Historical context After the last
Agilolfing duke of Bavaria,
Tassilo III, was deposed in 788,
Charlemagne and his
successors placed Bavaria under the rule of non-hereditary governors and civil servants. By the late 9th century however, Frankish direct power had waned in the region. The
conquests of the Hungarians and their
recurring invasions had allowed Bavaria's local rulers to grab greater independence.
Margrave Luitpold, the progenitor of the Luitpoldings, set himself up as the most prominent of Bavaria's aristocracy and thereby laid the foundations of the renewed
stem duchy.
Origins Ernstides and Huosi Luitpold's descent has not been conclusively established. Luitpold and his ancestors are said to have been an offshoot of the early medieval Bavarian
Huosi, one of the five leading Bavarian dynasties during the time of the formation of the
Bavarian tribes, who flourished in the 8th and 9th century. His father may have been Ernst II, of the Ernstides dynasty
de]. In this case, his aunt would have been married to
Gebhard of the Lahngau, the progenitor of the
Conradines. A namesake, Luitpold, who died in 846, could have been a relative.
Emperor Arnulf of Carinthia calls him a blood relative and a cousin. This relation may have gone through Luitpold's father Ernst II, whose possible sister Liutswind was married to the
Carolingian King Carloman of Bavaria, and were the parents of Arnulf. If correct, this would explain the transmission of the dukedom of the Bavarian/Bohemian march from Ernst I to Luitpold, both of whom are also recorded as Counts in the Nordgau.
Babenberger According to early tradition (as well as later Babenberger chroniclers), Luitpold descended from the
Popponids or Elder
House of Babenberg, who in turn descending from the
Frankish Robertians. At the same time, the Younger Babenberger, through their progenitor
Leopold I,
Margrave of Austria, are often assumed in older literature to descend from Luitpold (most likely due to the similarity of their names). Thus Luitpold would be the link between the Elder and Younger Babenberger. But in fact, Luitpold was probably linked with the enemies of the Elder Babenberger, the
Conradines, through his aunt and seemed to have played an active role by heading a Conradine army during the early phases of the clashes around the Babenberg Feud
de] that led to their near-extinction. One possible link could have been created after the fall of the Babenberger, through Luitpold's unnamed sister. Apart from fathering Luitpold and his direct heir, Ernst III, Ernst II also had a daughter. This daughter married Henry III of
Babenberg, a surviving son after the Feud, binding the two dynasties together and adding further legitimacy to Luitpold's power.
Welf Luitpold's mother is not known, but she is speculated to have been a
Welf daughter of
Conrad I the Elder.
Dukes of Bavaria thumb | The death of Luitpold in the Battle of Pressburg, by Wilhelm Lindenschmit the Elder</a> In 893, Emperor Arnulf appointed
Luitpold Margrave of Carinthia and Upper
Pannonia to succeed to the
Wilhelminer margrave
Engelschalk II. Luitpold was able to enlarge his Bavarian possessions around
Regensburg and in the adjacent
March of the Nordgau. He became a military leader during the
Hungarian invasions and was killed in the 907
Battle of Pressburg. While the
Kingdom of Germany emerged under the rule of King
Conrad I and his successors of the
Ottonian dynasty, Luitpold's son and heir
Arnulf the Bad was backed by the local nobility and adopted the
Bavarian ducal title. He reorganized the duchy's defenses against the Hungarian invaders and, according to the contemporary
Annales iuvavenses, built up a king-like position at his Regensburg residence. He interfered with the Ottonian King
Henry I of Germany, whose rule he finally acknowledged in 921, but he reserved numerous privileges for himself. Given a free hand, he campaigned in the lands of the
Přemyslid duke
Wenceslaus of Bohemia and even invaded the
Kingdom of Italy in 933–934 in order to obtain the
Iron Crown of Lombardy for his son Eberhard, though without success.
Decline Eberhard succeeded his father as Duke of Bavaria in 937. However, he soon struggled with King
Otto I of Germany, who had no intention to respect the Bavarian autonomy. King Otto declared Eberhard deposed and banned him the next year. Instead of Eberhard, King Otto appointed Arnulf's brother
Berthold duke, after the latter had renounced the exercise of the Bavarian liberties. Berthold would remain a loyal supporter of King Otto. Nevertheless, upon Berthold's death in 947, the hereditary title was denied to his son
Henry the Younger and the king ceded the Bavarian duchy to his own brother
Henry I instead, on the grounds that he was married to Arnulf's daughter
Judith. In 976, Henry the Younger received a certain compensation from Emperor
Otto II with the newly established
Duchy of Carinthia, and even managed to regain the Bavarian ducal title in 983. Only two years later, however, he had to yield that title to the force of the Ottonian Duke
Henry the Wrangler. With the death of Henry the Younger in 989, the line of the Luitpoldings ended. == Genealogy ==