The ancestry of count
Robert the Strong (d. 866) is not certain, and it has been the subject of various genealogical assumptions and historical studies. Robert's origins remain unclear, but medieval records hint at an origin in
Austrasia, or
East Francia (in present-day
Germany), an area then still also ruled by the Carolingians. In particular,
Regino of Prüm (died 915) states that Robert the Strong's son Odo was said to be a relative (
nepos) of a Count Meingaud, count of an area near
Worms, who died in 892, and there are indications that Maingaud's family used the names Robert and Odo. Modern proposals about their ancestry further back are based on the idea that there was one family which frequently named its sons Robert, including
Robert III of Worms (800–834),
Robert the Strong (d. 866), and
Robert I of France (866–923). For example, one proposed ancestor is
Robert of Hesbaye (c. 800), about whom there are almost no records. The Robertian family figured prominently amongst the
Carolingian nobility and married into this royal family. Eventually, the Robertians themselves produced Frankish kings such as the brothers
Odo (reigned 888–898) and
Robert I (r. 922–923), then
Hugh Capet (r. 987–996), who ruled from his seat in Paris as the first Capetian king of France. Although
Philip II Augustus (r. 1180–1223) was officially the last monarch of
France with the title "King of the Franks" (
rex Francorum) and the first to style himself "King of France" (
roi de France), in (systematic application of)
historiography, Hugh Capet holds this distinction. He founded the
Capetians, the royal dynasty that ruled France until the revolution of the
Second French Republic in 1848save during the interregnum of the
French Revolution and
Napoleonic Wars. Members of the family still reign in Europe today : both King
Felipe VI of Spain and Grand Duke
Henri of
Luxembourg descend from this family through the
Bourbon cadet branch of the dynasty. The oldest known Robertians probably originated in the county of
Hesbaye, around
Tongeren in modern-day
Belgium. The first certain ancestor is
Robert the Strong count of
Paris, probably the son of Robert III of Worms, grandson of Robert of Hesbaye, and nephew of
Ermengarde of Hesbaye, who was the daughter of
Ingram, and wife of
Louis the Pious. Other related family includes
Cancor, founder of the
Lorsch Abbey, his sister Landrada and her son
Saint Chrodogang, archbishop of
Metz. ==History==