Holy Roman Emperor
The
Holy Roman Emperor was, with some variation, the ruler of the
Holy Roman Empire, the predecessor of many countries mainly in central Europe, during its existence from the
8th century until its collapse in
1806.
The terminology of the title is somewhat confusing. The title of "emperor" was considered to have passed from the
Romans to the
Frankish kingdom when, in AD
800,
Pope Leo III crowned
Charlemagne, king of the Franks, emperor in exchange for the protection of the church. After the division of the Frankish realm into three parts by the
Treaty of Verdun in
843, the title first remained in the middle
Lotharingian realm, but eventually passed to the east when
Otto I the Great, Duke of the
Saxons, King of the East Frankish Realm, was crowned emperor in
962. The transfer of the Empire was, in medieval theory, referred to as
translatio imperii.Initially, the emperor called himself
Imperator Augustus, claiming to be a successor to the
Roman Emperors. The title of "Holy Roman Emperor", as the name of the Holy Roman Empire itself, was only used in later centuries.
Until
1508, the
King of the Romans, who was elected by a group of princes later known as
electors, became emperor when he was crowned by the
pope in Rome, after which he remained king (a title with functions in
feudal law). By contrast, the title of emperor had a more religious connotation, suggesting the task of protecting the church. The emperor was also ordained as a
subdeacon which excluded non-Catholics and women from the throne. The exact relationship between the two functions was never entirely clear and led to much conflict between the German dukes and the pope, for example in the
Investiture Controversy in the
11th century.
The selection of the king was influenced by a complicated mélange of factors. Formally elected, as opposed to
France, the title was only to a degree hereditary, although it frequently remained in a dynasty until there were no more successors. Some scholars suggest that the task of the electors was really to solve succession conflicts, when the dynastic rule was unclear. Still, the process required the most probable candidate to make concessions to the voters, the so-called
Wahlkapitulationen (election capitulations), which contributed to the decline of central power in favor of the territories in the Empire. The collegiate of electors was fixed to seven in the
Golden Bull in
1356 until
1623, when, during the
Thirty Years' War, more electors were added.
After
1438, the kingdom remained in the house of
Habsburg, with the brief exception of the
Wittelsbach Charles VII. In
1508 and permanently after
1556 the king assumed the title of Emperor-elect without travelling to Rome to be crowned by the Pope. Nonetheless, the king was commonly referred to as Emperor.
The office of Holy Roman Emperor was abolished with the empire in
1806. Its last occupant,
Francis II, had assumed the style Franz I,
Emperor of Austria in
1804.
*
List of Holy Roman Emperors*
List of German monarchs*
Emperor for other uses of the title "Emperor" in western Europe.