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Adelaide of Paris

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Name
  
Adelaide Paris


Parents
  
Adalard of Paris

Adelaide of Paris Adelaide of Paris French Queen Wife of Louis the Stammerer Antique

Tenure
  
6 October 877 – 10 April 879

Burial
  
Saint-Corneille Abbey, Compiegne, France,

Issue
  
Ermentrude of France Charles the Simple

Dynasty
  
Girardids (by birth) Carolingian (by marriage)

Father
  
Adalard of Paris, Marquis of Friuli

Died
  
November 10, 901 AD, Laon, France

Spouse
  
Louis the Stammerer (m. 875 AD)

Children
  
Charles the Simple, Ermentrude of France

Grandchildren
  
Louis IV of France, Cunigunda of France

Similar People
  
Louis the Stammerer, Charles the Bald, Charles the Simple, Ermentrude of Orleans, Eadgifu of Wessex

Medieval queens of france adelaide of paris


Adélaïde of Paris (or Aélis) (c. 850/853 – 10 November 901) was the second wife of Louis the Stammerer, King of Western Francia, and was the mother of Princess Ermentrude and King Charles the Simple.

Contents

Life

Adelaide was the daughter of the count palatine Adalard of Paris. Her maternal great-grandfather was Bégon, Count of Paris. Her great-grandmother, Alpaïs, wife of Bégon, was the illegitimate daughter of Louis the Pious by an unnamed mistress.

Adelaide was chosen by Charles the Bald, King of Western Francia, to marry his son and heir, Louis the Stammerer, despite the fact that Louis had secretly married Ansgarde of Burgundy against the wishes of his father. Although Louis and Ansgarde already had two children, Louis and Carloman, Charles prevailed upon Pope John VIII, to dissolve the union. This accomplished, Charles married his son to Adelaide in February 875.

However, the marriage was called into question because of the close blood-kinship of the pair. When on 7 September 878 the pope crowned Louis (who had succeeded his father in the previous year), the pope refused to crown Adelaide.

When Louis the Stammerer died in Compiegne on 10 April 879, Adelaide was pregnant, giving birth on 17 September 879, to Charles the Simple. The birth of this child led to a dispute between Adelaide and Ansgarde. Ansgarde and her sons accused Adelaide of adultery; Adelaide in turn disputed the right of Ansgarde's sons to inherit. Eventually, Adelaide succeeded in winning the case; but despite this, Ansgarde's sons Louis and Carloman remained kings until their deaths without heirs in 882 and 884 respectively, with the crown then being contested between Odo, Count of Paris and Charles the Fat.

Charles eventually succeeded to his father's throne in 898; his mother assisted in crowning him. She died in Laon on 10 November 901 and was buried in the Abbey of Saint-Corneille, Compiègne, Picardy.

References

Adelaide of Paris Wikipedia