First years of majority 's presentation as part of the Holy Roman Empire is debated. Henry was girded with a sword as a sign of his coming of age at
Worms on 29 March 1065. According to
Lampert of Hersfeld, he quarrelled with Archbishop Anno of Cologne soon after the ceremony, and Anno was subsequently excluded from court. Although Lampert's account is not entirely reliable, Agnes appears to have briefly recovered her influence. Two months later, however, she left for Italy, allowing Archbishop Adalbert of Bremen to dominate royal government. At Worms, Henry had accepted Pope Alexander II's invitation to Rome, but the journey was first postponed until autumn and then indefinitely, despite the Pope's need for his support against the Italian adherents of the antipope Honorius II. Instead, Henry travelled to Burgundy in June 1065, where later Burgundian diplomas treated his presence as the beginning of his reign. From Burgundy, he went to Lorraine and granted Lower Lorraine to Godfrey the Bearded in October. Meanwhile, Adalbert of Bremen, acting with Henry's young friend Werner, abused royal authority to seize church property and to accept bribes for appointments. They persuaded Henry to distribute monasteries among leading prelates and princes to placate their resentment. Adalbert's attempt to take possession of
Lorsch Abbey by force proved decisive, as the scandal enabled Archbishops
Siegfried of Mainz and Anno of Cologne to organise opposition. With the support of Otto of Nordheim, Rudolf of Rheinfelden, and Berthold of Zähringen, they persuaded Henry to dismiss Adalbert in January 1066. Anno regained royal favour, but thereafter no adviser exercised comparable control over the government. Henry fell gravely ill in mid-May 1066 and was widely thought to be dying, prompting discussion of his succession. He recovered within two weeks and soon married his betrothed Bertha, probably to stabilise the political situation. Later in 1066, Prince Richard of Capua rebelled against Pope Alexander II and invaded the
Roman Campagna. Early in 1067, Agnes returned from Italy to urge her son to intervene, but Godfrey the Bearded launched a successful counter-offensive against Richard in June, an independent action resented as a slight to royal authority in Italy. Adalbert's fall had encouraged the
Lutici, a pagan Slavic people beyond the river
Elbe, to raid northern Germany and plunder
Hamburg. In 1069, Henry crossed the Elbe, defeated them in battle, and temporarily checked their subsequent incursions into Saxony.
First Saxon rebellion and aristocratic resistance Large parcels of the royal
demesne were distributed during Henry's minority, and he decided to recover them around 1069. Most of these estates lay in Saxony, but he dispatched
Swabian to investigate property rights. The appointment of non-native and unfree officials offended the Saxons, particularly because they disregarded traditional
civil procedures. New royal castles were erected in Saxony and garrisoned with Swabian troops. Like his father, Henry spent much time in Saxony, and the accommodation of his retinue remained an irksome burden for the Saxons. The Thuringians were also angered by Henry's support for Archbishop Siegfried of Mainz's claim to levy tithes from them, although most Thuringians had long been exempt. The first Saxon lord to rebel was
Dedi I,
Margrave of Lower Lusatia. He claimed
benefices formerly held by
Otto I, Margrave of Meissen,
his wife's earlier husband, but Henry refused in 1069. Dedi sought Thuringian support, but after Henry promised to confirm their exemption from tithes, they joined the royal army. Henry invaded Dedi's lands and compelled his surrender. Otto of Nordheim held extensive estates in Saxony. After a nobleman, Egeno, accused him of plotting against Henry's life, Otto was summoned in early August 1070 to clear himself by single combat. The chronicler
Bruno the Saxon later alleged that Henry had bribed Egeno, though his account is partisan. Fearing an unjust judgment, Otto disobeyed the summons and fled from Bavaria to Saxony. Henry outlawed Otto and confiscated his benefices. He invaded Otto's Saxon lands, while Otto raided royal estates in Thuringia.
Ordulf, Duke of Saxony, and most Saxon nobles remained loyal, but his son
Magnus joined Otto. Henry granted Bavaria to Otto's wealthy son-in-law,
Welf, at Christmas 1070. Without wider support, Otto and Magnus surrendered and were placed in the German dukes' and bishops' custody in June 1071. Archbishop Adalbert of Bremen persuaded Henry to release Otto early in 1072, though Magnus remained imprisoned. Adalbert soon died, and Henry seized his treasury, an early instance of royal use of the . Henry's growing practice of appointing low-ranking men to office angered the aristocracy. Rudolf of Rheinfelden and Berthold of Zähringen withdrew from court, and rumours of conspiracy spread. Rudolf appealed to Empress Agnes, who returned from Rome and mediated a reconciliation in July 1072. It soon failed, since Henry did not dismiss his advisers. Agnes shared the princes' hostility to these advisers and persuaded Pope Alexander to excommunicate several of them in February 1073.
Conflicts with the papacy and a new Saxon rebellion in the 14th-century
Vienna Illuminated Chronicle). Appointments to the highest church offices remained a central element of Henry's authority, enabling him to demand benefices for his supporters from wealthy bishops and abbots, although reformist clergy condemned the practice as
simony. When Henry appointed the Milanese nobleman
Gotofredo to the
Archbishopric of Milan in 1070, Pope Alexander II excommunicated Gotofredo. Henry nevertheless obtained his consecration, which led to a prolonged conflict with the Holy See. The
Bishopric of Constance became another source of tension when local clerics appealed to Rome to prevent the installation of Henry's candidate, Charles of Magdeburg. Henry denied that Charles had bribed him, though he admitted that his advisers might have received money. Alexander II summoned the accused German bishops to Rome to investigate simony, but he died two months later. On 22 April 1073, the Romans proclaimed Hildebrand as his successor. Hildebrand, who assumed the name Gregory VII, did not seek Henry's confirmation. He did not immediately challenge royal prerogatives, but he believed that a ruler associated with excommunicated persons could not direct ecclesiastical affairs. He regarded lay investiture as the principal obstacle to reform and opposed royal appointments, acting upon complaints against German prelates. Henry's Italian chancellor, Bishop
Gregory of Vercelli, and several German bishops urged him to reject Gregory's election as invalid, but the German dukes and Beatrice of Tuscany, Godfrey the Bearded's influential widow, persuaded him to cooperate with the papacy. In early 1073,
Bolesław II of Poland invaded Bohemia, prompting Henry to plan a punitive expedition. He summoned the Saxon nobles to Goslar, where they demanded redress of grievances; Henry refused and withdrew to
Harzburg. Otto of Nordheim persuaded the Saxons to take up arms, forcing Henry to flee to Eschwege and enabling the rebels to capture
Lüneburg. To save its commander, Henry released Magnus of Saxony, whom the rebels recognised as their duke. Lacking support from the princes and bishops, Henry saw his castles attacked. To prevent the Saxon bishops from seeking papal backing, Henry sent a letter of penance to Pope Gregory, admitting involvement in simony and attributing his faults to youthful arrogance and the influence of misguided advisers.
Negotiations and new conflicts Siegfried of Mainz, Anno of Cologne, Rudolf of Rheinfelden, Berthold of Zähringen and other German magnates met the Saxon leaders at
Gerstungen in October 1073. They attempted to persuade Henry to redress Saxon grievances, but he remained determined to suppress the revolt. A month later Henry's servant Regenger warned Rudolf and Berthold that Henry intended to kill them. Regenger died unexpectedly in January 1074, but his testimony intensified the conflict between Henry and the two dukes. After recovering from illness, Henry went to Worms, where Bishop
Adalbert refused him entry until the townspeople expelled Adalbert and admitted Henry. The King rewarded the burghers by exempting them from customs duties, praising their loyalty when "all the princes of the realm" opposed him. In early 1074, Archbishops
Liemar of Bremen and
Udo of Trier, along with eight bishops, joined Henry at Worms. Their followers and the town militia formed a new army against the Saxons and Thuringians. Henry, now outnumbered, soon opened negotiations. The
Treaty of Gerstungen, concluded on 2 February, granted the rebels' main demands: Henry would dismantle his castles and appoint only natives to offices in Saxony, while the Saxon aristocracy promised to destroy their new fortifications. Saxon peasants nevertheless seized and destroyed Harzburg and
desecrated the royal graves there. This outrage provoked widespread indignation, and Henry regarded it as a breach of the treaty. Pope Gregory dispatched Cardinals
Gerald of Ostia and
Hubert of Palestrina to negotiate with Henry. Empress Agnes accompanied the legates. After Henry performed public penance for simony, the legates absolved him on 27 April 1074. They summoned the German bishops to a synod to hear the case against Bishop
Herman I of Bamberg, but several failed to appear. Gregory responded by suspending Archbishop Liemar and summoning the others to Rome. Henry did not intervene, despite the fact that the accused bishops were among his principal supporters. Henry's brother-in-law, Solomon of Hungary, appealed to him for support against his cousin
Géza, Béla I's eldest son. After Géza defeated him on 14 March 1074, Solomon fled to the fortresses of
Moson and
Pressburg. In return for Henry's help in recovering his kingdom, Solomon offered to cede six castles and to recognise Henry's suzerainty. Henry invaded Hungary and advanced as far as
Vác, but he failed to compel Géza's submission. Pope Gregory rebuked Solomon for accepting Henry’s overlordship, since he regarded Hungary as a fief of the Holy See.
Negotiations with the papacy and Saxon campaigns On 7 December 1074, Pope Gregory asked Henry to compel the German prelates who had ignored his summons to attend a Roman synod. At the Lenten synod in February 1075, he suspended five German bishops for disobedience and blamed five of Henry's advisers, likely those who had been excommunicated by his predecessor, for the dispute over the see of Milan. Henry and the German bishops sought to avoid open conflict. Archbishops Siegfried of Mainz and Liemar of Bremen travelled to Rome to negotiate and did not oppose the deposition of Bishop Herman of Bamberg. Pleased with their obedience, the Pope authorised Siegfried to convene a reforming synod in Germany. Meanwhile, Henry prepared to avenge the desecration of the royal graves at Harzburg, offering amnesty and rewards to those who joined his campaign against Saxony. Most German dukes and many bishops assembled with the royal army at
Breitungen in June 1074, and several Saxon nobles and prelates defected to Henry's side. Under Rudolf of Rheinfelden, the royal forces surprised the Saxons at
Homburg Castle on 9 June. Although most Saxon nobles escaped, many foot soldiers were slaughtered. Survivors blamed their lords, and their accounts turned the Saxon peasantry against the nobility. Pope Gregory congratulated Henry, describing the Saxons' defeat as an act of "
divine judgement". Henry invaded Saxony again in autumn 1075. Now,
Godfrey the Hunchback,
Duke of Lower Lorraine, was the only duke to support him, but Saxon resistance collapsed. Otto of Nordheim persuaded the Saxons to surrender unconditionally on 26 or 27 October. Henry restored Otto's benefices except Bavaria, but imprisoned other rebel leaders and confiscated their lands. He then summoned the German dukes to Goslar to swear fealty to his infant son Conrad, but only
Vratislaus II of Bohemia complied.
Road to Canossa kept in the
Vatican Library, 1115) Henry's victory in the Saxon War had weakened his dependence on Pope Gregory VII. He sent Count Eberhard the Bearded to Italy as his representative, instructing him to demand an oath of fealty from the papal vassal
Robert Guiscard,
Duke of Apulia and Calabria. Henry also appointed his chaplain
Tedald as archbishop of Milan, contrary to the Pope's former decisions. Alarmed, Gregory announced that he would excommunicate Henry unless he reversed his policy. Henry interpreted Gregory's announcement as a denial of the sacred character of kingship. At a
synod held in Worms on 24 January 1076, two archbishops, twenty-six bishops, and Godfrey the Hunchback declared Gregory's election invalid and demanded his abdication. A similar decision was taken by Lombard bishops and nobles at
Piacenza on 5 February. Godfrey the Hunchback was murdered on 22 February; although he had named his nephew
Godfrey of Bouillon as his heir, Henry granted Lower Lorraine to his own son Conrad. Gregory VII learned of these acts at the Lenten synod in Rome and publicly excommunicated Henry, releasing his subjects from their oath of loyalty in a public prayer addressed to
Saint Peter. Although unprecedented, the Pope regarded this as the only adequate response to Henry's arrogance. Henry convened a synod at Utrecht, but only the local bishop,
William I, supported the excommunication of the Pope. Seeking to justify his position, Henry circulated a letter drafted by his chaplain
Gottschalk, asserting that only God could judge a king and denouncing the Pope as the "false monk Hildebrand", with the command to "descend, descend". Shortly afterwards,
lightning destroyed Utrecht cathedral on 27 March, and Bishop William died suddenly on 27 April. Henry's opponents interpreted these events as
divine retribution for his sins. Bishop
Herman of Metz released the Saxon rebels in his custody, while Bishop Burchard of Halberstadt escaped from captivity and returned to Saxony. Theoderic and William of the Saxon
Wettin also returned from exile and joined the revolt. When Henry invaded Saxony in August, only Vratislaus II of Bohemia supported him. Their arrival provoked a general rising, forcing Henry to retreat to Bohemia. German nobles and bishops assembled at Trebur between 16 October and 1 November. They convinced Henry to accept the Pope's conditions: he was to dismiss his excommunicated advisers, recognise Gregory as the lawful pope, and accept papal jurisdiction in his disputes with the German dukes and bishops. They further declared that they would elect a new king if Henry did not obtain absolution within a year, and invited Gregory to Germany to preside over an assembly at Augsburg on 2 February 1077. '' of Henry, inaccurately with his family, barefoot before
Pope Gregory VII at
Canossa Castle. Henry withdrew to
Speyer and lived there as a penitent. He then decided to seek absolution in Italy, in order to prevent the Pope from judging his case at an assembly controlled by his enemies. Despite an unusually harsh winter, the King, Queen Bertha, and their followers crossed the
Mont Cenis pass across the Alps in December. On 25 January, they reached
Canossa Castle, where Gregory had taken refuge fearing Henry's revenge. Henry stood barefoot in sackcloth before the castle for three days, until
Matilda of Tuscany (the castle's owner), Bertha's mother Adelaide, and Hugh of Cluny persuaded the Pope to absolve him. Before receiving absolution, Henry promised to submit to the Pope’s judgement in his conflict with his subjects.
Civil war Henry remained in Italy after his absolution, which surprised his German opponents. At an assembly in
Forchheim, they argued that it had not restored their oaths of fealty, and on 14 March 1077 elected Rudolf of Rheinfelden king. Although the papal legates acknowledged the election, Gregory VII remained neutral, claiming the right to judge the dispute and summoning both Henry and Rudolf to an assembly in Germany. Henry replaced the new anti-king's chief ally,
Berthold of Zähringen, with
Liutold of Eppenstein as duke of Carinthia, awarded
Friuli to
Sigehard, Patriarch of Aquilea, confiscated Swabia from Rudolf and Bavaria from Welf, and placed both duchies under royal control. Before returning to Germany in April, Henry appointed his three-year-old son Conrad as his lieutenant in Italy, entrusting him to the excommunicated prelates Tedald of Milan and Denis of Piacenza. Unable to prevent his return, Rudolf withdrew to Saxony. Henry toured the main cities of southern and western Germany to demonstrate the restoration of his authority and rewarded his supporters with confiscated estates, though these had to be secured by force. The rival kings' armies first approached one another near
Würzburg in August, but Henry avoided battle as his forces were outnumbered. Aristocratic leaders sought peace and planned a joint assembly on the Rhine in November, which Henry obstructed by sending troops. On 12 November 1077 the papal legate Cardinal Bernard excommunicated Henry. Henry opened negotiations with the papacy through envoys, and a new (unnamed) papal legate later celebrated Easter with him at Cologne in 1078, implying Gregory did not consider the excommunication valid. Henry successfully campaigned in Lotharingia, but his supporters suffered defeats in Swabia and
Franconia. Rudolf advanced to Franconia and met Henry and his army of 12,000 Franconian peasants at
Mellrichstadt on 7 August 1078, where the battle ended without a decisive result. Gregory prohibited clerics from receiving royal appointments to bishoprics or abbeys in November 1078. Royal investiture had been a core element of royal administration, and the ring and
crosier symbolised the mutual dependence of ruler and prelate. At the Lenten synod of February 1079, Henry's opponents persuaded the Pope to send new legates to Germany, although he forbade them to judge bishops appointed by Henry. In March, Henry confiscated Rudolf's Swabian estates and granted them to Bishop
Burchard of Lausanne, and appointed a wealthy local aristocrat,
Frederick of Büren, duke of Swabia. Frederick gained control only north of the Danube, while Rudolf's son
Berthold held the southern regions. Henry met the papal legates
Peter of Albano and
Udalric of Padua at Regensburg in May 1079, and they arranged negotiations with Rudolf at
Fritzlar. The parties agreed to meet again at Würzburg, but Rudolf refused to appoint delegates, suspecting bribery. Henry invaded Saxony in August, but Rudolf secured a truce with the support of aristocrats loyal to Henry. Henry then undermined Rudolf's support in Saxony and assembled forces from the German duchies, Burgundy, and Bohemia. In January 1080, he invaded Saxony again, but Rudolf defeated him at the
Battle of Flarchheim on 27 January. However, the Saxon deserters did not return to Rudolf's camp. Henry sent envoys to the Roman synod of Lent demanding that Pope Gregory excommunicate Rudolf, hinting his willingness to appoint an antipope. Instead, Gregory excommunicated and deposed Henry and recognised Rudolf as king. A treatise,
The Defence of King Henry, was published stressing Henry's hereditary right. It employed Roman-law arguments, reflecting the study of the in Italy. Before returning, Henry's envoys, Archbishop Liemar of Bremen and Bishop
Rupert of Bamberg, raised a revolt against the Pope's ally Matilda of Tuscany and secured the backing of northern Italian aristocrats. Henry's second excommunication proved less damaging than the first. At a council in Mainz in May 1080, German prelates and nobles deposed Gregory, labelling him "the accused disturber of divine and human laws". In June a
synod in Brixen accused Gregory of simony and heresy and elected Archbishop
Wibert of Ravenna pope as Clement III. Henry then returned to Germany and prepared a new campaign in Saxony. Henry and Rudolf's armies met at
Hohenmölsen on 14 October 1080. Although Henry's forces were defeated, Rudolf died from his wounds. Henry portrayed Rudolf's death as divine punishment for perjury and opened negotiations with the Saxons, offering to make his son Conrad king of Saxony, but Otto of Nordheim persuaded them to reject the proposal.
Imperial coronation Henry led a small army to Italy in March 1081. His supporters'
earlier victory over Matilda of Tuscany allowed him to reach Rome, but the Romans remained loyal to Gregory VII and forced him to withdraw to northern Italy. He negotiated with envoys of the Byzantine Emperor
Alexios I Komnenos about an alliance against Robert Guiscard and released Lucca and Pisa from Matilda's lordship. While Henry was in Italy, the Saxons invaded Franconia and his southern German opponents elected
Hermann of Salm king, although Saxon support for Hermann came only months later. After a short visit to Germany, Henry returned to Italy in early 1082 and again besieged Rome without success, leaving Antipope Clement to continue the siege while he ravaged Matilda's lands. Fears of an invasion by Hermann kept him in the north, but he resumed the siege at the end of the year. Subsidies (144,000 gold pieces) from Alexios enabled him to bribe Roman aristocrats, capture the
Leonine City in June 1083, and force Gregory to retreat to
Castel Sant'Angelo. Henry then withdrew again, securing a secret agreement with Roman nobles to obtain his imperial coronation. In early 1084, Henry campaigned briefly against Robert Guiscard. Meanwhile, after Clement won over many cardinals and officials, resistance collapsed, and Henry entered Rome in March. Clement crowned him emperor in
St Peter's Basilica on 1 April. After six weeks, Henry departed before Guiscard arrived to rescue Gregory. The Norman troops then
sacked Rome and drove Gregory to Salerno. Henry ordered his allies to conquer Matilda's lands, but they were defeated at the
Battle of Sorbara in July 1084. ==Reign as emperor==