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  1. Charibert I | Merovingian, Aquitaine, Mayor | Britannica

  2. Charibert, roi de Paris (517 - 567) - Genealogy - Geni.com

  3. Charibert, comte de Laon (696 - 747) - Genealogy - Geni.com

  4. Merovingian dynasty | Frankish Kings & Legacy | Britannica

  5. Chilperic I - World History Encyclopedia

  6. People also ask
    Guntram received Burgundy, then Sigebert received Austrasia (including Rheims) with his capital at Metz, and the youngest brother Chilperic received a compact kingdom with Soissons as its capital. Charibert and his wife Ingoberga had a daughter, Bertha (539–c. 612). Charibert also had several concubines.
    By 744, his daughter Bertrada of Laon (by Bertrada of Cologne) had married Pepin the Short, mayor of the palace of Neustria and Burgundy and later king of the Franks. Caribert died before 762, as stated in an act of his daughter and son-in-law. Genealogy His father is unknown - either a Robertian or a Hugobertide.
    In 721, Caribert signed, with his mother Bertrade l'Ancienne or Bertrada of Prüm or Bertrade von Prüm, the foundation act of the Abbey of Prüm. The same year, also with his mother, he made a donation to the Abbey of Echternach.
    Though Charibert was eloquent and learned in the law, Gregory of Tours found him one of the most dissolute of the early Merovingians. He maintained four concurrent wives, two of them sisters, and this resulted in his excommunication by Germanus. This was the first ever excommunication of a Merovingian king.
    en.wikipedia.org
  7. Ingoberge (519–589) | Encyclopedia.com

  8. Charibert I - Wiki Video - YouTube

  9. King Charibert I of the Franks : Family tree by comrade28 - Geneanet

  10. Charibert I and the Episcopal Leadership of the Kingdom of Paris …