Trial of Hugh the Great, 948–949 Otto I was not satisfied with the growing power of Hugh the Great who, although not accepted by the whole kingdom, respected the division of powers. In 946 Otto I and
Conrad I of Burgundy raised an army and tried to take Laon and then
Senlis. They invaded Reims with a large army, according to Flodoard. Archbishop
Hugh of Vermandois escaped and Artald was restored. "Robert, Archbishop of Trier and
Frederick, Archbishop of Mainz take everyone by the hand" (Flodoard). A few months later, Louis IV joined the fight against Hugh the Great and his allies at the Battle of Rouen. In the spring of 947, Louis and his wife Gerberga spent the Easter holidays in Aachen at the court of Otto I, asking him for help in their war against Hugh the Great. Between late 947 and late 948, four imperial synods were held by Otto I between Meuse and Rhine to settle the fate of the Archbishopric of Reims and Hugh the Great. In
Synod of Ingelheim (June 948) participated the apostolic legate, thirty German and Burgundian bishops and finally Artald and his suffragants of Laon among the Frankish clerics. Louis IV presented his claims against Hugh the Great at the synod. The surviving final acts determined: "Anybody had the right to undermine the royal power or treacherously revolted against their King. We therefore decide that Hugh was the invasor and abductor of Louis, and he will be struck with the sword of the excommunication unless he presents himself and give a satisfaction to us for his perversity". But the Duke of the Franks, not paying attention to the sentence, devastated
Soissons, Reims and profaned dozens of churches. In the meanwhile, his vassal and relative
Theobald I, Count of Blois (nicknamed "the Trickster") who had married
Luitgarde of Vermandois, daughter of Herbert II of Vermandois and widow of William I Longsword, had built a fortress in
Montaigu in Laon to humiliate the king, and seized the lordship of
Coucy-le-Château-Auffrique in Reims. The Synod of Trier (September 948) decided to excommunicate him for his actions. Guy I,
Count of Soissons, who ordained Hugh of Vermandois, must repent, while Thibaud of Amiens and Yves of Senlis, who both consecrated Hugh, were excommunicated. The King, with the help of Arnold, deposed Thibaud from the seat of Amiens and placed the faithful Raimbaud in his place (949).
Return of the balance The last step in the emancipation of Louis IV shows that his reign wasn't entirely negative. In 949 he entered Laon, where by command of Hugh the Great, Theobald I of Blois surrendered to him the fortress he had built a few months earlier. The King recovered, at the expense of Herbert II's vassals, the château of
Corbeny which his father had given to Saint-Remi of Reims and also authorized archbishop Artald to mint coins in his city. In 950 Louis IV and Hugh the Great finally reconciled. After the death of
Hugh the Black in 952, Hugh the Great captured his half of Burgundy. Louis IV, now allied with Arnulf I of Flanders and
Adalbert I, Count of Vermandois, exercised real authority only north of the river
Loire. He also rewarded Liétald II of Mâcon and
Charles Constantine of Vienne for their loyalty. For a long time Louis IV and his son
Lothair were the last kings to venture south of the river Loire. In 951 Louis IV fell seriously ill during a stay in
Auvergne and decided to associate to the throne his eldest son and heir, the ten-year-old Lothair. During his stay, he received homage of Bishop Étienne II, brother of the viscount of Clermont. Louis IV recovered from his disease thanks to the care of his wife Gerberga, who during the reign of her husband had a key role. The royal couple had seven children, of whom only three survived infancy: Lothair, the eldest son and future King – that Flodoard cites not to be confused with the son of
Louis the Pious:
Lotharius puer, filius Ludowici (infant Lothair, son of Louis)–,
Mathilde – who in 964 married King
Conrad I of Burgundy – and
Charles – who was invested as Duke of Lower Lorraine by his cousin
Emperor Otto II in 977–. During the 950s, the royal power network was entrenched by construction of several palaces in the towns that were recovered by the King. Under Louis IV (and also during the reign of his son), there is a geographical tightening of royal lands around Compiègne, Laon and Reims which eventually gave Laon an incontestable primacy. Thus, through the charters issued by the Royal Chancery, can be followed the stays of Louis IV. The King spent most of his time in the palaces of Reims (21% of the charters), Laon (15%), Compiègne and Soissons (2% for each of them). Flodoard records in 951 that Queen Eadgifu (
Ottogeba regina mater Ludowici regis), who since her return with her son to France retired to the Abbey of Notre Dame in Laon (
abbatiam sanctæ Mariæ...Lauduni), where she became the Abbess, was abducted from there by
Herbert III of Vermandois, Count of Château-Thierry (
Heriberti...Adalberti fratris), who married her shortly after; the King, furious about this (
rex Ludowicus iratus) confiscated the Abbey of Notre Dame from his mother and donated it to his wife Gerberga (
Gerbergæ uxori suæ). == Death of Louis IV and the Legend of the Wolf ==