Page:Encyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition, v. 5.djvu/415

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CHARLEMAGNE 403 subdued, Charles crossed the Pyrenees, and received the submission of the country as far as the Ebro. On his return, however, the rear-guard was assailed and cut off by the mountaineers in the pass of Roncesvalles ; Roland their leader was slain, and the overthrow of the Franks, trans formed and wrought up in every possible way, became one of the great themes of song and romance (778). His march home from Spain had been unseasonably hastened by a general revolt of the Saxons, this time assisted by the Danes. Charles was again easily victorious, but no sooner had he left the country than the Saxons, mad with revenge, and animated by the fiercest national and religious hate, resumed the struggle. Even the massacre of Yerden (782), in which 4500 Saxon prisoners were slain in cold blood, served only to intensify the spirit of resistance ; but their rude courage was no match for the large and well-dis ciplined armies of the Frankish king. They were again completely defeated ; even Wittikind, the hero of the whole war, was compelled to confess the superiority of the God of Charlemagne, and at Attigny received the rite of baptism (785). His example was generally followed ; and the Frankish organization, political and ecclesiastical, was systematically introduced. Germany had become Christian ; it was now the Northmen, among whom thousands of Saxons had found refuge, that took up the task of support ing a gradually declining cause. But though this may be looked upon as the deciding act in the drama of old Ger manic resistance, there were still many bloody and almost general revolts of the Saxons. To punish these Charles adopted even a more effective method than the planting of Frankish garrisons ; thousands of Saxon families were de ported into other provinces of the empire, and more loyal subjects introduced to fill the vacant space. It was not till 804 that the last sparks of resistance were quenched. In the year 788, Bavaria was incorporated with the Frankish empire. Its duke, Thassilo, had more than once incurred the displeasure of Charles by too pronounced measures towards the recovery of his independence, and had even alienated his subjects by schemes of alliance with the heathen Avars and the heretic Greeks. Consequently Charles had no difficulty in dethroning him. This was followed in 791 by a vast and well-organized expedition against the Avars, a savage robber nation of Mongols inhabit ing the modern Hungary. The Franks were agaia victorious everywhere ; but other work of a more pressing kind prevented Charles from completing their reduction, which was afterwards effected chiefly by his lieutenants. Their immense circular encampments, or rings, from which they had issued to carry havoc into all the surrounding countries, were forced, and their treasures became the spoil of the Christian armies (798). They submitted ; and German colonists were introduced into many of those regions. In this way Pannonia was added to the empire of Charles. Other campaigns carried on at various times by Charlemagne or his lieutenants, on the Elbe and even in Bohemia, against the Danes, the Wends, and the Czechs, still further increased the prestige of the Frankish armies, and enlarged the empire of their great monarch against Slavish and Scandinavian heathendom, while his troops maintained the Spanish march against his south-western enemies, Moslem and Christian, and the duke of Bene ventum in Southern Italy was obliged to become his vassal. Thus from the Eider to Sicily, and from the Ebro to the Theiss, the will of Charles was supreme ; while over the Slavonic tribes, as far as the Oder or even the Vistula, his influence was felt in no feeble way. The genius and energy of one man had succeeded in arresting the progress of political disintegration, and, in the interest of culture and constructive order, in welding into one great monarchy all the races of continental Germany. It was no wonder that men who associated the ideas of imperial order and con structive civilization with the name of Rome should have recognized in the monarchy of Charles the restoration of the power of the Cseaars. "When, therefore, at Rome, on Christmas eve of the year 800, he was crowned emperor of the Romans, it seemed the natural consummation of his whole career. And when in 801 an embassy arrived with curious presents from Harun-al-Rashid, the great caliph who held in the East the same place as Charles in tho West, men recognized it as a becoming testimony to the world-wide reputation of the Frankish emperor. Charles was far more than an ordinary conqueror. Ht displayed not less energy in the internal organization and administration of his kingdom than in foreign affairs. The whole empire was divided into districts, presided over by counts, who were responsible for their good government ; while in the exposed frontiers or marches, other counts (Marlegrafcn) were stationed with forces capable of defending them. In order to superintend these provincial authorities, to give effect to the royal will, to preserve the due subordination of the outlying portions of the empire to the central power, aod in this way to complete and secure the organization of the empire, the missi dominici, experienced men both of the laity and clergy, were despatched in all directions. Two great assemblies were held every year, the Champ-de-Mai, which was a kind of national muster, essentially military, and an other in autumn, of the high officials, of a deliberative and advisory nature. In the capitularies (edicts issued as the necessities of the empire required), in his endeavours to promote education, in his organization of the church and the definitive institution of tithes, in the unsuccessful attempt to join the Danube and the Rhine by a canal, he gave proof of the noblest desire to conserve and propagate the culture of former times. Learned men Eginhard, Paul Warnefried, and, above all, Alcuin were his intimate friends -and teacliers ; Guizot .calls Alcuin his intellectual prime minister. Charlemagne died on 28th January 814, at Aix- la-Chapelle, and was buried there. The empire created and organized by his genius gradually fell to pieces after his death. His endeavour to resuscitate an old civilization, to engraft the Christian Roman culture on the vigorous stem of the Teutonic races, and to unite all the Germanic tribes in one empire, before the long action of historic influences had stamped upon them a distinct national character this was to a great extent a failure, because one life-time was too short for its accomplishment. His greatness lies ifi the nobility of his aim, in the energy and wisdom with which he carried it out during his life, and also in the enduring traces of valuable work which remained notwithstanding the general wreck of his empire ; for, though the central organization was swept away, the provincial authorities remained,, to be transformed into the new feudal organization of Western Europe, whilst the idea of the revival of the Christian Roman Empire was to be taken up by other sections of the Germanic race. Though the circumstances of his time prevented him from being the founder of a new epoch in history, like Csesar or Alexander. yet, in the greatness of his character, in his marvellous many-sided activity, and In the magic influence of his name on subsequent generations, he was equal to either. The works of Charlemagne are 1. His Capitularies, first col lected by Ansegise, abbot of St Wandrille, the best edition c f winch is that of Etienne Baluze, Paris, 1677, 2 vols. folio ; 1 Letters, contained in the collection of D. Bouquet ; 3. ^Grammar, of which fragments are to be found in the Polygraphia of Trithe- mius ; 4. His Testament, contained, in Bouchel s Bibliothbque du Droit Franc^ais, torn, iii., printed at Paris, 1667, folio ; 5. Some Latin poems, e .g. , the Epitaph of Pope Adrian and the Song tif Roland ;

6. The Caroline Books. The great contemporary authority for the