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  1. The three-year Carolingian Civil War culminated in the decisive Battle of Fontenoy, also called the Battle of Fontenoy-en-Puisaye, fought at Fontenoy, near Auxerre, on 25 June 841. The war was fought to decide the territorial inheritances of Charlemagne 's grandsons—the division of the Carolingian Empire among the three surviving ...

    • 25 June 841
    • Divisionist victory (Empire divided between the three leaders in 843)
  2. La llamada batalla de Fontenoy-en-Puisay (25 de junio de 841) fue el enfrentamiento decisivo ocurrido en la actual comuna francesa de Fontenoy entre los imperialistas (al mando de Lotario I) y los divisionistas (Carlos el Calvo y Luis el Germánico), en el marco de la tercera guerra civil del Imperio carolingio en el reinado Ludovico ...

    • Decisiva victoria rebelde
  3. by Nicolas Agrait Posted on April 22, 2013. The Annals of Fulda are the principal narrative source written from a perspective east of the Rhine for the period in which the Carolingian Empire gave way to a number of successor kingdoms. The text covers the period from the last years of unitary Frankish rule under Louis the Pious up to the end of ...

  4. The battle has been described as a major defeat for the allied forces of Lothair I of Italy and Pepin II of Aquitaine, and a victory for Charles the Bald and Louis the German. Hostilities dragged on for another two years until the Treaty of Verdun, which had a major influence on subsequent European history.

  5. 2 de nov. de 2016 · Battle of Fontenoy June 25, 841. The largest, bloodiest, and most destructive battle of the ninth century began at 6 in the morning on Saturday, June 25, 841, at Fontenoy-en-Puisaye, now a tiny village 22 miles (35 kilometers) south of Auxerre in France. Exactly how many men took part is uncertain.

  6. 25 de feb. de 2023 · by Brian Feb 25, 2023. The Battle of Fontenoy, fought on a summer's day in 841, was a pivotal moment in the Carolingian Civil War. It was the climax of a tumultuous three-year period that saw the heirs of Charlemagne locked in a bitter struggle for control of his vast empire. The stakes were high: the fate of an entire continent hung ...

  7. The battle of Fontenoy (25 June 841, near Auxerre), about which Janet Nelson has written often and always illuminatingly, is by far the most famous of these battles, and by far the best recorded. Two of the combatants, Nithard and Angelbert, fighting on opposing sides, wrote about it, one in a remarkable prose history, the other in a remarkable ...