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Charlemagne
742 - 814

Charlemagne, or Charles the Great, was king of the Franks,
768-814, and emperor of the West, 800-814. He founded the Holy
Roman Empire, stimulated European economic and political life,
and fostered the cultural revival known as the Carolingian
Renaissance.
In contrast to the general decline of western Europe from the
7th century on, the era of Charlemagne marks a significant
revival and turning point. Through his use of available
resources (such as the Church, Irish missionaries, and manorial
and feudal institutions), his alliance with the papacy, and his
numerous governmental and ecclesiastical reforms, Charlemagne
was able to halt the political and cultural disintegration of
the early Middle Ages and lay the foundation for strong central
government north of the Alps. Partially as a result of
Charlemagne's activity, northern Europe emerged in the high and
late Middle Ages as the dominant economic, political, and
cultural force in the West.
Early Life
Charlemagne, the son of Pepin the Short and Bertrada, was born
in 742. In 741 Pepin had become mayor of the palace, and in 751
he deposed the last Merovingian king and was declared king of
the Franks. Little is known about Charlemagne's childhood; in
754, however, he participated in the anointment of Pepin as king
by Pope Stephen II. He was educated at the palace school
primarily by Fulrad, the abbot of St. Denis.
When Pepin died in October 768, Charlemagne came into his
inheritance. According to a general assembly of the Franks,
Charlemagne and his brother, Carloman, were both proclaimed king
and were to rule the kingdom jointly. In the division of the
realm, however, Carloman received a larger and richer portion.
Under these circumstances ill feelings between the two brothers
were inevitable, and the tension was heightened when Carloman
refused to aid Charlemagne in his campaign against an uprising
in Aquitaine. Toward the conclusion of the Aquitanian campaign,
from which Charlemagne emerged victorious, a fraternal war
seemed certain; but Carloman died unexpectedly in 771 and left
Charlemagne the ruler of the entire kingdom.
Territorial Expansion
Charlemagne moved aggressively to remove those who threatened
his suzerainty and to expand his power, especially in Italy. He
immediately attacked and vanquished Desiderius, King of the
Lombards; and in 774 Charlemagne was received by Pope Adrian I
in Rome. The two renewed the alliance between the Frankish
monarchy and the papacy, and shortly thereafter Charlemagne was
crowned king of the Lombards at Pavia. The Frankish conquest of
Italy - first of Lombardy in the north and later of the southern
duchy of Benevento - had a twofold effect: all threats to the
independence of the Holy See were removed, and a large portion
of Italy was annexed by Charlemagne, thus bringing new wealth
and peoples into his kingdom.
During his Italian campaigns Charlemagne also declared war
against the Saxons, who had menaced the northeastern frontier of
Francia for several generations. Begun in 772, this cruel and
bitter war was finally concluded in 804 by the annexation of
Saxony by Francia and the enforced Christianization of the Saxon
tribes.
In the midst of the continual struggles to subdue the Saxons,
Charlemagne carried on several major campaigns that resulted in
territorial expansion. Perhaps the most renowned of these was
his expedition into Spain. In 778, during the return from this
successful campaign, Charlemagne's rear guard, led by Count
Roland of the Breton March, was ambushed by traitorous Basques
near Roncesvalles. The story of this episode was immortalized in
the epic poem The Song of Roland. The historical importance of
this campaign was the establishment of a military district
called the Spanish March, a territorial buffer zone between
Frankish Gaul and Moslem Spain.
On his eastern frontier Charlemagne defeated Tassilo, the Duke
of Bavaria, and made the duchy of Bavaria part of his empire. He
divided the western portion of the duchy into counties, each
administered by a count loyal to the king; the eastern half
formed a march, or border zone, called the Ost Mark (Austria),
protected by a military duke, or margrave.
Further to the east, the major power and ultimate threat to the
Frankish realm was the vast Slavic kingdom of the Avars, or
Huns, an Asiatic tribe which had settled along the upper Danube.
Between 791 and 795 Charlemagne crushed the power of the Avars
and made their kingdom a tributary state. This victory opened
the entire Danubian Plain to German colonization and the eastern
expansion of Christianity - the beginning of the Drang nach
Osten, or push to the East.
Holy Roman Empire
By 800 Charlemagne had succeeded in extending his overlordship
from the Elbe River in the northeast to south of the Pyrenees in
the southwest and from the North Sea to southern Italy. He ruled
all of the Christianized western provinces, except the British
Isles, that had once been part of the Roman Empire. As the sworn
protector of the Church, Charlemagne was in fact the political
master of Rome itself. Thus his authority, which extended over a
vast realm and included numerous peoples, rivaled that of the
Roman emperors of antiquity.
The papacy, at odds with Byzantium and its empress Irene over
the question of iconoclasm (the problem of image worship and the
use of images in the Church), looked to Charlemagne for
protection and political leadership and regarded him as the true
emperor of Latin Christendom and as the divinely appointed ruler
of the earthly sphere. Thus the Pope crowned Charlemagne Holy
Roman emperor on Christmas Day, 800.
Charlemagne endeavored to create unity and harmony within his
vast realm and to promulgate laws and promote learning that
would achieve his goals of empire. In his effort to assure his
equality of rank with the Byzantine emperor, Charlemagne
borrowed much from his eastern counterpart. The Byzantine
influence is most clearly seen in the Palace Chapel of Aachen
(Aix-la-Chapelle), which was a conscious imitation of the
imperial residence at Constantinople. In style, the building is
based upon the church of S. Vitale in Ravenna, the former
western Byzantine capital. Thus Charlemagne, in contrast to his
Merovingian predecessors, who traveled incessantly throughout
their realm, attempted to create a fixed capital parallel to
that of Byzantium, and he resided at Aachen during most of his
later years.
Character and Appearance
The major contemporary record of Charlemagne's personal
attributes and achievements is the Vita Caroli Magni, the first
medieval biography, written by Einhard between 817 and 836. This
biography is largely a firsthand account, since Einhard was a
member of the palace school during Charlemagne's reign and was
his close associate.
In the Vita is the actual physical description of the man who
has since become one of the greatest legendary heroes of the
Middle Ages. The most striking feature about Charlemagne was his
immense size in comparison to the average man of his day.
Einhard believed him to be seven times the length of a foot, but
with the opening of his tomb in 1861 scholars discovered that
his actual height was 6 feet 3 1/2 inches. He was well built and
admirably proportioned, except for his rather short thick neck
and a protruding paunch. He took frequent exercise on horseback
and enjoyed excellent health for most of his life. Einhard says
that "his eyes [were] very large and animated, nose a little
long, hair fair, and face laughing and merry."
Toward his friends Charlemagne was jovial, and he particularly
enjoyed the company of others. Yet toward his enemies he was a
stern and often cruel warrior to be feared for his strength and
ability. Although primarily a man of action, he had great
admiration for learning and "was such a master of Latin that he
could speak it as well as his native tongue." He studied Greek
and the liberal arts and thus combined to some extent the
personality of a warrior and a scholar.
Charlemagne's Administration
In many respects Charlemagne's government, which proved so
successful and which began the ascendancy of northern Europe,
differed little in its institutions from the Merovingian era. In
keeping with Frankish tradition, the monarchy was considered a
matter of family inheritance; the government itself was
personal, and its administration was founded on feudal oaths of
allegiance between lord and follower. There was no distinction
between the king's personal servants and the public officials.
Thus the public and private nature of political control were
inseparable, as were the secular and the religious aspects of
kingship. Much as the Merovingians had done in the past,
Charlemagne presided over ecclesiastical synods, depended upon
the clergy for advice and counsel, and interfered in matters of
Church discipline and property.
What is most striking about Charlemagne's rule of so vast a
realm was that he was able to maintain, largely through the
strength of his own personality, a centralized state wherein
royal authority was primary. Power and political authority
descended from the Emperor's imperium to his vassals. In this
system the count, a direct vassal of the Crown, was the primary
link between central and local government. Each count was in
charge of an administrative district or county, which he
governed with the help of lesser officials. There was always the
danger that a count might become too powerful in his own
district, and Charlemagne therefore created a group of special
envoys, missi dominici, who inquired into abuses in the kingdom.
He also maintained a small group of elite warriors, the vassi
dominici, who acted as his personal retinue and helped him
enforce imperial authority.
During the course of his reign Charlemagne sent a number of
written instructions to his officials. These enactments, known
as the Capitularii had the force of law and were implemented
directly by the royal agents. They are exceedingly valuable as
sources in understanding the social and legal structure of
Carolingian France.
In general, the reign of Charlemagne, because of his military
and political ability, was a period of internal tranquility and
prosperity. He succeeded, through diplomatic negotiations, in
having his imperial title recognized by the Byzantine emperor
and, through his program of cultural revival and Church reform,
in upgrading the level of civilization in the West.
Carolingian Culture
Charlemagne's support of art and letters had several purposes
beyond the general improvement of culture and literacy in the
empire. One of the major purposes was to provide an educated
clergy that could undertake many of the administrative tasks of
government. A second purpose, for which an educated clergy was
also a necessity, was to ensure the acceptance of orthodox
doctrine as well as a uniform liturgy throughout the empire.
Such uniformity not only strengthened the Church but facilitated
the political task of integrating and centralizing the
administration of the empire. The spread of a uniform script
known as the Caroline minuscule, the attempts at achieving
uniformity of doctrine through the suppression of heresy, and
the publication of a uniform Mass book, book of lessons, and
monastic rule were sponsored as a means of furthering unity and
integration. A third purpose of this cultural revival was to
enhance the prestige and authority of Charlemagne himself, who
thus appeared as the defender and protector of the Church, of
orthodoxy, and of education.
The intellectual traditions and educational institutions
supported by Charlemagne greatly influenced the development of
Western culture. Grammarians and rhetoricians from northern
Italy and English scholars, such as Alcuin, enhanced his court.
This mixture of Italian and Anglo-Irish culture provided a broad
foundation for the later stages of the Carolingian revival.
Charlemagne expanded the number of schools, both monastic and
episcopal, and the quality of education was greatly improved
through the influence of the scholars who taught at the palace
school.
Last Years
In 806, at the age of 64, Charlemagne took measures to provide
for the succession of his empire. He divided the realm among his
three sons - Charles, Pepin, and Louis. But the death of Charles
in April 810 was soon followed by that of Pepin. The remaining
son, Louis, later called "the Pious," who was the least warlike
and aggressive of the three, was left as the sole heir to the
empire, and he was crowned by his father in 813.
The last years of Charlemagne's reign saw difficult times. Civil
disobedience increased; pest and famine created hard times;
there were troubles on the frontiers. In many respects an era of
crisis and decline loomed in the future. In 811 Charlemagne made
his final will and gave a sizable portion of his treasures (more
than to his own heirs) to various churches of the realm. He
died, while fasting, on Jan. 28, 814, and was buried at his
palace at Aachen.
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This web page was last updated on:
09 December, 2008
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