{geni:job_title} Duc, de Sorbenmark
Enfant(s):
(2) Il avait une relation avec Mrs. Poppo I Countess of Thuringia.
Enfant(s):
Name Prefix:Count Name Suffix: II, Of Sorbenmark
Poppo, Duke of Thuringia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Poppo II or Boppo II (died after 906) was the Duke of Thuringia from 880 until his deposition in 892. His title was dux Sorabici (limitis) or dux Thuringorum, sometimes marchio (margrave). Before that his title was comes (count).
Poppo, a Babenberg, was the younger brother of Henry of Franconia.[1] They also had a younger brother named Egino. All three may have been the sons or grandsons of Poppo (I) of Grapfeld.
Poppo replaced Radulf II in the Sorbian March no later than 880.[2] In that year, the Daleminzi, Bohemians, and Sorbs threatened to invade Thuringia and burn the German-allied Slav districts. Poppo's subsequent expedition against them is recorded in three different variations in the three different manuscript traditions of the Annales Fuldenses.[3] He may or may not have led the Thuringii in this campaign, but he was certainly victorious.
The reasons behind Poppo's battles in 882, 883, and 884 are unknown.[4] In the former year, he and the Thuringii had instigated a war with Saxons under Egino and had been defeated.[5] In 883, he again fought his brother Egino, who was recorded as a co-duke of the Thuringii, and was defeated savagely and forced to retreat with only a few men.[6]
Poppo was deprived of his offices and titles in 892.[7] According to Regino of Prüm, Poppo had advised Arn, Bishop of Würzburg, to undertake the expedition against the Slavs on which he was killed earlier that year. Because Poppo was replaced in Thuringia by Conrad and Arn was replaced by Rudolf, both Conradines, it has been supposed that King Arnulf was merely patronising one family over another: the Conradines and Babenbergers were feuding shortly afterwards. On the other hand, Poppo may have been punished for the ill-advised campaign of Arn. He was restored to his lands in 899 and made Count of the Bavarian Nordgau in 903. He was Count of the Volkfeld in 906. He died sometime after.
[edit] Sources
Reuter, Timothy. Germany in the Early Middle Ages 800–1056. New York: Longman, 1991.
Reuter, Timothy (trans.) The Annals of Fulda. (Manchester Medieval series, Ninth-Century Histories, Volume II.) Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1992.
[edit] Notes
^ Reuter, AF, 55 n4.
^ Ibid, AF, 73 n3. Poppo may have been the brother-in-law of Radulf and'or son-in-law of Thachulf.
^ Ibid, AF, 3 n9.
^ Reuter, Germany, 81.
^ AF(B), 882 (p. 106 and n10).
^ AF(M), 873 (p. 94). AF(B), 883 (p. 107).
^ AF(B), 892 (p. 124 and n9).
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poppo%2C_Duke_of_Thuringia"
#Générale##Générale#s:ds03.54 ; theroff.capet
{geni:occupation} Margrave, Duc, de Sorbenmark, Duke of Thuringia, Duke of Thuringia 880 - 892, Count of the Bavarian Nordgau 903 - ca. 906, Count of the Volkfeld 906 - ca. 906, Greve i Saalgau
{geni:about_me} http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poppo,_Duke_of_Thuringia
Poppo II or Boppo II (died after 906) was the Duke of Thuringia from 880 until his deposition in 892. His title was dux Sorabici (limitis) or dux Thuringorum, sometimes marchio (margrave). Before that his title was comes (count).
Poppo, a Babenberg, was the younger brother of Henry of Franconia.[1] They also had a younger brother named Egino. All three may have been the sons or grandsons of Poppo (I) of Grapfeld.
Poppo replaced Radulf II in the Sorbian March no later than 880.[2] In that year, the Daleminzi, Bohemians, and Sorbs threatened to invade Thuringia and burn the German-allied Slav districts. Poppo's subsequent expedition against them is recorded in three different variations in the three different manuscript traditions of the Annales Fuldenses.[3] He may or may not have led the Thuringii in this campaign, but he was certainly victorious.
The reasons behind Poppo's battles in 882, 883, and 884 are unknown.[4] In the former year, he and the Thuringii had instigated a war with Saxons under Egino and had been defeated.[5] In 883, he again fought his brother Egino, who was recorded as a co-duke of the Thuringii, and was defeated savagely and forced to retreat with only a few men.[6]
Poppo was deprived of his offices and titles in 892.[7] According to Regino of Prüm, Poppo had advised Arn, Bishop of Würzburg, to undertake the expedition against the Slavs on which he was killed earlier that year. Because Poppo was replaced in Thuringia by Conrad and Arn was replaced by Rudolf, both Conradines, it has been supposed that King Arnulf was merely patronising one family over another: the Conradines and Babenbergers were feuding shortly afterwards. On the other hand, Poppo may have been punished for the ill-advised campaign of Arn. He was restored to his lands in 899 and made Count of the Bavarian Nordgau in 903. He was Count of the Volkfeld in 906. He died sometime after.
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Wikipedia:
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poppo_von_Th%C3%BCringen
Poppo von Thüringen
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Poppo von Thüringen wird von 878/880-906 als Graf im Volkfeld bezeugt. Er war von 880 bis 892 Markgraf der Sorbenmark und wurde bei seiner Absetzung 892 als „dux Thuringorum“, Herzog der Thüringer, bezeichnet.
Er war der jüngere Sohn des Grafen Poppo (I.) im Saalgau und der Bruder des princeps militiae und dux Austrasiorum Heinrich, des Heerführers Kaiser Karls III. und damit einer der wichtigsten Angehörigen der Familie der älteren oder fränkischen Babenberger, die eine der wesentlichen Stützen Karls des Dicken war und damit im Gegensatz zu Karls Nachfolger Arnulf von Kärnten.
880 – nachdem sein Bruder Heinrich in den Dienst des Königs getreten war – wird er nach einem Sieg über die Sorben als comes et dux Sorabici limes erwähnt (Annales Fuldenses), als Graf und Herzog der Sorbenmark, als der er von Karl dem Dicken eingesetzt worden war. Er hatte sich mit dem Grafen Egino um die Herrschaft in Thüringen auseinanderzusetzen, einen Kampf, den er zwar verlor, was ihn aber – vermutlich aufgrund des Eingreifens Karls des Dicken, auf jeden Fall aber, weil Egino sich ab 885 als Graf im Badanachgau anderen Aufgaben widmete – nicht seine Stellung dort kostete.
Im Jahr 892 wurde er von Karls Nachfolger Arnulf von Kärnten wegen Untreue angeklagt (Hauptanklagepunkt war der gescheiterte Slawenfeldzug Bischof Arns) und deshalb von seinen Aufgaben in Thüringen entbunden (und dabei von Regino von Prüm als dux Thuringorum bezeichnet). Arnulf nutzte die Gelegenheit, in Thüringen seinen Verwandten und Verbündeten, den Konradiner Konrad der Ältere zu installieren, was einer seiner Schritte zur Entmachtung der Babenberger war und mittelbar die Babenberger Fehde (902-906) auslöste, an der sich Poppo jedoch offenbar nicht beteiligte. Die im Zusammenhang mit dem Prozess konfiszierten Güter erhielt Poppo im Jahr 899 zurück.
Im Jahr 903 wird er als Markgraf im bayerischen Nordgau genannt, 906 als Graf im Volkfeld.
Er hatte zwei Söhne:
* Adalbert, 898/915 Graf im Grabfeld
* Poppo (III.), † 945, Graf im Grabfeld und Tullifeld
sowie vermutlich eine Tochter, die einen Graf Wilhelm heiratete, wohl Wilhelm I. von Weimar-Orlamünde.
Weblinks [Bearbeiten]
* Poppo bei genealogie-mittelalter
Normdaten: PND: 138062471 – weitere Informationen
Poppo II or Boppo II (died after 906) was the Duke of Thuringia from 880 until his deposition in 892. His title was dux Sorabici (limitis) or dux Thuringorum, sometimes marchio (margrave). Before that his title was comes (count).
Poppo, a Babenberg, was the younger brother of Henry of Franconia.[1] They also had a younger brother named Egino. All three may have been the sons or grandsons of Poppo (I) of Grapfeld.
Poppo replaced Radulf II in the Sorbian March no later than 880.[2] In that year, the Daleminzi, Bohemians, and Sorbs threatened to invade Thuringia and burn the German-allied Slav districts. Poppo's subsequent expedition against them is recorded in three different variations in the three different manuscript traditions of the Annales Fuldenses.[3] He may or may not have led the Thuringii in this campaign, but he was certainly victorious.
The reasons behind Poppo's battles in 882, 883, and 884 are unknown.[4] In the former year, he and the Thuringii had instigated a war with Saxons under Egino and had been defeated.[5] In 883, he again fought his brother Egino, who was recorded as a co-duke of the Thuringii, and was defeated savagely and forced to retreat with only a few men.[6]
Poppo was deprived of his offices and titles in 892.[7] According to Regino of Prüm, Poppo had advised Arn, Bishop of Würzburg, to undertake the expedition against the Slavs on which he was killed earlier that year. Because Poppo was replaced in Thuringia by Conrad and Arn was replaced by Rudolf, both Conradines, it has been supposed that King Arnulf was merely patronising one family over another: the Conradines and Babenbergers were feuding shortly afterwards. On the other hand, Poppo may have been punished for the ill-advised campaign of Arn. He was restored to his lands in 899 and made Count of the Bavarian Nordgau in 903. He was Count of the Volkfeld in 906. He died sometime after.
Sources
Reuter, Timothy. Germany in the Early Middle Ages 800-1056. New York: Longman, 1991.
Reuter, Timothy (trans.) The Annals of Fulda. (Manchester Medieval series, Ninth-Century Histories, Volume II.) Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1992.
Notes
^ Reuter, AF, 55 n4.
^ Ibid, AF, 73 n3. Poppo may have been the brother-in-law of Radulf and'or son-in-law of Thachulf.
^ Ibid, AF, 3 n9.
^ Reuter, Germany, 81.
^ AF(B), 882 (p. 106 and n10).
^ AF(M), 873 (p. 94). AF(B), 883 (p. 107).
^ AF(B), 892 (p. 124 and n9).
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Mrs. Poppo I Countess of Thuringia |
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