The following is a list of the 'Kings of
Burgundy'.
Kings of the Burgundians
The
Burgundians had left
Bornholm c.
300 and settled near the
Vistula.
Jordanes relates that in this area they were thoroughly defeated by the
Gepids in the
4th century and then moved to the
Rhineland.
★
Gebicca (late
4th century – c.
407)
★
Gundomar I (c.407 –
411), son of Gebicca
★
Giselher (c.407 –
411), son of Gebicca
★
Gunther (c.407 –
436), son of Gebicca
''
Flavius Aëtius moves the Burgundians into Sapaudia (
Upper Rhône Basin)''.
★
Gunderic/Gundioc (
436–
473) opposed by
★
★
Chilperic I, brother of Gundioc (
443–c.
480)
★ division of the kingdom among the four sons of Gundioc:
★
★
Gundobad (473–
516 in Lyon, king of all of Burgundy from 480),
★
★
Chilperic II (473–
493 in Valence)
★
★
Gundomar/Godomar (473–
486 in Vienne)
★
★
Godegisel (473–
500, in Vienne and Geneva)
★
Sigismund, son of Gundobad (
516–
523)
★
Godomar or Gundimar, son of Gundobad (
523–
532)
Burgundy under Frankish Kings
''Gradually conquered by the Frankish kings
Childebert I and
Clothar I from
532 –
534''
Merovingian Kings
★
Childebert I,
534–
558 (central parts)
★
Theudebert I,
534–
548 (northern parts)
★
Chlothar I,
534–
561 (southern parts), eventually uniting the entire kingdom
★
Guntram (
561–
592)
★
Childebert II,
592–
595
★
Theuderic II,
595–
613
''United with
Neustria under one king, but with separate administration (
613–
751)''
Carolingian Kings
★
Pippin the Younger,
751–
768
★
Carloman,
768–
771
★
Charlemagne,
771–
814
★
Louis the Pious,
814–
840
★
Lothar I,
840–
855, king under his father since
817
''The sons of
Louis the Pious divided the Frankish kingdom in the treaty of
Verdun in
843. Burgundy was divided between the brothers
★
Charles the Bald, who received the smaller part, west of the river
Saone. This entity was officially called ''regnum burgundiae'' (kingdom of Burgundy), but since the King of France delegated administrations to Dukes, the territory became known as the '
Duchy of Burgundy' or
Bourgogne.
★
Lothair I received the larger part, east of the river
Saone, which retained the name of 'Kingdom of Burgundy'
After Lothar's death in
855, his realm was divided between his sons. The Burgundian territories were divided between:
★
Lothair II, who received the northern parts.
★
Charles, who received the southern parts including
Provence,
Lyon and
Vienne. His realm was called the ''regnum provinciae'' (kingdom of Provence).
For the 'kings of Provence' before its union with the rest of Burgundy, see the '
list of dukes, kings, counts, and margraves of Provence'.
Kingdom of Upper Burgundy
★
Lothar II,
855–
869
Lothar subsumed his portion of Burgundy into the Kingdom of
Lotharingia and at his brother
Charles' death, gained some northern districts of the deceased's kingdom. When
Lothar II died in
869, his realm was divided between his uncles
Charles the Bald and
Louis the German in the
Treaty of Mersen.
When Emperor
Charles the Fat, who until
884 had reunited all Frankish kingdoms except for
kingdom of Provence, died in
888, the nobles and leading clergy of Upper Burgundy assembled at St Maurice and elected
Rudolph, count of Auxerre, from the
Elder Welf family, as king. At first, he tried to reunite the realm of
Lothar II, but opposition by
Arnulf of Carinthia forced him to focus on his Burgundian territory.
★
Rudolf I (
888–
912)
★
Rudolf II (
912–
937)
''In
933 Rudolph ceded his claims to the kingdom of Italy to
Hugh of Arles and in return gained the kingdom of Provence, thus reuniting the two territories.''
★
Conrad I (
937–
993)
★
Rudolph III (
993–
1032)
''In
1032 the kingdom of Burgundy was incorporated into the Holy Roman Empire as a third kingdom, with the King of Germany or Emperor as King of Burgundy.
Kingdom of Burgundy (Arelat) as part of the Holy Roman Empire
Salian (Frankish) Dynasty
★
Conrad II, king 1032-1039, emperor since 1027
★
Henry III, king 1039, emperor 1046-1056
★
Henry IV, king 1056, emperor 1084-1105
★
Henry V, king 1105-1125, emperor 1111-1125
Supplinburger
★
Lothar III, king 1125-1137, emperor 1133-1137
=== Staufen (or
Hohenstaufen dynasty) ===
★
Conrad III, king 1138-1152
★
Frederick I Barbarossa, king 1152, emperor 1155-1190
★
Henry VI, king 1190, emperor 1191-1197
★
Philip of Swabia, rival king 1198-1208
★
Otto IV of Brunswick (House of
Welf), rival king 1208-1215, emperor 1209-1215
★
Frederick II, king 1212, emperor 1220-1250
★
Conrad IV, king 1237-1254 (until 1250 under his father)
Rectorate of Burgundy
Under the kings
Conrad I and
Rudolph III, royal power had weakened while local nobles, such as the
Counts of Burgundy, had gained prominence.
After the early death of Emperor
Henry III, his widow
Agnes of Poitou acted as Regent for his young son
Henry IV. She made
Rudolf von Rheinfeld duke of
Swabia and also conferred on him the regal powers over Burgundy. However, when Rudolf was elected
anti-king, Roman king
Henry IV in
1079 stripped him of his powers and delegated them to the
Prince-bishops of Lausanne and Sitten (both in present Switzerland).
When
William III, count of Burgundy was assassinated in February
1127, King
Lothar III supported the claims of William's uncle Duke
Conrad of Zähringen, grandson of
Rudolf von Rheinfeld to the countship and conferred on him the regal powers over Burgundy.
Lacking a proper title, the
Zähringer called themselves ''dukes and rectors of Burgundy'', in order to gain the status of dukes of Burgundy. The royal chancellory however consistently avoided this term and the effective power of the ''
rector'' (in Roman law, a generic term for provincial governor) was restricted to the possessions of the Zähringer east of the Jura.
Any attempts to enforce the Zähringer's claims and to extend royal authority into the western and southern parts of the kingdom failed, most notably a military campaign in
1153. After these failures, Emperor
Frederick I Barbarossa, gained a firm hold of the western districts in
1156 by marrying
Beatrix, heiress to the
countship of Burgundy.
This success permanently confined the Zähringer between Jura and Alps, where they used their regal powers to expand their possessions. In
1218,
Berthold V of Zähringen died without issue.
After this, King
Frederick II conferred the title of the ''rector of Burgundy'' on his young son
Henry, in order to keep the heirs of Zähringer possessions away from the regal powers associated with that title. This appointment was only of momentary importance and after Henry had been elected
king of Germany in April
1220, the title disappeared for good. Also, the decline of royal power inside the
kingdom of Burgundy remained irreversible.
See also
★
Burgundy
★
Kingdom of Burgundy
★
King of Burgundy
★
Duchy of Burgundy
★
Duke of Burgundy
★
County of Burgundy
★
Count of Burgundy
★
Dukes of Burgundy family tree