Template:Short description Template:Good article Template:Pp-move Template:Pp-pc Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use British English {{#invoke:other uses|otheruses}} Template:Distinguish Template:Infobox royalty Template:Carolingians

Charlemagne (Template:IPAc-en Template:Respell; 2 April 748Template:Efn – 28 January 814) was King of the Franks from 768, King of the Lombards from 774, and Emperor of what is now known as the Carolingian Empire from 800, holding these titles until his death in 814. He united most of Western and Central Europe, and was the first recognised emperor to rule from the west after the fall of the Western Roman Empire approximately three centuries earlier. Charlemagne's reign was marked by political and social changes that had lasting influence on Europe throughout the Middle Ages.

A member of the Frankish Carolingian dynasty, Charlemagne was the eldest son of Pepin the Short and Bertrada of Laon. With his brother, Carloman I, he became king of the Franks in 768 following Pepin's death and became the sole ruler three years later. Charlemagne continued his father's policy of protecting the papacy and became its chief defender, removing the Lombards from power in northern Italy in 774. His reign saw a period of expansion that led to the conquests of Bavaria, Saxony, and northern Spain, as well as other campaigns that led Charlemagne to extend his rule over a large part of Europe. Charlemagne spread Christianity to his new conquests (often by force), as seen at the Massacre of Verden against the Saxons. He also sent envoys and initiated diplomatic contact with the Abbasid caliph Harun al-Rashid in the 790s, due to their mutual interest in Iberian affairs.

In 800, Charlemagne was crowned emperor in Rome by Pope Leo III. Although historians debate the coronation's significance, the title represented the height of his prestige and authority. Charlemagne's position as the first emperor in the West in over 300 years brought him into conflict with the Eastern Roman Empire in Constantinople. Through his assumption of the imperial title, he is considered the forerunner to the line of Holy Roman Emperors, which persisted into the nineteenth century. As king and emperor, Charlemagne engaged in a number of reforms in administration, law, education, military organisation, and religion, which shaped Europe for centuries. The stability of his reign began a period of cultural activity known as the Carolingian Renaissance.

Charlemagne died in 814 and was buried at Aachen Cathedral in Aachen, his imperial capital city. He was succeeded by his only surviving legitimate son, Louis the Pious. After Louis, the Frankish kingdom was divided and eventually coalesced into West and East Francia, which later became France and Germany, respectively. Charlemagne's profound influence on the Middle Ages and influence on the territory he ruled has led him to be called the "Father of Europe" by many historians. He is seen as a founding figure by multiple European states and a number of historical royal houses of Europe trace their lineage back to him. Charlemagne has been the subject of artworks, monuments and literature during and after the medieval period.

NameEdit

Several languages were spoken in Charlemagne's world, and he was known to contemporaries as {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} in the Old High German he spoke; as {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} to Early Old French (or Proto-Romance) speakers; and as {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (or {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}) in Medieval Latin, the formal language of writing and diplomacy.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Charles is the modern English form of these names. The name {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, as the emperor is normally known in English, comes from the French {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ('Charles the Great').Template:Sfn In modern German and Dutch, he is known as {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} and {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} respectively.Template:Sfn The Latin epithet {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ('great') may have been associated with him during his lifetime, but this is not certain. The contemporary Royal Frankish Annals routinely call him {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ("Charles the great king").Template:Sfn That epithet is attested in the works of the Poeta Saxo around 900, and it had become commonly applied to him by 1000.Template:Sfn

Charlemagne was named after his grandfather, Charles Martel.Template:Sfn That name, and its derivatives, are unattested before their use by Charles Martel and Charlemagne.Template:Sfn Karolus was adapted by Slavic languages as their word for "king" (Template:Langx, Template:Langx and Template:Langx) through Charlemagne's influence or that of his great-grandson, Charles the Fat.Template:Sfn

Early life and rise to powerEdit

Political background and ancestryEdit

By the sixth century, the western Germanic tribe of the Franks had been Christianised; this was due in considerable measure to the conversion of their king, Clovis I, to Catholicism.Template:Sfn The Franks had established a kingdom in Gaul in the wake of the Fall of the Western Roman Empire.Template:Sfn This kingdom, Francia, grew to encompass nearly all of present-day France and Switzerland, along with parts of modern Germany and the Low Countries under the rule of the Merovingian dynasty.Template:Sfn Francia was often divided under different Merovingian kings, due to the partible inheritance practised by the Franks.Template:Sfn The late seventh century saw a period of war and instability following the murder of King Childeric II, which led to factional struggles among the Frankish aristocrats.Template:Sfn

Pepin of Herstal, mayor of the palace of Austrasia, ended the strife between various kings and their mayors with his 687 victory at the Battle of Tertry.Template:Sfn Pepin was the grandson of two important figures of Austrasia: Arnulf of Metz and Pepin of Landen.Template:Sfn The mayors of the palace had gained influence as the Merovingian kings' power waned due to divisions of the kingdom and several succession crises.Template:Sfn Pepin was eventually succeeded by his son Charles, later known as Charles Martel.Template:Sfn Charles did not support a Merovingian successor upon the death of King Theuderic IV in 737, leaving the throne vacant.Template:Sfn He made plans to divide the kingdom between his sons, Carloman and Pepin the Short, who succeeded him after his death in 741.Template:Sfn The brothers placed the Merovingian Childeric III on the throne in 743.Template:Sfn Pepin married Bertrada, a member of an influential Austrasian noble family, in 744.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In 747, Carloman abdicated and entered a monastery in Rome. He had at least two sons; the elder, Drogo, took his place.Template:Sfn

BirthEdit

Charlemagne's year of birth is uncertain, although it was most likely in 748.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn An older tradition based on three sources, however, gives a birth year of 742. The ninth-century biographer Einhard reports Charlemagne as being 72 years old at the time of his death; the Royal Frankish Annals imprecisely gives his age at death as about 71, and his original epitaph called him a septuagenarian.Template:Sfn Einhard said that he did not know much about Charlemagne's early life; some modern scholars believe that, not knowing the emperor's true age, he still sought to present an exact date in keeping with the Roman imperial biographies of Suetonius, which he used as a model.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn All three sources may have been influenced by Psalm 90: "The days of our years are threescore years and ten".Template:Sfn

Historian Karl Ferdinand Werner challenged the acceptance of 742 as the Frankish king's birth year, citing an addition to the Annales Petaviani which records Charlemagne's birth in 747.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Lorsch Abbey commemorated Charlemagne's date of birth as 2 April from the mid-ninth century, and this date is likely to be genuine.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Matthias Becher built on Werner's work and showed that 2 April in the year recorded would have actually been in 748, since the annalists recorded the start of the year from Easter rather than 1 January.Template:Sfn Presently, most scholars accept April 748 for Charlemagne's birth.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Charlemagne's place of birth is unknown. The Frankish palaces in Vaires-sur-Marne and Quierzy are among the places suggested by scholars.Template:Sfn Pepin the Short held an assembly in Düren in 748, but it cannot be proved that it took place in April or if Bertrada was with him.Template:Sfn

Language and educationEdit

File:Charlemagne c 800.jpg
Sketch thought to be of Charlemagne,Template:Efn Template:Circa

The {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ("native tongue")Template:Sfn that Einhard refers to with regard to Charlemagne, was a Germanic language.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Due to the prevalence in Francia of "rustic Roman", he was probably functionally bilingual in Germanic and Romance dialects at an early age.Template:Sfn Charlemagne also spoke Latin and, according to Einhard, could understand and (perhaps) speak some Greek.Template:Sfn Some 19th-century historians tried to use the Oaths of Strasbourg (842) to determine Charlemagne's native language. They assumed that the text's copyist, Nithard, being a grandson of Charlemagne, would have spoken the same dialect as his grandfather, giving rise to the assumption that Charlemagne would have spoken language closely related to the one used in the oath, which is a form of Old High German ancestral to the modern Rhenish Franconian dialects.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Other authors have instead taken the place of Charlemagne's education and main residence (Aachen), to postulate that Charlemagne most likely spoke a form of Moselle- or Ripuarian Franconian. In any case, all three dialects would have been closely related, mutually intelligible and, while classified as Old High German, none of the dialects involved can be considered typical of Old High German, showing varying degrees of participation in the High German consonant shift as well as certain similarities with Old Dutch, the presumed language of the previous Merovingian dynasty, mirroring the linguistic diversity still typical of the region today.Template:Sfn

Charlemagne's father Pepin had been educated at the abbey of Saint-Denis, although the extent of Charlemagne's formal education is unknown.Template:Sfn He almost certainly was trained in military matters as a youth in Pepin's court,Template:Sfn which was itinerant.Template:Sfn Charlemagne also asserted his own education in the liberal arts in encouraging their study by his children and others, although it is unknown whether his study was as a child or at court during his later life.Template:Sfn The question of Charlemagne's literacy is debated, with little direct evidence from contemporary sources. He normally had texts read aloud to him and dictated responses and decrees, but this was not unusual even for a literate ruler at the time.Template:Sfn Historian Johannes Fried considers it likely that Charlemagne would have been able to read,Template:Sfn but the medievalist Paul Dutton writes that "the evidence for his ability to read is circumstantial and inferential at best"Template:Sfn and concludes that it is likely that he never properly mastered the skill.Template:Sfn Einhard makes no direct mention of Charlemagne reading, and recorded that he only attempted to learn to write later in life.Template:Sfn

Accession and reign with CarlomanEdit

There are only occasional references to Charlemagne in the Frankish annals during his father's lifetime.Template:Sfn By 751 or 752, Pepin had deposed Childeric and replaced him as king.Template:Sfn Early Carolingian-influenced sources claim that Pepin's seizure of the throne was sanctioned beforehand by Pope Stephen II,Template:Sfn but modern historians dispute this.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn It is possible that papal approval came only when Stephen travelled to Francia in 754 (apparently to request Pepin's aid against the Lombards), and on this trip anointed Pepin as king; this legitimised his rule.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Charlemagne was sent to greet and escort the Pope, and he and his younger brother Carloman were anointed with their father.Template:Sfn Pepin sidelined Drogo around the same time, sending him and his brother to a monastery.Template:Sfn

Charlemagne began issuing charters in his own name in 760. The following year, he joined his father's campaign against Aquitaine.Template:Sfn Aquitaine, led by Dukes Hunald and Waiofar, was constantly in rebellion during Pepin's reign.Template:Sfn Pepin fell ill on campaign there and died on 24 September 768, and Charlemagne and Carloman succeeded their father.Template:Sfn They had separate coronations, Charlemagne at Noyon and Carloman at Soissons, on 9 October.Template:Sfn The brothers maintained separate palaces and spheres of influence, although they were considered joint rulers of a single Frankish kingdom.Template:Sfn The Royal Frankish Annals report that Charlemagne ruled Austrasia and Carloman ruled Burgundy, Provence, Aquitaine, and Alamannia, with no mention made of which brother received Neustria.Template:Sfn The immediate concern of the brothers was the ongoing uprising in Aquitaine.Template:Sfn They marched into Aquitaine together, but Carloman returned to Francia for unknown reasons and Charlemagne completed the campaign on his own.Template:Sfn Charlemagne's capture of Duke Hunald marked the end of ten years of war that had been waged in the attempt to bring Aquitaine into line.Template:Sfn

Carloman's refusal to participate in the war against Aquitaine led to a rift between the kings.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn It is uncertain why Carloman abandoned the campaign; the brothers may have disagreed about control of the territory,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn or Carloman was focused on securing his rule in the north of Francia.Template:Sfn Regardless of the strife between the kings, they maintained a joint rule for practical reasons.Template:Sfn Charlemagne and Carloman worked to obtain the support of the clergy and local elites to solidify their positions.Template:Sfn

Pope Stephen III was elected in 768, but was briefly deposed by Antipope Constantine II before being restored to Rome.Template:Sfn Stephen's papacy experienced continuing factional struggles, so he sought support from the Frankish kings.Template:Sfn Both brothers sent troops to Rome, each hoping to exert his own influence.Template:Sfn The Lombard king Desiderius also had interests in Roman affairs, and Charlemagne attempted to enlist him as an ally.Template:Sfn Desiderius already had alliances with Bavaria and Benevento through the marriages of his daughters to their dukes,Template:Sfn and an alliance with Charlemagne would add to his influence.Template:Sfn Charlemagne's mother, Bertrada, went on his behalf to Lombardy in 770 and brokered a marriage alliance before returning to Francia with his new bride.Template:Sfn Desiderius's daughter is traditionally known as Desiderata, although she may have been named Gerperga.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Anxious about the prospect of a Frankish–Lombard alliance, Pope Stephen sent a letter to both Frankish kings decrying the marriage and separately sought closer ties with Carloman.Template:Sfn

Charlemagne had already had a relationship with the Frankish noblewoman Himiltrude, and they had a son in 769 named Pepin.Template:Sfn Paul the Deacon wrote in his 784 {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} that Pepin was born "before legal marriage", but does not say whether Charles and Himiltrude ever married, were joined in a non-canonical marriage ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), or married after Pepin was born.Template:Sfn Pope Stephen's letter described the relationship as a legitimate marriage, but he had a vested interest in preventing Charlemagne from marrying Desiderius's daughter.Template:Sfn

Carloman died suddenly on 4 December 771, leaving Charlemagne sole king of the Franks.Template:Sfn He moved immediately to secure his hold on his brother's territory, forcing Carloman's widow Gerberga to flee to Desiderius's court in Lombardy with their children.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Charlemagne ended his marriage to Desiderius's daughter and married Hildegard, daughter of count Gerold, a powerful magnate in Carloman's kingdom.Template:Sfn This was a reaction to Desiderius's sheltering of Carloman's familyTemplate:Sfn and a move to secure Gerold's support.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

King of the Franks and the LombardsEdit

Annexation of the Lombard KingdomEdit

File:771 CE, Europe.svg
Political map of Europe in 771, showing the Franks and their neighbors

Charlemagne's first campaigning season as sole king of the Franks was spent on the eastern frontier in his first war against the Saxons, who had been engaging in border raids on the Frankish kingdom when Charlemagne responded by destroying the pagan Irminsul at Eresburg and seizing their gold and silver.Template:Sfn The success of the war helped secure Charlemagne's reputation among his brother's former supporters and funded further military action.Template:Sfn The campaign was the beginning of over thirty years of nearly-continuous warfare against the Saxons by Charlemagne.Template:Sfn

Pope Adrian I succeeded Stephen III in 772, and sought the return of papal control of cities that had been captured by Desiderius.Template:Sfn Unsuccessful in dealing with the Lombard king directly, Adrian sent emissaries to Charlemagne to gain his support for recovering papal territory. Charlemagne, in response to this appeal and the dynastic threat of Carloman's sons in the Lombard court, gathered his forces to intervene.Template:Sfn He first sought a diplomatic solution, offering gold to Desiderius in exchange for the return of the papal territories and his nephews.Template:Sfn This overture was rejected, and Charlemagne's army (commanded by himself and his uncle, Bernard) crossed the Alps to besiege the Lombard capital of Pavia in late 773.Template:Sfn

Charlemagne's second son (also named Charles) was born in 772, and Charlemagne brought the child and his wife to the camp at Pavia. Hildegard was pregnant, and gave birth to a daughter named Adelhaid. The baby was sent back to Francia, but died on the way.Template:Sfn Charlemagne left Bernard to maintain the siege at Pavia while he took a force to capture Verona, where Desiderius's son Adalgis had taken Carloman's sons.Template:Sfn Charlemagne captured the city; no further record exists of his nephews or of Carloman's wife, and their fate is unknown.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Recent biographer, Janet Nelson compares them to the Princes in the Tower in the Wars of the Roses.Template:Sfn Fried suggests that the boys were forced into a monastery (a common solution of dynastic issues), or "an act of murder smooth[ed] Charlemagne's ascent to power."Template:Sfn Adalgis was not captured by Charlemagne, and fled to Constantinople.Template:Sfn

File:Charlemagne and Pope Adrian I.jpg
Pope Adrian receiving Charlemagne at Rome, 1493

Charlemagne left the siege in April 774 to celebrate Easter in Rome.Template:Sfn Pope Adrian arranged a formal welcome for the Frankish king, and they swore oaths to each other over the relics of St. Peter.Template:Sfn Adrian presented a copy of the agreement between Pepin and Stephen III outlining the papal lands and rights Pepin had agreed to protect and restore.Template:Sfn It is unclear which lands and rights the agreement involved, which remained a point of dispute for centuries.Template:Sfn Charlemagne placed a copy of the agreement in the chapel above St. Peter's tomb as a symbol of his commitment, and left Rome to continue the siege.Template:Sfn

Disease struck the Lombards shortly after his return to Pavia, and they surrendered the city by June 774.Template:Sfn Charlemagne deposed Desiderius and took the title of King of the Lombards.Template:Sfn The takeover of one kingdom by another was "extraordinary",Template:Sfn and the authors of The Carolingian World call it "without parallel".Template:Sfn Charlemagne secured the support of the Lombard nobles and Italian urban elites to seize power in a mainly-peaceful annexation.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Historian Rosamond McKitterick suggests that the elective nature of the Lombard monarchy eased Charlemagne's takeover,Template:Sfn and Roger Collins attributes the easy conquest to the Lombard elite's "presupposition that rightful authority was in the hands of the one powerful enough to seize it".Template:Sfn Charlemagne soon returned to Francia with the Lombard royal treasury and with Desiderius and his family, who would be confined to a monastery for the rest of their lives.Template:Sfn

Frontier wars in Saxony and SpainEdit

The Saxons took advantage of Charlemagne's absence in Italy to raid the Frankish borderlands, leading to a Frankish counter-raid in the autumn of 774 and a reprisal campaign the following year.Template:Sfn Charlemagne was soon drawn back to Italy as Duke Hrodgaud of Friuli rebelled against him.Template:Sfn He quickly crushed the rebellion, distributing Hrodgaud's lands to the Franks to consolidate his rule in Lombardy.Template:Sfn Charlemagne wintered in Italy, consolidating his power by issuing charters and legislation and taking Lombard hostages.Template:Sfn Amid the 775 Saxon and Friulian campaigns, his daughter Rotrude was born in Francia.Template:Sfn

Returning north, Charlemagne waged another brief, destructive campaign against the Saxons in 776.Template:Efn This led to the submission of many Saxons, who turned over captives and lands and submitted to baptism.Template:Sfn In 777, Charlemagne held an assembly at Paderborn with Frankish and Saxon men; many more Saxons came under his rule, but the Saxon magnate Widukind fled to Denmark to prepare for a new rebellion.Template:Sfn

Also at the Paderborn assembly were representatives of dissident factions from al-Andalus (Muslim Spain). They included the son and son-in-law of Yusuf ibn Abd al-Rahman al-Fihri, the former governor of Córdoba ousted by Caliph Abd al-Rahman in 756, who sought Charlemagne's support for al-Fihri's restoration. Also present was Sulayman al-Arabi, governor of Barcelona and Girona, who wanted to become part of the Frankish kingdom and receive Charlemagne's protection rather than remain under the rule of Córdoba.Template:Sfn Charlemagne, seeing an opportunity to strengthen the security of the kingdom's southern frontier and extend his influence, agreed to intervene.Template:Sfn Crossing the Pyrenees, his army found little resistance until an ambush by Basque forces in 778 at the Battle of Roncevaux Pass. The Franks, defeated in the battle, withdrew with most of their army intact.Template:Sfn

Building the dynastyEdit

File:Couronnement de Louis Ier le Pieux.jpg
Adrian crowning Louis, as Charlemagne looks on

Charlemagne returned to Francia to greet his newborn twin sons, Louis and Lothair, who were born while he was in Spain;Template:Sfn Lothair died in infancy.Template:Sfn Again, Saxons had seized on the king's absence to raid. Charlemagne sent an army to Saxony in 779Template:Sfn while he held assemblies, legislated, and addressed a famine in Francia.Template:Sfn Hildegard gave birth to another daughter, Bertha.Template:Sfn Charlemagne returned to Saxony in 780, holding assemblies at which he received hostages from Saxon nobles and oversaw their baptism.Template:Sfn

He and Hildegard travelled with their four younger children to Rome in the spring of 781, leaving Pepin and Charles at Worms, to make a journey first requested by Adrian in 775.Template:Sfn Adrian baptised Carloman and renamed him Pepin, a name he shared with his half-brother.Template:Sfn Louis and the newly renamed Pepin were then anointed and crowned. Pepin was appointed king of the Lombards, and Louis king of Aquitaine.Template:Sfn This act was not nominal, since the young kings were sent to live in their kingdoms under the care of regents and advisers.Template:Sfn A delegation from the Byzantine Empire, the remnant of the Roman Empire in the East, met Charlemagne during his stay in Rome; Charlemagne agreed to betroth his daughter Rotrude to Empress Irene's son, Emperor Constantine VI.Template:Sfn

Hildegard gave birth to her eighth child, Gisela, during this trip to Italy.Template:Sfn After the royal family's return to Francia, she had her final pregnancy and died from its complications on 30 April 783. The child, named after her, died shortly thereafter.Template:Sfn Charlemagne commissioned epitaphs for his wife and daughter, and arranged for a Mass to be said daily at Hildegard's tomb.Template:Sfn Charlemagne's mother Bertrada died shortly after Hildegard, on 12 July 783.Template:Sfn Charlemagne was remarried to Fastrada, daughter of the East Frankish count Radolf, by the end of the year.Template:Sfn

Saxon resistance and reprisalEdit

In summer 782, Widukind returned from Denmark to attack the Frankish positions in Saxony.Template:Sfn He defeated a Frankish army, possibly due to rivalry among the Frankish counts leading it.Template:Sfn Charlemagne came to Verden after learning of the defeat, but Widukind fled before his arrival. Charlemagne summoned the Saxon magnates to an assembly and compelled them to turn prisoners over to him, since he regarded their previous acts as treachery. The annals record that Charlemagne had 4,500 Saxon prisoners beheaded in the massacre of Verden.Template:Sfn Fried writes, "Although this figure may be exaggerated, the basic truth of the event is not in doubt",Template:Sfn and Alessandro Barbero calls it "perhaps the greatest stain on his reputation."Template:Sfn Charlemagne issued the Capitulatio de partibus Saxoniae, probably in the immediate aftermath of (or as a precursor of) the massacre.Template:Sfn With a harsh set of laws which included the death penalty for pagan practices, the Capitulatio "constituted a program for the forced conversion of the Saxons"Template:Sfn and was "aimed ... at suppressing Saxon identity".Template:Sfn

Charlemagne's focus for the next several years would be on his attempt to complete the subjugation of the Saxons. Concentrating first in Westphalia in 783, he pushed into Thuringia in 784 as his son Charles the Younger continued operations in the west. At each stage of the campaigns, the Frankish armies seized wealth and carried Saxon captives into slavery.Template:Sfn Unusually, Charlemagne campaigned through the winter instead of resting his army.Template:Sfn By 785, he had suppressed the Saxon resistance and completely commanded Westphalia. That summer, he met Widukind and persuaded him to end his resistance. Widukind agreed to be baptised with Charlemagne as his godfather, ending this phase of the Saxon Wars.Template:Sfn

Benevento, Bavaria, and Pepin's revoltEdit

Charlemagne travelled to Italy in 786, arriving by Christmas. Aiming to extend his influence further into southern Italy, he marched into the Duchy of Benevento.Template:Sfn Duke Arechis fled to a fortified position at Salerno before offering Charlemagne his fealty. Charlemagne accepted his submission and hostages, who included Arechis's son Grimoald.Template:Sfn In Italy, Charlemagne also met with envoys from Constantinople. Empress Irene had called the 787 Second Council of Nicaea, but did not inform Charlemagne or invite any Frankish bishops. Charlemagne, probably in reaction to the perceived slight of the exclusion, broke the betrothal of his daughter Rotrude and Constantine VI.Template:Sfn

File:Grimoald III solidus 74000878.jpg
A solidus from Benevento, with Grimoald's effigy and Charlemagne's name (DOMS CAR RX, the Lord King Charles)

After Charlemagne left Italy, Arechis sent envoys to Irene to offer an alliance; he suggested that she send a Byzantine army with Adalgis, the exiled son of Desiderus, to remove the Franks from power in Lombardy.Template:Sfn Before his plans could be finalised, Aldechis and his elder son Romuald died of illness within weeks of each other.Template:Sfn Charlemagne sent Grimoald back to Benevento to serve as duke and return it to Frankish suzerainty.Template:Sfn The Byzantine army invaded, but were repulsed by the Frankish and Lombard forces.Template:Sfn

As affairs were being settled in Italy, Charlemagne turned his attention to Bavaria. Bavaria was ruled by Duke Tassilo, Charlemagne's first cousin, who had been installed by Pepin the Short in 748.Template:Sfn Tassilo's sons were also grandsons of Desiderius, and a potential threat to Charlemagne's rule in Lombardy.Template:Sfn The neighbouring rulers had a growing rivalry throughout their reigns, but had sworn oaths of peace to each other in 781.Template:Sfn In 784, Rotpert (Charlemagne's viceroy in Italy) accused Tassilo of conspiring with Widukind in Saxony and unsuccessfully attacked the Bavarian city of Bolzano.Template:Sfn Charlemagne gathered his forces to prepare for an invasion of Bavaria in 787. Dividing the army, the Franks launched a three-pronged attack. Quickly realizing his poor position, Tassilo agreed to surrender and recognise Charlemagne as his overlord.Template:Sfn The following year, Tassilo was accused of plotting with the Avars to attack Charlemagne. He was deposed and sent to a monastery, and Charlemagne absorbed Bavaria into his kingdom.Template:Sfn Charlemagne spent the next few years based in Regensburg, largely focused on consolidating his rule of Bavaria and warring against the Avars.Template:Sfn Successful campaigns against them were launched from Bavaria and Italy in 788,Template:Sfn and Charlemagne led campaigns in 791 and 792.Template:Sfn

Charlemagne gave Charles the Younger rule of Maine in Neustria in 789, leaving Pepin the Hunchback his only son without lands.Template:Sfn His relationship with Himiltrude was now apparently seen as illegitimate at his court, and Pepin was sidelined from the succession.Template:Sfn In 792, as his father and brothers were gathered in Regensburg, Pepin conspired with Bavarian nobles to assassinate them and install himself as king. The plot was discovered and revealed to Charlemagne before it could proceed; Pepin was sent to a monastery, and many of his co-conspirators were executed.Template:Sfn

The early 790s saw a marked focus on ecclesiastical affairs by Charlemagne. He summoned a council in Regensburg in 792 to address the theological controversy over the adoptionism doctrine in the Spanish church and formulate a response to the Second Council of Nicea.Template:Sfn The council condemned adoptionism as heresy and led to the production of the Libri Carolini, a detailed argument against Nicea's canons.Template:Sfn In 794, Charlemagne called another council in Frankfurt.Template:Sfn The council confirmed Regensburg's positions on adoptionism and Nicea, recognised the deposition of Tassilo, set grain prices, reformed Frankish coinage, forbade abbesses from blessing men, and endorsed prayer in vernacular languages.Template:Sfn Soon after the council, Fastrada fell ill and died;Template:Sfn Charlemagne married the Alamannian noblewoman Luitgard shortly afterwards.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Continued wars with the Saxons and AvarsEdit

Charlemagne gathered an army after the council of Frankfurt as Saxon resistance continued, beginning a series of annual campaigns which lasted through 799.Template:Sfn The campaigns of the 790s were even more destructive than those of earlier decades, with the annal writers frequently noting Charlemagne "burning", "ravaging", "devastating", and "laying waste" the Saxon lands.Template:Sfn Charlemagne forcibly removed a large number of Saxons to Francia, installing Frankish elites and soldiers in their place.Template:Sfn His extended wars in Saxony led to his establishing his court in Aachen, which had easy access to the frontier. He built a large palace there, including a chapel which is now part of the Aachen Cathedral.Template:Sfn Einhard joined the court at that time.Template:Sfn Pepin of Italy (Carloman) engaged in further wars against the Avars in the south, which led to the collapse of their kingdom and the eastward expansion of Frankish rule.Template:Sfn

Charlemagne also worked to expand his influence through diplomatic means during the 790s wars, focusing on the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms of Britain. Charles the Younger proposed a marriage pact with the daughter of King Offa of Mercia, but Offa insisted that Charlemagne's daughter Bertha also be given as a bride for his son.Template:Sfn Charlemagne refused the arrangement, and the marriage did not take place.Template:Sfn Charlemagne and Offa entered into a formal peace in 796, protecting trade and securing the rights of English pilgrims to pass through Francia on their way to Rome.Template:Sfn Charlemagne was also the host and protector of several deposed English rulers who were later restored: Eadbehrt of Kent, Ecgberht, King of Wessex, and Eardwulf of Northumbria.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Nelson writes that Charlemagne treated the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms "like satellite states," establishing direct relations with English bishops.Template:Sfn Charlemagne also forged an alliance with Alfonso II of Asturias, although Einhard calls Alfonso his "dependent".Template:Sfn Following his sack of Lisbon in 798, Alfonso sent Charlemagne trophies of his victory, including armour, mules and prisoners.Template:Sfn

Reign as emperorEdit

CoronationEdit

After Leo III became pope in 795, he faced political opposition. His enemies accused him of a number of crimes and physically attacked him in April 799, attempting to remove his eyes and tongue.Template:Sfn Leo escaped and fled north to seek Charlemagne's help.Template:Sfn Charlemagne continued his campaign against the Saxons before breaking off to meet Leo at Paderborn in September.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Hearing evidence from the pope and his enemies, he sent Leo back to Rome with royal legates who were instructed to reinstate the pope and conduct a further investigation.Template:Sfn In August of the following year, Charlemagne made plans to go to Rome after an extensive tour of his lands in Neustria.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Charlemagne met Leo in November near Mentana at the twelfth milestone outside Rome, the traditional location where Roman emperors began their formal entry into the city.Template:Sfn Charlemagne presided over an assembly to hear the charges, but believed that no one could sit in judgement of the pope. Leo swore an oath on 23 December, declaring his innocence of all charges.Template:Sfn At mass in St. Peter's Basilica on Christmas Day 800, Leo proclaimed Charlemagne "emperor of the Romans" (Imperator Romanorum) and crowned him.Template:Efn Charlemagne was the first reigning emperor in the west since the deposition of Romulus Augustulus in 476.Template:Sfn His son, Charles the Younger, was anointed king by Leo at the same time.Template:Sfn

File:Karel Leo.jpg
Pope Leo III crowning Charlemagne. From Chroniques de France ou de Saint Denis, volume 1, France, second quarter of the 14th century

Historians differ about the intentions of the imperial coronation, the extent to which Charlemagne was aware of it or participated in its planning, and the significance of the events for those present and for Charlemagne's reign.Template:Sfn Contemporary Frankish and papal sources differ in their emphasis on, and representation of, events.Template:Sfn Einhard writes that Charlemagne would not have entered the church if he knew about the pope's plan; modern historians have regarded his report as truthful or rejected it as a literary device demonstrating Charlemagne's humility.Template:Sfn Collins says that the actions surrounding the coronation indicate that it was planned by Charlemagne as early as his meeting with Leo in 799,Template:Sfn and Fried writes that Charlemagne planned to adopt the title of emperor by 798 "at the latest."Template:Sfn During the years before the coronation, Charlemagne's courtier Alcuin referred to his realm as an Imperium Christianum ("Christian Empire") in which "just as the inhabitants of the Roman Empire had been united by a common Roman citizenship", the new empire would be united by a common Christian faith.Template:Sfn This is the view of Henri Pirenne, who says that "Charles was the Emperor of the ecclesia as the Pope conceived it, of the Roman Church, regarded as the universal Church".Template:Sfn

The Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire remained a significant contemporary power in European politics for Leo and Charlemagne, especially in Italy. The Byzantines continued to hold a substantial portion of Italy, with their borders not far south of Rome. Empress Irene had seized the throne from her son Constantine VI in 797, deposing and blinding him.Template:Sfn Irene, the first Byzantine empress, faced opposition in Constantinople because of her gender and her means of accession.Template:Sfn One of the earliest narrative sources for the coronation, the Annals of Lorsch, presented a female ruler in Constantinople as a vacancy in the imperial title which justified Leo's coronation of Charlemagne.Template:Sfn Pirenne disagrees, saying that the coronation "was not in any sense explained by the fact that at this moment a woman was reigning in Constantinople."Template:Sfn Leo's main motivations may have been the desire to increase his standing after his political difficulties, placing himself as a power broker and securing Charlemagne as a powerful ally and protector.Template:Sfn The Byzantine Empire's lack of ability to influence events in Italy and support the papacy were also important to Leo's position.Template:Sfn According to the Royal Frankish Annals, Leo prostrated himself before Charlemagne after crowning him (an act of submission standard in Roman coronation rituals from the time of Diocletian). This account presents Leo not as Charlemagne's superior, but as the agent of the Roman people who acclaimed Charlemagne as emperor.Template:Sfn

Historian Henry Mayr-Harting claims that the assumption of the imperial title by Charlemagne was an effort to incorporate the Saxons into the Frankish realm, since they did not have a native tradition of kingship.Template:Sfn However, Costambeys et al. note in The Carolingian World that "since Saxony had not been in the Roman empire it is hard to see on what basis an emperor would have been any more welcomed."Template:Sfn These authors write that the decision to take the title of emperor was aimed at furthering Charlemagne's influence in Italy, as an appeal to traditional authority recognised by Italian elites within and (especially) outside his control.Template:Sfn

Collins also writes that becoming emperor gave Charlemagne "the right to try to impose his rule over the whole of [Italy]", considering this a motivation for the coronation.Template:Sfn He notes the "element of political and military risk"Template:Sfn inherent in the affair due to the opposition of the Byzantine Empire and potential opposition from the Frankish elite, as the imperial title could draw him further into Mediterranean politics.Template:Sfn Collins sees several of Charlemagne's actions as attempts to ensure that his new title had a distinctly-Frankish context.Template:Sfn

Charlemagne's coronation led to a centuries-long ideological conflict between his successors and Constantinople known as the problem of two emperors,Template:Efn which could be seen as a rejection or usurpation of the Byzantine emperors' claim to be the universal, preeminent rulers of Christendom.Template:Sfn Historian James Muldoon writes that Charlemagne may have had a more limited view of his role, seeing the title as representing dominion over lands he already ruled.Template:Sfn However, the title of emperor gave Charlemagne enhanced prestige and ideological authority.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He immediately incorporated his new title into documents he issued, adopting the formula "Charles, most serene augustus, crowned by God, great peaceful emperor governing the Roman empire, and who is by the mercy of God king of the Franks and the Lombards"Template:Efn instead of the earlier form "Charles, by the grace of God king of the Franks and Lombards and patrician of the Romans."Template:EfnTemplate:Sfn Leo acclaimed Charlemagne as "emperor of the Romans" during the coronation, but Charlemagne never used this title.Template:Sfn The avoidance of the specific claim of being a "Roman emperor", as opposed to the more-neutral "emperor governing the Roman empire", may have been to improve relations with the Byzantines.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn This formulation (with the continuation of his earlier royal titles) may also represent a view of his role as emperor as being the ruler of the people of the city of Rome, as he was of the Franks and the Lombards.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Governing the empireEdit

File:Aachener Dom BW 2016-07-09 13-49-15.jpg
Charlemagne's throne in Aachen Cathedral

Charlemagne left Italy in the summer of 801 after adjudicating several ecclesiastical disputes in Rome and experiencing an earthquake in Spoleto.Template:Sfn He never returned to the city.Template:Sfn Continuing trends and a ruling style established in the 790s,Template:Sfn Charlemagne's reign from 801 onward is a "distinct phase"Template:Sfn characterised by more sedentary rule from Aachen.Template:Sfn Although conflict continued until the end of his reign, the relative peace of the imperial period allowed for attention on internal governance. The Franks continued to wage war, though these wars were defending and securing the empire's frontiers,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn and Charlemagne rarely led armies personally.Template:Sfn A significant expansion of the Spanish March was achieved with a series of campaigns by Louis against the Emirate of Cordoba, culminating in the 801 capture of Barcelona.Template:Sfn

The 802 Capitulare missorum generale was an expansive piece of legislation, with provisions governing the conduct of royal officials and requiring that all free men take an oath of loyalty to Charlemagne.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The capitulary reformed the institution of the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, officials who would now be assigned in pairs (a cleric and a lay aristocrat) to administer justice and oversee governance in defined territories.Template:Sfn The emperor also ordered the revision of the Lombard and Frankish legal codes.Template:Sfn

In addition to the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, Charlemagne also ruled parts of the empire with his sons as sub-kings.Template:Sfn Although Pepin and Louis had some authority as kings in Italy and Aquitaine, Charlemagne had the ultimate authority and directly intervened.Template:Sfn Charles, their elder brother, had been given lands in Neustria in 789 or 790 and made a king in 800.Template:Sfn

The 806 charter {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (Division of the Realm) set the terms of Charlemagne's succession.Template:Sfn Charles, as his eldest son in good favour, was given the largest share of the inheritance: rule of Francia, Saxony, Nordgau, and parts of Alemannia. The two younger sons were confirmed in their kingdoms and gained additional territories; most of Bavaria and Alemmannia was given to Pepin, and Provence, Septimania, and parts of Burgundy were given to Louis.Template:Sfn Charlemagne did not address the inheritance of the imperial title.Template:Sfn The {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} also provided that if any of the brothers predeceased Charlemagne, their sons would inherit their share; peace was urged among his descendants.Template:Sfn

Conflict and diplomacy with the eastEdit

After his coronation, Charlemagne sought recognition of his imperial title from Constantinople.Template:Sfn Several delegations were exchanged between Charlemagne and Irene in 802 and 803. According to the contemporary Byzantine chronicler Thophanes, Charlemagne made an offer of marriage to Irene which she was close to accepting.Template:Sfn Irene was deposed and replaced by Nikephoros I, who was unwilling to recognise Charlemagne as emperor.Template:Sfn The two empires conflicted over control of the Adriatic Sea (especially Istria and Veneto) several times during Nikephoros' reign. Charlemagne sent envoys to Constantinople in 810 to make peace, giving up his claims to Veneto. Nikephoros died in battle before the envoys could leave Constantinople but his son-in-law and successor Michael I confirmed the peace, sending his own envoys to Aachen to recognise Charlemagne as emperor.Template:Sfn Charlemagne soon issued the first Frankish coins bearing his imperial title, although papal coins minted in Rome had used the title as early as 800.Template:Sfn

He sent envoys and initiated diplomatic contact with the Abbasid caliph Harun al-Rashid during the 790s, due to their mutual interest in Spanish affairs.Template:Sfn As an early sign of friendship, Charlemagne requested an elephant as a gift from Harun. Harun later provided an elephant named Abul-Abbas, which arrived at Aachen in 802.Template:Sfn Harun also sought to undermine Charlemagne's relations with the Byzantines, with whom he was at war. As part of his outreach, Harun gave Charlemagne nominal rule of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem and other gifts.Template:Sfn According to Einhard, Charlemagne "zealously strove to make friendships with kings beyond the seas" in order "that he might get some help and relief to the Christians living under their rule." A surviving administrative document, the Basel roll, shows the work done by his agents in Palestine in furtherance of this goal.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn

Harun's death lead to a succession crisis and, under his successors, churches and synagogues were destroyed in the caliphate.Template:Sfn Unable to intervene directly, Charlemagne sent specially-minted coins and arms to the eastern Christians to defend and restore their churches and monasteries. The coins with their inscriptions were also an important tool of imperial propaganda.Template:Sfn Johannes Fried writes that deteriorating relations with Baghdad after Harun's death may have been the impetus for renewed negotiations with Constantinople which led to Charlemagne's peace with Michael in 811.Template:Sfn

As emperor, Charlemagne became involved in a religious dispute between Eastern and Western Christians over the recitation of the Niceno-Constantinopolitan Creed, the fundamental statement of orthodox Christian belief. The original text of the creed, adopted at the Council of Constantinople, professed that the Holy Spirit proceeded from the Father. A tradition developed in Western Europe that the Holy Spirit proceeded from the Father "and the Son", inserting the Latin term {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} into the creed.Template:Sfn The difference did not cause significant conflict until 807, when Frankish monks in Bethlehem were denounced as heretics by a Greek monk for using the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} form.Template:Sfn The Frankish monks appealed the dispute to Rome, where Pope Leo affirmed the text of the creed omitting the phrase and passed the report on to Charlemagne.Template:Sfn Charlemagne summoned a council at Aachen in 809 which defended the use of {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, and sent the decision to Rome. Leo said that the Franks could maintain their tradition, but asserted that the canonical creed did not include {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}.Template:Sfn He commissioned two silver shields with the creed in Latin and Greek (omitting the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), which he hung in St. Peter's Basilica.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Another product of the 809 Aachen council was the Handbook of 809, an illustrated calendrical and astronomical compendium.Template:Sfn

Wars with the DanesEdit

File:Europe 814.svg
Europe at the death of the Charlemagne in 814

Scandinavia had been brought into contact with the Frankish world through Charlemagne's wars with the Saxons.Template:Sfn Raids on Charlemagne's lands by the Danes began around 800.Template:Sfn Charlemagne engaged in his final campaign in Saxony in 804, seizing Saxon territory east of the Elbe, removing its Saxon population, and giving the land to his Obotrite allies.Template:Sfn The Danish king Gudfred, uneasy at the extension of Frankish power, offered to meet with Charlemagne to arrange peace and (possibly) hand over Saxons who had fled to him;Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn the talks were unsuccessful.Template:Sfn

The northern frontier was quiet until 808, when Gudfred and some allied Slavic tribes led an incursion into the Obotrite lands and extracted tribute from over half the territory.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Charles the Younger led an army across the Elbe in response, but only attacked some of Gudfred's Slavic allies.Template:Sfn Gudfred again attempted diplomatic overtures in 809, but no peace was apparently made.Template:Sfn Danish pirates raided Frisia in 810, although it is uncertain if they were connected to Gudfred.Template:Sfn Charlemagne sent an army to secure Frisia while he led a force against Gudfred, who had reportedly challenged the emperor to face him in battle.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The battle never took place, since Gudfred was murdered by two of his own men before Charlemagne's arrival.Template:Sfn Gudfred's nephew and successor Hemming immediately sued for peace, and a commission led by Charlemagne's cousin Wala reached a settlement with the Danes in 811.Template:Sfn The Danes did not pose a threat for the remainder of Charlemagne's reign, but the effects of this war and their earlier expansion in Saxony helped set the stage for the intense Viking raids across Europe later in the ninth century.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Final years and deathEdit

File:Shroud of Charlemagne manufactured in Constantinople 814.jpg
A portion of Charlemagne's death shroud. Illustrating a quadriga (a four-horse chariot), it was manufactured in Constantinople.

The Carolingian dynasty experienced a number of losses in 810 and 811, when Charlemagne's sister Gisela, his daughter Rotrude, and his sons Pepin the Hunchback, Pepin of Italy, and Charles the Younger died.Template:Sfn The deaths of Charles and Pepin of Italy left Charlemagne's earlier plans for succession in disarray. He declared Pepin of Italy's son Bernard ruler of Italy and made his own only surviving son, Louis, heir to the rest of the empire.Template:Sfn Charlemagne also made a new will detailing the disposal of his property at his death, with bequests to the church, his children, and his grandchildren.Template:Sfn Einhard (possibly relying on tropes from Suetonius's The Twelve Caesars) says that Charlemagne viewed the deaths of his family members, his fall from a horse, astronomical phenomena, and the collapse of part of the palace in his last years as signs of his impending death.Template:Sfn Charlemagne continued to govern with energy during his final year, ordering bishops to assemble in five ecclesiastical councils.Template:Sfn These culminated in a large assembly at Aachen, where Charlemagne crowned Louis as his co-emperor and Bernard as king in a ceremony on 11 September 813.Template:Sfn

Charlemagne became ill in the autumn of 813 and spent his last months praying, fasting, and studying the gospels.Template:Sfn He developed pleurisy, and was bedridden for seven days before dying on the morning of 28 January 814.Template:Sfn Thegan, a biographer of Louis, records the emperor's last words as "Into your hands, Lord, I commend my spirit" (quoting from Template:Bibleverse).Template:Sfn Charlemagne's body was prepared and buried in the chapel at Aachen by his daughters and palace officials that day.Template:Sfn Louis arrived at Aachen thirty days after his father's death, making a formal {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} and taking charge of the palace and the empire.Template:Sfn Charlemagne's remains were exhumed by Holy Roman Emperor Frederick Barbarossa in 1165, and reinterred in a new casket by Frederick II in 1215.Template:Sfn

Template:Multiple image

LegacyEdit

Political legacyEdit

File:Vertrag von Verdun en.svg
Partition of the Carolingian Empire after the 843 Treaty of Verdun

The stability and peace of Charlemagne's reign did not long outlive him. Louis' reign was marked by strife, including a number of rebellions by his sons. After Louis' death, the empire was divided among his sons into West, East, and Middle Francia by the Treaty of Verdun.Template:Sfn Middle Francia was divided several more times over the course of subsequent generations.Template:Sfn Carolingians would ruleTemplate:Sndwith some interruptionsTemplate:Sndin East Francia (later the Kingdom of Germany) until 911,Template:Sfn and in West Francia (which would become France) until 987.Template:Sfn After 887, the imperial title was held sporadically by a series of non-dynastic Italian rulersTemplate:Sfn before it lapsed in 924.Template:Sfn The East Frankish king Otto the Great conquered Italy, and was crowned emperor in 962.Template:Sfn By this time, the eastern and western parts of Charlemagne's former empire had already developed distinct languages and cultures.Template:Sfn Otto founded (or re-established) the Holy Roman Empire, which would last until its dissolution in 1806, during the Napoleonic Wars.Template:Sfn

According to historian Jennifer Davis, Charlemagne "invented medieval rulership" and his influence can be seen at least into the nineteenth century.Template:Sfn Charlemagne is often known as "the father of Europe" because of the influence of his reign and the legacy he left across the large area of the continent.Template:Sfn The political structures he established remained in place through his Carolingian successors, and continued to exert influence into the eleventh century.Template:Sfn

Charlemagne was an ancestor of several European ruling houses, including the Capetian dynasty,Template:Efn the Ottonian dynasty,Template:Efn the House of Luxembourg,Template:Efn and the House of Ivrea.Template:Efn The Ottonians and Capetians, direct successors of the Carolingans, drew on the legacy of Charlemagne to bolster their legitimacy and prestige; the Ottonians and their successors held their German coronations in Aachen through the Middle Ages.Template:Sfn The marriage of Philip II of France to Isabella of Hainault (a direct descendant of Charlemagne) was seen as a sign of increased legitimacy for their son, Louis VIII, and the French kings' association with Charlemagne's legacy was stressed until the monarchy's end.Template:Sfn German and French rulers, such as Frederick Barbarossa and Napoleon, cited the influence of Charlemagne and associated themselves with him.Template:Sfn Both German and French monarchs considered themselves as successors of Charlemagne, enumerating him as "Charles I" in their regnal lists.Template:Sfn

The city of Aachen has, since 1949, awarded an international prize (the Karlspreis der Stadt Aachen) in honour of Charlemagne. It is awarded annually to those who promote European unity.Template:Sfn Recipients of the prize include Richard von Coudenhove-Kalergi (founder of the pan-European movement), Alcide De Gasperi, and Winston Churchill.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Carolingian RenaissanceEdit

Contacts with the wider Mediterranean world through Spain and Italy, the influx of foreign scholars at court, and the relative stability and length of Charlemagne's reign led to a cultural revival known as the Carolingian Renaissance.Template:Sfn Although the beginnings of this revival can be seen under his predecessors, Charles Martel and Pepin, Charlemagne took an active and direct role in shaping intellectual life which led to the revival's zenith.Template:Sfn Charlemagne promoted learning as a matter of policy and direct patronage, with the aim of creating a more effective clergy.Template:Sfn The Admonitio generalis and Epistola de litteris colendis outlined his policies and aims for education.Template:Sfn

Intellectual life at court was dominated by Irish, Anglo-Saxon, Visigothic and Italian scholars, including Dungal of Bobbio, Alcuin of York, Theodulf of Orléans, and Peter of Pisa; Franks such as Einhard and Angelbert also made substantial contributions.Template:Sfn Aside from the intellectual activity at the palace, Charlemagne promoted ecclesiastical schools and publicly funded schools for the children of the elite and future clergy.Template:Sfn Students learned basic Latin literacy and grammar, arithmetic, and other subjects of the medieval liberal arts.Template:Sfn From their education, it was expected that even rural priests could provide their parishioners with basic instruction in religious matters and (possibly) the literacy required for worship.Template:Sfn Latin was standardised and its use brought into territories well beyond the former Roman Empire, forming a second language community of speakers and writers and sustaining Latin creativity in the Middle Ages.Template:Sfn

Carolingian authors produced extensive works, including legal treatises, histories, poetry, and religious texts.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Scriptoria in monasteries and cathedrals focused on copying new and old works, producing an estimated 90,000 manuscripts during the ninth century.Template:Sfn The Carolingian minuscule script was developed and popularised in medieval copying, influencing Renaissance and modern typefaces.Template:Sfn Scholar John J. Contreni considers the educational and learning revival under Charlemagne and his successors "one of the most durable and resilient elements of the Carolingian legacy".Template:Sfn

Memory and historiographyEdit

Charlemagne was a frequent subject of, and inspiration for, medieval writers after his death. Einhard's Vita Karoli Magni, according to Johannes Fired, "can be said to have revived the defunct literary genre of the secular biography."Template:Sfn Einhard drew on classical sources, such as Suetonius' The Twelve Caesars, the orations of Cicero, and Tacitus' Agricola to frame his work's structure and style.Template:Sfn The Carolingian period also saw a revival of the mirrors for princes genre.Template:Sfn The author of the Latin poem Visio Karoli Magni, written Template:Circa, uses facts (apparently from Einhard) and his own observations on the decline of Charlemagne's family after their civil wars later in the ninth century as the bases of a visionary tale about Charles meeting a prophetic spectre in a dream.Template:Sfn Notker's Gesta Karoli Magni, written for Charlemagne's great-grandson Charles the Fat, presents moral anecdotes (exempla) to highlight the emperor's qualities as a ruler.Template:Sfn

Charlemagne, as a figure of myth and emulation, grew over the centuries; Matthias Becher writes that over 1,000 legends are recorded about him, far outstripping subsequent emperors and kings.Template:Sfn Later medieval writers depicted Charlemagne as a crusader and Christian warrior.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Charlemagne is the main figure of the medieval literary cycle known as the Matter of France. Works in this cycle, which originated during the Crusades, centre on characterisations of the emperor as a leader of Christian knights in wars against Muslims. The cycle includes {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (epic poems) such as the Song of Roland and chronicles such as the Historia Caroli Magni, also known as the (Pseudo-)Turpin Chronicle.Template:Sfn Charlemagne was depicted as one of the Nine Worthies, a fixture in medieval literature and art as an exemplar of a Christian king.Template:Sfn Despite his central role in these legends, author Thomas Bulfinch noted that "romancers represent him as often weak and passionate, the victim of treacherous counsellors, and at the mercy of turbulent barons, on whose prowess he depends for the maintenance of his throne."Template:Sfn

Attention to Charlemagne became more scholarly in the early modern period as Eindhard's Vita and other sources began to be published.Template:Sfn Political philosophers debated his legacy; Montesquieu viewed him as the first constitutional monarch and protector of freemen, but Voltaire saw him as a despotic ruler and representative of the medieval period as a Dark Age.Template:Sfn As early as the sixteenth century, debate between German and French writers began about Charlemagne's "nationality".Template:Sfn These contrasting portraits—a French Charlemagne versus a German Karl der Große—became especially pronounced during the nineteenth century with Napoleon's use of Charlemagne's legacy and the rise of German nationalism.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn German historiography and popular perception focused on the Massacre of Verden, emphasised with Charlemagne as the "butcher" of the Germanic Saxons or downplayed as an unfortunate part of the legacy of a great German ruler.Template:Sfn Propaganda in Nazi Germany initially portrayed Charlemagne as an enemy of Germany, a French ruler who worked to take away the freedom and native religion of the German people.Template:Sfn This quickly shifted as Adolf Hitler endorsed a portrait of Charlemagne as a great unifier of disparate German tribes into a common nation, allowing Hitler to co-opt Charlemagne's legacy as an ideological model for his expansionist policies.Template:Sfn

Historiography after World War II focused on Charlemagne as "the father of Europe" rather than a nationalistic figure,Template:Sfn a view first advanced during the nineteenth century by German romantic philosopher Friedrich Schlegel.Template:Sfn This view has led to Charlemagne's adoption as a political symbol of European integration.Template:Sfn Modern historians increasingly place Charlemagne in the context of the wider Mediterranean world, following the work of Henri Pirenne.Template:Sfn

Religious influence and venerationEdit

Template:Further

File:Aix dom int vue cote.jpg
The Palatine Chapel, built by Charlemagne at the Aachen palace

Charlemagne gave much attention to religious and ecclesiastical affairs, holding 23 synods during his reign. His synods were called to address specific issues at particular times, but generally dealt with church administration and organisation, education of the clergy, and the proper forms of liturgy and worship.Template:Sfn Charlemagne used the Christian faith as a unifying factor in the realm and, in turn, worked to impose unity on the church.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He implemented an edited version of the Dionysio-Hadriana book of canon law acquired from Pope Adrian, required use of the Rule of St. Benedict in monasteries throughout the empire, and promoted a standardised liturgy adapted from the rites of the Roman Church to conform with Frankish practices.Template:Sfn Carolingian policies promoting unity did not eliminate the diverse practices throughout the empire, but created a shared ecclesiastical identity—according to Rosamond McKitterick, "unison, not unity."Template:Sfn

The condition of all his subjects as a "Christian people" was an important concern.Template:Sfn Charlemagne's policies encouraged preaching to the laity, particularly in vernacular languages they would understand.Template:Sfn He believed it essential to be able to recite the Lord's Prayer and the Apostles' Creed, and made efforts to ensure that the clergy taught them and other basics of Christian morality.Template:Sfn

ThomasTemplate:NbspF.Template:NbspX.Template:NbspNoble writes that the efforts of Charlemagne and his successors to standardise Christian doctrine and practices and harmonise Frankish practices were essential steps in the development of Christianity in Europe, and the Roman Catholic or Latin Church "as a historical phenomenon, not as a theological or ecclesiological one, is a Carolingian construction."Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He says that the medieval European concept of Christendom as an overarching community of Western Christians, rather than a collection of local traditions, is the result of Carolingian policies and ideology.Template:Sfn Charlemagne's doctrinal policies promoting the use of {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} and opposing the Second Council of Nicea were key steps in the growing divide between Western and Eastern Christianity.Template:Sfn

Emperor Otto III attempted to have Charlemagne canonised in 1000.Template:Sfn In 1165, Frederick Barbarossa persuaded Antipope Paschal III to elevate Charlemagne to sainthood.Template:Sfn Since Paschal's acts were not considered valid, Charlemagne was not recognised as a saint by the Holy See.Template:Sfn Despite this lack of official recognition, his cult was observed in Aachen, Reims, Frankfurt, Zurich and Regensburg, and he has been venerated in France since the reign of Charles V.Template:Sfn

Charlemagne also drew attention from figures of the Protestant Reformation, with Martin Luther criticising his apparent subjugation to the papacy by accepting his coronation from Leo.Template:Sfn John Calvin and other Protestant thinkers viewed him as a forerunner of the Reformation, however, noting the Libri CaroliniTemplate:'s condemnation of the worship of images and relics and conflicts by Charlemagne and his successors with the temporal power of the popes.Template:Sfn

Wives, concubines, and childrenEdit

Template:Further Template:Col-begin Template:Col-2 Wives and their childrenTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Template:Col-2 Concubines and their childrenTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn

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Charlemagne had at least twenty children with his wives and other partners.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn After the death of his wife Luitgard in 800, he did not remarry, but had children with unmarried partners.Template:Sfn He was determined that all his children, including his daughters, should receive an education in the liberal arts. His children were taught in accordance with their aristocratic status, which included training in riding and weaponry for his sons, and embroidery, spinning and weaving for his daughters.Template:Sfn

Rosamond McKitterick writes that Charlemagne exercised "a remarkable degree of patriarchal control ... over his progeny," noting that only a handful of his children and grandchildren were raised outside his court.Template:Sfn Pepin of Italy and Louis reigned as kings from childhood and lived at their courts.Template:Sfn Careers in the church were arranged for his illegitimate sons.Template:Sfn His daughters were resident at court or at Chelles Abbey (where Charlemagne's sister was abbess), and those at court may have fulfilled the duties of queen after 800.Template:Sfn

Louis and Pepin of Italy married and had children during their father's lifetime, and Charlemagne brought Pepin's daughters into his household after Pepin's death.Template:Sfn Rotrude had been betrothed to Emperor Constantine VI, but the betrothal was ended.Template:Sfn None of Charlemagne's daughters married, although several had children with unmarried partners. Bertha had two sons, Nithard and Hartnid, with Charlemagne's courtier Angilbert; Rotrude had a son named Louis, possibly with Count Rorgon; and Hiltrude had a son named Richbod, possibly with a count named Richwin.Template:Sfn The {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} issued by Charlemagne in 806 provided that his legitimate daughters be allowed to marry or become nuns after his death. Theodrada entered a convent, but the decisions of his other daughters are unknown.Template:Sfn

Appearance and iconographyEdit

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Einhard gives a first-hand description of Charlemagne's appearance later in life:Template:Sfn

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He was heavily built, sturdy, and of considerable stature, although not exceptionally so, since his height was seven times the length of his own foot. He had a round head, large and lively eyes, a slightly larger nose than usual, white but still attractive hair, a bright and cheerful expression, a short and fat neck, and he enjoyed good health, except for the fevers that affected him in the last few years of his life.{{#if:|{{#if:|}}

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Charlemagne's tomb was opened in 1861 by scientists who reconstructed his skeleton and measured it at Template:Convert in length, roughly equivalent to Einhard's seven feet.Template:Sfn A 2010 estimate of his height from an X-ray and CT scan of his tibia was Template:Convert; this puts him in the 99th percentile of height for his period, given that average male height of his time was Template:Convert. The width of the bone suggested that he was slim.Template:Sfn

Charlemagne wore his hair short, abandoning the Merovingian tradition of long-haired monarchs.Template:Sfn He had a moustache (possibly imitating the Ostrogothic king Theoderic the Great), in contrast with the bearded Merovingian kings;Template:Sfn future Carolingian monarchs would adopt this style.Template:Sfn Paul Dutton notes the ubiquitous crown in portraits of Charlemagne and other Carolingian rulers, replacing the earlier Merovingian long hair.Template:Sfn A ninth-century statuette depicts Charlemagne or his grandson, Charles the BaldTemplate:Efn and shows the subject as moustachioed with short hair;Template:Sfn this also appears on contemporary coinage.Template:Sfn

By the twelfth century, Charlemagne was described as bearded rather than moustachioed in literary sources such as the Song of Roland, the Pseudo-Turpin Chronicle, and other works in Latin, French, and German.Template:Sfn The Pseudo-Turpin uniquely says that his hair was brown.Template:Sfn Later art and iconography of Charlemagne followed suit, generally depicting him in a later medieval style as bearded with longer hair.Template:Sfn

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