Book contents
- After Charlemagne
- After Charlemagne
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Additional material
- 1 Italy after Charlemagne
- 2 A Brief Introduction to Italian Political History until 875
- Section I Was There a Carolingian Italy?
- 3 Talking about the Carolingians in Eighth- and Ninth-Century Italy
- 4 The Name of the Kingdom
- 5 Was There a Carolingian Italy?
- Section II Organizing Italy
- Section III Carolingian Rulers
- Section IV Cities, Courts and Carolingians
- Bibliography
- Index
5 - Was There a Carolingian Italy?
Politics, Institutions and Book Culture
from Section I - Was There a Carolingian Italy?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 December 2020
- After Charlemagne
- After Charlemagne
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Additional material
- 1 Italy after Charlemagne
- 2 A Brief Introduction to Italian Political History until 875
- Section I Was There a Carolingian Italy?
- 3 Talking about the Carolingians in Eighth- and Ninth-Century Italy
- 4 The Name of the Kingdom
- 5 Was There a Carolingian Italy?
- Section II Organizing Italy
- Section III Carolingian Rulers
- Section IV Cities, Courts and Carolingians
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
That the kingdom of Italy was ‘Carolingian’ was obvious to everyone in the ninth century. Political integration was achieved. By the 810s, one generation after the conquest, the ruling counts were Franks, Alemans, Bavarians. With Louis II, Italy had a king physically present from 840, and from 850 an emperor totally devoted to the kingdom. Legislation, justice, ecclesiastical reforms were going in the same direction on both sides of the Alps. By contrast, the area of culture illustrates the limits of integration. Of the 7,650 manuscripts attributed to the ninth century and summarily catalogued by Bernhard Bischoff, not even one in ten was copied in the peninsula. Was the need for books less urgent here than in the north? The type of intellectual production was also different. The genres considered as ‘typically’ Carolingian – the exegetical commentaries, the mirrors of princes, the theological and doctrinal treatises – these are decidedly not the work of Italy, or of Italians. Not only was Italy not producing much, but it was not very receptive to what was going on elsewhere. It seems to be because the culture of the kingdom of Italy had a strong secular stamp, which distinguished it from that of the others.
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- After CharlemagneCarolingian Italy and its Rulers, pp. 54 - 82Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020
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