Hildegard (queen)
Template:Short description Template:Infobox royalty Hildegard (Template:Circa – 30 April 783) was a Frankish queen and the wife of Charlemagne from Template:Circa until her death. Hildegard was a noblewoman of Frankish and Alemannian heritage. Through eleven years of marriage with Charlemagne, Hildegard helped share in his rule as well as having nine children with him, including the kings Charles the Younger and Pepin of Italy and the emperor Louis the Pious.
LifeEdit
Hildegard was the daughter of the Frankish count Gerold and his wife, the Alemannian noblewoman Imma. Thegan of Trier, a ninth-century biographer of Hildegard's son Louis emphasizes her Alemannian heritage and descent from duke Gotfrid through her mother, indicating that Imma was of higher status than Gerold.Template:Sfn Hildegard was likely born in 757 or 758.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Gerold held lands in the vicinity of the Middle Rhine under the Frankish king Carloman I.Template:Sfn Carloman died on 4 December 771 and his brother king Charlemagne sought to bring Carloman's lands under his rule. Charlemagne arranged to marry Hildegard and gain Gerold's support.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Hildegard married Charlemagne shortly after Carloman's death, certainly before 30 April 772.Template:Sfn She was thirteen or fourteen years old at the time of the marriage.Template:Sfn By marrying Hildegard, Charlemagne ended his marriage to a daughter of the Lombard king Desiderius.Template:Sfn Charlemagne had also had a previous relationship (perhaps a marriage) with the Frankish noblewoman Himiltrude, and had a son with her named Pepin.Template:Sfn As queen, Hildegard would have been responsible for administering the royal household and estates.Template:Sfn She also joined her husband as the co-signer of charters, including grants of patronage to monasteries.<ref>Klaus Schreiner: "Hildegardis regina". Wirklichkeit und Legende einer karolingischen Herrscherin, in: Archiv für Kulturgeschichte 57 (1975), p. 8.</ref>
Charlemagne took Hildegard to the Frankish royal palace at Thionville, where they stayed for two months before he set off on a campaign in Saxony.Template:Sfn At the end of the campaigning season, Charlemagne returned to Thionville, and during this period the couple's son Charles was born.Template:Sfn At Thionville, Charlemagne received an emissary from Pope Adrian I who was seeking his help against Desiderius.Template:Sfn Charlemagne, heeding the Pope's call for aid, invaded Lombardy in late 773 and besieged the Lombard capital of Pavia.Template:Sfn In early 774, Charlemagne sent for Hildegard to travel to the Frankish camp at Pavia with Pippin and Charles. Hildegard was heavily pregnant, and gave birth to a daughter named Adelhaid during the siege. They sent the baby back north to Francia for safety, but she died on the way.Template:Sfn By June, Charlemagne conquered the city, deposed Desiderius and his wife Ansa, and named himself king of the Lombards.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Charlemagne and Hildegard likely went through a ritual installation as the new king and queen in Pavia (though no direct source exists),Template:Sfn and a charter issued in Lombardy in July was a grant of Lombard land to the Abbey of St. Martin made in both of their names.Template:Sfn
The royal family returned to Francia later in the summer of 774.Template:Sfn The next year, as Charlemagne campaigned in Saxony, Hildegard gave birth to their daughter Rotrude.Template:Sfn Their next child was Carloman, born in 777.Template:Sfn In 778, Hildegard traveled with Charlemagne to Chasseneuil-du-Poitou, where he was amassing his army for a campaign in Spain.Template:Sfn Hildegard was pregnant when they arrived, and gave birth to twin boys, Louis and Lothair, while Charlemagne was on campaign.Template:Sfn Lothair died in 780 at the age of two,Template:Sfn the same year Hildegard gave birth to another daughter, Bertha.Template:Sfn
In 781, Charlemagne and Hildegard traveled to Rome with Louis, Carloman, and their daughters at Pope Adrian's request.Template:Sfn Carloman was four years old, but his parents had delayed his baptism so that the Pope could perform it.Template:Sfn Carloman was baptized, and Adrian then crowned him as king of the Lombards (later styled king of Italy) and Louis as king of Aquitaine.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn As part of Carloman's baptism, he was renamed Pepin, now sharing a name with his half-brother.Template:Sfn The two new kings, still young children, were sent to their new kingdoms to be raised by regents and advisors in their own courts.Template:Sfn On this trip to Italy, Hildegard also gave birth to her third daughter, Gisela, and she was baptized in Milan.Template:Sfn Around this time, Hildegard and Charlemagne jointly commissioned the Godescalc Evangelistary, a surviving illuminated manuscript of the Gospels and exemplary piece of Carolingian Renaissance art.Template:Sfn
Hildegard had her final pregnancy in 782–783, and she and Charlemagne stayed in the palace at Thionville during that winter. Hildegard gave birth to another daughter in late April, but died shortly after on 30 April 783, possibly due to complications from the birth. The baby was named in her mother's honor, but also died less than two months later. Hildegard was buried at the Abbey of Saint-Arnould at Metz, and Charlemagne arranged for her tomb to be perpetually lit and for daily masses to be said there, as well as commissioning an epitaph in her honor from his courtier Paul the Deacon.Template:Sfn
ChildrenEdit
In her marriage to Charlemagne, Hildegard had nine children:Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn
- Charles the Younger (Template:Circa–811), Duke of Maine and king under CharlemagneTemplate:Sfn
- Adalhaid (773/4–774), born while her parents were on campaign in Italy. She was sent back to Francia, but died before reaching Lyons.Template:Sfn
- Rotrude (or Hruodrud) (Template:Circa–810)
- Carloman, renamed Pepin (777–810), King of Italy
- Louis (778–840), King of Aquitaine and Emperor
- Lothair (778–779/780), twin of Louis, he died in infancyTemplate:Sfn
- Bertha (779/780–826)
- Gisela (b. 782)
- Hildegard (782–783)
Louis and Pepin both married and had children.Template:Sfn Rotrude had been betrothed to Emperor Constantine VI, but this betrothal was ended.Template:Sfn None of Hildegard's daughters married, though several had children with unmarried partners: Bertha had two sons, Nithard and Hartnid with Charlemagne's courtier Angilbert; and Rotrude had a son named Louis possibly with Count Rorgon.Template:Sfn
See alsoEdit
- Princely Abbey of Kempten – financially and politically supported by Hildegard
ReferencesEdit
BibliographyEdit
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