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Gisela di Friuli

Also Known As: "Gisele de Friaul"
Birthdate:
Death: after 918
Immediate Family:

Wife of Waltfred de Vérone, Count of Verona, Margrave of Friuli
Mother of Gisela di Verona (Nellenburg)

Managed by: Everard van Dijk
Last Updated:

About Gisela di Friuli

Source : https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adalhard_von_Burc

For information: Gisela, Adalhard, Unruoch III and Berengar I are brothers and sister. It is not clear who this Gisela was married from the monastery after her abduction. It must be a cousin of Bishop Liutward von Vercelli. Abduction in 886/87 Brescia. There are also information on the Internet that the Gisela abducted another Gisela is the daughter of Unruoch III, the brother of this Gisela. Looking at the Europäische Stammtafen Band II 1984 Table 188A then would be the abducted Gisela nameless and a daughter of Berengar I di Friuli. It is to expect that this Gisela is Waltfred von Verona's wife and so the mother of Gisela de Verona (Nellenburg) but she must then be born after 886 but this year of birth looks not good. It is true that Waltfred von Verona had a wife with the name Gisela.

Wikipedia: Berengar I. von Friaul (* um 840; † 7. April 924 in Verona) war Kaiser von 915 bis 924 und König von Italien in den Jahren 888–889, 896–901 und 905–924. Somit gehört er zu den Nationalkönigen. Leben [Bearbeiten]

In 886, Liutward, Bishop of Vercelli, took Berengar's sister from the nunnery of S. Salvatore at Brescia in order to marry her to a relative of his; whether or not by force or by the consent of the convent and Charles the Fat, her relative, is uncertain.[11] Berengar and Liutward had a feud that year, which involved his attack on Vercelli and plundering of the bishop's goods.[12] Berengar's actions are explicable if his sister was abducted by the bishop, but if the bishop's actions were justified, then Berengar appears as the initiator of the feud. Whatever the case, bishop and margrave were reconciled shortly before Liutward was dismissed from court in 887.[12]

By his brief war with Liutward, Berengar had lost the favour of his cousin the emperor. Berengar came to the emperor's assembly at Waiblingen in early May 887.[13] He made peace with the emperor and compensated for the actions of the previous year by dispensing great gifts.[13] In June or July, Berengar was again at the emperor's side at Kirchen, when Louis of Provence was adopted as the emperor's son.[14] It is sometimes alleged that Berengar was pining to be declared Charles' heir and that he may in fact have been so named in Italy, where he was acclaimed (or made himself) king immediately after Charles' deposition by the nobles of East Francia in November that year (887).[15] On the other hand, his presence may merely have been necessary to confirm Charles' illegitimate son Bernard as his heir (Waiblingen), a plan which failed when the pope refused to attend, and then to confirm Louis instead (Kirchen).[16] [edit] King of Italy, 887–915

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