Succeeded his father Louis in 840 until defeat at the battle of Fontenay (841) and the Treaty of Verdun (843) which divided Charlemagne’s empire into three: the East Frankish Kingdom (Germany) under Lewis the German; the West Frankish Kingdom (France) under Charles the Bold; and the rest (Lotharingia) under Lothair. But this peace did not last. The period 840-890 was marked by continued anarchy in the Carolingian domains. [GADD.GED]


Lothaire I (795-855), emperor of the Holy Roman empire, eldest son of Louis the Pious, on whose death (840) he claimed the title. [World Wide Illustrated Encyclopedia, 1935]


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, Bourgogne, 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, reigned from 855 to 869 over the kingdom of Lotharingia. [Microsoft Encarta 98 Encyclopedia]

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