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  1. Emma de Francia (894-2 de noviembre de 934) fue hija del rey Roberto I de Francia Occidental y de su segunda esposa, Beatriz de Vermandois. Se casó en 921 con el duque Raúl de Borgoña que, tras la muerte del rey Roberto I, fue consagrado rey de los francos el 13 de julio de 923 1 en la Abadía de Saint-Médard de Soissons .

  2. Emma de París (943-19 de marzo de 968) era un consorte duquesa de Normandía, casada con el duque Ricardo I de Normandía. Ella era la hija del conde Hugo el Grande de París y Hedwige de Sajonia y hermana de Hugo Capeto, rey de Francia.

    • 18 de marzo de 968 o 19 de marzo de 968
    • c. 943
  3. Emma de Francia (894-2 de noviembre de 934) fue hija del rey Roberto I de Francia Occidental y de su segunda esposa, Beatriz de Vermandois. Se casó en 921 con el duque Raúl de Borgoña que, tras la muerte del rey Roberto I, fue consagrado rey de los francos el 13 de julio de 923 [1] en la Abadía de Saint-Médard de Soissons .

  4. Tiempo de lectura: 1 minuto. Tal día como hoy del año 934, hace 1.088 años, en París, moría Emma de Francia, esposa del rey usurpador Raúl I, segundo monarca del segundo paréntesis denominado "robertino" (922-936) que más tarde pondría fin a la dinastía carolingia (751-987) y daría paso a la estirpe Capeto (987-1328).

    • mpons@elnacional.cat
    • Lineage and Early Life
    • Marriage to Raoul
    • Military Campaigns, 927-933
    • Death and Legacy
    • Sources and Additional Reading

    The Rise of the Robertians

    Emma was a member of the Robertians, a Frankish aristocratic family in West Francia which eventually gave rise to the Capetian dynasty, whose members ruled France from the accession of Hugh Capet in 987 until 1328. The Robertians' rise to prominence began with Emma’s grandfather, Robert the Strong. Descended from Austrasian nobility, he was a royal military commander and administrative official favored by the Carolingian emperor and king of West Frankish king, Charles the Bald. He defended ro...

    Parents and Early Life

    King Robert I had two daughters. The first is often called Adela by scholars, but her actual name remains unknown. She is the daughter of Robert I’s first wife and she married Herbert II of Vermandois. Robert I’s second daughter was Emma. Scholars are divided over whether she was the child of Robert’s first wife, or his second wife, Beatrix of Vermandois. Due to the age gap between her and her younger brother, Hugh the Great, who was the son of Beatrix, scholars have largely inferred that she...

    Robert I and the Election of Raoul

    Charles the Simple, although crowned in Laon in 893, only was able to gain full control of the West Frankish kingdom in 898 after Odo's death. While his reign was seemingly more widely accepted than Odo’s, most magnates took exception to his rule. His time on the throne was marked by internal dissension as well as Viking attacks, forcing him to allow Robert I to hold Neustria and other parts of West Francia, a decision which allowed Robert I to gain more legitimacy as a ruler.As a result, the...

    Particularly in times of insecurity and rivalry for the throne, a wife often served as a king's most loyal and trustworthy ally. A wife such as Emma, powerful and clever, was therefore the ideal partner for a new ruler like Raoul, who many considered a usurper due to his lack of direct relation to previous rulers. Marriage to the “beautiful and int...

    Emma was active in a number of military campaigns and political maneuvers. As the historian Simon MacLean writes, one of her influential contemporaries, the scholar Flodoard of Reims, “mentions Emma’s direct involvement in the politics and military affairs of her kingdom as if it were normal, without gendered criticism,” implying that women wieldin...

    Emma died only a few years later; different sources report her death to have occurred in either 934 or 935. Raoul survived her for only a brief time, dying in 936.Neither of their children would succeed them on the throne, and little evidence about them survives for the years following Emma and Raoul's death. After Raoul’s death, Charles the Simple...

    Bouchard, Constance Brittain (2001). "Those of My Blood" : Constructing Noble Families in Medieval Francia. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
    Bradbury, Jim (2007). The Capetians : Kings of France, 987-1328. London; New York: Hambledon Continuum.
    Le Jan, Régine (2001). Femmes, pouvoir et société dans le haut Moyen Age. Paris: Picard.
    Maclean, Simon; Adalbert (2009). History and Politics in Late Carolingian and Ottonian Europe : the Chronicle of Regino of Prüm and Adalbert of Magdeburg. Manchester, UK ; New York : New York: Manc...
  5. Emma o Emina, Reina de Francia (s. X). Reina de Francia, hija de Lotario II, rey de Italia y mujer de Lotario, rey de Francia; también llamada Emina, vivió por la época del 986.

  6. Emma de Francia (fallecida en 935) fue una princesa francesa por nacimiento y reina por matrimonio. También fue conocida como Emma Capet, Emma de Borgoña y Emma de Neustria. Era la hija de Roberto I de Francia y Aelis de Maine o Béatrice de Vermandois. Su familia es conocida como los Robertianos. C ª.