FREDERICK II, Holy Roman Emperor and German King

1194–1250, Holy Roman emperor (1220–50) and German king (1212–20), king of Sicily (1197–1250), and king of Jerusalem (1229–50), son of Holy Roman Emperor Henry VI and of Constance, heiress of Sicily.

Rivalry for the German Crown

In 1196, Henry VI secured the election as German king, or emperor-elect, for his infant son Frederick. When Henry died (1197), his brother, Philip of Swabia, was unable to hold the German magnates to this election, but in Sicily Constance secured Frederick's investiture as king from Pope Innocent III. Prior to her death (1198) Constance named the pope as Frederick's guardian; as a child, however, he passed from one Sicilian faction to another.

Meanwhile, in Germany, Otto of Brunswick (Otto IV) and Philip of Swabia were elected rival kings. Otto finally prevailed and was crowned emperor (1209) at Rome, but immediately alienated the pope by attempting to reassert imperial control in Italy. His invasion of Apulia (1210) led Innocent to promote Frederick's coronation (1212) at Mainz as German king, even though this meant putting a Hohenstaufen on the imperial throne. After Otto's defeat at Bouvines (1214) by Frederick's French ally King Philip II, Frederick was recrowned (1215) at Aachen and took the Cross (i.e., pledged to lead a Crusade).

Beginning of Reign in Sicily

Despite his promises to Pope Innocent III that when crowned Holy Roman emperor he would separate Sicily from the empire by establishing a regency there for his infant son Henry, he reversed these arrangements in 1220. Promising Pope Honorius III to start on his crusade, he secured Henry's election as German king, and thus his position as imperial successor, shortly before his own imperial coronation (1220) at Rome. This action seemed to insure the union of Sicily and the empire. Under Frederick, however, no such union was effected; Henry governed, first under a regency, in Germany, and Frederick governed Italy and Sicily, which became the seat of his empire.

After his coronation Frederick returned to Sicily. While in Germany, the success of Frederick's early rule (1212–20) was due largely to his lavishness with imperial lands and rights. In his Sicilian kingdom, which included S Italy, he pursued the reverse of his German policy; he suppressed the barons, transported the Saracens to a colony on the mainland, recovered alienated lands, and began his legislative reforms. In 1224 he founded the university at Naples.

King of Jerusalem

Having married (1225) Yolande, daughter of John of Brienne, he claimed the crown of Jerusalem, but again postponed his departure on crusade. He further offended the pope by reasserting at the Diet of Cremona (1226) the imperial claim to Lombardy. The Lombard League was immediately revived, but open conflict did not break out until 1236. On the insistent demand of the new pope, Gregory IX, Frederick embarked on a crusade (Sept., 1227), but fell ill, turned back, and was excommunicated.

In 1228 he finally embarked. His "crusade," actually a state visit, was a diplomatic victory. At Jaffa he made a treaty by which Jerusalem, Nazareth, and Bethlehem were surrendered to the Christians, with the Mosque of Omar being left to the Muslims. In 1229 he crowned himself king at Jerusalem. The pope denounced the treaty by Frederick, who was still under excommunication, and sent a papal army to invade Frederick's kingdom. Frederick returned in 1229 and signed (1230) the Treaty of San Germano, by which he was temporarily reconciled with the pope.

Conflict in Germany and Italy

He then turned to strengthening his Sicilian domains in preparation for the inevitable conflict with the Lombard League. Among his achievements in Sicily were his Liber Augustalis (1231), a new body of laws that were the most constructive of the era. In Germany, Frederick attempted to insure support for his Italian policy by granting the princes practically absolute authority within their territories. This policy led to a conflict with his son Henry, who objected to Frederick's virtual renunciation of his imperial rights in Germany. In 1234 Henry rebelled with the aid of the German towns, but Frederick easily deposed and imprisoned (1235) his son. At the Diet of Mainz (1235), Frederick issued a land peace establishing an imperial court of justice to try all cases except those involving the great vassals. This land peace is one of the monuments of imperial legislation.

In 1236 Frederick began a successful campaign against the Lombard cities, but in Mar., 1239, Pope Gregory IX joined the Lombards and excommunicated the emperor. Frederick issued a circular against the pope and seized most of the Papal States; in May, 1241, he captured a number of prelates en route from Genoa to a general council in Rome, and he was threatening Rome when Gregory died. While emperor and pope were thus at swords' points, Europe was threatened (1241) by a Mongol invasion under Batu Khan. The Mongols withdrew in 1242.

After the election (1243) of Pope Innocent IV, Frederick offered sweeping concessions to the pope and his allies, but the pope fled (1244) to Lyons, deposed Frederick at the Council of Lyons (1245), and gave the emperor's foes the privileges of Crusaders. The election (1246) of an antiking to Conrad IV, Frederick's younger son, plunged Germany into civil war. The war in Italy turned in Frederick's favor in 1250, but in December he died of dysentery.

Character and Legacy

Frederick II was one of the most arresting figures of the Middle Ages. He called himself "lord of the world"; his contemporaries either praised him as stupor mundi [wonder of the world] or reviled him as anti-Christ. Norman and German in ancestry but essentially a Sicilian, Frederick always felt a stranger in Germany. He spent most of his time in Italy and Sicily, where his legal reforms set up an efficient administration. This system he tried, with some success, to transfer to Germany.

Himself an expert trader engaging in far-flung business affairs, Frederick encouraged commerce and soon expanded it to Spain, Morocco, and Egypt. Agriculture and industry were likewise fostered. Towns, though at first somewhat curbed, enjoyed a more generous treatment in the later years of his reign, and many developed into important trade centers.

Frederick was also a gifted artist and scientist. A poet himself, he was surrounded by Provençal troubadours and German minnesingers. He patronized science and philosophy and interested himself in medicine, mathematics, astronomy, and astrology. His De arte venandi cum avibus, on hawking as well as the anatomy and life of birds, was the first modern ornithology. Frederick's personality was a curious mixture of German-Christian and Byzantine-Muslim influences. Although Christian, he maintained a harem; though he was frequently at odds with the papacy, he ruthlessly persecuted heretics; though sensitive to art and poetry, he could be extremely cruel.

The intense struggle between Frederick and the papacy led to the ruin of the house of Hohenstaufen and severely damaged papal prestige. With his rule the great days of the German empire ended and the rise of states in Italy began. The interregnum (see Holy Roman Empire) ended only with the election (1273) of Rudolf I of Hapsburg.

Bibliography

See biography by T. C. Van Cleve (1972); study by G. Masson (1957, repr. 1973).

____________________

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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...together with Frederick William of...appeal of the Holy Alliance...Alexander II of Russia...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...figure was King Frederick William III...the rest of Germany, there was...that of the Holy Roman Empire, to...supplied emperors since 1438...its largely German inhabitants...
...Collected Works, through Karl Marx Frederick Engels, The German Ideology (1846), reprinted in 5...Marx abandoned his references to Roman law while maintaining the analysis...and Other Nations: Presented to King James, in 8 Works 351, 351-76...
...nightmare of World War II, during which more...allegedly ten-century long German enmity. The territorial...that in 951, Otto I, King of Germany and first Holy Roman Emperor, invaded Italian states...uprising against his rule, Frederick Barbarossa punished...
...Rudolph II was plainly annoyed. The Holy League of...powerful French Roman Catholic...puppet, King Henry III...vassal, Frederick, count of...the angry emperors letter to...belonging to the German duchy of...with the king of Spain...also told Frederick that he would...December, Emperor Rudolph II wrote to...December 1585; Emperor Rudolph II to Count Frederick , 16 December...difficult German letters and...
...Rudolph II was plainly annoyed. The Holy League of...powerful French Roman Catholic...puppet, King Henry III...vassal, Frederick, count of...the angry emperors letter to...belonging to the German duchy of...with the king of Spain...also told Frederick that he would...December, Emperor Rudolph II wrote to...December 1585; Emperor Rudolph II to Count Frederick , 16 December...difficult German letters and...
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...Frederick II by...medieval Holy Roman Emperors was ill for...party at Fredericks death was...territories in Germany and grandson...was crowned King of Sicily...rival for the German kingship...was crowned emperor in St Peters...popes. Frederick astonished...European king. His brilliant...crowned himself King of Jerusalem...Church of the Holy Sepulchre...used to see Frederick as a Renaissance...
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...obscured the real powers that a Holy Roman Emperor could exercise. Moreover the...cruelly objectified by the young King of Prussia, Frederick II. He did not refer to Charles...unthinkable in France or in many German states, had never been in doubt...
...formal powers of the Holy Roman Emperor (as Charles was) over his German territories, a patchwork...challenges from the king of France and the...Elector of Saxony, John Frederick, and placing them...French king, Henri II and the betrayal of...
...Electors of the Holy Roman Empire. Both...formidable Frederick William of...northern German states, created...aiding the Emperor Leopold I...not be a king of Brandenburg...call himself king in Poland...Konigsberg as Frederick I and so...theoretically part of Germany owing allegiance to the Emperor, was treated...
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...Charlemagne, 742-814. Holy Roman Emperor. 9 Hernando...BC. Persian king. 11 Frederick the Great...1888-1954. German tank general...93 Louis II de Bourbon...1890-1978. German general...1682-1718. Swedish king. 98 Thomas...
...Martin Luther King jnr (1929...Japan. 58. Frederick The Great...The sword of German militarism...1500-1558) Holy Roman emperor who gave it...Pope Urban II (1042-1099...power. 79. Frederick Douglass...protestant King.
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FREDERICK II , Holy Roman emperor and German king 1194 1250...at Mainz as German king, even though...Bouvines (1214) by Fredericks French ally King Philip II , Frederick...when crowned Holy Roman emperor he would separate...
FREDERICK III , Holy Roman emperor and German king 1415 93...cousin Albert II, whom he was...relations with the Roman Catholic Church, Frederick was guided by...Pope Pius II ). In return...was the last emperor crowned at Rome...
...at Rome he was crowned Holy Roman emperor by Pope Celestine III...Sicily. He returned to Germany, where he faced a rebellion...obtained custody (1193) of King Richard I of England...son (later Emperor Frederick II ) as king. Henry died...
...Hapsburg. He secured the German princes approval for...1311, he was crowned king of the Lombards at Milan...1312, he was crowned Holy Roman emperor. Leaving Rome, he besieged...allied himself with King Frederick II of Sicily, he pronounced...
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