Impero: tunc urbes, nunc mea regna polus.
Written by Hildebert, bishop of Le Mans, and afterwards archbishop of Tours (born A.D. 1057). Extracted from his works as printed by Migne, Patrologiæ Cursus Completus[436].
INDEX.
- A.
- Aachen, [72], [77], [86], [148], [212], [316] note, [403].
- Adalbert (St.), [245]; the church founded at Rome to receive his ashes, [286].
- Adelheid (Queen of Italy), account of her adventures, [83].
- Adolf of Nassau, [221], [222], [262].
- Adso, his Vita Antichristi, [114] note.
- Aistulf the Lombard, [39].
- Alaric, his desire to preserve the institutions of the Empire, [17], [19].
- Alberic (consul or senator), [83].
- Albert I (son of Rudolf of Hapsburg), [221], [224], [262].
- Albigenses, revolt of the, [241].
- Alboin, his invasion of Italy, [36].
- Alcuin of York, [59], [66], [96], [201].
- Alexander III (Pope), Frederick I's contest with, [170]; their meeting at Venice, [171].
- Alfonso of Castile, his double election with Richard of England, [212], [229].
- America, discovery of, [311].
- Anastasius, his account of the coronation of Charles, [55].
- Angelo (Michael), rebuilding of the Capitol by, [295].
- Antichrist, views respecting, in the earlier Middle Ages, [114] note; in later times, [334].
- Architecture, Roman, [48], [290]; analogy between it and the civil and ecclesiastical constitution, [296]; preservation of an antique character in both, [296].
- Ardoin (Marquis of Ivrea), [149].
- Aristocracy, barbarism of the, in the Middle Ages, [289]; struggles of the Teutonic Emperors against the, [388].
- Arles; see [Burgundy].
- Arnold of Brescia, Rome under, [174], [252], [276]; put to death at the instance of Pope Hadrian, [278], [299] note.
- Arnulf (Emperor), [78].
- Athanaric, [17].
- Athanasius, the triumph of, [12].
- Athaulf the Visigoth, his thoughts and purposes respecting the Roman Empire, [19], [30].
- Augsburg, [259]; treaty of, [334].
- Augustine, [94].
- Aulic Council, the, [340], [342] note.
- Austria, privilege of, [199]; her claim to represent the Roman Empire, [368], [381].
- Austrian succession, war of the, [352].
- Avignon, exactions of the court of, [219]; its subservience to France, [219], [243].
- Avitus, letter of, on Sigismund's behalf, [18].
- B.
- Barbarians, feared by the Romans, [14]; Roman armies largely composed of, [14]; admitted to Roman titles and honours, [15]; their feelings towards the Roman Empire, [16]; their desire to preserve its institutions, [17]; value of the Roman officials and Christian bishops to the, [19].
- Bartolommeo (San), the church of, [287].
- Basil the Macedonian and Lewis II, [191].
- 'Basileus,' the title of, [143], [191].
- Basilica, erected at Aachen by Charles the Great, [76] note.
- Belisarius, his war with the Ostrogoths, [29], [273].
- [Bell-tower], or campanile, in the churches of Rome, [294].
- Benedict of Soracte, [51] note.
- Benedict VIII (Pope), alleged decree of, [197].
- Benevento, the Annals of, [150].
- Berengar of Friuli, [82]; his death, [83].
- Berengar II (King of Italy), [83].
- Bernard (St.), [109] note.
- Bible, rights of the Empire proved from the, [112]; perversion of its meaning, [114].
- Bohemia, acquired by Luxemburg A.D. 1309, [222]; the king of, an elector, [230].
- Boniface VIII (Pope), his extravagant pretensions, [109], [247]; declares himself Vicar of the Empire, [219] note.
- Boso, [81], [395].
- Bosphorus, removal of the seat of government to the, [154].
- Britain, abandoned by Imperial Government, [24]; Roman Civil Law not forgotten in, at a late date, [32]; Roman ensigns and devices in, [258].
- Buildings, the old, destruction and alteration of, by invaders, [291]; by the Romans of the Middle Ages, [292]; by modern restorers of churches, [292].
- Bull, the Golden, of Charles IV, [225], [230], [236].
- [Burgundy], the kingdom of, Otto's policy towards, [143]; added to the Empire under Conrad II, [151]; effect of its loss on the Empire, [305]; confusion caused by the name, [395]; ten senses in which it is met with, [395]- [397].
- Byzantium, effect of the removal of the seat of power to, [9]; Otto's policy towards, [141]; attitude towards Emperor, [189].
- C.
- Campanile; see [Bell-tower].
- Canon law, correspondence between it and the Corpus Juris Civilis, [101]; its consolidation by Gregory IX, [112], [217].
- Capet (Hugh), [142].
- Capitol, rebuilding of the, by Michael Angelo, [295].
- Capitulary of A.D. 802, [65].
- Caracalla (Emperor), effect of his edict, [6].
- Carolingian Emperors, [76].
- Carolingian Empire of the West, its end in A.D. 888, [78]; Florus the Deacon's lament over its dissolution, [85] note.
- Carroccio, the, [178] note, [328].
- Cathari and other heretics, spread of, [241].
- Catholicity or Romanism, [94], [106].
- Celibacy, enforcement of, [158].
- Cenci, name of, [289] note.
- Charlemagne; see [Charles I].
- [Charles] I (the Great), extinguishes the Lombard kingdom, [41]; is received with honours by Pope Hadrian and the people, [41]; his personal ambition, [42]; his treatment of Pope Leo III, [44]; title of 'Champion of the Faith and Defender of the Holy See' conferred upon, [47]; crowned at Rome, [48]; important consequences of his coronation, [50], [52]; its real meaning, [52], [80], [81]; contemporary accounts, [53], [64], [65], [84]; their uniformity, [56]; illegality of the transaction, [56]; three theories respecting it held four centuries after, [57]; was the coronation a surprise? [58]; his reluctance to assume the imperial title, [60]; solution suggested by Döllinger, [60]; seeks the hand of Irene, [61]; defect of his imperial title, [61]; theoretically the successor of the whole Eastern line of Emperors, [62], [63]; has nothing to fear from Byzantine Princes, [63]; his authority in matters ecclesiastical, [64]; presses Hadrian to declare Constantine VI a heretic, [64]; his spiritual despotism applauded by subsequent Popes, [64]; importance attached by him to the Imperial name, [65]; issues a Capitulary, [65]; draws closer the connexion of Church and State, [66]; new position in civil affairs acquired with the Imperial title, [67], [68], [69]; his position as Frankish king, [69], [70]; partial failure of his attempt to breathe a Teutonic spirit into Roman forms, [70], [71]; his personal habits and sympathies, [71]; groundlessness of the claims of the modern French to, [71]; the conception of his Empire Roman, not Teutonic, [72]; his Empire held together by the Church, [73]; appreciation of his character generally, [73], [74]; impress of his mind on mediæval society, [74]; buried at Aachen, [74]; inscription on his tomb, [74]; canonised as a saint, [75]; his plan of Empire, [76].
- Charles II (the Bald), [77], [156], [157].
- Charles III (the Fat), [78], [81].
- Charles IV, [223]; his electoral constitution, [225]; his Golden Bull, [225], [236]; general results of his policy, [236]; his object through life, [236]; the University of Prague founded by, [237]; welcomed into Italy by Petrarch, [254].
- Charles V, accession of, [319]; casts in his lot with the Catholics, [321]; the momentous results, [322]; failure of his repressive policy, [322].
- Charles VI, [348], [351], [352].
- Charles VII, his disastrous reign, [351].
- Charles VIII (King of France), his pretensions on Naples and Milan, [315].
- Charles Martel, [36], [38].
- Charles of Valois, [223].
- Charles the Bold and Frederick III, [249].
- Chemnitz, his comments on the condition and prospects of the Empire, [339].
- Childeric, his deposition by the Holy See, [39].
- Chivalry, the orders of, [250].
- Church, the, opposed by the Emperors, [10]; growth of, [10]; alliance of, with the State, [10], [66], [107], [387]; organization of, framed on the model of the secular administration, [11]; the Emperor the head of, [12]; maintains the Imperial idea, [13]; attitude of Charles the Great towards, [65], [66]; the bond that holds together the Empire of Charles, [73]; first gives men a sense of unity, [92]; how regarded in Middle Ages, [92], [370]; draws tighter all bonds of outward union, [94]; unity of, felt to be analogous to that of the Empire, [93]; becomes the exact counterpart of the Empire, [99], [101], [107], [328]; position of, in Germany, [128]; Otto's position towards, [129]; effect of the Reformation upon, [327]; influence of the Empire upon the history of, [384].
- Churches, national, [95], [330].
- Churches of Rome, destruction of old buildings by modern restorers of, [292]; mosaics and bell-tower in the, [294].
- Cities, in Lombardy, [175]; growth of in Germany, [179]; their power, [223].
- Civil law, revival of the study of, [172]; its study forbidden by the Popes in the thirteenth century, [253].
- Civilis, the Batavian, [17].
- Clergy, aversion of the Lombards to the, [37]; their idea of political unity, [96]; their power in the eleventh century, [128]; Gregory VII's condemnation of feudal investitures to the, [158]; their ambition and corruption in the later Middle Age, [290].
- Clovis, his desire to preserve the institutions of the Empire, [17], [30]; his unbroken success, [35].
- Coins, papal, [278] note.
- Colonna (John), Petrarch's letters to, [270] and note; the family of, [281].
- Commons, the, [132], [314].
- Concordat of Worms, [163].
- Confederation of the Rhine, provisions of the, [362].
- Conrad I (King of the East Franks), [122], [226].
- Conrad II, the reign of, [151]; comparison between the prerogative at his accession and at the death of Henry V, [165]; the crown of Burgundy first gained by, [194].
- Conrad III, [165], [277].
- Conrad IV, [210].
- Conradin (Frederick II's grandson), murder of, [211].
- Constance, the Council of, [220], [253], [301]; the peace of, signed by Frederick I, [178].
- Constantine, his vigorous policy, [8]; the Donation of, [43], [100], [288] note.
- Constantinople, capture of, [303], [311].
- Coronations, ceremonies at, [112]; the four, gone through by the Emperors, [193], [403]; their meaning, [195]; churches in which they were performed, [284], [288].
- Corpus Juris Civilis, correspondence between, and the Canon Law, [101].
- Councils, General, right of Emperors to summon, [111].
- Counts Palatine, Otto's institution of, [125].
- Crescentius, [146].
- Crown, the Imperial, the right to confer, [57], [61], [81]; not legally attached to Frankish crown or nation, [81]; how treated by the Popes, [82].
- Crowns, the four, [193], [403].
- Crusades, the, [164], [166], [179], [193], [205], [209].
- D.
- Dante, [208]; his attitude towards the Empire, [255]; his treatise De Monarchia, [262]; sketch of its argument, [264] et seq.; its omissions, [268], [299].
- Dark Ages, existing relics of the, [294].
- Decretals, the False, [156].
- Denmark, and the Slaves, [143]; imperial authority in, [184]; its relations to the Empire, [398].
- Diet, the, [126], [314], [353]; its rights as settled A.D. 1648, [340]; its altered character A.D. 1654, [344]; its triflings, [353].
- Diocletian, his vigorous policy, [8].
- Divine right of the Emperor, [246].
- Döllinger (Dr.), [60] note.
- Dominicans, the order of, [205].
- Donation of Constantine, forgery of the, [43], [100], [118] note, [261] note.
- Dukes, the, in Germany, [125].
- E.
- East, imperial pretensions in the, [189].
- Eastern Church, the, [191].
- Eastern Empire, its relations with the Western, [24], [25]; decay of its power in the West, [45]; how regarded by the Popes, [46].
- Edict of Caracalla, [6].
- Edward II (King of England), his declaration of England's independence of the Empire, [187].
- Edward III (King of England) and Lewis the Bavarian, [187]; his election against Charles IV, [223].
- Eginhard, his statement respecting Charles's coronation, [58], [60].
- Elective constitution, the, [227]; difficulty of maintaining the principle in practice, [233]; its object the choice of the fittest man, [233]; restraint of the sovereign, [233]; recognition of the popular will, [234].
- Elector, the title of, its advantage, [232] note; personages upon whom it was conferred by Napoleon, [232].
- Electoral body in primitive times, [226].
- Electoral function, conception of the, [235].
- Electorate, the Eighth, [231]; the Ninth, [231].
- Electors, the Seven, [165], [229]; their names and offices, [230] note; the question of their vote, [257] note.
- Emperor, the position of, in the second century, [5], [6]; the head of the Church, [12], [23], [111]; sanctity of the name, [22], [120]; correspondence between his position and functions and those of the Pope, [104]; proofs from mediæval documents, [109]; and from the coronation ceremonies, [112]; illustrations from mediæval art, [116]; nature of his power, [120]; fusion of his functions with those of German King, [127]; his office feudalized, [130]; attitude of Byzantine Emperors towards, [189]; his dignities and titles, [193], [257], [261], [400]; the title not assumed till the Roman coronation, [196]; origin and results of this practice, [196]; policy of, [222]; his office as peace-maker, [244], [245]; divine right of the, [246]; his right of creating kings, [249]; his international place at the Council of Constance, [253]; change in titles of, [316]; his rights as settled A.D. 1648, [340]; altered meaning of the word now-a-days, [402].
- Emperors, meaning of their four coronations, [193], [195], [403]; persons eligible as, [251]; after Henry VII, [263]; their short-sighted policy towards Rome, [277]; their visits to Rome, [282]; their approach, [283]; their entrance, [284]; hostility of the Pope and people to the, [284]; their burial-places, [287] note; nature of the question at issue between the Popes and the, [385]; their titles, [400].
- Emperors, Carolingian, [76].
- Emperors, Franconian, [133].
- Emperors, Hapsburg, beginning of their influence in Germany, [310]; their policy, [305], [348]; repeated attempts to set them aside, [350]; causes of the long retention of the throne by the, [349]; modern pretensions of, [368], [381].
- Emperors, Italian, [80].
- Emperors, Saxon, [133].
- [Emperors], Swabian or Hohenstaufen, [57], [165], [167].
- Emperors, Teutonic, defects in their title, [61]; their short-sighted policy, [277]; their memorials in Rome, [286]; names of those buried in Italy, [287] note; their struggles against nationality, aristocracy, and popular freedom, [388].
- Empire, the Roman, growth of despotism in, [5]; obliteration of national distinctions in, [6]; unity of, threatened from without and from within, [7], [8]; preserved for a time by the policy of Diocletian and Constantine, [8], [9]; partition of, [9]; influence of the Church in supporting, [13]; armies of, composed of barbarians, [15]; how regarded by the barbarians, [16]; belief in eternity of, [20]; reunion of Italy to, [29]; its influence in the Transalpine provinces, [30]; influence of religion and jurisprudence in supporting, [31], [32]; belief in, not extinct in the eighth century, [44]; restoration of by Charles the Great, [48]; the 'translation' of the, [52], [111], [175], [218]; divided between the grandsons of Charles, [77]; dissolution of, [78]; ideal state supposed to be embodied in, [99]; never, strictly speaking, restored, [102].
- Empire, the Holy Roman, created by Otto the Great, [80], [103]; a prolongation of the Empire of Charles, [80]; wherein it differed therefrom, [80]; motives for establishment of, [84]; identical with Holy Roman Church, [106]; its rights proved from the Bible, [112]; its anti-national character, [120]; its union with the German kingdom, [122]; dissimilarity between the two, [127]; results of the union, [128]; its pretensions in Hungary, [183]; in Poland, [184]; in Denmark, [184]; in France, [185]; in Sweden, [185]; in Spain, [185]; in England, [186]; in Naples, [188]; in Venice, [188]; in the East, [189]; the epithet 'Holy' applied by Frederick I, [199]; origin and meaning of epithet, [200]; its fall with Frederick II, [210]; Italy lost to, [211]; change in its position, [214]; its continuance due to its connexion with the German kingdom, [214]; its relations with the Papacy, [153], [155], [216]; its financial distress, [223]; theory of, in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, [238]; its duties as an international judge and mediator, [244]; why an international power, [248]; illustrations, [249]; attitude of new learning towards, [251], [254], [256]; doctrine of its rights and functions never carried out in fact, [253]; end of its history in Italy, [263], [304]; relation between it and the city, [297]; reaches its lowest point in Frederick III's reign, [301]; its loss of Burgundy, [305], and of Switzerland, [306]; change in its character, [308], [313]; effects of the Renaissance upon, [312]; effects of the Reformation upon, [319], [325]; its influence upon the name and associations of, [332]; narrowing of its bounds, [341]; causes of the continuance of, [344]; its relation to the balance of power, [345]; its position in Europe, [346]; its last phase, [352]; signs of its approaching fall, [356]; its end, [363]; the desire for its re-establishment, [364]; unwillingness of certain states, [364]; technically never extinguished, [364] note; summary of its nature and results, [366]; claim of Austria to represent, [368]; of France, [368]; of Russia, [368]; of Greece, [368]; of the Turks, [368]; parallel between the Papacy and, [369], [373]; never truly mediæval, [373]; sense in which it was Roman, [374]; its condition in the tenth century, [374]; essential principles of, [377]; its influence on Germany, [378]; Austria as heir of, [381]; its bearing on the progress of Europe, [383]; ways in which it affected the political institutions of the Middle Ages, [383]; its influence upon modern jurisprudence, [383]; upon the history of the Church, [384]; influence of its inner life on the minds of men, [387]; principles adverse to, [388]; change marked by its fall, [389]; its relations to the nationalities of Europe, [390]; difficulty of fully understanding, [392].
- Empire and Papacy, interdependence of, [101]; consequences, [102]; struggle between, [153]; their relations, [155], [216]; parallel between, [369]; compared as perpetuation of a name, [372].
- Empire Western, last days of the, [24]; its extinction by Odoacer, [26]; its restoration, [34].
- Empire, French, under Napoleon, [360].
- Engelbert, [113] note.
- England, [45]; Otto's position towards, [143]; authority not exercised by any Emperors in, [186]; vague notion that it must depend on the Empire, [186]; imperial pretensions towards, [187]; position of the regal power in, as compared with Germany, [215]; feudalism in, [343].
- Estate, Third, did not exist in time of Otto the Great, [132].
- Eudes (Count of Champagne), [151].
- Europe, bearing of the Empire on the progress of, [383]; on the nationalities of, [390].
- F.
- False Decretals, the, [156].
- Ferdinand I, [316] note, [323], [401].
- Ferdinand II, accession of, [335]; his plans, [335]; deprives the Palsgrave Frederick of his electoral vote, [231].
- Feudal aristocracy, power of the, [221].
- Feudal king, his peculiar relation to his tenants, [124].
- Feudalism, [90], [123]; reason of its firm grasp upon society, [124]; hostility between it and imperialism, [131]; its results in France, [343]; in England, [343]; in Germany, [344]; struggles of the Teutonic Emperors against, [388].
- Financial distress of the Empire, [223].
- Florus the Deacon's lament over the dissolution of the Carolingian Empire, [85] note.
- Fontenay, battle of, [77].
- France, modern, dates from Hugh Capet, [142]; imperial authority exercised in, [185]; her irritation at Germany's precedence, [185]; growth of the regal power in, as compared with Germany, [215]; alliance of the Protestants with, [325]; territory gained by treaties of Westphalia, [341]; feudalism in, [343]; under Napoleon, [360]; her claim to represent the Roman Empire, [368], [376].
- Francia occidentalis, given to Charles the Bald, [77].
- Francis I, reign of, [351].
- Francis II, accession of, [356]; resignation of imperial crown by, [1], [363].
- Franciscans, the order of, [205].
- Franconia, extinction of the dukedom of, [222].
- Franconian Emperors, [133].
- 'Frank,' sense in which the name was used, [142] note.
- Franks, rise of the, [34]; success of their arms, [35]; Catholics from the first, [36]; their greatness chiefly due to the clergy, [36]; enter Rome, [48].
- Franks, the West, Otto's policy towards, [142].
- Frankfort, synod held at, [64]; coronations at, [316] note, [404].
- Frederick I (Barbarossa), his brilliant reign, [167], [179]; his relations to the Popedom, [167]; his contest with Pope Hadrian IV, [169], [316]; incident at their meeting on the way to Rome, [314] note; his contest with Pope Alexander III, [170]; their meeting at Venice, [171]; magnificent ascriptions of dignity to, [173]; assertion of his prerogative in Italy, [174]; his version of the 'Translation of the Empire,' [175]; his dealings with the rebels of Milan and Tortona, [175]; his temporary success, [177]; victory of the Lombards over, [178]; his prosperity as German king, [178]; his glorious life and happy death, [179]; legend respecting him, [180]; extent of his jurisdiction, [182]; his dominion in the East, [189]; his letter to Saladin, [189]; anecdote of, [214].
- Frederick II, character of, [207]; events of his struggle with the Papacy, [209]; results of his reign, [221]; the charge of heresy against, [251] note; memorials left by, in Rome, [287].
- Frederick III, abases himself before the Romish court, [220]; Charles the Bold seeks an arrangement with, [249]; his calamitous reign, [301].
- Frederick (Count Palatine and King of Bohemia), deprived by Ferdinand II of his electoral vote, [231].
- Frederick of Prussia (the Great), [347], [352], [353] note.
- Freedom popular, growth of, [240]; struggles of the Teutonic Emperors against, [388].
- G.
- Gallic race, political character of the, [376].
- Gauverfassung, the so-called, [123].
- Gerbert (Pope Sylvester II), [146].
- 'German Emperor,' the title of, [127], [317].
- Germanic constitution, the, [221]; influence upon, of the theory of the Empire as an international power, [307]; attempted reforms of, [313]; means by which it was proposed to effect them, [314]; causes of their failure, [314].
- Germany, beginning of the national existence of, [77]; chooses Arnulf as king, [78]; overrun by Hungarians, [79]; establishment of monarchy in, by Henry the Fowler, [79]; desires the restoration of the Carolingian Empire, [86]; position of in the tenth century, [122]; union of the Empire with, [122]; results of the union, [128]; dissimilarity of the two systems, [127]; feudalism in, [123]; the feudal polity of, generally, [125]; nature of the history of, till the twelfth century, [126]; princes of, ally themselves with the Pope against the Emperor, [162]; its hatred of the Romish Court, [169]; the position of under Frederick Barbarossa, [179]; growth of towns in, [179], [223]; decline of imperial power in, [211]; state of during Great Interregnum, [213]; decline of regal power in, [215]; encroachments of nobles in, [221], [228]; kingdom of, not originally elective, [225]; how it ultimately became elective, [226]; changes in the constitution of, [228]; its weakness as compared with other states of Europe, [302]; its loss of imperial territories, [303]; its internal weakness, [306]; position of the Emperor in, compared with that of his predecessors in Europe, [309]; beginning of the Hapsburg influence in, [310]; first consciousness of its nationality, [315]; destruction of its State-system, [324]; its troubles, [324]; finally severed from Rome, [340]; after the peace of Westphalia, [342]; effect of a number of petty independent states upon, [343]; feudalism in, [343]; its political life in the eighteenth century, [345]; foreign thrones acquired by its princes, [346]; French aggression upon, [346]; its weakness and stagnation, [347]; popular feeling in at the close of eighteenth century, [354]; Napoleon in, [361]; changes in, by war of 1866, [365] note; influence of the Holy Empire on, [378].
- Gerson, chancellor of Paris, plans of, [301].
- Ghibeline, the name of, [304].
- Goethe, [236] note, [316] note, [356].
- Golden Bull of Charles IV, [225], [230], [236].
- Goths, wisest and least cruel of the Germanic family, [28]; Arian Goths regarded as enemies by Catholic Italians, [29].
- Greece, her influence in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, [240], [252]; her claim to represent the Roman Empire, [368].
- Greeks and Latins, origin of their separation, [37] note.
- Greeks, effect of their hostility upon the Teutonic Empire, [210].
- Gregory the Great, fame of his sanctity and writings, [31]; means by which he advanced Rome's ecclesiastical authority, [154].
- Gregory II (Pope), reason of his reluctance to break with the Byzantine princes, [102].
- Gregory III (Pope) appeals to Charles Martel for succour against the Lombards, [39].
- Gregory V (Pope), [146].
- [Gregory] VII (Pope), his condemnation of feudal investitures to the clergy, [158]; war between him and Henry IV, [159]; his letter to William the Conqueror, [160]; passage in his second excommunication of Henry, [161]; results of the struggle between them, [162]; his death, [162]; his theory as to the rights of the Pope with respect to the election of Emperors, [217]; his silence about the Translation of the Empire, [218]; his simile between the Empire and the Popedom, [373]; his demands on the Emperor, [386].
- Gregory IX (Pope), Canon law consolidated by, [102]; receives the title of 'Justinian of the Church,' [102].
- Gregory X (Pope), [219].
- Grotius, [384].
- Guelf, the name of, [304].
- Guido, or Guy, of Spoleto, [82].
- Guiscard, Robert, [292].
- Gundobald the Burgundian, [25].
- Gunther of Schwartzburg, [222].
- Gustavus Adolphus, [336].
- H.
- Hadrian I (Pope), summons Charles (the Great) to resist the Lombards, [41]; motives of his policy, [42]; his allusion to Constantine's Donation, [118] note.
- Hadrian IV (Pope), Frederick I's contest with, [169], [285]; his pretensions, [197].
- Hallam, his view of the grant of a Roman dignity to Clovis, [30] note.
- Hanseatic Confederacy, [223], [347].
- Hapsburg, the castle of, [213] note.
- Harold the Blue-toothed, [143].
- Henry I (the Fowler), [79], [122], [132], [226].
- Henry II crowned Emperor, [149].
- Henry II (King of France), assumes the title of 'Protector of the German Liberties,' [325].
- Henry II (King of England), his submissive tone towards Frederick I, [186].
- Henry III, power of the Empire at its meridian under, [151]; his reform of the Popedom, [152]; fatal results of his encroachments, [152]; his death, [152].
- Henry IV, election of, [226] note; war between him and Gregory VII, [159]; his humiliation, [159]; results of the struggle, [162]; his death, [162].
- Henry V (Emperor), his claims over ecclesiastics, [163]; his quarrel with Pope Paschal II, [163]; his perilous position, [163]; comparison between the prerogative at his death and that at the accession of Conrad II, [165]; tumults produced by his coronation, [285].
- Henry V (King of England) refuses submission to the Emperor Sigismund, [187].
- Henry VI, [188]; his proposal to unite Naples and Sicily to the Empire, [206]; opposition to the scheme, [206]; his untimely death, [206].
- Henry VII, [221], [223]; in Italy, [262]; his death, [263].
- Henry VIII (King of England), [334] note.
- Hessen-Cassel, Elector of, dethroned, [232].
- Hilary, feelings of, towards the Roman Empire, [21] note.
- Hildebert (Bishop of Caen), his lines contrasting the past and present of Rome, [406].
- Hildebrand; see [Gregory VII].
- Hippolytus a Lapide, the treatise of, [339].
- Hohenstaufen; see [Emperors, Swabian].
- Hohenstaufen, the castle of, [165] note.
- Holland, declared independent, [342].
- Holstein, its relations to the Empire, [398].
- Hugh Capet, [42].
- Hugh of Burgundy, [83].
- Hungarians, the, [143].
- Hungary, imperial authority exercised in, [183]; its connexion with the Hapsburgs, [184] note.
- Huss, the writings of, [241].
- I.
- Iconoclastic controversy, [38].
- 'Imperator electus,' the title of, [316], [405].
- Imperialism, Roman, French, and Mediæval, [375].
- Imperial titles and ceremonies, [193], [400].
- Innocent III (Pope), his exertions on behalf of Otto IV, [206]; his pretensions, [209], [217]; his struggle with Frederick II, [208].
- Innocent X and the sacred number Seven of the electors, [227] note; his protest against the Peace of Westphalia, [341].
- International power, the need of an, [242]; why the Roman Empire an, [248].
- Interregnum, the Great, frightful state of Germany during, [213]; enables the feudal aristocracy to extend their power, [221].
- Investitures, the struggle of the, [162].
- Irene (Empress), behaviour of, [47], [61], [68].
- Irminsûl, overthrow of, by Charles the Great, [69]; meaning of term, [69] note.
- Italian Emperors, [80].
- Italian nationality, era at which its first rudiments appeared, [140].
- Italians, modern, their feelings towards Rome, [299].
- Italy, under Odoacer, [26], [27]; attempt of Theodoric to establish a national monarchy in, [27]; reconquered by Justinian, [29]; harassed by the Lombards, [37]; condition of, previous to Otto's descent into, [80]; Otto the Great's first expedition into, [84]; its connexion with Germany, [87]; Otto's rule in, [139]; liberties of the northern cities of, [150]; Frederick I in, [174]; Henry VII in, [263]; lost to the Empire, [211], [304]; names of Emperors buried in, [287] note; the nation at the present day, [389].
- Italy, Southern, [150].
- J.
- John VIII (Pope), [156].
- John XII (Pope), crowns Otto the Great, [87]; plots against him, [134]; his reprobate life, [134]; Liudprand's list of the charges against, [135]; letter recounting them sent to him, [136]; his reply, [136]; Otto's answer, [136]; deposed by Otto, [137]; regret of the Romans at his expulsion, [137]; his return and death, [138].
- John XXII (Pope), his conflict with Lewis IV, [220].
- Joseph II, reign of, [352].
- Julius Cæsar, [390], [392].
- Julius II (Pope), [316].
- Jurisprudence, influence of, in supporting the Empire, [31]; aversion of the Romish court to the ancient, [252]; influence of the Empire on modern, [383].
- Jurists, their attitude towards imperialism, [256].
- Justinian, Italy reconquered by, [29]; study of the legislation of, [240], [256].
- 'Justinian of the Church,' title of, conferred on Gregory IX, [102].
- Jutland, Otto penetrates into, [143].
- K.
- Kings, the Emperor's right of creating, [249].
- Knighthood, analogy between priesthood and, [250].
- L.
- Lactantius, his belief in the eternity of the Roman Empire, [21].
- Lambert (son of Guido of Spoleto), [82].
- Landgrave of Thuringia, choice of the, commanded by the Pope, [219].
- Lateran Palace at Rome, mosaic of the, [117], [288].
- Latins and Greeks, origin of their separation, [37] note.
- Lauresheim, Annals of, their account of the coronation of Charles, [53].
- Law, old, the influence exercised by, [32]; era of the revived study of, [276].
- Learning, revival of, [240]; connexion between it and imperialism, [254].
- Leo I (Pope), his assertion of universal jurisdiction, [154].
- Leo the Isaurian (Emperor), his attempt to abolish the worship of images, [38].
- Leo III (Pope), his accession, [43]; his adventures, [44]; crowns Charles at Rome on Christmas Day, A.D. 800, [3], [49]; charter of, issued on same day, [106]; relation of, to the act of coronation, [52], [53]; lectured by Charles, [64].
- Leo VIII (Pope), [138].
- Leonine city, the, [286] note.
- Leopold I, ninth electorate conferred by, [231].
- Leopold II, [352].
- Lewis I (the Pious), [76], [77].
- Lewis II, [77], [104] note, [191], [403].
- Lewis III (son of Boso), [82].
- Lewis IV, his conflict with Pope John XXII, [220].
- Lewis XII (King of France), his pretensions on Naples and Milan, [315].
- Lewis XIV (King of France), [346].
- Lewis (the German) (son of Lewis the Pious), [77].
- Lewis the Child (son of Arnulf), [121].
- Literature, revival of, [240]; connexion between it and imperialism, [254].
- Liudprand (Bishop of Cremona), his list of the accusations against John XII, [135]; account of his embassy to the princess Theophano, [141].
- Liudprand (King of the Lombards), attacks Rome and the exarchate, [38].
- Lombard cities, [175]; their victory over Frederick I, [178].
- Lombards, arrival of the, A.D. 568, [29], [37]; their aversion to the clergy, [37]; the Popes seek help from the Franks against the, [39]; extinction of their kingdom by Charlemagne, [41].
- Lothar I (son of Lewis the Pious), [77], [403].
- Lothar II, election of, [165], [228].
- Lothar (son of Hugh of Burgundy), [83].
- Lotharingia or Lorraine, [78], [79], [143], [183], [341], [349].
- Luneville, the Peace of, [361].
- Luther, [319].
- M.
- Majesty, the title of, [247] note.
- Mallum, the popular assembly so called, [126].
- Manuel Comnenus, [193].
- Mario (Monte), [283].
- Marsilius of Padua, his 'de Imperio Romano,' [231] note.
- Maximilian I, [231], [310]; character of his epoch, [310]; events of his reign, [313]; his title of 'Imperator electus,' [316], [405]; his proposals to recover Burgundy and Italy, [317].
- Maximilian II, [323].
- Mayfield, the popular assembly so called, [126].
- Mediæval art, rights of the Empire set forth in, [116].
- Mediæval monuments, causes of the want of in Rome, [289].
- Michael, [61].
- Michael Angelo, capital rebuilt by, [295].
- Middle Ages, the state of the human mind in, [90]; theology of, [95]; philosophy of, [97]; relations of Church and State during, [107], [387]; mode of interpreting Scriptures in, [114]; art of, [116]; opposition of theory and practice in, [133], [261]; real beginning of, [204]; reverence for ancient forms and phrases in, [258]; absence of the idea of change or progress in, [259]; the city of Rome in, [269]; barbarism of the aristocracy in, [289]; ambition and corruption of the clergy in the latter, [290]; destruction of old buildings by the Romans of, [292]; existing relics of, [294]; aspiration for unity during, [370]; the Visible Church in the, [370]; ferocity of the heroes of, [382]; ways in which the Empire affected the political institutions of, [383]; idea of the communion of saints during, [387].
- Milan, Frederick I's dealings with the rebels of, [125]; the rebuilding of, [178]; victory of Frederick II over, [287]; pretensions of Charles VIII and Lewis XII of France on, [315].
- Mahommedanism, rise of, [45].
- Moissac, Chronicle of, its account of the coronation of Charles, [54], [84].
- Mommsen, [390].
- Monarchy, universal, doctrine of, [91], [97].
- Monarchy, elective, [232].
- Mosaics in the churches of Rome, [294].
- Müller, Johannes von, [354].
- Münster, the treaty of; see [Westphalia].
- N.
- Naples, imperial authority in, [188], [205]; pretensions of Charles VIII and Lewis XII of France on, [315].
- Napoleon, as compared with Charles the Great, [74]; extinction of Electorates by, [232]; Emperor of the West, [357]; his belief that he was the successor of Charlemagne, [358]; attitude of the Papacy towards, [359]; his mission in Germany, [361].
- Nationalities of Europe, the formation of, [242]; relations of the Empire to the, [390].
- Nationality, struggles of the Teutonic Emperors against, [388].
- Neo-Platonism, Alexandrian, effect of, [7].
- Nicæa, first council of, [23], [301]; second council of, [64].
- Nicephorus, [61], [192].
- Nicholas I (Pope) and the case of Teutberga, [252].
- Nicholas II (Pope), fixes a regular body to elect the Pope, [158].
- Nicholas V (Pope), [279], [292], [312].
- Nobles, the, in feudal times, [125], [221]; encroachments of the, [228].
- Nürnberg, [259].
- O.
- Occam, the English Franciscan, [220].
- Odo, [81].
- Odoacer, extinction of the Western Empire by, A.D. 476, [25]; his original position, [25] note; his assumption of the title of King, [26]; nature of his government, [27].
- Optatus (Bishop of Milevis), his treatise Contra Donatistas, [13] note.
- Orsini, the family of, [281].
- Osnabrück, treaty of; see [Westphalia].
- Ostrogoths, [24]; war between Belisarius and the, [273].
- Otto I, the Great, appealed to by Adelheid, [83]; his first expedition into Italy, [84]; invitation sent by the Pope to, [84]; his victory over the Hungarians, [85]; crowned king of Italy at Rome, [87]; his coronation a favourable opening to sacerdotal claims, [155]; causes of the revival of the Empire under, [84]; his coronation feast the inauguration of the Teutonic realm, [123]; consequences of his assumption of the imperial title, [128]; his position towards the Church, [128]; changes in title, [129]; his imperial office feudalized, [130]; the Germans made a single people by, [131]; incidents which befel him in Rome, [134]; inquires into the character and manners of Pope John XII, [135]; his letters to John, [136]; deposes John, [136]; appoints Leo in his stead, [137]; his suppression of the revolts of the Romans on account of John, [138]; his rule in Italy, [139]; resumes Charles's plans of foreign conquest, [140]; his policy towards Byzantium, [141]; seeks for his heir the hand of the princess Theophano, [141]; his policy towards the West Franks, [142]; his Northern and Eastern conquests, [143]; extent of his empire, [144]; comparison between it and that of Charles, [144]; beneficial results of his rule, [145]; how styled by Nicephorus, [211].
- Otto II, [142]; memorials left by, in Rome, [317].
- Otto III, his plans and ideas, [146], [147], [148]; his intense religious belief in the Emperor's duties, [147]; his reason for using the title 'Romanorum Imperator,' [147]; his early death, [148], [228]; his burial at Aachen, [148]; respect in which his life was so memorable, [149]; compared with Frederick II, [207]; his expostulation with the Roman people, [285] note; memorials left by, in Rome, [286].
- Otto IV, Pope Innocent III's exertions in behalf of, [206]; overthrown by Innocent, [207]; explanation of a curious seal of, [266] note.
- P.
- Palgrave (Sir F.), his view of the grant of a Roman dignity to Clovis, [30] note.
- Palsgrave, deprived of his vote, [231]; reinstated, [231].
- Panslavism, Russia's doctrine of, [368].
- Papacy, the Teutonic reform of, [146]; Frederick I's bad relations with, [168]; Henry III's purification of, [152], [204]; growth of its power, [153]; its relations with the Empire, [153], [155], [216]; its condition after the dissolution of the Carolingian Empire, [275]; its attitude towards Napoleon, [359].
- Papacy and Empire, interdependence of, [101]; its consequences, [102]; struggle between them, [153]; their relations, [155], [216]; parallel between, [369]; compared as perpetuation of a name, [372].
- Papal elections, veto of Emperor on, [138], [155].
- Partition treaty of Verdun, [77].
- Paschal II (Pope), his quarrel with Henry V, [163].
- Patrician of the Romans, import of the title, [40]; date when it was bestowed on Pipin, [40] note.
- Patritius, secretary of Frederick III, on the poverty of the Empire, [224].
- Pavia, the Council of, and Charles the Bald, [156].
- Persecution, Protestant, [330].
- Peter's (St.), old, [48].
- Petrarch, his feelings towards the Empire, [254]; towards the city of Rome, [270].
- Pfeffinger, [351] note.
- Philip of Hohenstaufen, contest between Otto of Brunswick and, [206]; his assassination, [206].
- Philosophy, scholastic, spread of, in the thirteenth century, [240].
- Pipin of Herstal, [35].
- Pipin the Short appointed successor to Childeric, [39]; twice rescues Rome from the Lombards, [39]; receives the title of Patrician of the Romans, [40]; import of this title, [40]; date at which it was bestowed, [40] note.
- Pius VII (Pope), [359].
- Placitum, the popular assembly so called, [126].
- Podiebrad (George), (King of Bohemia), [223].
- Poland, imperial authority in, [184]; partition of, [345].
- Politics, beginning of the existence of, [241].
- Popes, emancipation of the, [27], [37], [281], [282]; appeal to the Franks for succour against the Lombards, [39]; their reasons for desiring the restoration of the Western Empire, [45], [46]; their theory respecting the coronation of Charles, [57]; their profligacy in the tenth century, [82], [85], [275]; their theory respecting the chair of St. Peter, [99]; their position and functions, [104]; growth of their pretensions, [108], [156], [217]; and power, [153]; their relations to the Emperor, [155]; their temporal power, [157]; their position as international judges, [243]; reaction against their pretensions, [243], [275]; their aversion to the study of ancient jurisprudence, [252]; hostility of, to the Germans, [284]; nature of the question at issue between the Emperors and, [385].
- Porcaro (Stephen), conspiracy of, [279].
- Prætaxation, the so-called right of, [228], [229].
- Pragmatic Sanctions of Frederick II, [212], [221].
- Prague, University of, [237].
- Prerogative, Imperial, contrast of, at accession of Conrad II and death of Henry V, [165].
- Priesthood, analogy between knighthood and, [250].
- Princes, league of, formed by Frederick the Great, [352].
- Protestant States, their conduct after the Reformation, [330].
- Protestants of Germany, their alliance with France, [325].
- Public Peace and Imperial Chamber, establishment of the, [313].
- R.
- Radulfus de Colonna, his account of the origin of the separation of Greeks and Latins, [37] note.
- Ravenna, exarch of, [27].
- Reformation, dawnings of the, [240]; Charles V's attitude towards the, [321]; influence of its spirit on the Empire, [319], [325]; its real meaning, [325]; its effect on the doctrines regarding the Visible Church, [327]; consequent effect upon the Empire, [328]; its small immediate influence on political and religious liberty, [329]; conduct of the Protestant States after the, [330]; its influence on the name and associations of the Empire, [332].
- Religion, influence of, in supporting the Empire, [31]; wars of, [330].
- Renaissance, the, [240], [311].
- 'Renovatio Romani Imperii,' signification of the seal bearing legend of, [103].
- Rhine, towns of the, [223]; provisions of the Confederation of the, [362].
- Richard I (King of England), pays homage to the Emperor Henry VI, [186]; his release, [187].
- Richard (Earl of Cornwall), his double election with Alfonso X of Castile, [212], [229].
- Richelieu, policy of, [336].
- Ricimer (patrician), [25].
- Rienzi, Petrarch's letter to the Roman people respecting, [255]; his character and career, [278].
- Romans, revolts of the, at the expulsion of Pope John XII, [137], [138]; Otto's vigorous measures against the, [138]; their revolt from the Iconoclastic Emperors of the East, [274]; the title of King of the, [404].
- Romanism or Catholicity, [94], [106].
- Rome, commanding position of, in the second century, [7]; prestige of, not destroyed by the partition of the Empire, [9]; lingering influences of her Church and Law, [31], [32]; claim of, to the right of conferring the imperial crown, [57], [61], [81]; republican institutions of, renewed, [83]; profligacy of, in the tenth century, [82], [85]; under Arnold of Brescia, [174]; imitations of old, [257]; in the Middle Ages, [269]; absence of Gothic in, [271]; the modern traveller in, [271], [283]; causes of her rapid decay, [273]; peculiarities of her position, [274]; her internal history from the sixth to the twelfth century, [274]; her condition in the ninth and tenth centuries, [274]; growth of a republican feeling in, [276]; short-sighted policy of the Emperors towards, [277]; causes of the failure of the struggle for independence in, [280]; her internal condition, [280]; her people, [280]; her nobility, [281]; her bishop, [281]; relation of the Emperor to, [282]; the Emperors' visits to, [282]; dislike of, to the Germans, [285]; memorials of Otto III in, [286]; of Otto II, [287]; of Frederick II, [287]; causes of the want of mediæval monuments in, [289]; barbarism of the aristocracy of, [289]; ambition, weakness, and corruption of the clergy of, [290]; tendency of her builders to adhere to the ancient manner, [290]; destruction and alteration of old buildings in, [291]; her modern churches, [293]; existing relics of Dark and Middle Ages in, [291]; changed aspect of, [295]; analogy between her architecture and the civil and ecclesiastical constitution, [296]; relation of, to the Empire, [297]; feelings of modern Italians towards, [299]; perpetuation of the name of, [367]; parallel instances, [367]; Hildebert's lines contrasting the past and present of, [406].
- Romulus Augustulus, his resignation at Odoacer's bidding, [25].
- Rudolf (King of Transjurane), [81].
- Rudolf of Hapsburg, [213], [219], [221], [222]; financial distress under, [224]; Schiller's description of the coronation feast of, [231] note, [262].
- Rudolf II, [335].
- Rudolf III, [151].
- Rudolf of Swabia, [162].
- Rudolf III (King of Burgundy), his proposal to bequeath Burgundy to Henry II, [151].
- Russia, her claim to represent the Roman Empire, [368].
- S.
- Sachsenspiegel, the, [108] note.
- Saladin (the Sultan), Frederick I's letter to, [189].
- Santa Maria Novella at Florence, fresco in, [118].
- Saxon Emperors, [133].
- Saxony, extinction of the dukedom of, [222].
- Schleswig, its annexation by Otto, [143]; its relation to the Empire, [398].
- Scholastic philosophy, spread of, in the thirteenth century, [240].
- Seal, ascribed to A.D. 800, [103].
- Septimius Severus, concentration of power in his hands, [5], [6].
- Sergius IV (Pope), [228] note.
- Seven Years' War, [352].
- Sicambri, probably the chief source of the Frankish nation, [34].
- Sicily, imperial authority in, [188], [205].
- Sigismund (the Burgundian king), his desire to preserve the institutions of the Empire, [18].
- Sigismund (Emperor), his visit to Henry V, [187]; at the Council of Constance, [253], [301].
- Simony, measures taken against, [158].
- Slavic races, the, [27], [143], [260], [378].
- Smalkaldic league, the, [322].
- Southern Italy, [150].
- Spain, Otto's position towards, [143]; authority not exercised by any Emperor in, [185]; compared with Germany, [303].
- Speyer, Diet of, [111] note.
- Stephania (widow of Crescentius), [148].
- Swabia, extinction of the dukedom of, [222]; the towns of, [223], [313]; theory of the Emperors of the house of, respecting the coronation of Charles, [57].
- Sweden, improbability of imperial pretensions to, [185].
- Swiss Confederation, the, [306]; her gains by treaties of Westphalia, [341].
- Switzerland lost to the Empire, [306], [342].
- Sylvester (Pope), [43].
- T.
- Taxes, mode of collecting in Roman Empire, [9] note.
- Tertullian, his feelings towards the Roman Emperor, [21] note, [23] note.
- Teutberga (wife of Lothar), the famous case of, [252].
- Teutonic race, political character of the, [376].
- Theodebert (son of Clovis), his desire to preserve the institutions of the Empire, [18].
- Theodoric the Ostrogoth, his attempt to establish a national monarchy in Italy, [27], [28]; its failure, [29]; his usual place of residence, [28] note; prosperity under his reign, [29].
- Theodosius (the Emperor), his abasement before St. Ambrose, [12].
- Theophano (princess), [141].
- Thirty Years' War, [335]; its unsatisfactory results, [336]; its substantial advantage to the German princes, [338].
- Thomas (St.), his statement respecting the election of Emperors, [227].
- Tithes, first enforced by Charles the Great, [67].
- Titles, change of, [129], [316], [400].
- Tortona, Frederick I's dealing with the rebels of, [175].
- Transalpine provinces, influence of the Empire in, [30].
- 'Translation of the Empire,' [52], [111], [175], [218].
- Transubstantiation, [326] note.
- Turks, the, [303]; their claim to represent the Roman Empire, [368].
- Turpin (Archbishop), [51] note.
- U.
- University of Prague, foundation of, [237].
- Unity, political, idea of, upheld by the clergy, [96].
- Urban IV (Pope), on the right of choosing the Roman king, [229].
- V.
- Venice, her attitude, [171]; imperial pretensions towards, [188]; maintains her independence, [188].
- Verdun, partition treaty of, [77].
- Vespasian, his dying jest, [23] note.
- Vienna, Congress of, [364].
- Villani (Matthew), his idea of the Teutonic Emperors, [304]; his etymology of Guelf and Ghibeline, [304] note.
- Visigothic kings of Spain, the Empire's rights admitted by the, [30].
- W.
- Wallenstein, [335].
- Wenzel of Bohemia, [223].
- Western Empire, its last days, [24], [25]; its extinction by Odoacer, [26]; its restoration, [34].
- [Westphalia], the Peace of, [336]; its advantages to France, [341]; to Sweden, [341]; its importance in imperial history, [342].
- Wickliffe, excitement caused by his writings, [241].
- William the Conqueror, letter of Hildebrand to, [160].
- Wippo, [227] note.
- Witukind, [85] note.
- Woitech (St. Adalbert), [269].
- World-Monarchy, the idea of a, [91]; influence of metaphysics upon the theory, [97].
- World-Religion, the idea of a, [91]; coincides with the World-Empire, [92].
- Worms, Concordant of, [163]; Diet of, [319], [334].
FOOTNOTES:
[1] The author has in preparation, and hopes before long to complete and publish, a set of chronological tables which may be made to serve as a sort of skeleton history of mediæval Germany and Italy.
[2] Reckoning the Anti-pope Felix (A.D. 356) as Felix II.
[3] Crowned Emperor, but at Bologna, not at Rome.
[4] According to the vicious financial system that prevailed, the curiales in each city were required to collect the taxes, and when there was a deficit, to supply it from their own property.