The office originated in the
Lombard kingdom in Italy (c.575–774), where the kings appointed officials with the title
comes palatii (count of the palace) and power to act in the king's absence. The office was retained in Italy under the
Carolingians after 774 and under the
Ottonians after 961. The Emperor
Otto III is known to have appointed a large number of counts palatine. The title for a count palatine gradually grew in length, from
comes sacri palatii (count of the sacred palace) to
comes sacri Lateranensis palatii (count of the sacred Lateran palace) to
comes palatinus sacri Lateranensis palatii (count palatine of the sacred Lateran palace). The connection to the actual
Lateran Palace in
Rome was merely symbolic. The Lateran was a former imperial palace under the
Roman Empire and was the chief residence of the
Popes in the
Middle Ages. Its use in the title of a count palatine underlined his imperial and universal commission. This could occasionally be explicit, as in Benedetto Porcellini's title in a 1519 notarial act:
comes palatinus et sacri Lateranensis palatii apostolicis et imperialis (count palatine of the sacred Lateran apostolic and imperial palace). The office of imperial count palatine was hereditary and the emperors seem to have used it to create an Italian aristocratic class loyal to the empire. In 1357, the Emperor
Charles IV added the power of conferring licences and doctorates of civil law to those of the counts palatine. Later on, they acquired the power to confer doctorates in general. ==Role==