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  1. Welf I (or Hwelf; died c. 825) is the first documented ancestor of the Elder House of Welf. He is mentioned as a count (comes) in the Frankish lands of Altdorf in Alamannia. He is the son of Rothard of the Argengau and grandson of Hardrad.

  2. Judith of Bavaria (c. 797 – 19 April 843) was the Carolingian empress as the second wife of Louis the Pious. Marriage to Louis marked the beginning of her rise as an influential figure in the Carolingian court. She had two children with Louis, Gisela and Charles the Bald.

  3. Judith Welf (* um 1100; † 22. Februar 1130 oder 1131), auch Judith von Bayern genannt, war Herzogin von Schwaben. [1] Sie war Tochter des Welfen Heinrich des Schwarzen. Um 1119/1120 heiratete sie den Staufer Herzog Friedrich II. von Schwaben. 1122 wurde ihr erster Sohn geboren, der spätere Kaiser Friedrich I. Barbarossa. [1]

  4. 22. Aug. 2024 · From the English Wikipedia page on Welf, father of Judith: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Welf_(father_of_Judith) Welf or Hwelf also known as Welf I, was the son of the 9th century Frankish count Rothard of Metz. He is the oldest known member of the Elder House of Welf.

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  5. Welf was the oldest son of Welf I, Duke of Bavaria, and his wife Judith of Flanders. [3] In 1088 [4] or 1089, [5] when Welf was still a teenager, he married Matilda of Tuscany, [3] who was more than twenty years older than him, in order to strengthen the relation between his family and the pope during the Investiture Controversy between king and pope. [6]

  6. Welf I (or Hwelf; died about 825) is the first documented ancestor of the Elder House of Welf. He is mentioned as a count (comes) in the Frankish lands of Altdorf in Alamannia. He is the son of Rothard of the Argengau and grandson of Hardrad.

  7. Born 802 in Bavaria; died in 843 in France; daughter of Welf of Bavaria and Heilwig ; sister of Emma of Bavaria (d. 876); became second wife of Louis I the Pious (778–840), king of Aquitaine (r. 781–814), king of France (r. 814–840), and Holy Roman emperor (r.