Read An Empire of Memory Online
Authors: Matthew Gabriele
Tags: #History, #Medieval, #Social History, #Religion
Björn Weiler and Simon MacLean (eds.), Representations of Power in Medieval Germany, 800–1500
(Turnhout, 2006), 155–8. Timothy Reuter suggested that Otto III was more committed to
appropriating a Carolingian legacy for the simple fact that not many Carolingians were still alive.
Timothy Reuter, ‘The Ottonians and Carolingian Tradition’, in Janet L. Nelson (ed.), Medieval
Polities and Modern Mentalities (Cambridge, 2006), 279.
29 e.g. Conradi II. Diplomata, ed. H. Bresslau, MGH Dipl. Ger. (Berlin, 1957), iv, nos. 2, 41, 46.
Conrad did not offer a single diploma for Aachen.
30 Henry III offered only one diploma for the Marian chapel at Aachen and it did not mention
Charlemagne. See Heinrici III. Diplomata, ed. H. Bresslau and P. Kehr, MGH Dipl. Ger. (Berlin,
1957), v, no. 94. But see Heinrici IV. Diplomata, ed. Dietrich von Gladiss and Alfred Gawlik, MGH
Dipl. Ger. (Hanover, 1941), vi/1, no. 254; also no. 283.
31 Lambert of Hersfeld, Libelli de institutione Herveldensis ecclesiae quae supersunt, ed. O. Holder-
Egger, MGH SRG (Hanover, 1894), 38: 353. See also Bonizo of Sutri, Liber ad amicum, ed. Ernst
Dümmler, MGH LdL (Hanover, 1891), 1: 586–7; and the comments by Bernd Schütte, ‘Karl der
Grosse in der Historiographie der Ottonen- und Salierzeit’, in Franz-Reiner Erkens (ed.), Karl der
Grosse und das Erbe der Kulturen (Berlin, 2001), 248.
22
The Franks Remember Empire
Charlemagne’s kingdom’.32 Only when the succession to the throne had been
stabilized and the Capetians firmly established could those sympathetic to the
Capetians begin to reach out to the Carolingian past. Abbo of Fleury (d. 1004)
was among the first to do so, claiming that Hugh Capet stood in the line of
Constantine, Charlemagne, and Louis the Pious.33 In a poem dedicated to Robert II
the Pious (996–1031), Adalbero of Laon (d. 1030) stressed that Robert’s legitimacy
derived from his descent from the Carolingians and Ottonians.34 It was not until the
1070s and 1080s though, under Philip I (1060–1108), that the Capetians them-
selves took the first steps towards embracing the Carolingians. Even then, this move
back towards the Carolingians fizzled in the 1090s and was not taken up again until
the time of Philip’s successors (Louis VI and Louis VII), who worked this program in
conjunction with the abbots of Saint-Denis, Suger and Odo of Deuil.35
In these moments of uncertain attitudes toward the Carolingians, particularly in
West Francia after the ascension of Hugh Capet in 987, it became common for
texts to promote the idea of imperium Francorum, imperial authority stemming
from the essential Frankishness of the Capetians’ domain.36 This conception of
Frankish identity was not new though and seems to have derived from the late
ninth century. The Franks survived, even if the Carolingians did not. Emperor
Louis II of Italy’s (855–75) letter to the Byzantine ruler Basil I (867–86) argued
forcefully for the continued unity of the Franks in ‘flesh, blood, and spirit’, despite
the recent political division of the empire.37 But even earlier, as Mary Garrison has
pointed out, the Carolingians were not known as ‘the Carolingians’ until the
eleventh century. These rulers were, simply, Franks––an essential part of a larger,
united community. This was, at the very least, a change from the Merovingians,
who were indeed referred to by their dynastic name.38
32 ‘Eodem anno unctus est in regem Remis civitate Hugo dux, et ipso anno Robertus, filius eius, in
regnum piissimus rex ordinatus est. Hic deficit regnum Karoli Magni.’ Historia Francorum Senonensis,
MGH SS 9: 368. Even into the reign of Robert the Pious though, some still pined for the Carolingians.
See Jason Glenn, Politics and History in the Tenth Century: The Work and World of Richer of Reims
(Cambridge, 2004), 212–14.
33 Joachim Ehlers, ‘Karolingische Tradition und frühes Nationalbewusstsein in Frankreich’, Francia, 4
(1976), 223. We must be careful about overgeneralizing though. A 990 diploma from Hugh Capet for
Sainte-Croix in Orléans confirms the privileges granted by Hugh’s Carolingian predecessors. Cartulaire de Sainte-Croix d’Orléans (814–1300), ed. Joseph Thillier (Paris, 1906), no. 39.
34 Ehlers, ‘Karolingische Tradition’, 224–5. Robert claimed descent from the Carolingians because
he sat on the Frankish throne. He claimed descent from the Ottonians because his grandmother was
a daughter of King Henry I (919–36).
35 Matthew Gabriele, ‘The Provenance of the Descriptio qualiter Karolus Magnus: Remembering the
Carolingians at the Court of King Philip I (1060–1108) before the First Crusade’,Viator, 39 (2008),
93–117; and Gabrielle M. Spiegel, ‘The Cult of Saint-Denis and Capetian Kingship’, Journal of
Medieval History, 1 (1975), 43–69.
36 Ehlers, ‘Karolingische Tradition’, 213; and Nelson, ‘Kingship’, 76. Ehlers takes imperium here to
mean ‘empire’ but a better translation would be ‘authority’. I will deal with this idea in much greater depth in Chs. 4 and 5, below.
37 Steven Fanning, ‘Imperial Diplomacy between Francia and Byzantium: The Letter of Louis II to
Basil I’, Cithara, 34 (1994), 4–9.
38 Mary Garrison, ‘Divine Election for Nations: A Difficult Rhetoric for Medieval Scholars?’ in Lars
Boje Mortensen (ed.), The Making of Christian Myths in the Periphery of Latin Christendom (c.1000–
1300) (Copenhagen, 2006), 301–6.
The Birth of a Frankish Golden Age
23
Perhaps the most striking thing about this appeal to a transcendent ‘Frankish-
ness’ is how it survived across centuries. For instance, Notker the Stammerer
counted himself as a Frank, despite his proud descent from Alamannian nobility.
The key point is that these identities were not seen as mutually exclusive. Being an
Alamann meant having local ties. Being a Frank meant belonging to something
larger. Notker writes, ‘When I say Francia, I mean all the provinces north of
the Alps; for . . . , at that time, because of the excellence of the most glorious
Charlemagne, the Gauls, the Aquitanians, the Aedui, the Spaniards, the Alamanns,
and the Bavarians all prided themselves on being paid a great compliment if they
earned the right to be called Franks.’39 These peoples, it seems, did not summarily
abandon their other identity when being called ‘Franks’. They held both together.
The contemporary Bella Parisiacae urbis of Abbo of Saint-Germain-des-Prés also
shows a great flexibility in how it uses ‘Franks.’ For Abbo, a Frank could be an
inhabitant of a specific geographical area east of the Seine or it could mean anyone
who was ruled by a Carolingian. Notker and Abbo’s contemporaries, the Lombard
Andreas of Bergamo, the anonymous Saxon Poet, and Archbishop Ado of Vienne
display similar sentiments.40 At the end of the ninth century, being a Frank seems
to have meant consciously associating oneself with a larger, European identity and
with an idealized memory of Charlemagne’s reign. Being a Frank seems to have
been a statement that his Golden Age was a part of your heritage.
R E L I G I O U S H O U S E S A N D T H E I R C H A R L E M A G N E S
Of the datable forgeries included at the back of the MGH’s collection of Charle-
magne’s diplomas, over 70 percent (68 out of 97) date to the period between the ninth
and the early twelfth centuries and, almost without exception, these forged diplomas
originated in the religious houses of Charlemagne’s old empire.41 Many of these
forgeries have to do with Charlemagne’s alleged role in the foundation of these religious
houses. In the tenth century, the monastery of Gerri (in the Pyrenees) forged two
diplomas, each calling Charlemagne a just and pious emperor who had restored
the monastery after it had been destroyed by the pagans.42 At about that same time,
the archbishop of Ravenna ‘found’ a diploma from Charlemagne giving him power
39 ‘Franciam vero interdum cum nominavero, cum omnes cisalpinas provincias significo, quia . . . in
illo tempore propter excellentiam gloriosissimi Karoli et Galli et Aquitani, Edui et Hispani, Alamanni et Baioarii non parum se insignitos gloriabantur, si vel nomine Francorum servorum censri
mererentur.’ Notker, Gesta, ed. Haefele, 13. English tr. adapted from Notker the Stammerer, Gesta
Karoli Magni, in Two Lives of Charlemagne, tr. Lewis Thorpe (London, 1969), 103. See also the
comments of Goetz, Strukturen der spätkarolinischen Epoche, 72–3. On Notker’s personal identity, see
Innes, ‘Memory, Orality’, 11–12, 31.
40 MacLean, Kingship and Politics, 60–3; Godman, Poets and Emperors, 183; and Rosamond
McKitterick, Perceptions of the Past in the Early Middle Ages (Notre Dame, Ind., 2006), 29. See also
the extended discussion of 11th-cent. Frankish identity in Ch. 5, below.
41 On these false diplomas, see Dieter Hägermann, ‘Die Urkundenfälschungen auf Karl den
Grossen: Eine Übersicht’, in Fälschungen im Mittelalter, 6 vols. (Hanover, 1988), iv. 433–43.
42 Pippini, Carlomanni, Caroli Magni Diplomata, ed. Engelbert Mühlbacher, MGH Dipl. Karol.
(Hanover, 1906), i, nos. 308, 309.
24
The Franks Remember Empire
over twenty-five other bishops.43 In the eleventh century, the monks of Psalmodi in
Aquitaine believed that the ‘most serene’ Charlemagne refounded the abbey and
placed another monastery under its jurisdiction after Aquitaine had been ravaged by
pagans.44 Ademar of Chabannes claimed that the monastery of Saint-Philibert of
Noirmoutier had been founded by Charlemagne (although it had not).45 Shortly after
Ademar wrote in the eleventh century, the abbey of Saint-Savin (near the Pyrenees)
pushed its foundation back to the time of Charlemagne, making their real founder,
Count Raymond of Bigorre (d. 958), the abbey’s refounder.46 The monastery of
Sant’Antimo in Tuscany got Emperor Henry III in 1051 to confirm their legendary
foundation by Charlemagne.47 In the middle of the eleventh century, a false diploma
for La Réole said that Charles had built that priory and also generously endowed its
mother house (Fleury) at the same time.48 Although the Astronomer said that Louis
the Pious had reformed the monastery of Conques, both the eleventh-century Chron-
icon sancti Maxentii Pictavensisi and Hugh of Fleury in the early twelfth century said
that this was actually Charlemagne.49 The bishopric of Bremen claimed in the
eleventh century that Charles had established its see.50 The bishops of Verden in
Saxony claimed the same in the early twelfth century.51 At about the same time, a
forged diploma asserted that the great Frankish emperor had given the church of St
Peregrin, which Charles had founded after seeing a vision of the saint, to the monastery
of San Vincenzo al Volturno.52
In claiming that Charlemagne had a hand in their foundation (or refounda-
tion), monastic authors accomplished two things. First, by linking themselves to
Charlemagne’s reign, they reinforced the character of his Golden Age. In his recent
study of the Charlemagne legend in modern France, Robert Morrissey suggested
that legends generally develop in one of two ways: either with a logic of narration
(horizontally, where contradictions are not allowed) or with a logic of accumula-
tion (vertically, where contradictions are alright).53 The existence of different
versions of the same event would indicate a legend developed by accumulation.
This latter type of development certainly was at work in the Charlemagne legend.
David Ganz gives the example of a ninth-century manuscript that has Einhard’s
Vita Karoli inserted into the middle of the ARF, just before the reign of Louis the
43 Carlo Dolcini, ‘Il falso diploma di Carlo Magno per la Chiesa di Ravenna (787)’, in Fälschungen
im Mittelalter, 6 vols. (Hanover, 1988), iv. 159–66.
44 Caroli Magni Diplomata, ed. Mühlbacher, i, no. 303.
45 Ademar of Chabannes, Chronicon, ed. R. Landes and G. Pon, CCCM (Turnhout, 1999),
129: 132. On the veracity of this claim, see Ademar, Chronicon, ed. Landes and Pon, 256.
46 Cartulaire de l’abbaye de Saint-Savin en Lavedan (v. 975–v. 1180), ed. Alphonse Meillon
(Cauterets, 1920), 249–50. This portion of the prefatory chronicle was written c.1059–69.
47 Heinrici III. Diplomata, ed. Bresslau and Kehr, v, no. 271.
48 Cartulaire du prieuré de Saint-Pierre de la Réole, ed. Ch. Grellet-Balguerie, Archives historiques de la Gironde, 5 (1863), no. 102.
49 Sources discussed and summarized in Walter Cahn, ‘Observations on the A of Charlemagne in
the Treasure of the Abbey of Conques’, Gesta, 45 (2006), 97–100.
50 Caroli Magni Diplomata, ed. Mühlbacher, i, no. 245.
51 Ibid., no. 240.
52 Ibid., no. 315.
53 Morrissey, Charlemagne, 13.
The Birth of a Frankish Golden Age
25
Pious.54 But the foundation legends originating at religious houses seem to have
primarily developed through narration. As each monastery added its own layer to
the Charlemagne legend, the list of his deeds grew longer. The Golden Age
reinforced itself. The development of the legend in this way is similar to a story
passed around a campfire, in which each participant adds a sentence to the overall
narrative. Each addition makes the overall story richer and perhaps more plausible
by reinforcing the themes of the story as a whole. Religious houses did not have to
compete for Charlemagne’s attention. There was, it seems, more than enough