Zij is getrouwd met Berengario I re d'Italia re d'Italia.
Zij zijn getrouwd rond 880Perugia
Italy.
Kind(eren):
Bertila var grevinne av Spoleto.
Basic Life Information
Bertila of Spoleto
Bertila of Spoleto (c. 860-December 915) was the wife of Berengar I of Italy, and by marriage Queen consort of Italy and Holy Roman Empress.
She was the daughter of Suppo II (c. 835-c. 885), and of Bertha (dead by 921). Her paternal grandfather was Adelchis I of Spoleto, second son of Suppo I and father of Suppo II.
She married Berengar c. 880, becoming Queen of Italy in 888. However, her husband lost his throne in the following year to Guy of Spoleto. Berengar began to reassert his power in 896, after the fall of the Spoleto family, and the withdrawal of Emperor Arnulf from the peninsula; however, a defeat by a Magyar army, and the decision by the Italian nobles to appoint Louis of Provence as King of Italy, delayed the King and Queen's formal return to power until 905.
Bertila became Holy Roman Empress, after her husband was crowned Emperor in 915. She died in the December of the same year.
Bertila and Berengar had three children:
Bertha
Gisela (882-910), who married Adalbert I of Ivrea.
Berengar II of Italy.
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bertila_of_Spoleto>
Bertila of Spoleto
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bertila of Spoleto (c. 860–December 915) was the wife of Berengar I of Italy, and by marriage Queen consort of Italy and Holy Roman Empress.
She was the daughter of Suppo II of Spoleto (c. 835–c. 885), and of Bertha (dead by 921). Her paternal grandfather was Maurin, Pfalzgrave of Parma (dead by c. 839).
She married Berengar c. 880, becoming Queen of Italy in 888. However, her husband lost his throne in the following year to Guy of Spoleto. Berengar began to reassert his power in 896, after the fall of the Spoleto family, and the withdrawal of Emperor Arnulf from the peninsula; however, a defeat by a Magyar army, and the decision by the Italian nobles to appoint Louis of Provence as King of Italy, delayed the King and Queen's formal return to power until 905.
Bertila became Holy Roman Empress, after her husband was crowned Emperor in 915. She died in the December of the same year.
Bertila and Berengar had three children:
Bertha
Gisela (882–910), who married Adalbert I of Ivrea. Her son was Berengar II of Italy.
[edit] Source
Ancestral Roots of Certian American Colonists Who Came to America Before 1700 by Frederick Lewis Weis, Line 146-16.
Preceded by
Ota Empress of the Holy Roman Empire
915 Succeeded by
Interregnum (Eventually Adelaide of Italy)
Queen consort of Italy
888–889;
905–915 Succeeded by
Bertha of Swabia
[2914] BJOHNSN.GED also Bertila, b bef 870, d 915
WSHNGT.ASC file (Geo Washington Ahnentafel) # 139602507 = 14683211, b & d
Rootsweb Feldman
URL: http://worldconnect.genealogy.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=:3044567&id=I11389
# ID: I11389
# Name: Berenger I of ITALY 1 1 2 3 4 5
# Sex: M
# Title: King of Italy
# Birth: 850 in Friuli, Italy ?(Marquis and Duke of Friuli) 1 2 3 4 5
# Death: 7 APR 924 in murdered in Verona, Italy 1 2 3 4 5
# Christening: 888 Italy - Aka the "Phantom Emperor" 1 2 3 4 5
# Change Date: 15 JAN 2004 5
# Change Date: 6 OCT 2001 2 3 4 5
# IDNO: 544 2 3 4 5
# Note:
[Joanne's Tree.1 GED.GED]
2 PLAC 544
2 SOUR S332582
3 DATA
4 TEXT Date of Import: 14 Jan 2004
[daveanthes.FTW]
GIVN Berenger I of
SURN Italy
NPFX King
NSFX *
EVEN Northern Italy
TYPE Ruled
DATE 899/900
PLAC Italy
EVEN Italy (as rival king to Louis III)
TYPE Ruled
DATE BET 888 AND 923
PLAC Italy
NPFX King
GIVN Berenger I of
SURN ITALY
NSFX *
Marquis of Friuli, King of the Lombards 888-889; Holy Roman Emperor
915-924; defeated by Duke Guy of Spoleta; last of the Italian line of
Emperors. aka Berengarius I.
In 888 Berenger or Berengarius of Friuli declared himself to be kingof Italy, rival king to Louis III of Burgundy.
ABBR SOURCE #337
TITL Kingdom's of Europe, Illustrated Encyclopedia of Ruling Monarchs FromAncient Times to the Present
AUTH Gene Gurney
PUBL Crown Publishers, New York. 1982
PAGE Gurney page 48.
EVEN Berengarius of Friuli
TYPE AKA
EVEN Northern Italy
TYPE Ruled
DATE 899/900
PLAC Italy
Berenger I, aka Berengar or Berengaro, claimed the position of soleruler of Northern Italy after the death of Emperor Arnulf. He wasexpelled about 900 by the Hungarians who had invaded his country.
Hewas succeeded by the Burgundian Louis III. Berenger or Beregarius,then claimed all of Italy after Louis III died in 905, and ruled until923. He was succeeded by Rudolf II of Burgundy.
ABBR Trager's Chronology
PAGE 319 AD891-900
ABBR SOURCE #337
TITL Kingdom's of Europe, Illustrated Encyclopedia of Ruling Monarchs FromAncient Times to the Present
AUTH Gene Gurney
PUBL Crown Publishers, New York. 1982
PAGE Gurney page 48.
EVEN Italy (as rival king to Louis III)
TYPE Ruled
DATE BET 888 AND 923
PLAC Italy
OCCU King of Italy ...
SOUR Royalty for Commoners, Roderick W. Stuart says c840/845
HAWKINS.GED says ABT 842
PAGE 143
QUAY 1
SOUR BAIL3.GED (Compuserve), #143;
Royalty for Commoners, Roderick W. Stuart, p. 197;
HAWKINS.GED;
Duke of Friuli - COMYNI.GED (Compuserve), #1112;Berenger I-GWALTNEY.ANC (Comp-
userve) #2032179914; Marquis de Frioul - BAIL3.GED (Compuserve), 143; King of
Italy, Jan. 888-924; Emperor of the West, Dec 915-924; Marquis of Fruiuli -
Royalty for Commoners, Roderick W. Stuart p. 197
Father: Eberhard of SAXONY b: ABT 816 in Friuli, Italia
Mother: Gisele Princess of FRANCE b: 818 in Frankfurt, Hesse Nassau, France
Marriage 1 Bertila of SPOLETO b: 845 in Perugia Prov., Italy
* Married: ABT 880 in Italy 1 2 3 4 5
Children
1. Has Children Gisela of ITALY b: ABT 881 in Perugia, Tuscany, Italy
2. Has Children Gerberge ITALY b: ABT 884 in ,,Italy
Sources:
1. Title: daveanthes.FTW
Note: ABBR daveanthes.FTW
Note: Source Media Type: Other
Repository:
Call Number:
Media: Book
Text: Date of Import: 14 Jan 2004
2. Title: daveanthes.FTW
Note: ABBR daveanthes.FTW
Note: Source Media Type: Other
Repository:
Call Number:
Media: Book
Text: Date of Import: Jan 13, 2004
3. Title: Spare.FTW
Repository:
Call Number:
Media: Other
Text: Date of Import: Jan 18, 2004
4. Title: Spare.FTW
Repository:
Call Number:
Media: Other
Text: Date of Import: 21 Jan 2004
5. Title: Joanne's Tree.1 GED.GED
Repository:
Call Number:
Media: Other
Text: Date of Import: Feb 6, 2004
[AR 146:16; ES ii, 188A]
[AR 146:16; ES ii, 188A]
#Générale##Générale#de Souabe, 1ʻ femme
ou Anna:2ʻ femme
{geni:about_me}
http://finnholbek.dk/getperson.php?personID=I12460&tree=2
Bertila of Spoleto (c. 860–December 915) was the wife of Berengar I of Italy, and by marriage Queen consort of Italy and Holy Roman Empress.
She was the daughter of Suppo II (c. 835–c. 885), and of Bertha (dead by 921). Her paternal grandfather was Adelchis I of Spoleto, second son of Suppo I and father of Suppo II.
She married Berengar c. 880, becoming Queen of Italy in 888. However, her husband lost his throne in the following year to Guy of Spoleto. Berengar began to reassert his power in 896, after the fall of the Spoleto family, and the withdrawal of Emperor Arnulf from the peninsula; however, a defeat by a Magyar army, and the decision by the Italian nobles to appoint Louis of Provence as King of Italy, delayed the King and Queen's formal return to power until 905.
Bertila became Holy Roman Empress, after her husband was crowned Emperor in 915. She died in the December of the same year.
Bertila and Berengar had three children:
* Bertha
* Gisela (882–910), who married Adalbert I of Ivrea. Her son was Berengar II of Italy.
--------------------
Bertila of Spoleto (c. 860–December 915) was the wife of Berengar I of Italy, and by marriage Queen consort of Italy and Holy Roman Empress.
She was the daughter of Suppo II (c. 835–c. 885), and of Bertha (dead by 921). Her paternal grandfather was Adelchis I of Spoleto, second son of Suppo I and father of Suppo II.
She married Berengar c. 880, becoming Queen of Italy in 888. However, her husband lost his throne in the following year to Guy of Spoleto. Berengar began to reassert his power in 896, after the fall of the Spoleto family, and the withdrawal of Emperor Arnulf from the peninsula; however, a defeat by a Magyar army, and the decision by the Italian nobles to appoint Louis of Provence as King of Italy, delayed the King and Queen's formal return to power until 905.
Bertila became Holy Roman Empress, after her husband was crowned Emperor in 915. She died in the December of the same year.
Bertila and Berengar had three children:
Bertha
Gisela (882–910), who married Adalbert I of Ivrea. Her son was Berengar II of Italy.
From www.wikipedia.org at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bertila_of_Spoleto
--------------------
Bertila of Spoleto (c. 860–December 915) was the wife of Berengar I of Italy, and by marriage Queen consort of Italy and Holy Roman Empress.
She was the daughter of Suppo II (c. 835–c. 885), and of Bertha (dead by 921). Her paternal grandfather was Adelchis I of Spoleto, second son of Suppo I and father of Suppo II.
She married Berengar c. 880, becoming Queen of Italy in 888. However, her husband lost his throne in the following year to Guy of Spoleto. Berengar began to reassert his power in 896, after the fall of the Spoleto family, and the withdrawal of Emperor Arnulf from the peninsula; however, a defeat by a Magyar army, and the decision by the Italian nobles to appoint Louis of Provence as King of Italy, delayed the King and Queen's formal return to power until 905.
Bertila became Holy Roman Empress, after her husband was crowned Emperor in 915. She died in the December of the same year.
Bertila and Berengar had three children:
Bertha
Gisela (882–910), who married Adalbert I of Ivrea. Her son was Berengar II of Italy.
--------------------
Bertila of Spoleto (c. 860–December 915) was the wife of Berengar I of Italy, and by marriage Queen consort of Italy and Holy Roman Empress.
She was the daughter of Suppo II (c. 835–c. 885), and of Bertha (dead by 921). Her paternal grandfather was Adelchis I of Spoleto, second son of Suppo I and father of Suppo II.
She married Berengar c. 880, becoming Queen of Italy in 888. However, her husband lost his throne in the following year to Guy of Spoleto. Berengar began to reassert his power in 896, after the fall of the Spoleto family, and the withdrawal of Emperor Arnulf from the peninsula; however, a defeat by a Magyar army, and the decision by the Italian nobles to appoint Louis of Provence as King of Italy, delayed the King and Queen's formal return to power until 905.
Bertila became Holy Roman Empress, after her husband was crowned Emperor in 915. She died in the December of the same year.
Bertila and Berengar had three children:
Bertha
Gisela (882–910), who married Adalbert I of Ivrea. Her son was Berengar II of Italy.
--------------------
Bertila of Spoleto
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bertila of Spoleto (c. 860–December 915) was the wife of Berengar I of Italy, and by marriage Queen consort of Italy and Holy Roman Empress.
She was the daughter of Suppo II (c. 835–c. 885), and of Bertha (dead by 921). Her paternal grandfather was Adelchis I of Spoleto, second son of Suppo I and father of Suppo II.
She married Berengar c. 880, becoming Queen of Italy in 888. However, her husband lost his throne in the following year to Guy of Spoleto. Berengar began to reassert his power in 896, after the fall of the Spoleto family, and the withdrawal of Emperor Arnulf from the peninsula; however, a defeat by a Magyar army, and the decision by the Italian nobles to appoint Louis of Provence as King of Italy, delayed the King and Queen's formal return to power until 905.
Bertila became Holy Roman Empress, after her husband was crowned Emperor in 915. She died in the December of the same year.
Bertila and Berengar had three children:
Bertha
Gisela (882–910), who married Adalbert I of Ivrea. Her son was Berengar II of Italy.
--------------------
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bertila_of_Spoleto
--------------------
Bertila of Spoleto (c. 860–December 915) was the wife of Berengar I of Italy, and by marriage Queen consort of Italy and Holy Roman Empress.
She was the daughter of Suppo II of Spoleto (c. 835–c. 885), and of Bertha (dead by 921). Her paternal grandfather was Maurin, Pfalzgrave of Parma (dead by c. 839).
She married Berengar c. 880, becoming Queen of Italy in 888. However, her husband lost his throne in the following year to Guy of Spoleto. Berengar began to reassert his power in 896, after the fall of the Spoleto family, and the withdrawal of Emperor Arnulf from the peninsula; however, a defeat by a Magyar army, and the decision by the Italian nobles to appoint Louis of Provence as King of Italy, delayed the King and Queen's formal return to power until 905.
Bertila became Holy Roman Empress, after her husband was crowned Emperor in 915. She died in the December of the same year.
Bertila and Berengar had two children:
* Bertha
* Gisela (882–910), who married Adalbert I of Ivrea. Her son was Berengar II of Italy.
--------------------
Bertila of Spoleto (c. 860–December 915) was the wife of Berengar I of Italy, and by marriage Queen consort of Italy and Holy Roman Empress.
She was the daughter of Suppo II of Spoleto (c. 835–c. 885), and of Bertha (dead by 921). Her paternal grandfather was Maurin, Pfalzgrave of Parma (dead by c. 839).
She married Berengar c. 880, becoming Queen of Italy in 888. However, her husband lost his throne in the following year to Guy of Spoleto. Berengar began to reassert his power in 896, after the fall of the Spoleto family, and the withdrawal of Emperor Arnulf from the peninsula; however, a defeat by a Magyar army, and the decision by the Italian nobles to appoint Louis of Provence as King of Italy, delayed the King and Queen's formal return to power until 905.
Bertila became Holy Roman Empress, after her husband was crowned Emperor in 915. She died in the December of the same year.
Bertila and Berengar had two children:
Bertha
Gisela (882–910), who married Adalbert I of Ivrea. Her son was Berengar II of Italy.
--------------------
Camerino is small town of 7,000 inhabitants in the Marches (Marche region), in the province of Macerata, Italy. It is located in the Apennines bordering Umbria, between the valleys of the rivers Potenza and Chienti, about 40 miles from Ancona.
History
Camerino occupies the site of the ancient Camerinum, the inhabitants of which (Camertes Umbri or Umbrii-Camertii) became allies of the Romans in 310 BC or 309 BC (at the time of the attack on the Etruscans in the Ciminian Forest). On the other hand, the Katspriot referred to in the history of the year 295 BC are probably the inhabitants of Clusium. Later it appears as a dependent autonomous community with the foedus aequum, an 'equal' treaty with Rome (Mommsen, Römisches Staatsrecht, iii. 664).
Two cohorts of Camertes fought with distinction under Gaius Marius against the invading Germanic Cimbri. It was much affected by the conspiracy of Catiline, and is frequently mentioned in the Civil Wars; under the empire it was a municipium. It belonged to ancient Umbria, but was on the borders of Picenum.
Camerino was part of the Exarchate of Ravenna until 592, when it was captured by the Lombards. The city under the latter wasseat of a marquisate and then of a duchy which was sometimes under the suzerainty of Spoleto, which was later conquered by the Franks. In the 10th-11th century the cityi was under the Mainardi family. Boniface III of Tuscany occupied the duchy around 1050, and then ceded it to his daughter Matilda, who in turn donated it to the Papal States.
Since the year 1000, however, Camerino had turned itself into an independent commune. Initially Ghibelline, it later became a Guelph stronghold and suffered much under Emperor Frederick II on account of its loyalty to the pope; Manfred of Sicily's troops, led by Percivalle Doria, besieged and destroyed it (1256): much of the population was killed, but Camerino recovered under Gentile Da Varano, who was amongst the refugees that returned in 1262, forming a lasting fiefdom for his family which laster three centuries.
In 1382, his descendant Giovanni Da Varano built a 12 km-long wall to defend the city, while a Ducal Palace was built by Giulio Cesare in 1460, which was one of the most sumptuous in Italy at the time. In 1336 the University was founded. The Da Varano were wiped out by Cesare Borgia in 1502, and in 1545 the city fell under the direct Papal administration.
In 1861, after becoming Italian, the university was recognised by the new state. In 1958, the school became known as the University of Camerino, a public institution
--------------------
Bertila of Spoleto (c. 860 – December 915) was the wife of Berengar I of Italy, and by marriage Queen consort of Italy and Holy Roman Empress.
She was the daughter of Suppo II (c. 835 – c. 885), and of Bertha (dead by 921). Her paternal grandfather was Adelchis I of Spoleto, second son of Suppo I.
She married Berengar c. 880, becoming Queen of Italy in 888. However, her husband lost his throne in the following year to Guy of Spoleto. Berengar began to reassert his power in 896, after the fall of the Spoleto family, and the withdrawal of Emperor Arnulf from the peninsula; however, a defeat by a Magyar army, and the decision by the Italian nobles to appoint Louis of Provence as King of Italy, delayed the King and Queen's formal return to power until 905.
Bertila became Holy Roman Empress, after her husband was crowned Emperor in 915. She died in the December of the same year.
Bertila and Berengar had several children. By 915, their eldest daughter, Bertha, was abbess of San Salvatore in Brescia, where her aunt had once been a nun. Their younger daughter Gisela (882–910) married Adalbert I of Ivrea, who were the parents of Berengar II of Italy.
[AR 146:16; ES ii, 188A]
from "Our Folk" by Albert D Hart, Jr.
887189859. Grevinne Bertilda SUPPOSDTR av Spoleto died bef des 915. (21502) She was a Grevinne in Spoleto.
SOURCE NOTES:
Bu302
RESEARCH NOTES:
Countess of Spoleto
_P_CCINFO 2-2438
_P_CCINFO 2-2438
"OF SPOLETO"
[De La Pole.FTW]
Sources: RC 269; Coe; Kraentzler 1458; A. Roots.
K. calls her Berthila de Parma.
Bertila of Spoleto (c. 860-December 915) was the wife of Berengar I of Italy, and by marriage Queen consort of Italy and Holy Roman Empress.
She was the daughter of Suppo II (c. 835-c. 885), and of Bertha (dead by 921). Her paternal grandfather was Adelchis I of Spoleto, second son of Suppo I and father of Suppo II.
She married Berengar c. 880, becoming Queen of Italy in 888. However, her husband lost his throne in the following year to Guy of Spoleto. Berengar began to reassert his power in 896, after the fall of the Spoleto family, and the withdrawal of Emperor Arnulf from the peninsula; however, a defeat by a Magyar army, and the decision by the Italian nobles to appoint Louis of Provence as King of Italy, delayed the King and Queen's formal return to power until 905.
Bertila became Holy Roman Empress, after her husband was crowned Emperor in 915. She died in the December of the same year.
Bertila and Berengar had three children:
Bertha
Gisela (882-910), who married Adalbert I of Ivrea. Her son was Berengar II of Italy.
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