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3 - The Cult of Charlemagne from His Death to the Accession of Frederick Barbarossa (814–1152)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 May 2024

Vedran Sulovsky
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
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Summary

The third chapter delivers a reassessment of the cult of Charlemagne from his death in 814 to Frederick Barbarossa’s accession in 1152. The use of local Aquensian and regional Lotharingian material shows that the widely known developments of the memory of Charlemagne had a particular regional and unique local tendency. Sulovsky’s focus in this chapter is on the Karlsdekret, a forgery pretending to be Charlemagne’s foundation charter for the city and convent of Aachen. Where historians previously dated it to before about 1147, Sulovsky affirms that the forged seal of Charlemagne, the Karlssiegel, which dates to the late 1120s, must have been impressed on the original copy of the forgery. Thus, the forgery was an imitation of an imperial charter, and it was designed to impress Lothar III in 1127. This small find redates and reshapes all of what we know about the rise of the cult of Charlemagne in crusade-era Europe. Aachen had a particular stake in shaping the memory of its most famous patron, but it also wielded an influence over it as it contained his tomb.

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Making the Holy Roman Empire Holy
Frederick Barbarossa, Saint Charlemagne and the <i>sacrum imperium</i>
, pp. 118 - 137
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

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