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Definition of Louis the stammerer
1. Noun. King of France and Germany (846-879).
Lexicographical Neighbors of Louis The Stammerer
Literary usage of Louis the stammerer
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The History of Modern Europe: With an Account of the Decline & Fall of the by William Russell, Charles Coote (1822)
"Louis the Stammerer, son of Charles the Bald, may be said to have purchased the
crown R77 of ... Louis the Stammerer d led after a reign of eighteen months, ..."
2. The History of Modern Europe: With an Account of the Decline & Fall of the by William Russell, Charles Coote (1822)
"Louis the Stammerer, son of Charles the Bald, may be said to have purchased the
crown R7_ of ... Louis the Stammerer d led after a reign of eighteen months, ..."
3. The Historians' History of the World: A Comprehensive Narrative of the Rise by Henry Smith Williams (1907)
"LOUIS II TO CARLOMAN (877-884 AD) Louis the Stammerer, given a share in the ...
Ludwig of Saxony contended with Louis the Stammerer for that of Lorraine and ..."
4. The Oxford Collection of the Drawings of Roger de Gaignières and the Royal by Elizabeth A. R. Brown (1988)
"Clovis II, son of Dagobert, was pressed into service as Carloman II, son of Louis
the Stammerer. Carloman I, son of Pepin, emerged as Clovis II, ..."
5. The Historians' History of the World: A Comprehensive Narrative of the Rise by Henry Smith Williams (1909)
"Ludwig of Saxony contended with Louis the Stammerer for that of Lorraine and the two
... Louis the Stammerer, having fallen into a decline, died in 879 at ..."
6. History of the Fall of the Roman Empire: Comprising a View of the Invasion by Jean-Charles-Léonard Simonde Sismondi (1835)
"... Louis the Stammerer subject to the Aristocracy 393 879. The Sons of Louis the
Stammerer crowned at Ferri- dres; Boson proclaimed King at ..."
7. A School History of France by John Jacob Anderson (1885)
"By the law of succession the crown devolved upon an infant son of Louis the
Stammerer, but the circumstances of the kingdom requiring a sovereign of mature ..."