'Pepin II', called 'the Younger' (
823 – after
864 in
Senlis), was
King of Aquitaine from
838 as the successor upon the death of his father,
Pepin I.
Pepin II was eldest son of Pepin I and Ingeltrude,
[1] daughter of the count of
Madrie, Theodobert. He was grandson of the
Emperor Louis the Pious.
Pepin was elected king upon his father's death by the nobles of Aquitaine who were keen to establish their independence from the Empire. Louis the Pious however had appointed
Charles the Bald as King of Aquitaine in
832 when he (nominally) dispossessed Pepin I. Pepin had thereafter been at war with his Uncle Charles. Louis the Pious fully disinherited him at
Crémieux and then at
Worms in two subsequent divisions of the empire.
Louis demanded the Aquitainians send Pepin to
Aachen to learn the ways of good governance however they refused. Pepin was in total control of Aquitaine until
841 when he went to his uncle
Lothair I's aid at the
Battle of Fontenay. Pepin's contingent faced the troops of Charles the Bald and defeated him. However elswhere on the battlefield Lothair was routed by the forces of
Louis the German, Charles' brother. Pepin returned to Aquitaine and continued war with Charles the Bald.
In
844 Pepin made the fatal error of asking the Viking Adventurer
Jarl Oscar for military assistance. He guided the
Viking force up the
Garonne to
Toulouse, giving them an opportunity to scout the land for plundering. In
845 Pepin welcomed
Seguin of Bordeaux who had defected from the Emperors side and made him ''
dux Wasconum'', to help his fight against
Sans II Sancion, leader of the
Gascons.
In
847 Oscar was given control of Bordeaux, the largest city in Aquitaine and then controlled by Charles, by disaffected citizens: either
Jews or partisans of Pepin. This loss of the City to a
heathen pirate, coupled with Pepin's penchant for the bottle and loose living, eroded his support in the nobility until
848 he was left with no support. His brother,
Charles then left Aachen to claim the Aquitainian Kingdom for himself.
Pepin II's rule finally ended in
851 or
852 when he was captured by Sans II Sancion, who had been at war with his father Pepin I, and handed over to Charles. He was detained in the monastery of
Saint Médard in
Soissons. As reward Sans was awarded the status of
Duke.
Meanwhile
Louis the Younger, a cousin, was sent by his father
Louis the German who was at war with Charles the Bald, to rule Aquitaine. He marched as far as
Limoges in
855 before returning east.
However Pepin escaped and recovered some of his old authority and lands in
854. The Vikings now established in the
Loire Valley ravaged
Poitiers,
Angoulême,
Périgueux,
Limoges,
Clermont, and
Bourges while Charles the Bald was busy trying to subdue Pepin. In
864 Pepin joined the Vikings and is rumoured to have turned from
Christianity to worship
Woden. He took part with the Vikings on an attack on Toulouse. He was captured again later in 864 and deposed by the
Edict of Pistres, and imprisoned in
Senlis, where he eventually died.
Notes
1. Also called ''Engelberga'', ''Rigarde'', ''Hringard'', or ''Ringart''.