Chlothar I
Chlothar I (c. 497–561) was a Merovingian king of the Franks, the youngest son of Clovis I, who inherited a share of the Frankish realm upon his father's death in 511 and eventually ruled the entire unified kingdom from 558 until his own death.[1][2] Along with his brothers Theuderic I, Chlodomer, and Childebert I, Chlothar divided the paternal inheritance into subkingdoms centered at Metz, Orléans, Paris, and Soissons, respectively, engaging in joint military expeditions that expanded Frankish control over Thuringia in 531 and Burgundy following the defeat of King Sigismund in 534.[1][2] After outliving or eliminating his brothers and their heirs—most notoriously by arranging the murder of Chlodomer's young sons in 532 to claim Orléans—Chlothar absorbed their territories, briefly restoring the monarchy's unity under a single ruler for the first time since Clovis.[1][2] His later years involved suppressing a revolt by his son Chramn, whom he executed in 560, and conducting raids into Saxony and against the Visigoths, though these efforts were limited by ongoing dynastic instability.[2] Chlothar's reign, chronicled primarily by the contemporary bishop Gregory of Tours in his History of the Franks, exemplifies the Merovingian pattern of aggressive expansion coupled with ruthless intra-family conflict, culminating in the kingdom's repartition among his sons Charibert I, Guntram, Sigebert I, and Chilperic I after his death from plague near Compiègne.[1][2]Origins and Family
Birth and Parentage
Chlothar I, also known as Clotaire or Lothar, was the son of Clovis I, the first king to unite the Frankish tribes under Merovingian rule, and Clotilde, a Burgundian princess and daughter of King Chilperic II of Burgundy.[3] His birth occurred between 501 and 502, as inferred from his position in the birth order among Clovis's children documented by Gregory of Tours.[3] As the youngest surviving son of Clovis and Clotilde, Chlothar followed siblings Ingomer (who died in infancy), Chlodomer, and Childebert I, all born to the royal couple after Clovis's marriage to Clotilde around 493.[3] He had an older half-brother, Theuderic I, from one of Clovis's concubines prior to the marriage.[3] Gregory of Tours explicitly names Clotaire as a son of Clovis and Clotilde in his Historia Francorum, providing the primary contemporary account of Merovingian genealogy, though exact birth records were not maintained in this era.[3]Inheritance Customs Under Merovingian Tradition
The Merovingian dynasty adhered to the Frankish tradition of partes divisionis, or partible inheritance, whereby a deceased king's realm was divided equally among his legitimate sons, reflecting broader Germanic customs of equitable distribution among male heirs rather than primogeniture.[4] This practice treated the kingdom as a patrimonial estate, with each son receiving a roughly proportional share of territories, fiscal lands, and royal prerogatives, often guided by the late ruler's will or fraternal agreement to minimize immediate strife.[5] Unlike Roman imperial succession, which emphasized designation or adoption, Merovingian inheritance prioritized biological sons, excluding daughters from royal claims in line with Salic legal principles that barred female succession to certain lands and offices.[6] Upon Clovis I's death on November 27, 511, his unified Frankish kingdom—spanning much of Gaul—was partitioned among his four sons by his wife Clotilde: Theuderic I (Theoderic), the eldest, received the eastern territories around Reims and Metz; Chlodomer inherited Orléans and central regions; Childebert I took Paris and the northwest; and Chlothar I, the youngest, was allotted Soissons and the Salian Frankish heartlands in northeastern Gaul.[7] These divisions were not always geographically contiguous, incorporating a mix of Roman administrative units (civitates) and tribal districts, with movable royal treasures and authority over the church also split.[4] The allocation aimed for parity in resources, though disputes over exact boundaries frequently arose, as evidenced by subsequent alliances and conflicts among the brothers. This custom fostered dynastic instability, as surviving brothers or nephews could claim portions of deceased kin's realms if no direct male heirs existed, enabling opportunistic conquests under the guise of familial right—Chlothar himself later absorbed territories from his nephews and brothers through such means.[8] Partible inheritance persisted across Merovingian generations, resulting in repeated fragmentations and brief reunifications, with the realm dividing into up to four or more subkingdoms by the mid-6th century, undermining centralized authority and inviting external threats.[6] Primary accounts, such as those in Gregory of Tours' Historia Francorum, portray these partitions as normative yet prone to violence, underscoring how the system's egalitarianism among sons incentivized fratricide and civil war to consolidate power.[4]Marriages and Concubines
Chlothar I practiced polygamy and maintained concubines, consistent with Merovingian royal customs, as detailed by the contemporary bishop Gregory of Tours in his History of the Franks.[3] His unions were often politically motivated, securing alliances, territories, or heirs, though some ended in repudiation due to ecclesiastical pressure or personal choice.[3] His first recorded marriage was to Guntheuca, widow of his brother King Chlodomer of Orléans, around 524 after Chlodomer's death in campaign against the Burgundians.[3] This union provided access to Chlodomer's treasury but produced no known children and was later dissolved.[3] Chlothar married Radegund, daughter of Thuringian King Bertachar, circa 531 following the Frankish conquest of Thuringia in which her family was slain.[3] Captured young and raised in his household, she bore no children; the marriage ended when Radegund fled to a convent life after Chlothar's murder of her brother, later earning her sainthood.[3] In 532, he wed Ingundis (Ingund), a Thuringian noblewoman who had initially served as his concubine, with whom he fathered multiple children including future kings Charibert I, Guntram, and Sigibert I, as well as sons Gunthar and Childerich (both died young) and daughter Chlodesindis.[3] He concurrently married her sister Arnegundis, another polygamous arrangement, who gave birth to Chilperic I, who later ruled Neustria.[3] Around 555, Chlothar took as wife Waldrada, widow of his nephew King Theodebald of Austrasia, but bishops protested the incestuous affinity, leading to her repudiation and handover to another; no issue resulted.[3] Chunsina, identified as a concubine rather than wife, bore Chramn, who rebelled against his father and was executed in 560.[3] An unidentified concubine may have mothered Gundobald, though this attribution remains tentative in sources.[3]| Partner | Status | Approx. Marriage/Union Date | Known Children | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Guntheuca | Wife | 524 | None | Repudiated |
| Radegund | Wife | 531 | None | Repudiated; she entered convent |
| Ingundis | Wife (from concubine) | 532 | Charibert I, Guntram, Sigibert I, Gunthar, Childerich, Chlodesindis | Deceased before him |
| Arnegundis | Wife | Concurrent with Ingundis | Chilperic I | Deceased before him |
| Waldrada | Wife | 555 | None | Repudiated due to church opposition |
| Chunsina | Concubine | Undated | Chramn | Union ended with Chramn's execution |
| Unidentified | Concubine | Undated | Possibly Gundobald | Uncertain |
Children and Dynastic Offspring
Chlothar I fathered multiple sons and daughters primarily through his wife Ingundis and other unions, with the bishop Gregory of Tours providing the chief contemporary account in his Historia Francorum. Ingundis bore at least five sons—Gunthar (died after 532), Childerich (died before 561), Charibert (c. 520–567), Guntram (c. 532/34–592), and Sigebert (c. 535–575)—and one named daughter, Chlodesindis (died before 567), though some accounts suggest a second unnamed daughter from this marriage.[3] Gunthar and Childerich predeceased their father without significant dynastic roles, while Charibert, Guntram, and Sigebert each acceded as kings over portions of the Frankish realm following Chlothar's death in 561.[3] [9] Arnegundis, sister to Ingundis and another wife, gave birth to Chilperic (died 584), who also inherited kingship over Neustria and Soissons in the post-561 partition.[3] Chlothar's concubine Chunsina bore Chramn (died 560), who rebelled against his father around 558, allying with local Breton forces before his capture and execution along with his family; Gregory attributes this unrest to Chramn's ambition for greater authority.[3] [2] No children are recorded from Chlothar's other marriages to Guntheuca, Radegund, or Waldrada, nor from any additional concubines beyond a possible disputed son Gundobald (died 585).[3]| Mother | Child(ren) | Key Details and Dynastic Role |
|---|---|---|
| Ingundis | Gunthar | Died young; no succession.[3] |
| Ingundis | Childerich | Died before 561; no succession.[3] |
| Ingundis | Charibert I | King of Paris (561–567); divided realm with brothers.[3] |
| Ingundis | Guntram | King of Orléans/Burgundy (561–592); sole ruler after 575.[3] |
| Ingundis | Sigebert I | King of Reims/Austrasia (561–575); expanded eastward.[3] |
| Ingundis | Chlodesindis | Married Alboin of the Lombards c. 550; diplomatic link to Italy.[3] [9] |
| Arnegundis | Chilperic I | King of Neustria/Soissons (561–584); father of future kings.[3] |
| Chunsina (concubine) | Chramn | Rebelled 558–560; executed by father.[3] |