Charlemagne,
or Charles the Great, succeeded his father, Pepin, on the
throne in the year 768. This prince, though the hero of
numerous romantic legends, appears greater in history than
in fiction. Whether we regard him as a warrior or as a
legislator, as a patron of learning or as the civilizer of
a barbarous nation, he is entitled to our warmest
admiration. Such he is in history; but the romancers
represent him as often weak and passionate, the victim of
treacherous counsellors, and at the mercy of turbulent
barons, on whose prowess he depends for the maintenance of
his throne. The historical
representation is doubtless the true one, for it is
handed down in trustworthy records, and is confirmed by
the events of the age. At the height of his power, the
French empire extended over what we now call France,
Germany, Switzerland, Holland, Belgium, and a great part
of Italy.
[Image: Charlemagne
crowned king of the Franks (768) (Grandes
Chroniques de France)]
[Map: Europe
in the Age of Charlemagne]
[Map: Holy
Roman Empire Under Charlemagne - 800 A.D.]
In the year 800, Charlemagne, being in Rome, whither he
had gone with a numerous army to protect the Pope,
was crowned by the Pontiff Emperor of the West. On
Christmas day Charles entered the Church of St. Peter, as
if merely to take his part in the celebration of the mass
with the rest of the congregation. When he approached the
altar and stooped in the act of prayer, the Pope stepped
forward and placed a crown of gold upon his head; and
immediately the Roman people shouted, "Life and
victory to Charles the August, crowned by God the great
and pacific Emperor of the Romans." The Pope then
prostrated himself before him, and paid him reverence,
according to the custom established in the times of the
ancient Emperors, and concluded the ceremony by anointing
him with consecrated oil.
[Biography: Pope
Leo III]
[Commentary: Significance
of Charlemagne's coronation]
[Image: Charlemagne
crowned emperor (Grandes Chroniques de France)]
Charlemagne's
wars were chiefly against the pagan and barbarous
people, who, under the name of Saxons,
inhabited the countries now called Hanover and Holland. He
also led expeditions against the Saracens of Spain; but
his wars with the Saracens were not carried on, as the
romances assert, in France, but on the soil of Spain. He
entered Spain by the Eastern Pyrenees, and made an easy
conquest of Barcelona and Pampeluna (Pamplona). But
Saragossa refused to open her gates to him, and Charles
ended by negotiating, and accepting a vast sum of gold as
the price of his return over the Pyrenees.
[Image: Franks
Combating the Saxons (Grandes Chroniques de France)]
[Image: Saracens
disguised as devils (Grandes Chroniques de France)]
[Image: Charlemagne
massacring the Saracens (Grandes Chroniques de
France)]
On his way back, he marched with his whole army through
the gorges of the mountains by way of the valleys of
Engui, Eno, and Roncesvalles. The chief of this region had
waited upon Charlemagne, on his advance, as a faithful
vassal of the monarchy; but now, on the return of the
Franks, he had called together all the wild mountaineers
who acknowledged him as their chief, and they occupied the
heights of the mountains under which the army had to pass.
The main body of the troops met with no obstruction, and
received no intimation of danger; but the rear-guard,
which was considerably behind, and encumbered with its
plunder, was overwhelmed by the mountaineers in the pass
of Roncesvalles, and slain to a man. Some of the bravest
of the Frankish chiefs perished on this occasion, among
whom is mentioned Roland or Orlando, governor of the
marches or frontier of Brittany. His name became famous in
after times, and the disaster of Roncesvalles and death of
Roland became eventually the most celebrated episode in
the vast cycle of romance.
[Commentary: Aragon
and Navarre]
[Image: Franks
and Saracens at the Battle of Roncesvalles (Grandes
Chroniques de France)]
[Source: The
Song of Roland (translation)]
Though after this there were hostile encounters between
the armies of Charlemagne and the Saracens, they were of
small account, and generally on the soil of Spain. Thus
the historical foundation for the stories of the romancers
is but scanty, unless we suppose the events of an earlier
and of a later age to be incorporated with those of
Charlemagne's own time.
[Image: Flight
of the Saracens (Grandes Chroniques de France)]
[Biography: Charlemagne
the King]
[Document: Summons
to Charlemagne's Army]
There is, however, a pretended history, which for a
long time was admitted as authentic, and attributed to Turpin,
Archbishop of Rheims, a real personage of the time of
Charlemagne. Its title is "History of Charles the
Great and Orlando." It is now unhesitatingly
considered as a collection of popular traditions, produced
by some credulous and unscrupulous monk, who thought to
give dignity to his romance by ascribing its authorship to
a well-known and eminent individual. It introduces its
pretended author, Bishop Turpin, in this manner:-
"Turpin, Archbishop of Rheims, the friend and
secretary of Charles the Great, excellently skilled in
sacred and profane literature, of a genius equally
adapted to prose and verse, the advocate of the poor,
beloved of God in his life and conversation, who often
fought the Saracens, hand to hand, by the Emperor's
side, he relates the acts of Charles the Great in one
book, and flourished under Charles and his son Louis, to
the year of our Lord eight hundred and thirty."
The titles of some of Archbishop Turpin's chapters will
show the nature of his history. They are these: "Of
the Walls of Pampeluna, that fell of themselves."
"Of the War of the holy Facundus, where the Spears
grew." (Certain of the Christians fixed their spears,
in the evening, erect in the ground, before the castle;
and found them, in the morning, covered with bark and
branches.) "How the Sun stood still for Three Days,
and the Slaughter of Four Thousand Saracens."
Turpin's history has perhaps been the source of the
marvellous adventures which succeeding poets and romancers
have accumulated around the names of Charlemagne and his
Paladins, or Peers. But Ariosto
and the other Italian poets have drawn from different
sources, and doubtless often from their own invention,
numberless other stories which they attribute to the same
heroes, not hesitating to quote as their authority
"the good Turpin," though his history contains
no trace of them;- and the more outrageous the
improbability, or rather the impossibility, of their
narrations, the more attentive are they to cite "the
Archbishop," generally adding their testimonial to
his unquestionable veracity.
The principal Italian poets who have sung the
adventures of the peers of Charlemagne are Pulci, Boiardo,
and Ariosto. The characters of Orlando, Rinaldo, Astolpho,
Gano, and others, are the same in all, though the
adventures attributed to them are different, Boiardo tells
us of the loves of Orlando, Ariosto
of his disappointment and consequent madness, Pulci of his
death.
Ogier, the Dane [Otker/Holger], is
a real personage. History agrees with romance in
representing him as a powerful lord who, originally from
Denmark and a Pagan, embraced Christianity, and took
service under Charlemagne. He revolted from the Emperor,
and was driven into exile. He afterwards led one of those
bands of piratical Norsemen
which ravaged France under the reigns of Charlemagne's
degenerate successors. [map]
The description which an ancient chronicler gives of
Charlemagne, as described by Ogier, is so picturesque,
that we are tempted to transcribe it. Charlemagne was
advancing to the siege of Pavia. Didier [Desiderius],
King of the Lombards,
was in the city with Ogier, to whom he had given refuge.
When they learned that the king was approaching, they
mounted a high tower, whence they could see far and wide
over the country. "They first saw advancing the
engines of war, fit for the armies of Darius or Julius
Caesar. 'There is Charlemagne,' said Didier. 'No,' said
Ogier. The Lombard next saw a vast body of soldiers, who
filled all the plain. 'Certainly Charles advances with
that host,' said the king. 'Not yet,' replied Ogier. 'What
hope for us,' resumed the king, 'if he brings with him a
greater host than that?' At last Charles appeared, his
head covered with an iron helmet, his hands with iron
gloves, his breast and shoulders with a cuirass of iron,
his left hand holding an iron lance, while his right hand
grasped his sword. Those who went before the monarch,
those who marched at his side, and those who followed him,
all had similar arms. Iron covered the fields and the
roads; iron points reflected the rays of the sun. This
iron, so hard, was borne by a people whose hearts were
harder still. The blaze of the weapons flashed terror into
the streets of the city."
[Webmaster's Note: Pavia fell in June, 774
A.D., Charlemagne annexed the entire kingdom of Lombardy,
and the defeated Desiderius and his family were sent off
to live in monasteries. Ogier the Dane returned to Denmark
where for years he was the scourge of the Saxons. Ogier
and Charlemagne were eventually reconciled and the
exploits of Holger Danske or Ogier le Danois
have become enshrined in both Danish and French medieval
legend and folklore. (See Chapters 24,
25, and 26.)]
[Map: 768
A.D. - Europe and the Kingdom of the Lombards]
[Source: Life
of Charlemagne, Monk of St. Gall (Notker the
Stammerer)]
This picture of Charlemagne in his military aspect
would be incomplete without a corresponding one of his
"mood of peace." One of the greatest of modern
historians, M. Guizot, has compared the glory of
Charlemagne to a brilliant meteor, rising suddenly out of
the darkness of barbarism to disappear no less suddenly in
the darkness of feudalism. But the light of this meteor
was not extinguished, and reviving civilization owed much
that was permanently beneficial to the great Emperor of
the Franks. His ruling hand is seen in the legislation of
his time, as well as in the administration of the laws. He
encouraged learning; he upheld the clergy, who were the
only peaceful and intellectual class, against the
encroaching and turbulent barons; he was an affectionate
father, and watched carefully over the education of his
children, both sons and daughters. Of his encouragement of
learning, we will give some particulars.
[Image: Charlemagne
receiving bishops (Grandes Chroniques de France)]
He caused learned men to be brought from Italy and from
other foreign countries, to revive the public schools of
France, which had been prostrated by the disorders of
preceding times. He recompensed these learned men
liberally, and kept some of them near himself, honoring
them with his friendship. Of these the most celebrated is Alcuin,
an Englishman, whose writings still remain, and prove him
to have been both a learned and a wise man. With the
assistance of Alcuin, and others like him, he founded an
academy or royal school, which should have the direction
of the studies of all the schools of the kingdom.
Charlemagne himself was a member of this academy on equal
terms with the rest. He attended its meetings, and
fulfilled all the duties of an academician. Each member
took the name of some famous man of antiquity. Alcuin
called himself Horace, another took the name of Augustin,
a third of Pindar. Charlemagne, who knew the Psalms by
heart, and who had an ambition to be, according to his
conception, a king after God's own heart, received from
his brother academicians the name of David.
Of the respect entertained for him by foreign nations
an interesting proof is afforded in the embassy sent to
him by the Caliph of the Arabians, the celebrated Haroun
al Raschid, a prince in character and conduct not unlike
to Charlemagne. The ambassadors brought with them, besides
other rich presents, a clock, the first that was seen in
Europe, which excited universal admiration. It had the
form of a twelve-sided edifice with twelve doors. These
doors formed niches, in each of which was a little statue
representing one of the hours. At the striking of the hour
the doors, one for each stroke, were seen to open, and
from the doors to issue as many of the little statues,
which, following one another, marched gravely round the
tower. The motion of the clock was caused by water, and
the striking was effected by balls of brass equal to the
number of the hours, which fell upon a cymbal of the same
metal, the number falling being determined by the
discharge of the water, which, as it sunk in the vessel,
allowed their escape.
[Image: Charlemagne
receiving gifts (Grandes Chroniques de France)]
Charlemagne was succeeded by his son Louis,
a well-intentioned but feeble prince, in whose reign the
fabric reared by Charles began rapidly to crumble. Louis
was followed successively by two Charleses, incapable
princes, whose weak and often tyrannical conduct is no
doubt the source of incidents of that character ascribed
in the romances to Charlemagne.
[Map: Holy
Roman Empire at the Death of Charlemagne, 814 A.D.]
[Maps: The
Western Empire 843 A.D. - 887 A.D.]
[Map: Partioning
of the Empire of Charlemagne, 843 and 870 A.D.]
[Map: Western
Europe, 880 A.D.]
The lawless and disobedient deportment of Charles's
paladins, instances of which are so frequent in the
romantic legends, was also a trait of the declining
empire, but not of that of Charlemagne.
[Genealogy: Charlemagne
- Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, King of the Franks]
[History: European
Middle Ages - Medieval France]