In the 1970s, Janet Nelson (later president of the society) read two important communications on medieval royal anointing to the Ecclesiastical History Society. In these she proposed that we should understand anointing in the Western tradition as a rite of passage, a ritual that worked to turn its recipient into a new man: someone who was not a king became a king.Footnote 1 This article is inspired by Dame Janet's work to return to the question of royal anointing as a specifically Christian rite of passage and to ask how it came about: what were the forces within the societies in which it first emerged that made it necessary for rulers to go through a special religious ceremony in order to change their status? My argument is that these forces emerged from the lay elite political culture of those times and places where royal anointing first took hold: namely, Visigothic Spain in the seventh century and the Frankish kingdom in the eighth century.
There is, of course, a vast quantity of material on early medieval royal anointing, debating its origin, purposes and nature. Most of this is narrowly focused on specific acts of anointing, especially that of Pippin III as the first Carolingian king of the Franks.Footnote 2 One of the really impressive things about Nelson's work in the 1970s was that she sought to look at the entire ‘early medieval syndrome’ of royal anointing and identify the common factors within different societies that embraced the rite of passage. She identified as key the existence of an active culture of episcopal synods, leading to a strong sense of group identity and shared interests amongst the higher clergy; anointing emerged out of ‘a crystallization of the clergy's needs and expectations of kingship’.Footnote 3 I have been inspired by the ambition of Nelson's analysis to think across different societies where royal anointing emerged; if I come to a different conclusion from hers, that is primarily because I examine different case studies.
Nelson pointed to four contexts in which royal anointing became standard: seventh-century Spain, mid-ninth-century West Frankia, late ninth-century East Frankia and mid-tenth-century England.Footnote 4 I look at a narrower range of case studies than Nelson did because, as will become apparent, I believe royal anointing had already become a significant and sustained practice in Frankia before the ninth century, and the example of this Carolingian tradition of anointing clearly provided an authorizing model for the later development of the rite in the post-Carolingian states of the ninth and tenth centuries. While anointing probably became common in England before the tenth century (as Nelson's own work has shown), it was introduced there as a result of eighth-century Carolingian influence.Footnote 5 Arguments that anointing was practised or theorized before the eighth century in the British Isles are now generally found unconvincing.Footnote 6 Consequently, I would argue that Visigothic Spain and early Carolingian Frankia are the earliest two contexts in which we can be sure that royal anointing emerged essentially independently and endogenously.Footnote 7 I examine these two case studies in turn before briefly comparing them to draw some general conclusions.
Visigothic Spain
By the time the kingdom of Visigothic Spain was swept aside by the Arab Conquest of 711, its kings seem to have been regularly anointed at the start of their reigns, but when this practice began has been a contentious question. Some historians suggest that the point of origin was 589, when King Reccared first became a Nicene Christian.Footnote 8 He would have received a confirmation-anointing as part of that process, for this was the standard liturgical accompaniment to an ‘Arian’ heretic's being restored to Mother Church. But we know that the majority of the Gothic aristocracy converted with Reccared; this does not seem like a very likely context for an explicitly royal connection with anointing to emerge.Footnote 9 Others propose 633 as the start date, when the bishops of Spain, in council at Toledo, decreed that the king was the Lord's anointed whose life was therefore sacrosanct; hence the suggestion that anointing was introduced as a practice to defend the king against the ‘Gothic disease’ of regicide.Footnote 10 Modern historians have made rather more of the phrase christus domini than the bishops themselves did in 633; for them, it served purely to introduce the necessary Old Testament proof texts condemning the killing of a king.Footnote 11 The bishops never mentioned unction as a practice. More importantly, in his most famous work Isidore of Seville, who presided at the 633 Council of Toledo and probably had a hand in the writing of its acts, spoke of royal anointing as something that had happened in the Israelite past, but no longer occurred in the present; that he neither knew of, nor showed any interest in restoring, royal anointing is significant.Footnote 12
The earliest evidence we have for an actual practice of royal anointing dates to 672: Julian of Toledo's account of King Wamba's inauguration of that year specifically states that he was anointed on the head with oil. After Wamba we start to see passing references in documentary sources to kings’ having been anointed, something that never happened before 672.Footnote 13 The balance of scholarship has therefore shifted in favour of Wamba's being the first Visigothic royal anointing, and therefore the first anointing of any Christian king.Footnote 14 Wamba was a middle-aged courtier who had been elected to the kingship by the elite of the realm on the death of his predecessor, King Reccesuinth. To some extent, Wamba's succession to the kingship was a model case, for election by the court aristocracy and higher clergy was the constitutional form established as legal in 633 by the Council of Toledo. It had not been the practical norm in the intervening generation, but by 672 there were strong grounds for such a practice to be put into effect. During Reccesuinth's long reign in particular, an aristocratic elite of palatine officials emerged who would come to dominate Visigothic politics for the remainder of the century, particularly through their attendance at the national councils of Toledo.Footnote 15
Wamba was one of this group: he emerged from the fairly narrow ruling clique that chose him. As will be obvious by now, Visigothic monarchy was non-dynastic: this had essentially been the norm since the beginning of the seventh century, a small number of (usually short-lasting) father-son successions notwithstanding. Direct inheritance of the throne does not reappear after Wamba's succession until the very end of the century. That does not mean that kings were chosen from a wide pool of candidates. A small number of often interconnected families, closely associated with the central royal court, seem to have supplied all the Visigothic kings from Wamba until 711.Footnote 16 The leading representatives of this group, as I have mentioned, attended national church councils and, although laymen, frequently signed the canons that emerged from those councils: these were men with titles from the court administration, such as Count of the Chamberlains or Notaries, but many of them also held the military rank of dux.Footnote 17 This lay elite seems to have taken part in the Christian spiritual government of the nation. Kings often noted at the later Visigothic councils that Christ or the Holy Spirit was present when bishops gathered in Christ's name; it is possible that this divine inspiration was thought to seep out from the episcopal core to irradiate the palatine officials present on these occasions.Footnote 18 While the liturgical ordo for Visigothic church councils specified that kings had to leave before deliberation began, their greatest lay subjects may have become agents of the Spirit through their presence at the gathering.Footnote 19
Wamba's inauguration took place in a context of contestation: he faced a rival king who had been chosen by a different gathering, one that represented the interests of provincial aristocrats in the Gallic parts of the Visigothic kingdom, somewhat distant from the Toledan court. The rebel king, Paul, is also described as having been anointed in Julian of Toledo's account of Wamba, as well as having been crowned with a purloined votive crown. If true, this coronation with a sacred object would also be an innovative rite of passage in a Visigothic context.Footnote 20 Julian's text deals entirely with this challenge and how Wamba repressed it, including through the imposition of strict Old Testament purity regulations to ensure divine favour for his army.Footnote 21 Mayke de Jong, amongst others, has argued for this as a sign of a developing Gothic identification as the New Israel, in which the centre of the kingdom and its ruling elites were framed as masculine, ethnically pure and (Old Testament) Israelite, while peripheral groups were understood as feminine, foreign and (New Testament) Jewish.Footnote 22 Of course, as metropolitan of Toledo, Julian had an obvious vested interest in emphasizing the importance of the Toledan centre in the making of legitimate Visigothic monarchs; anointing in this context was something that helped put him and his successors at the heart of the king-making process, since Julian was clear that a king could only receive effective unction in the metropolitan church of Toledo itself.Footnote 23
Even allowing for Julian's possible distortion, there remains a plausible context for the emergence of Visigothic royal anointing in the second half of the seventh century. The need for a rite of passage was clear in a case where royal succession could not be presented as a natural, dynastic fact. The king had to leave the group of the palace aristocracy and be separated from them, all the while maintaining the consensus and shared interests which bound him to the politically powerful elite. Anointing made sense in terms of the Israelite group identity that the central aristocracy might have developed at this time, but it also usefully set the king apart as something rather more than just a primus inter pares, more than just the leader of equals who, potentially, looked forward to their own day on the throne. In a context in which many of this ruling elite may have regularly bathed in the divine inspiration poured out upon the participants in a church council, their king needed an even closer relationship with divine inspiration in order to be seen as superior: Julian tells us that when the oil touched Wamba's head a shaft of steaming light went up and bees flew out.Footnote 24 For Julian, clearly, royal anointing provided an awe-inspiring spectacle, and spectacles only make sense when considered in terms of their audience. While undoubtedly the bishop's account stressed the episcopal contribution to king-making as vital, it seems that a need to manage the relationship between different members of the lay elite created this new rite.
One final piece of evidence for Visigothic royal anointing may deserve consideration: the liturgical evidence. All the manuscript records of a Mozarabic liturgy of anointing were created in the kingdom of Asturias / León, centuries after the fall of the Visigothic kingdom. Two bodies of material survive, although they may both derive from a single liturgical tradition: prayers for the office of the ‘ordination’ of a king are preserved in the Antiphonary of León, while the scriptural readings from the mass for the ‘ordination’ of a king are preserved in the liber commicus / comicus lectionary tradition.Footnote 25 The Antiphonary of León (León, Cathedral Library, MS 8) dates from the first third of the tenth century. While it can no longer be taken to be a copy of an exemplar dating from the beginning of Wamba's reign (previously the standard inference from a dating clause early on in the manuscript, which is now thought to have no relationship to the liturgical contents), it probably derives from an earlier (possibly late eighth-century) antiphonary.Footnote 26 The earliest manuscript of the liber comicus that I know of dates possibly to the ninth century: Toledo, Biblioteca del Cabildo, MS 35.8;Footnote 27 recent study of the Lenten readings in the liber comicus has concluded that they reflect seventh-century Spanish liturgical practice.Footnote 28 We may, therefore, have access to elements from a Spanish anointing liturgy of the 800s, if not earlier. This is a liturgy which shows no trace of a relationship to Frankish traditions, which were well established by the ninth century and already proving influential elsewhere in Europe.Footnote 29 The Spanish manuscripts seem to preserve a liturgy of royal anointing which is entirely the product of indigenous Spanish developments; they are, consequently, probably the closest we can get to how Visigothic royal anointing was performed.
The antiphonary material provides evidence of a self-conscious comparison of the ruler's subjects with Israel, and some striking use of the Psalms to describe the awe-inspiring sight of the king in his regalia which chimes with my comments above on the significance of spectacle in Julian of Toledo's account of Wamba's anointing.Footnote 30 The lectionary evidence is more interesting. The three readings (which are Old Latin, not Vulgate) are: Wisdom 9: 1–12 in the voice of Solomon, chosen by God as king, requesting wisdom so that he will rule justly and worthily; Romans 13: 1–8 on obeying all powers because they come from God, with the ruler as a minister of God to punish the wicked; and Luke 4: 16–22 where Christ reads in the synagogue about the Spirit of God anointing the Messiah to preach, help the downtrodden and proclaim the day of judgement.Footnote 31 This last lection ends with Christ announcing that this, the anointing of the Messiah, is now fulfilled ‘before you’. If we think of Visigothic royal anointing as a rite of passage, as a ritual journey from one status to another, here we have the indication that the king has been transformed from being the weak candidate for the throne, the homo infirmus of Wisdom 9: 5, to the anointed one himself. Alongside the king's transformation, the audience of the lections shifts from God himself in Wisdom to the surrounding congregation, whose obedience to the king is demanded by Romans 13, and whose wonder at the miraculous transformation which has occurred is elicited by the Gospel text.
Julian's mention of Wamba's illuminated head conjures up this same sense of wonder. His text may give us a clerical perspective, but it nonetheless hints at how the reaction of the lay congregation around Wamba mattered, something the liturgical evidence also suggests.Footnote 32 Nelson made an important point in emphasizing the significance of seventh-century Spain's conciliar tradition. This certainly played a role in the process by which Visigothic kingship came to be understood as an office with religious and moral responsibilities that in part limited and constricted the king.Footnote 33 But the presence of the laity at Toledan councils means that these ideas cannot have simply expressed clerical opinion, separate from that of the rest of the leading aristocracy. In the lectionary for a royal inauguration, we see a stress on submission to the king, a glorification of him, and a narrative telling us how he is no longer just like other men; the readings say surprisingly little about how a king ought to behave. This may be a liturgy which, rather than simply sending a clerical message to kings, might have been intended to send a royal message to lay subjects, until recently the king's colleagues and equals.
The Carolingians
Frankish anointing is far better known and more extensively studied than its Visigothic predecessor. That the usurping Pippin III exploited anointing to establish himself on a throne held by members of the Merovingian family for the previous two and a half centuries is one of the most repeated facts of early medieval history. Older comments about how the sacrality of the Merovingians could only be replaced by a revolutionary ‘piece of church magic’ still do the rounds outside specialist scholarship on occasion, but tend not to be taken very seriously by historians now.Footnote 34 Indeed, much that was once known about Pippin's anointing has had to be rethought in light of some devastating primary source criticism in recent years, especially by Josef Semmler and Rosamond McKitterick.Footnote 35 The old story told how Pippin was anointed twice, once in 751 by St Boniface on the orders of Pope Zacharias (741–52), and again in 754 by Pope Stephen II (752–57) in person, but it is now not clear that any anointing took place in 751 at all: if it did, Boniface certainly had nothing to do with it. His role is mentioned only in the Annales regni Francorum, put together in or near Charlemagne's court around the year 790; the much more closely contemporary so-called Continuation of Fredegar simply refers to a consecration (consecratio) of Pippin by unnamed bishops.Footnote 36
Pippin was certainly anointed in 754 by the pope; plenty of papal evidence, including numerous letters written in subsequent years by the pope himself, shows that Stephen II anointed both the king and his two young sons, Charles (i.e. Charlemagne) and Carloman, on that occasion.Footnote 37 Much excellent work has been done showing that the papacy probably developed the ritual of royal anointing out of that of post-baptismal anointing, so that Carolingian anointing could be understood as a kind of spin-off of confirmation, a rite of passage exported from the Roman Church to the rest of Western Europe.Footnote 38 Alternative liturgical origins have been suggested: Nelson pointed to the development, within Frankia itself, of priestly anointings in particular; a number of scholars have pointed to how oil rituals, of all sorts, were increasingly common in Western Christianity at this time.Footnote 39 This stress on the liturgical context for royal anointing has exacerbated the tendency to see the ritual as a clerical imposition on lay rulers, something rather foreign to kings, reflecting little of the Carolingians’ own concerns and priorities. That was Nelson's original interpretation: for her, the anointing(s) of the 750s were a one-off clerical creation that went nowhere, because unrepresentative of Frankish lay interests and concepts; only the episcopate of the ninth century, regularly meeting in synod, eventually ensured that royal anointing became the norm.Footnote 40
Nelson pointed to all the literature we have from the court of Charlemagne, none of it mentioning his anointing at papal hands: ‘Don't courtiers write what kings want to hear?’Footnote 41 The problem, of course, is that what kings want to hear changes. Literary works, mostly from the 790s, do not necessarily allow us to see lay perceptions of anointing several generations earlier. Charlemagne's anointing seems to have mattered more in the generation after 754 than it did by the end of the eighth century. My contention is that the role of royal anointing changed in Carolingian society over time, and did so within a continuing tradition of royal anointings, from 754 until the early ninth century. Rather than there being a substantial gap in Carolingian anointings between Pippin in 754 and Charles the Bald in 848, there were probably unctions in 768, 771, 781, 800, 816 and 823, as well as an attempted anointing around 772/3. However, we cannot take the reality of all these events for granted, and I therefore need to devote some space to the technical task of setting out the evidence.Footnote 42
In 768, Pippin III died and his two sons, Charlemagne and Carloman, succeeded him. In separate ceremonies within their own sub-kingdoms, both kings were raised to their new positions on 9 October 768. To my knowledge, only one Carolingian text described what happened on that date as an anointing: the Annals of St Amand declared that ‘Charles and Carloman were anointed as kings’.Footnote 43 Do we have any reason to give this single source much credence? It is broadly contemporary; this section of the Annales sancti Amandi was completed in or shortly after 771, and the text may be strictly contemporary in many of its entries from around this time.Footnote 44 Therefore someone in north-eastern Frankia, shortly after the events of October 768, believed that Pippin's two sons had been anointed when they succeeded their father. Also closely contemporary (and much closer to the Carolingian kings themselves) was the Continuation of Fredegar, which here again used the word consecratio. Presumably, this is a deliberate echo of the terminology used to describe Pippin's inauguration in 751: clearly some sort of episcopal consecration was involved in 768.Footnote 45
We may see the impact of a 768 royal anointing in papal letters to Charlemagne and Carloman. During their father's reign, the two young kings had received numerous letters from Rome which made reference to their anointing by Stephen II, events also mentioned in some letters to their father Pippin.Footnote 46 These references almost all take the same basic form: God had anointed Charles and Carloman as kings through the apostle Peter, by the hands of the latter's representative. But after Pippin's death these mentions of anointing dry up in papal letters: Charlemagne and Carloman never again received a reminder that they had been anointed as kings by Stephen II. Might this simply reflect changes at Rome at either the papal or the notarial level? There is also a noticeable drop-off in the use of biblical references in papal letters after Pippin's death, noted by a number of scholars.Footnote 47 But, as we have seen, there was no particularly biblical overtone to how the popes had referred to anointing, so the one change cannot necessarily explain the other. The disappearance of royal anointing from these letters may also slightly predate the decline of biblical rhetoric. Pope Stephen III (768–72) wrote a famously violent letter to Charlemagne and Carloman, warning them off marriage to a Lombard princess, that relied heavily on biblical imagery and language. Stephen admonished the Franks against setting aside their lawful wives, behaviour unworthy of Christians who ‘through anointing with holy oil … have been sanctified with a heavenly blessing by the hands of the vicar of the blessed Peter’. Here the anointing of 754 was not described as a royal anointing, as it always had been before, but as a straightforward post-baptismal / confirmation anointing.Footnote 48
The disappearance of royal anointing from papal letters seems to have derived from a conscious decision: when Pope Hadrian I (772–95) reused one of Stephen II's letters to Pippin to provide him with the words with which to address Charlemagne in 775, all reference to the papal anointing of the king was removed.Footnote 49 Charlemagne had, of course, been anointed by the pope on the very same day as Pippin. Why was that fact no longer relevant and why did it cease to be relevant almost as soon as Pippin died? One explanation would be that in 768 the papal anointing had been superseded by another royal anointing of Charlemagne and Carloman, one in which no pope had participated. If the papacy knew that the Frankish kings were, after October 768, appealing to a more recent liturgical unction for their kingly legitimacy, then it might no longer have been deemed politic to refer to the 754 anointing. This would suggest that royal anointing was not just a papal, or even a clerical, idea. Rather, it suggests that it was a Frankish rite presumably valued by the Carolingian family themselves.
On 4 December 771, Carloman died and representatives from his kingdom swiftly journeyed to meet Charlemagne on the border between the two sub-kingdoms to accept him as their ruler. Once again, most sources do not mention an anointing on this occasion, except one: in addition to the list of dignitaries given in the ARF entry, the Annales Mettenses priores state that ‘they anointed the most glorious king Charles as their lord over them’.Footnote 50 Now the so-called ‘earlier’ Annals of Metz are certainly not a contemporary source. The text was written around 805 by someone keen to provide a favourable view of the Carolingian family's history, someone probably close to the (post-800) imperial court who intended to defend the providential nature of the Carolingian ascent to empire, and possibly influence succession plans amongst Charlemagne's sons. Charlemagne's sister, Gisela, has been credited with the inspiration for the text, although her patronage is not universally accepted.Footnote 51 If true, of course, Gisela's role would mean that the Metz annalist had access to good quality family information about the recent Carolingians.Footnote 52 Olaf Schneider has pointed out a number of striking similarities between the events of 771 and the ARF's account of Pippin's anointing in 751; the latter probably distorted the record to make Charlemagne's recent accession to sole kingship seem in perfect continuity with Pippin's receipt of Frankish kingship.Footnote 53 If Charlemagne was anointed in 771, that might explain why the ARF felt compelled to state that Pippin had been so in 751: anointing, by the early 770s, may have become the standard way that a Carolingian king was made. Alternatively, Josef Semmler has suggested that the Metz annalist simply used ‘anointed’ to mean ‘appointed’; if so, that was a significant choice of word.Footnote 54
The other evidence we have for Carolingian anointings in the eighth century points to a papal rite. In 781, Charlemagne had his sons Pippin and Louis anointed kings of Italy and Aquitaine respectively by Hadrian I in a grand ceremony in Rome; their elder brother, Charles the Younger, had to wait until 800, when he became a king immediately after his father's imperial coronation. Papal sources state that Pope Leo III (795–816) anointed Charles.Footnote 55 There was also a papal anointing that never happened. In 772 or 773, the Lombard king Desiderius attempted to have the pope anoint Charlemagne's two young nephews as kings, presumably as part of an attempt to weaken Charlemagne's position within Frankia by establishing rivals for the monarchy. Within a few years, Charlemagne had invaded Italy and taken over the Lombard kingdom, causing his nephews to disappear in the process.Footnote 56 There is an important context here: the difficulty of determining who exactly was a member of the royal family in the early Carolingian era. At regular intervals the dynastic tree had to be rather brutally pruned.
Pippin III spent some years before 754 excluding various close male relatives (including his own brother's son) from power in Frankia. Having his sons anointed alongside him indicated that only his branch of the Carolingian family was entitled to rule.Footnote 57 Charlemagne not only prevented his nephews from using anointing to assert their membership of the royal family; he also seems to have used anointing to manage his own children. The papal anointing in 781 took care of Charlemagne's two youngest sons, setting them up usefully in sub-kingdoms within their father's larger realm. This left the two older sons in a somewhat ambiguous position at best. The eldest, Pippin ‘the Hunchback’, did not belong to Charlemagne's second family (the children of his, probably, third wife, Hildegard) and may well have been essentially demoted from the status of a legitimate Carolingian in 781, when one of Hildegard's sons was renamed Pippin.Footnote 58 Hildegard's eldest son, Charles the Younger, also, rather oddly, was not anointed in 781, although he seems to have enjoyed paternal favour in the years that followed. There may have been personal issues with Charles that raised doubts about his suitability as a king, or Charlemagne may have preferred to maintain some ambiguity rather than raise up another king of the Franks. Having avoided trouble during the revolt of ‘the Hunchback’ of 792, Charles the Younger was eventually ritually acknowledged as a king in 800, his status as successor to the lion's share of his father's realm (confirmed by the succession plans Charlemagne published in 806) probably being decided at that point.Footnote 59
Royal anointing thus functioned as an important tool for controlling and manipulating the shape of the Carolingian family and the eventual succession to power. By the end of the eighth century this may have been its primary function in the Frankish lands. The Frankish memory of the 754 anointing ceremony preserved the idea that Stephen II had declared that the Franks could only choose anointed Carolingians as their kings henceforth;Footnote 60 regular re-enactments of the papal anointing of that year served to indicate who was a member of that chosen family of monarchs. But that function does not explain the possible anointings of Charlemagne and Carloman in 768, and of Charlemagne alone in 771. In order to explain those, we need to remember that in its early years the Carolingian dynasty was no such thing. The Carolingians were merely the greatest of the aristocratic families in the Frankish realm. They were members of the elite gens Francorum, the ethnically defined warrior aristocracy who were celebrated for their religious excellence in much propaganda of the early Carolingian era. A rich array of evidence survives for the intense group identity of the mid-eighth-century Frankish elite, for their self-conception not just as ‘strong in arms’ but also as ‘immune from heresy’, a Christian, an orthodox and a holy people.Footnote 61 Sanctity had become a key resource in late Merovingian elite politics, accessed via patronage of monasteries and family connections to saintly men and women.Footnote 62 Carolingian royal sanctification took place, consequently, against a backdrop of wider aristocratic sanctification.
It was one of Janet Nelson's great insights in the 1980s that early medieval king-making rituals were intended both to separate out the king from his subjects, and to appeal to the aristocratic consensus on which royal power depended in practice. For Nelson, anointing was part of this balancing act, but was still a somewhat foreign one, barely reflecting indigenous Frankish lay ideas.Footnote 63 But Frankish records of the 754 anointing also mention that Stephen II blessed the assembled Frankish nobles on that occasion. In other words, a confirmation of the religiously special status of the entire elite provided the setting for royal anointing.Footnote 64 The Frankish liturgy for royal anointing that existed by the end of the eighth century (incidentally, evidence that anointings were performed by clerics other than popes) shows little sophisticated clerical thought about what royal anointing meant. It is really just a cut-and-paste job, essentially replicating the liturgical prayers used for earlier oil rituals familiar to local lay audiences.Footnote 65 Consequently, Carolingian royal anointing very plausibly had its origins in Frankish lay expectations and needs.
In the first instance, anointing may have been a strategy for setting apart some (and only some) members of the Carolingian family from the rest of the Frankish elite as royal, in a manner that made sense in terms of the self-conception of the aristocracy as a whole. Over time, with Charlemagne securely on the throne and his position increasingly accepted by a new generation of nobles, anointing seems to have become restricted to managing succession within the Carolingian dynasty. The utility of this function also faded with time, as, with all Hildegard's sons anointed by 800, maternal status could unproblematically become the determining factor of who would be a king and who would not. Anointing, therefore, was no longer needed to single out some of Hildegard's sons and so was no longer a noteworthy feature of the younger Carolingians’ biographies, as it had ceased to be a noteworthy feature of their father's some years previously.Footnote 66 Royal anointing was next deployed in 816 when Louis the Pious sought to limit Carolingian kingship to himself and his children, in a process that excluded his nephew and other relatives.Footnote 67 This revival suggests that the dynastic meaning of anointing had impressed itself on Carolingian memories.
Conclusion
What do our two cases studies have in common? In both seventh-century Spain and eighth-century Frankia we see situations in which the distinction between a new king and the other members of the lay aristocracy was not immediately clear. There was a lack of a dynastic principle that commanded consent: this simply did not exist in the Visigothic context and had broken down in the Frankish, where a new royal dynasty was trying to establish itself. Kings in these societies were passing from one social group (the elite aristocracy) into a new status: a rite of passage was needed to mark this transition. In both cases, the lay aristocracy had a strong religious self-understanding as a Christian elite, and were frequently involved in the religious life of the kingdom. Something more than the usual religious features of early medieval kingship was needed to set the monarch apart from his nobles, while also winning support from them by flattering their sense of ‘chosenness’. Royal anointing was a rite of passage that chimed with existing elite identities, while also elevating the king.
In the Carolingian case, where the aim was to create a new royal family, the rite was used to ease the succession of the younger generation. By the ninth century, anointing's main purpose seems to have become family management for the rite's significance had changed over time. Further change helps explain why, by the middle of the ninth century, royal anointing had become a much more clerical rite. A sea change in the self-perception of the Frankish episcopate around the 820s led to the emergence of bishops willing and able, as Nelson skilfully detailed, to shape the liturgy and ideology of anointing.Footnote 68 But they modified an existing Christian rite, one whose origins had probably been driven more by the laypeople who received and beheld it than by the clerics who performed it.