Charlemagne
inherited the Frankish crown in 768. During his reign
(768-814), he subdued Bavaria, conquered Lombardy and
Saxony, and established his authority in central Italy. By
the end of the eighth century, his kingdom, later to become
known as the First Reich (empire in German), included
present-day France, the Netherlands, Belgium, and
Luxembourg, as well as a narrow strip of northern Spain,
much of Germany and Austria, and much of the northern half
of Italy. Charlemagne, founder of an empire that was Roman,
Christian, and Germanic, was crowned emperor in Rome by the
pope in 800. The
Carolingian Empire was based on an alliance between the
emperor, who was a temporal ruler supported by a military
retinue, and the pope of the Roman Catholic Church, who
granted spiritual sanction to the imperial mission.
Charlemagne and his son Louis I (r. 814-40) established
centralized authority, appointed imperial counts as
administrators, and developed a hierarchical feudal
structure headed by the emperor. Reliant on personal
leadership rather than the Roman concept of legalistic
government, Charlemagne's empire lasted less than a
century. A period
of warfare followed the death of Louis. The Treaty of Verdun
(843) restored peace and divided the empire among three
sons, geographically and politically delineating the
approximate future territories of Germany, France, and the
area between them, known as the Middle Kingdom (see fig. 2).
The eastern Carolingian kings ruled the East Frankish
Kingdom, what is now Germany and Austria; the western
Carolingian kings ruled the West Frankish Kingdom, what
became France. The imperial title, however, came to depend
increasingly on rule over the Middle Kingdom. By this time,
in addition to a geographical and political delineation, a
cultural and linguistic split had occurred. The eastern
Frankish tribes still spoke Germanic dialects; the language
of the western Frankish tribes, under the influence of
Gallo-Latin, had developed into Old French. Because of these
linguistic differences, the Treaty of Verdun had to be
written in two languages. Not only
had Charlemagne's empire been divided into three kingdoms,
but the East Frankish Kingdom was being weakened by the rise
of regional duchies, the so-called stem duchies of
Franconia, Saxony, Bavaria, Swabia, and Lorraine, which
acquired the trappings of petty kingdoms. The fragmentation
in the east marked the beginning of German particularism, in
which territorial rulers promoted their own interests and
autonomy without regard to the kingdom as a whole. The
duchies were strengthened when the Carolingian line died out
in 911; subsequent kings would have no direct blood link to
the throne with which to legitimate their claims to power
against the territorial dukes. Merovingian
Dynasty
<<< Contents
>>> Saxon
Dynasty
Library of Congress Country Study The
Carolingian Dynasty, 752-911
Library of Congress Country Study
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