Following
the death of Henry V (r. 1106-25), the last of the Salian
kings, the dukes refused to elect his nephew because they
feared that he might restore royal power. Instead, they
elected a noble connected to the Saxon noble family Welf
(often written as Guelf). This choice inflamed the
Hohenstaufen family of Swabia, which also had a claim to the
throne. Although a Hohenstaufen became king in 1138, the
dynastic feud with the Welfs continued. The feud became
international in nature when the Welfs sided with the papacy
and its allies, most notably the cities of northern Italy,
against the imperial ambitions of the Hohenstaufen
Dynasty. The
second of the Hohenstaufen rulers, Frederick I (r. 1152-90),
also known as Frederick Barbarossa because of his red beard,
struggled throughout his reign to restore the power and
prestige of the German monarchy, but he had little success.
Because the German dukes had grown stronger both during and
after the Investiture Contest and because royal access to
the resources of the church in Germany was much reduced,
Frederick was forced to go to Italy to find the finances
needed to restore the king's power in Germany. He was soon
crowned emperor in Italy, but decades of warfare on the
peninsula yielded scant results. The papacy and the
prosperous city-states of northern Italy were traditional
enemies, but the fear of imperial domination caused them to
join ranks to fight Frederick. Under the skilled leadership
of Pope Alexander III, the alliance suffered many defeats
but ultimately was able to deny the emperor a complete
victory in Italy. Frederick returned to Germany old and
embittered. He had vanquished one notable opponent and
member of the Welf family, Saxony's Henry the Lion, but his
hopes of restoring the power and prestige of his family and
the monarchy seemed unlikely to be met by the end of his
life. During
Frederick's long stays in Italy, the German princes became
stronger and began a successful colonization of Slavic
lands. Offers of reduced taxes and manorial duties enticed
many Germans to settle in the east as the area's original
inhabitants were killed or driven away. Because of this
colonization, the empire increased in size and came to
include Pomerania, Silesia, Bohemia, and Moravia. A
quickening economic life in Germany increased the number of
towns and gave them greater importance. It was also during
this period that castles and courts replaced monasteries as
centers of culture. Growing out of this courtly culture,
German medieval literature reached its peak in lyrical love
poetry, the Minnesang, and in narrative epic
poems such as Tristan,
Parzival, and the
Nibelungenlied. Frederick
died in 1190 while on a crusade and was succeeded by his
son, Henry VI (r. 1190-97). Elected king even before his
father's death, Henry went to Rome to be crowned emperor. A
death in his wife's family gave him possession of Sicily, a
source of vast wealth. Henry failed to make royal and
imperial succession hereditary, but in 1196 he succeeded in
gaining a pledge that his infant son Frederick would receive
the German crown. Faced with difficulties in Italy and
confident that he would realize his wishes in Germany at a
later date, Henry returned to the south, where it appeared
he might unify the peninsula under the Hohenstaufen name.
After a series of military victories, however, he died of
natural causes in Sicily in 1197. Because
the election of the three-year-old Frederick to be German
king appeared likely to make orderly rule difficult, the
boy's uncle, Philip, was chosen to serve in his place. Other
factions elected a Welf candidate, Otto IV, as counterking,
and a long civil war began. Philip was murdered by Otto IV
in 1208. Otto IV in turn was killed by the French at the
Battle of Bouvines in 1214. Frederick returned to Germany in
1212 from Sicily, where he had grown up, and became king in
1215. As Frederick II (r. 1215-50), he spent little time in
Germany because his main concerns lay in Italy. Frederick
made significant concessions to the German nobles, such as
those put forth in an imperial statute of 1232, which made
princes virtually independent rulers within their
territories. The clergy also became more powerful. Although
Frederick was one of the most energetic, imaginative, and
capable rulers of the Middle Ages, he did nothing to draw
the disparate forces in Germany together. His legacy was
thus that local rulers had more authority after his reign
than before it. By the
time of Frederick's death in 1250, there was little
centralized power in Germany. The Great Interregnum
(1256-73), a period of anarchy in which there was no emperor
and German princes vied for individual advantage, followed
the death of Frederick's son Conrad IV in 1254. In this
short period, the German nobility managed to strip many
powers away from the already diminished monarchy. Rather
than establish sovereign states, however, many nobles tended
to look after their families. Their many heirs created more
and smaller estates. A largely free class of officials also
formed, many of whom eventually acquired hereditary rights
to administrative and legal offices. These trends compounded
political fragmentation within Germany. Despite
the political chaos of the Hohenstaufen period, the
population grew from an estimated 8 million in 1200 to about
14 million in 1300, and the number of towns increased
tenfold. The most heavily urbanized areas of Germany were
located in the south and the west. Towns often developed a
degree of independence, but many were subordinate to local
rulers or the emperor. Colonization of the east also
continued in the thirteenth century, most notably through
the efforts of the Knights of the Teutonic Order, a society
of soldier-monks. German merchants also began trading
extensively on the Baltic. Salian
Dynasty
<<< Contents
>>> Early
Habsburgs
Library of Congress Country Study The
Hohenstaufen Dynasty, 1138-1254
Library of Congress Country Study
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