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Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor

Charles IV (Czech: Karel IV.; German: Karl IV.; Latin: Carolus IV; 14 May 1316 – 29 November 1378[1]), also known as Charles of Luxembourg, born Wenceslaus (Czech: Václav, German: Wenzel),[2] was the first King of Bohemia to become Holy Roman Emperor. He was a member of the House of Luxembourg from his father's side and the Bohemian House of Přemyslid from his mother's side; he emphasized the latter due to his lifelong affinity for the Bohemian side of his inheritance, and also because his direct ancestors in the Přemyslid line included two saints.[3][4]

Charles IV
King of Bohemia
Reign26 August 1346 – 29 November 1378
Coronation2 September 1347, Prague
PredecessorJohn
SuccessorWenceslaus IV
King of the Romans
(Roman-German King)
Reign11 July 1346 – 29 November 1378
Coronation26 November 1346, Bonn
PredecessorLouis IV
SuccessorWenceslaus
Holy Roman Emperor
King of Italy
Reign1355 – 29 November 1378
Coronation
  • 6 January 1355, Milan (Italian)
  • 5 April 1355, Rome (Imperial)
PredecessorLouis IV
SuccessorSigismund
Born14 May 1316
Prague
Died29 November 1378 (aged 62)
Prague
Burial
Spouse
(m. 1329; died 1348)
(m. 1349; died 1353)
(m. 1353; died 1362)
(m. 1363)
Issue
HouseLuxembourg
FatherJohn of Bohemia
MotherElisabeth of Bohemia
ReligionRoman Catholicism
Coat of arms of the House of Luxembourg–Bohemia
Arms of Charles IV as Holy Roman Emperor

He was the eldest son and heir of John of Bohemia, King of Bohemia and Count of Luxembourg, who died at the Battle of Crécy on 26 August 1346. His mother, Elizabeth, Queen of Bohemia, was the sister of Wenceslaus III, King of Bohemia and Poland, the last of the male Přemyslid rulers of Bohemia. Charles inherited the County of Luxembourg from his father and was elected king of the Kingdom of Bohemia. On 2 September 1347, Charles was crowned King of Bohemia.

On 11 July 1346, the prince-electors chose him as King of the Romans (rex Romanorum) in opposition to Louis IV, Holy Roman Emperor. Charles was crowned on 26 November 1346 in Bonn. After his opponent died, he was re-elected in 1349 and crowned King of the Romans. In 1355, he was crowned King of Italy and Holy Roman Emperor. With his coronation as King of Burgundy in 1365, he became the personal ruler of all the kingdoms of the Holy Roman Empire.

Having played a tremendous part in the political and cultural history of the Kingdom of Bohemia, he remains a very popular figure in the Czech Republic. The Golden Bull of 1356 marked a structural change in the politics of the Holy Roman Empire. Several aspects of his legacy remain a contentious matter though. The image of Charles as a wise, pious, peace-loving king (partly constructed by Charles himself) has proved influential until this day, supported by several artistic or scholarly projects produced during Charles's reign or afterwards.

Life

Birth and childhood

Charles was born to John of Bohemia of the Luxembourg dynasty and Queen Elizabeth of Bohemia of the Bohemian Přemyslid dynasty in Prague.[5] His maternal grandfather was the Bohemian King Wenceslaus II. He chose the name Charles at his confirmation in honor of his uncle, King Charles IV of France, at whose court he was resident for seven years.[6]

Charles received French education and was literate and fluent in five languages: Latin, Czech, German, French, and Italian.[citation needed]

Italy and Moravia

In 1331, he gained some experience of warfare in Italy with his father. At the beginning of 1333, Charles went to Lucca (Tuscany) to consolidate his rule there. In an effort to defend the city, Charles founded the nearby fortress and the town of Montecarlo (Charles' Mountain).[7]

From 1333, he administered the lands of the Bohemian Crown due to his father's frequent absence and deteriorating eyesight. In 1334, Charles was named Margrave of Moravia, the traditional title for heirs to the throne. Two years later, he assumed the government of Tyrol on behalf of his brother, John Henry, and was soon actively involved in a struggle for the possession of this county.[8]

King of the Romans

On 11 July 1346, in consequence of an alliance between his father and Pope Clement VI, relentless enemy of the emperor Louis IV, Charles was elected as Roman king in opposition to Louis by some of the prince-electors at Rhens. As he had previously promised to be subservient to Clement, he made extensive concessions to the pope in 1347. Confirming the papacy in the possession of vast territories, he promised to annul the acts of Louis against Clement, to take no part in Italian affairs, and to defend and protect the church.[8]

 
Lands of the Bohemian Crown ruled by Charles IV

Charles IV was in a very weak position in Germany. Owing to the terms of his election, he was derisively referred to as a "Priests' King" (Pfaffenkönig). Many bishops and nearly all of the Imperial cities remained loyal to Louis the Bavarian. Worse still, Charles backed the wrong side in the Hundred Years' War, losing his father and many of his best knights at the Battle of Crécy in August 1346, with Charles himself escaping from the field wounded.

Civil war in Germany was prevented, however, when Louis IV died on 11 October 1347, after suffering a stroke during a bear hunt. In January 1349, House of Wittelsbach partisans attempted to secure the election of Günther von Schwarzburg as king, but he attracted few supporters and was defeated by Charles at the siege of Eltville in May. Thereafter, Charles faced no direct threat to his claim to the Imperial throne.

Charles initially worked to secure his power base. Bohemia had remained untouched by the plague. Prague became his capital, and he rebuilt the city on the model of Paris, establishing the New Town (Nové Město). In 1348, he founded the Charles University in Prague, which was later named after him and was the first university in Central Europe. This served as a training ground for bureaucrats and lawyers. Soon Prague emerged as the intellectual and cultural center of Central Europe.

 
Bust of Charles IV in St. Vitus Cathedral, 1370s

Having made good use of the difficulties of his opponents, Charles was again elected in Frankfurt on 17 June 1349 and re-crowned at Aachen on 25 July 1349. He was soon the undisputed ruler of the Empire. Gifts or promises had won the support of the Rhenish and Swabian towns; a marriage alliance secured the friendship of the Habsburgs; and an alliance with Rudolf II of Bavaria, Count Palatine of the Rhine, was obtained when Charles, who had become a widower in 1348, married Rudolph's daughter Anna.[8]

In 1350, the king was visited at Prague by the Roman tribune Cola di Rienzo, who urged him to go to Italy, where the poet Petrarch and the citizens of Florence also implored his presence.[9] Turning a deaf ear to these entreaties, Charles kept Cola in prison for a year, and then handed him as a prisoner to Clement at Avignon.[8]

Outside Prague, Charles attempted to expand the Bohemian crown lands, using his imperial authority to acquire fiefs in Silesia, the Upper Palatinate, and Franconia. The latter regions comprised "New Bohemia", a string of possessions intended to link Bohemia with the Luxemburg territories in the Rhineland. The Bohemian estates, however, were not willing to support Charles in these ventures. When Charles sought to codify Bohemian law in the Maiestas Carolina of 1355, he met with sharp resistance. After that point, Charles found it expedient to scale back his efforts at centralization.

Holy Roman Emperor

In 1354, Charles crossed the Alps without an army, received the Lombard crown in St. Ambrose Basilica, Milan, on 6 January 1355, and was crowned emperor at Rome by a cardinal on April 5th of the same year.[10][8] His sole object appears to have been to obtain the Imperial crown in peace, in accordance with a promise previously made to Pope Clement. He only remained in the city for a few hours, in spite of the expressed wishes of the Roman people. Having virtually abandoned all the Imperial rights in Italy, the emperor re-crossed the Alps, pursued by the scornful words of Petrarch, but laden with considerable wealth.[11][8] On his return, Charles was occupied with the administration of the Empire, then just recovering from the Black Death, and in 1356, he promulgated the famous Golden Bull to regulate the election of the king.[8]

 
Charles's possessions at the signing of the Golden Bull of 1356.

Having given Moravia to one brother, John Henry, and erected the county of Luxembourg into a duchy for another, Wenceslaus, he was unremitting in his efforts to secure other territories as compensation and to strengthen the Bohemian monarchy. To this end he purchased part of the upper Palatinate of the Rhine in 1353, and in 1367 annexed Lower Lusatia to Bohemia and bought numerous estates in various parts of Germany. On the death of Meinhard, Duke of Upper Bavaria and Count of Tyrol, in 1363, Upper Bavaria was claimed by the sons of the emperor Louis IV, and Tyrol by Rudolf IV, Duke of Austria. Both claims were admitted by Charles on the understanding that if these families died out both territories should pass to the House of Luxembourg. At about the same time, he was promised the succession to the Margravate of Brandenburg, which he actually obtained for his son Wenceslaus in 1373.[8]

 
Meeting with Charles V of France in Paris in 1378, from a fifteenth-century manuscript in the Bibliothèque de l'Arsenal

Casimir III of Poland and Louis I of Hungary entered a conspiracy against Charles and managed to persuade Otto V of Bavaria to join. After the repeal of the estate contract by margrave Otto, in early July 1371, Charles IV declared hostilities and invaded Margraviate of Brandenburg; after two years of conflict, in 1373 Brandenburg became part of the Czech lands. This was when he gave the order to measure his new territory, its villages, people, and income. This was recorded in the Landbuch of Charles IV, which was finished in 1375. Many villages were mentioned for the first time in this book, so it can provide information on how old they are. He also gained a considerable portion of Silesian territory, partly by inheritance through his third wife, Anna von Schweidnitz, daughter of Henry II, Duke of Świdnica and Catherine of Hungary. In 1365, Charles visited Pope Urban V at Avignon and undertook to escort him to Rome; on the same occasion he was crowned King of Burgundy at Arles.[8]

His second journey to Italy took place in 1368 when he had a meeting with Pope Urban V at Viterbo, was besieged in his palace at Siena, and left the country before the end of 1369. During his later years, the emperor took little part in German affairs beyond securing the election of his son Wenceslaus as king of the Romans in 1376, and negotiating a peace between the Swabian League of Cities and some nobles in 1378. After dividing his lands between his three sons and his nephews,[1] he died in November 1378 at Prague, where he was buried, and where a statue was erected to his memory in 1848.[8]

Charles IV suffered from gout (metabolic arthritis), a painful disease quite common in that time.

Legacy

Evaluation

The reign of Charles IV was characterized by a transformation in the nature of the Empire and is remembered as the Golden Age of Bohemia. He promulgated the Golden Bull of 1356 whereby the succession to the imperial title was laid down, which held for the next four centuries.

He also organized the states of the empire into peace-keeping confederations. In these, the Imperial cities figured prominently. The Swabian Landfriede confederation of 1370 was made up almost entirely of Imperial Cities. At the same time, the leagues were organized and led by the crown and its agents. As with the electors, the cities that served in these leagues were given privileges to aid in their efforts to keep the peace.

He assured his dominance over the eastern borders of the Empire through succession treaties with the Habsburgs and the purchase of Brandenburg. He also claimed imperial lordship over the crusader states of Prussia and Livonia.

In 2005 Charles IV ranked the first in the TV show Největší Čech, the Czech spin-off of the BBC Greatest Britons show.

Patronage of culture and the arts

 
Statue of Charles IV near Charles Bridge (1848), Prague, by Ernst Julius Hähnel

Prague became the capital of the Holy Roman Empire during the reign of Charles IV. The name of the royal founder and patron remains on many monuments and institutions, for example Charles University, Charles Bridge, Charles Square. High Gothic Prague Castle and part of the cathedral of Saint Vitus by Peter Parler were also built under his patronage. Finally, the first flowering of manuscript painting in Prague dates from Charles's reign. In the present Czech Republic, he is still regarded as Pater Patriae (father of the country or otec vlasti), a title first coined by Adalbertus Ranconis de Ericinio at his funeral.

Charles also had strong ties to Nuremberg, staying within its city walls 52 times and thereby strengthening its reputation amongst German cities. Charles was the patron of the Nuremberg Frauenkirche, built between 1352 and 1362 (the architect was likely Peter Parler), where the imperial court worshipped during its stays in Nuremberg.

Charles's imperial policy was focused on the dynastic sphere and abandoned the lofty ideal of the Empire as a universal monarchy of Christendom. In 1353, he granted the Duchy of Luxembourg to his half-brother, Wenceslaus. He concentrated his energies chiefly on the economic and intellectual development of Bohemia, where he founded the university in 1348 and encouraged the early humanists. He corresponded with Petrarch and invited him to visit the royal residence in Prague, whilst the Italian hoped – to no avail – to see Charles move his residence to Rome and reawaken tradition of the Roman Empire.

Charles's sister Bona married the eldest son of Philip VI of France, the future John II of France, in 1335. Thus, Charles was the maternal uncle of Charles V of France, who solicited his relative's advice at Metz in 1356 during the Parisian Revolt. This family connection was celebrated publicly when Charles made a solemn visit to his nephew in 1378, just months before his death. A detailed account of the occasion, enriched by many splendid miniatures, can be found in Charles V's copy of the Grandes Chroniques de France.

Castles

Castles built or established by Charles IV:[12]

Places named after Charles IV

Czech Republic
Italy

Other

 
100-CZK banknote

Family

Genealogy

Henry VII
12 July 1275(6) – 24 August 1313
  Margaret of Brabant
4 October 1276 – 14 December 1311
  Wenceslaus II
27 September 1271 – 21 June 1305
  Judith of Habsburg
13 March 1271 – 18 June 1297
         
     
  John of Bohemia
10 August 1296 – 26 August 1346
  Elisabeth of Bohemia
20 January 1292 – 28 September 1330
 
     
   
1
Blanche of Valois
1316 – 1 August 1348
OO   15 May 1323
2
Anna of Bavaria
26 September 1329 – 2 February 1353
OO   March 1349
Charles IV
14 May 1316 – 29 November 1378
3
Anna von Schweidnitz
1339 – 11 July 1362
OO   27 May 1353
4
Elizabeth of Pomerania
1346(7) – 14 February 1393
OO   21 May 1363
                   
   1    1    1    2    3    3    3    4
son
b.1334
Margaret of Bohemia
1335–49
Catherine of Bohemia
1342–95
Wenceslas
1350–51
Elisabeth of Bohemia
1358–73
Wenceslaus,
King of the Romans

1361–1419
son
1362
Anne
of Bohemia

1366–94
   4    4    4    4    4        
Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor
1368–1437
John of Görlitz
1370–96
Charles
1372–73
Margaret of Bohemia
1373–1410
Henry
1377–78

Marriages and children

 
Charles and his first wife, Blanche

Charles was married four times. His first wife was Blanche of Valois (1316–1348), daughter of Charles, Count of Valois, and a half-sister of King Philip VI of France.[5] They had three children:

He secondly married Anna of Bavaria, (1329–1353), daughter of Rudolf II, Count Palatine of the Rhine; they had one son:

  • Wenceslaus (1350–1351).

His third wife was Anna von Schweidnitz, (1339–1362),[5] daughter of Henry II, Duke of Świdnica and Katharina of Anjou (daughter of Charles I Robert, King of Hungary), by whom he had three children:

His fourth wife was Elizabeth of Pomerania, (1345 or 1347 – 1393),[15] daughter of Bogislaw V, Duke of Pomerania and Elisabeth of Poland who was the daughter of King Casimir III of Poland. They had six children:

Charles had one illegitimate son, William, born in 1362 to an unknown woman. He was raised in Brabant and seems to have joined his father at the time of the latter's trip to France in 1377. He was acknowledged by his father, who sought a papal dispensation for him to marry within the fourth degree. It is unknown if he ever married. He served his Bohemian relatives as a diplomat, but his ultimate fate is unknown.[16]

References

  1. ^ a b Karl IV. In: Hans Herzfeld [de] (1960): Geschichte in Gestalten (History in figures), vol. 2: F–K. Das Fischer Lexikon [de] 38, Frankfurt 1963, p. 294
  2. ^ Kavka, František (1998). "Chapter 3: Politics and culture under Charles IV". In Teich, Mikuláš (ed.). Bohemia in History. Cambridge University Press. p. 60. ISBN 0-521-43155-7.
  3. ^ Mahoney, William (2011). The history of the Czech Republic and Slovakia. Greenwood. p. 50. ISBN 978-0313363054.
  4. ^ Agnew, Hugh (2004). The Czechs and the lands of the Bohemian crown. Hoover Institution Press. pp. 32. ISBN 978-0817944926.
  5. ^ a b c d e Boehm & Fajt 2005, p. xvi.
  6. ^ "Charles IV – the greatest Czech". Prague City Tourism Prague City Tourism. Retrieved 19 April 2020.
  7. ^ Montecarlo
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Charles IV. (Roman Emperor)". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 5 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 898–899.
  9. ^ Francesco Petrarca Epistolae familiares X.1, XII.1, XVIII.1; See also: E.H. Wilkins Life of Petrarch (Chicago, 1961) 97, 112, 134 resp.
  10. ^ František Palacký. Dějiny národu českého v Čechách i v Moravě, books VIII and IX
  11. ^ Francesco Petrarca, Epistolae familiares XIX.12; see also E. H. Wilkins, Life of Petrarch (Chicago, 1961), p. 147
  12. ^ Karel IV. – český král
  13. ^ Dvornik 1962, p. 52.
  14. ^ Jaschke 1997, p. 102.
  15. ^ a b c d e Boehm & Fajt 2005, p. xvii.
  16. ^ Ondřej Schmidtm John of Moravia between the Czech Lands and the Patriarchate of Aquileia (ca. 1345–1394) (Brill, 2019), p. 31.

Bibliography

  • Boehm, Barbara Drake; Fajt, Jiri, eds. (2005). Prague: The Crown of Bohemia, 1347–1437. Yale University Press.[ISBN missing]
  • Dvornik, Francis (1962). The Slavs in European History and Civilization. Rutgers University Press.
  • Jaschke, Karl-Ulrich (1997). "From Famous Empresses to Unspectacular Queens". In Duggan, Anne J. (ed.). Queens and Queenship in Medieval Europe. The Boydell Press.[ISBN missing]

Further reading

  • Charles IV (autobiography), edited by Balázs Nagy, Frank Schaer: Autobiography of Emperor Charles IV; And, His Legend of St. Wenceslas: Karoli IV Imperatoris Romanorum Vita Ab Eo Ipso Conscripta; Et, Hystoria Nova de Sancto Wenceslao Martyre, Published by Central European University Press, 2001, ISBN 978-9639116320, 259 pages, books.google.com
  • Boehm, Barbara Drake (2005). Prague : the Crown of Bohemia, 1347–1437. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. ISBN 1588391612.

External links

  • Literature by and about Karl IV. in the German National Library catalogue
  • Works by and about Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor in the Deutsche Digitale Bibliothek (German Digital Library)
  • Regesta Imperii
  • Publications on Charles IV. in the OPAC of the Regesta Imperii
  • 'Constitutiones et acta publica imperatorum et regum 1357–1378' – digital pre-publication of documents by Charles IV by the MGH
  • "Carolus IV". Repertorium "Historical Sources of the German Middle Ages" (Geschichtsquellen des deutschen Mittelalters).
  • Aleksandra Filipek-Misiak, Karol IV Luksemburski jako ideał władcy w Catalogus abbatum Saganensium Ludolfa z Żagania, In: Historie – Otázky – Problémy, 7 (2015), z. 1, pp. 76–89
  • Lewis E 64 Golden Bull of Charles IV at OPenn
Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor
Born: 14 May 1316  Died: 29 November 1378
Preceded by Count of Luxembourg
1346–1353
Succeeded by
King of Bohemia
1346–1378
Succeeded by
Preceded by King of the Romans
1346–1378
(until 1347 in opposition to Louis IV)
(in 1349 opposed by Günther von Schwarzburg)
Holy Roman Emperor
1355–1378
Vacant
Title next held by
Sigismund

charles, holy, roman, emperor, charles, czech, karel, german, karl, latin, carolus, 1316, november, 1378, also, known, charles, luxembourg, born, wenceslaus, czech, václav, german, wenzel, first, king, bohemia, become, holy, roman, emperor, member, house, luxe. Charles IV Czech Karel IV German Karl IV Latin Carolus IV 14 May 1316 29 November 1378 1 also known as Charles of Luxembourg born Wenceslaus Czech Vaclav German Wenzel 2 was the first King of Bohemia to become Holy Roman Emperor He was a member of the House of Luxembourg from his father s side and the Bohemian House of Premyslid from his mother s side he emphasized the latter due to his lifelong affinity for the Bohemian side of his inheritance and also because his direct ancestors in the Premyslid line included two saints 3 4 Charles IVCharles IV in the Votive Panel of Jan Ocko of VlasimKing of BohemiaReign26 August 1346 29 November 1378Coronation2 September 1347 PraguePredecessorJohnSuccessorWenceslaus IVKing of the Romans Roman German King Reign11 July 1346 29 November 1378Coronation26 November 1346 BonnPredecessorLouis IVSuccessorWenceslausHoly Roman EmperorKing of ItalyReign1355 29 November 1378Coronation6 January 1355 Milan Italian 5 April 1355 Rome Imperial PredecessorLouis IVSuccessorSigismundBorn14 May 1316PragueDied29 November 1378 aged 62 PragueBurialSt Vitus Cathedral PragueSpouseBlanche of Valois m 1329 died 1348 wbr Anne of Bavaria m 1349 died 1353 wbr Anna von Schweidnitz m 1353 died 1362 wbr Elizabeth of Pomerania m 1363 wbr IssueMargaret Queen of Hungary Catherine Duchess of Austria and Bavaria Elisabeth Duchess of Austria Wenceslas King of Bohemia and Germany Anne Queen of England Sigismund Holy Roman Emperor John Duke of Gorlitz Margaret Burgravine of NurembergHouseLuxembourgFatherJohn of BohemiaMotherElisabeth of BohemiaReligionRoman CatholicismCoat of arms of the House of Luxembourg Bohemia Arms of Charles IV as Holy Roman Emperor He was the eldest son and heir of John of Bohemia King of Bohemia and Count of Luxembourg who died at the Battle of Crecy on 26 August 1346 His mother Elizabeth Queen of Bohemia was the sister of Wenceslaus III King of Bohemia and Poland the last of the male Premyslid rulers of Bohemia Charles inherited the County of Luxembourg from his father and was elected king of the Kingdom of Bohemia On 2 September 1347 Charles was crowned King of Bohemia On 11 July 1346 the prince electors chose him as King of the Romans rex Romanorum in opposition to Louis IV Holy Roman Emperor Charles was crowned on 26 November 1346 in Bonn After his opponent died he was re elected in 1349 and crowned King of the Romans In 1355 he was crowned King of Italy and Holy Roman Emperor With his coronation as King of Burgundy in 1365 he became the personal ruler of all the kingdoms of the Holy Roman Empire Having played a tremendous part in the political and cultural history of the Kingdom of Bohemia he remains a very popular figure in the Czech Republic The Golden Bull of 1356 marked a structural change in the politics of the Holy Roman Empire Several aspects of his legacy remain a contentious matter though The image of Charles as a wise pious peace loving king partly constructed by Charles himself has proved influential until this day supported by several artistic or scholarly projects produced during Charles s reign or afterwards Contents 1 Life 1 1 Birth and childhood 1 2 Italy and Moravia 1 3 King of the Romans 1 4 Holy Roman Emperor 2 Legacy 2 1 Evaluation 2 2 Patronage of culture and the arts 2 3 Castles 2 4 Places named after Charles IV 2 5 Other 3 Family 3 1 Genealogy 3 2 Marriages and children 4 References 5 Bibliography 6 Further reading 7 External linksLife EditBirth and childhood Edit Charles was born to John of Bohemia of the Luxembourg dynasty and Queen Elizabeth of Bohemia of the Bohemian Premyslid dynasty in Prague 5 His maternal grandfather was the Bohemian King Wenceslaus II He chose the name Charles at his confirmation in honor of his uncle King Charles IV of France at whose court he was resident for seven years 6 Charles received French education and was literate and fluent in five languages Latin Czech German French and Italian citation needed Italy and Moravia Edit In 1331 he gained some experience of warfare in Italy with his father At the beginning of 1333 Charles went to Lucca Tuscany to consolidate his rule there In an effort to defend the city Charles founded the nearby fortress and the town of Montecarlo Charles Mountain 7 From 1333 he administered the lands of the Bohemian Crown due to his father s frequent absence and deteriorating eyesight In 1334 Charles was named Margrave of Moravia the traditional title for heirs to the throne Two years later he assumed the government of Tyrol on behalf of his brother John Henry and was soon actively involved in a struggle for the possession of this county 8 King of the Romans Edit On 11 July 1346 in consequence of an alliance between his father and Pope Clement VI relentless enemy of the emperor Louis IV Charles was elected as Roman king in opposition to Louis by some of the prince electors at Rhens As he had previously promised to be subservient to Clement he made extensive concessions to the pope in 1347 Confirming the papacy in the possession of vast territories he promised to annul the acts of Louis against Clement to take no part in Italian affairs and to defend and protect the church 8 Lands of the Bohemian Crown ruled by Charles IV Charles IV was in a very weak position in Germany Owing to the terms of his election he was derisively referred to as a Priests King Pfaffenkonig Many bishops and nearly all of the Imperial cities remained loyal to Louis the Bavarian Worse still Charles backed the wrong side in the Hundred Years War losing his father and many of his best knights at the Battle of Crecy in August 1346 with Charles himself escaping from the field wounded Civil war in Germany was prevented however when Louis IV died on 11 October 1347 after suffering a stroke during a bear hunt In January 1349 House of Wittelsbach partisans attempted to secure the election of Gunther von Schwarzburg as king but he attracted few supporters and was defeated by Charles at the siege of Eltville in May Thereafter Charles faced no direct threat to his claim to the Imperial throne Charles initially worked to secure his power base Bohemia had remained untouched by the plague Prague became his capital and he rebuilt the city on the model of Paris establishing the New Town Nove Mesto In 1348 he founded the Charles University in Prague which was later named after him and was the first university in Central Europe This served as a training ground for bureaucrats and lawyers Soon Prague emerged as the intellectual and cultural center of Central Europe Bust of Charles IV in St Vitus Cathedral 1370s Having made good use of the difficulties of his opponents Charles was again elected in Frankfurt on 17 June 1349 and re crowned at Aachen on 25 July 1349 He was soon the undisputed ruler of the Empire Gifts or promises had won the support of the Rhenish and Swabian towns a marriage alliance secured the friendship of the Habsburgs and an alliance with Rudolf II of Bavaria Count Palatine of the Rhine was obtained when Charles who had become a widower in 1348 married Rudolph s daughter Anna 8 In 1350 the king was visited at Prague by the Roman tribune Cola di Rienzo who urged him to go to Italy where the poet Petrarch and the citizens of Florence also implored his presence 9 Turning a deaf ear to these entreaties Charles kept Cola in prison for a year and then handed him as a prisoner to Clement at Avignon 8 Outside Prague Charles attempted to expand the Bohemian crown lands using his imperial authority to acquire fiefs in Silesia the Upper Palatinate and Franconia The latter regions comprised New Bohemia a string of possessions intended to link Bohemia with the Luxemburg territories in the Rhineland The Bohemian estates however were not willing to support Charles in these ventures When Charles sought to codify Bohemian law in the Maiestas Carolina of 1355 he met with sharp resistance After that point Charles found it expedient to scale back his efforts at centralization Holy Roman Emperor Edit The Golden Bull of 1356 In 1354 Charles crossed the Alps without an army received the Lombard crown in St Ambrose Basilica Milan on 6 January 1355 and was crowned emperor at Rome by a cardinal on April 5th of the same year 10 8 His sole object appears to have been to obtain the Imperial crown in peace in accordance with a promise previously made to Pope Clement He only remained in the city for a few hours in spite of the expressed wishes of the Roman people Having virtually abandoned all the Imperial rights in Italy the emperor re crossed the Alps pursued by the scornful words of Petrarch but laden with considerable wealth 11 8 On his return Charles was occupied with the administration of the Empire then just recovering from the Black Death and in 1356 he promulgated the famous Golden Bull to regulate the election of the king 8 Charles s possessions at the signing of the Golden Bull of 1356 Having given Moravia to one brother John Henry and erected the county of Luxembourg into a duchy for another Wenceslaus he was unremitting in his efforts to secure other territories as compensation and to strengthen the Bohemian monarchy To this end he purchased part of the upper Palatinate of the Rhine in 1353 and in 1367 annexed Lower Lusatia to Bohemia and bought numerous estates in various parts of Germany On the death of Meinhard Duke of Upper Bavaria and Count of Tyrol in 1363 Upper Bavaria was claimed by the sons of the emperor Louis IV and Tyrol by Rudolf IV Duke of Austria Both claims were admitted by Charles on the understanding that if these families died out both territories should pass to the House of Luxembourg At about the same time he was promised the succession to the Margravate of Brandenburg which he actually obtained for his son Wenceslaus in 1373 8 Meeting with Charles V of France in Paris in 1378 from a fifteenth century manuscript in the Bibliotheque de l Arsenal Casimir III of Poland and Louis I of Hungary entered a conspiracy against Charles and managed to persuade Otto V of Bavaria to join After the repeal of the estate contract by margrave Otto in early July 1371 Charles IV declared hostilities and invaded Margraviate of Brandenburg after two years of conflict in 1373 Brandenburg became part of the Czech lands This was when he gave the order to measure his new territory its villages people and income This was recorded in the Landbuch of Charles IV which was finished in 1375 Many villages were mentioned for the first time in this book so it can provide information on how old they are He also gained a considerable portion of Silesian territory partly by inheritance through his third wife Anna von Schweidnitz daughter of Henry II Duke of Swidnica and Catherine of Hungary In 1365 Charles visited Pope Urban V at Avignon and undertook to escort him to Rome on the same occasion he was crowned King of Burgundy at Arles 8 His second journey to Italy took place in 1368 when he had a meeting with Pope Urban V at Viterbo was besieged in his palace at Siena and left the country before the end of 1369 During his later years the emperor took little part in German affairs beyond securing the election of his son Wenceslaus as king of the Romans in 1376 and negotiating a peace between the Swabian League of Cities and some nobles in 1378 After dividing his lands between his three sons and his nephews 1 he died in November 1378 at Prague where he was buried and where a statue was erected to his memory in 1848 8 Charles IV suffered from gout metabolic arthritis a painful disease quite common in that time Legacy EditMain article Cultural depictions of Charles IV Holy Roman Emperor Evaluation Edit The reign of Charles IV was characterized by a transformation in the nature of the Empire and is remembered as the Golden Age of Bohemia He promulgated the Golden Bull of 1356 whereby the succession to the imperial title was laid down which held for the next four centuries He also organized the states of the empire into peace keeping confederations In these the Imperial cities figured prominently The Swabian Landfriede confederation of 1370 was made up almost entirely of Imperial Cities At the same time the leagues were organized and led by the crown and its agents As with the electors the cities that served in these leagues were given privileges to aid in their efforts to keep the peace He assured his dominance over the eastern borders of the Empire through succession treaties with the Habsburgs and the purchase of Brandenburg He also claimed imperial lordship over the crusader states of Prussia and Livonia In 2005 Charles IV ranked the first in the TV show Nejvetsi Cech the Czech spin off of the BBC Greatest Britons show Patronage of culture and the arts Edit Statue of Charles IV near Charles Bridge 1848 Prague by Ernst Julius Hahnel Prague became the capital of the Holy Roman Empire during the reign of Charles IV The name of the royal founder and patron remains on many monuments and institutions for example Charles University Charles Bridge Charles Square High Gothic Prague Castle and part of the cathedral of Saint Vitus by Peter Parler were also built under his patronage Finally the first flowering of manuscript painting in Prague dates from Charles s reign In the present Czech Republic he is still regarded as Pater Patriae father of the country or otec vlasti a title first coined by Adalbertus Ranconis de Ericinio at his funeral Charles also had strong ties to Nuremberg staying within its city walls 52 times and thereby strengthening its reputation amongst German cities Charles was the patron of the Nuremberg Frauenkirche built between 1352 and 1362 the architect was likely Peter Parler where the imperial court worshipped during its stays in Nuremberg Charles s imperial policy was focused on the dynastic sphere and abandoned the lofty ideal of the Empire as a universal monarchy of Christendom In 1353 he granted the Duchy of Luxembourg to his half brother Wenceslaus He concentrated his energies chiefly on the economic and intellectual development of Bohemia where he founded the university in 1348 and encouraged the early humanists He corresponded with Petrarch and invited him to visit the royal residence in Prague whilst the Italian hoped to no avail to see Charles move his residence to Rome and reawaken tradition of the Roman Empire Charles s sister Bona married the eldest son of Philip VI of France the future John II of France in 1335 Thus Charles was the maternal uncle of Charles V of France who solicited his relative s advice at Metz in 1356 during the Parisian Revolt This family connection was celebrated publicly when Charles made a solemn visit to his nephew in 1378 just months before his death A detailed account of the occasion enriched by many splendid miniatures can be found in Charles V s copy of the Grandes Chroniques de France Castles Edit Castles built or established by Charles IV 12 Karlstejn 1348 1355 in Central Bohemian Region for safekeeping the Imperial Regalia especially the Imperial Crown of the Holy Roman Empire later the Czech Crown Jewels were also kept there Kasperk Karlsberg 1356 in Kasperske Hory in Plzen Region Lauf Wenzelsburg built on the way connecting Prague and Nuremberg in Bohemian Palatinate inside survived 112 coats of arms of the Bohemian Kingdom Montecarlo in Italy Radyne Karlskrone around 1360 in Plzen Region Hradek u Purkarce Karlshaus around 1357 Tepenec Twingenberg Karlsburg in Jivova in Olomouc Region KarlsfriedPlaces named after Charles IV Edit Czech RepublicKarlovy Vary a spa city Karlstejn a town beyond the eponymous castle Charles Bridge Karluv most Prague Charles University Univerzita Karlova Prague Multiple squares Charles Square Karlovo namesti in Prague and others for example in Brno Kolin Melnik etc Multiple streetsItalyMontecarlo Charles s Mountain a municipalityOther Edit 100 CZK banknote The 100 Czech koruna banknote 16951 Carolus Quartus an asteroidFamily EditGenealogy Edit Henry VII12 July 1275 6 24 August 1313 Margaret of Brabant4 October 1276 14 December 1311 Wenceslaus II27 September 1271 21 June 1305 Judith of Habsburg13 March 1271 18 June 1297 John of Bohemia10 August 1296 26 August 1346 Elisabeth of Bohemia20 January 1292 28 September 1330 1 Blanche of Valois1316 1 August 1348OO 15 May 1323 2 Anna of Bavaria26 September 1329 2 February 1353OO March 1349 Charles IV14 May 1316 29 November 1378 3 Anna von Schweidnitz1339 11 July 1362OO 27 May 1353 4 Elizabeth of Pomerania1346 7 14 February 1393OO 21 May 1363 1 1 1 2 3 3 3 4sonb 1334 Margaret of Bohemia1335 49 Catherine of Bohemia1342 95 Wenceslas1350 51 Elisabeth of Bohemia1358 73 Wenceslaus King of the Romans1361 1419 son1362 Anne of Bohemia1366 94 4 4 4 4 4 Sigismund Holy Roman Emperor1368 1437 John of Gorlitz1370 96 Charles1372 73 Margaret of Bohemia1373 1410 Henry1377 78Marriages and children Edit Charles and his first wife Blanche Charles was married four times His first wife was Blanche of Valois 1316 1348 daughter of Charles Count of Valois and a half sister of King Philip VI of France 5 They had three children son b 1334 died young Margaret of Bohemia Queen of Hungary 1335 1349 married King Louis I of Hungary 13 Catherine of Bohemia 1342 1395 married Rudolf IV Duke of Austria 14 and Otto V Duke of Bavaria and Elector of Brandenburg He secondly married Anna of Bavaria 1329 1353 daughter of Rudolf II Count Palatine of the Rhine they had one son Wenceslaus 1350 1351 His third wife was Anna von Schweidnitz 1339 1362 5 daughter of Henry II Duke of Swidnica and Katharina of Anjou daughter of Charles I Robert King of Hungary by whom he had three children Elisabeth of Bohemia 19 April 1358 4 September 1373 married Albert III Duke of Austria at the very young age of 8 and died at the age of 15 they had no children 5 Wenceslaus IV of Bohemia 1361 1419 5 later elected King of Germany formally King of the Romans and on his father s death became King of Bohemia as Wenceslaus IV and Emperor elect of the Holy Roman Empire married firstly to Joanna of Bavaria in 1370 and secondly to Sophia of Bavaria in 1389 son born and died 11 July 1362 His fourth wife was Elizabeth of Pomerania 1345 or 1347 1393 15 daughter of Bogislaw V Duke of Pomerania and Elisabeth of Poland who was the daughter of King Casimir III of Poland They had six children Anne of Bohemia Queen of England 1366 1394 married King Richard II of England 15 Sigismund of Bohemia 1368 1437 15 later became Holy Roman Emperor was King of Bohemia Margrave of Brandenburg and also King of Hungary through his first marriage to Mary Queen of Hungary in 1385 His second marriage was to Barbara of Cilli the daughter and youngest child of Herman II Count of Celje in 1405 1408 John of Bohemia 1370 1396 later Margrave of Moravia and Duke of Gorlitz married Richardis Catherine of Sweden the daughter of Albert King of Sweden 15 His only daughter and heiress Elisabeth of Gorlitz was Duchess of Luxembourg Charles 13 March 1372 24 July 1373 Margaret of Bohemia Burgravine of Nuremberg 1373 1410 married John III Burgrave of Nuremberg 15 Henry 1377 1378 Charles had one illegitimate son William born in 1362 to an unknown woman He was raised in Brabant and seems to have joined his father at the time of the latter s trip to France in 1377 He was acknowledged by his father who sought a papal dispensation for him to marry within the fourth degree It is unknown if he ever married He served his Bohemian relatives as a diplomat but his ultimate fate is unknown 16 References Edit a b Karl IV In Hans Herzfeld de 1960 Geschichte in Gestalten History in figures vol 2 F K Das Fischer Lexikon de 38 Frankfurt 1963 p 294 Kavka Frantisek 1998 Chapter 3 Politics and culture under Charles IV In Teich Mikulas ed Bohemia in History Cambridge University Press p 60 ISBN 0 521 43155 7 Mahoney William 2011 The history of the Czech Republic and Slovakia Greenwood p 50 ISBN 978 0313363054 Agnew Hugh 2004 The Czechs and the lands of the Bohemian crown Hoover Institution Press pp 32 ISBN 978 0817944926 a b c d e Boehm amp Fajt 2005 p xvi Charles IV the greatest Czech Prague City Tourism Prague City Tourism Retrieved 19 April 2020 Montecarlo a b c d e f g h i j One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Charles IV Roman Emperor Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 5 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 898 899 Francesco Petrarca Epistolae familiares X 1 XII 1 XVIII 1 See also E H Wilkins Life of Petrarch Chicago 1961 97 112 134 resp Frantisek Palacky Dejiny narodu ceskeho v Cechach i v Morave books VIII and IX Francesco Petrarca Epistolae familiares XIX 12 see also E H Wilkins Life of Petrarch Chicago 1961 p 147 Karel IV cesky kral Dvornik 1962 p 52 Jaschke 1997 p 102 a b c d e Boehm amp Fajt 2005 p xvii Ondrej Schmidtm John of Moravia between the Czech Lands and the Patriarchate of Aquileia ca 1345 1394 Brill 2019 p 31 Bibliography EditBoehm Barbara Drake Fajt Jiri eds 2005 Prague The Crown of Bohemia 1347 1437 Yale University Press ISBN missing Dvornik Francis 1962 The Slavs in European History and Civilization Rutgers University Press Jaschke Karl Ulrich 1997 From Famous Empresses to Unspectacular Queens In Duggan Anne J ed Queens and Queenship in Medieval Europe The Boydell Press ISBN missing Further reading EditCharles IV autobiography edited by Balazs Nagy Frank Schaer Autobiography of Emperor Charles IV And His Legend of St Wenceslas Karoli IV Imperatoris Romanorum Vita Ab Eo Ipso Conscripta Et Hystoria Nova de Sancto Wenceslao Martyre Published by Central European University Press 2001 ISBN 978 9639116320 259 pages books google com Boehm Barbara Drake 2005 Prague the Crown of Bohemia 1347 1437 New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 1588391612 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Charles IV Holy Roman Emperor Latin Wikisource has original text related to this article Vita Caroli IV Literature by and about Karl IV in the German National Library catalogue Works by and about Charles IV Holy Roman Emperor in the Deutsche Digitale Bibliothek German Digital Library Entry in the Residenzen Kommission Regesta Imperii Publications on Charles IV in the OPAC of the Regesta Imperii Constitutiones et acta publica imperatorum et regum 1357 1378 digital pre publication of documents by Charles IV by the MGH Carolus IV Repertorium Historical Sources of the German Middle Ages Geschichtsquellen des deutschen Mittelalters Aleksandra Filipek Misiak Karol IV Luksemburski jako ideal wladcy w Catalogus abbatum Saganensium Ludolfa z Zagania In Historie Otazky Problemy 7 2015 z 1 pp 76 89 Lewis E 64 Golden Bull of Charles IV at OPennCharles IV Holy Roman EmperorHouse of LuxembourgBorn 14 May 1316 Died 29 November 1378Preceded byJohn Count of Luxembourg1346 1353 Succeeded byWenceslaus IKing of Bohemia1346 1378 Succeeded byWenceslaus IV amp IPreceded byLouis IV King of the Romans1346 1378 until 1347 in opposition to Louis IV in 1349 opposed by Gunther von Schwarzburg Holy Roman Emperor1355 1378 VacantInterregnumTitle next held bySigismund Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles IV Holy Roman Emperor amp oldid 1142304847, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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