Portal:Holy Roman Empire
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Welcome
The purpose of the Holy Roman Empire portal is to make it easy for readers to find and explore articles about the Holy Roman Empire and its aristocratic families, as well as enabling editors to come together to work to enhance the subject and its themes. New editors are warmly welcome and invited to participate in adding new articles and improving existing ones – the first steps are very easy.
Article of the month
Louis William of Baden-Baden
Louis William, Margrave of Baden-Baden, nicknamed Turkish Louis or the Shield of the Empire was the victorious imperial general of the Turkish Wars. The Turks called him the "Red King" because of his red uniform jacket which could be seen far across the battlefields.
Louis William was born on 8 April 1655, seven years after the end of the Thirty Years' War, in the Hôtel de Soissons in Paris and died on 4 January 1707 in his unfinished palace in Rastatt. His name was chosen after his grandfather, Margrave William, and his godfather, Louis XIV, the King of France. He was the son of the heir to the throne, Ferdinand Maximilian of Baden and Louise of Savoy-Carignan, whose brother, Eugene Maurice of Savoy-(Soissons)-Carignan, was the father of the famous Prince Eugene.
Quick start
Important noble families
Agilolfings • Ahalolfings • Andechs • Aribonids • Arnulfing • Ascania • Babenberg • Balduin • Billung • Burcharding • Caroligians • Conradines • Diepolding-Rapotones • Ekkehardins • Emichones • Eppensteins • Etichonids • Ezzonids • Griffins • Habsburg • Hohenstaufen • Hohenzollern • Ludovingians • Luitpoldings • Luxembourg • Matfrieds• Meinhardiner • Nassau • Northeim • Obodrites • Ottonians • Plantagenet • Popponids • Premyslid • Reginar • Salians • Sieghardingians • Spanheim • Supplinburg • Udalrichings • Unruochings • Welfs • Wigerics • Wittelsbach • Wettin • Wilhelminers • Württemberg • Zähringen
Important imperial treaties, edicts and legal sources
Peace of Augsburg • Confoederatio cum principibus ecclesiasticis • Constitutio Criminalis Carolina • Cuius regio, eius religio • Golden Bull of 1356 • Ems Punctation • Ewiger Landfriede • Peace of Constance • Treaty of Lunéville • Treaty of Venice • Youngest Recess • German mediatization (Reichsdeputationshauptschluss) • Ottonian-Salian Imperial Church System • Peace of Passau • Sachsenspiegel • Schwabenspiegel • Statutum in favorem principum • Treaty of Bonn (921) • Peace of Westphalia • Edict of Worms • Concordat of Worms
Conflicts and key events
Anti-kings • Augsburg Interim • Battle of the Three Emperors • War of the Austrian Succession • War of the Bavarian Succession • Walk to Canossa • Crusades • Investiture Controversy • Battle of Lechfeld • Battle of Legnano • War of the Palatine Succession • Defenestrations of Prague • Reformation • Schmalkaldic League • Schmalkaldic War • Seven Years' War • Thirty Years' War • Western Schism
Terminology
Imperial Army (Reichsarmee) • Free imperial city (Freie Reichsstadt) • Hasenrat • Perpetual Diet of Regensburg (Immerwährender Reichstag) • Interregnum • Coronation • Recess (Reichsabschied) • Imperial ban (Reichsacht) • Flags • Reichsdeputation • Reichsexekution • Reichsexekutionsordnung • Reichsfürstenrat • Imperial Italy (Reichsitalien) • Imperial Regalia (Reichskleinodien) • Imperial Register (Reichsmatrikel) • Imperial Prelate (Reichsprälat) • Imperial Reform (Reichsreform) • Imperial Government (Reichsregiment) • Imperial Knighthood (Reichsritterschaft) • Reichsstädtekollegium • Reichssturmfahne • Reservatrechte • Römermonat • Quaternionenadler • Wahlkapitulation
Organisation of the Empire
Structures
- Hoftag
- Imperial Prelates (Reichsprälat)
- Emperors
- Kings
- Imperial Estates (Reichsstände)
- Prince-electors (Kurfürst)
- Imperial Villages (Reichsdorf)
- Erzamt
- Imperial Princes (Reichsfürst)
- Imperial Counts (Reichsgraf)
- Free imperial cities
- Other imperially immediate estates
- Imperial Knights (Reichsritter)
Institutions of the Empire
- Imperial Diet (Reichstag)
- Königliches Kammergericht to 1495
- Reichskammergericht from 1495
- Imperial Circle (Reichskreise) from 1495
- Aulic Council (Reichshofrat) from 1498
Holy Roman Empire
The Holy Roman Empire , also known as the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation after 1512, was a polity in Central and Western Europe, usually headed by the Holy Roman Emperor. It developed in the Early Middle Ages, and lasted for a millennium until its dissolution in 1806 during the Napoleonic Wars.
On 25 December 800, Pope Leo III crowned the Frankish king Charlemagne Roman emperor, reviving the title more than three centuries after the fall of the Western Roman Empire in 476. The title lapsed in 924, but was revived in 962 when Otto I was crowned emperor by Pope John XII, as Charlemagne's and the Carolingian Empire's successor. From 962 until the 12th century, the empire was one of the most powerful monarchies in Europe. It depended on cooperation between emperor and vassals; this was disturbed during the Salian period. The empire reached the apex of territorial expansion and power under the House of Hohenstaufen in the mid-13th century, but overextension led to a partial collapse. The imperial office was traditionally elective by the mostly German prince-electors. In theory and diplomacy, the emperors were considered the first among equals of all of Europe's Catholic monarchs.
A process of Imperial Reform in the late 15th and early 16th centuries transformed the empire, creating a set of institutions which endured until its final demise in the 19th century. On 6 August 1806, Emperor Francis II abdicated and formally dissolved the empire following the creation by French emperor Napoleon of the Confederation of the Rhine from German client states loyal to France. (Full article... )
History of the Holy Roman Empire
The Holy Roman Empire (Latin Sacrum Romanum Imperium) was the official name for the sovereign territory of the Roman-German Emperor from the Middle Ages to the year 1806. The name of the Empire is derived from the claim of its medieval rulers that it continued the tradition of the Ancient Roman Empire. The Holy Roman Empire is the forerunner of the modern nation-states of Germany and Austria. To distinguish it from the German Empire founded in 1871 it is also referred to by modern historians as the "Old Empire" (German: Altes Reich) more...
Well known people of the Holy Roman Empire
Emperors and kings
Otto I • Otto II • Otto III • Henry II • Conrad II • Henry III • Henry IV • Henry V • Conrad III • Frederick I • Henry VI • Philip of Swabia • Otto IV • Frederick II • Henry VII • Louis IV • Charles IV • Frederick III • Charles V • Ferdinand I • Ferdinand II • Joseph I • Charles VII • Francis II
Important church leaders
Leo III • Gregory VII • Urban II • Innocent III • Alexander III • Leo X • Jan Hus • Martin Luther • Philip Melanchthon • John Calvin
Members
New articles
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Wanted articles
Brunswick-Celle
- Eberhard I of Habsburg-Laufenburg
- Frederick III of Veldenz
- Lordship of Ochsenstein
- Holstein-Glückstadt
- Holstein-Oldenburg
- Jean-Baptiste Paulin Guérin
- Joanna of Ligny and St. Pol
- Carmelite Church, Straubing
- Conrad of Thierberg
- Kraft I of Hohenlohe
- Kreistag
- Landkasten/ Landschaftskasse/ Landschaft (Bank)
- Louis V of Lichtenberg
- Louis of Eyb
- Mangold of Sternberg
- Margaret of Bavaria-Landshut
- Otto of Lomello
- Palatinate-Kleeburg
- Treaty of Prague (1546)
- Reichsrecht
- Rerum Prussicarum
- House of Schneeberg
- Seehaufen
- Ulrich III of Ortenburg
- Untertanenpatent
- House of Dernbach
- House of Kruchfeld
- House of Wichsenstein
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