Louis IV \"d’Outremer\": Carolingian Return and the Princes’ War (936–954) · EARLY MIDDLE AGES
Normandy is not only a frontier: it is a test. Controlling the duchy means controlling military force, routes, and a political space able to tip the kingdom.
In late 942, William Longsword is assassinated at Picquigny. Soon after, Herbert II of Vermandois dies. Two powers are reshaped: Normandy has a young heir; Vermandois is divided among several sons.
Louis exploits the opening: he enters Rouen, receives homage from part of the Norman aristocracy, and offers protection to the young Richard. He entrusts tutelage to his faithful Herluin of Montreuil and brings the duke’s person into the royal sphere as a political guarantee.
In 945, Louis returns to Normandy. An ambush near Bayeux cuts him off from support: Herluin is killed and the king is captured. Crisis becomes total, because captors can negotiate the kingdom itself.
🔍 Zoom – 945–948: Rouen, captivity, and the Council of Ingelheim
After his release, the king pays dearly: an opponent demands concessions, even claiming Laon, heart of Carolingian legitimacy. In 946, royal diplomas display a vocabulary of reconquest, as if the kingdom had to be “recovered” after captivity.