Lower Burgundy
| Lower Burgundy | |
|---|---|
| 879–933 | |
| Main regions of historical Burgundy, with Lower Burgundy encompassing Cisjurane (light orange) and southern (orange) regions | |
| Common languages | Vulgar Latin Old Occitan | 
| Government | Kingdom | 
| Historical era | Early Medieval | 
| • Established  | 879 | 
| • Disestablished  | 933 | 
Lower Burgundy (Latin: Burgundia inferior; French: Bourgogne inférieure) was a historical region in the early medieval Burgundy, and a distinctive realm known as the Kingdom of Lower Burgundy, that existed from 879 to 933, when it was incorporated into the reunited Kingdom of Burgundy. During that period, Lower Burgundy was encompassing the entire Cisjurane Burgundy, centered on the region of Vienne (fr. Bourgogne viennoise), and also the entire southern region around Arles (fr. Bourgogne arlésienne), centered on Provence. The borders of Lower Burgundy were the region of Upper Burgundy to the north, the Kingdom of Italy to the east, the Mediterranean Sea to the south, Septimania to the southwest, and Aquitaine to the west.