Pippin I

Pippin I

▪ Carolingian king
also spelled  Pepin 
died Dec. 13, 838

      Carolingian king of Aquitaine, the second son of the emperor Louis I the Pious.

      Pippin was granted Aquitaine in July 814 and was recognized as king in 817, though it was clear that he was to remain subordinate to his elder brother, Lothar (Lothar I), the heir to the imperial title. It was Pippin who in 830 started the revolt of Louis I's elder three sons against their father, but in February 831 he became reconciled with Louis. Rebelling again in 832, he was then deposed from his kingship by Louis. He escaped from detention and took advantage of his support in Aquitaine, joining his brothers in renewed rebellion against Louis in 833. Tensions with his brothers led Pippin to repent in 834, and he helped to restore the emperor's authority. Aquitaine was then given back to him, with Anjou in addition.

▪ Carolingian mayor
also spelled  Pepin , byname  Pippin of Landen  or  Pippin the Elder , French  Pépin de Landen  or  Pépin le Vieux , German  Pippin der Ältere 
died 639 or 640

      councillor of the Merovingian king Chlotar II and mayor of the palace in Austrasia, whose lands lay in the part of the Frankish kingdom that forms part of present-day Belgium. The reference to Landen dates from the 13th century.

      Through the marriage of his daughter Begga with Ansegisel, son of Arnulf (d. 641; bishop of Metz), Pippin was the founder of the Carolingian dynasty. Deprived of his mayoralty at the accession (629) of Dagobert I, he regained power in Austrasia after that king's death (January 639) but did not long survive to enjoy it.

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  • Pippin II. — Pippin hießen folgende Herrscher: Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Pippin 1.1 Pippin I. 1.2 Pippin II. 2 Pippin ... 3 Siehe auch // …   Deutsch Wikipedia

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  • Pippīn — (Pipin), männlicher Name, dessen bemerkenswerte Träger sind: Fränkische Majores domus: 1) P. I. der Ältere (nicht: von Landen), Sohn des edeln Franken Karlmann, erlangte mit Hilfe des Bischofs Arnulf von Metz unter Chlotar 11. (613–628) und… …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

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  • pippin — excellent person or thing, 1897, from coveted varieties of apple that were raised from seed (so called since early 15c.), from M.E. pipin seed (see PIP (Cf. pip) (1)) …   Etymology dictionary

  • pippin — ► NOUN ▪ a red and yellow dessert apple. ORIGIN originally denoting a seed of a fruit: from Old French pepin …   English terms dictionary

  • pippin — [pip′in] n. [ME pipyn < OFr pepin, seed, pip] 1. any of a number of varieties of apple, esp. those valued as dessert 2. [Brit. Dial.] a small pip, or seed 3. Slang a person or thing much admired …   English World dictionary

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