Louis IV (born 893, Altötting, Bavaria—died Sept. 20 or 24, 911, Frankfurt?) was the East Frankish king, the last of the East Frankish Carolingians. During his reign, the country was ravaged by frequent Magyar raids, and local magnates (the ancestors of the later ducal dynasties) brought Bavaria, Franconia, Swabia, and Saxony under their sway.
The only son of the East Frankish king Arnulf, Louis was declared heir to the kingdom in 897 and, after Arnulf’s death (899), was crowned king in 900. Later that year a party of Lotharingians, after defeating their king, Zwentibold (Louis’s half brother), in an uprising, acknowledged Louis as their sovereign.
Although in theory the boy king was himself the ruler, the government was in fact controlled by Archbishop Hatto I of Mainz and by Salomo, bishop of Constance (Konstanz). The kingdom was, however, too weak to check the raids of the Magyars, which became increasingly frequent after 900. In 910 they defeated a large royal army near Augsburg. Louis’s death the following year ended the East Frankish Carolingian line.