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See also: Roman emperor, was the son of the emperor See also: Otto the See also: Great,• by his second wife Adelaide
.
He received a See also: good See also: education under the care of his See also: uncle, See also: Bruno, archbishop of Cologne, and his illegitimate See also: half-See also: brother, See also: William, archbishop of
See also: Mainz
.
He was chosen See also: German See also: king at
See also: Worms in 961, crowned at See also: Aix-la-Chapelle on the 26th of May 961, and on the 25th of See also: December 967 was crowned joint emperor at See also: Rome by See also: Pope See also: John XIII
.
On the 14th of
See also: April 972 he married See also: Theophano, daughter of the eastern emperor See also: Romanus II., and after sharing in various See also: campaigns in See also: Italy, returned to See also: Germany and became See also: sole emperor on the See also: death of his See also: father in May 973
.
After suppressing a rising in See also: Lorraine, difficulties arose in See also: southern Germany, probably owing to Otto's refusal to See also: grant the duchy of
See also: Swabia to See also: Henry II., the Quarrelsome, duke of
See also: Bavaria
.
The first conspiracy was easily suppressed, and in 974 an attempt on the See also: part of Harold III., king of the Danes, to throw off the German yoke was also successfully resisted; but an expedition against the Bohemians led by the king in See also: person in 975 was a partial failure owing to the outbreak of further trouble in Bavaria
.
In 976 Otto deposed Duke Henry, restored See also: order for the second See also: time in Lorraine, and made another expedition into Bohemia in 977, when King Boleslaus II. promised to return to his earlier allegiance
.
Having crushed an attempt made by Henry to regain Bavaria, Otto was suddenly attacked by See also: Lothair, king of See also: France, who held Aix in his possession for a few days; but when the emperor retaliated by invading France he met with little resistance
.
He was, however, compelled by ;sickness among his troops to raise the siege of See also: Paris, and on the return journey the rearguard of his army was destroyed and the baggage seized by the French
.
An expAtlition against the Poles was followed by See also: peace with France, when Lothair renounced his claim on Lorraine
.
The emperor then prepared for a journey to Italy
.
In Rome, where he restored Pope Benedict VII., he held a splendidSee also: court, attended by princes and nobles from all parts of western See also: Europe
.
He was next required to punish inroads of the See also: Saracens on the See also: Italian mainland, and in See also: September 981 he marched into Apulia, where he met at first with consider-able success; but an See also: alliance between the See also: Arabs and the Eastern See also: Empire, whose hostility had been provoked by the invasion of Apulia, resulted in a severe defeat on Otto's troops near Stilo in See also: July 982
.
Without revealing his identity, the emperor escaped on a See also: Greek vessel to See also: Rossano
.
At a See also: diet held at See also: Verona, largely attended by German and Italian princes, a fresh See also: campaign was arranged against the Saracens
.
Proceeding to Rome, Otto secured the election of See also: Peter of See also: Pavia as Pope john XIV
.
Just as the See also: news reached him of a general rising of the tribes on the eastern frontier of Germany, he died in his palace in Rome on the 7th of December 983
.
He See also: left a son, afterwards the emperor Otto III., and three daughters
.
He was buried in the atrium of St Peter's, and when the See also: church was rebuilt his remains were removed to the crypt, where his
See also: tomb may still be seen
.
Otto, who is sometimes called the " Red," was a See also: man of small stature, by nature brave and impulsive, and by training an accomplished knight
.
He was generous to the church and aided the spread of See also: Christianity in many ways
.
See Die Urkunden See also: des Kaisers Otto II., edited by Th. von Sickel, in the Monumenta Germaniae historica
.
Diplomata (See also: Hanover, 1879) ;
L. von See also: Ranke, Weltgeschichte, Part vii
.
( See also: Leipzig, 1886) ; W. von See also: Giesebrecht, Geschichte der deutschen Kaiserzeit (Leipzig, 1881–189o) ; and Jahrbiicher des deutschen Reichs unter Kaiser Otto II
.
(Berlin, 1837–184o) ; H
.
Detmer, Otto II. bis zum Tode seines Vaters (Leipzig, 1878) ; J
.
Moltmann, Theophano die Gemahlin Ottos II. in ihrer Bedeutung fur die Polilik Ottos I. and Ottos II
.
(See also: Gottingen, 1878) ; and A
.
Matthaei, Die See also: Handel Ottos II. nit Lothar von Frankreich (See also: Halle, 1882)
.
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