The Children of Adam and Eve

WHOSYERDAD-E Who's Your Daddy?
Wikigenealogy

Lothair I Holy Roman Emperor, 795855 (aged 60 years)

Name
Lothair I // Holy Roman Emperor
Given names
Lothair I
Name suffix
Holy Roman Emperor
Family with parents
father
Louis the Pious, contemporary depiction from 826 as a miles Christi (soldier of Christ), with a poem of Rabanus Maurus overlaid.
778840
Birth: August 778 36 20 Chasseneuil, Indre, Centre-Val de Loire, France
Death: 20 June 840Ingelheim, Mainz-Bingen, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany
mother
Marriage Marriage794
2 years
himself
12 years
younger brother
brother
Father’s family with Judith of Bavaria
father
Louis the Pious, contemporary depiction from 826 as a miles Christi (soldier of Christ), with a poem of Rabanus Maurus overlaid.
778840
Birth: August 778 36 20 Chasseneuil, Indre, Centre-Val de Loire, France
Death: 20 June 840Ingelheim, Mainz-Bingen, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany
father’s partner
half-brother
823877
Birth: 823 44 Frankfurt, Hesse, Germany
Death: 6 October 877Avrieux, Savoie, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, France
-11 months
half-sister
Father’s family with an unknown individual
father
Louis the Pious, contemporary depiction from 826 as a miles Christi (soldier of Christ), with a poem of Rabanus Maurus overlaid.
778840
Birth: August 778 36 20 Chasseneuil, Indre, Centre-Val de Loire, France
Death: 20 June 840Ingelheim, Mainz-Bingen, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany
half-brother
Family with Ermengarde de Tours
himself
partner
son
11 years
son
Note

Lothair I (795?-855), Holy Roman emperor (840-55), and eldest son of Holy
Roman Emperor Louis I, the Pious, and grandson of Charlemagne. Lothair
became coruler with his father in 817 and was crowned by the Pope six
years later. He twice conspired with his Brothers in revolts against their
father. In 839 Lothair received the eastern part of the empire in addition
to Italy, which he had received in 822. After the Death of Louis I,
Lothair attempted to assert his power over his Brothers, but he was
defeated by them at Fontenoy, France, on June 25, 841. By the Treaty of
Verdun (843), the title of Holy Roman emperor was guaranteed to Lothair,
together with sovereignty over Italy, Burgundy, Alsace, Lorraine, and the
Low Countries. After having divided his kingdom among his three sons,
Lothair retired to a monastery. His second son, sometimes called Lothair
II (circa 835-69), reigned from 855 to 869 over the kingdom of
Lotharingia.