Erchinoald (ca. 580 - 658) volgde in 641 Aega op als hofmeier van Neustrië en in 642 Flaochad als hofmeier van Bourgondië. Hij stierf in 658 en werd opgevolgd door Ebroin.
Geschiedenis
Over de beginjaren van Erchinoald is weinig bekend. Alleen een relatie met Berthetrude, de moeder van de Merovingische koning Dagobert I, en dat hij over rijke landerijen beschikte ten oosten van de Seine worden beschouwd als zeker. In 641 benoemt Nanthild, weduwe van Dagobert, hem als opvolger van Aega in het ambt van hofmeier van Neustrië. In deze functie leidde hij het rijk grotendeels voor Clovis II en zijn vrouw Bathildis, die vóór haar huwelijk met Clovis als slavin aan het hof van Erchinoald had geleefd. In 642 sloot hij een alliantie met de Bourgondische hofmeier Flaochad waarin ze elkaar in het ambt bevestigden. Na de dood van Flaochad werd hij diens opvolger in Bourgondië. Nog datzelfde jaar trok hij troepen samen tegen de edelman Willibad, hetgeen de laatste vermelding over hem is in de kroniek van de zogenaamde Fredegar. Tot zijn dood in 658 is verder niets meer over hem bekend. Zijn opvolger in het ambt van hofmeier in Neustrië was Ebroin.
Familie
Erchinoald was gehuwd met Leutsinde, een verwante van Dagobert I, wiens vader Liuteric hofmeier van Theuderik III was. Met haar had hij twee kinderen. Zijn zoon Leudesius werd in 675 zelf hofmeier, en zijn dochter Emma trouwde met koning Eadbald van Kent.
Erchinoald (also Erkinoald and, in French, Erchenout) succeeded Aega as the mayor of the palace of Neustria in 641 and succeeded Flaochad in Burgundy in 642 and remained such until his death in 658. According to Fredegar, he was a relative (consanguineus) of Dagobert I's mother. Chaume cites the Notitia de Fundatione Monasterii Glanderiensis to suggest that Erchinoald was descended from the Gallo Roman senator Ansbertus through a son of that senator also named Erchinoald and that Erchinoald's son Leudesius, and was therefor a descendant of the gallo-roman families of the Syagrii and Ferrèoli [1][2] Erchinoald's relationship with Merovingian King Dagobert has been proposed to have been through his mother Gerberga, daughter of Burgundian dux Ricomeres (fl. 575) and Bertrude, her putative sister and mother of King Dagobert.[3][4] Herchenfrida (Erchinfreda), mother of St Desiderius of Cahors will have also been of this family as is further evidenced inter alia by that Gallo Roman saint's close ties to King Dagobert, and a brother named "Syagrius".
Erchinoald introduced Balthild, an Anglo-Saxon slave, most probably of a high ranking Anglo Saxon family from East Anglia (later canonised), to Clovis II, king of Neustria. The king's marriage to the pious Balthild reinforced Erchinoald's position at court. It has been suggested given the rarity of the name element "Erchin" (Genuine or truly) among the Franks and Saxons that Queen Emma of Kent, thought to be from Frankia, and the wife of Eadbald of Kent was of this family and perhaps Erchinoald's daughter. Eadbald and Emma had a son Eorconbert b. ca 618 so Emma was probably born before 600 and was not a daughter but a sister or less likely a cousin of Erchinoald. This was a period of considerable Frankish influence in Kent and East Anglia and as one of the most powerful men in Frankia located at his estate at Peronne not far from the English channel when he was not at court, it was Erchinoald who wielded this influence during his lifetime. Erchinoald supported efforts of successors of the Augustinian mission to England. One notable manner in which he both exerted influence and aided the mission was his involvement in and support of convents within his sphere of influence in Nuestria (for example Faremoutiers) into which some of the princesses of Kent, such as Eorcongota and East Anglia such as Aethelburg and Saethryth, in most cases his relations, retired and were made abbess.[5]
Erchinoald himself married Leutsinde.[6] Through her he had a son, Leudesius, who became the mayor of the palace of Nuestria in 675.
Erchinoald died in 658 and was succeeded by Ebroin, chosen by the Frankish nobles. Although his son, Leudesius, and much of his family were destroyed in the conflict between the factions of Saint Leudegar of Autun Leger and Ebroin in 676, the name does resurface in the 7th century in Frankia suggesting he may have had some descendants who survived and Chaume has posited a sister who was ancestor to a number of powerful families during the Carolingian era such as the Guerinids, the counts of Gatinais and the Guidonids
Let op: Partner (Leutsinde) is 38 jaar ouder.
Hij is getrouwd met Leutsinde.
Zij zijn getrouwdBron 1
Kind(eren):
grootouders
ouders
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