Judith was the eldest daughter of the Bavarian duke Arnulf the Bad and, traditionally, Judith of Friuli. In the emergingKingdom of Germany, her father tried to maintain the autonomy of his Bavarian stem duchy and entered into several conflicts with KingConrad I as well as with his Ottonian successor Henry the Fowler. According to the Annales iuvavenses, he even proclaimed himself anti-king after Conrad's death in 918, nevertheless he reconciled with King Henry three years later. Judith's elder brother Eberhard succeeded his father as Bavarian duke in 937 and again picked a fierce quarrel with Henry's son King Otto I. In 938 the king campaigned the Bavarian lands, declared Eberhard deposed and enfeoffed his uncle Berthold as duke. Though Berthold remained a loyal supporter of the Ottonian dynasty, he failed to secure the Bavarian duchy for his minor son Henry the Younger. Instead, King Otto had evolved plans to create a dynastic relation with the Luitpoldings and to install his own brother, Henry I, as duke. Shortly before her father's death in 937, Judith and Henry I were betrothed, thereby legitimising Henry's claims to the Bavarian throne. Through this matrimonial alliance between the Luitpolding and Ottonian dynasties, the Bavarian duchy entered the growing Kingdom of Germany, and Judith's descent would back the recognition of her husband's rule. Upon Berthold's death in 947, Henry I succeeded him as duke. Judith remained loyal to her husband, even when he was temporarily expelled by the Bavarian nobility during the revolt of his nephew, Duke Liudolf of Swabia, in 953. Judith's son Henry the Wrangler was born in 951; he was a minor when his father fell ill and died in 955, and she acted as regent for him. She turned out as a capable ruler over the vast Bavarian territories when she married her daughter Hadwig to Duke Burchard III of Swabia and also arranged the marriage of Henry the Wrangler with Princess Gisela of Burgundy, thereby forging a stable alliance between the South German duchies and the Burgundian kingdom. Judith also fostered good relations to the Ottonian dynasty and Empress Adelaide. According to the medieval chronicler Widukind of Corvey, she was "a woman of exceptional wisdom". She made a pilgrimage to Jerusalem and, upon returning in 973, had to witness the rebellion of her son and his deposition by Emperor Otto II. She retired to the abbey of Niedermünster in Regensburg, where she is buried beside her husband. Judith was the progenitor of the Bavarian branch of the Ottonian dynasty; her grandson Henry II was elected king in 1002 and crowned Holy Roman Emperor in 1014. Some sources mention a younger, possibly illegitimate son of her husband named Brun, who married and had descendants, though an affiliation with the BrunswickBrunonids has not been conclusively established.