors, Albi, and Toulouse.[20]

      War with Chram
      Chlothar again engaged in war with the Saxons. He sent his sons Charibert and Guntram to lead an army against Chram. They marched to Auvergne and Limoges and finally found Chram in Saint-Georges-Nigremont. Their armies met at the foot of a "black mountain" where they demanded that Chram relinquish land belonging to their father. He refused, but a storm prevented the battle. Chram sent a messenger to his half-brothers, falsely informing them of the death of Chlothar at the hand of the Saxons. Charibert and Guntram immediately marched to Burgundy. The rumor that Chlothar had died in Saxony spread throughout Gaul, even reaching the ears of Childebert. It is possible that Childebert was behind the rumor as well. Chram then took the opportunity to extend his influence to Chalon-sur-Saône. He besieged the city and won. Chram married Chalda, daughter of Wiliachaire (Willacharius), Count of Orléans, which was under Childebert's authority.[21]

      Unification of all Francia

      The Death of Chramn, in a 16th-century miniature
      On 23 December 558, Childebert died childless after a long illness. This allowed Chlothar to reunite the Greater Frankish Kingdom, as his father Clovis had done, and seize the treasure of his brother.[22]

      The news of Childebert's death had caused many kingdoms to unify under Chlothar. Paris, which had fought against him, submitted to his rule. Chram therefore called on the Bretons to allow him refuge. He had made such an agreement with his father-in-law Willacharius, Count of Orléans, although he was currently taking refuge himself in the Basilica of St. Martin of Tours. He[who?] was caught and subsequently burned "for the sins of the people and the scandals that were perpetrated by Wiliachaire and his wife." Chlothar then restored the Basilica.[22]

      Between 1 September and 31 August 559, with the help of the Bretons, Chram plundered and destroyed a large number of places belonging to his father. Chlothar, accompanied by his son Chilperic, advanced to Domnonée and arrived there in November or December of 560. During the battle, located near the coast, Conomor was defeated and killed when he attempted to flee. Conomor owned land on both sides of the Channel, and Chram perhaps intended to flee from Chlothar to take refuge in England with the support of Conomor. Chram fled for the sea, but first attempted to rescue his wife and daughters. He was then captured and immediately sentenced to death. He and his wife and daughters were locked in a shack and were strangled and burned.[23] Overwhelmed with remorse, Clothar went to Tours to implore forgiveness at the tomb of St Martin and died shortly afterwards at the royal palace at Compiègne.

      Relations with the church
      In 561 Chlothar attempted to raise taxes on churches, despite the exemption granted by Roman law which had been routinely confirmed by past kings. Indeed, Childeric I had granted immunities to ecclesiastics. The Bishop of Tours, Injuriosus refused, left his diocese, and abandoned Chlothar. At the death of the bishop, the king replaced him with a member of his household named Baudin. Similarly, he exiled the bishop of Trier, Nizier, because of its inflexibility on canon law. Thus the tax on churches held.

      Ingund and Chlothar made many additions to churches, including the decorations of the tomb of Saint-Germain Auxerre; the basilica are preserved with a given royal chalice.

      Death
      At the end of his reign, the Frankish kingdom was at its peak, covering the whole of Gaul (except Septimania) and part of present-day Germany. He died at the end of 561 of acute pneumonia at the age of 64, leaving his kingdom to his four sons. They went to bury him at Soissons in the Basilica of St. Marie, where he had started to build the tomb of St. Médard.[24]

      Succession
      Charibert received the ancient kingdom of Childebert I, between the Somme and Pyrénées, with Paris as its capital, and including the Paris Basin, Aquitaine and Provence.
      Guntram received Burgundy with a part of the Kingdom of Orléans, where he established his capital.
      Sigebert received the Kingdom of Metz with its capital Reims and Metz.
      Chilperic received the territories north of the Kingdom of Soissons.[25]
      Female monasticism
      Chlothar financed the construction of the monastery of Sainte-Croix in Poitiers, which folds Radegund. He transferred reliquaries that the queen had accumulated during her stay with the king to the monastery of St. Croix.

      Family
      "Blithilde" redirects here. It is not to be confused with Bilichild.
      According to Gregory of Tours, "The King Chlothar had seven sons of various women, namely: with Ingund he had Gunthar, Childeric, Charibert, Guntram, Sigebert, and a daughter named Chlothsind; of Aregund, sister of Ingund he had Chilperic; and of Chunsine he had Chram."

      Breakup of the Frankish Kingdoms upon Chlothar's death in 561
      Chlothar's first marriage was to Guntheuc, widow of his brother Chlodomer, sometime around 524. They had no children. His second marriage, which occurred around 532, was to Radegund, daughter of Bertachar, King of Thuringia, whom he and his brother Theuderic defeated.[26] She was later canonized. They also had no children. His third and most successful marriage was to Ingund,[27] by whom he had five sons and two daughters:

      Gunthar, predeceased father
      Childeric, predeceased father
      Charibert, King of Paris
      Guntram, King of Burgundy
      Sigebert, King of Austrasia
      Chlothsind, married Alboin, King of the Lombards
      He likely had an illegitimate son named Gondovald with an unnamed woman, born sometime in the late 540s or early 550s. Since Chlothar had sown children all throughout Gaul this was not unlikely. The boy was given a literary education and allowed to grow his hair long, a symbol of belonging to royalty. Although Chlothar would offer no more aid or privilege to the boy, his mother took him to the court of Childebert, who recognized him as his nephew and agreed to keep him in court.

      His next marriage was to a sister of Ingund, Aregund, with whom he had a son, Chilperic, King of Soissons.[27] His last wife was Chunsina (or Chunsine), with whom he had one son, Chram,[28] who became his father's enemy and predeceased him. Chlothar may have married and repudiated Waldrada.

      A false genealogy found in the Brabant trophies, made in the ninth century during the reign of Charles the Bald, invents a daughter of Chlothar's named Blithilde who supposedly married the saint and bishop Ansbert of Rouen, who was himself alleged to be son of Ironwood III. The Duke Arnoald, father of Arnulf of Metz, was said to have been born of this marriage, thus connecting the Merovingian and Carolingian dynasties and creating the appearance that the Carolingian ruled by right of inheritance. It also linked them to the Romans by their affiliation with the senatorial family Ferreoli.

      Notes

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      http://fmg.ac/

    6. [S788] WORLD: Wikipedia.
      https://www.wikipedia.org/

    7. [S787] WORLD: GENi.
      https://www.geni.com/

    8. [S1944] WORLD: Public Member Trees.
      https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/1030/

    9. [S790] WORLD: Family Search, Ancestral File.
      https://www.familysearch.org/search/genealogies