Charlemagne and his successors also patronized a vast project that they and their clerical advisers called correctio—restoring the fragmented western European world to an earlier idealized condition. During the Carolingian Renaissance, as it is called by modern scholars, Frankish rulers supported monastic studies and manuscript production, attempted to standardize monastic practice and rules of life, insisted on high moral and educational standards for clergy, adopted and disseminated standard versions of canon law and the liturgy, and maintained a regular network of communications throughout their dominions.
Charlemagne drew heavily on most of the kingdoms of Christian Europe, even those he conquered, for many of his advisers. Ireland sent Dicuil the geographer. The kingdoms of Anglo-Saxon England, drawn close to Rome and the Franks during the 8th century, produced the widely circulated works of Bede and the ecclesiastical reformer Boniface. Also from England was the scholar Alcuin, a product of the great school at York, who served as Charlemagne’s chief adviser on ecclesiastical and other matters until becoming abbot of the monastery of St. Martin of Tours. Charlemagne’s relations with the kingdoms in England remained cordial, and his political and intellectual reforms in turn shaped the development of a unified English monarchy and culture under Alfred (reigned 871–899) and his successors in the 9th and 10th centuries.
Although the Visigothic kingdom fell to Arab and Berber armies in 711, the small Christian principalities in the north of the Iberian Peninsula held out. They too produced remarkable scholars, some of whom were eventually judged to hold heretical beliefs. The Christological theology of adoptionism, which held that Christ in his humanity is the adopted son of God, greatly troubled the Carolingian court and generated a substantial literature on both sides before the belief was declared heterodox. But Iberia also produced scholars for Charlemagne’s service, particularly Theodulf of Orleans, one of the emperor’s most influential advisers.
The kingdom of the Lombards, established in northern and central Italy in the later 6th century, was originally Arian but converted to Catholic Christianity in the 7th century. Nevertheless, Lombard opposition to Byzantine forces in northern Italy and Lombard pressure on the bishops of Rome led a number of 8th-century popes to call on the assistance of the Carolingians. Pippin invaded Italy twice in the 750s, and in 774 Charlemagne conquered the Lombard kingdom and assumed its crown. Among the Lombards who migrated for a time to Charlemagne’s court were the grammarian Peter of Pisa and the historian Paul the Deacon.
From 778 to 803 Charlemagne not only stabilized his rule in Frankland and Italy but also conquered and converted the Saxons and established frontier commands, or marches, at the most vulnerable edges of his territories. He built a residence for himself and his court at Aachen, which was called “a second Rome.” He remained on excellent terms with the bishops of Rome, Adrian I (reigned 772–795) and Leo III (reigned 795–816). Scholars began to call Charlemagne “the father of Europe” and “the lighthouse of Europe.” Although the lands under his rule were often referred to as “the kingdom of Europe,” contemporaries recognized them as forming an empire, much of which extended well beyond the imperial frontiers of Rome. Because of its use in reference to the empire, the old geographical term Europe came to be invested with a political and cultural meaning that it did not have in Greco-Roman antiquity.
In 800 Charlemagne extracted Leo III from severe political difficulties in Rome (Leo had been violently attacked by relatives of the former pope and accused of various crimes). On Christmas Day of that year Leo crowned Charlemagne emperor of the Romans, a title that Charlemagne’s successors also adopted. Although the title gave Charlemagne no resources that he did not already possess, it did not please all his subjects, and it greatly displeased the Byzantines. But it survived the Frankish monarchy and remained the most respected title of a lay ruler in Europe until the Holy Roman Empire, as it was known from the mid-12th century, was abolished by Napoleon Bonaparte in 1806, a little more than 1,000 years after Charlemagne was crowned. Historians still debate whether the coronation of 800 indicated a backward-looking last manifestation of the older world of late antiquity or a new organization of the elements of what later became Europe.
Charlemagne’s kingdoms, but not the imperial title, were divided after the death of his son Louis I (the Pious) in 840 into the regions of West Francia, the Middle Kingdom, and East Francia. The last of these regions gradually assumed control over the Middle Kingdom north of the Alps. In addition, an independent kingdom of Italy survived into the late 10th century. The imperial title went to one of the rulers of these kingdoms, usually the one who could best protect Rome, until it briefly ceased to be used in the early 10th century.
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.]