42:
370:("do-nothing kings"), puppets of their mayors. This theme has been continued in modern historiography. Some have even suggested that the Pippinids and Arnulfings followed a "long-term strategy" to seize power. Following his victory at the
382:
had taken control of both
Austrasia and Neustria. His descendants are the Carolingians proper, although some historians apply this label as far back as the marriage of Ansegisel and Begga. The descendants of Charles's brother,
349:, the earliest known designation for the family. In a strict sense, the Pippinids are the descendants of Pippin of Landen and the Arnulfings those of Arnulf of Metz. These groups only overlap via the marriage of Arnulf's son
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Since the late eighth century, the rise of the family has been depicted as the defining feature of the late
Merovingian period, with the kings portrayed as
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The names "Pippinid" and "Arnulfing" are modern conventions, reflecting the families' descent from two contemporaries,
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378:. His death in 714 was followed by years of civil war between his successors. By 718, his younger son
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Frankish aristocratic family during the
Merovingian period; founders of the Carolingian dynasty
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after 687 and eventually supplanted the
Merovingians as kings in 751, founding the
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BBC2: "From
Merovingians to Carolingians : Dynastic Change in Frankia"
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Rewriting Saints and
Ancestors: Memory and Forgetting in France, 500β1200
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Rewriting Saints and
Ancestors: Memory and Forgetting in France, 500β1200
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in 687, Pippin of
Herstal extended his influence into
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Pippin in the family led the anonymous author of the
456:(University of Pennsylvania Press, 2001), pp. 2β5.
440:(University of Pennsylvania Press, 2015), p. 112.
425:Charlemagne: The Formation of a European Identity
411:(University of Pennsylvania Press, 2015), p. 114.
476:
277:
454:Early Carolingian Warfare: Prelude to Empire
427:(Cambridge University Press, 2008), p. 57n.
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387:, on the other hand, are known as the
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335:(died 640). The recurrence of the
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316:. They dominated the office of
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226:Lothair I, Holy Roman Emperor
345:(c. 805) to call the family
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308:aristocratic families from
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526:
490:Frankish noble families
510:7th century in Francia
353:and Pippin's daughter
71:Childebert the Adopted
500:German noble families
495:French noble families
361:and his descendants.
436:Constance Bouchard,
421:Rosamond McKitterick
407:Constance Bouchard,
203:Pepin I of Aquitaine
505:Carolingian dynasty
322:Carolingian dynasty
318:mayor of the palace
185:Charles the Younger
179:Pepin the Hunchback
34:Carolingian dynasty
331:(died c. 640) and
314:Merovingian period
122:Drogo of Champagne
359:Pippin of Herstal
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16:(Redirected from
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450:Bernard Bachrach
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372:Battle of Tertry
333:Pippin of Landen
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249:Louis the German
237:Charles the Bald
218:Treaty of Verdun
110:Pepin of Herstal
104:Chlodulf of Metz
59:Pippin the Elder
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161:Pepin the Short
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255:East Francia
243:West Francia
142:Carolingians
61:(c. 580β640)
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389:Nibelungids
385:Childebrand
312:during the
173:Charlemagne
116:Grimoald II
479:Categories
395:References
302:Arnulfings
229:(795β855;
216:After the
167:Carloman I
85:Arnulfings
18:Arnulfings
485:Pippinids
351:Ansegisel
347:Pippinios
310:Austrasia
304:were two
298:Pippinids
251:(804β876)
239:(823β877)
205:(797β838)
199:(778β840)
193:(773β810)
187:(772β811)
181:(768β811)
175:(742β814)
169:(751β771)
163:(714β768)
151:(686β741)
128:Theudoald
124:(670β708)
112:(635β714)
98:Ansegisel
94:(582β640)
67:(616β656)
52:Pippinids
376:Neustria
306:Frankish
300:and the
157:(d. 754)
155:Carloman
130:(d. 741)
118:(d. 714)
73:(d. 662)
65:Grimoald
355:Begga
220:(843)
296:The
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324:.
285:e
278:t
271:v
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