'Louis VI' (
1 December 1081 –
1 August 1137), called 'the Fat' (), was
King of France from
1108 until his death (
1137). Chronicles called him "roi de Saint-Denis". The first member of the
House of Capet to make a lasting contribution to the centralizing institutions of royal power,
[1] Louis was born in
Paris, the son of
Philip I and his first wife,
Bertha of Holland. Almost all of his twenty-nine-year reign was spent fighting either the "
robber barons" who plagued Paris or the Norman kings of England for their continental possession of Normandy. Nonetheless, Louis VI managed to reinforce his power considerably and became one of the first strong kings of France since the division of the
Carolingian Empire. His biography by his constant advisor
Abbot Suger of Saint Denis renders him a fully-rounded character to the historian, unlike most of his predecessors.
In his youth, Louis fought the
duke of Normandy,
Robert Curthose, and the lords of the
royal demesne, the
ÃŽle de France. He became close to Suger, who became his adviser. He succeeded his father on Philip's death on
July 29,
1108. Louis's half-brother prevented him from reaching
Rheims and so he was crowned on
August 3 in the cathedral of
Orléans. The
archbishop of Reims,
Ralph the Green, sent envoys to challenge the validity of the coronation and anointing, but to no avail.
On
Palm Sunday 1115, Louis was present in
Amiens to support the bishop and inhabitants of the city in their conflict with
Enguerrand I of Coucy, one of his vassals, who refused to recognize the granting of a charter of communal privileges. Louis came with an army to help the citizens to besiege
Castillon (the fortress dominating the city, from which Enguerrand was making punitive expeditions). At the siege, the king took an arrow to his
hauberk, but the castle, considered impregnable, fell after two years.
Louis VI died on
August 1,
1137, at the castle of
Béthisy-Saint-Pierre, nearby
Senlis and
Compiègne, of
dysentery caused by his excesses, which had made him obese. He was interred in
Saint Denis Basilica. He was succeeded on the throne by his son
Louis VII, called "the Younger," who had originally wanted to be a monk.
Descendents include
Winston Churchill,
George Washington and
Lady Diana.
Ancestors
Marriages and children
He married in 1104: 1)
Lucienne de Rochefort — the marriage was annulled.
★ 'Their child:'
★
★ 1) Isabelle (c.1105 – before 1175), married (''ca'' 1119) William of Vermandois, seigneur of Chaumont
He married in 1115: 2)
Adélaide de Maurienne (
1092–
1154)
★ 'Their children: '
★
★ #
Philip (
1116 –
October 13,
1131), King of France (
1129–
31), not to be confused with his brother of the same name; died from a fall from a horse.
★
★ #
Louis VII (
1120 –
November 18,
1180), King of France
★
★ #
Henry (
1121–
75),
archbishop of Reims
★
★ # Hugues (born ''ca''
1122
★
★ #
Robert (''ca''
1123 –
October 11,
1188),
count of Dreux
★
★ #
Constance (''ca''
1124 –
August 16,
1176), married first
Eustace IV,
count of Boulogne and then
Raymond V of Toulouse.
★
★ #
Philip (
1125–
61),
bishop of Paris. not to be confused with his elder brother.
★
★ #
Peter of France (''ca''
1125–
83), married Elizabeth,
lady of Courtenay
Notes
1. Norman F. Cantor, ''The Civilization of the Middle Ages'' 1993, p 410.
References
★ Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America Before 1700 by Frederick Lewis Weis, Lines: 96-28, 101-24, 117-24, 117-25, 169A-26, 274A-25
★
Suger, Abbot of Saint Denis,. ''The Deeds of Louis the Fat''. Translated with introduction and notes by Richard Cusimano and John Moorhead. Washington, DC : Catholic University of America Press,1992. (ISBN 0-8132-0758-4)
★ Suger, Abbot of Saint Denis,. ''
The Deeds of Louis the Fat''. Translated by Jean Dunbabin (this version is free, but has no annotations)