The following list of Frankish Kings is one of several Wikipedia lists of incumbents.
The Frankish kingdoms were ruled by two main dynasties, the Merovingians (who established the realm) and later the Carolingians. A timeline of Frankish rulers is difficult since the realm was, according to old Germanic practice, frequently divided among the sons of a leader upon his death and then eventually reunited. For more detailed explanations, see the Franks article.
Upon Clovis' death, the kingdom was split among his four sons:
| Soissons | Paris | Orleans | Reims |
| Clotaire I 511-561 | |||
| Clotaire I 511-561 |
Clotaire (of Soissons) eventually took over the other three kingdoms after the deaths of his brothers (or their successors). After his own death, the kingdom was once again split among his four sons:
| Soissons (Neustria) | Paris | Orleans (Burgundy) | Metz (Austrasia) |
|---|---|---|---|
Clotaire II defeated Brunhilda and her offspring and reunified the kingdom. However, in 623 he created the sub-kingdom of Austrasia, in order to appease particularistic forces and also to secure the borders. His son and successor Dagobert I emulated this move by appointing sub-kings for Aquitaine in 629 and Austrasia in 634.
| Neustria & Burgundy | Aquitaine | Austrasia |
|---|---|---|
| Neustria & Burgundy | Austrasia | ||
|---|---|---|---|
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| Neustria & Burgundy | Austrasia | ||
|---|---|---|---|
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The Carolingians initially were Mayors of the Palace under Merovingian kings in the sub-kingdom of Austrasia and later in the reunited Frankish realm:
When Pippin the Younger became king, the Carolingians succeeded the Merovingian dynasty:
The Frankish kingdom was then divided with the Treaty of Verdun in 843 among the sons of Louis the Pious. The following table lists only the rulers in the three subdivisions, which are the kernels of later kingdoms France and Germany, leaving out Italy.
| West Franks (eventually France) | Lotharingia | East Franks (eventually Germany) |
|---|---|---|
Names marked * were not Carolingians, but still distantly related to the dynasty.
After this, the Capetian dynasty ruled France. For the continuation, see the list of French monarchs. |
After Lothar's death in 855, his realm was divided between his sons:
Kings of Lotharingia
Charles the Bald claimed Lotharingia at his nephew's death and was crowned king in Metz, but his brother Louis the German opposed his claim and in 870 the Treaty of Meersen divided Lotharingia between the two brothers and subsequently their sons. In 880, the Treaty of Ribemont gave the whole of Lotharingia to Louis the Younger, son of Louis the German.
After this Lotharingia was permanently subsumed into the Eastern kingdom and the Holy Roman Empire. For the continuation, see list of German monarchs. |
After this, Conrad of Franconia ruled from 911-918, and was followed by the Saxon Ottonian dynasty.These events are commonly considered the beginning of the Kingdom of Germany and the Holy Roman Empire. For the continuation, see the list of German monarchs. |
Lists of monarchs | Lists of office-holders | Franks | Early Middle Ages | Seznam franských králů | Frankiske konger | Liste der fränkischen Herrscher | Lista_de_monarcas_de_Francia | Elenco di re franchi | Frank királyok | Lijst van koningen der Franken | Liste over frankiske konger | Królowie frankijscy | Lista de reis merovíngios | Seznam frankovskih kraljev | Lista över frankiska kungar
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"List of Frankish Kings".
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