Making the Holy Roman Empire Holy
How did the Holy Roman Empire (sacrum imperium) become Holy? In this innovative book, Vedran Sulovsky explores the reign of Frederick Barbarossa (1152–1190), offering a new analysis of the key documents, artworks, and contemporary scholarship used to celebrate and commemorate the imperial regime, especially in the imperial coronation site and Charlemagne's mausoleum, the Marienkirche in Aachen. By dismantling the Kulturkampf-inspired view of the history of the Holy Roman Empire – which was supposedly desacralised in the Investiture Controversy, and then resacralised by Barbarossa and the Reichskanzler Rainald of Dassel – Sulovsky, using new evidence, reveals the personal relations between various courtiers which led to the rise of the new, holy name of the Empire. Annals, chronicles, charters, forgeries, letters, liturgical texts and objects, relics, insignia, seals, architecture and rituals have all been exploited by Sulovsky to piece together a mosaic that shows the true roots of sacrum imperium.
- Offers the first detailed overview of twelfth-century Aachen and some of the greatest surviving artworks of the Middle Ages
- Helps readers to understand how official and legal documents can be used to make sense of the world of the Holy Roman Empire
- Challenges long-established beliefs of the Holy Roman Empire by re-examining a wide variety of textual and material sources
Product details
May 2024Adobe eBook Reader
9781009203524
0 pages
40 b/w illus. 3 maps
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- 1. Sacrum imperium: Lombard Influence and the Sacralisation of the State in the mid-Twelfth Century (1125–1167)
- 2. Sacrum imperium II: The Barometer of Lombard Influence at Court (1167–1190)
- 3. The Cult of Charlemagne from His Death to the Accession of Frederick Barbarossa (814–1152)
- 4. The Canonisation of Charlemagne in 1165
- 5. The Barbarossaleuchter: Imperial Monument and Pious Donation
- 6. The Reliquary Shrine of Saint Charlemagne: The High Point of the Sacrum imperium?
- Conclusion.