CAROLINGIANS

kărəlĭnˈjēənz, dynasty of Frankish rulers, founded in the 7th cent. by Pepin of Landen, who, as mayor of the palace, ruled the East Frankish Kingdom of Austrasia for Dagobert I. His descendants, Pepin of Heristal, Charles Martel, Carloman, and Pepin the Short, continued to govern the territories under the nominal kingship of the Merovingians. In 751, with the knowledge and backing of Pope Zacharias, Pepin the Short deposed the last Merovingian king, Childeric III. To emphasize the importance of the church and to legitimize his reign, Pepin was consecrated by a bishop of the Roman church. The family was at its height under Pepin's son, Charlemagne, who was crowned emperor in 800. His empire was divided by the Treaty of Verdun (843) after the death of his son, Emperor Louis I, among Louis's three sons. Lothair I inherited the imperial title and the middle part of the empire. Louis the German founded a dynasty that ruled in Germany (kingdom of the East Franks) until 911, his successors being Charles III (Charles the Fat), Arnulf, and Louis the Child. The third son of Louis I, Charles II (Charles the Bald), founded the French Carolingian dynasty, which ruled, with interruptions, until 987. Its rulers were Louis II (Louis the Stammerer), Louis III, Carloman, Charles III (Charles the Simple), Louis IV (Louis d'Outremer), Lothair (941–86), and Louis V. In the Carolingian period, a landed economy was firmly established. The kings consolidated their rule by issuing capitularies and worked closely with church officials. Until the late 9th cent., Charlemagne and his successors were generous patrons of the arts. He encouraged the Carolingian Renaissance, a return to Roman classicism and Byzantine and Greco-Roman styles. Charlemagne successfully conquered all of Gaul and parts of Germany and Italy. He created a papal state in central Italy in 774. After his death the kingdom was divided; its authority, eventually eroded, was reestablished in France in 893.

See H. Fichtenau, The Carolingian Empire (1949; tr. 1957, repr. 1965); D. Bullough, The Age of Charlemagne (1965); F. L. Ganshof, The Carolingians and the Frankish Monarchy (tr. 1971); E. James, The Origins of France: Clovis and the Capetians, a.d. 500–1000 (1982); R. McKitternick, The Frankish Kingdoms under the Carolingians (1983).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Carolingians  - 577 results

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THE CAROLINGIANS IN CENTRAL EUROPE, Their HISTORY...Tel Aviv University VOLUME 18 The Carolingians in Central Europe, Their History...Data Schutz, Herbert, 1937- The Carolingians in Central Europe, their history...
THE FRANKISH KINGDOMS UNDER THE CAROLINGIANS 751-987 THE FRANKISH KINGDOMS UNDER THE CAROLINGIANS, 751-987 ROSAMOND MCKITTERICK...Rosamond. The Frankish kingdoms under the Carolingians, 751-987. Bibliography: p. 340...
...by Walter Pohl, Ian Wood and Helmut Reimitz VOLUME 10 The Transformation of Frontiers From Late Antiquity to the Carolingians by Walter Pohl Ian Wood Helmut Reimitz BRILL LEIDEN BOSTON 2001 This book is printed on acid-free paper...
...and index. ISBN 0-8014-3790-3 1. Carolingians. 2. Property Europe History. 3. Bavaria...Disputing under the Carolingians, 791 811 73 Chapter...Disputing under the Carolingians, 812 835 140 Chapter...
...the imperial dignity and the Carolingian conception. The Carolingians, indeed, waged some kind of propaganda warfare against the...Italian monastery. Thus Pepin became sole ruler. So far the Carolingians had never dared to remove the Merovingian puppet kings...
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journal articles on: Carolingians  - 22 results

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...threat posed by Islam receded and assumed its place as only one among many peripheral challenges to the authority of the Carolingians and their successors. For the Christians of Spain, who lived within the boundaries of Islam, the distance was psychological...
...post-Carolingian Europe. When the Carolingians came to power in the mid-eighth...insightful chapters (chapter three, "The Carolingians and Ecclesiastical Property"), Hummer shows how the early Carolingians effectively coopted local gift...
...Athens; and Rosamund McKitterick, The Carolingians and the Written Word and (ed.) The...Matthew Innes, "Trojans or Teutons? The Carolingians and the Germanic Past." (52) See...36. --. "Trojans or Teutons? The Carolingians and the Germanic Past." Hen and Innes...
...were under threat from the enriched aristocracy, for the Carolingians systematically had to legislate to protect them. The signs...dominance to which they had become accustomed since the Carolingians (as well as to the tradition of landlordship which they...
...1977), and Rosamund McKitterick, The Frankish Kingdoms under the Carolingians, 751-987 (London and New York: Longman, 1983) are good introductory studies of the Carolingians. (39) Scharer, "The Writing of History," 177-206. (40) Bately...
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magazine articles on: Carolingians  - 11 results

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...family who supplanted them in 751, the Carolingians. According to Einhard, the biographer...oxen. The scissors came out again. The Carolingians, with papal backing, cut off Childerics...hair, made a king. Furthermore, the Carolingians prided themselves on being descendants...
...introduction of a monetary economy by the Carolingians in the ninth century. This economic...degrees with the intervention of the Carolingians in Italy. An augur survey of archaeological...doges found a way of mediating with the Carolingians who sought a port on the Adriatic...
...the medieval Franco-German empire of Charlemagne. These new Carolingians have drafted a constitution (of which many of Europes smaller...nationals of Iraqi Coalition countries. Naturally, the new Carolingians recognize an exception to this rule where their own vital...
...Frankish Empire, which ruled till a.d., 751 when Pepin the Short deposed the last of their kings and began a new dynasty, the Carolingians. Its most famous ruler, Charlemagne, was crowned as head of what would become the Holy Roman Empire by Pope Leo III in 800...
...wall, which stands to this day, to safeguard St Peters. Arab settlement, rather than pillaging, significantly unnerved the Carolingians. This threatened the integrity of Latin Christendom. As early as 847, the Emperor Lothar had said: May our dearest son...
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newspaper articles on: Carolingians  - 2 results

 
 
...may have given the game away. Heath Ledger plays Alex Bernier, a young Catholic priest of an ancient order called the Carolingians, a breakaway sect eyed suspiciously by the Vatican hierarchy for - this is hard to swallow - being too conservative and superstitious...
...to the ninth-century reign of Charles the Bold contained the word "Bruggia." Brugge was part of a defense built by the Carolingians to ward off the marauding Vikings. By 851, Brugge was the site of a medieval fortress. During the Burgundian court, Brugge...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Carolingians  - 20 results

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CAROLINGIANS kar lin je nz, dynasty of Frankish rulers, founded...The Age of Charlemagne (1965); F. L. Ganshof, The Carolingians and the Frankish Monarchy (tr. 1971); E. James...R. McKitternick, The Frankish Kingdoms under the Carolingians (1983). ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia...
CAROLINGIAN ARCHITECTURE AND ART art forms and structures created by the Carolingians . Toward the beginning of the Carolingian Period, in the 8th cent., a gradual change appeared in Western culture and art, a change...
...THE CHILD 893 911, German king (900 911), son and successor of King Arnulf. He was the last of the German line of the Carolingians. The archbishop of Mainz was regent for him. During his reign the Magyars began devastating raids into Bavaria, Saxony, and...
...Loire dept. and partially in Puy-de-Dome dept. Roanne is the chief town. The region was known as Pagus Forensis under the Carolingians. In the 10th cent. it was an earldom dependent on Burgundy. Annexed to the French crown lands in 1527, it was incorporated...
...From 893 to 987 the crown passed back and forth between Carolingians and descendants of Robert the Strong. Eudess brother...1982); R. McKitterick, The Frankish Kingdoms under the Carolingians (1983); J. Dunbabin, France in the Making, 843 1180 (1985...
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