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2 - Sacrum imperium II: The Barometer of Lombard Influence at Court (1167–1190 and Beyond)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 May 2024

Vedran Sulovsky
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
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Summary

The second chapter continues the investigation of sacrum imperium, demonstrating that while the imperial chancery used the term more and more frequently, it was only the strong Italian presence at court that kept influencing the imperial notaries to use it and other correlated terms. It is also made clear that the converse was true: when there were no Italians at court, this kind of terminology was not used, even as late as the 1220s. The investigation shows, contrary to expectations, that cities where this terminology was used could be identified, and occasionally even individuals could be pinpointed. Moreover, the presence of courtiers or diplomats from the city of Rome is clearly correlated to the appearance of the tripartite title of the Empire (sacrum Romanum imperium and sacrum imperium Romanum). Thus, the most commonly used title of the Empire for most of its existence was not only invented by the Romans, as Jürgen Petersohn demonstrated, but it was also propagated by them to the rest of the Empire and the world.

Type
Chapter
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Making the Holy Roman Empire Holy
Frederick Barbarossa, Saint Charlemagne and the <i>sacrum imperium</i>
, pp. 77 - 117
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

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