Conrad I (died Dec. 23, 918) was a German king from 911 to 918 and a member of the powerful Franconian dynasty known as the Conradines.
Duke of Franconia, Conrad was elected German king on Nov. 10, 911, at Forchheim, after the death of Louis the Child, the last of the East Frankish Carolingians. It is not clear whether Conrad was supported by all the German nobles east of the Rhine or only by the Franks and Saxons. Between the East and West Frankish kingdoms, the Lotharingian nobles turned to the West Frankish Carolingian, Charles III. In 913 Conrad married Kunigunde, a member of the Alaholfing family of Swabia. His reign was a bitter and bloody struggle to uphold the traditions of Carolingian kingship against the growing power of the Saxon, Bavarian, and Swabian dukes. His attempt to mobilize the episcopate in this cause at the synod of Hohenaltheim (916) could not compensate for the failure of his military campaigns. Conrad was in fact unable to establish his family as the new royal house in the East Frankish kingdom, and shortly before his death he is reported to have proposed his opponent, the Liudolfing Henry of Saxony, as his successor.