, one of the products of the Carolingian Renaissance. The Carolingian Renaissance was a period of intellectual and cultural revival in the
Carolingian Empire occurring from the late eighth century to the ninth century, as the first of three medieval renaissances. It occurred mostly during the reigns of the
Carolingian rulers
Charlemagne and
Louis the Pious. It was supported by the scholars of the
Carolingian court, notably
Alcuin of York For moral betterment the Carolingian renaissance reached for models drawn from the example of the Christian Roman Empire of the 4th century. During this period there was an increase of
literature,
writing, the
arts,
architecture,
jurisprudence,
liturgical reforms and
scriptural studies. Charlemagne's
Admonitio generalis (789) and his
Epistola de litteris colendis served as manifestos. The effects of this cultural revival, however, were largely limited to a small group of court
literati: "it had a spectacular effect on education and culture in
Francia, a debatable effect on artistic endeavors, and an immeasurable effect on what mattered most to the Carolingians, the moral regeneration of society," John Contreni observes. Beyond their efforts to write better Latin, to copy and preserve patristic and classical texts and to develop a more legible, classicizing script—the
Carolingian minuscule that
Renaissance humanists took to be Roman and employed as
humanist minuscule, from which has developed early modern
Italic script—the secular and ecclesiastical leaders of the Carolingian Renaissance for the first time in centuries applied rational ideas to social issues, providing a common language and writing style that allowed for communication across most of Europe. One of the primary efforts was the creation of a standardized curriculum for use at the recently created schools. Alcuin led this effort and was responsible for the writing of textbooks, creation of word lists, and establishing the
trivium and
quadrivium as the basis for education. While a substantial portion of the classical corpus that it is possessed today owes its survival to the copies produced by Carolingian scribes, the use of the term
renaissance to describe this period is contested because its aims and output differ markedly from those of the 15th- and 16th-century
Renaissance. The Carolingian project was a top-down initiative, driven by royal patronage and executed by literate elites who trained and served in ecclesiastical institutions, in contrast to the wide-ranging social movements of the later
Italian Renaissance. Earlier scholarship sometimes portrayed the Carolingian period as an attempt to recreate the previous culture of the
Roman Empire, motivated by
humanist and
antiquarian interests. Rather than a pure revival, Carolingian scholars described their engagement with classical learning as
correctio. This notion of
correctio, combined with pragmatic concerns, aimed to "correct" and transform older knowledge into something useful and suitable for a newly unified Christian society—society whose salvation Charlemagne, as its ruler, felt personally responsible for. Similar processes occurred in
Southeast Europe with the
Christianization of Bulgaria and the introduction liturgy in
Old Bulgarian language and the
Cyrillic script created in
Bulgaria few years before the reign of
Simeon I of Bulgaria, during the reign of his father
Boris I of Bulgaria.
Clement of Ohrid and
Naum of Preslav created (or rather compiled) the new alphabet which was called
Cyrillic and was declared the official alphabet in Bulgaria in 893. The
Old Church Slavonic language was declared as official in the same year. In the following centuries the
liturgy in Bulgarian language and the
alphabet were adopted by many other
Slavic peoples and counties. The
Golden Age of medieval Bulgarian culture is the period of the
Bulgarian cultural prosperity during the reign of emperor
Simeon I the Great (889—927). The term was coined by Spiridon Palauzov in the mid 19th century. During this period there was an increase of
literature,
writing, arts,
architecture and
liturgical reforms. == Ottonian renaissance (10th and 11th centuries)==