Holy Roman Emperor


The Holy Roman Emperor, officially the Emperor of the Romans, and also the German-Roman Emperor, was the ruler of the Holy Roman Empire. The Empire was considered by the Roman Catholic Church to be the only legal successor of the Roman Empire during the Middle Ages and the early modern period. The title was held in conjunction with the title of King of Italy from the 8th to the 16th century, and, almost without interruption, with the title of King of Germany throughout the 12th to 18th centuries.
In theory and diplomacy, the Emperors were considered primus inter pares, regarded as first among equals among other Roman Catholic monarchs across Europe. In practice, an emperor was only as strong as his army and alliances, including marriage alliances, made him.
From an autocracy in Carolingian times the title by the 13th century evolved into an elective monarchy, with the Emperor chosen by the Prince-Electors.
Various royal houses of Europe, at different times, became de facto hereditary holders of the title, notably the Ottonians and the Salians. Following the late medieval crisis of government, the Habsburgs kept possession of the title without interruption from 1440-1740. The final emperors were from the House of Habsburg-Lorraine, from 1765-1806. The Holy Roman Empire was dissolved by Francis II, after a devastating defeat to Napoleon at the Battle of Austerlitz.
The Emperor was widely perceived to rule by divine right, though he often contradicted or rivaled the Pope, most notably during the Investiture controversy. The Holy Roman Empire never had an empress regnant, though women such as Theophanu and Maria Theresa exerted strong influence. Throughout its history, the position was viewed as a defender of the Roman Catholic faith. Until Maximilian I in 1508, the Emperor-elect was required to be crowned by the Pope before assuming the imperial title. Charles V was the last to be crowned by the Pope in 1530. Even after the Reformation, the elected Emperor was always a Roman Catholic. There were short periods in history when the electoral college was dominated by Protestants, and the electors usually voted in their own political interest.

Title

From the time of Constantine I, the Roman emperors had, with very few exceptions, taken on a role as promoters and defenders of Christianity.
The reign of Constantine established a precedent for the position of the Christian emperor in the Church. Emperors considered themselves responsible to the gods for the spiritual health of their subjects, and after Constantine they had a duty to help the Church define orthodoxy and maintain orthodoxy. The emperor's role was to enforce doctrine, root out heresy, and uphold ecclesiastical unity.
Both the title and connection between Emperor and Church continued in the Eastern Roman Empire throughout the medieval period. The ecumenical councils of the 5th to 8th centuries were convoked by the Eastern Roman Emperors.
In Western Europe, the title of Emperor became defunct after the death of Julius Nepos in 480, although the rulers of the barbarian kingdoms continued to recognize the authority of the Eastern Emperor at least nominally well into the 6th century. In 797, the Eastern Emperor Constantine VI was deposed and replaced as monarch by his mother, Irene. The Papacy, which up until this point had continued to recognize the rulers in Constantinople as Roman Emperors, viewed the imperial throne as vacant since in their mind, a woman could not rule the empire.
For this reason, Charlemagne, the King of the Franks and King of Italy, was crowned Emperor of the Romans by Pope Leo III, as the successor of Constantine VI as Roman Emperor under the concept of translatio imperii. On his coins, the name and title used by Charlemagne is Karolus Imperator Augustus and in his own documents he used Imperator Augustus Romanum gubernans Imperium and serenissimus Augustus a Deo coronatus, magnus pacificus Imperator Romanorum gubernans Imperium. The Eastern Empire eventually relented to recognizing Charlemagne and his successors as emperors, but as "Frankish" and "German emperors", at no point referring to them as Roman, a label they reserved for themselves.
The title of Emperor in the West implied recognition by the pope. As the power of the papacy grew during the Middle Ages, popes and emperors came into conflict over church administration. The best-known and most bitter conflict was that known as the investiture controversy, fought during the 11th century between Henry IV and Pope Gregory VII.
After the coronation of Charlemagne, his successors maintained the title until the death of Berengar I of Italy in 924. The comparatively brief interregnum between 924 and the coronation
of Otto the Great in 962 is taken as marking the transition from the Frankish Empire to the Holy Roman Empire.
Under the Ottonians, much of the former Carolingian kingdom of Eastern Francia fell within the boundaries of the Holy Roman Empire.
Since 911, the various German princes had elected the King of the Germans from among their peers. The King of the Germans would then be
crowned as emperor following the precedent set by Charlemagne, during the period of 962-1530. Charles V was the last emperor to be crowned by the pope, and his successor, Ferdinand I, merely adopted the title of "Emperor elect" in 1558. The final Holy Roman Emperor-elect, Francis II, abdicated in 1806 during the Napoleonic Wars that saw the Empire's final dissolution.
The term sacrum in connection with the German Roman Empire was first used in 1157 under Frederick I Barbarossa.
The standard designation of the Holy Roman Emperor was "August Emperor of the Romans". When Charlemagne was crowned in 800, he was styled as "most serene Augustus, crowned by God, great and pacific emperor, governing the Roman Empire," thus constituting the elements of "Holy" and "Roman" in the imperial title.
The word Roman was a reflection of the principle of translatio imperii that regarded the Holy Roman Emperors as the inheritors of the title of Emperor of the Western Roman Empire, despite the continued existence of the Eastern Roman Empire.
In German-language historiography, the term Römisch-deutscher Kaiser is used to distinguish the title from that of Roman Emperor on one hand, and that of German Emperor on the other. The English term "Holy Roman Emperor" is a modern shorthand for "emperor of the Holy Roman Empire" not corresponding to the historical style or title, i.e., the adjective "holy" is not intended as modifying "emperor"; the English term "Holy Roman Emperor" gained currency in the interbellum period ; formerly the title had also been rendered "German-Roman emperor" in English.

Succession

The elective monarchy of the kingdom of Germany goes back to the early 10th century, the election of Conrad I of Germany in 911 following the death without issue of Louis the Child, the last Carolingian ruler of Germany.
Elections meant the kingship of Germany was only partially hereditary, unlike the kingship of France, although sovereignty frequently remained in a dynasty until there were no more male successors. The process of an election meant that the prime candidate had to make concessions, by which the voters were kept on the side, which was known as Wahlkapitulationen.
Conrad was elected by the German dukes, and it is not known precisely when the system of seven prince-electors was established. The papal decree Venerabilem by Innocent III, addressed to Berthold V, Duke of Zähringen, establishes the election procedure by princes of the realm, reserving for the pope the right to approve of the candidates.
A letter of Pope Urban IV, in the context of the disputed vote of 1256 and the subsequent the interregnum, suggests that by "immemorial custom", seven princes had the right to elect the King and future Emperor. The seven prince-electors are named in the Golden Bull of 1356: The Archbishop of Mainz, the Archbishop of Trier, the Archbishop of Cologne, the King of Bohemia, the Count Palatine of the Rhine, the Duke of Saxony and the Margrave of Brandenburg.
After 1438, the Kings remained in the house of Habsburg and Habsburg-Lorraine, with the brief exception of Charles VII, who was a Wittelsbach. Maximilian I and his successors no longer travelled to Rome to be crowned as Emperor by the Pope. Maximilian, therefore, named himself Elected Roman Emperor in 1508 with papal approval. This title was in use by all his uncrowned successors. Of his successors, only Charles V, the immediate one, received a papal coronation.
The Elector Palatine's seat was conferred on the Duke of Bavaria in 1621, but in 1648, in the wake of the Thirty Years' War, the Elector Palatine was restored, as the eighth elector. Electorate of Hanover was added as a ninth elector in 1692. The whole college was reshuffled in the German mediatization of 1803 with a total of ten electors, a mere three years before the dissolution of the Empire.

List of emperors

This list includes all 47 German monarchs crowned from Charlemagne until the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire.
Several rulers were crowned King of the Romans but not emperor, although they styled themselves thus, among whom were: Conrad I of Germany and Henry the Fowler in the 10th century, and Conrad IV, Rudolf I, Adolf and Albert I during the interregnum of the late 13th century.
Traditional historiography assumes a continuity between the Carolingian Empire and the Holy Roman Empire, while a modern convention takes the coronation of Otto I in 962 as the starting point of the Holy Roman Empire.

Frankish emperors

The rulers who were crowned as Roman emperors in Western Europe between AD 800 and 915 were as follows:

800–888: Carolingian dynasty

891–898: Widonid dynasty

896–899: Carolingian dynasty

901–905: Bosonid dynasty

915–924: Unruoching dynasty

Holy Roman Emperors

There was no emperor in the west between 924 and 962.
While earlier Germanic and Italian monarchs had been crowned as Roman emperors, the actual Holy Roman Empire is usually considered to have begun with the crowning of the Saxon king Otto I. It was officially an elective position, though at times it ran in families, notably the four generations of the Salian dynasty in the 11th century. From the end of the Salian dynasty through the middle 15th century, the emperors drew from many different German dynasties, and it was rare for the throne to pass from father to son. That changed with the ascension of the Austrian House of Habsburg, as an unbroken line of Habsburgs held the imperial throne until the 18th century. Later a cadet branch known as the House of Habsburg-Lorraine passed it from father to son until the abolition of the Empire in 1806. Notably, the Habsburgs were also dispensed with the requirement that emperors be crowned by the pope before exercising their office. Starting with Ferdinand I, all successive emperors forwent the traditional coronation.

962–1024: Ottonian dynasty

PortraitNameKingEmperorEndedRelationship with predecessorOther title
Otto I, the Great
7 August 9362 February 9627 May 973
  • King of Italy
  • King of Germany
  • Duke of Saxony
Otto II, the Red26 May 96125 December 9677 December 983Son of Otto I
  • King of Italy
  • King of Germany
Otto III25 December 98321 May 99623 January 1002Son of Otto II
  • King of Italy
  • King of Germany
Henry II7 June 100214 February 101413 July 1024Second cousin of Otto III

1027–1125: Salian dynasty

PortraitNameKingEmperorEndedRelationship with predecessorOther title
Conrad II, the Elder
8 September 102426 March 10274 June 1039Great-great-grandson of Otto I
Henry III, the Black14 April 102825 December 10465 October 1056Son of Conrad II
Henry IV17 July 10545 October 10567 August 1106Son of Henry III
  • King of Burgundy
  • King of Italy
  • King of Germany
  • Duke of Bavaria
Henry V6 January 109913 April 111123 May 1125Son of Henry IV
  • King of Italy
  • King of Germany
  • King of Burgundy

1133–1137: Supplinburg dynasty

1155–1197: Staufen dynasty

PortraitNameKingEmperorEndedRelationship with predecessorOther title
Frederick I Barbarossa
4 March 115218 June 115510 June 1190Great-grandson of Henry IV
  • King of Germany
  • King of Italy
  • King of Burgundy
Henry VI15 August 116914 April 119128 September 1197Son of Frederick I

1198–1215: Welf dynasty

PortraitCoat of armsNameKingEmperorEndedRelationship with predecessorOther title
Otto IV
9 June 119821 October 12091215Great-grandson of Lothair II
  • King of Germany
  • King of Italy
  • King of Burgundy

1220–1250: Staufen dynasty

The interregnum of the Holy Roman Empire is taken to have lasted from the deposition of Frederick II by Pope Innocent IV to the election of Rudolf I of Germany.
Rudolf was not crowned emperor, nor were his successors Adolf and Albert.
The next emperor was Henry VII, crowned on 29 June 1312 by Pope Clement V.

1312–1313: House of Luxembourg

PortraitCoat of armsNameKingEmperorEndedRelationship with predecessorOther title
Henry VII
27 November 130829 June 131224 August 1313Great x11 grandson of Charles II

1314–1347: House of Wittelsbach

PortraitCoat of armsNameKingEmperorEndedRelationship with predecessorOther title
Louis IV, the Bavarian
20 October 131417 January 132811 October 1347Far descendant of Henry IV and great-great-great-great-grandson of Lothair II
  • King of Germany
  • King of Italy
  • Duke of Bavaria

1346–1437: House of Luxembourg

PortraitCoat of armsNameKingEmperorEndedRelationship with predecessorOther title
Charles IV
11 July 13465 April 135529 November 1378Grandson of Henry VII
  • King of Germany
  • King of Italy
  • King of Bohemia
  • King of Burgundy
  • Count of Luxemburg
Sigismund10 September 1410
/21 July 1411
31 May 14339 December 1437Son of Charles IV

1440–1740: House of Habsburg

In 1508, Pope Julius II allowed Maximilian I to use the title of Emperor without coronation in Rome, though the title was qualified as Electus Romanorum Imperator. Maximilian's successors adopted the same titulature, usually when they became the sole ruler of the Holy Roman Empire. Maximilian's first successor Charles V was the last to be crowned Emperor by the Pope in Rome.
PortraitCoat of armsNameKingEmperorEndedRelationship with predecessorOther title
Frederick III, the Peaceful
2 February 144016 March 145219 August 1493second cousin of Albert II of Germany, Emperor designate.
Maximilian I16 February 14864 February 150812 January 1519Son of Frederick III
  • King of Germany
  • Archduke of Austria
Charles V28 June 151928 June 151927 August 1556Grandson of Maximilian I
Ferdinand I5 January 153127 August 155625 July 1564Brother of Charles V
  • King of Germany
  • King of Bohemia
  • King of Hungary
  • King of Croatia
  • Archduke of Austria
Maximilian II22 November 156225 July 156412 October 1576Son of Ferdinand I
  • King of Germany
  • King of Bohemia
  • King of Hungary
  • King of Croatia
  • Archduke of Austria
Rudolph II27 October 157512 October 157620 January 1612Son of Maximilian II
  • King of Germany
  • King of Bohemia
  • King of Hungary
  • King of Croatia
  • Archduke of Austria
Matthias13 June 161213 June 161220 March 1619Brother of Rudolf II
  • King of Germany
  • King of Bohemia
  • King of Hungary
  • King of Croatia
  • Archduke of Austria
Ferdinand II28 August 161928 August 161915 February 1637Cousin of Matthias
  • King of Germany
  • King of Bohemia
  • King of Hungary
  • King of Croatia
  • Archduke of Austria
Ferdinand III22 December 163615 February 16372 April 1657Son of Ferdinand II
  • King of Germany
  • King of Bohemia
  • King of Hungary
  • King of Croatia
  • Archduke of Austria
Leopold I18 July 165818 July 16585 May 1705Son of Ferdinand III
  • King of Germany
  • King of Bohemia
  • King of Hungary
  • King of Croatia
  • Archduke of Austria
Joseph I23 January 16905 May 170517 April 1711Son of Leopold I
  • King of Germany
  • King of Bohemia
  • King of Hungary
  • King of Croatia
  • Archduke of Austria
Charles VI12 October 171112 October 171120 October 1740Brother of Joseph I

1742–1745: House of Wittelsbach

PortraitCoat of armsNameKingEmperorEndedRelationship with predecessorOther title
Charles VII
24 January 174224 January 174220 January 1745Great-great grandson of Ferdinand II; Son-in-law of Joseph I

1745–1765: House of Lorraine

PortraitCoat of armsNameKingEmperorEndedRelationship with predecessorOther title
Francis I
13 September 174513 September 174518 August 1765Great-grandson of Ferdinand III; Son-in-law of Charles VI

1765–1806: House of Habsburg-Lorraine

Coronation

The Emperor was crowned in a special ceremony, traditionally performed by the Pope in Rome. Without that coronation, no king, despite exercising all powers, could call himself Emperor. In 1508, Pope Julius II allowed Maximilian I to use the title of Emperor without coronation in Rome, though the title was qualified as Electus Romanorum Imperator. Maximilian's successors adopted the same titulature, usually when they became the sole ruler of the Holy Roman Empire. Maximilian's first successor Charles V was the last to be crowned Emperor.
EmperorCoronation dateOfficiantLocation
Charles I25 December 800Pope Leo IIIRome, Italy
Louis I5 October 816Pope Stephen IVReims, France
Lothair I5 April 823Pope Paschal IRome, Italy
Louis II15 June 844Pope Leo IVRome, Italy
Charles II29 December 875Pope John VIIIRome, Italy
Charles III12 February 881Pope John VIIIRome, Italy
Guy III of Spoleto21 February 891Pope Stephen VRome, Italy
Lambert II of Spoleto30 April 892Pope FormosusRavenna, Italy
Arnulf of Carinthia22 February 896Pope FormosusRome, Italy
Louis III15 or 22 February 901Pope Benedict IVRome, Italy
BerengarDecember 915Pope John XRome, Italy
Otto I2 February 962Pope John XIIRome, Italy
Otto II25 December 967Pope John XIIIRome, Italy
Otto III21 May 996Pope Gregory VMonza, Italy
Henry II14 February 1014Pope Benedict VIIIRome, Italy
Conrad II26 March 1027Pope John XIXRome, Italy
Henry III25 December 1046Pope Clement IIRome, Italy
Henry IV31 March 1084Antipope Clement IIIRome, Italy
Henry V13 April 1111Pope Paschal IIRome, Italy
Lothair III4 June 1133Pope Innocent IIRome, Italy
Frederick I18 June 1155Pope Adrian IVRome, Italy
Henry VI14 April 1191Pope Celestine IIIRome, Italy
Otto IV4 October 1209Pope Innocent IIIRome, Italy
Frederick II22 November 1220Pope Honorius IIIRome, Italy
Henry VII29 June 1312Ghibellines cardinalsRome, Italy
Louis IV17 January 1328Senator Sciarra ColonnaRome, Italy
Charles IV5 April 1355Pope Innocent VI's cardinalRome, Italy
Sigismund31 May 1433Pope Eugenius IVRome, Italy
Frederick III19 March 1452Pope Nicholas VRome, Italy
Charles V24 February 1530Pope Clement VIIBologna, Italy