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      Rewriting German History 

      The Age of Assassination: Monarchy and Nation in Nineteenth-Century Europe

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      Palgrave Macmillan UK

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          Kingship and Politics in the Late Ninth Century : Charles the Fat and the End of the Carolingian Empire

          This is a major study of the collapse of the pan-European Carolingian empire and the reign of its last ruler, Charles III 'the Fat' (876–888). The later decades of the empire are conventionally seen as a dismal period of decline and fall, scarred by internal feuding, unfettered aristocratic ambition and Viking onslaught. This book offers an alternative interpretation, arguing that previous generations of historians misunderstood the nature and causes of the end of the empire, and neglected many of the relatively numerous sources for this period. Topics covered include the significance of aristocratic power; political structures; the possibilities and limits of kingship; developments in royal ideology; the struggle with the Vikings and the nature of regional political identities. In proposing these explanations for the empire's disintegration, the book has broader implications for our understanding of this formative period of European history more generally.
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            Caesarism, Circuses, and Monuments

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              Itinerant Kingship and Royal Monasteries in Early Medieval Germany, c.936–1075

              In examining the relationship between the royal monasteries in tenth- and eleventh-century Germany and the German monarchs, this book assimilates a great deal of European scholarship on a central problem - that of the realities and structures of power. It focuses on the practical aspects of governing without a capital and while constantly in motion, and on the payments and services which monasteries provided to the king and which in turn supported the king's travel economically and politically. Royal-monastic relations are investigated in the context of the 'itinerant kingship' of the period to determine how this relationship functioned in practice. It emerges that German rulers did in fact make much greater use of their royal monasteries than has hitherto been recognised.
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                Author and book information

                Book Chapter
                2015
                : 121-141
                10.1057/9781137347794_7
                e674254b-94c5-4208-a142-f0d0fa2a39e9

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

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