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Louis VI of France

Louis VI of France (26), King of France 1081-1137, married Alice or Adelaide of Savoy (26) (1092 - 1154) in 1115, daughter of Hubert II de Maurienne (27) (1062 - ?), Count of Piedmont.

His son was Louis VII of France (25), (1119-1180), married 3rd Adelaide of Champagne (or Adela) (25) (1140 - 1206), daughter of Theobold II (26) (1088 - 1152), Count of Champagne, and his wife Mathilde of Carinthia (26) (1097 - 1160).

His father was Philip I of France (27) (1052-1108), who reigned 1060-1108, married in 1071 (1st) Bertha (27), daughter of Florient Count of Holland (28).


From Encyclopaedia Britannica:

Louis VI

b. 1081, d. Aug. 1, 1137

byname LOUIS THE FAT, French LOUIS LE GROS, king of France from 1108 to 1137; he brought power and dignity to the French crown by his recovery of royal authority over the feudal nobles in his domains of the le-de-France and the Orléanais.

Louis was designated by his father, Philip I [Philip I of France], as his successor in 1098 and was already effectively the ruler well before Philip's death in 1108. He quickly recognized that his priority must be to bring the unruly barons of the royal lands under firm control, and he spent much of his reign in conflict with such men as Hugh de Puiset. His success won him the respect of his greater vassals and was crucial to later Capetian expansion. From his pacification program Louis developed several important concepts for future kings: for example, that the king was a vassal of no man.

Louis had a good relationship with the church and clergy. He has been presented by some historians as the father of communes or towns, but in fact he recognized towns only out of circumstance rather than from principle.

Louis's major wars were against King Henry I of England during the periods 1104-13 and 1116-20. When Charles the Good, count of Flanders, was assassinated in 1127, Louis supported William Clito, who became the successor; even though William was eventually toppled, Louis's actions demonstrated the new strength of the monarchy. In 1124 he was able to muster forces from many parts of France to counter a threatened invasion by the Holy Roman emperor Henry V. Louis's last major achievement was to arrange a marriage between his son Louis VII and Eleanor, heiress of William X, duke of Aquitaine. Abbot Suger of Saint-Denis, a most trusted adviser, is the primary historian for Louis's reign.

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