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The chronicle was written in Regensburg some time after 1146.
The poet ( or at least the final compiler ) was presumably a cleric in secular service, a partisan of the Guelphs.
However the view that it was written by Konrad der Pfaffe, author of the Rolandslied, has been discredited.
Known sources include the Chronicon Wirzeburgense, the Chronicle Ekkehard of Aura, and the Annolied ; the relationship to the Annolied has received particular attention in scholarship, as earlier views of the priority of the Kaiserchronik, or of a shared source, were gradually dismissed.
Judging from the large number of surviving manuscripts ( twelve complete and seventeen partial ), it must have been very popular, and it was twice continued in the 13th century: the first addition, " Bavarian continuation ", comprised 800 verses, while the second, the " Swabian continuation ", which brought the poem to the Interregnum ( 1254 – 73 ), consisted of 483 lines.
The Kaiserchronik in turn was used as an important source for other verse chronicles in the thirteenth century, most notably Jans der Enikel's.

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