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Childeric III (died about 754), called either the Idiot or the Phantom King, king of the Franks, was the fourteenth and last king of the Merovingian dynasty.

The throne had been vacant for seven years when the mayors of the palace, Carloman and Pepin the Short, decided in 743 to recognize Childeric as king. Neither his parentage nor his relation to the Merovingian family are known for sure. He may have been the son of Chilperic II.

He took no part in public business, which was directed, as previously, by the mayors of the palace. When, in 747, Carloman retired into a monastery, Pepin resolved to take the royal crown for himself. Pepin sent letters to Pope Zachary, asking whether the title of king belonged to the one who had exercised the power or the one with the royal lineage. The pope responded that the real power should have the royal title as well. In 751, Childeric was dethroned and tonsured, deposit et detonsit, on the orders of Zachary's successor, Stephen II, because, according to Einhard, quia non erat utilis, "he was not useful." His long hair was the symbol of his dynasty and thus the royal rights (some say magical powers), by cutting it, they divested him of all royal prerogatives. In 752, he and his son Theuderic were placed in the monastery of Saint-Bertin, though some say he in Saint-Omer and Theuderic in Saint-Wandrille. He died about four years later. Under the Carolingians, he received bad press, being called a rex falsus, false king, despite the fact that it was Pepin who raised him to his throne.

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See also


750s deaths | Frankish kings

Childerich III. | Childerico III | Childéric III | Childerico III | Childeric III | Childerik III | Childeryk III | Childerico III | Childerik III

 

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