FREDERICK I, Holy Roman Emperor and German King

or Frederick Barbarossabärbərôsˈə [Ital.,=red beard], c.1125–90, Holy Roman emperor (1155–90) and German king (1152–90), son of Frederick of Hohenstaufen, duke of Swabia, nephew and successor of Holy Roman Emperor Conrad III.

Restoration of Imperial Power

His mother, Judith, was a Guelph (see Guelphs), and Frederick frequently acted as a mediator between his Hohenstaufen uncle, Conrad, and his Guelph cousin, Henry the Lion. Prior to his death Conrad III named Frederick as his successor, hoping that Frederick's reign would end the discord between the rival houses of Hohenstaufen and Guelphs. Frederick's coronation as emperor in Rome was delayed by unrest in Germany and by the revolutionary commune of Rome (1143–55), headed by Arnold of Brescia, which controlled the city. In 1152, Frederick pacified Germany by proclaiming a general land peace to end the anarchy, and in 1156 he satisfied Henry the Lion by restoring the duchy of Bavaria to him, at the same time making Austria into a new duchy as a counterweight to Henry's power.

In Italy, Frederick's policy was to restore the imperial power, which had virtually disappeared as a result of neglect by previous emperors. It was thus necessary for him to conciliate the pope. In a treaty (1153) with Pope Eugene III, Frederick promised to assist him against Arnold of Brescia and against the powerful Normans in Sicily. Frederick entered Italy in 1154 and was crowned in Rome (June 18, 1155) amid hostile demonstrations. The reluctance of his troops to remain in Italy forced him to return to Germany without assisting the new pope, Adrian IV, against King William I of Sicily. Adrian, obliged to ally himself (1156) with William, turned against Frederick.

At the Diet of Besançon (1157) the papal legate presented a letter that Frederick interpreted as a claim by the pope that the empire was a papal fief. Frederick replied in a manifesto that he held the throne "through the election of the princes from God alone" and prepared to invade Italy, where Milan had begun the conquest of Lombardy. Adrian explained that he had not intended that interpretation of his words, but Frederick entered Italy, seized Milan, and at the Diet of Roncaglia (1158) laid claim, as emperor and king of the Lombards, to all imperial rights, including the appointment of an imperial podesta, or governor, in every town.

The rapacity of his German officials led to the revolt (1159) of Milan, Brescia, Crema, and their allies, secretly encouraged by Adrian IV. After a long siege, Frederick stormed and burned Milan (1162). Moreover he set up an antipope to Adrian's successor, Alexander III, who excommunicated him. Frederick withdrew temporarily, but returned in 1166, captured Rome, and was preparing to attack the pope's Sicilian allies when his army was decimated by an epidemic.

Reconciliation and Revenge

In 1167 the rebellious Italian communes united against Frederick in the Lombard League, and Frederick retreated with difficulty to Germany, where he turned to increasing his territorial power and pacifying the constantly feuding German princes. In 1174 he returned to Italy. He was decisively defeated (1176) at Legnano by the Lombard League, partly because of lack of support from the German princes, notably Henry the Lion.

After his defeat Frederick became reconciled with the pope; he agreed to recognize Alexander III as pope and was restored (1177) to communion. He made peace with the Lombard towns (confirmed by the Peace of Constance in 1183) and arranged a truce with the pope's Sicilian allies. After his return to Germany, Frederick brought about the downfall (1180) of Henry the Lion, whose large duchies were partitioned; Frederick's divisions of the German territories were of lasting consequence. At the Diet of Mainz (1184) the emperor celebrated his own glory in fabulous pomp. He arranged the marriage (1186) of his son and successor, Henry (later Henry VI), to Constance, heiress presumptive of Sicily, thus insuring peace with Sicily.

Death and Legacy

In Mar., 1188, Frederick took the Cross, and he set out (1189) on the Third Crusade (see Crusades). He was drowned in Cilicia. Legend, however, has him asleep in the Kyffhäuser, waiting to restore the empire to its former greatness. Among the positive and lasting achievements of Frederick's reign are the foundations of new towns, the increase of trade, and the colonization and Christianization of Slavic lands in E Germany. In his administrative reforms the emperor was ably assisted by his chancellor, Rainald of Dassel.

Bibliography

See study by P. Munz (1969); Otto of Freising, The Deeds of Frederick Barbarossa (tr. 1953).

____________________

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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...Chapter I A HERITAGE...career of the Emperor Frederick the Second...Pippin, King of the Franks...Crown to the German race. 1...known as the "Holy Roman Empire...Treves, the King of Bohemia...the young Frederick of Sicily...gives the Germans own conception of the Holy Roman Empire, and...their future Emperor. "God Almighty...
...Emperor Charles VI...Frederick William I of Prussia...Acknowledgments "Germany is a state...constitution of the Holy Roman Empire of...the first King in Prussia...laconically "soon I ran out of...court of the Holy Roman Emperor of the German Nation. He...
...state. Thus Frederick the Great, King of Prussia...southern Germany typically...looked to the Holy Roman Empire of...since German emperors wielded extensive...peculiar German sort of freedom...equilibrium of the Holy Roman Empire was...threatened by the emperors, whose imperial...Francis as Holy Roman Emperor. An empire...had nudged Frederick William III...French out of Germany. Rather...
...or of Fredericks reign. 1 Frederick I, who was nicknamed Red Beard...1190, and considered himself a Roman emperor, a descendant of the ancient Caesars...accurately traced only to 962, when a German king, Otto I 936-73 , was crowned...
...in Mainz, Germany furnished...central Europe. I hope that...polity in the Holy Roman Empire possessing...Death of Emperor Ferdinand...treaty Dec. King Frederik...Duke John Frederick of Saxony...Copenhagen?4 The Holy Roman emperors of this period...Emperor Frederick III enfeoffed King Christian I (the former...imprisonment, the Holy Roman Emperor, in a move...Palatine Frederick to marry...brethren in Germany. In 1536, the Danish king joined his...
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...The Winter King: Frederick V of the Palatine...of the other German princes to avoid...ruin of the Holy Roman Empire" that...Provinces. James I, who continuously...peace with the emperor, emerges with...astutely observed: Frederick "takes the matter...
...together with Frederick William of...appeal of the Holy Alliance...World War I destroyed...Pope in the Roman Catholic...especially in Germany and even...Mikhailovich in his Emperor Alexander...around the King. In Britain...represented by the Emperor Francis I and by his...figure was King Frederick William III...the rest of Germany, there was...his fellow Germans of less exalted...left of the Holy Roman Empire in...one of the Emperor Francis Is...Ferdinand I who reigned...
...Works, through Karl Marx Frederick Engels, The German Ideology (1846), reprinted...abandoned his references to Roman law while maintaining...37 (1977). (28.) Here I condense a complex argument...Nations: Presented to King James, in 8 Works 351...
...puppet, King Henry III...vassal, Frederick, count of...the angry emperors letter to...belonging to the German duchy of...Reformed or Roman Catholic...presentation to the Holy Roman Emperor...Roman I am indebted...December 1585; Emperor Rudolph II to Count Frederick , 16 December...AN-K 2186. I acknowledge...difficult German letters and...
...puppet, King Henry III...vassal, Frederick, count of...the angry emperors letter to...belonging to the German duchy of...Reformed or Roman Catholic...presentation to the Holy Roman Emperor...Roman I am indebted...December 1585; Emperor Rudolph II to Count Frederick , 16 December...AN-K 2186. I acknowledge...difficult German letters and...
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...historian of the Holy Roman Empire, agreed...the reigning emperor Constantine had...shaggy, skin-clad Germanic barbarians hurl...law I chose the...and Germanic king that was to dominate...The Emperor Frederick Barbarossa (r...
...the real powers that a Holy Roman Emperor could exercise. Moreover...objectified by the young King of Prussia, Frederick II. He did not refer...former Emperor, Joseph I. Her husbands election...in France or in many German states, had never been...
...powers of the Holy Roman Emperor (as Charles was) over his German territories...from the king of France...over Francis I (which led...Saxony, John Frederick, and placing...victorious Roman emperors. But this...to return Germany to the Catholic...new French king, Henri II...
...Electors of the Holy Roman Empire. Both...formidable Frederick William of...northern German states, created...aiding the Emperor Leopold I. There could not be a king of Brandenburg...call himself king in Poland...Konigsberg as Frederick I and so created...theoretically part of Germany owing allegiance to the Emperor, was treated...
...Benda (170986), Frederick the Great of Prussia...the supremacy of German music: Must...Hamburg? Indeed, I...rulers such as the Emperor Joseph II, the Holy Roman Emperor from 1765...sang God Save the King. On his return...
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...742-814. Holy Roman Emperor. 9 Hernando...Persian king. 11 Frederick the Great...58 Richard I (The Lionheart...1888-1954. German tank general...leader. 90 Frederick Roberts...1890-1978. German general...Swedish king. 98 Thomas...
...Elizabeth I (1533-1603...Martin Luther King jnr (1929...Japan. 58. Frederick The Great...The sword of German militarism...1500-1558) Holy Roman emperor who gave it...power. 79. Frederick Douglass...protestant King.
...there to find the Holy Grail. Wed climbed...to Jerash, the Roman town an hour outside Amman. I could go there...temple to the Emperor Augustus, one...inevitable hummus to German cheese or yoghurt...characters from a Frederick Forsyth novel...the poster of King Abdullah - we...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Frederick I Holy Roman Emperor and German King  - 49 results

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FREDERICK I , Holy Roman emperor and German king or Frederick...successor of Holy Roman Emperor Conrad III...Guelphs ), and Frederick frequently...by unrest in Germany and by the...IV , against King William I of Sicily...
...coronation (1212) at Mainz as German king, even though this meant...at Bouvines (1214) by Fredericks French ally King Philip...Aachen and took the Cross (i.e., pledged to lead a...III that when crowned Holy Roman emperor he would separate Sicily...
...and German king 1415 93, Holy Roman emperor (1452 93) and German king (1440 93). With his brother...succeed as German king. Although Frederick was generally a weak ruler...son, later King Maximilian I , to Charless daughter Mary...
MAXIMILIAN I , 1459 1519, Holy Roman emperor and German king 1459 1519...Roman Emperor Frederick III. As emperor...see Philip I of Castile...the future Holy Roman Emperor Charles V...and son of King Uladislaus...
...successor of Holy Roman Emperor Frederick I (Frederick Barbarossa...was crowned German king at Aachen in...was crowned Holy Roman emperor by Pope Celestine...returned to Germany, where he faced...custody (1193) of King Richard I of England...
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