Kingdom of Germany

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Regnum Teutonicum
Kingdom of Germany

Kingdom

Flag
919 – 962
Capital none
Language(s) Latin, German, many others
Religion Roman Catholicism
Government Monarchy
King
 - 919 - 936 Henry I
 - 936 - 962# Otto I
History
 - Henry I crowned "King of the Germans" 23 April 919
 - Otto I crowned "Holy Roman Emperor" 2 February 962
# Otto I died 973

The Kingdom of Germany was a medieval state[1] which grew out of that of East Francia in the tenth century, when the term regnum Teutonicum first came into informal use. The character of the eastern partition of the Treaty of Verdun of 843 was never very Frankish. By the High Middle Ages, the German character of the united stem duchies was generally recognised. As the other various states of the Carolingian then Holy Roman Empire removed themselves from its orbit, leaving solely Germany, her kings holding the imperial title and struggling for it,[2] the German state became synonymous with the Empire and in the time of the Renaissance, the "Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation" united the two concepts of empire and kingdom.

The term rex Teutonicorum, or "king of the Germans", first came into use during the Investiture Controversy as a polemical tool against the Emperor Henry IV by Pope Gregory VII in the late eleventh century.[3] In the twelfth century, in order to stress the imperial and transnational character of their office, the emperors began to employ the title rex Romanorum or "king of the Romans" on their election (by German bishops and noblemen). The royal titles of Germany, Italy, and Burgundy, which traditionally had their own courts, laws, and chanceries, remained with the Holy Roman Emperors until the end (1806).

  1. ^ Gillingham, passim. Robinson, 729. Furhmann, passim.
  2. ^ Furhmann, 348.
  3. ^ Robinson, 729.


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