Book contents
- After Charlemagne
- After Charlemagne
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Additional material
- 1 Italy after Charlemagne
- 2 A Brief Introduction to Italian Political History until 875
- Section I Was There a Carolingian Italy?
- Section II Organizing Italy
- Section III Carolingian Rulers
- 9 Staying Lombard While Becoming Carolingian?
- 10 Carolingian Fathers and Sons in Italy
- 11 A King in Training?
- Section IV Cities, Courts and Carolingians
- Bibliography
- Index
9 - Staying Lombard While Becoming Carolingian?
Italy under King Pippin
from Section III - Carolingian Rulers
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 December 2020
- After Charlemagne
- After Charlemagne
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Additional material
- 1 Italy after Charlemagne
- 2 A Brief Introduction to Italian Political History until 875
- Section I Was There a Carolingian Italy?
- Section II Organizing Italy
- Section III Carolingian Rulers
- 9 Staying Lombard While Becoming Carolingian?
- 10 Carolingian Fathers and Sons in Italy
- 11 A King in Training?
- Section IV Cities, Courts and Carolingians
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
This chapter focusses on some aspects of the first stage of Carolingian rule over Italy. Broadly speaking, the focus is set on the three decades between 781 and 810, which correspond to the period in which young Carloman/Pippin was made co-ruler of the Carolingian kingdom of the Lombards. The chapter considers not only some aspects regarding Pippin’s co-rulership over the regnum Langobardorum, which his father Charlemagne had conquered during the campaign of 773–774, but also some major transformations that took place in different areas of the realm under their political action. In the first section, the chapter recapitulates some of the results recently acquired through research with diverse perspectives and interests. In the second section, it focusses on some new aspects. Finally, it adds some further conjectures which may need to be more deeply investigated in the near future.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- After CharlemagneCarolingian Italy and its Rulers, pp. 135 - 147Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020