Read An Empire of Memory Online
Authors: Matthew Gabriele
Tags: #History, #Medieval, #Social History, #Religion
even at Charroux’s scriptorium, but they are not included in the cartulary. They are included in Chartes et documents, ed. de Monsabert, 86–126.
82 See du Pouget, ‘Recherches’, Positions des thèses, 41–4; Folz, Souvenir, 179; Levillain, ‘Essai’,
261–2.
83 Suger says that he remembers pilgrims visiting the relics at Saint-Denis when he was a child
oblate (in the 1090s) but the first mention of the relics at Saint-Denis by someone else is a charter given to Saint-Denis by Bishop Henry of Senlis sometime between 1183 and 1185. See Suger, Scriptum
consecrationis ecclesiae sancti Dionysii, in Œuvres, ed. Françoise Gasparri, 2 vols. (Paris, 1996), i. 8–10; Papsturkunden in Frankreich, Neue Folge, ed. Rolf Grosse, 9 vols. (Göttingen, 1998), ix. 234. This
charter from Senlis would make sense in the context of Odo’s tireless promotion of the Descriptio
qualiter. His program included forged diplomas, a history of the Holy Shroud for the priory of
Argenteuil, and two roundels depicting scenes from the Descriptio qualiter in a crusading window for
the abbey’s church. Although Robert Barroux and Marc du Pouget have argued that the diplomas and
Argenteuil text originated under Suger, Co van de Kieft, Brown, and Cothren have convincingly
refuted their arguments. Robert Barroux, ‘L’Abbé Suger et la vassalité du Vexin en 1124’, Le Moyen
Âge, 64 (1958), 1–26; Marc du Pouget, ‘Le Légende carolingienne à Saint-Denis: Le Donation de
Charlemagne au retour de Roncevaux’, Société des Sciences, Lettres, et Arts de Bayonne, 135 (1979), 58; C. Van de Kieft, ‘Deux diplômes faux de Charlemagne pour Saint-Denis, du XIIe siècle’, Le Moyen Age,
64 (1958), 401–36; and Brown and Cothren, ‘Crusading Window’, 32–3. On the windows, see
Brown and Cothren, ‘Crusading Window’, 37–8.
84 Hincmar of Reims’s (845–82) Gesta Dagoberti emphasized the special place Saint-Denis (and
St Denis) had in Dagobert’s affections. After Philip I’s death in 1108, Abbot Adam of Saint-Denis
instituted a feast commemorating Dagobert––not Charlemagne or Charles the Bald––for the benefit of
the new king, Louis VI. Suger continued this tradition, displaying no real devotion to Charlemagne,
while his ‘special royal heroes appear to have been Dagobert . . . , and Charles the Bald’. See respectively Gabrielle M. Spiegel, ‘The Cult of Saint Denis and Capetian Kingship’, Journal of Medieval History,
1 (1975), 51–2; idem, The Chronicle Tradition of Saint-Denis: A Survey (Brookline, Mass., 1978), 28;
and Brown and Cothren, ‘Crusading Window’, 25. Jean Dunbabin also comments on the pre-
eminence of Charles the Bald as emperor and relic-collector in 12th-cent. Anjou. See idem,
‘Discovering a Past for the French Aristocracy’, in Paul Magdalino (ed.), The Perception of the Past in Twelfth-Century Europe (London, 1992), 7.
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The Franks Remember Empire
King Philip I never emphasized any sort of special relationship with either Saint-
Denis or St Denis. In 1085/6, Philip I did place his son, later King Louis VI, in the
care of Saint-Denis for his education85 but Philip promoted St Remigius as the
monarchy’s patron and gave most of his attention to religious houses the Capetians
had heretofore neglected, such as Saint-Maur-les-Fossés, Saint-Corneille of Com-
piègne, and Fleury.86
In most translation narratives, miracles occur at the site of the relic’s new resting
place, legitimizing the place. The original site associated with the relic ‘travels’ with
the relic itself.87 But in the Descriptio qualiter, the miracles all occur before the relics
reach their final destinations. There are no litanies of miracles at Aachen, Saint-
Corneille, or Saint-Denis. Instead, the Descriptio qualiter’s litany of miracles occur
for Charlemagne, enhancing his power, legitimizing the translator as much as, if
not more than, the translation. For example, it is not incidental, I think, that
Charlemagne himself carries the relics back to Aachen from Constantinople. After
Charlemagne’s death, Charles the Bald brings the narrative to a close by passing the
relics to Saint-Corneille and Saint-Denis. One could remove the religious houses
from the Descriptio qualiter and the account would still stand as a story about
Charlemagne’s legendary journey to the East, with Charles the Bald as continuator
of Charlemagne’s legacy, and the current patron of Saint-Corneille and Saint-Denis
as continuator of that Carolingian legacy. Unlike Charroux’s Historia, the Descrip-
tio qualiter is not about a monastery. It tells a story about a ruler, his activities, and
his relics.
As Levillain so astutely recognized in his seminal article on Lendit, the Descriptio
qualiter highlights a nexus between relics, religious foundation(s), and royal/impe-
rial power; a nexus present in northern Francia under King Philip I but not earlier
in the eleventh century. Functionally, the Descriptio qualiter created a legitimizing
genealogy for King Philip I and fit well within an overarching program in the 1070s
and 1080s intended to tie him back to the Carolingians. Shortly before 1080,
85 Louis left Saint-Denis in 1092, when he was appointed count of the Vexin (perhaps naturally,
given his connection to Saint-Denis) at the age of 11. See Grosse, Saint-Denis, 92. Philip also did, it seems, try to help Saint-Denis re-establish its authority around Paris though, for he realized that he would profit by limiting the independence of the seigneurs there. See Thomas G. Waldman, ‘Saint-Denis et les premiers Capétians’, in Dominique Iogna-Prat and Jean-Charles Picard (eds.), Religion et
culture autour de l’an mil: Royaume capétien et Lotharingie (Paris, 1990), 191–2, 195.
86 On Philip and St Remigius, see Spiegel, Chronicle Tradition, 28. Philip I especially favored Fleury during his reign. He offered ten diplomas in the abbey’s favor, twice as many as he gave for his next
most favored religious house (significantly, Saint-Corneille of Compiègne). Philip also visited Fleury on several occasions and, as shown in the subscriptions of his diplomas, was almost constantly
accompanied by its abbots. His burial at Fleury in 1108 signaled not only his affection for the abbey
but also an effort to move the royal necropolis away from Saint-Denis. See La Chronique de Morigny,
ed. Léon Mirot (Paris, 1912), 10–11; William of Malmesbury, Gesta regum Anglorum, tr. R. A. B.
Mynors, R. M. Thomson, and M. Winterbottom (Oxford, 1998), 731–3; Hugh of Cluny, Ad
Philippum regum, PL 159: 930–2; Alain Erlande-Brandenburg, Le Roi est mort: Étude sur les
funérailles, les sépultres, et les tombeaux des rois de France jusqu’à la fin du XIIIe siècle (Geneva, 1975), 75; Andrew W. Lewis, Royal Succession in Capetian France: Studies on Familial Order and the State
(Cambridge, Mass., 1981), 49; and Crosby and Blum, Royal Abbey, 9.
87 Rosamond McKitterick, Perceptions of the Past in the Early Middle Ages (Notre Dame, Ind.,
2006), 54. For example, see the section on Charroux above.
Charlemagne’s Journey to the East
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Philip’s brother Hugh, married Adela of Vermandois, whose family was proud of its
Carolingian ancestry. Even Philip’s first wife, Bertha of Holland, whom he married
in 1072, was proud of her descent from the Carolingians.88 This is especially
significant, given that Philip gave his first son and projected heir a name not used
since the Carolingians (Louis), on his birth in 1081 (two years after the translation
of the Holy Shroud at Saint-Corneille), a decision that broke Capetian tradition to
that point (Philip’s father was Henry, his grandfather Robert, his great-grandfather
Hugh, and his brothers Robert and Hugh as well).89 Philip may have even had
another son with a Carolingian name (Charles), who died in infancy.90 In his
diplomas, Philip skipped generations of ancestors––namely his family––in order to
instead style himself as a direct successor to the Carolingians.91 Those diplomas
also make clear that Philip was greatly concerned with long-neglected sites of
Carolingian memory such as Charroux, Saint-Maur-les-Fossés,92 Saint-Corneille,
and Senlis.93 Lest we forget, all of these sites are tied specifically to either Charlemagne
or Charles the Bald, the two main protagonists of the Descriptio qualiter.
88 Bull, ‘Capetian Monarchy’, 33.
89 Lewis, Royal Succession, 47–8. The importance of aristocratic naming should not be
underestimated. Jean Dunbabin has demonstrated that King Henry I of France (1031–60) had
chosen a name for his first son, Philip, intended to demonstrate Henry’s ‘piety, his goodwill towards
his wife, his political optimism, his grasp of Christian history, his consciousness of the peculiar status of the Franks as the chosen people, and his personal conviction that the end of the world was near’. One
would not stretch too far to suggest that Philip thought just as much about his choice of name for his son. Jean Dunbabin, ‘What’s in a Name? Philip, King of France’, Speculum, 68 (1993), 949–68,
quotation at 968.
90 A donation to the monastery of Chaalis by Louis VI mentions a brother named Charles. Other
texts from the monastery are problematic though. See Lewis, Royal Succession, 243 n. 10. If Philip
indeed had a son named Charles, who was born after Louis, Philip would have been following the
example of Charles the Bald (again). Charles named his first son Louis (the Stammerer, 877–9) and his
second son Charles (king of Aquitaine, 855–66). Also like Charles the Bald, Philip placed his son Louis under the protection of Saint-Denis. See the genealogy in Janet L. Nelson, Charles the Bald (London,
1992), 310–11.
91 e.g. Recueil des actes de Philippe Ier, ed. Prou, no. 40. In this diploma, Philip confirms the
privileges given to Saint-Denis by his predecessors. He only names Merovingians and Carolingians.
Philip does invoke his father Henry I numerous times in his diplomas, but Hugh Capet and Robert the
Pious rarely appear.
92 Saint-Maur-les-Fossés was founded by the Merovingians. Monks from Glanfeuil fled there in
868, bringing relics of St Maur and beginning a protracted, nearly 250-year struggle between the
abbeys for rights to those relics and over the dependence of which abbey on which. The Carolingians,
beginning with Charles the Bald and continuing through Charles the Simple, were intimately involved
in this controversy and so were well remembered there. See the summary in DHGE 21: 141–5.
93 Much of Philip’s interest in Senlis was practical, since the abbey of Saint-Vincent of Senlis was
founded by his mother and the town, similar to Compiègne, stood at about the farthest extent of
effective royal power, quite close to Normandy. The bishops of Senlis also seem to have been quite
important at court and their appointment was a royal prerogative until c.1120 (although it began to slip away in 1099 when Bishop Hubert, who was earlier Philip I’s chancellor, was invested directly by Pope
Pascal II). Bishop Ursio of Senlis was the one who consecrated Philip I’s bigamous marriage to Bertrada in 1092. But also similar to Compiègne, Senlis was an important palace for the late Carolingians,
especially under Charles the Bald, who spent a great deal of time there. On Philip’s interest in Senlis, see Fliche, Le Règne, 50, 96, 154; Olivier Guyotjeannin, ‘Les Évêques dans l’entourage royal sous les
premiers Capétians’, in Michel Parisse and Xavier Barral I Altet (eds.), Le Roi de France et son royaume autour de l’an mil: Actes du Colloque Hugues Capet 987–1987 (Paris, 1992), 96; Reinhold Kaiser,
Bischofsherrschaft zwischen Königtum und Fürstenmacht: Studien zur bischöflichen Stadtherrschaft im
westfränkisch-französischen Reich im frühen und hohen Mittelalter (Bonn, 1981), 490; and
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The Franks Remember Empire
The Descriptio qualiter created a tradition linking King Philip I to certain religious
houses and to a tradition of royal/imperial patronage. In effect, the text moves imperial
authority west along with the christological relics, from Jerusalem, to Constantinople,
to Aachen, and finally to Saint-Denis and Saint-Corneille. More importantly, it
suggests that imperium moves west through its rulers, from Christ himself, to Con-
stantine, Charlemagne, Charles the Bald, and eventually to Philip I.94 The Cross and
Crown of Christ, his imperial symbols,95 were deposited by Constantine and Helena
at Constantinople, where they remained until given by––note, another––Constantine
to Charlemagne, who translated them to Aachen after he had re-established proper
order in the empire by expelling the Muslims from Jerusalem. The relics stayed at
Aachen until Charles the Bald, the first west Frankish king, translated them once again
to Saint-Corneille and Saint-Denis. Then, implicitly, Philip I begins the next chapter
of this narrative. By resuming royal advocacy for Saint-Denis, by participating in and
later commemorating the translation of the Holy Shroud at Saint-Corneille, and by
instituting fairs at both Saint-Denis and Saint-Corneille to celebrate those relics, Philip
confirmed those relics’ previous translations and added another layer of royal patron-
age to these houses.96
Despite their common connections to Philip I, one should hesitate before
asserting the dependence of the Historia upon the Descriptio qualiter, or vice
versa. Like Monte Soratte, Charroux was a site of Carolingian memory in its own
right, having a direct link to Charles the Bald, Louis the Pious, and Charlemagne
(through one of his illegitimate sons). As discussed above, although both the