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- Rudolph_of_France abstract "Rudolph (also Radulf, Ralph, or Raoul) (c. 880/890 – 14/15 January 936) was the King of France from 923 until his death. Prior to his election as king, he was Duke of Burgundy and Count of Troyes from 921. He was the son of Richard, Duke of Burgundy and Adelaide of Auxerre, and inherited the Duchy of Burgundy from his father. He married Emma of France, daughter of Robert I of France. This Rudolph is frequently confused with his uncle Rudolph I of Burgundy.Rudolph was elected king of West Francia in 923 by an assembly of nobles, to succeed his father-in-law, and crowned by Walter, Archbishop of Sens, at St Médard in Soissons on Sunday, 13 July 923. On assuming the crown, he passed the Duchy of Burgundy to his younger brother, Hugh the Black, after only two years as duke. Charles III was still living and claiming the kingdom at the time, but Rudolph's brother-in-law, Herbert II, Count of Vermandois, who was married to Emma's sister, tricked Charles, a fellow Carolingian, into meeting him and took him prisoner. Rudolph's first act as king was to lead an army against Henry the Fowler, who had made a compact with King Robert at Jülich earlier in the year. Trying to annex Lorraine, the German monarch met Rudolph and a considerably-sized army and made peace again. Though, in 925, Henry attacked the waffling Gilbert, Duke of Lorraine, constantly changing sides, and wrested control of Lorraine from France permanently, Rudolph then being in no position to resist.At about this point, 924, the Vikings made a fresh series of raids into West Francia. From the Loire Valley, they threatened Hugh the Great, brother of Emma, his wife, but Rudolph did nothing. Soon they had attacked Burgundy, domain of his own brother and were repulsed, moving to Melun, where they threatened the royal demesne. Joined only by his ecclesiastic vassals and Herbert, he recruited troops in Burgundy, while Hugh the Great was convinced to join him. The Vikings left, but the Normans, whom Charles had legally implanted around Rouen in 911, began ravaging that whole region. Herbert and Arnulf I of Flanders joined him this time and they took Eu, but were ambushed near Fauquembergues and the king was wounded, the Count of Ponthieu killed, and many Normans left dead on the field. Also in that year, Rudolph conversed with Louis the Blind, king of Provence, over the Magyars, the newest migrants to Europe, then menacing Louis. In 930, the Magyars invaded the region around Rheims, but left before the king could engage them. In 935, the Magyars invaded Burgundy and Rudolph brought a large army against them, causing their retreat without battle. France was temporarily safe from both Viking and Magyar at Rudolphs's death.Herbert, however, was not to continue to be one of Rudolph's partisans. He used his royal prisoner as a bargaining tool to secure the archbishopric of Rheims for his son Hugh in 925 and the county of Laon for his other son Odo in 927. The protestations of Rudolph led Herbert to bring Charles before William Longsword, for homage and thence to Rheims to press Charles' claim on Pope John X. In 928, Herbert finally got possession of Laon, but the next year, Charles died at Péronne and Herbert lost his leverage against Rudolph. By defeating the Vikings of the Limousin, Rudolph received the allegiance of the Aquitainians and the homage of William Longsword, now duke.In 929, Rudolph started trying to reduce the power of Ebalus, Duke of Aquitaine. He withdrew from him access to Berry, then, in 932, he granted the title of prince of Gothia to the count of Toulouse, Raymond Pons, and his brother of Rouergue, Ermengol. He also transferred the title Count of Auvergne to Raymond. Moreover, the territory of the march which was under the control of the lord of Charroux was transformed into an independent county. Later, however, he was campaigning with Ebalus in the south to eradicate the last Viking strongholds there. He then proceeded aggressively against Herbert, marching into Rheims and replacing Hugh with Artald (931). Then, joined by Hugh the Great, Rudolph burned Herbert's fortresses and cornered him in Château-Thierry, where he had first imprisoned Charles, from 933 to 934. The two made peace in 935 and Rudolph fell ill, dying a few months hence on 14 or 15 January 936.".
- Rudolph_of_France activeYearsEndYear "0936".
- Rudolph_of_France activeYearsStartYear "0923".
- Rudolph_of_France deathPlace Auxerre.
- Rudolph_of_France parent Adelaide_of_Auxerre_(born_c._849).
- Rudolph_of_France parent Richard,_Duke_of_Burgundy.
- Rudolph_of_France predecessor Robert_I_of_France.
- Rudolph_of_France spouse Emma_of_France.
- Rudolph_of_France successor Louis_IV_of_France.
- Rudolph_of_France thumbnail Denier_sous_Raoul_de_France.jpg?width=300.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageID "417867".
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageLength "7705".
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageOutDegree "88".
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageRevisionID "704022983".
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Adelaide_of_Auxerre_(born_c._849).
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Adelaide_of_Tours.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Aquitaine.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Arnulf_I,_Count_of_Flanders.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Artald_of_Reims.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Auxerre.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Berry_(province).
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Bivin_of_Gorze.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Boso_the_Elder.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Bosonids.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Cambridge_University_Press.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Category:10th-century_French_people.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Category:10th-century_monarchs_in_Europe.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Category:936_deaths.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Category:Bosonids.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Category:Dukes_of_Burgundy.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Category:Kings_of_West_Francia.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Category:Roman_Catholic_monarchs.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Category:Year_of_birth_unknown.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Charles_the_Simple.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Charroux.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Château-Thierry.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Conrad_I,_Count_of_Auxerre.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Conrad_II,_Duke_of_Transjurane_Burgundy.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Count_of_Champagne.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Count_of_Ponthieu.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Count_of_Rouergue.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Count_of_Toulouse.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Duchy_of_Lorraine.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Duke_of_Burgundy.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Ebalus,_Duke_of_Aquitaine.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Emma_of_France.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Ermengol_of_Rouergue.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Eu,_Seine-Maritime.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Fauquembergues.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Gilbert,_Duke_of_Lorraine.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Henry_Melvill_Gwatkin.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Henry_the_Fowler.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Herbert_II,_Count_of_Vermandois.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink History_of_Limousin.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Hugh_of_Tours.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Hugh_of_Vermandois_(bishop).
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Hugh_the_Black.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Hugh_the_Great.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Hungarians.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink James_Pounder_Whitney.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Jülich.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Laon.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink List_of_French_monarchs.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink List_of_kings_of_Burgundy.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink List_of_rulers_of_Auvergne.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Loire_Valley.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Louis_IV_of_France.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Louis_the_Blind.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Margrave.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Medardus.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Melun.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Normans.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Pope_John_X.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Prince_of_Gothia.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Péronne,_Somme.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Raymond_Pons,_Count_of_Toulouse.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Reims.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Richard,_Duke_of_Burgundy.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Robert_I_of_France.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Roman_Catholic_Archdiocese_of_Reims.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Rouen.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Rudolph_I_of_Burgundy.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Soissons.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Style_of_the_French_sovereign.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Vikings.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Walter_(archbishop_of_Sens).
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink Welf_(father_of_Judith).
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink West_Francia.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink William_I_Longsword.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLink File:Denier_sous_Raoul_de_France.jpg.
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLinkText "King Rudolph".
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLinkText "Ralph of France".
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLinkText "Ralph".
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLinkText "Raoul".
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLinkText "Rudolf".
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLinkText "Rudolph II".
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLinkText "Rudolph of Burgundy".
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLinkText "Rudolph of France".
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLinkText "Rudolph of West Francia".
- Rudolph_of_France wikiPageWikiLinkText "Rudolph".