List of kings of Burgundy
List of kings of Burgundy includes all kings of Burgundy, as a historical realm that went through several political transformations, being established at first as the Ancient Kingdom of Burgundy, and later revived as the Welfish Kingdom of Burgundy. It continued to exist as the Kingdom of Burgundy within the Holy Roman Empire.
Kings of the Burgundians
- Gebicca
- Gundomar I, son of Gebicca
- Giselher, son of Gebicca
- Gunther, son of Gebicca
- Gunderic/Gundioc opposed by
- *Chilperic I, brother of Gundioc
- division of the kingdom among the four sons of Gundioc:
- *Gundobad,
- *Chilperic II
- *Godomar I
- *Godegisel
- Sigismund, son of Gundobad
- Godomar or Gundomar, son of Gundobad
Frankish kings in Burgundy
Merovingian kings
- Childebert I, 534-558
- Theudebert I, 534-548
- Chlothar I, 534-561, eventually uniting the entire kingdom
- Guntram
- Childebert II, 592-595
- Theuderic II, 595-613
Carolingian kings in Burgundy
- Pippin the Younger, 751-768
- Carloman, 768-771
- Charlemagne, 771-814
- Louis the Pious, 814-840
- Lothair I, 840-855, king under his father after 817
- Charles the Bald received the smaller part, west of the river Saône. This entity was officially called regnum burgundiae, but since the king of France delegated administration to dukes, the territory became known as the Duchy of Burgundy.
- Lothair I received the larger part, east of the river Saône, which retained the name of Kingdom of Burgundy
- Lothair II, who received the north, and
- Charles of Provence, who received the south, including Provence, Lyon and Vienne. His realm was called the regnum provinciae.
Kings of Lower Burgundy
- Charles of Provence
- Louis II, also Holy Roman Emperor from 855
- Charles the Bald, also Holy Roman Emperor from 875
- Louis the Stammerer
- Boso
- Louis the Blind, also Holy Roman Emperor from 901 to 905
- Hugh
Kings of Upper Burgundy
- Lothair II, 855-869
On the death in 888 of Emperor Charles the Fat, who until 884 had united all Frankish kingdoms except for Kingdom of Provence, the nobles and leading clergy of Upper Burgundy assembled at St Maurice and elected Rudolph, count of Auxerre, from the Elder Welf family, as king. At first, he tried to reunite the realm of Lothair II, but opposition by Arnulf of Carinthia forced him to focus on his Burgundian territory.
- Rudolf I
- Rudolf II In 933 Rudolph ceded his claims to the Kingdom of Italy to Hugh of Arles in return for the Kingdom of Provence, thus reuniting the two territories.
- Conrad I
- Rudolph III
Kings of Burgundy (Arles) within the Holy Roman Empire
Salian (Frankish) dynasty
- Conrad II, king 1032–1039, emperor after 1027
- Henry III, king 1039–1056, emperor 1046–1056
- Henry IV, king 1056–1105, emperor 1084–1105
- Henry V, king 1105–1125, emperor 1111–1125
Supplinburger
- Lothar III, king 1125–1137, emperor 1133–1137
Staufen (or [Hohenstaufen] dynasty)
- Conrad III, king 1138–1152
- Frederick I Barbarossa, king 1152, emperor 1155–1190
- Henry VI, king 1190, emperor 1191–1197
- Philip of Swabia, king 1198–1208
- Otto IV of Brunswick, king 1208–1215, emperor 1209–1215
- Frederick II, king 1212, emperor 1220–1250
- Conrad IV, king 1237–1254
Luxemburg
- Charles IV, king 1365, emperor 1355–1378
Rectors of Burgundy
Emperor Lothair III appointed Conrad I, Duke of Zähringen as the imperial representative in the Arlesian kingdom. Conrad was titled as the Rector of Burgundy, and the same office was held by his successors from the House of Zähringen, until emperor Frederick II decided to confirm that title to his own son and designated heir Henry. That appointment was made in order to keep feudal lords from further pretensions to regal powers associated with the rectoral title. After young Henry had been elected king of Germany in April 1220, the title disappeared for good.
During the Zähringen era, the effective power of the Rectors of Burgundy was restricted mainly to the northern parts of the Burgundian realm, since the Zähringer had vast possessions in that region, particularly to the east of the Jura Mountains. Various attempts to enforce the Zähringer's rectoral authority into the southern parts of the kingdom failed, most notably a military campaign in 1153. After these failures, Emperor Frederick Barbarossa gained a firm hold of the western districts in 1156 by marrying Countess Beatrice I of Burgundy.