Age of Charlemagne Campaign Pack
- Age Of Charlemagne Mercia Guide
- Age Of Charlemagne Mercia Guided
- Total War Attila Age Of Charlemagne Mercia Guide
Age Of Charlemagne Mercia Guide
I downloaded Age of Charlemagne recently and had some fun taking over England as Mercia, but now I'm trying as the Danes and it's impossible! Do I stick to the mainland or sail to Britain? I tried Britain twice and just got bogged down straight away. สำหรับ Total War: Attila Age of Charlemagne ก็จะพาผู้เล่นไปยังยุคที่มีขุนนางอัศวินเต็มไปหมดซึ่งนั่นก็หมายความว่าผู้เล่นจะได้เข้าสู่ยุคกลางในดินแดนทวีปยุโรป.
Release: 10 December 2015
Age Of Charlemagne - What is it?
The world lays in tatters, exhausted, bleeding, scarred and burnt, the people desperate. But even after the apocalypse there are men willing to give everything to return to light, to knowledge, to civilisation. Whatever the cost, and whatever the means... It is the age of a chosen few, an age of greatness, when the first true kings built vast kingdoms from the ashes of past empires... it is the Age of Charlemagne.
The year is 768 CE and, after the death of his father, Charlemagne is to share the Frankish throne alongside his brother. A situation that ill-befits a man of his vision, and their relationship clouds as he feels the fiery blood of his grandfather, Charles Martel, stir in his veins. Friends, enemies and opportunity populate a continent tired of conflict, the people eager for peace. Charlemagne finds himself at the head of a new age of education, religion and warfare, and sees all as tools to unite, stabilise… and expand.
The Saxons, the Saracens and the Vikings will all have something to say to a man of such ambition.
It will take guile, charm, intelligence and ruthlessness to succeed above all others.
Charles the Great, King of the Franks, the Father of Europe. Will you make your mark in his image, or will you become your own king?
New Campaign Map
The brand new Age of Charlemagne Campaign map is focussed in on Europe from the year 768 CE. With 52 conquerable provinces, it provides a detailed and vibrant geopolitical starting position, offering hundreds of hours of potential gameplay.
The User Interface is now resplendent in a style inspired by the art of the Middle Ages. Influences ranging from illuminated manuscripts and early stained glass work will lend colour and atmosphere to your campaign.
A Unique Campaign with New Gameplay Mechanics
Age of Charlemagne is an epic expansion for Total War: Attila, set in the Middle Ages on an sprawling new campaign map of Europe.
There have been kings and kingdoms before, but this is a time where truly great men united entire nations, built lasting legacies and defined what it meant to be a king. Can you be counted amongst them?
You’ll face a new age, but an exhausted world, weary of conflict and battle. New technologies and new ways of waging war will only get you so far. A good king is a shrewd man, who knows precisely how far his people can be pushed. Do not mistake a reluctance to go to war as a sign that a nation is unprepared for it. Europe remains a melting pot of conflicting ideologies and long held distrust. While the old Empire is now a fading memory, the threats and consequences of its passing echo, resonating in new dangers and pressures for fledgling nations.
Opportunity presents itself in tying together vast new kingdoms, powerful new states that can be marshalled under a banner of civilisation drawn from ashes. Greatness awaits you, if you have the steel and vision of Charlemagne.
Playable factions
Age of Charlemagne includes a diverse selection of playable factions, each one featuring its own faction traits, unit roster and unique and challenging conditions under which they can be named a ‘kingdom’ in their own right.
- Kingdom of Asturias
- Avars
- Kingdom of Charlemagne
- Emirate of Cordoba
- Kingdom of the Danes
- Kingdom of the Lombards
- Kingdom of Mercia
- Westphalia
New Units
Age of Charlemagne includes all new units to better reflect the advancing warfare of the period, characterised by more heavily armed and armoured infantry and an increasing prevalence of cavalry of all categories, especially the emergence of knights in the Norman style for the first time. With over 300 new units, you will have the opportunity to recruit iconic military forces of the period, such as Thegns, Fyrd Axemen, Scola Knights, Berber Jinetes, Gazehounds and the feared Seax-armed Saxon warriors.
War Weariness
The sign of a great true king is in knowing how far your people can be pushed. Wars are significant and dramatic events between kingdoms, and should not be undertaken lightly. The fewer wars you wage the better your people will respond, as frequent and drawn out conflict will rapidly damage morale and your armies’ integrity. A shrewd ruler will seek to bring peace quickly and decisively.
Unique Kingdom and Story Events
Each playable faction has a unique set of challenging ‘Kingdom’ requirements to meet for the dedicated and shrewd player. Once achieved, you will be able to declare a new Kingdom name for your faction, reflecting or altering history in your wake. In addition, each faction will receive tailored narrative Story Events, offering you distinct challenges and dilemmas as your Campaign unfolds. Historically-inspired, some choices will lead you further to that faction’s original destiny, or you may choose to carve a new path of your own.
New Technologies and Buildings
Age of Charlemagne features many technologies and buildings that reflect the new period; significantly, you’ll encounter and leverage those that inspire the emerging ideas of Feudalism and Chivalry as your campaign progresses. Many buildings also now give bonuses to adjacent provinces as well as their own, allowing for more specialisation within the different geographic areas of your kingdom and chaining combinations of benefits across your lands. In addition, while conflict will always dog you, victory conditions that reward a less military-focussed approach are achievable; testing your mettle as both a compassionate and cunning ruler.
Agents and Skills
![Mercia Mercia](https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/564x/d8/24/58/d8245891d4a18c430823c66b34c7d9f3.jpg)
You will find Agents more specialised than before, with Assassins, Spies and Priests (or Imams) focused on a more powerful but specific ability set rather than being more useful in all situations. Alongside your Generals, Agents also receive all new skill trees with more variation in the branches available to them. This provides greater choices in how you develop and specialise them over time. Finally, the new Army and Navy Legacies will focus on bonuses that reward distinct playstyles.
System Requirements
PC
Minimum
- Windows Vista®
- Intel Core 2 Duo 3 GHz
- 3 GB RAM
- 512 MB NVIDIA GeForce 8800 GT, AMD Radeon HD 2900 XT or Intel HD 4000
- Version 10
- 35 GB HD space
- PC integrated graphics chipsets require 64 bit Windows, e.g. Intel HD series
Recommended
- Windows 7®
- 2nd Generation Intel Core i5 • RAM: 4 GB
- 4 GB RAM
- 2 GB NVIDIA GeForce GTX 560 Ti or AMD Radeon HD 5870
- 11
- 35 GB HD space
- PC integrated graphics chipsets require 64 bit Windows, e.g. Intel HD series.
Mac
Minimum
- OS X 10.9.4
- Intel Core i5 1.7 GHz
- 4 GB RAM
- 512 MB NVIDIA GeForce GT 640M, AMD Mobility Radeon HD 5670 or Intel HD 4000
- 35 GB available space
- Unsupported graphics chipsets for Mac: NVIDIA GeForce 9 series, GeForce 300 series, GeForce Quatro series ; AMD Radeon HD 4000 series, Radeon HD 3000 series, Radeon HD 2000 series.
Recommended
- OS X 10.9.4
- 2nd Generation Intel Core i5
- 8 GB RAM
- 2 GB NVIDIA GeForce GT 750M
- 35 GB available space
- nsupported graphics chipsets for Mac: NVIDIA GeForce 9 series, GeForce 300 series, GeForce Quatro series ; AMD Radeon HD 4000 series, Radeon HD 3000 series, Radeon HD 2000 series.
Retrieved from ‘https://wiki.totalwar.com/index.php?title=Age_of_Charlemagne_Campaign_Pack&oldid=23317’
Born: 742 at Paris? Father: Pepin III 'the Short' (714-68) Mother: Bertrada, Countess of Laon (d783) Spouse1: Himiltrude (disowned 770, commoner) Spouse2: Desiderata, dau of Lombard king (m770, dau of Lombard king) Spouse3: Hildegard, Countess of Vinzgau (d783, Swabian nobility) Spouse4: Fastrada (m783 d794, E Frank, or German) Concub1: ? (mother of Rothaide) Spouse5: Liutgarda (m794 d800, Alemanni, no children) Concub2: Madelgard Concub3: Gersvinda (Saxon) Concub4: Regina Concub5: Adallinda Children: At right top, a portrait from FHL book on The Netherlands, below a pic of a statue of Charlemagne on Clark's book cover (c1350 Reliquary, Aachen Cathedral Treasury) >> |
tIoC cvr | 9 Oct 1991 at Nijmegen Charlemagne's castle | by Albrecht Duerer c1512 Vintage, 2005, 226pp, Mustang |
tIoC p39 | tIoC p66 | tIoC p104 | France p68 |
From tIoC:
Few names in European history inspire greater thoughts of medieval romance and glory than Charlemagne. In fact, only mythical figures like King Arthur, Sir Lancelot, Robin Hood, and Charlemagne's own loyal servant Roland have inspired as many legends ... One reason is [his] historic role in establishing the traditions of European royalty and nobility. Another ... was his interest in education and the arts. He invited scholars and artists throughout Europe and England to work and live at his court, and he financed the finest library collections in the Western world. As a result, more written history has been preserved about this early medieval king than about many later rulers. About 830, Einhard, Charles' close friend, adviser, and administrator in his royal govt, wrote a biography entitled Vita Caroli (The Life of Charlemagne) ... Although the HRE that [he] founded began to crumble just 27 yrs after his death, his influence lived on in the military and cultural traditions of the European nobility [e.g. French, German, Italian]; in the secular power of the RCC; and in the restoration of art, literature, and education, which he began.'
Few names in European history inspire greater thoughts of medieval romance and glory than Charlemagne. In fact, only mythical figures like King Arthur, Sir Lancelot, Robin Hood, and Charlemagne's own loyal servant Roland have inspired as many legends ... One reason is [his] historic role in establishing the traditions of European royalty and nobility. Another ... was his interest in education and the arts. He invited scholars and artists throughout Europe and England to work and live at his court, and he financed the finest library collections in the Western world. As a result, more written history has been preserved about this early medieval king than about many later rulers. About 830, Einhard, Charles' close friend, adviser, and administrator in his royal govt, wrote a biography entitled Vita Caroli (The Life of Charlemagne) ... Although the HRE that [he] founded began to crumble just 27 yrs after his death, his influence lived on in the military and cultural traditions of the European nobility [e.g. French, German, Italian]; in the secular power of the RCC; and in the restoration of art, literature, and education, which he began.'
Background: Charlemagne incorporated much romanitas, preserved in the form of descendants of Roman military commanders and governors who remained in Gaul long after the fall of Rome in 476 and were respected by the Germanic and Frankish leaders. The Great Migration (East to West) began at the fall of Rome (beginning 3 centuries of Lombard v. Byzantine struggle for Italy, the former winning by 568). Another Romanizing influence was the RCC, which especially influenced Clovis and the Merovingians. Admiring the heirarchy of the RCC (which had been adopted from the Roman aristocracy), Clovis 'built the first aristocratic Frankish govt, which became the dominant model for most European govts until the 20C' (13). The 5C Greek historian Procopius described the Frankish 'nation in matters of trust [as] the most treacherous in the world' (14), a reputation for bravery and ruthlessness they had already gained by the time of Clovis (481 AD). After Clovis, power flowed toward local counts and bishops in the 3 succeeding kingdoms (Austrasia, Neustria, Burgundy, i.e. centralized power 'was not part of Frankish culture' 15). This decentralized 'system of private govt and military service that began during the time of the weak [later] Merovingian kings [was called] feudalism (from feudum, the Latin word for fief ... a piece of land granted by one noble to another) ... In 613 the Merovingian king Clothar II awarded new titles to 2 powerful and wealthy Frankish families in Austrasia for their strong military and diplomatic support. The head of one of these families, Arnulf, was named Bishop of Metz, the richest and most important city in the realm. Pepin (I), the head of the other loyal family, was named mayor of the palace of Austrasia' (19) ... [both are] ggggfathers of Charlemagne ... When Arnulf's son Ansegisel m. Pepin's dau Begga, these 2 roots merged to form the trunk of Charlemagne's family tree (20) ... [Austrasian] Pepin II, the gson of both Arnulf and Pepin I, helped the Merovingian king Theuderic III gain control of all 3 Frankish realms [he was clearly in charge, the king was a mere figurehead] ... [But] when Pepin II d. 16 Dec 714 ... his fragile political alliances broke apart ... The house of Pepin might have faded into history ... had it not been for his bastard son, Charles Martel ... gfather of Charlemagne, was the first in his family line to bear the name Charles ... The name Martel, which means 'the hammer' in Latin, was added by later Carolingian historians to signify [his] military and political strength ... [tho built in part by giving church lands to (often immoral) political allies, angering the RCC and damaging it spiritually, he's also famous for repulsing the Muslim Moors at Tours 732, he d. 22 Oct 741] ... Although Charles had never assumed the title of king, most Franks apparently thought of him as their king ... when Merovingian king Theuderic d737, Charles didn't bother naming a successor ... Charles divided most of his kingdom between 2 sons, Carloman, the oldest, and Pepin III, aka 'the Short,' the father of Charlemagne ... [Charles' death sparked unrest by ambitious nobles, so his sons set up the puppet king Childeric III (found him in a monastery), Carloman and Boniface focused on church purity, Pepin on politics, Pepin in Nov 751 dethroned Childeric III and became the first Carolingian king after Carloman left politics for a monastery] ... This seemingly insignificant move was to have great implications for the politics of Europe for several centuries [i.e. succession needn't be hereditary, more merit-based, opening path to challengers, Pope legitimized Pepin in return for securing/donating 'Papal States' in Italy, remained to 1870!] ... In addition to the conquest of [previously independent] Aquitaine, Pepin led campaigns against Arab colonies in S France and against Saxon and Frisian barbarians in N Germany. As Pepin's fame and influence spread, so did the intl recognition of the Frankish kingdom, tho still remote and barbaric v. Byzantine and Arab civilizations ... [When Pepin III d. 24 Sep 768, he] divided his kingdom between his 2 sons' ... [uneasy alliance arranged by their mother Bertrada involving m. to Desiderata in 770, created peace, but Charles felt stifled, he rebelled 771, div. Desiderata, Carloman died suddenly 771 age 20].
Charlemagne: Our best source of info on him is Einhard's book, tho it is clearly hagiographic (Charlemagne and Louis rewarded Einhard richly as a trust friended and adviser). He took his Christian faith seriously and sought to uplift all his subjects in mind, body and spirit. Like Charles Martel and Pepin III, Charlemagne sought to build 'a powerful central govt in the style of the Romans' (48). He kept his nobles too busy to rebel by conducting constant warfare against foreign threats - real or imagined (48). Charlemagne most wanted to conquer Saxony, which had 'resisted colonization and Christianization since the time of the Romans ... still worshipped Othin [Odin, Woden => wood, wooden, Wednesday], the Germanic tree god' (51) ... 1rst Saxon campaign cut short by urgent call from Pope ... forces led by C and his uncle Bernhard [connection?] ... C's friendship w/Hadrian (met on 1rst visit to Rome) had lasting effects in binding RCC and Frank-led HRE, C 'fell in love w/Rome and its traditions, pledged to restore Rome to its original glory and prestige as capital of the great Roman Empire, no cause nearer to his heart' (53) ... 'The Saxons had long been natural enemies of the Franks. They represented the old Germanic tribal culture from which the Franks had evolved. Both ... had migrated west from N and C Europe during the Great Migration 3-5C. No significant boundaries separated them, so they had often fought for the same land' (54, C wanted to impose Frankish feudalism v. German tribalism, hmmm see br-oei) ... p/u at p57 ...
The romanticization of Charlemagne (see 'The Matter of France' in br-doka) 'became the model for later romances about King Arthur and his knights of the round table ... the basis for many medieval ideals of what a king is supposed to be and how he is supposed to act ... courage, loyalty, heroism, originality [v. dull routine] ... youth, adventure, interest, excitement, gossip, scandal ... a heartening man. To be near him was to be near the fire ... Before his day it was by no means a foregone conclusion that kingship would be a romantic tradition of high idealism and lofty devotion, of respect for law, care for religion and zeal for education. The man who made it this was [Charlemagne]. He designed and cut out the pattern of the perfect monarch, which was to guide the judgment of mankind at large for a thousand years to come ... The atheist and the republican today test bishops and kings, not by a rule of their own, but by [Charlemagne's] rule' (65-6, which is based on Christian ideals, we might add).
772 1rst Saxon campaign (cuts down Irminsul or holy tree at Paderborn)
773 Lombardia invaded, (capital) Pavia besieged
774 C's 1rst visit to Rome, Pavia falls, C declares himself King of Lombardia
775 invades Saxony, defeats Westphalians and Eastphalians
777 General Assembly at Paderborn declares annexation of Saxony
778 unsuccessful invasion of Spain, defeat at Roncesvaux (orig. of Roland legend), Witikind leads Saxon raids on Austrasian border
781 2nd visit to Rome, 2 sons bap., Pepin anointed K of Italy, Louis K of Aquitaine
782 mass execution of 4,500 Saxons at Verden
784 Saxony devastated, 10s of thousands d. of flooding, famine
785 Witikind surrenders
787 3rd visit to Rome, Bavaria invaded, Duke Tassilo submits
788 Tassilo condemned, Bavaria annexed
793 Failure of Karlsgruben canal project
795 Pepin conquers Ring of Avars in Hungary, Pope Hadrian III dies, Leo III elected
797 Wihmodia conquered, 50K Saxons deported
799 Conspiracy in Rome, Leo escapes to Paderborn to C's protection
800 Trial of Leo III, then C crowned HRE in Rome by Leo III
801 Louis captures Barcelona and other Spanish strongholds, est. Spanish March
806 C announces plan to partition empire among 3 sons
810 Pepin dies
813 C's Rhine bridge at Mainz burns, C falls ill
814 C dies, Louis becomes emperor
840 Louis the Pious dies
841 Battle of Fontenoy
843 Treaty of Verdun permanently breaks up HRE (see Lothar)
773 Lombardia invaded, (capital) Pavia besieged
774 C's 1rst visit to Rome, Pavia falls, C declares himself King of Lombardia
775 invades Saxony, defeats Westphalians and Eastphalians
777 General Assembly at Paderborn declares annexation of Saxony
778 unsuccessful invasion of Spain, defeat at Roncesvaux (orig. of Roland legend), Witikind leads Saxon raids on Austrasian border
781 2nd visit to Rome, 2 sons bap., Pepin anointed K of Italy, Louis K of Aquitaine
782 mass execution of 4,500 Saxons at Verden
784 Saxony devastated, 10s of thousands d. of flooding, famine
785 Witikind surrenders
787 3rd visit to Rome, Bavaria invaded, Duke Tassilo submits
788 Tassilo condemned, Bavaria annexed
793 Failure of Karlsgruben canal project
795 Pepin conquers Ring of Avars in Hungary, Pope Hadrian III dies, Leo III elected
797 Wihmodia conquered, 50K Saxons deported
799 Conspiracy in Rome, Leo escapes to Paderborn to C's protection
800 Trial of Leo III, then C crowned HRE in Rome by Leo III
801 Louis captures Barcelona and other Spanish strongholds, est. Spanish March
806 C announces plan to partition empire among 3 sons
810 Pepin dies
813 C's Rhine bridge at Mainz burns, C falls ill
814 C dies, Louis becomes emperor
840 Louis the Pious dies
841 Battle of Fontenoy
843 Treaty of Verdun permanently breaks up HRE (see Lothar)
Will Durant's The Age of Faith (Volume IV in his 10-volume The Story of Civilization, Simon & Schuster, 1950, own) has a 10-page section on Charlemagne, 'the greatest of medieval kings ... of German blood and speech, and shar[ing] some characteristics of his people - strength of body, courage of spirit, pride of race, and a crude simplicity many centuries apart from the urbane polish [and cynical artifice] of the modern French ... [2yrs after becoming king, responded to an urgent appeal from Pope Hadrian II to defend the Italian papal states against the Lombard Desiderius, which he did] ... Returning to his capital at Aachen, he began a series of 53 campaigns - nearly all led in person - designed to round out his empire by conquering and Christianizing Bavaria and Saxony, destroying the troublesome Avars, shielding Italy from the raiding Saracens, and strengthening the defenses of Francia against the expanding Moors of Spain ... [responded to a 777 request at Paderborn by Ibn al-Arabi, Moslem governor of Barcelona, to help fight against his own caliph [HQ1 Baghdad, HQ2 Cordova] by invading the Basque region of NE Spain, but Arabi's promised raiding help failed to appear, forcing Charlemagne to retreat, which is when he lost the famous noble Hruodland (Roland) to a Basque attack] ... loved admin more than war, and had taken to the field to force some unity of govt and faith upon a Western Europe torn for centuries past by conflicts of tribe and creed ... [introduced many improvements in admin, greatly advancing civilization ... held parliament-like assemblies at] Worms, Valenciennes, Aachen, Geneva, Paderborn ... Barring his wars, Charlemagne's was the most just and enlightened govt that Europe had known since Theodoric the Goth ... [greatly supported Church, sholarship and learning] ... Palaces were built for [him] at Ingelhiem, Nijmegen, Aachen [his favorite capital ... bur. there under the dome of the cathedral, hmmm, same as St. Mary's at Aix-la-Chapelle?].' The next section on the Carolingian Decline discusses rising pressures from Vikings (N), Magyars (E) and Muslims (SE); 'In 846 - while the Saracens were attacking Rome - the Northmen conquered Frisia, burned Dordrecht, and sacked Limoges' (474). Durant notes that Louis I was 'so absorbed in piety as to seem unfit to govern a rough and treacherous world' (471). Similarly, 'the last Carolingian kings - Louis IV, Lothaire IV, Louis V (d987) - were well-meaning men, but they had not in their blood the iron needed to forge a living order out of the universal desolation [left by attacking Vikings]' (475). So when Louis V d. w/o issue in 987, the nobles chose one of their own, Hugh Capet.
Playing cards celebrate 4 great kings in history: Charlemagne is the king of hearts, David spades, Alexander the Great clubs, and Julius Caesar diamonds.
Jeff Sypeck's 2006 book Becoming Charlemagne: Europe, Baghdad, and the Empires of AD 800 (HarperCollins, Mustang) mentions the '9 worthies' compiled by Medieval scholars: 1 Joshua c1300 BC, 2 Hector [Troy] c1200 BC, 3 David c1000 BC, 4 AlexGrt d332 BC, 5 Judas Maccabeus 'the hammerer' c160s BC, 6 Julius Caesar 1C BC, 7 King Arthur c450-519 AD, 8 Charlemagne c750-814 and 9 Godfrey of Bouillon famous in 1st 1097 Crusade. i.e. they were all successful empire builders, mostly Christian but also classical or Jewish.
See Merovingians and Carolingians
See Smokykin page
Contemporary (8C) events (mostly from BN HT and CHME):
- cf Pepin2 for earlier events
- 700 Arabs capture Tunis (in today's Tunesia), N African Christianity nearly exterminated; Lindesfarne Gospels produced
- 702 Arabic made ofcl language of Egypt, Ethiopians attack Arabs in Red Sea
- 705 BE36 Justinian II 'Rhinotmetus' to 711 6yrs
- 707 Muslims capture Tangier (Algeria?), Ceuta (?) in 709
- 710 BE? Justinian II confirms papal privileges; Roderic, last Visigoth king in Spain to 711 1yr
- 711 Moors (Arabs and Berbers from Morocco) conquer Spain (and Portugal), Roderic defeated, 'Andalusia' begins; ldr (Berber) Tariq ibn Ziyad (came ashore at Gibraltar, name comes from Arabic 'Jebel al-Tariq' Hyby p94); BE37 Philippicus Bardanes to 713 2yrs
- 712 Muslims est. state in Sind (in today's Pakistan)
- 713 BE38 Anastasius II to 715 2yrs
- 715 BE39 Theodosius III to 717 2yrs; monk Eadfrith creates Lindisfarne Gospels (Hyby p94)
- 716 2nd Arab siege of Constantinople to 717, fails
- 717 BE40 Leo III to 741 24yrs, repelled 2nd Muslim siege of Constantinople
- 718 Visigoth prince Pelayo fnds kingdom of Asturias in Spanish mtns, but Moors now hold most of Spain and Portugal, advancing N. Christians defeat Moors in Spain at Battle of Covadonga; icon disputes begin 719 (CHME p50)
- 725 Christian Copts in Egypt rebel, volcano rocks Constantinople (Leo interprets as 'God's fury' for icon-worship, CHME p50); 1st record of a mechanical clock in Tang China (likely at capital city Chang'an [Xi'an] pop. 2M, little survives today (Hyby p93)
- 726 BE40 Leo III begins Iconoclast Movement (response to Islam?), but Pope Gregory II opposes him (excom's Leo in 730); K Ine of Wessex 1st levies 'Peter's Pence' tax to support a college in Rome
- 731 Brit monk Venerable Bede (d735) completes 'History of English Church'
- 732 Charles Martel defeats Moors at Tours, halting their N advance
- 733 Leo III w/d Byz provinces of S Italy from papal jurisdiction
- 735 Venerable Bede dies (b673 72yo), author of English Church History
- 737 Charles Martel again defeats Moors at Narbonne (France)
- 739 Another Coptic rebellion in Egypt
- 741 Pepin II 'the Short' succeeds his father, Charles Martel, as 'mayor of the palace' (i.e. real ruler of Franks); B41 Constantine V 'Copronymus' [? impolite 'horsey smell' ZHC p141] 741 < 1yr
- 742 BE42 Artabasdus < 1yr
- 743 BE43 Constantine V (again) to 775 32yrs
- 746 Greeks retake Cyprus from Arabs
- 749 [St] John of Damascus dies circa here (b. c650 99yo, Temp p112)
- 750 end of [660- 90yrs] Umayyad Dynasty (Damascus, last member escapes to Spain, est. emirate at Cordoba, Hyby p94), start of Abbasids of Baghdad (to 969 219yrs); Tiwanaku, Bolivia, a city in the Andes at its height (Hyby p94)
- 751 Arabs (led by new Abbasid caliph Abu al-Abbas, Hyby p94) defeat Chinese near Samarkand (at Talas River in today's Kyrgyzstan, Hyby p92); Pepin II crowned King, fnding Carolingian Dynasty (ending Merovingian); Lombards under Aistulf capture Ravenna from BE
- 754 St Boniface dies (martyred), English bishop and missionary to Frisians; 'Pepin's Donation' i.e. Pepin III (Charlemagne's dad) gave part of Italy ('the papal states') to the pope in return for the RCC's approval and a royal title; E council at Hiera near Chalcedon, icons condemened w/pro-iconers John of Damascus and Germanus (ZHC p141)
- 756 Papal States fnd'd in Italy (i.e. politically cntl'd by Vatican, after Pepin II leads an army to protect Pope Stephen III from Lombards); al-Rahman (desc. of) Muawiya est. Omayyad Dynasty at Cordoba, Spain
- 757 Offa, King of Mercia to 796 39yrs, builds Offa's Dyke v. Welsh
- 762 famous 'round city' of Baghdad built by Mansur, Haroun's gdad (cf br-70waw)
- 767-72 5yrs Yet another Coptic revolt in Egypt
- 771-814 Charlemagne (son of Pepin II) king of Franks (1st HRE 800-14)
- 772 Charlemagne subdues Saxons, (forcibly) converts them to Christianity
- 773 Charlemagne annexes Lombard kingdom (N Italy)
![Age of charlemagne mercia guide Age of charlemagne mercia guide](/uploads/1/1/9/7/119728931/662337787.jpg)
- 775 BE44 Leo IV to 780 5yrs
- 778 Moors and Basques defeat Franks at Roncesvalles in the Pyrenees (hmmm, origin of Roland tale?)
- 779 Offa of Mercia becomes King of all England
- c780 Bishop Timothy becomes patriarch of Eastern Christianity, based at Seleucia (near Baghdad, d823 in his 90s, cf br-lhc); BE45 Constantine VI 780-97 17yrs (his mother Irene was regent, banished 790, returned 792, see note below); 780-823 Nestorian monks spread gospel into India, Turkestan, China, Persia and Syria (CHME p60)
- 782 Alcuin (740-804 64yo), a 42yo [B&N 50yo?] scholar for Northumbria's K Athelred I L32 r774-9, leaves York for Francia, becomes Charlemagne's leading scholar, ldr of palace school at Aachen -> revival of learning in Europe (Sypeck p50, cf br-70waw)
- 786 Haroun al-Rashid becomes 5th Abbasid caliph (head of state), made Baghdad a cntr of learning, xlated anc Grk/Rom texts into Arabic, some '1001 Nights' stories relate to him (Hyby p95)
- 787 1st Danish (Viking) invasion of Britain (start of 'Viking Age' of invasions 800-1100); Haroun al-Rashid Caliph at Baghdad to 809 22yrs (zenith of Abbasid dynasty); 2nd Council of Nicaea (church's 7th, last general, called by Irene) denouced 'adoptionism' (the idea that Jesus is not God's Son by nature) and iconoclasts, allowing Christians to revere - but NOT worship - images (icons, controversial, some say they mandated worship of them)
- 788 Charlemagne annexes Bavaria
- 791 BE45 Constantine imprisons his mother Irene for her cruelty and assumes sole power
- 793 1st recorded Viking attack (at Lindisfarne), no warning, caused widespread horror and alarm (Hyby p95)
- 796 Offa dies, end of Mercian supremacy in England
- 797 BE46 [Empress] Irene to 802 5yrs, 1st Empress, son blinded and imprisoned, 22yr rule, 17 as regent for her minor son, Irene later deposed, had a doctrinal dispute w/Charlemagne when she tried to 'impose Byzantine image-reverence on the West, an idolatrous practice [to] the RCC' (AMF p41, Byz bk ends w/Irene)
- 800 Pope Leo III crowns Charlemagne in Rome as 1st HRE of West; Vikings invade Germany; the 'Donation of Constantine' document surfaced c800, claimed REConst had given the pope pwr over all other bishops and large portions of Italy, later shown to be a forgery
- cf LouisItP for later events
On BE45 Constantine VI: 'Strange as it may seem to us today, [Charlemagne et. al.] did not think of the Roman Empire as a thing of the past. They viewed the Byzantine Empire ... as [its] continuation ... [standing for] civilization, stability, tradition ... [and] still regarded Constantine VI, the boy emperor, as the RE. Therefore, in 798 the West was shocked by news that the young emperor had been overthrown by his ambitious mother, Irene ... [Charlemagne] undoubtedly perceived Irene's revolt as a sign of weakness in the empire and ... [of] opportunity for himself' (tIoC p97 [cf Roman.html], i.e. set off a sequence of events leading to his crowning as 1st HRE, seen as a legit. continuation of RE, still disputed how much he himself was involved, key turning point as West ceased to see Byzantines as 'above' them, latter's own fault thru corruption, might've been different).
From ToN.html: Amy Chua's 2007 bk 'Day of Empire' looks at 'big 8' 'hyperpowers' 1 Persia [6-4C BC] 2 Rome [3C BC - 5C AD] 3 Tang China (r618-907 AD began w/Li Yuan, cf BWH) 4 Mongols [12C AD] 5 Spain [15C] 6 TDR [17C] 7 British [18-9C] and 8 USA, says 'tolerance' 1rst builds, then (angry reaction) undermines empires, and that 'in its [8C] heyday, Tang China was by far the greatest power in the world' (p81, Taizong r626-49, Ming Huang r712-56, at its zenith, China had 60M pop. v. [Damascus-based] Umayads 36M [+ Baghdad-based Abbasids pop.?], Byz 13M and [Trier-based] Franks 10M)
In theory, the HRE title made its holder the heir of the ancient Roman emperors and [thus] the ruler of the [old] Western [Roman] Empire. In reality, HREs only ruled portions of C Europe. German kings possessed the title from AD 962 to 1806, when Napoleon abolished it. Since the 5C the West had descended into (tribalism or) decentralized feudalism ('futilism' acc. to Calvin and Hobbes), and this was an attempt to re-ignite the empire and a higher level of civilization (CHME p48).
One reason Islam made such rapid progress in the East was that the Church (both RCC and Eastern Church) had already rejected N African (esp. Copts) and other Christians who held the '1-Nature' theology. So many of them viewed Islam as 'a better deal' and cooperated in changing their churches into Mosques. Also, Muslims generally respected other 'people of the book' (Christians and Jews), tho they were saddled w/some disadvantages. But perhaps even so many were treated better than under their former distant Christian rulers (CHME p50).
In 799 several Italian nobles wanted to control the RCC. Their candidate for pope was rejected [by RCC ldrs] in favor of Leo III. But the nobles were sore losers; they hired thugs to gouge out Leo's tongue. 2 Franks brought the injured bishop to Charlemagne's palace [at Trier], where Leo was warmly welcomed by Charlemagne. But the Italians were accusing Leo of misusing church funds. Leo would've appealed to the RE, but the West no longer had one! Empress Irene ruled in the East, but Leo refused to let a woman judge him. How to resolve? Aha! On 23 Dec 800 Charlemagne declares Leo innocent of all charges; 2 days later Leo crowns Charlemagne HRE (CHME p51-2, 1st time RCC had created an emperor).
The mandylion [likely the Shroud of Turin, which had come to Constantinople via Edessa in 944, and likely from Qumran before that. It was the #1 relic at Const.] was at the center of debate at the 787 Nicaea Council. Theodore, abbot of the Monastery of Studion in Constantinople, one of the most splendid centers of Byzantine culture ... was able to fight both intellectually and politically to reassert the need to worship [or at least venerate] images ... he was able to underline a perennially valid, timeless fact: Forbidding the cult of images can be very dangerous, for it lays the groundwork for the growth of heresies. Rejecting images in the name of religion made only of ideas and mental concepts prevents contact between believers and the human aspects of Jesus: This leaves believers exposed to the ever-lurking danger of taking Jesus Christ as nothing but a spiritual entity, a symbol of the possible contact between man and God (Temp 114-5).
get 'Christendom' quote from B&C Mar/Apr 2010 p20 (rats, I gave that issue away)
Charlemagne occupies an important place in Irvin Baxter's understanding of biblical prophecy i.e. his 800 AD coronation as the 1st 'Holy Roman Emperor' by Pope Leo III marked the 1st of the top 5 post-resurrection prophecy events.
Sources:
- tIoC = The Importance of Charlemagne, Timothy Levi Biel, Lucent Bks, 1997.
- Byz = Byzantium: The Early Centuries [to Irene], John Julius Norwich, pub?, yr?, Mustang.
- AMF = A Mighty Fortress [on Germany], Steven Ozment, pub?, yr?, Mustang.
- BN HT = History's Timeline, Barnes & Noble, 1981, own.
- CHME = Christian History Made Easy, Dr Timothy Paul Jones, Rose, 2005, own.
- Hyby = History Year by Year, DK, 2013, FHL.
- France = France: Enchantment of the World, Peter Moss and Thelma Palmer, Children's Press (Regensteiner), 1986, FHL.
- ZHC = Zondervan [HB to the] History of Christianity, Jonathan Hill, 2006, own.
Age Of Charlemagne Mercia Guided
- Temp = The Templars, Barbara Frale, Skyhorse, 2012, FHL.Total War Attila Age Of Charlemagne Mercia Guide
Notes: DOKA (pp49-57) has several references to a Syagrius who lived in the later 5C (seems too late to be either of these, but possibly a descendent?). A Roman general named Aegidius established himself as an independent ruler of N Gaul c457. His son Syagrius succeeded him. Aegidius may be Geoffrey's model for Ambrosius Aurelius, son of parents who 'wore the purple and died in the devastation' (i.e. Roman sympathizers, possibly a Senator, 49). By 467, Aegidius has died and Syagrius 'dominated the North [Gaul], at some point, interestingly, adopting the title 'King of the Romans' (52). Possibly Syagrius received 'Arthur' on his arrival at the mouth of the Loire in France from Britain [to attack Saxons, smashing them near Angers, before being betrayed by Roman prefect Arvandus and then defeated by Euric the Visigoth c470]. Promised (by Syagrius) Roman troops who never came to help Arthur (Riotimus) would have come from Syagrius (56). Riotimus in Brittainy [Armorica], Ambrosius in Britain, Aegidius and Syagrius in N Gaul stood for Romanitas (57). The Franks had been on good relations w/Syagrius, but after Euric's victory, they turned against Syagrius 'and in 486 their next king, Clovis, captured his capital, Soissons [Syagrius killed?]. Clovis rose to supremacy in N Gaul and drove the Visigoths back toward Spain. Gaul became the land of the Franks - eventually France [might have been a revitalized 'Rome' had Arthur succeeded]' (57). Online (at www.smokykin.com, I think) was a reference to Deuteria, dau of Dux Syagrius 'king of Romans.' As Julius Caesar and Pompey were sparring (leading up to Pharsalus), Pompey's 2 able commanders in Spain were Lucius Afranius and Marcus Petreius (tIoJC p53, hmmm connected w/Afranius below?). tIoJC (see JuCaesar.html): Upon his return to Rome in July 46 BC (after defeating Juba the Numidian et al in N Africa; King Juba, Pompey's f-i-l General Metellus Scipio, Petreius d. fighting, Afranius executed (had been spared earlier in Spain), Pompey's sons Gnaeus and Sextus escaped to Spain, Marcus Cato committed suicide), Caesar began making reforms in Rome. Meanwhile Pompey's 2 sons [tried to regroup in Spain,] Caesar led his own army to Spain Nov 46, defeating them at Munda March 45' [terrible battle, 30K killed, 1K of Caesar's own k., he nearly lost his life, hardest and last battle of his life].