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- I think you are misusing the speedy deletion tag. Best regards JRB-Europe (talk) 07:01, 1 September 2015 (UTC)
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- Ok, I clarified this disambiguation JRB-Europe (talk) 09:12, 5 January 2016 (UTC)
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Ripuarian Franks
Hi. Concerning this edit. One question I have is whether the Carolingians are really considered to be "Ripuarians". I have never found sources which show clearly how various modern tertiary works claim to know the exact boundaries between Salian and Ripuarian kingdoms. Indeed the best sources seem to see the questions of the bounds of these kingdoms as something that is debated and unsure? Do you have any good sources which can help us clarify?--Andrew Lancaster (talk) 14:29, 21 September 2016 (UTC)
- Hello Andrew, thank you for your comments. One good source that explains how both the Salian and Ripuarian Franks were already in a good position to take over after the Roman collapse in december 406 is the work of Jona Lendering and Arjen Bosman. "De rand van het Rijk, De Romeinen en de Lage Landen". I think this work is also translated in English now. It explains how both tribes after the for the history of the Netherlands and Belgium very important (Meuseand the Rhineland south of Cologne and later the Moselle valley. In the 130 years between 274 and 406 they had been in very close contact with the Romans, what explains that after 406 they were both far more able to include surviving Roman elements in there kingdoms than other and competing Germanic invaders. The amazing success of the Frankish kingdoms and their successor states is for a large part due to the way they were able to incorporate this Roman elements, the most important being Roman-Catholicism.
- As far as the northern and western borders of the Ripuarian Franks are concerned the border was (and linguistically still is) the former forest area between the Scheldt and the Meuse-basin (Limburgs - it even has its own wikipedia). The same goes for the Moselle valley. The language spoken there was also derived from the Ripuarian Frankish language. In the same way it's also easy to determine the border between former Ripuarian Frank and Saxon areas in both the Netherlands and Germany. For the areas were both Salians and Ripuarian invaders were a clear minority and the proto-French language already won out in the very early middle ages its not clear if we can linguistically determine the borders. Maybe somebody with excellent knowledge of Northern French dialects should investigate this. We however have military and political history, placement of riversystems and the organisation of the Catholic church in bishoprics. As far as the rivers are concerned the Meuse valley was clearly Ripuarian and the Schelde-basin was clearly Salian. The Rhine and the Moselle are also clear. I agree with your critique that for the north-eastern part of the Seine-basin the situation is less clear. I have no conclusive evidence that the Seine-basin was completely Salian. I for the moment will therefore qualify my statements. Maybe I will address this question later. Regards JRB-Europe (talk) 17:07, 21 September 2016 (UTC)]
- Thanks for that reference. I can read Flemish and will look around for it. One thing I am interested in is whether there is a really strong consensus for the types of definitive statements which I know that secondary and tertiary sources often make about Salians and Ripuarians. For example I know there is real primary evidence for the Salians being allowed to move into Toxandria (which we also have no exact boundaries for, but must have roughly been to the north of the road you mention). I also know that Cologne was Ripuarian. But you for example mention Maastricht, which is very close to Toxandria. Is there really any evidence about this? You also mentioned the Ardennes as a boundary, but is this just a standard assumption or really something "known" ? (Actually you mention Silva Carbonaria, which raises more questions about whether the boundaries of the term are clear today.) I have seen that there is serious debate is really strong sources such as the historian Guy Halsall about things often assumed in books such as the idea that Merovingians simply moved south from Toxandria. (He thinks they probably had their ethnogenesis within the empire around the Loire. Your comments above tend to make me think you are proposing a reasonable speculation, rather than something there is a clear consensus about?--Andrew Lancaster (talk) 11:45, 22 September 2016 (UTC)
- Ok, if you can read Dutch and Flemish maybe it's good idea to also have a look at the wikipedia articles over the dialects that are spoken south and west of the Rhine. Limburgs are descended from the language spoken by the Ripuarian Franks. Also have a look at the article over nl:Toxandrië. Even now, more than 1.500 years later, you can easily hear the difference between a village where they speak a dialect that goes back to the Salian Franks versus one that goes back to the Ripuarian Franks. By the way it's good that you challenge me since I was too hasty in making Nijmegen, Maastricht and Cologne the vertexes of the area that was taken by the Ripuarians after 274. The more correct vertices of this area are Cologne, Tongeren, Venlo, Duisburg. The original Frankish tribe that before 274 lived opposite the line Nijmegen-Xanten line apparently became part of the Salian Franks and moved south-west, since in Kleve and surroundings quiet a few people still speak Kleverlandish, a dialect directly related to Brabantic.
- Ok, if you can read Dutch and Flemish maybe it's good idea to also have a look at the wikipedia articles over the dialects that are spoken south and west of the Rhine.
- It's quiet well known were the borders of the former Tubanti, the ancient name for Twente. Salland, Hamaland (now called the Achterhoek), and Twente are all bordering on each other. These territories are now all Saxon, not Frankish, and have been Saxon for as long as written history goes back (end 8th century). The reasons that a number of already existing smaller tribes amalgamated into the larger group of the Salian Franks around 250 was a great crisis. Individually the smaller tribes were in grave danger to be obliterated between the Roman border (then still the limes on the Rhine and the Saxons to the north. In order to prevent this they formed a successfull alliance that later in history became known as the Salian Franks, to distinguish them from the Ripuarian Franks. In an irony of history and with a considerable amount of luck (in the battle of Chalons in 274, the Rhine-army of the Gallian empire was completely destroyed, leaving the limes in Germania Inferior defenseless). The newly formed alliance of the Salian Franks got its lucky break and subsequently managed to consolidate their power for 130 years south of the Rhine, first in Toxandria, and after 406 also in the Schelde basin (center Tournai, see Merovech and Childeric I), after which under the extraordinary leaderschip of Clovis they managed to start the Merovingian dynastyaround 500 AD.
- It's quiet well known were the borders of the former
- I see no direct link with the river Loire. Can you elaborate over what Halsell exactly says ? Maybe there is some form of misunderstanding and he means something else with the word "ethnogenesis". Greetings JRB-Europe (talk) 18:09, 22 September 2016 (UTC)
- I am aware of such theories yes, and the dialects etc. But I think you need to make it a project to try to collect the best possible published sources for all these connections, and ask yourself what wordings we should use. If they are just common and likely speculations, then we should report it that way. In this post however you are focusing on a new subject in a way: the boundaries of old tribes before the ethnogenesis of the Salians and Ripuarians. But coming back to the question of the Salians and Ripuarians and their boundaries, you mention the commonly asserted idea that Limburgish dialects are "Ripuarian". That might not be disproven but it is also not a simple as a modern dialect map might make it look. A big part of the area you are thinking of as Ripuarian would be "Toxandria". (Northern Belgian Limburg is a big part of the Kempen, which is I think fairly securely equated with the Kempen area.) But the classical sources we have mentioning Salians, which are actually very few, mention the Salians specifically in Toxandria. (They were moved there from Batavia, but had previously been north of the Rhine.) Indeed I think you also assume the Salians are the Merovingians, but I think the only connection is the use of the Lex Salica? However no one really knows whether the Lex Salica should be seen as simply Merovingian or Carolingian. (There are various legal documents associated with the Frankish empire including a Lex Ripuaria. But there is a lot of mystery.) As I mentioned before, there is a serious line of debate that the Merovingians were a cultural group which formed within France among Romanized military Franks (because very simply this is where all the records show them first appearing, and mainly appearing after that). Similarly I am not sure if anyone can really strongly link the eventual imperial Duchy of Franconia with the Ripuarians in anything but a likely story?--Andrew Lancaster (talk) 09:47, 23 September 2016 (UTC)
- Andrew, I feel a little bit insulted that you think that I assume that Salian Franks are the Merovingians. That is a very crude statement. Clovis started his career in Tournai. His father was buried there. There is no sign that Tournai ever was Flemish spoken. So his father would have ruled over Roman-speaking subjects. In fact as soon as Salian Franks crossed the "heerweg" Boulogne-Cologne after 406, they would have ruled over Roman speaking people. In his career Clovis first eliminated all rival Salian Frank leaders and surviving Roman led territories in the neighbourhood (among them Alamans (together with Ripuarian Franks) and late in in his career the Visigoths. He also fought the Burgundians. Also important is that he was able to become ruler of the Ripuarian Franks in Cologne. In the mean time, somewhere around 500, he converted to Roman Catholicism and forged a highly succesfull alliance with the church. The amazing success of the Merovingian state and it's successor states is for a large part due to the way that Clovis was able to incorporate the conquered Roman elements, the most important being Roman-Catholicism. Apparently most subject must have felt some loyalty to it, otherwise the Merovingian state could not have existed for 250 years. In this Merovingian state at least in the first decades but probably longer the original Salian Franks formed a very important military and political elite. The rulers of the Merovingian state were descendants of Clovis. After 639 (death of Dagobert I) the de facto power over the Merovingian state shifted to the Austrasian mayordomo's. Regards JRB-Europe (talk) 13:48, 23 September 2016 (UTC)]
- Andrew, I feel a little bit insulted that you think that I assume that Salian Franks are the Merovingians. That is a very crude statement. Clovis started his career in Tournai. His father was buried there. There is no sign that Tournai ever was Flemish spoken. So his father would have ruled over Roman-speaking subjects. In fact as soon as Salian Franks crossed the "heerweg" Boulogne-Cologne after 406, they would have ruled over Roman speaking people. In his career Clovis first eliminated all rival Salian Frank leaders and surviving Roman led territories in the neighbourhood (among them
- I am aware of such theories yes, and the dialects etc. But I think you need to make it a project to try to collect the best possible published sources for all these connections, and ask yourself what wordings we should use. If they are just common and likely speculations, then we should report it that way. In this post however you are focusing on a new subject in a way: the boundaries of old tribes before the ethnogenesis of the Salians and Ripuarians. But coming back to the question of the Salians and Ripuarians and their boundaries, you mention the commonly asserted idea that Limburgish dialects are "Ripuarian". That might not be disproven but it is also not a simple as a modern dialect map might make it look. A big part of the area you are thinking of as Ripuarian would be "Toxandria". (Northern Belgian Limburg is a big part of the Kempen, which is I think fairly securely equated with the Kempen area.) But the classical sources we have mentioning Salians, which are actually very few, mention the Salians specifically in Toxandria. (They were moved there from Batavia, but had previously been north of the Rhine.) Indeed I think you also assume the Salians are the Merovingians, but I think the only connection is the use of the Lex Salica? However no one really knows whether the Lex Salica should be seen as simply Merovingian or Carolingian. (There are various legal documents associated with the Frankish empire including a Lex Ripuaria. But there is a lot of mystery.) As I mentioned before, there is a serious line of debate that the Merovingians were a cultural group which formed within France among Romanized military Franks (because very simply this is where all the records show them first appearing, and mainly appearing after that). Similarly I am not sure if anyone can really strongly link the eventual imperial Duchy of Franconia with the Ripuarians in anything but a likely story?--Andrew Lancaster (talk) 09:47, 23 September 2016 (UTC)
Charlemagne
Charlemagne was the founder of the Holy Roman Empire. UtherPendrogn (talk) 20:01, 2 October 2016 (UTC)
- No he was not. He was the founder of the Otto I the Great was the founder of Holy Roman Empire in the middle of the 10th century. JRB-Europe (talk) 13:29, 3 October 2016 (UTC)]
"The Holy Roman Empire only becomes formally established in the next century. But it is implicit in the title adopted by Charlemagne in 800: 'Charles, most serene Augustus, crowned by God, great and pacific emperor, governing the Roman empire." UtherPendrogn (talk) 05:14, 4 October 2016 (UTC)
The Holy Roman Empire wikipedia page even lists 800, and then 962. UtherPendrogn (talk) 05:15, 4 October 2016 (UTC)
- Have a look at the German (Das Reich bildete sich im 10. Jahrhundert unter der Dynastie der Ottonen aus dem ehemals karolingischen Ostfrankenreich heraus.[2] Mit der Kaiserkrönung Ottos I. 962 knüpften die römisch-deutschen Herrscher (wie zuvor die Karolinger) an die Idee des erneuerten Römerreiches an, woran bis zum Ende des Reiches zumindest prinzipiell festgehalten wurde. Das Gebiet des Ostfrankenreichs wurde erstmals im 11. Jahrhundert in den Quellen als Regnum Teutonicum oder Regnum Teutonicorum (Königreich der Deutschen) bezeichnet;) and the French wikipedia (Il se considérait, du Xe siècle jusqu'à sa suppression par Napoléon, comme le continuateur légitime de l’Empire d’Occident des Carolingiens, mais également de l’Empire romain) articles. The statement in the English wikipedia that "On 25 December 800, Pope Leo III crowned the Frankish king Charlemagne as Emperor, reviving the title in Western Europe after more than three centuries." is simply wrong. JRB-Europe (talk) 13:30, 4 October 2016 (UTC)
- I have changed this to "On 25 December 800, Pope Leo III crowned the Frankish king Charlemagne as Emperor". In case someone doesn't notice what I have changed. I have changed the link. JRB-Europe (talk) 13:41, 4 October 2016 (UTC)
- He did revive the title. UtherPendrogn (talk) 16:31, 4 October 2016 (UTC)
- Yes, Charlemagne did revive the title but he was not the founder of the Holy Roman Empire. JRB-Europe (talk) 18:19, 4 October 2016 (UTC)
- Plenty of scholars regard Charlemagne as the founder of the Holy Roman Empire, although few use that term for the period before about 1200. It is true that Charlemagne revived the imperial title in Western Europe after more than three centuries (save for a few Byzantine territories in Spain and Italy). Srnec (talk) 00:49, 5 October 2016 (UTC)
- Most scholars of medieval history that I'm aware of regard Carolingian empire not as the founder of the Holy Roman Empire. JRB-Europe (talk) 13:33, 5 October 2016 (UTC)]
- I probably should have said that most scholars working in English treat 800 as the more pivotal date than 962. In neither case was a new empire "founded" on the date in question: Charlemagne already ruled the Franks and Lombards before he took the imperial title, as Otto I ruled the Germans and Italians before taking the same. Peter Wilson's Heart of Europe (2016) begins with 800. Joachim Whaley, in the first of his volumes on the modern empire, places "the Reich's origins ... in the translation of the inheritance of the Roman Empire northwards by Charlemagne." In my experience, this is typical. You cannot talk about the origins of the Holy Roman Empire without talking about Charlemagne. Srnec (talk) 05:09, 8 October 2016 (UTC)
- I don't know why you think that I want to talk about the origins of the Holy Roman Empire without talking about Charlemagne. The only thing I state in the discussion above is that it is wrong to say that Charlemagne was the founder of the Holy Roman Empire. I think the current wording of the second paragraph of the article Holy Roman Empire is acceptable. JRB-Europe (talk) 12:31, 8 October 2016 (UTC)
- I probably should have said that most scholars working in English treat 800 as the more pivotal date than 962. In neither case was a new empire "founded" on the date in question: Charlemagne already ruled the Franks and Lombards before he took the imperial title, as Otto I ruled the Germans and Italians before taking the same. Peter Wilson's Heart of Europe (2016) begins with 800. Joachim Whaley, in the first of his volumes on the modern empire, places "the Reich's origins ... in the translation of the inheritance of the Roman Empire northwards by Charlemagne." In my experience, this is typical. You cannot talk about the origins of the Holy Roman Empire without talking about Charlemagne. Srnec (talk) 05:09, 8 October 2016 (UTC)
- Most scholars of medieval history that I'm aware of regard
- Plenty of scholars regard Charlemagne as the founder of the Holy Roman Empire, although few use that term for the period before about 1200. It is true that Charlemagne revived the imperial title in Western Europe after more than three centuries (save for a few Byzantine territories in Spain and Italy). Srnec (talk) 00:49, 5 October 2016 (UTC)
- Yes, Charlemagne did revive the title but he was not the founder of the Holy Roman Empire. JRB-Europe (talk) 18:19, 4 October 2016 (UTC)
- He did revive the title. UtherPendrogn (talk) 16:31, 4 October 2016 (UTC)
- I have changed this to "On 25 December 800, Pope Leo III crowned the Frankish king Charlemagne as Emperor". In case someone doesn't notice what I have changed. I have changed the link. JRB-Europe (talk) 13:41, 4 October 2016 (UTC)
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