РефератыИностранный языкThThe Franks Essay Research Paper The last

The Franks Essay Research Paper The last

The Franks Essay, Research Paper


The last phase of the Western Roman Empire, the period of transition


between Romanity and the rise of a new medieval world, is marked by


successive incursions of Barbarians from the north. In particular, there were


the Goths (Visigoths and Ostrogoths), Alans, Suebi, Vandals, Huns, and the


Franks. Dominating present-day northern France, Belgium, and western


Germany, one of these groups, the Franks, established the most powerful


Christian kingdom of early medieval western Europe.


The origins of the Franks are obscure. They seemed to have


developed as a distinct people during the 1st or 3rd century A.D. as a result


of a fusion of many small Germanic tribes living along the east bank of the


lower Rhine River. While the tribes were linked by language and


institutions, they were not united politically(Malcolm 9) Two large groupings


of the Franks, the Salians and the Ripuarians, existed as early as the 3rd


century. Each of these was divided into many petty kingdoms rules by


warrior chiefs whose personal ability and success in war determined the


fortune of each kingdom( McNeill 75)


The turning point in the Franks history came with their movement


west of the Rhine into Roman Gaul.(Latouche 216) In the mid-3rd century


the Franks tried unsuccessfully to expand westward across the Rhine into


Roman-held Gaul. In the mid-4th century the Franks again attempted to


invade Gaul, and in 358 Rome was compelled to abandon the area between


the Meuse and Scheldt rivers(now in Belgium) to the Salian Franks. During


the course of these drawn-out struggles, the Franks were gradually


influenced by Roman civilization. Some Frankish leaders became Roman


allies in the defense of the Roman frontier, and many Franks served as


auxiliary soldiers in the Roman army.(Mcneill 76)


The Vandals launched a massive invasion of Gaul in 406, and in the


ensuing decades, the Franks took advantage of the overstrained Roman


defenses. They solidified their hold on what is now Belgium, took


permanent control of the lands immediately west of the middle Rhine River,


and edged into what is now northeastern France.(Cottingham 29) The firm


establishment of the Franks in northeastern Gaul by the year 480 meant that


both the former Roman province of Germania and part of the two former


Belgic provinces were lost to Roman rule. The small Gallo-Roman


population therefore became submerged among the German immigrants,


and Latin ceased to be the language of everyday speech.(McManus 46)


The extreme limit of Frankish settlement at this time is marked by the


linguistic frontier that still divides the Romance-speaking peoples of France


and southern Belgium from the Germanic-speaking peoples of northern


Belgium, The Netherlands, and Germany.(McNeill 76)


Under the Salian king Clovis I, the power and extent of the Frankish


kingdom grew considerably. In 481-482, Clovis succeeded his father


Childeric, as the ruler of the Salian Franks of Tournai. In 486 Clovis


overthrew Syagrius, the last Roman governor in Gaul, and in the following


years, compelled the other Salian and Ripuarian tribes to submit to his


authority.(Cottingham 31) This marked the first time the Franks had stood


united. Clovis then took advantage of the depleted Roman defenses and


led the united Franks in a series of campaigns that brought all of northern


Gaul under his rule by 494. He stemmed the Alemannic migrations into


Gaul from east of the Rhine, and in 507 he drove southward, subduing the


Visigoths who had established themselves in southern Gaul. A unified


Frankish kingdom was thus established and secured. Clovis converted to


Catholicism, and the massive adoption of orthodox Christianity by the


Franks only helped to further unite them.(McNeill 77)


Clovis belonged to the Merovingian dynasty, so named for his


grandfather Merovich.(Latouche 215) After the death of Clovis, the kingdom


was divided among his four sons, and for the following century it went


through several divisions and reunifications until finally consolidated by


Clotaire II in 613. Shortly after his death, however, the kings ceased to


exercise any influence, and authority passed into the hands of the great


officers of the state, mostly notably, the mayor of the palace(major domus).


In the eastern part, Austrasia, however, a powerful family, the Carolingian,


arose which retained exclusive possession of the palace morality for more


than 100 years.(Winston 77) In 687 Pepin of Herstal, the Austrasian mayor


of the palace, overthrew the forces of Neustria(the western part) and


Bourgogne, setting himself up as major domus of a united Frankish


kingdom. His son, Charles Martel, extended the frontiers of the kingdom in


the east and in 732 repelled the Moors in a decisive battle fought at a site


between Tours and Poitiers. Frankish power attained great development


under Charles Martel s grandson, Charlemagne, who in his time was the


most powerful monarch of Europe. On December 25, 800, he was crowned


Carolus Augustus, emperor of the Romans, by Pop Leo III. Charlemagne s


imperial title was later borne by the Holy Roman emperors until the early


19th century. His Frankish lands developed into the kingdom of France,


which is named for the Franks.(Ibid)


The Carolingian decline after Charlemagne, followed the same pattern


as the Merovingians after Clovis. The same type of partition of lands


resulted in the area roughly equivalent to medieval France being assigned to


the Frankish emperor Charles II. He and his descendants held an


ever-weakening grip over the kingdom against invading Vikings and


predatory lords. Over the shrunken French state, the Capetian dynasty


would achieve kingship by 987, and within the state the feudal system would


flower.(McManus 48)


Successive Barbarian incursions marked the last phase of the


Western Roman Empire. Among these Barbarian groups were the


Goths(Visigoths and Ostrogoths), the Alans, the Suebi, the Vandals, and the


Franks. Only one of these, however, was able to establish a great and


prosperous kingdom after the fall of the Western Roman Empire.


Dominating present-day northern France, Belgium, and Western Germany,


the Franks established the most powerful Christian kingdom of early


medieval Europe.

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