Einhard, The Life of Charlemagne

Translated by Samuel Epes Turner

Downloaded from the Medieval Sourcebook
 
 

EINHARD'S PREFACE

SINCE I have taken upon myself to narrate the public and private life, and
no small part of the deeds, of my lord and foster-father, the most lent and
most justly renowned King Charles, I have condensed the matter into as brief
a form as possible. I have been careful not to omit any facts that could
come to my knowledge, but at the same time not to offend by a prolix style
those minds that despise everything modern, if one can possibly avoid
offending by a new work men who seem to despise also the masterpieces of
antiquity, the works of most learned and luminous writers. Very many of
them, l have no doubt, are men devoted to a life of literary leisure, who
feel that the affairs of the present generation ought not to be passed by,
and who do not consider everything done today as unworthy of mention and
deserving to be given over to silence and oblivion , but are nevertheless
seduced by lust of immortality to celebrate the glorious deeds of other
times by some sort of composition rather than to deprive posterity of the
mention of their own names by not writing at all.

Be this as it may, I see no reason why I should refrain from entering upon a
task of this kind, since no man can write with more accuracy than I of
events that took place about me, and of facts concerning which I had
personal knowledge, ocular demonstration as the saying goes, and I have no
means of ascertaining whether or not any one else has the subject in hand.

In any event, I would rather commit my story to writing, and hand it down to
posterity in partnership with others, so to speak, than to suffer the most
glorious life of this most excellent king, the greatest of all the princes
of his day, and his illustrious deeds, hard for men of later times to
imitate, to be wrapped in the darkness of oblivion.

But there are still other reasons, neither unwarrantable nor insufficient,
in my opinion, that urge me to write on this subject, namely, the care that
King Charles bestowed upon me in my childhood, and my constant friendship
with himself and his children after I took up my abode at court. In this way
he strongly endeared me to himself, and made me greatly his debtor as well
in death as in life, so that were I unmindful of the benefits conferred upon
me, to keep silence concerning the most glorious and illustrious deeds of a
man who claims so much at my hands, and suffer his life to lack due eulogy
and written memorial, as if he had never lived, I should deservedly appear
ungrateful, and be so considered, albeit my powers are feeble, scanty, next
to nothing indeed, and not at all adapted to write and set forth a life that
would tax the eloquence of a Tully [note: Tully is Marcus Tullius Cicero].

I submit the book. It contains the history of a very great and distinguished
man; but there is nothing in it to wonder at besides his deeds, except the
fact that I, who am a barbarian, and very little versed in the Roman
language, seem to suppose myself capable of writing gracefully and
respectably in Latin, and to carry my presumption so far as to disdain the
sentiment that Cicero is said in the first book of the Tusculan Disputations
to have expressed when speaking of the Latin authors. His words are: "It is
an outrageous abuse both of time and literature for a man to commit his
thoughts to writing without having the ability either to arrange them or
elucidate them, or attract readers by some charm of style." This dictum of
the famous orator might have deterred me from writing if I had not made up
my mind that it was better to risk the opinions of the world, and put my
little talents for composition to the test, than to slight the memory of so
great a man for the sake of sparing myself.

                       THE LIFE OF THE EMPEROR CHARLES

1. The Merovingian Family

The Merovingian family, from which the Franks used to choose their kings, is
commonly said to have lasted until the time of Childeric [III, 743-752] who
was deposed, shaved, and thrust into the cloister by command of the Roman
Pontiff Stephen [II (or III) 752-757]. But although, to all outward
appearance, it ended with him, it had long since been devoid of vital
strength, and conspicuous only from bearing the empty epithet Royal; the
real power and authority in the kingdom lay in the hands of the chief
officer of the court, the so-called Mayor of the Palace, and he was at the
head of affairs. There was nothing left the King to do but to be content
with his name of King, his flowing hair, and long beard, to sit on his
throne and play the ruler, to give ear to the ambassadors that came from all
quarters, and to dismiss them, as if on his own responsibility, in words
that were, in fact, suggested to him, or even imposed upon him. He had
nothing that he could call his own beyond this vain title of King and the
precarious support allowed by the Mayor of the Palace in his discretion,
except a single country seat, that brought him but a very small income.
There was a dwelling house upon this, and a small number of servants
attached to it, sufficient to perform the necessary offices. When he had to
go abroad, he used to ride in a cart, drawn by a yoke of oxen driven,
peasant-fashion, by a Ploughman; he rode in this way to the palace and to
the general assembly of the people, that met once a year for the welfare of
the kingdom, and he returned him in like manner. The Mayor of the Palace
took charge of the government and of everything that had to be planned or
executed at home or abroad.

2. Charlemagne's Ancestors

At the time of Childeric's deposition, Pepin, the father of King Charles,
held this office of Mayor of the Palace, one might almost say, by hereditary
right; for Pepin's father, Charles [Martel 715-41], had received it at the
hands of his father, Pepin, and filled it with distinction. It was this
Charles that crushed the tyrants who claimed to rule the whole Frank land as
their own, and that utterly routed the Saracens, when they attempted the
conquest of Gaul, in - -two great battles-one in Aquitania, near the town of
Poitiers , and the other on the River Berre, near Narbonne-and compelled
them to return to Spain. This honor was usually conferred by the people only
upon men eminent from their illustrious birth and ample wealth. For some
years, ostensibly under King the father of King Charles, Childeric, Pepin,
shared the duties inherited from his father and grandfather most amicably
with his brother, Carloman. The latter, then, for reasons unknown, renounced
the heavy cares of an earthly crown and retired to Rome [747]. Here he
exchanged his worldly garb for a cowl, and built a monastery on Mt. Oreste,
near the Church of St. Sylvester, where he enjoyed for several years the
seclusion that he desired, in company with certain others who had the same
object in view. But so many distinguished Franks made the pilgrimage to Rome
to fulfill their vows, and insisted upon paying their respects to him, as
their former lord, on the way, that the repose which he so much loved was
broken by these frequent visits, and he was driven to change his abode.
Accordingly when he found that his plans were frustrated by his many
visitors, he abandoned the mountain, and withdrew to the Monastery of St.
Benedict, on Monte Cassino, in the province of Samnium [in 754], and passed
the rest there in the exercise of religion.

3. Charlemagne's Accession

Pepin, however, was raised by decree of the Roman pontiff, from the rank of
Mayor of the Palace to that of King, and ruled alone over the Franks for
fifteen years or more [752-768]. He died of dropsy [Sept. 24, 768] in Paris
at the close of the Aquitanian War, which he had waged with William, Duke of
Aquitania, for nine successive years, and left his two sons, Charles and
Carloman, upon whim, by the grace of God, the succession devolved.

The Franks, in a general assembly of the people, made them both kings [Oct
9, 786] on condition that they should divide the whole kingdom equally
between them, Charles to take and rule the part that had to belonged to
their father, Pepin, and Carloman the part which their uncle, Carloman had
governed. The conditions were accepted, and each entered into the possession
of the share of the kingdom that fell to him by this arrangement; but peace
was only maintained between them with the greatest difficulty, because many
of Carloman's party kept trying to disturb their good understanding, and
there were some even who plotted to involve them in a war with each other.
The event, however, which showed the danger to have been rather imaginary
than real, for at Carloman's death his widow [Gerberga] fled to Italy with
her sons and her principal adherents, and without reason, despite her
husband's brother put herself and her children under the protection of
Desiderius, King of the Lombards. Carloman had succumbed to disease after
ruling two years [in fact more than three] in common with his brother and at
his death Charles was unanimously elected King of the Franks.

4. Plan of This Work

It would be folly, I think, to write a word concerning Charles' birth and
infancy, or even his boyhood, for nothing has ever been written on the
subject, and there is no one alive now who can give information on it.
Accordingly, I determined to pass that by as unknown, and to proceed at once
to treat of his character, his deed, and such other facts of his life as are
worth telling and setting forth, and shall first give an account of his deed
at home and abroad, then of his character and pursuits, and lastly of his
administration and death, omitting nothing worth knowing or necessary to
know.

5. Aquitanian War

His first undertaking in a military way was the Aquitanian War, begun by his
father but not brought to a close; and because he thought that it could be
readily carried through, he took it up while his brother was yet alive,
calling upon him to render aid. The campaign once opened, he conducted it
with the greatest vigor, notwithstanding his broth withheld the assistance
that he had promised, and did not desist or shrink from his self-imposed
task until, by his patience and firmness, he had completely gained his ends.
He compelled Hunold, who had attempted to seize Aquitania after Waifar's
death, and renew the war then almost concluded, to abandon Aquitania and
flee to Gascony. Even here he gave him no rest, but crossed the River
Garonne, built the castle of Fronsac, and sent ambassadors to Lupus, Duke of
Gascony, to demand the surrender of the fugitive, threatening to take him by
force unless he were promptly given up to him. Thereupon Lupus chose the
wiser course, and not only gave Hunold up, but submitted himself, with the
province which he ruled, to the King.

6. Lombard War

After bringing this war to an end and settling matters in Aquitania (his
associate in authority had meantime departed this life), he was induced [in
773], by the prayers and entreaties of Hadrian [I, 772-795], Bishop of the
city of Rome, to wage war on the Lombards. His father before him had
undertaken this task at the request of Pope Stephen [II or III, 752-757],
but under great difficulties, for certain leading Franks, of whom he usually
took counsel, had so vehemently opposed his design as to declare openly that
they would leave the King and go home. Nevertheless, the war against the
Lombard King Astolf had been taken up and very quickly concluded [754]. Now,
although Charles seems to have had similar, or rather just the same grounds
for declaring war that his father had, the war itself differed from the
preceding one alike in its difficulties and its issue. Pepin, to be sure,
after besieging King Astolf a few days in Pavia, had compelled him to give
hostages, to restore to the Romans the cities and castles that he had taken,
and to make oath that he would not attempt to seize them again: but Charles
did not cease, after declaring war, until he had exhausted King Desiderius
by a long siege [773], and forced him to surrender at discretion; driven his
son Adalgis, the last hope of the Lombards, not only -from his kingdom, but
from all Italy [774]; restored to the Romans all that they had lost; subdued
Hruodgaus, Duke of Friuli [776], who was plotting revolution; reduced all
Italy to his power, and set his son Pepin as king over it. [781]

At this point I should describe Charles' difficult passage over the Alps
into Italy, and the hardships that the Franks endured in climbing the
trackless mountain ridges, the heaven-aspiring cliffs and ragged peaks, if
it were not my

purpose in this work to record the manner of his life rather than the
incidents of the wars that he waged. Suffice it to say that this war ended
with the subjection of Italy, the banishment of King Desiderius for life,
the expulsion of his son Adalgis from Italy, and the restoration of the
conquests of the Lombard kings to Hadrian, the head of the Roman Church.

7. Saxon War

At the conclusion of this struggle, the Saxon war, that seems to have been
only laid aside for the time , was taken up again. No war ever undertaken by
the Frank nation was carried on with such persistence and bitterness, or
cost so much labor, because the Saxons, like almost all the tribes of
Germany, were a fierce people, given to the worship of devils, and hostile
to our religion, and did not consider it dishonorable to transgress and
violate all law, human and divine. Then there were peculiar circumstances
that tended to cause a breach of peace every day. Except in a few places,
where large forests or mountain ridges intervened and made the bounds
certain, the line between ourselves and the Saxons passed almost in its
whole extent through an open country, so that there was no end to the
murders thefts and arsons on both sides. In this way the Franks became so
embittered that they at last resolved to make reprisals no longer, but to
come to open war with the Saxons [772]. Accordingly war was begun against
them, and was waged for thirty-three successive years with great fury; more,
however, to the disadvantage of the Saxons than of the Franks. It could
doubtless have been brought to an end sooner, had it not been for the
faithlessness of the Saxons. It is hard to say how often they were
conquered, and, humbly submitting to the King, promised to do what was
enjoined upon them, without hesitation the required hostages, gave and
received the officers sent them from the King. They were sometimes so much
weakened and reduced that they promised to renounce the worship of devils,
and to adopt Christianity, but they were no less ready to violate these
terms than prompt to accept them, so that it is impossible to tell which
came easier to them to do; scarcely a year passed from the beginning of the
war without such changes on their part. But the King did not suffer his high
purpose and steadfastness - firm alike in good and evil fortune - to be
wearied by any fickleness on their part, or to be turned from the task that
he had undertaken, on the contrary, he never allowed their faithless
behavior to go unpunished, but either took the field against them in person,
or sent his counts with an army to wreak vengeance and exact righteous
satisfaction. At last, after conquering and subduing all who had offered
resistance, he took ten thousand of those that lived on the banks of the
Elbe, and settled them, with their wives and children, in many different
bodies here and there in Gaul and Germany [804]. The war that had lasted so
many years was at length ended by their acceding to the terms offered by the
King; which were renunciation of their national religious customs and the
worship of devils, acceptance of the sacraments of the Christian faith and
religion, and union with the Franks to form one people.

8. Saxon War (continued)

Charles himself fought but two pitched battles in this war, although it was
long protracted one on Mount Osning [783], at the place called Detmold, and
again on the bank of the river Hase, both in the space of little more than a
month. The enemy were so routed and overthrown in these two battles that
they never afterwards ventured to take the offensive or to resist the
attacks of the King, unless they were protected by a strong position. A
great many of the Frank as well as of the Saxon nobility, men occupying the
highest posts of honor, perished in this war, which only came to an end
after the lapse of thirty-two years [804]. So many and grievous were the
wars that were declared against the Franks in the meantime, and skillfully
conducted by the King, that one may reasonably question whether his
fortitude or his good fortune is to be more admired. The Saxon war began two
years [772] before the Italian war [773]; but although it went on without
interruption, business elsewhere was not neglected, nor was t ere any
shrinking from other equally arduous contests. The King, who excelled all
the princes of his time in wisdom and greatness of soul, did not suffer
difficulty to deter him or danger to daunt him from anything that had to be
taken up or carried through, for he-had trained himself to bear and endure
whatever came, without yielding in adversity, or trusting to the deceitful
favors of fortune in prosperity.

9. Spanish Expedition

In the midst of this vigorous and almost uninterrupted struggle with the
Saxons, he covered the frontier by garrisons at the proper points, and
marched over the Pyrenees into Spain at the head of all the forces that he
could muster. All the towns and castles that he attacked surrendered. and up
to the time of his homeward march he sustained no loss whatever; but on his
return through the Pyrenees he had cause to rue the treachery of the
Gascons. That region is well adapted for ambuscades by reason of the thick
forests that cover it; and as the army was advancing in the long line of
march necessitated by the narrowness of the road, the Gascons, who lay in
ambush [778] on the top of a very high mountain, attacked the rear of the
baggage train and the rear guard in charge of it, and hurled them down to
the very bottom of the valley [at Roncevalles, later celebrated in the Song
of Roland]. In the struggle that ensued they cut them off to a man; they
then plundered the baggage, and dispersed with all speed in every direction
under cover of approaching night. The lightness of their armor and the
nature of the battle ground stood the Gascons in good stead on this
occasion, whereas the Franks fought at a disadvantage in every respect,
because of the weight of their armor and the unevenness of the ground.
Eggihard, the King's steward; Anselm, Count Palatine; and Roland, Governor
of the March of Brittany, with very many others, fell in this engagement.
This ill turn could not be avenged for the nonce, because the enemy
scattered so widely after carrying out their plan that not the least clue
could be had to their whereabouts.

10. Submission of the Bretons and Beneventans

Charles also subdued the Bretons [786], who live on the sea coast, in the
extreme western part of Gaul. When they refused to obey him, he sent an army
against them, and compelled them to give hostages, and to promise to do his
bidding. He afterwards entered Italy in person with his army [787], and
passed through Rome to Capua, a city in Campania, where he pitched his camp
and threatened the Beneventans with hostilities unless they should submit
themselves to him. Their duke, Aragis, escaped the danger by sending his two
sons, Rumold and Grimold, with a great sum of money to meet the King,
begging him to accept them as hostages, and promising for himself and his
people compliance with all the King's commands, on the single condition that
his personal attendance should not be required. The King took the welfare of
the people into account rather than the stubborn disposition of the Duke,
accepted the proffered hostages, and released him from the obligation to
appear before him in consideration of his handsome gift. He retained the
younger son only as hostage, and sent the elder back to his father, and
returned to Rome, leaving commissioners with Aragis to exact the oath of
allegiance, and administer it to the Beneventans. He stayed in Rome several
days in order to pay his devotions at the holy places, and then came back to
Gaul [787].

11. Tassilo and the Bavarian Campaign

At this time, on a sudden, the Bavarian war broke out, but came to a speedy
end. It was due to the arrogance and folly of Duke Tassilo. His wife
[Liutberga], a daughter of King Desiderius, was desirous of avenging her
father's banishment through the agency of her husband, and accordingly
induced him to make a treaty with the Huns, the neighbors of the Bavarians
on the east, and not only to leave the King's commands unfulfilled, but to
challenge him to war. Charles' high spirit could not brook Tassilo's
insubordination, for it seemed to him to pass all bounds; accordingly he
straightway summoned his troops from all sides for a campaign against
Bavaria and appeared in person with a great army on the river Lech , which
forms the boundary between the Bavarians and the Alemanni. After Pitching
his camp upon its banks, he determined to put the Duke's disposition to the
test by an embassy before entering the province. Tassilo did not think that
it was for his own or his people's good to persist, so he surrendered
himself to the King, gave the hostages demanded, among them his own son
Theodo, and promised by oath not to give ear to any one who should attempt
to turn him from his allegiance; so this war, which bade fair to be very
grievous, came very quickly to an end. Tassilo, however, was afterward
summoned to the King's presence [788], and not suffered to depart, and the
government of the province that he had had in charge was no longer intrusted
to a duke, but to counts.

12. Slavic War

After these uprisings had been thus quelled, war was declared against the
Slavs who are commonly known among us as Wilzi, but properly, that is to say
in their own tongue, are called Welatabians. The Saxons served in this
campaign as auxiliaries among the tribes that followed the King's standard
at his summons, but their obedience lacked sincerity and devotion. War was
declared because the Slavs kept harassing the Abodriti, old allies of the
Franks, by continual raids, in spite of all commands to the contrary. A gulf
[ie the Baltic Sea] of unknown length, but nowhere more than a hundred miles
wide, and in many parts narrower, stretches off towards the east from the
Western Ocean. Many tribes have settlements on its shores; the Danes and
Swedes, whom we call Northmen, on the northern shore and all the adjacent
islands; but the southern shore is inhabited by the Slava and the Aïsti
[from whom derive the modern name of "Estonia"]; and various other tribes.
The Welatabians, against whom the King now made war, were the chief of
these; but in a single campaign [789], which he conducted in person, he so
crushed and subdued them that they did not think it advisable thereafter to
refuse obedience to his commands.

13. War with the Huns

The war against the Avars, or Huns, followed [791], and, except the Saxon
war, was the greatest that he waged; he took it up with more spirit than any
of his other wars, and made far greater preparations for it. He conducted
one campaign in person in Pannonia, of which the Huns then had possession.
He entrusted all subsequent operations to his son, Pepin, and the governors
of the provinces, to counts even, and lieutenants. Although they most
vigorously prosecuted the war, it only came to a conclusion after a seven
years' struggle. The utter depopulation of Pannonia, and the site of the
Khan's palace, now a desert, where not a trace of human habitation is
visible bear witness how many battles were fought in those years, and how
much blood was shed. The entire body of the Hun nobility perished in this
contest, and all its glory with it. All the money and treasure that had been
years amassing was seized, and no war in which the Franks have ever engaged
within the memory of man brought them such riches and such booty. Up to that
time the Huns had passed for, a poor people, but so much gold and silver was
found in the Khan's palace, and so much valuable spoil taken in battle, that
one may well think that the Franks took justly from the Huns what the Huns
had formerly taken unjustly from other nations. Only two of the chief men of
the Franks fell in this war - Eric, Duke of Friuli, who was killed in
Tarsatch [799], a town on the coast of Liburnia by the treachery of the
inhabitants; and Gerold,Governor of Bavaria, who met his death in Pannonia,
slain [799], with two men that were accompanying him, by an unknown hand
while he was marshaling his forces for battle against the Huns, and riding
up and down the line encouraging his men. This war was otherwise almost a
bloodless one so far as the Franks were concerned, and ended most
satisfactorily, although by reason of its magnitude it was long protracted.

14. Danish War

The Saxon war next came to an end as successful as the struggle had been
long. The Bohemian [805-806] and Linonian [808] wars that next broke out
could not last long; both were quickly carried through under the leadership
of the younger Charles. The last of these wars was the one declared against
the Northmen called Danes. They began their career as pirates, but afterward
took to laying waste the coasts of Gaul and Germany with their large fleet.
Their King Godfred was so puffed with vain aspirations that he counted on
gaining empire overall Germany, and looked upon Saxony and Frisia as his
provinces. He had already subdued his neighbors the Abodriti, and made them
tributary, and boasted that he would shortly appear with a great army before
Aix-la-Chapelle [Aachen - Charlemagn's capital], where the King held his
court. Some faith was put in his words, empty as they sound, and it is
supposed that he would have attempted something of the sort if he had not
been prevented by a premature death. He was murdered [810] by one of his own
bodyguard, and so ended at once his life and the war that he had begun.

15. Extent of Charlemagne's Conquests

Such are the wars, most skillfully planned and successfully fought, which
this most powerful king waged during the forty-seven years of his reign. He
so largely increased the Frank kingdom, which was already great and strong
when he received it at his father's hands, that more than double its former
territory was added to it. The authority of the Franks was formerly confined
to that part of Gaul included between the Rhine and the Loire, the Ocean and
the Balearic Sea; to that part of Germany which is inhabited by the
so-called Eastern Franks, and is bounded by Saxony and the Danube, the Rhine
and the Saale-this stream separates the Thuringians from the Sorabians; and
to the country of the Alemanni and Bavarians. By the wars above mentioned he
first made tributary Aquitania, Gascony, and the whole of the region of the
Pyrenees as far as the River Ebro, which rises in the land of the Navarrese,
flows through the most fertile districts of Spain, and empties into the
Balearic Sea, beneath the walls of the city of Tortosa. He next reduced and
made tributary all Italy from Aosta to Lower Calabria, where the boundary
line runs between the Beneventans and the Greeks, a territory more than a
thousand miles" long; then Saxony, which constitutes no small part of
Germany, and is reckoned to be twice as wide as the country inhabited by the
Franks, while about equal to it in length; in addition, both Pannonias,
Dacia beyond the Danube, and Istria, Liburnia, and Dalmatia, except the
cities on the coast, which he left to the Greek Emperor for friendship's
sake, and because of the treaty that he had made with him. In fine, he
vanquished and made tributary all the wild and barbarous tribes dwelling in
Germany between the Rhine and the Vistula, the Ocean and the Danube, all of
which speak very much the same language, but differ widely from one another
in customs and dress. The chief among them are the Welatabians, the
Sorabians, the Abodriti, and the Bohemians, and he had to make war upon
these; but the rest, by far the larger number, submitted to him of their own
accord.

16. Foreign Relations

H added to the glory of his reign by gaining the good will of several kings
and nations; so close, indeed, was the alliance that he contracted with
Alfonso [II 791-842] King of Galicia and Asturias, that the latter, when
sending letters or ambassadors to Charles, invariably styled himself his
man. His munificence won the kings of the Scots also to pay such deference
to his wishes that they never gave him any other title than lord or
themselves than subjects and slaves: there are letters from them extant in
which these feelings in his regard are expressed. His relations with Aaron
[ie Harun Al-Rashid, 786-809], King of the Persians, who ruled over almost
the whole of the East, India excepted, were so friendly that this prince
preferred his favor to that of all the kings and potentates of the earth,
and considered that to him alone marks of honor and munificence were due.
Accordingly, when the ambassadors sent by Charles to visit the most holy
sepulcher and place of resurrection of our Lord and Savior presented
themselves before him with gifts, and made known their master's wishes, he
not only granted what was asked, but gave possession of that holy and
blessed spot. When they returned, he dispatched his ambassadors with them,
and sent magnificent gifts, besides stuffs, perfumes, and other rich
products of the Eastern lands.. A few years before this, Charles had asked
him for an elephant, and he sent the only one that he had. The Emperors of
Constantinople, Nicephorus [I 802-811], Michael [I, 811-813], and Leo [V,
813-820], made advances to Charles, and sought friendship and alliance with
him by several embassies; and even when the Greeks suspected him of
designing to wrest the empire from them, because of his assumption of the
title Emperor, they made a close alliance with him, that he might have no
cause of offense. In fact, the power of the Franks was always viewed by the
Greeks and Romans with a jealous eye, whence the Greek proverb "Have the
Frank for your friend, but not for your neighbor."

17. Public Works

This King, who showed himself so great in extending his empire and subduing
foreign nations, and was constantly occupied with plans to that end,
undertook also very many works calculated to adorn and benefit his kingdom,
and brought several of them to completion. Among these, the most deserving
of mention are the basilica of the Holy Mother of God at Aix-la-Chapelle,
built in the most admirable manner, and a bridge over the Rhine at Mayence,
half a mile long, the breadth of the river at this point. This bridge was
destroyed by fire [May, 813] the year before Charles died, but, owing to his
death so soon after, could not be repaired, although he had intended to
rebuild it in stone. He began two palaces of beautiful workmanship - one
near his manor called Ingelheim, not far from Mayence; the other at
Nimeguen, on the Waal, the stream that washes the south side of the island
of the Batavians. But, above all, sacred edifices were the object of his
care throughout his whole kingdom; and whenever he found them falling to
ruin from age, he commanded the priests and fathers who had charge of them
to repair them , and made sure by commissioners that his instructions were
obeyed. He also fitted out a fleet for the war with the Northmen; the
vessels required for this purpose were built on the rivers that flow from
Gaul and Germany into the Northern Ocean. Moreover, since the Northmen
continually overran and laid waste the Gallic and German coasts, he caused
watch and ward to be kept in all the harbors, and at the mouths of rivers
large enough to admit the entrance of vessels, to prevent the enemy from
disembarking; and in the South, in Narbonensis and Septimania, and along the
whole coast of Italy as far as Rome, he took the same precautions against
the Moors, who had recently begun their piratical practices. Hence, Italy
suffered no great harm in his time at the hands of the Moors, nor Gaul and
Germany from the Northmen, save that the Moors got possession of the
Etruscan town of Civita Vecchia by treachery, and sacked it, and the
Northmen harried some of the islands in Frisia off the German coast.

18. Private Life

Thus did Charles defend and increase as well, as beautify his, kingdom, as
is well known; and here let me express my admiration of his great qualities
and his extraordinary constancy alike in good and evil fortune. I will now
forthwith proceed to give the details of his private and family life.

After his father's death, while sharing the kingdom with his brother, he
bore his unfriendliness and jealousy most patiently, and, to the wonder of
all, could not be provoked to be angry with him. Later he married a daughter
of of Desiderius, King of the Lombards, at the instance of his mother; but
he repudiated her at the end of a year for some reason unknown, and married
Hildegard, a woman of high birth, of Suabian origin. He had three sons by
her - Charles, Pepin and Louis -and as many daughters - Hruodrud, Bertha,
and and Gisela. He had three other daughters besides these- Theoderada,
Hiltrud, and Ruodhaid - two by his third wife, Fastrada, a woman of East
Frankish (that is to say, of German) origin, and the third by a concubine,
whose name for the moment escapes me. At the death of Fastrada [794], he
married Liutgard, an Alemannic woman, who bore him no children. After her
death [Jun4 4, 800] he had three concubines - Gersuinda, a Saxon by whom he
had Adaltrud; Regina, who was the mother of Drogo and Hugh; and Ethelind, by
whom he lead Theodoric. Charles' mother, Berthrada, passed her old age with
him in great honor; he entertained the greatest veneration for her; and
there was never any disagreement between them except when he divorced the
daughter of King Desiderius, whom he had married to please her. She died
soon after Hildegard, after living to three grandsons and as many
granddaughters in her son's house, and he buried her with great pomp in the
Basilica of St. Denis, where his father lay. He had an only sister, Gisela,
who had consecrated herself to a religious life from girlhood, and he
cherished as much affection for her as for his mother. She also died a few
years before him in the nunnery where she passed her life.

19 Private Life (continued) [Charles and the Education of His Children]

The plan that he adopted for his children's education was, first of all, to
have both boys and girls instructed in the liberal arts, to which he also
turned his own attention. As soon as their years admitted, in accordance
with the custom of the Franks, the boys had to learn horsemanship, and to
practise war and the chase, and the girls to familiarize themselves with
cloth-making, and to handle distaff and spindle, that they might not grow
indolent through idleness, and he fostered in them every virtuous sentiment.
He only lost three of all his children before his death, two sons and one
daughter, Charles, who was the eldest, Pepin, whom he had made King of
Italy, and Hruodrud, his oldest daughter. whom he had betrothed to
Constantine [VI, 780-802], Emperor of the Greeks. Pepin left one son, named
Bernard, and five daughters, Adelaide, Atula, Guntrada, Berthaid and
Theoderada. The King gave a striking proof of his fatherly affection at the
time of Pepin's death [810]: he appointed the grandson to succeed Pepin, and
had the granddaughters brought up with his own daughters. When his sons and
his daughter died, he was not so calm as might have been expected from his
remarkably strong mind, for his affections were no less strong, and moved
him to tears. Again, when he was told of the death of Hadrian [796], the
Roman Pontiff, whom he had loved most of all his friends, he wept as much as
if he had lost a brother, or a very dear son. He was by nature most ready to
contract friendships, and not only made friends easily, but clung to them
persistently, and cherished most fondly those with whom he had formed such
ties. He was so careful of the training of his sons and daughters that he
never took his meals without them when he was at home, and never made a
journey without them; his sons would ride at his side, and his daughters
follow him, while a number of his body-guard, detailed for their protection,
brought up the rear. Strange to say, although they were very handsome women,
and he loved them very dearly, he was never willing to marry any of them to
a man of their own nation or to a foreigner, but kept them all at home until
his death, saying that he could not dispense with their society. Hence,
though other-wise happy, he experienced the malignity of fortune as far as
they were concerned; yet he concealed his knowledge of the rumors current in
regard to them, and of the suspicions entertained of their honor.

20. Conspiracies Against Charlemagne

By one of his concubines he had a son, handsome in face, but hunchbacked,
named Pepin, whom I omitted to mention in the list of his children. When
Charles was at war with the Huns, and was wintering in Bavaria [792], this
Pepin shammed sickness, and plotted against his father in company with some
of the leading Franks, who seduced him with vain promises of the royal
authority. When his deceit was discovered, and the conspirators were
punished, his head was shaved, and he was suffered, in accordance with his
wishes, to devote himself to a religious life in the monastery of Prüm. A
formidable conspiracy against Charles had previously been set on foot in
Germany, but all the traitors were banished, some of them without
mutilation, others after their eyes had been put out. Three of them only
lost their lives; they drew their swords and resisted arrest, and, after
killing several men, were cut down, because they could not be otherwise
overpowered. It is supposed that the cruelty of Queen Fastrada was the
primary cause of these plots, and they were both due to Charles' apparent
acquiescence in his wife's cruel conduct, and deviation from the usual
kindness and gentleness of his disposition. All the rest of his life he was
regarded by everyone with the utmost love and affection, so much so that not
the least accusation of unjust rigor was ever made against him.

21. Charlemagne's Treatment of Foriegners

He liked foreigners, and was at great pains to take them under his
protection. There were often so many of them, both in the palace and the
kingdom, that they might reasonably have been considered a nuisance; but he,
with his broad humanity, was very little disturbed by such annoyances,
because he felt himself compensated for these great inconveniences by the
praises of his generosity and the reward of high renown.

22. Personal Appearance

Charles was large and strong, and of lofty stature, though not
disproportionately tall (his height is well known to have been seven times
the length of his foot); the upper part of his head was round, his eyes very
large and animated, nose a little long, hair fair, and face laughing and
merry. Thus his appearance was always stately and dignified, whether he was
standing or sitting; although his neck was thick and somewhat short, and his
belly rather prominent; but the symmetry of the rest of his body concealed
these defects. His gait was firm, his whole carriage manly, and his voice
clear, but not so strong as his size led one to expect. His health was
excellent, except during the four years preceding his death, when he was
subject to frequent fevers; at the last he even limped a little with one
foot. Even in those years he consulted rather his own inclinations than the
advice of physicians, who were almost hateful to him, because they wanted
him to give up roasts, to which he was accustomed, and to eat boiled meat
instead. In accordance with the national custom, he took frequent exercise
on horseback and in the chase, accomplishments in which scarcely any people
in the world can equal the Franks. He enjoyed the exhalations from natural
warm springs, and often practised swimming, in which he was such an adept
that none could surpass him; and hence it was that he built his palace at
Aixla-Chapelle, and lived there constantly during his latter years until his
death. He used not only to invite his sons to his bath, but his nobles and
friends, and now and then a troop of his retinue or body guard, so that a
hundred or more persons sometimes bathed with him.

23. Dress

He used to wear the national, that is to say, the Frank, dress-next his skin
a linen shirt and linen breeches, and above these a tunic fringed with silk;
while hose fastened by bands covered his lower limbs, and shoes his feet,
and he protected his shoulders and chest in winter by a close-fitting coat
of otter or marten skins. Over all he flung a blue cloak, and he always had
a sword girt about him, usually one with a gold or silver hilt and belt; he
sometimes carried a jewelled sword, but only on great feast-days or at the
reception of ambassadors from foreign nations. He despised foreign costumes,
however handsome, and never allowed himself to be robed in them, except
twice in Rome, when he donned the Roman tunic, chlamys, and shoes; the first
time at the request of Pope Hadrian, the second to gratify Leo, Hadrian's
successor. On great feast-days he made use of embroidered clothes, and shoes
bedecked with precious stones; his cloak was fastened by a golden buckle,
and he appeared crowned with a diadem of gold and gems: but on other days
his dress varied little from the common dress of the people.

24. Habits

Charles was temperate in eating, and particularly so in drinking, for he
abominated drunkenness in anybody, much more in himself and those of his
household; but he could not easily abstain from food, and often complained
that fasts injured his health. He very rarely gave entertainments, only on
great feast-days, and then to large numbers of people. His meals ordinarily
consisted of four courses, not counting the roast, which his huntsmen used
to bring in on the spit; he was more fond of this than of any other dish.
While at table, he listened to reading or music. The subjects of the
readings were the stories and deeds of olden time: he was fond, too, of St.
Augustine's books, and especially of the one entitled "The City of God."

He was so moderate in the use of wine and all sorts of drink that he rarely
allowed himself more than three cups in the course of a meal. In summer
after the midday meal, he would eat some fruit, drain a single cup, put off
his clothes and shoes, just as he did for the night, and rest for two or
three hours. He was in the habit of awaking and rising from bed four or five
times during the night. While he was dressing and putting on his shoes, he
not only gave audience to his friends, but if the Count of the Palace told
him of any suit in which his judgment was necessary, he had the parties
brought before him forthwith, took cognizance of the case, and gave his
decision, just as if he were sitting on the Judgment-seat. This was not the
only business that he transacted at this time, but he performed any duty of
the day whatever, whether he had to attend to the matter himself, or to give
commands concerning it to his officers.

25 Studies

Charles had the gift of ready and fluent speech, and could express whatever
he had to say with the utmost clearness. He was not satisfied with command
of his native language merely, but gave attention to the study of foreign
ones, and in particular was such a master of Latin that he could speak it as
well as his native tongue; but he could understand Greek better than he
could speak it. He was so eloquent, indeed, that he might have passed for a
teacher of eloquence. He most zealously cultivated the liberal arts, held
those who taught them in great esteem, and conferred great honors upon them.
He took lessons in grammar of the deacon Peter of Pisa, at that time an aged
man. Another deacon, Albin of Britain, surnamed Alcuin, a man of Saxon
extraction, who was the greatest scholar of the day, was his teacher in
other branches of learning. The King spent much time and labour with him
studying rhetoric, dialectics, and especially astronomy; he learned to
reckon, and used to investigate the motions of the heavenly bodies most
curiously, with an intelligent scrutiny. He also tried to write, and used to
keep tablets and blanks in bed under his pillow, that at leisure hours he
might accustom his hand to form the letters; however, as he did not begin
his efforts in due season, but late in life, they met with ill success.

26 Piety

He cherished with the greatest fervor and devotion the principles of the
Christian religion, which had been instilled into him from infancy. Hence it
was that he built the beautiful basilica at Aix-la-Chapelle, which he
adorned with gold and silver and lamps, and with rails and doors of solid
brass. He had the columns and marbles for this structure brought from Rome
and Ravenna, for he could not find such as were suitable elsewhere. He was a
constant worshipper at this church as long as his health permitted, going
morning and evening, even after nightfall, besides attending mass; and he
took care that all the services there conducted should be administered with
the utmost possible propriety, very often warning the sextons not to let any
improper or unclean thing be brought into the building or remain in it. He
provided it with a great number of sacred vessels of gold and silver and
with such a quantity of clerical robes that not even the doorkeepers who
fill the humblest office in the church were obliged to wear their everyday
clothes when in the exercise of their duties. He was at great pains to
improve the church reading and psalmody, for he was well skilled in both
although he neither read in public nor sang, except in a low tone and with
others.

27 Generosity [Charles and the Roman Church]

He was very forward in succoring the poor, and in that gratuitous generosity
which the Greeks call alms, so much so that he not only made a point of
giving in his own country and his own kingdom, but when he discovered that
there were Christians living in poverty in Syria, Egypt, and Africa, at
Jerusalem, Alexandria, and Carthage, he had compassion on their wants, and
used to send money over the seas to them. The reason that he zealously
strove to make friends with the kings beyond seas was that he might get help
and relief to the Christians living under their rule.

He cherished the Church of St. Peter the Apostle at Rome above all other
holy and sacred places, and heaped its treasury with a vast wealth of gold,
silver, and precious stones. He sent great and countless gifts to the popes;
and throughout his whole reign the wish that he had nearest at heart was to
re-establish the ancient authority of the city of Rome under his care and by
his influence, and to defend and protect the Church of St. Peter, and to
beautify and enrich it out of his own store above all other churches.
Although he held it in such veneration, he only repaired to Rome to pay his
vows and make his supplications four times during the whole forty-seven
years that he reigned.

28 Charlemagne Crowned Emperor

When he made his last journey thither, he also had other ends in view. The
Romans had inflicted many injuries upon the Pontiff Leo, tearing out his
eyes and cutting out his tongue, so that he had been comp lied to call upon
the King for help [Nov 24, 800]. Charles accordingly went to Rome, to set in
order the affairs of the Church, which were in great confusion, and passed
the whole winter there. It was then that he received the titles of Emperor
and Augustus [Dec 25, 800], to which he at first had such an aversion that
he declared that he would not have set foot in the Church the day that they
were conferred, although it was a great feast-day, if he could have foreseen
the design of the Pope. He bore very patiently with the jealousy which the
Roman emperors showed upon his assuming these titles, for they took this
step very ill; and by dint of frequent embassies and letters, in which he
addressed them as brothers, he made their haughtiness yield to his
magnanimity, a quality in which he was unquestionably much their superior.

29. Reforms

It was after he had received the imperial name that, finding the laws of his
people very defective (the Franks have two sets of laws, very different in
many particulars), he determined to add what was wanting, to reconcile the
discrepancies, and to correct what was vicious and wrongly cited in them.
However, he went no further in this matter than to supplement the laws by a
few capitularies, and those imperfect ones; but he caused the unwritten laws
of all the tribes that came under his rule to be compiled and reduced to
writing . He also had the old rude songs that celeate the deeds and wars of
the ancient kings written out for transmission to posterity. He began a
grammar of his native language. He gave the months names in his own tongue,
in place of the Latin and barbarous names by which they were formerly known
among the Franks. He likewise designated the winds by twelve appropriate
names; there were hardly more than four distinctive ones in use before. He
called January, Wintarmanoth; February, Hornung; March, Lentzinmanoth;
April, Ostarmanoth; May, Winnemanoth; June, Brachmanoth; July, Heuvimanoth;
August, Aranmanoth; September, Witumanoth; October, Windumemanoth; Novemher,
Herbistmanoth; December, Heilagmanoth. He styled the winds as follows;
Subsolanus, Ostroniwint; Eurus, Ostsundroni-, Euroauster, Sundostroni;
Auster, Sundroni; Austro-Africus, Sundwestroni; Africus, Westsundroni;
Zephyrus, Westroni; Caurus, Westnordroni; Circius, Nordwestroni; Septentrio,
Nordroni; Aquilo, Nordostroni; Vulturnus, Ostnordroni.

30. Coronation of Louis - Charlemagne's Death

Toward the close of his life [813], when he was broken by ill-health and old
age, he summoned Louis, Kigi of Aquitania, his onlv surviving son by
Hildegard, and gathered together all the chief men of the whole kingdom of
the Franks in a solemn assembly. He appointed Louis, with their unanimous
consent, to rule with himself over the whole kingdom and constituted him
heir to the imperial name; then, placing the diadem upon his son's head, he
bade him be proclaimed Emperor and is step was hailed by all present favor,
for it really seemed as if God had prompted him to it for the kingdom's
good; it increased the King's dignity, and struck no little terror into
foreign nations. After sending his son son back to Aquitania, although weak
from age he set out to hunt, as usual, near his palace at Aix-la-Chapelle,
and passed the rest of the autumn in the chase, returning thither about the
first of November [813]. While wintering there, he was seized, in the month
of January, with a high fever Jan 22 814], and took to his bed. As soon as
he was taken sick, he prescribed for himself abstinence from food, as he
always used to do in case of fever, thinking that the disease could be
driven off , or at least mitigated, by fasting. Besides the fever, he
suffered from a pain in the side, which the Greeks call pleurisy; but he
still persisted in fasting, and in keeping up his strength only by draughts
taken at very long intervals. He died January twenty-eighth, the seventh day
from the time that he took to his bed, at nine o'clock in the morning, after
partaking of the holy communion, in the seventy-second year of his age and
the forty-seventh of his reign [Jan 28, 814].

31. Burial

His body was washed and cared for in the usual manner, and was then carried
to the church, and interred amid the greatest lamentations of all the
people. There was some question at first where to lay him, because in his
lifetime he had given no directions as to his burial; but at length all
agreed that he could nowhere be more honorably entombed than in the very
basilica that he had built in the town at his own expense, for love of God
and our Lord Jesus Christ, and in honor of the Holy and Eternal Virgin, His
Mother. He was buried there the same day that he died, and a gilded arch was
erected above his tomb with his image and an inscription. The words of the
inscription were as follows: "In this tomb lies the body of Charles, the
Great and Orthodox Emperor, who gloriously extended the kingdom of the
Franks, and reigned prosperously for forty-seven years. He died at the age
of seventy, in the year of our Lord 814, the 7th Indiction, on the 28th day
of January."

32. Omens of Death

Very many omens had portended his approaching end, a fact that he had
recognized as well as others. Eclipses both of the sun and moon were very
frequent during the last three years of his life, and a black spot was
visible on the sun for the space of seven days. The gallery between the
basilica and the palace, which he had built at great pains and labor, fell
in sudden ruin to the ground on the day of the Ascension of our Lord. The
wooden bridge over the Rhine at Mayence, which he had caused to be
constructed with admirable skill, at the cost of ten years' hard work, so
that it seemed as if it might last forever, was so completely consumed in
three hours by an accidental fire that not a single splinter of it was left,
except what was under water. Moreover, one day in his last campaign into
Saxony against Godfred, King of the Danes, Charles himself saw a ball of
fire fall suddenly from the heavens with a great light, just as he was
leaving camp before sunrise to set out on the march. It rushed across the
clear sky from right to left, and everybody was wondering what was the
meaning of the sign, when the horse which he was riding gave a sudden
plunge, head foremost, and fell, and threw him to the ground so heavily that
his cloak buckle was broken and his sword belt shattered; and after his
servants had hastened to him and relieved him of his arms, he could not rise
without their assistance. He happened to have a javelin in his hand when he
was thrown, and this was struck from his grasp with such force that it was
found lying at a distance of twenty feet or more from the spot. Again, the
palace at Aix-la-Chapelle frequently trembled, the roofs of whatever
buildings he tarried in kept up a continual crackling noise, the basilica in
which he was afterwards buried was struck by lightning, and the gilded ball
that adorned the pinnacle of the roof was shattered by the thunderbolt and
hurled upon the bishop's house adjoining. In this same basilica, on the
margin of the cornice that ran around the interior, between the upper and
lower tiers of arches, a legend was inscribed in red letters, stating who
was the builder of the temple, the last words of which were Karolus
Princeps. The year that he died it was remarked by some, a few months before
his decease, that the letters of the word Princeps were so effaced as to be
no longer decipherable. But Charles despised, or affected to despise, all
these omens, as having no reference whatever to him.

33. Will

It had been his intention to make a will, that he might give some share in
the inheritance to his daughters and the children of his concubines; but it
was begun too late and could not be finished. Three years before his death,
however, he made a division of his treasures, money, clothes, and other
movable goods in the presence of his friends and servants, and called them
to witness it, that their voices might insure the ratification of the
disposition thus made. He had a summary drawn up of his wishes regarding
this distribution o his property, the terms and text of which are as
follows:

"In the name of the Lord God, the Almighty Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. This
is the inventory and division dictated by the most glorious and most pious
Lord Charles, Emperor Augustus, in the 811th year of the Incarnation of our
Lord Jesus Christ, in the 43d year of his reign in France and 37th in Italy,
the 11th of his empire, and the 4th Indiction, which considerations of piety
and prudence have determined him, and the favor of God enabled him, to make
of his treasures and money ascertained this day to be in his treasure
chamber. In this division he is especially desirous to provide not only that
the largess of alms which Christians usually make of their possessions shall
be made for himself in due course and order out of his wealth, but also that
his heirs shall be free from all doubt, and know clearly what belongs to
them, and be able to share their property by suitable partition without
litigation or strife. With this intention and to this end he has first
divided all his substance and movable goods ascertained to be in his
treasure chamber on the day aforesaid in gold, silver, precious stones, and
royal ornaments into three lots and has subdivided and set off two of the
said lots into twenty-one parts, keeping the third entire. The first two
lots have been thus subdivided into twenty one parts because there are in
his kingdom twenty-one" recognized metropolitan cities, and in order that
each archbishopric may receive by way of alms, at the hands of his heirs and
friends, one of the said parts, and that the archbishop who shall then
administer its affairs shall take the part given to it, and share the same
with his suffragans in such manner that one third shall go to the Church,
and the remaining two thirds be divided among the suffragans. The twenty-one
parts into which the first two lots are to be distributed, according to the
number of recognized metropolitan cities, have been set apart one from
another, and each has been put aside by itself in a box labeled with the
name of the city for which it is destined. The names of the cities to which
this alms or largess is to be sent are as follows: Rome, Ravenna, Milan,
Friuli, Grado, Cologne, Mayence, Salzburg, Treves, Sens, Besançon, Lyons,
Rouen, Rheims, Arles, Vienne, Moutiers-en-Tarantaise, Embrun, Bordeaux,
Tours, and Bourges. The third lot, which he wishes to be kept entire, is to
be bestowed as follows: While the first two lots are to be divided into the
parts aforesaid, and set aside under seal, the third lot shall be employed
for the owner's daily needs, as property which he shall be under no
obligation to part with in order to the fulfillment of any vow, and this as
long as he shall be in the flesh, or consider it necessary for his use. But
upon his death, or voluntary-renunciation of the affairs of this world, this
said lot shall be divided into four parts, and one thereof shall be added to
the aforesaid twenty-one parts; the second shall be assigned to his sons and
daughters, and to the sons and daughters of his sons, to be distributed
among them in just and equal partition; the third, in accordance with the
custom common among Christians, shall be devoted to the poor; and the fourth
shall go to the support of the men servants and maid servants on duty in the
palace. It is his wish that to this said third lot of the whole amount,
which consists, as well as the rest, of gold and silver shall be added all
the vessels and utensils of brass iron and other metals together with the
arms, clothing, and other movable goods, costly and cheap, adapted to divers
uses, as hangings, coverlets, carpets, woolen stuffs leathern articles,
pack-saddles, and whatsoever shall be found in his treasure chamber and
wardrobe at that time, in order that thus the parts of the said lot may be
augmented, and the alms distributed reach more persons. He ordains that his
chapel-that is to say, its church property, as well that which he has
provided and collected as that which came to him by inheritance from his
father shall remain entire, and not be dissevered by any partition whatever.
If, however, any vessels, books or other articles be found therein which are
certainly known not to have been given by him to the said chapel, whoever
wants them shall have them on paying their value at a fair estimation. He
likewise commands that the books which he has collected in his library in
great numbers shall be sold for fair prices to such as want them, and the
money received therefrom given to the poor. it is well known that among his
other property and treasures are three silver tables, and one very large and
massive golden one. He directs and commands that the square silver table,
upon which there is a representation of the city of Constantinople, shall be
sent to the Basilica of St. Peter the Apostle at Rome, with the other gifts
destined therefor; that the round one, adorned with a delineation of the
city of Rome, shall be given to the Episcopal Church at Ravenna; that the
third, which far surpasses the other two in weight and in beauty of
workmanship, and is made in three circles, showing the plan of the whole
universe, drawn with skill and delicacy, shall go, together with the golden
table, fourthly above mentioned, to increase that lot which is to be devoted
to his heirs and to alms.

This deed, and the dispositions thereof, he has made and appointed in the
presence of the bishops, abbots, and counts able to be present, whose names
are hereto subscribed: Bishops - Hildebald, Ricolf, Arno, Wolfar, Bernoin,
Laidrad, John, Theodulf, Jesse, Heito, Waltgaud. Abbots - Fredugis, Adalung,
Angilbert, Irmino. Counts Walacho, Meginher, Otulf, Stephen, Unruoch
Burchard Meginhard, Hatto, Rihwin, Edo, Ercangar, Gerold, Bero, Hildiger,
Rocculf."

Charles' son Louis who by the grace of God succeeded him, after examining
this summary, took pains to fulfill all its conditions most religiously as
soon as possible after his father's death.