Sulekha Rani .R PGT Chemistry, KV NTPC Kayamkulam
Early History of Germany
The Germanic tribes, which probably originated from a
mixture of peoples along the Baltic Sea coast, inhabited the northern part of
the European continent by about 500 B.C. By 100 B.C., they had advanced into
the central and southern areas of present-day Germany. At that time, there were
three major tribal groups: the eastern Germanic peoples lived along the Oder
and Vistula rivers; the northern Germanic peoples inhabited the southern part
of present-day Scandinavia; and the western Germanic peoples inhabited the
extreme south of Jutland and the area between the North Sea and the Elbe,
Rhine, and Main rivers. The Rhine provided a temporary boundary between
Germanic and Roman territory after the defeat of the Suevian tribe by Julius
Caesar about 70 B.C.
Medieval Germany -- The Merovingian Dynasty, ca. 500-751
In Gaul a fusion of Roman and Germanic societies
occurred. Clovis, a Salian Frank belonging to a family supposedly descended
from a mythical hero named Merovech, became the absolute ruler of a Germanic
kingdom of mixed Roman-Germanic population in 486. He consolidated his rule
with victories over the Gallo-Romans and all the Frankish tribes, and his
successors made other Germanic tribes subjects of the Merovingian Dynasty.
The remaining 250 years of the
dynasty, however, were marked by internecine struggles and a gradual decline.
During the period of Merovingian rule, the Franks reluctantly began to adopt
Christianity following the baptism of Clovis, an event that inaugurated the
alliance between the Frankish kingdom and the Roman Catholic Church. The most
notable of the missionaries responsible for Christianizing the tribes living in
Germany was Saint Boniface (ca. 675-754), an English missionary who is
considered the founder of German Christianity.
Medieval Germany -- The Carolingian Dynasty, 752-911
Charlemagne - around 1512, Albrecht DÜRER, oil on the lime wood, Germanisches Nationalmuseum, Nuremberg
Charlemagne inherited the Frankish crown in 768.
During his reign (768-814), he subdued Bavaria, conquered Lombardy and Saxony,
and established his authority in central Italy. By the end of the eighth
century, his kingdom, later to become known as the First Reich (empire in
German), included present-day France, the Netherlands, Belgium, and Luxembourg,
as well as a narrow strip of northern Spain, much of Germany and Austria, and
much of the northern half of Italy. Charlemagne, founder of an empire that was
Roman, Christian, and Germanic, was crowned emperor in Rome by the pope in 800.
The Carolingian Empire was based on an alliance
between the emperor, who was a temporal ruler supported by a military retinue,
and the pope of the Roman Catholic Church, who granted spiritual sanction to
the imperial mission. Charlemagne and his son Louis I (r. 814-40) established
centralized authority, appointed imperial counts as administrators, and
developed a hierarchical feudal structure headed by the emperor. Reliant on
personal leadership rather than the Roman concept of legalistic government,
Charlemagne's empire lasted less than a century.
A period of warfare followed the death of Louis. The
Treaty of Verdun (843) restored peace and divided the empire among three sons,
geographically and politically delineating the approximate future territories
of Germany, France, and the area between them, known as the Middle Kingdom. The
eastern Carolingian kings ruled the East Frankish Kingdom, what is now Germany
and Austria; the western Carolingian kings ruled the West Frankish Kingdom,
what became France. The imperial title, however, came to depend increasingly on
rule over the Middle Kingdom. By this time, in addition to a geographical and
political delineation, a cultural and linguistic split had occurred. The
eastern Frankish tribes still spoke Germanic dialects; the language of the
western Frankish tribes, under the influence of Gallo-Latin, had developed into
Old French. Because of these linguistic differences, the Treaty of Verdun had
to be written in two languages.
Not only had Charlemagne's empire been divided into three
kingdoms, but the East Frankish Kingdom was being weakened by the rise of
regional duchies, the so-called stem duchies of Franconia, Saxony, Bavaria,
Swabia, and Lorraine, which acquired the trappings of petty kingdoms. The
fragmentation in the east marked the beginning of German particularism, in
which territorial rulers promoted their own interests and autonomy without
regard to the kingdom as a whole. The duchies were strengthened when the
Carolingian line died out in 911; subsequent kings would have no direct blood
link to the throne with which to legitimate their claims to power against the
territorial dukes.
Medieval Germany -- The Saxon Dynasty, 919-1024
Because the dukes of the East Frankish Kingdom had
wearied of being ruled by a foreign king, they elected a German to serve as
their king once the Carolingian line expired. The election of Conrad I (r.
911-18), Duke of Franconia, as the first German king has been marked by some
historians as the beginning of German history.
Conrad's successor, Henry I (r. 919-36), Duke of
Saxony, was powerful enough to designate his son Otto I (r. 936-73) as his
successor. Otto was so able a ruler that he came to be known as Otto the Great.
He overpowered other territorial dukes who rebelled against his rule and
reversed the particularist trend for a time. But he failed to establish the
principle of hereditary succession, and the German dukes continued to elect one
of their number as king. But through military successes and alliances with the
church, which had extensive properties and military forces of its own, Otto
expanded the crown lands, thus laying the foundation of monarchical power.
Henry, Otto, and the later Saxon kings also encouraged eastward expansion and
colonization, thereby extending German rule to parts of the Slavic territories
of Poland and Bohemia. The Magyars' westward expansion was halted by Otto in
955 at the Battle of Lechfeld in southern Germany.
In 962 Otto, who had also gained control of the Middle
Kingdom, was formally crowned king of the Romans. The possessor of this title
would, in time, be known as the Holy Roman Emperor. The coronation came to be
seen as the founding of the Holy Roman Empire, an institution that lasted until
1806 and profoundly influenced the course of German history. The coronation of
Otto was a moment of glory for the German monarchy, but its long-term
consequences were not beneficial because as German kings sought to exercise the
offices of the empire they became involved in Italian affairs, often to such an
extent that they neglected the governing of Germany. Because German kings were
so often in Italy, the German nobility became stronger. In addition, the
presence of German kings in Italy as emperors soon caused them to come into
conflict with the papacy, which did not hesitate to seek allies in Italy or
Germany to limit imperial power. A last problem was that the succession to the
German throne was often uncertain or was hotly contested because it was not
inheritable, but could only be attained through election by the German dukes.
This circumstance made the formation of an orderly or stable central government
nearly impossible. In the opinion of some historians, Otto's triumph in Rome in
962 ultimately was disastrous for Germany because it delayed German unification
by centuries.
Medieval Germany -- The Salian Dynasty, 1024-1125
After the death of the last Saxon king in 1024, the crown passed
to the Salians, a Frankish tribe. The four Salian kings--Conrad II,
Henry III, Henry IV, and Henry V--who ruled Germany as kings
from 1024 to 1125, established their monarchy as a major European power. Their
main accomplishment was the development of a permanent administrative system
based on a class of public officials answerable to the crown.
Conrad II, (born c. 990—died June 4, 1039, Utrecht, Ger., Holy Roman Empire), German king (1024–39) and Holy Roman emperor (1027–39), founder of the Salian dynasty
A principal reason for the success of the early Salians was their alliance with the church, a policy begun by Otto I,
which gave them the material support they needed to subdue rebellious dukes. In
time, however, the church came to regret this close relationship. The
relationship broke down in 1075 during what came to be known as the Investiture
Contest, a struggle in which the reformist pope, Gregory VII, demanded that
Henry IV (r. 1056-1106) renounce his rights over the German church. The pope
also attacked the concept of monarchy by divine right and gained the support of
significant elements of the German nobility interested in limiting imperial
absolutism. More important, the pope forbade church officials under pain of
excommunication to support Henry as they had so freely done in the past. In the
end, Henry journeyed to Canossa in northern Italy in 1077 to do penance and to
receive absolution from the pope. However, he resumed the practice of lay
investiture (appointment of religious officials by civil authorities) and
arranged the election of an antipope.
Henry IV begging Matilda of Canossa
The German monarch's struggle with the papacy resulted in a war
that ravaged German lands from 1077 until the Concordat of Worms in 1122. This
agreement stipulated that the pope was to appoint high church officials but
gave the German king the right to veto the papal choices. Imperial control of
Italy was lost for a time, and the imperial crown became dependent on the
political support of competing aristocratic factions. Feudalism also became
more widespread as freemen sought protection by swearing allegiance to a lord.
These powerful local rulers, having thereby acquired extensive territories and
large military retinues, took over administration within their territories and
organized it around an increasing number of castles. The most powerful of these
local rulers came to be called princes rather than dukes.
According to the laws of the German feudal system, the king had no
claims on the vassals of the other princes, only on those living within his
family's territory. Lacking the support of the formerly independent vassals and
weakened by the increasing hostility of the church, the monarchy lost its
preeminence. Thus, the Investiture Contest strengthened local power in Germany
in contrast to what was happening in France and England, where the growth of a
centralized royal power was under way.
Salian Dynasty coins
The Investiture Contest had an additional effect. The long
struggle between emperor and pope hurt Germany's intellectual life--in this
period largely confined to monasteries--and Germany no longer led or even kept
pace with developments occurring in France and Italy. For instance, no
universities were founded in Germany until the fourteenth century.
Medieval Germany -- The Hohenstaufen Dynasty, 1138-1254
Following the death of Henry V (r. 1106-25), the last of the
Salian kings, the dukes refused to elect his nephew because they feared that he
might restore royal power. Instead, they elected a noble connected to the Saxon
noble family Welf (often written as Guelf). This choice inflamed the
Hohenstaufen family of Swabia, which also had a claim to the throne. Although a
Hohenstaufen became king in 1138, the dynastic feud with the Welfs continued.
The feud became international in nature when the Welfs sided with the papacy
and its allies, most notably the cities of northern Italy, against the imperial
ambitions of the Hohenstaufen Dynasty.
The second of the Hohenstaufen rulers, Frederick I (r. 1152-90),
also known as Frederick Barbarossa because of his red beard, struggled
throughout his reign to restore the power and prestige of the German monarchy,
but he had little success. Because the German dukes had grown stronger both
during and after the Investiture Contest and because royal access to the
resources of the church in Germany was much reduced, Frederick was forced to go
to Italy to find the finances needed to restore the king's power in Germany. He
was soon crowned emperor in Italy, but decades of warfare on the peninsula yielded
scant results. The papacy and the prosperous city-states of northern Italy were
traditional enemies, but the fear of imperial domination caused them to join
ranks to fight Frederick. Under the skilled leadership of Pope Alexander III,
the alliance suffered many defeats but ultimately was able to deny the emperor
a complete victory in Italy. Frederick returned to Germany old and embittered.
He had vanquished one notable opponent and member of the Welf family, Saxony's
Henry the Lion, but his hopes of restoring the power and prestige of his family
and the monarchy seemed unlikely to be met by the end of his life.
During Frederick's long stays in Italy, the German princes became
stronger and began a successful colonization of Slavic lands. Offers of reduced
taxes and manorial duties enticed many Germans to settle in the east as the
area's original inhabitants were killed or driven away. Because of this
colonization, the empire increased in size and came to include Pomerania,
Silesia, Bohemia, and Moravia. A quickening economic life in Germany increased
the number of towns and gave them greater importance. It was also during this
period that castles and courts replaced monasteries as centers of culture.
Growing out of this courtly culture, German medieval literature reached its
peak in lyrical love poetry, the Minnesang, and in narrative
epic poems such asTristan, Parzival, and the Nibelungenlied.
Henry VI Hohenstaufen receives the legates of Palermo
Frederick died in 1190 while on a crusade and was succeeded by his
son, Henry VI (r. 1190-97). Elected king even before his father's death, Henry
went to Rome to be crowned emperor. A death in his wife's family gave him
possession of Sicily, a source of vast wealth. Henry failed to make royal and
imperial succession hereditary, but in 1196 he succeeded in gaining a pledge
that his infant son Frederick would receive the German crown. Faced with
difficulties in Italy and confident that he would realize his wishes in Germany
at a later date, Henry returned to the south, where it appeared he might unify
the peninsula under the Hohenstaufen name. After a series of military
victories, however, he died of natural causes in Sicily in 1197.
Because the election of the three-year-old Frederick to be German
king appeared likely to make orderly rule difficult, the boy's uncle, Philip,
was chosen to serve in his place. Other factions elected a Welf candidate, Otto
IV, as counterking, and a long civil war began. Philip was murdered by Otto IV
in 1208. Otto IV in turn was killed by the French at the Battle of Bouvines in
1214. Frederick returned to Germany in 1212 from Sicily, where he had grown up,
and became king in 1215. As Frederick II (r. 1215-50), he spent little time in
Germany because his main concerns lay in Italy. Frederick made significant
concessions to the German nobles, such as those put forth in an imperial
statute of 1232, which made princes virtually independent rulers within their
territories. The clergy also became more powerful. Although Frederick was one
of the most energetic, imaginative, and capable rulers of the Middle Ages, he
did nothing to draw the disparate forces in Germany together. His legacy was
thus that local rulers had more authority after his reign than before it.
The anarchy of the Great Interregnum
By the time of Frederick's death in 1250, there was little
centralized power in Germany. The Great Interregnum (1256-73), a period of
anarchy in which there was no emperor and German princes vied for individual
advantage, followed the death of Frederick's son Conrad IV in 1254. In this
short period, the German nobility managed to strip many powers away from the
already diminished monarchy. Rather than establish sovereign states, however,
many nobles tended to look after their families. Their many heirs created more
and smaller estates. A largely free class of officials also formed, many of
whom eventually acquired hereditary rights to administrative and legal offices.
These trends compounded political fragmentation within Germany.
Despite the political chaos of the Hohenstaufen period, the
population grew from an estimated 8 million in 1200 to about 14 million in
1300, and the number of towns increased tenfold. The most heavily urbanized
areas of Germany were located in the south and the west. Towns often developed
a degree of independence, but many were subordinate to local rulers or the
emperor. Colonization of the east also continued in the thirteenth century,
most notably through the efforts of the Knights of the Teutonic Order, a
society of soldier-monks. German merchants also began trading extensively on
the Baltic.
Medieval Germany -- The Empire Under the Early Habsburgs
Rudolf of Habsburg
The Great Interregnum ended in 1273 with the election of Rudolf of
Habsburg as king-emperor. After the interregnum period, Germany's emperors came
from three powerful dynastic houses: Luxemburg (in Bohemia), Wittelsbach (in
Bavaria), and Habsburg (in Austria). These families alternated on the imperial
throne until the crown returned in the mid-fifteenth century to the Habsburgs,
who retained it with only one short break until the dissolution of the Holy
Roman Empire in 1806.
The Golden Bull of 1356, an edict promulgated by Emperor Charles
IV (r. 1355-78) of the Luxemburg family, provided the basic constitution of the
empire up to its dissolution. It formalized the practice of having seven
electors--the archbishops of the cities of Trier, Cologne, and Mainz, and the
rulers of the Palatinate, Saxony, Brandenburg, and Bohemia--choose the emperor,
and it represented a further political consolidation of the principalities. The
Golden Bull ended the long-standing attempt of various emperors to unite
Germany under a hereditary monarchy. Henceforth, the emperor shared power with
other great nobles like himself and was regarded as merely the first among
equals. Without the cooperation of the other princes, he could not rule.
The Golden Bull of 1356
The princes were not absolute rulers either. They had made so many
concessions to other secular and ecclesiastical powers in their struggle
against the emperor that many smaller principalities, ecclesiastical states,
and towns had retained a degree of independence. Some of the smaller noble
holdings were so poor that they had to resort to outright extortion of
travelers and merchants to sustain themselves, with the result that journeying
through Germany could be perilous in the late Middle Ages. All of Germany was
under the nominal control of the emperor, but because his power was so weak or
uncertain, local authorities had to maintain order--yet another indication of
Germany's political fragmentation.
Despite the lack of a strong central authority, Germany prospered
during the 14th and 15th centuries. Its population increased from about 14
million in 1300 to about 16 million in 1500, even though the Black Death killed
as much as one-third of the population in the mid-fourteenth century.
Located in the center of Europe, Germany was active in
international trade. Rivers flowing to the north and the east and the Alpine
passes made Germany a natural conduit conveying goods from the Mediterranean to
northern Europe. Germany became a noted manufacturing center. Trade and
manufacturing led to the growth of towns, and in 1500 an estimated 10 percent
of the population lived in urban areas. Many towns became wealthy and were
governed by a sophisticated and self-confident merchant oligarchy. Dozens of
towns in northern Germany joined together to form the Hanseatic League, a
trading federation that managed shipping and trade on the Baltic and in many
inland areas, even into Bohemia and Hungary. The Hanseatic League had
commercial offices in such widely dispersed towns as London, Bergen (in present-day
Norway), and Novgorod (in present-day Russia). The league was at one time so
powerful that it successfully waged war against the king of Denmark. In
southern Germany, towns banded together on occasion to protect their interests
against encroachments by either imperial or local powers. Although these urban
confederations were not always strong enough to defeat their opponents, they
sometimes succeeded in helping their members to avoid complete subjugation. In
what was eventually to become Switzerland, one confederation of towns had
sufficient military might to win virtual independence from the Holy Roman
Empire in 1499.
Master and Knight of the Teutonic Order
The Knights of the Teutonic Order continued their settlement of
the east until their dissolution early in the sixteenth century, in spite of a
serious defeat at the hands of the Poles at the Battle of Tannenberg in 1410.
The lands that came under the control of this monastic military, whose members
were pledged to chastity and to the conquest and conversion of heathens,
included territory that one day would become eastern Prussia and would be
inhabited by Germans until 1945. German settlement in areas south of the
territories controlled by the Knights of the Teutonic Order also continued, but
generally at the behest of eastern rulers who valued the skills of German
peasant-farmers. These new settlers were part of a long process of peaceful
German immigration to the east that lasted for centuries, with Germans moving
into all of eastern Europe and even deep into Russia.
Intellectual growth accompanied German expansion. Several
universities were founded, and Germany came into increased contact with the
humanists active elsewhere in Europe. The invention of movable type in the
middle of the fifteenth century in Germany also contributed to a more lively
intellectual climate. Religious ferment was common, most notably the heretical
movement engendered by the teachings of Jan Hus (ca. 1372-1415) in Bohemia. Hus
eventually was executed, but the dissatisfaction he felt toward the established
church was shared by many others throughout German-speaking lands, as could be
seen in the frequent occurrences of popular, mystical religious revivalism
after his death.
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