The kings of new peoples ruled as much in Roman style as they could, issuing laws written in Latin for their own peoples and their Roman subjects and striking coins that imitated imperial coinage. They also sponsored the composition of “ethnic” and genealogical histories that attributed to themselves and their peoples, however recently assembled, an identity and antiquity rivaling that of Rome. Although the Romans, who called their own society a populus (“civil people”), used the term rex (“king”) only for rulers of peoples at lower levels of sociocultural development, the political order of kings and peoples became a commonplace in Europe in late antiquity and would remain so until the 19th century. Some of these kingdoms, especially that of the Visigoths in southern Gaul and later in Iberia, also modeled themselves on the ancient Hebrew kingdoms as described in Scripture. They borrowed and adapted some ancient Jewish rituals, such as liturgically anointing the ruler with oil and reminding him in sermons, prayers, and meetings of church councils that he was God’s servant, with spiritual and political responsibilities that legitimized his power.
As the cultures associated with the new kings and peoples spread throughout western Europe from the 5th to the 8th centuries, they influenced political and religious change in areas that the empire had never ruled—initially Ireland, then northern Britain, the lower Rhineland, and trans-Rhenish Europe (the lands east of the Rhine River). The bishop and the monk were two of the most remarkable and longest enduring religious and social inventions of late antiquity; the barbarian kingdoms were a third. Although many of the latter did not survive, their experiments in Christian kingship, as represented in texts, ritual, pictures, and objects, began a long tradition in European political life and thought.
Clay-model-of-a-wheeled-cart-from-a-grave-atClay model of a wheeled cart, from a grave at Szigetszentmárton, Hung., end of the 4th …[Credits : © Hungarian National Museum, Budapest; photograph, Kardos Judit]
Calendar-illustration-for-April-from-the-Tres-Riches-Heures-duCalendar illustration for April from the Très Riches Heures du duc de …[Credits : Photos.com/Jupiterimages]
Illumination-from-the-manuscript-of-St-Augustines-City-of-GodIllumination from the manuscript of St. Augustine’s City of God, 1475; in …[Credits : Scala/Art Resource, New York]
Petrarch-engravingPetrarch, engraving.[Credits : © Ancient Art & Architecture Collection]
Voltaire-bronze-by-Jean-Antoine-Houdon-in-the-Hermitage-StVoltaire, bronze by Jean-Antoine Houdon; in the Hermitage, St. …[Credits : Scala/Art Resource, New York]
Jules-Michelet-detail-of-an-oil-painting-by-Thomas-CoutureJules Michelet, detail of an oil painting by Thomas Couture; in the Carnavalet Museum, Paris.[Credits : Giraudon/Art Resource, New York]
Georges-Duby-1988Georges Duby, 1988.[Credits : Patrick Robert—Corbis/Sygma]
Constantine-I-colossal-marble-head-AD-325Constantine I, colossal marble head, c. ad 325.[Credits : The Granger Collection, New York]
Infrastructure and influences of the Roman and Greek civilizations of old can still be seen in the …[Credits : Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.]
Learn some of the peculiarities of the inquisitors’ interrogation book, “Malleus …[Credits : Acquired from Vast Video]
In the years following World War II, Soviet satellite governments sprang up in Eastern Europe and …[Credits : Acquired from Vast Video]
U.S. President Woodrow Wilson was among the statesmen who gathered in France in June 1919 to sign …[Credits : Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.]