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Nobility of the Carolingian Empire

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Robert the Strong
Frankish noble
Liudolf
Duke of Saxony
Welf I, Count of Altdorf
father of Judith of Bavaria
Bera
count of Barcelona
Hugh of Tours
French noble
Borna of Croatia
Duke of Croatia
Bernard of Septimania
Spanish noble
Conrad II, Duke of Transjurane Burgundy
French noble
William of Septimania
Count of Toulouse and Barcelona (826–850)
Bego of Paris
Count of Paris from 813 to 816
Berengar the Wise
Spanish noble
Rampon, Count of Barcelona
Frankish noble
Udo of Neustria
9th century nobleman
Lambert I of Nantes
French noble
Theobald of Arles
Count of Arles (c. 854–895)
Anscar of Ivrea
margrave of Ivrea from 888 to 902
Adelheid van Tours
Countess of Anjou and Blois (c.820–c.866)
Baldric of Friuli
Frankish noble
Vladislav of Croatia
Duke of Croatia
Bello of Carcassonne
Count of Carcassonne
Gaucelm
thumb | right | alt=A historical map of northeastern Iberia around 801–820. The counties ruled by Gaucelm (Rosselló and Empúries) are shaded pink. Neighboring counties ruled by Berà are shaded in green. | Gaucelm was the count of Rosselló and Empúries, both of which are highlighted in pink on this map. The image visually contextualizes the extent of his rule within the region of early medieval Catalonia. Gaucelm (died 834) was a Frankish count and leading magnate in Gothia during the reign of Louis the Pious. He was initially the Count of Roussillon from about 800, but he received Empúries in
Bernard
German noble
Guerin of Provence
French noble
Matfrid
Matfrid (died 836) was the Frankish count of Orléans in the reign of Emperor Louis the Pious. He is usually thought to have been the first of the lineage known to historians as the Matfriede (German Matfridinger or Matfriede).
Gerard, Count of Auvergne
Frankish noble
Sigard, Count of Hainaut
Leuthard I of Paris
count of Paris and Fezensac
Unruoch II of Friuli
Frankish noble
Wiltrud of Orleans
Frankish noblewoman
Oliba I of Carcassonne
count of Carcassonne
Contardus of Naples
Frank noble
Renaud d'Herbauges
Frankish Count of Herbauges, Poitiers and Nantes
John
Frankish Duke of Istria in the early years of the 9th century
Adalhelm of Autun
8th and 9th century Frankish nobleman
Guisclafred of Carcassonne
count of Carcassonne, 9th century
Hathumod
Hathumoda (840 – November 874) was a Saxon noblewoman who became the first abbess of Gandersheim. Her family, the Liudolfings, founded the Gandersheim Abbey, and she was cloistered since childhood. After she died in an epidemic, there was an unsuccessful attempt to promote her as a saint. ==Origin and childhood== Hathumoda was born in 840. Her parents were Count Liudolf of Saxony and the Frankish noblewoman Oda. Hathumoda's family, the Liudolfings, were rich and powerful. Their ancestors had only recently been converted to Christianity, which may explain Hathumoda's name (spelt variously as Ha
Sunyer I, Count of Empúries
Frankish noble
Hemming Halfdansson
Viking warrior, died 837
list of consorts of Orléans
Wikimedia list article
Aeblus
Aeblus, Ebalus, or Ebles was a Frankish count in Gascony early in the ninth century.