Louis IV \"d’Outremer\": Carolingian Return and the Princes’ War (936–954) · EARLY MIDDLE AGES
For Louis IV, the East is both temptation and trap: Lotharingia is Carolingian by inheritance, but also a theatre dominated by German power.
In 939, Duke Giselbert of Lotharingia, breaking with Otto I, seeks support and turns to Louis. The king crosses the eastern marches and receives homages on the road: the move aims to widen his base and reduce dependence on Hugh the Great.
Giselbert’s death changes the situation. Louis strengthens position through marriage to Gerberga of Saxony, linked to the Ottonian dynasty. But Otto I does not tolerate a “Carolingian” Lotharingia: he supports hostile coalitions in West Francia and weighs directly on the politics of bishoprics and strongholds.
After years of crisis, stabilisation passes through arbitration: Otto can propose reconciliation and “freeze” a princes’ war that threatens to erase royal authority. Peace here is not victory: it is an exit from crisis.