1 / 29

Charlemagne and the Holy Roman Empire

Charlemagne and the Holy Roman Empire. (www.tutino.wikispaces.com). From last time. The Roman Empire: East and West (395) Eastern Roman Empire: ‘Roman’ and ‘Christian’ identities

Jims
Télécharger la présentation

Charlemagne and the Holy Roman Empire

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Charlemagne and the Holy Roman Empire (www.tutino.wikispaces.com)

  2. From last time.. • The Roman Empire: East and West (395) • Eastern Roman Empire: ‘Roman’ and ‘Christian’ identities • We saw the progressive destruction of the Western Roman Empire (476), and the progressive strengthening of the Christian Church • Social and Political void filled by the Church

  3. The Barbarians and the Pope • Remember the example of Gregory the Great and his letter to the Queen! • A very important example of alliance between the Barbarians and the Papacy is the French one

  4. The Frankish Kingdom

  5. Pippin & Zachary • Pippin and the Merovingian Dynasty • 751: The Pope backs him up • Why did Pippin need the Pope? • What did the Pope gain?

  6. Charlemagne: the most important of Pippin’s successors Harvard Memorial Hall,1888 Charlemagne as a symbol of sovereignty and political wisdom

  7. Why was Charlemagne so important? Let’s see from Einhard’s ‘Chronicle’(ca.830) • Roman and Frank: a ‘merged’ allegiance • Moderation: a Christian virtue • What was he reading? What does that mean? • What was his relationship with the Pope? • The city of Rome and the Church of Saint Peter: the reference points of a HOLY ROMAN EMPEROR (although this term started to be used later in the sources)

  8. Charlemagne as the Holy Roman Emperor: he was crowned by Pope Leo III on Christmas night of the year 800 Illustration from a 14th c. manuscript, Bibliothèque Nationale

  9. Why is this important? • The concept of Translatio Imperii: Rome is not dead! • Once again, the role of the Pope in that: remember Constantine • Europe has a new strong political authority, but this time tied to religion

  10. Rome is alive: Moscow and the ‘third Rome’ myth

  11. Rome is alive: Mussolini and the ‘third Rome’ myth

  12. The Carolingian reformation: the Church • Before talking about this, let us firm up some points….

  13. What is the difference between regular and secular clergy? • Regular Clergy = those who follow a religious Rule, i.e. monks • Secular Clergy = those who are in the ‘saeculum’ (Latin for ‘world-time’), and who have ‘cura animarum’ (Latin for ‘care for the souls’)

  14. The Carolingian Reformation: the Church • Reform of the Regular Clergy: Rule of St.Benedict applied throughout • Reform of the Secular Clergy: Charlemagne starts appointing Bishops and enforces moral and doctrinal discipline

  15. The Carolingian Reformation: the Schools • Cathedral, Monastic and Court Schools • Reform of the Curriculum: the Seven Liberal Arts (grammar, rhetoric, logic; geometry, arithmetic, astronomy, music) • Liberal Arts as a preparation for theology • Latin • Handwriting

  16. Preserving Manuscripts: one of the most important legacies of the Carolingian Era

  17. The Collapse of the Carolingian World: in 851 the Empire splits

  18. Eastern Frankish Kingdom (Germany) retains the title of Holy Roman Empire Western Frankish Kingdom (France) looses its imperial character After 851:

  19. Partial conclusions • Holy Roman Empire: Rome is alive once again, and Church and State ‘united’ • Carolingian Reform: a deep re-organization of Western Europe’s intellectual, social and religious life • Open question: what is the future of Europe in 851? How does the post-Carolingian world look like?

  20. Islam: a new kid on the block • Ca 570: Muhammad is born in Mecca • 622: Muhammad goes to Medina -a leader is born • 624: the battle of Badr • 630: Muhammad wins in Mecca: a new religion and a new society is born

  21. The Muslim empire expands: • First picture: the Islamic empire at the time of the death of Muhammad (632) • Second picture: the Islamic empire around 750

  22. One important issue: Sunni and Shiite- can you tell the difference? • No major theological difference • Split occurred in 661 at the death of Ali -the Shiites believe that only Ali, the fourth caliph and his heirs are the legitimate successors of Muhammad

  23. Who is Sunni? Who is Shiite? • What is Osama Bin Laden? • Sunni • How about Iran? • Shiite • How about Hezbollah? • Shiite • Sunni is 90% of the Muslim world • Shiites are concentrated in Iran, Iraq and Lebanon

  24. The Muslim world after 750: from unity to fragmentation • After 750: the dissolution of the caliphate • 790-1050: the Islamic renaissance, which produced a series of important intellectual and cultural innovations and developments, including..

  25. I mean… • The number ‘0’ is an Arab (fantastic) invention, that allows you to count the way you do! • Roman numerals, with no ‘0’, were much more complicated and they worked through addition (e.g.: X=10, I=1, V=5; that is 16= X+V+I, XVI)

  26. A lot of Aristotle! • Islamic religion puts a lot of emphasis on reason, • In fact, many Arab intellectuals commented and studied Aristotle, and it is thanks to them that some of his works survived! • The best known of those commentators of Aristotle is Abn-Ali Al Hosain Ibn Abdallah Ibn Sina, called in Latin AVICENNA (980-1037)

  27. In conclusion: • Charlemagne and the Holy Roman Empire: an extraordinary political and religious entity, Rome is born again! • Again, Christian Church fundamental in this • The Muslim world is starting to divide itself, but maintains a vivacious intellectual activity • Looking ahead: what happens in the Byzantine empire? And how does the post-Charlemagne world look like?

  28. The End See you on Thursday

More Related