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  1. Gerberga, Queen of Italy. Gerberga, Otto-William 's mother [1] (c. 947 [2] – 986/91), was, by her successive marriages, queen of Italy (c. 958 – 963), margravine of Ivrea (965–970), and duchess of Burgundy (971/5–986/91). Ancestry [ edit] There has been some debate about Gerberga's ancestry.

  2. Queen of Italy (regina Italiae in Latin and regina d'Italia in Italian) is a title adopted by many spouses of the rulers of the Italian peninsula after the fall of the Roman Empire. The details of where and how the ruling kings ruled are in the article about them.

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    Family

    Gerberga was born c. 913. She was the second daughter of Henry the Fowler, King of Germany, and his second wife, Matilda. Her older brother was Otto I of Germany.

    First marriage

    In 929, Gerberga married her first husband, Gilbert, Duke of Lorraine.They had four children: 1. Alberade of Lorraine (b. about 929); married Renaud of Roucy, a Viking chieftain who became the Count of Roucy. 2. Henry, Duke of Lorraine (b. about 932). 3. Gerberge of Lorraine (b. about 935); married Adalbert I of Vermandois. 4. Wiltrude (b. about 937). Jocundus, a Lotharingian chronicler writing in the 1070s, recorded that Gerberga was the driving force behind Gilbert's decision to support her...

    Second marriage

    When Gilbert died, Gerberga was about 26 years old. She married secondly Louis IV of France in 939.They were parents to eight children: 1. Lothair of France(941–986). 2. Matilda (b. about 943); married Conrad of Burgundy. 3. Hildegarde (b. about 944). 4. Carloman (b. about 945). 5. Louis (b. about 948). 6. Charles, Duke of Lower Lorraine(953–993). 7. Alberade (b. before 953). 8. Henry (b. about 953).

    Bouchard, Constance Brittain, Those of My Blood: Constructing Noble Families in Medieval Francia(University of Pennsylvania Press, 2001).
    Guenée, Bernard (1978). "Les généalogies entre l'histoire et la politique: la fierté d'être Capétien, en France, au Moyen Age". Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales (in French). 33e Année, No. 3 (M...
    Jocundus, Translatio sancti Servatii Tungrensis episcopi et miracula, ed. R. Koepke, MGH SS 12 (Hannover, 1856), accessible online at: Monumenta Germaniae Historica
    Eduard Hlawitschka (1964), "Gerberga", Neue Deutsche Biographie (in German), vol. 6, Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 256–257; (full text online) (in German)
  3. This chapter discusses the career of Gerberga, a sister of Otto I who married the West Frankish (‘French’) king Louis IV in 939. It begins with a discussion of the internal conflicts over the Ottonian succession after 936, which provoked rebellions and an invasion across the Rhine by the Carolingian Louis IV.

  4. 5 lug 2022 · Gerberga of Burgundy (c. 965/966 – 7 July 1018/1019) was a member of the Elder House of Welf. She was married firstly to Herman I, count of Werl and secondly to Herman II, Duke of Swabia. Gerberga was born in Arles.

    • Burgundy
    • Burgundy, France
    • circa 965
  5. Gerbergas queenly status was asserted at particularly tense moments, and this is analysed in charter and textile evidence. The conclusion is that Gerberga’s career is only understandable as a product of the peculiar circumstances of the early to mid-tenth century.

  6. Gerberga was a Saxon princess, the daughter of Henry the Fowler of Germany and Matilda of Saxony. At age 19, she married Duke Giselbert of Lotharingia, but was widowed only two years later. She then married Louis IV of France as part of an alliance between the French monarch and her father.