Western Civilization.p

(Jacob Rumans) #1

134 Chapter 7


outrage marked the beginning of a long and bloody
struggle. The Saxons destroyed Christian settlements
and monasteries. The Franks resorted to wholesale mas-
sacre and deportations and the Saxons were at last con-
verted and incorporated into the empire in 797.
Charlemagne did not shrink from converting people at
swordspoint.
The rest of Germany fell into his hands when he
deposed the ruler of Bavaria, who was not only a Christ-
ian but also a nominal tributary of the Franks. Then, to
secure his borders, he defeated the Avars in 791 and
803, pressing into Croatia, which was partially resettled
with Slavic and German immigrants. In the west, he re-
pelled a Muslim raid on Narbonne and seized Catalonia,
which after 811 became a Christian enclave in Muslim
Spain. When he died three years later Charlemagne
ruled everything from Catalonia to the Baltic and from
the Netherlands to the middle Danube (see map 7.2).
To govern this vast territory, he relied upon counts,
dukes, and bishops who supposedly acted on his behalf


in their own regions and who transmitted his decrees to
their subjects. These men were bound to him by per-
sonal allegiance fortified with powerful oaths, but dis-
tance, poverty, and primitive communications left them
with a great deal of independence. Though imperial ad-
ministration remained fragmentary, communication was
maintained through missi dominici,officials who traveled
constantly from place to place on the ruler’s business
(see document 7.6). Charlemagne did, however, estab-
lish the principle that law was to be administered on a
territorial instead of a tribal basis. That is, if a Frank
committed a crime in Burgundian territory he was to be
tried under Burgundian, not Frankish, law. This change
represented a greater advance than it seems, for law was
no longer paralyzed by jurisdictional disputes.
Everywhere, Charlemagne relied heavily upon the
church to support his policies. In return, he strength-
ened its financial and institutional base. Monasteries es-
tablished by royal grants on the fringes of the empire
converted, and in some cases civilized, new subjects.

Atlantic
Ocean

North
Sea

Mediterranean
Sea

Division of Empire
by Treaty of Verdun: 843

NORTHUMBRIA

EAST
ANGLIA
ESSEX
SUSSEXKENT

WESTWESSEX
WALES

WALES

DANISH
MARCH

SAXONY

BAVARIA

PEOPLES
VENETIA

PAPAL
STATES

BURGUNDY

ALEMANNI

AUSTRASIA

NEUSTRIA

BRITTANY

SPANISH
MARCH

AQUITAINE

TRIBUTARY
SLAVIC

FRISIA

IRELAND

DUCHY
OF BENEVENTO

BYZANTINE
EMPIRE

UMAYYAD
KINGDOM
OF SPAIN

Córdoba

Toledo Barcelona

Bordeaux Lyons

Paris

Aachen
Mainz

Milan

Rome

York

Verdun

Corsica

Sardinia

Seine
LoireR. R.

MERCIA Ba

ltic

Se

a

Sicily

Pyre
nees
Mts.

Elbe

R. Ode
r

R.

Rhine

Danu
be
R.

Ad
ria
tic
Sea

Alps M

ts.

R.

0 200 400 Miles

0 200 400 600 Kilometers

North
Sea

SeaMediterranean

BaltiSea

c

KINGDOM
OF
LOUIS

KINGDOM
OF
LOTHAR

KINGDOM
OF
CHARLES

Frankish kingdom: 768
Territories gained
by Charlemagne

MAP 7.2
The Carolingian Empire
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