SOURCE -<The Avalon Project at Yale Law School >
In the year of the Incarnation of our Lord Jesus Christ 870,
on the day before the Nones of March,
in the 32nd year of the most glorious king Charles,
in the palace at Aix,
this agreement was made
between him and his brother king Louis.
I promise this on the part of my lord, that my lord king Charles consents that his brother, king Louis,
shall have such portion of the kingdom of king Lothar,
as either they themselves, or their faithful followers among themselves, shall find to be most just and most equable.
Neither with regard to that portion nor with regard to the kingdom
which he (Louis) before held will he (Charles) deceive or ill-advise him through any fraud or wile,
provided that his brother Louis will on his part inviolably observe, as long as he lives,
the same steadfastness and fidelity to my lord which I have promised to him on the part of that lord.
I promise this on the part of my lord,
that my lord king Louis consents that his brother, king Charles, shall have such portion of the kingdom of king Lothar,
as either they themselves, or their faithful followers among themselves, shall find to be most just or most equable.
Neither with regard to that portion nor with regard to the kingdom which he (Charles) before held,
will he (Louis) deceive or ill-advise him through any fraud or wile, provided that his brother Charles will on his part inviolably observe,
as long as he lives, the same steadfastness and fidelity to my lord which I have promised to him on the part of that lord.
In like manner count Theoderic as a third swore to these things
on the part of the glorious king Charles + as a fourth count Ralph on the part of king Louis.
There were present there:
archbishop Liutbert,
bishop Altfrid,
bishop Odo,
count Adalelm,
count Ingleram,
count Liutfried,
count Theoderic,
likewise a
count Adalelm.
Henderson's NoteA treaty, entered into in 870,
regarding the subdivision of the central one of the
three kingdoms founded by the treaty of Verdun.
It is given here as showing the
beginning of the thousand years' struggle between France and Germany
for the possession of the border provinces.
It was preliminary to the
treaty of Mersen.
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