Louis V, byname Louis le Faineant (Louis the Do-Nothing) (b. 967 - d. May 21/22, 987), king of France and the last Carolingian monarch.
Crowned on June 8, 979, while his father Lothair was still alive, he shortly afterward married Adelaide, widow of an Aquitainian count, and was established as king in Aquitaine. His friviolity, however, and his rejection of his wife, who finally ran away, brought him into discredit. Sole king on his father's death in 986, he disregarded the advice of his mother, Queen Emma, and Archbishop Adalbero of Reims, who wanted him to seek friendship with the German king Otto III. Just as he was about to have the Archbishop tried for treason, Louis died as the result of a hunting accident. His unpopular uncle Charles of Lower Lorraine, the only surviving member of the Carlingian dynasty, was passed over in favour of Hugh Capet as Louis' successor, thus initiating the Capetian line of French monarchs. [Encyclopaedia Britannica]