The rich iconography of Charlemagne is a reflection of Charlemagne's special position in Europe's collective memory, as the greatest of the Frankish kings, founder of the Holy Roman Empire, unifier of Western Europe, protector of the Catholic Church, promoter of education and of the Carolingian Renaissance, fictional precursor of the crusades, one of the Nine Worthies, a (contested) Catholic saint, and a national icon in Andorra, Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Netherlands and Switzerland.
Appearance
editThe Vita Karoli Magni written after Charlemagne's death by his servant Einhard has served ever since as a reference establishing his stature and charisma:
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.
— Einhard, The Life of Charlemagne, translated by Samuel Epes Turner (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1880)
Beard
editContemporaneous depictions of Charlemagne and related rulers suggest he sported a mustache, but not a beard.[1] The motif of Charlemagne's beard appears in 11th-century chansons de geste and especially the Song of Roland, which has a verse describing Charlemagne: "Blanche ad la barbe et tut flurit le chef", which translates as "his beard is white, and all his hair is greying."[2] The expression "l'empereur à la barbe fleurie" came to refer specifically to Charlemagne in French, and was further popularized by Victor Hugo in a 1846 poem of la Légende des siècles:
Charlemagne, empereur à la barbe fleurie,
Revient d'Espagne ; il a le cœur triste, il s'écrie :
« Roncevaux ! Roncevaux ! ô traître Ganelon ! »
Car son neveu Roland est mort dans ce vallon
Avec les douze pairs et toute son armée.
— Victor Hugo, "Aymerillot"
The epithet "fleuri" in this context appears to have meant "greyish-white", alluding to Charlemagne's old age[3] - even though he was actually under 40 at the time of the historical battle of Roncevaux Pass. An alternative view is that the poem refers to Charlemagne's beard being kept unshaven during the arduous military campaign.[4]
In any case, the beard has remained a near-constant attribute of Charlemagne since the High Middle Ages, and a long white beard associated with his old age. A rare exception is his depiction in the fresco of the Coronation of Charlemagne in the Raphael Rooms of the Apostolic Palace, since this was made a likeness of Francis I of France for political reasons, and Francis was beardless at the time.[5] Some 20th- or 21st-century depictions of Charlemagne also show him beardless for historical accuracy.
Attire
editCharlemagne has been generally depicted in military or ceremonial garb, with the style varying across time - typically, contemporary or at least recent in the Middle Ages and early modern period; ancient Roman in the 18th century; and aiming at historicist accuracy in the 19th century. He is often shown carrying, in his left hand, a globus cruciger, and in his right hand, either a sword (sometimes modeled on his attributed Joyeuse) or a scepter; from the 17th century the latter has tended, at least in France, to be the scepter of Charles V then known as "scepter of Charlemagne". In images where Charlemagne is crowned, the crown is in some instances the Imperial Crown of the Holy Roman Empire, as in Albrecht Dürer's seminal portrait now in Nuremberg, or the coronation crown of the kings of France also known as Crown of Charlemagne, as in the Mass of Saint Giles now in London. In many other depictions, however, the crown does not refer to a specific existing object.
Heraldry
editIn the Holy Roman Empire, the Imperial eagle (Reichsadler) emblem was attributed retroactively to Charlemagne, at the latest at the time of his reburial under Emperor Frederick II in 1215. Meanwhile, following the marriage of Isabella of Hainault with Philip II of France in 1180, the French Capetian dynasty promoted its own claims to the memory and legacy of Charlemagne, including by linking him to the fleur-de-lis.[6]
The heraldic combination of the two shields, by either dimidiation (i.e. with only a half-Reichsadler on the "German" side) or more rarely impalement (full Reichsadler), is first attested in a poem of Ogier's Youth (Les Enfances Ogier) by Adenes Le Roi in the last third of the 13th century. This adaptation became accepted in France and in the Empire as well, thanks to the fleur-de-lis's symbolic and mythical association not only with the Capetians but also with their Frankish predecessors.[6]
In line with the prevailing conventions of precedence among European monarchies, French depictions generally placed the Imperial eagle on the more honorable left-hand half of the shield (worn on the right-hand side when displayed on Charlemagne's coat), as was naturally done in the Empire.[6]
Public monuments
editCharlemagne was represented from medieval times in public settings including churches and civic landmarks. These include, among numerous others, the stucco statue of Charlemagne inside Saint John Abbey, Müstair (Switzerland), of uncertain date between the 9th and 12th centuries; a statue above the entrance of Osnabrück Town Hall; and a prominent 15th-century statue on one of the towers of the Grossmünster in Zürich (the original is now in the crypt, and a copy by Otto Münch was replaced on the tower in 1933).[7]
From the early modern era, several free-standing statues of Charlemagne were created for prominent public locations for various political purposes, including:
- The statue of Charlemagne in Aachen (Peter and Frans von Trier, 1620); the original is now in the Centre Charlemagne museum, and a 1969 copy replaced on the Marktplatz in front of Aachen Town Hall
- The equestrian statue of Charlemagne under the portico of St. Peter's Basilica (Agostino Cornacchini, 1725)
- The statue of Charlemagne on the Alte Brücke in Frankfurt (Johann Nepomuk Zwerger , 1843); the original is now at the Historical Museum, and a copy was re-erected on the bridge in 2016[8]
- The statue of Charlemagne in Liège (Louis Jehotte, 1867)
- The bronze group of Charlemagne et ses Leudes in front of Notre-Dame de Paris (Louis and Charles Rochet, 1878)
- The equestrian statue of Charlemagne on Keizer Karelplein in Nijmegen (Albert Termote , 1960)[9][10]
Gallery
edit-
Denier of Charlemagne, early 810s
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so-called Equestrian statuette of Charlemagne, 9th century, Louvre
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Thomas Hoving has theorized that the life-size golden face of the reliquary of Saint Faith at Conques, France, is a portrait or death mask of Charlemagne.[11]
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Charlemagne and Pepin of Italy, 10th century
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Stucco sculpture of Charlemagne, Saint John Abbey, Müstair, 10th–12th century
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Charlemagne on one of the Kaiserfenster in Strasbourg Cathedral, late 12th century
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Scenes from the life of Charlemagne, Vitrail de Charlemagne at Chartres Cathedral, c. 1225
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Charlemagne and Constantine, on the Vitrail de Charlemagne
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Charlemagne as one of the Nine Worthies, Cologne City Hall, 13th century
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Saint Charlemagne by Jaume Cascalls, 1345, Girona Cathedral
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Charlemagne on the Scepter of Charles V, 1370s, Louvre
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Charlemagne crowning Louis the Pious, Grandes Chroniques de France, 14th–15th centuries
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Charlemagne tapestry, 15th century, Musée des Beaux-Arts de Dijon
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Saint Charlemagne in the Crucifixion of the Parlement de Paris , mid-15th century, Louvre
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Charlemagne in the book of hours of Philip the Good, by Jean Le Tavernier , 1450s
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Coronation of Charlemagne in the Grandes Chroniques de France, by Jean Fouquet, 1450s
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Charlemagne surveying the works of the Palatine Chapel, Aachen, by Jean Fouquet, 1450s
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Charlemagne (right) by Jean Hey, 1488, National Gallery
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Charlemagne on the Window of the Dukes at Moulins Cathedral, late 15th century
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Charlemagne statue, Grossmünster at Zürich (original)
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Charlemagne rescuing Pope Adrian I, by Antoine Vérard, 1493
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Charlemagne on a print from the Nuremberg workshop of Michael Wolgemut and Wilhelm Pleydenwurff, 1493
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Charlemagne (lower left corner) and his descendants, Nuremberg Chronicle, late 15th century
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Charlemagne protecting the king of France, by the Master of Jacques de Besançon , c. 1500, Livre d'heures de Charles VIII
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Charlemagne (left) attending mass, by the Master of Saint Giles, c. 1500, National Gallery
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Charlemagne on the Polyptyque d'Anchin by Jehan Bellegambe, c. 1510, Musée de la Chartreuse de Douai
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The Three Christian Worthies: Charlemagne, King Arthur and Godfrey of Bouillon, by Hans Burgkmair, 1516–19
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Charlemagne protecting Charles V, window by Jan Haeck after Bernard van Orley, 1538, Brussels Cathedral
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Charlemagne portrait in Sebastian Münster's Cosmographia, c. 1550
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Charlemagne as one of the Nine Worthies by Virgil Solis, mid-16th century
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Charlemagne by Giovanni Battista de'Cavalieri, 1583
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Charlemagne as one of the Nine Worthies by Nicolaes de Bruyn, 1594
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Charlemagne in Adrianus Barlandus's Chronicles of the Dukes of Brabant, 1603
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Charlemagne on the Town Hall of Lüneburg, by Hans Schröder, c. 1605
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Charlemagne on the Madonna of Vic by Frans Pourbus the Younger, 1617, Saint-Nicolas-des-Champs, Paris
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Charlemagne legislator of Frisia, by Pieter Feddes van Harlingen, 1618–20
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Statue of Charlemagne by Peter and Frans von Trier, 1620, Aachen
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Charlemagne as one of the Nine Worthies by Willem van de Passe, London, 1621–36
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Charlemagne in Icones Imperatorum Romanorum (1645), by Cornelis Galle the Elder after Hendrick Goltzius
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Saint Charlemagne and Saint Louis, by Grégoire Huret , mid-17th century
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Charlemagne at Kremsmünster Abbey, by Johann Peter Spaz, 1667
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Charlemagne at the Jesuit college of Kutná Hora , remodeling by Giovanni Domenico Orsi de Orsini , 1670s
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Charlemagne at the Dôme des Invalides in Paris, by Antoine Coysevox, 1706
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Charlemagne on the Alte Mainbrücke in Würzburg, c. 1730
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Charlemagne receives relics from Waldo of Reichenau, Münster Reichenau-Mittelzell , 18th century
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Study of Charlemagne's head for the Panthéon frescoes, by Antoine-Jean Gros, c. 1812
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Charlemagne submitting Widukind at Paderborn, Galerie des Batailles of the Palace of Versailles, by Ary Scheffer, 1835
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Charlemagne by Louis-Félix Amiel, late 1830s, Musée de l'Histoire de France (Versailles)
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Statue of Charlemagne by Johann Nepomuk Zwerger , 1843, Historical Museum, Frankfurt
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Coronation of Charlemagne at Aachen Town Hall, by Joseph Kehren , 1860
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Charlemagne in the Belgian Senate Chamber, by Louis Gallait, 1870s
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Charlemagne et ses Leudes in Paris, by Louis and Charles Rochet, 1878
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Statue of Charlemagne in Hamburg, by Engelbert Peiffer , 1889
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"Charlemagne visits a school", French schoolbook illustration by E. Creté after Henri Grobet, 1902
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Charlemagne Window in Metz-Ville station, 1908
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Charlemagne by Alexei Radakov , 1911
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Charlemagne and his farmers, illustration of Ernest Lavisse's Histoire de France, 1913
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Charlemagne on top of the Monument to the victory at Verdun, by Jean Boucher, 1929
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Charlemagne stamp, Germany, 1948
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Charlemagne statue in Nijmegen, by Albert Termote , 1960
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Statue of Charlemagne in Nienburg, Lower Saxony, by Volker Neuhoff, 1991
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Mein Karl 2014 public installation on the Katschhof at Aachen, by Ottmar Hörl, 2014
Notes
edit- ^ Jip Barreveld (21 February 2020). "Beards and Barbarians: Hair and identity in the Early Medieval West". Leiden Medievalists Blog.
- ^ Brigitte L.M. Bauer; Jonathan Slocum. "Old French Online - Lesson 1". The University of Texas at Austin Linguistic Research Center.
- ^ Rémi Usseil (21 May 2017). "L'empereur à la barbe fleurie". Matière de France.
- ^ "C'est arrivé le 4 décembre 771 : Charlemagne devient l'unique souverain du royaume Franc". Le Dauphiné libéré. 4 December 2020.
- ^ Joseph Archer Crowe (2009). Raphael: His Life and Works. With Particular Reference to Recently Discovered Records, and an Exhaustive Study of Extant Drawings and Pictures Volume 2 (1882-85). Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Library.
- ^ a b c Adrian Ailes (January 2016). "The Attributed Arms of Charlemagne, 1200–1500" (PDF). University of Bristol's blog network.
- ^ René & Peter van der Krogt. "Karl der Grosse / Charlemagne". Statues - Hither & Thither.
- ^ Hanna Neumann (2017). "Karl der Große". Kunst im öffentlichen Raum Frankfurt.
- ^ Kees van Tilburg (11 January 2017). "Charles the Great". Equestrian Statues.
- ^ Feico Hoekstra (14 June 2014). "Het ruiterstandbeeld van Karel de Grote op het Keizer Karelplein". De Oversteek.
- ^ Hoving, Thomas (May 2009). "Letters, May 2009". Harper's Magazine. Retrieved 28 December 2016.
There are, in fact, two portraits of Charlemagne. One is the little bronze in the Louvre showing the emperor on a horse. The other, life-size and perhaps a death mask, is the golden face on the reliquary of Sainte-Foy in the treasury of Conques. The latter is usually called, inaccurately, a late Roman head. But traces of the distinctive crown of Charlemagne are easily seen when the head is removed from the body of the reliquary. During the preparation of the Louvre show Les Fastes du Gothique in the 1960s, I had the pleasure of taking Sainte-Foy apart and spotted the tell-tale details.