Conrad II of Italy
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Conrad II (12 February 1074 – 27 July 1101) was the second son of Holy Roman Emperor Henry IV. As such, he was King of Germany from 1087 to 1098 and also King of Italy from 1093 to 1098.
Conrad was born in Hersfeld Abbey in 1074 to Henry and Bertha of Savoy. His elder brother Henry had been born and died in August 1071. As his father's heir, he was appointed Duke of Lower Lorraine and Margrave of Turin in 1076, at the age of two. In the same year he accompanied his father on his way to Canossa. Conrad was given to the care of Tedald, Archbishop of Milan, and stayed in Italy. In 1087, he was elected King of Germany and crowned on 30 May in Aachen, which officially made him his father's heir.
Under the influence of Marchioness Matilda of Tuscany, Conrad in 1093 joined the papal camp and thus turned against his father. In the same year, he was crowned King of Italy in Milan by Archbishop Anselm III. According to Landulf Iuniore, historian of Milan, he was also crowned at Monza, where the Iron Crown was being kept. In 1095, shortly after the Council of Piacenza, he swore an oath of loyalty to Pope Urban II in Cremona and served as the Pope's strator, leading the Pope's horse as a symbolic gesture of humility. In turn, Urban promised Conrad the Imperial crown. In the same year, the Pope arranged a marriage of Conrad to Constanze of Sicily, daughter of Count Roger I of Sicily.
His father reacted at the Reichstag of Mainz in April 1098 by deposing Conrad and designating his younger son Henry as successor. After this, Conrad could hardly influence the political events in Italy and in 1101 he died at the age of twenty seven in Florence. He was buried in Santa Reparata, now superseded by Santa Maria del Fiore.
Preceded by Godfrey IV |
Duke of Lower Lorraine 1076 – 1087 |
Succeeded by Godfrey V |
Preceded by Henry IV |
German King (formally King of the Romans) 1087 – 1098 |
Succeeded by Henry V |
King of Italy 1093 – 1098 |