'Conrad II' (probably
1003–
20 July 1039), called 'the Younger', was the
Salian duke of Carinthia from
1035. His father,
Conrad I died in 1011 when he was a minor.
Adalbero of Eppenstein was given the duchy of
Carinthia. Instead Conrad became count in
Nahegau,
Speyergau, and
Wormsgau.
In 1024, as his father and grandfather in 1002, Conrad was a candidate for the German kingship after the death of the
Emperor Henry II. It was his cousin, another
Conrad II, the son of his paternal uncle,
Henry of Speyer, who was elected king. In 1035, Adalbero rebelled against Salian rule and influence and was deprived of his duchy. Conrad was chosen to replace him. He did not live long thereafter, dying in
1039. He was buried alongside his father and mother, Matilda, daughter of
Herman II, Duke of Swabia, in the cathedral at
Worms. On his death, his natural heir was
King Henry III.
No marriage is recorded of Conrad, though a son, named Cuno, appears in 1056, selling
Bruchsal to the
King Henry IV.