Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Pepin or Pippin (born Carloman), (777 – 8 July 810) was King of Italy from 781 until his death in 810. He was the third son of Charlemagne (and his second with Queen Hildegard). Upon his baptism in 781, Carloman was renamed Pepin, where he was also crowned as king of the Lombard Kingdom his father had conquered. Pepin ruled the kingdom from a ...
Gundred or Gundreda (Latin: Gundrada) (died 27 May 1085) [1] was the Flemish-born wife of an early Norman baron, William de Warenne, 1st Earl of Surrey.
Pepin I (French: Pépin; c. 817—850) was Count of Vermandois, lord of Senlis, Péronne and Saint Quentin. He was son of King Bernard of Italy (a grandson of Charlemagne) and his wife, Cunigunda of Laon. [1] He supported Emperor Lothar after the death of Emperor Louis the Pious, despite having sworn allegiance to Charles the Bald.
Short title: The English historical review; Author: File change date and time: 04:47, 19 January 2013: Date and time of digitizing: 04:32, 19 January 2013
Pepin II (845–893) was a Frankish count. He was a son of Pepin, Count of Vermandois and Valois and thus a grandson of Bernard of Italy , who was himself a grandson of Charlemagne . [ 1 ] He was the Count of Senlis and Count of Vermandois (850 – 893); Lord of Valois (877 – 886), and later Count of Valois (886 – 893).
Bernard was a half-brother of the Frankish King Pepin the Short, and uncle to Charlemagne.He was brother to Hieronymus and Remigius of Rouen.Although they were all denied any claim in the legacy of their father, they were raised at court and accorded various honors.
Bernard (797 – 17 April 818) was the illegitimate son of Pepin of Italy. He plotted against his uncle, Emperor Louis the Pious, when the latter's Ordinatio Imperii made Bernard a vassal of his cousin Lothair. When his plot was discovered, Louis had him blinded, a procedure which killed him.
William married Gundrada, the daughter of Reginald de Warenne. Gundrada was the widow of Peter de Valognes. [2] William died in 1171. His heir was a son, William de Courcy, who died in 1194. The elder William also had a daughter, Alice, who was his eventual heiress, after the death of her brother.