Political fragmentation and imperial overlordship By the start of the 5th century, the Western Roman Empire remained close to its maximum territorial extent, notwithstanding the loss of the
Agri Decumates during the
crisis of the Third Century, but Roman rule had become fragile and many areas were depopulated. In the early years of the century, the Empire
withdrew from Great Britain, leaving it open to
Anglo-Saxon settlement. Mounting
foreign incursions soon resulted in permanent settlement of Germanic and other ethnic groups into territories that became gradually autonomous, were sometimes acknowledged or even encouraged by treaty (
foedus) by the Western Empire, and often embarked on expansion by further conquest. The
Vandals crossed the Rhine in 406, the Pyrenees in 409, the
Strait of Gibraltar in 428, and established the
Vandal Kingdom in Northern Africa and the Western Mediterranean islands by the mid-5th century; the
Suebi, initially moving alongside the Vandals, established their
Western Iberian kingdom in 409; the
Visigothic Kingdom was initially established by treaty in 418 in the
Garonne Valley, and soon expanded into the
Iberian Peninsula; the
Alemanni expanded into
Alsace and beyond, from their initial base in the
Agri Decumates; in the 440s, the
Kingdom of the Burgundians was established around the
Rhone; an autonomous
Kingdom of Soissons was carved out from 457 by Roman military commanders between the
Seine and
Somme rivers; last but not least, the
Franks, which had been established north of the Rhine in 358 by treaty with
Emperor Julian, expanded into what is now Belgium and Northern France. As a consequence, when the last Western Emperor
Romulus Augustulus was deposed by military commander
Odoacer in 476, his direct rule did not extend much beyond the current Northern borders of Italy. Another military leader,
Julius Nepos, briefly Romulus Augustulus's predecessor, held territory in
Dalmatia and kept the Imperial title until his assassination in 480. In a symbolic act that would fascinate later historians, Odoacer sent back the Imperial
regalia or accessories of Romulus Augustulus to the Eastern
Emperor Zeno in Constantinople. Far from signaling the end of imperial rule in Italy, this meant that Odoacer acknowledged Zeno's overlordship and did not claim full sovereignty. Like previous
foederati leaders, he adopted the title of King (
Rex) and ruled in the name of the remaining Emperors, namely Zeno and also Julius Nepos while the latter was still alive. This arrangement was kept by
Theodoric the Great, who vanquished and killed Odoacer in 493 and replaced him as
King of Italy. Political boundaries kept moving in the later 5th and 6th centuries.
Clovis I, king of the Franks (d. 511), conquered
Alemannia, the
Kingdom of Soissons and most of the
Visigothic Kingdom north of the Pyrenees, and his sons conquered the
Kingdom of the Burgundians in 534, thus creating a vast
kingdom of Francia, which was periodically divided between various members of the
Merovingian dynasty. Meanwhile, Eastern
Emperor Justinian I reestablished direct Imperial rule in
southern Spain,
North Africa and especially
Italy, reconquered during the hard-fought
Gothic War (535–554). Later in the 6th century,
Emperor Maurice sponsored
Gundoald, a member of Clovis's
Merovingian dynasty, in his claim to the Frankish kingdom, which ended unsuccessfully in 585 at
Saint-Bertrand-de-Comminges. Even though it was out of the Empire's direct military reach,
Francia kept acknowledging the overlordship of Constantinople throughout the 6th century. At a ceremony in early 508 in
Tours,
Clovis received the
insignia sent by
Emperor Anastasius I which established his service to the Empire as
Consul. Similarly, in the early 6th century,
King Gundobad of the still-independent
Burgundians, despite being an
Arian, was
Magister militum in the name of the Emperor. The
Gesta pontificum Autissiodorensium, a compendium of information about the
Bishops of Auxerre first compiled in the late 9th century, keeps referring to the reigning Roman Emperor up to
Desiderius (d. 621), listed as bishop "in the reigns of
Phocas and
Heraclius" (
imperantibus Foca, atque Heraclio). No such deference appears to have existed in the
Visigothic Kingdom at the same time.
Chris Wickham portrays the Visigothic king
Euric (466–484) as "the first major ruler of a 'barbarian' polity in Gaul - the second in the Empire after
Geiseric - to have a fully autonomous political practice, uninfluenced by any residual Roman loyalties." A century and a half later in the 620s,
Isidore of Seville articulated for the Visigothic Kingdom, by then a
Catholic monarchy following the conversion of
Reccared I in 587, a vision of Christian monarchy on an equal status with the Eastern Roman Empire that would have seminal influence on later Western European political thinking. {{multiple image| align=right| total_width=600 Imperial rule in the West eroded further from the late 6th century. In Britain, to the extent discernible from scarce documentation, Roman rule was at best a distant memory. In Francia, references to Imperial overlordship disappear at the time of
Merovingian renewal in the early 7th century under
Chlothar II and
Dagobert I. In the Iberian Peninsula, the
Visigothic King Suintila expelled the last Imperial forces from southern Spain in 625. In Italy, the
Lombards invaded in 568, and the resulting
Kingdom of the Lombards was hostile to the Empire whose territorial footprint shrank gradually.
Papal pivot The Roman Papacy was to become the instrument of the Imperial idea's revival in the West. Rome was increasingly isolated from Constantinople following the devastations of
Gothic War (535–554), subsequent imperial choices to favor
Ravenna over Rome, and the
Lombard invasion of Italy starting in 568, which limited its communications with the main imperial outposts in
Ravenna and
Sicily. The
Column of Phocas on the
Roman Forum, dedicated in 608, counts among the last monumental expressions of (eastern) imperial power in Rome. In 649, in breach of tradition,
Pope Martin I was elected and consecrated without waiting for imperial confirmation.
Constans II was the last (eastern) emperor to visit Rome for centuries, in 663, and plundered several of the remaining monuments to adorn Constantinople. Meanwhile, and for various reasons, Catholicism finally triumphed over
Arianism in the Western kingdoms: in the Visigothic Iberian Peninsula with the conversion of
Reccared I in 587, and in Lombard-held Italy, after some back-and-forth, following the death of
King Rothari in 652.
Pope Gregory I (590–604) established the foundations for the papacy's incipient role as leader of Christianity in the West, even though at the time there was no conception of an alternative imperial authority to be established there in competition with Constantinople. The promotion of
iconoclasm by Emperor
Leo III the Isaurian from 726 led to a deepening rupture between the Eastern Empire and the Papacy.
Pope Gregory II saw iconoclasm as the latest in a series of imperial
heresies. In 731, his successor
Pope Gregory III organized a
synod in Rome which declared iconoclasm punishable by
excommunication. Leo III responded in 732/33 by confiscating all papal patrimonies in southern Italy and Sicily, and further removed the bishoprics of
Thessalonica,
Corinth,
Syracuse,
Reggio,
Nicopolis,
Athens, and
Patras from papal jurisdiction, instead subjecting them to the Patriarch of Constantinople. This was in effect an act of
triage: it strengthened the imperial grip in southern Italy, but all but guaranteed the eventual destruction of the
exarchate of Ravenna, which soon occurred at Lombard hands. In effect, the papacy had been "cast out of the empire".
Pope Zachary, in 741, was the last pope to announce his election to a Byzantine ruler or seek their approval. by
Pope Stephen II in 754 (right),
miniature by
Jean Fouquet,
Grandes Chroniques de France, ca. 1455-1460 The Popes needed to quickly reinvent their relationship to secular authority. Even though the neighboring Lombard kings were no longer heretical, they were often hostile. The more powerful and more distant Franks, which had by and large been allies of the Empire, were an alternative option as potential protectors. In 739, Gregory III sent a first embassy to
Charles Martel seeking protection against
Liutprand, King of the Lombards, but the Frankish strongman had been Liutbrand's ally in the past and had asked him in 737 to ceremonially adopt his son. The Papacy had more luck with the latter,
Pepin the Short, who succeeded Charles in October 741 together with his elder brother
Carloman (who withdrew from public life and became a monk in 747).
Pope Zachary was pressed into action by the final Lombard campaign against the
exarchate of Ravenna, whose fall in mid-751 sealed the end of Byzantine rule in Central Italy. He was in contact with the Frankish ruling elites through the venerable
Boniface,
Archbishop of Mainz, and other clerics such as
Burchard of Würzburg and
Fulrad. In March 751 he moved to depose
Childeric III, the last
Merovingian King, following which Pepin was dedicated as King of France in
Soissons. In 754, Zachary's successor
Pope Stephen II undertook the first-ever papal visit north of the Alps, met Pepin in
Ponthion and anointed him as king at
Saint-Denis on July 28, setting the template for later
rites of coronation of French Kings. Stephen further legitimized the
Carolingian dynasty by also anointing Pepin's sons
Charles and
Carloman, by prohibiting the election of any non-descendant of Pepin as king, and by proclaiming that "the Frankish nation is above all nations". This in return prompted the
Donation of Pepin in 756, cementing the Popes' rule over the
Papal States over the next eleven centuries. Subsequently, in 773–774, Pepin's son and successor
Charlemagne conquered the Lombard Kingdom of Italy.
Holy Roman Empire , probably by
Gianfrancesco Penni on a design by
Raphael,
fresco in the
Raphael Rooms of the
Vatican, 1516-1517 The coronation of
Charlemagne by
Pope Leo III, in Rome on Christmas Day 800, was explicitly intended as establishing continuity with the Roman Empire that still existed in the East. In Constantinople,
Irene of Athens had blinded and deposed her son
Emperor Constantine VI a few years earlier. With no precedent of a woman being sole holder of the imperial title, her critics in the West (e.g.
Alcuin) viewed the imperial throne as vacant rather than recognizing her as Empress. Thus, as
Peter H. Wilson put it, "it is highly likely Charlemagne believed he was being made Roman Emperor" at the time of his coronation; however, Charlemagne's imperial title rested on a different base from any of the Roman emperors until him, as it was structurally reliant on the partnership with the Papacy, embodied in the act of his coronation by the Pope. Meanwhile, the accession to the Byzantine throne of
Nikephoros I in 802 confirmed the conflict of legitimacy between the Frankish and Byzantine incarnations of the Roman Empire, known in historiography as the
problem of two emperors (in German,
Zweikaiserproblem). According to
Theophanes the Confessor, Charlemagne had attempted to prevent that conflict with a project to marry Irene, but this was not completed. The territorial conflicts were addressed in the following years through a series of negotiations known as the
Pax Nicephori, but the broader conflict with Constantinople about Imperial legitimacy proved extremely durable. superimposed on present-day state borders , late 10th / early 11th century inside
Albi Cathedral, showing him with a mantle adorned with the Holy Roman Empire's emblem Political authority fragmented within the Empire following Charlemagne's death. The eventual outcome was an association of the Imperial dignity with the easternmost ("German") lands of the Carolingian geography, but that was not self-evident at the start and took a long time to happen. From 843 to 875, the holders of the Imperial title only ruled over Northern Italy and, at the start, the "middle kingdom" of
Lotharingia. On Christmas Day 875, exactly 75 years after Charlemagne,
Charles the Bald of
West Francia was crowned Emperor in Rome by
Pope John VIII, adopting the motto
renovatio imperii Romani et Francorum, which raised the prospect of an Empire centered on what is today
France. Charles died soon afterwards in 877, and his successor
Charles the Fat only briefly managed to reunite all the Carolingian domains, and after his death in 888 the Western part of
Francia was dominated by the non-Carolingian
Robertians, later the
Capetian dynasty. For over seven decades, the Emperors' authority was then mostly confined to Northern Italy, until
Otto I revived the Imperial idea and was crowned by
Pope John XII in Rome in 962. From then on, all Emperors had dynastic roots in the Germanic-speaking lands (even though
Frederick II was born in Italy,
Henry VII in
Valenciennes,
Charles IV in
Prague,
Charles V in
Ghent,
Ferdinand I in Spain,
Charles VII in
Brussels,
Francis I in
Nancy, and
Francis II in
Florence). During the millennium of the Holy Roman Empire, several specific attempts were made to recall the Empire's classical heritage.
Emperor Otto III reigned from Rome from 998 to his death in 1002, and made a short-lived attempt to revive ancient Roman institutions and traditions in partnership with
Pope Sylvester II, who chose his papal name as an echo of the time of
Constantine the Great.
Frederick II took a keen interest in Roman antiquity, sponsored archaeological excavations, organized a Roman-style
triumph in
Cremona in 1238 to celebrate his victory at the
battle of Cortenuova, and had himself depicted in classical imagery. Similarly,
Maximilian I was highly mindful of classical references in his "memorial" projects of the 1510s that included the three monumental
woodblock prints of the
Triumphal Arch,
Triumphal Procession and
Large Triumphal Carriage.
Papacy and the imperial title in pink was in personal union with the Holy Roman Empire) According to his biographer
Einhard, Charlemagne was unhappy about his coronation, a fact that later historians have interpreted as displeasure about the Pope's assumption of the key role in the legitimation of Imperial rule. Instead of the traditional recognition by popular acclamation, Leo III had crowned Charlemagne at the outset of the ceremony, just before the crowd acclaimed him. In September 813, Charlemagne tried to override that precedent by himself crowning his son
Louis the Pious in
Aachen, but the principle of Papal coronation survived and was renewed in 962 when
Otto I restored the Empire and its rituals after decades of turmoil and received the Imperial Crown from
Pope John XII. The interdependence between Pope and Emperor led to conflict after the Papacy started asserting its position with the
Gregorian Reform of the mid-11th century. The
Investiture Controversy (1076–1122) included episodes of dramatic confrontation, in which the pope attempted to deprive the emperor of his imperial dignity. The
Dictatus papae, a papal document issued in 1075 shortly after the election of
Gregory VII, states that the pope "alone may use the Imperial Insignia", that "All princes shall kiss the feet of the Pope alone", and that "It may be permitted to him to depose emperors". Following
Emperor Henry IV's
walk to Canossa in January 1077, Gregory VII pronounced his absolution but referred to him as
rex Teutonicorum ("king of the Germans"), thus omitting the imperial title and the fact that Henry was king (
rex) of several realms, including
Burgundy and
Italy. Wars of
Guelphs and Ghibellines, the respective partisans of the Pope and the Emperor, lasted until the 15th century. In 1527, the Pope's involvement in the
Italian Wars led to the traumatic
sack of Rome by
Charles V's imperial troops, after which the Papacy's influence in international politics was significantly reduced.
Kingdoms and the imperial title dominions
personally united with
Holy Roman Empire at
Charles V. on
Place des Victoires in Paris (1686), anachronistically combining the
SPQR motto with the
double-headed eagle Early in the Empire's history,
Louis the Pious formally established the supremacy of the Empire over Catholic kingdoms through the document issued in 817 and later known as
Ordinatio Imperii. The view at the time was that the Empire covered all Western Christendom under one authority. (The British Isles, Brittany, and the
Kingdom of Asturias were omitted in this vision.) Under Louis's arrangement, only his elder son
Lothair would hold the title of Emperor, and Lothair's younger brothers
Pepin and
Louis should obey him even though they were kings, respectively, of
Aquitaine and
Bavaria. That document was controversial from the start, not least as it did not conform to Frankish succession law and practices. Following Louis the Pious's death in June 840, the
Battle of Fontenoy (841),
Oaths of Strasbourg (842) and
Treaty of Verdun (843) established a different reality, in which the Imperial title remained undivided but its holder competed with kings for territory, even though at the time all were still bound by the family links of the
Carolingian dynasty and the bounds of Catholic Christianity. Following the gradual demise of the Carolingian dynasty in the late 9th and 10th centuries, the rivalry between the Empire and individual kingdoms developed on these early precedents. The
Kingdom of France, developing from
Charles the Bald's
West Francia, was continually reluctant to acknowledge the Emperor's senior status among European monarchs. As Latin Christendom expanded in the
High Middle Ages, new kingdoms appeared outside of the Empire and would similarly bid for territory and supremacy. France itself was instrumental in the developments that led to the Empire's political decline from the 16th to the early 19th centuries. ==Modern-era nationalist revivals==