In 1032, king Rudolph III died without any surviving heirs, and in accordance with the 1006 treaty, the kingdom passed to Henry's successor, Emperor
Conrad II from the
Salian dynasty. Thus, the kingdom was incorporated into the
Holy Roman Empire, though its territories operated with considerable autonomy. In 1057, the empress
Agnes (d. 1077), acting as the regent for her young son, Emperor
Henry IV, appointed
Rudolf of Rheinfelden as imperial representative and governor of Burgundy. Emperor
Lothair III (d. 1137) appointed
Conrad I, Duke of Zähringen (d. 1152) as the imperial representative in the kingdom, titled as the
Rector of Burgundy (), and the same office was held by Conrad's successors from the
House of Zähringen until Emperor
Frederick II (d. 1250) decided to confer that title on his own son and designated heir,
Henry (d. 1242). Though from that time the emperors held the title "King of Arles", few went to be crowned in the cathedral of Arles. An exception was
Frederick Barbarossa, who in 1157 held
a diet in Besançon and in 1178 was crowned King of Burgundy by the
archbishop of Arles. In 1246, the French prince
Charles I of Anjou succeeded in acquiring the
County of Provence and the
County of Forcalquier, thus establishing a Provençal branch of the
House of Capet. In coordination with
Pope Nicholas III, he made a stillborn attempt to revive the kingdom of Burgundy/Arles. Between 1277 and 1279, Charles, at that time already
King of Sicily,
Rudolf of Habsburg, King of the Romans and aspirant to the Imperial crown, and
Margaret of Provence, queen dowager of France, settled their dispute over the County of Provence, and also over Rudolf's bid to become the sole Imperial candidate. Rudolf agreed that his daughter
Clemence of Austria would marry Charles's grandson
Charles Martel of Anjou, with the whole Arelat kingdom as her dowry. In exchange, Charles would support the imperial crown being made hereditary in the House of Habsburg. Nicholas III expected Northern Italy to become a kingdom carved out of Imperial territory, to be given to his family, the Orsini. In 1282, Charles was ready to send the child couple to reclaim the old royal title of Kings of Arles, but the
War of the Sicilian Vespers frustrated his plans. The
Vivarais was the first of the kingdom's territories to be annexed to the
Kingdom of France; this annexation occurred gradually during the 13th century and was formally recognized in 1306. The
Lyonnais had been practically beyond the reach of the Empire since the late 12th century. Its incorporation into France was the result of internal conflicts between the
Archbishop of Lyon, the cathedral chapter, and the city council. It was cemented in the early 14th century and formalized in a 1312 treaty between
Archbishop Peter of Savoy and
Philip IV of France. Emperor
Henry VII protested against this but did not seriously challenge it. From 1343, the French royal
House of Valois tried to expand its influence over the Kingdom of Arles by acquiring feudal possessions in the region of
Dauphiné, ruled by the childless dauphin
Humbert II of Viennois. By 1349, Humbert finally decided to sell his domains to the House of Valois, and an agreement was made designating young French prince
Charles (the future-king Charles V) as Humbert's successor, on the condition that the Dauphiné would remain a distinct
polity and thus not be incorporated into the French realm. Thus in the summer of 1349, young Charles became the first Valois
Dauphin de Viennois. In 1350, when his father ascended to the French throne, Charles became the
heir presumptive and thus for the first time the two honors of Dauphin de Viennois and heir to the French throne were held by the same person. In 1356, the young Charles, being the ruling
Dauphin of Viennois, made an
homage to the emperor
Charles IV at
Metz, and received imperial confirmation. On the same occasion, Charles was appointed as the
imperial vicar in Dauphiné. Formally remaining an imperial fief within the Kingdom of Arles, the
Dauphiné was from that time effectively controlled by the French royal House of Valois. In the spring of 1365, Emperor
Charles IV came in person to the Kingdom of Arles. During the month of May he visited the
County of Savoy, and appointed count
Amadeus VI as
imperial vicar over central regions of the Kingdom, from
Lausanne and
Geneva, to
Lyon and
Grenoble. At the same time, pretensions of the French royal
House of Valois towards gaining the imperial vicariate over the region were rejected by the emperor. Proceeding to Arles, the emperor was crowned as king on 4 June (1365), by cardinal Guillaume de La Garde, the
Archbishop of Arles, in the presence of high representatives of various regions, including Provence and Dauphiné, thus reaffirming imperial sovereignty over the Arlesian realm. That was the first coronation after a gap of nearly two centuries, following the previous Arlesian coronation of
Frederick I in 1178. That attempt to revive the imperial hold on the Kingdom was mainly symbolic. Already in 1366, count Amadeus VI of Savoy was relieved of his duties as imperial vicar in the region. During a state visit to Paris in early 1378, Emperor Charles IV granted the title of
imperial vicar over the Kingdom of Burgundy (Arles) to the nine-year-old
Charles, Dauphin of Viennois (future French king Charles VI), but only for his lifetime. Since Charles was
Dauphin of Viennois and thus a holder of an imperial fief within the Kingdom, his appointment as the imperial vicar did not imply transfer of authority to the French crown, but in reality it was still seen as a gain for the House of Valois. Imperial authority over the old Burgundian regions continued to decline, thus initiating the final stage of institutional dissolution of the Kingdom as a distinct entity. In 1421, Emperor
Sigismund appointed
Louis II of Chalon-Arlay as the
Imperial vicar of Burgundy in the hope of restoring some imperial authority over Dauphiné, Viennois, and Provence. Those efforts were directed against rising ambitions of powerful Burgundian Duke
Philip the Good. In 1463, the title of Imperial vicar was offered to Duke Philip himself, by Emperor
Frederick III, as part of a proposed dynastic alliance between the houses of Burgundy and Austria, but no final agreement was reached, and thus the appointment was not accepted. By that time French influence over northern parts of the Arlesian realm had been strengthened. In 1405, upon the death of Countess
Margaret, who ruled the
Free County of Burgundy in her own right, that imperial county was inherited by her son,
John the Fearless, who was also the
Duke of Burgundy. Since John belonged to the
House of Valois-Burgundy, his acquisition of the county additionally increased French influence in regions belonging to the Kingdom of Burgundy/Arles. In 1477, upon the death of
Charles the Bold, the French king seized not only the Duchy of Burgundy, which belonged to the French realm, but also the County of Burgundy, which was still an imperial fief. But in 1493, by the
Treaty of Senlis, the county passed to
Philip the Handsome of the
House of Habsburg, thus reaffirming its attachment to the Empire. In the southern regions of the Kingdom, the
County of Provence was held by the
House of Valois-Anjou, which also promoted French interests in the region. In 1481, the last Valois-Anjou count,
Charles of Provence, died and left his domains to the French royal house, but under the condition that the county would not be integrated into the French realm. Thus, an effective French control was imposed in Province, but without formal annexation. (green) in 1512 At the beginning of the 16th century, during the
imperial reform, several
imperial circles were created in 1512, one of them being the
Burgundian Circle, which encompassed not only the
Free County of Burgundy and the
Free Imperial City of Besançon, but also much of the
Habsburg Netherlands. By that time, both the Dauphiné and Provence were already under French control, but those realities were not formally sanctioned by the Holy Roman Emperors. Thus in 1524, imperial troops invaded Provence during the
Italian War of 1521–1526, but failed to capture the region. In 1525, during the peace negotiations between Emperor
Charles V and French King
François I, it was proposed that a realm centered on Arles and Provence could be renewed for
Charles III, Duke of Bourbon (d. 1527), but those plans were abandoned and not included in the
Treaty of Madrid (1526). In the summer of 1536, during the
Italian War of 1536–1538, Emperor Charles V personally led the invasion of Provence. He took
Aix-en-Provence on August 5, affirming there his rights to the Kingdom of Arles, but those gains were soon lost, and the war ended with the
Treaty of Nice (1538). Burgundian royal traditions were briefly revived in 1784, following the
War of the Bavarian Succession (1777–1779), when Emperor
Joseph II (d. 1790) proposed to the new Bavarian prince-elector
Charles Theodore to exchange
Bavaria for the
Austrian Netherlands, offering him the title "King of Burgundy". While the
Low Countries were not part of the Kingdom of Arles, they were part of the
Burgundian State and the
Burgundian Circle. The proposal was not accepted, and thus the plan failed. By that time, the title of Imperial vicar of Burgundy had become extinct, while the title "King of Arles" remained one of the Holy Roman Emperor's official subsidiary titles until the dissolution of the Empire in 1806. The
Archbishop of Trier continued to act as the
Imperial Archchancellor of Burgundy/Arles, as codified by the
Golden Bull of 1356. The remnants of the Kingdom of Arles became part of the
imperial circles unlike Italian,
Bohemian, or
Swiss territories. All remaining Imperial states but Savoy were conquered by
Louis XIV (r. 1643–1715). ==See also==