Because the dukes
of the East Frankish Kingdom had wearied of being ruled by a
foreign king, they elected a German to serve as their king
once the Carolingian line expired. The election of Conrad I
(r. 911-18), Duke of Franconia, as the first German king has
been marked by some historians as the beginning of German
history. Conrad's successor, Henry I (r. 919-36), Duke of
Saxony, was powerful enough to designate his son Otto I (r.
936-73) as his successor. Otto was so able a ruler that he
came to be known as Otto the Great. He overpowered other
territorial dukes who rebelled against his rule and reversed
the particularist trend for a time. But he failed to
establish the principle of hereditary succession, and the
German dukes continued to elect one of their number as king.
But through military successes and alliances with the
church, which had extensive properties and military forces
of its own, Otto expanded the crown lands, thus laying the
foundation of monarchical power. Henry, Otto, and the later
Saxon kings also encouraged eastward expansion and
colonization, thereby extending German rule to parts of the
Slavic territories of Poland and Bohemia. The Magyars'
westward expansion was halted by Otto in 955 at the Battle
of Lechfeld in southern Germany. In 962 Otto, who
had also gained control of the Middle Kingdom, was formally
crowned king of the Romans. The possessor of this title
would, in time, be known as the Holy Roman Emperor. The
coronation came to be seen as the founding of the Holy Roman
Empire, an institution that lasted until 1806 and profoundly
influenced the course of German history. The coronation of
Otto was a moment of glory for the German monarchy, but its
long-term consequences were not beneficial because as German
kings sought to exercise the offices of the empire they
became involved in Italian affairs, often to such an extent
that they neglected the governing of Germany. Because German
kings were so often in Italy, the German nobility became
stronger. In addition, the presence of German kings in Italy
as emperors soon caused them to come into conflict with the
papacy, which did not hesitate to seek allies in Italy or
Germany to limit imperial power. A last problem was that the
succession to the German throne was often uncertain or was
hotly contested because it was not inheritable, but could
only be attained through election by the German dukes. This
circumstance made the formation of an orderly or stable
central government nearly impossible. In the opinion of some
historians, Otto's triumph in Rome in 962 ultimately was
disastrous for Germany because it delayed German unification
by centuries.
Library of Congress Country Study The Saxon
Dynasty, 919-1024
Library of Congress Country Study
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