Cunigunde Alaholfing (Countess) of SWABIA

Characteristics

Type Value Date Place Sources
name Cunigunde Alaholfing (Countess) of SWABIA
name Hicha of SWABIA
occupation Queen Consort of Eastern Francia between 913 and 918
occupation Margravine of Bavaria before 907

Events

Type Date Place Sources
death after 7. February 918
Lorsch Abbey, East Francia (now in Bergstrasse, Hessen), Germany Find persons in this place
burial after 10. February 918
Lorsch Abbey (now in Bergstrasse, Hessen), Germany Find persons in this place
birth about 873
Swabia, East Francia (now in Baden-Württemberg), Germany Find persons in this place
marriage before 890
marriage 913
East Francia (now in Germany) Find persons in this place

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Marriage ??spouse_en_US??Children
before 890
Luitpold (Margrave) of BAVARIA
913
East Francia (now in Germany)
Conrad I Franconia (King) of GERMANY

Notes for this person

Cunigunde of Swabia (c. 873 - 7 February after 918), a member of the Ahalolfing noble family, was Margravine of Bavaria until 907 by her first marriage with Margrave Luitpold and German queen (Queen of the Franks) from 913 to 918 by her second marriage with King Conrad I, the first and sole ruler of the Conradine dynasty. Life Cunigunde was the daughter of the Swabian count palatine Berchthold I. Her mother possibly was Gisela, a daughter of the Carolingian king Louis the German and his consort Emma of Altdorf. Cunigunde's brother Erchanger became Duke of Swabia in 915. Very little is known of her. She married first the Bavarian margrave Luitpold who became the ancestor of the Luitpolding dynasty. Her sons by him were Arnulf the Bad and Berthold, both ruling as Dukes of Bavaria later on. Luitpold was killed in the 907 Battle of Pressburg fighting against the Hungarian forces. According to the Annales Alamannici, Cunigunde married in 913 King Conrad I of Germany who was striving to strengthen the ties with the Bavarian stem duchy.[1] The marriage left no male heirs; two children are assumed, both born 913: Herman, who died young, and Cunigunda, who married Werner of Worms and was possibly the mother of Conrad the Red, the founder of the Salian dynasty. First mentioned as queen consort in June 914, Cunigunde apparently did not play a significant political role while her son Arnulf remained in constant conflict with the king. In 915 she chose Lorsch Abbey as her burial place. King Conrad died in December 918 after a long illness, possibly by a heavy injury during a campaign against Arnulf of Bavaria. He was succeeded by the Saxon duke Henry the Fowler. References MacLean 2017, p. 26. Sources MacLean, Simon (2017). Ottonian Queenship. Oxford University Press. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Title Borneman-Wagner, Howard-Hause, Trout-Nutting, Boyer-Stutsman Family Tree
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