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Imperial Regalia

The Imperial Regalia, also called Imperial Insignia[citation needed] (in German Reichskleinodien, Reichsinsignien or Reichsschatz), are regalia of the Holy Roman Emperor. The most important parts are the Crown, the Imperial orb, the Imperial sceptre, the Holy Lance and the Imperial Sword. Today they are kept at the Imperial Treasury in the Hofburg palace in Vienna, Austria.

Charlemagne, wearing the Imperial Regalia. An imaginary portrait by Albrecht Dürer
Imperial Crown (Reichskrone)
Imperial Orb (Reichsapfel)
Coronation Gospel (Krönungsevangeliar)
Glove from Palermo before 1220

The Imperial Regalia are the only completely preserved regalia from the Middle Ages. During the late Middle Ages, the word Imperial Regalia (Reichskleinodien) had many variations in the Latin language. The regalia were named in Latin: insignia imperialia, regalia insignia, insignia imperalis capellae quae regalia dicuntur and other similar words.

Components edit

The regalia is composed of two different parts. The greater group are the so-called Nürnberger Kleinodien (roughly translated Nuremberg jewels), named after the town of Nuremberg, where the regalia were kept from 1424 to 1796. This part comprised the Imperial Crown, parts of the coronation vestments, the Imperial Orb, the Imperial Sceptre, the Imperial Sword, the Ceremonial Sword, the Imperial Cross, the Holy Lance, and all other reliquaries except St. Stephen's Purse.

St. Stephen's Purse, the Imperial Bible, and the so-called Sabre of Charlemagne were kept in Aachen until 1794, which gave them the name Aachener Kleinodien (Aachen jewels). It is not known how long they have been considered among the Imperial Regalia, nor how long they had been in Aachen.

Present inventory in Vienna:
Aachen regalia (Aachener Kleinodien) Probable place of origin, and date of production
Imperial Bible (Reichsevangeliar or Krönungsevangeliar) Aachen, end of 8th century
St. Stephen's Purse (Stephansbursa) Carolingian, 1st third of 9th century
Sabre of Charlemagne (Säbel Karl des Großen)    Eastern Europe, 2nd half of 9th century
Nuremberg regalia (Nürnberger Kleinodien) Probable place of origin, and date of production
Imperial Crown (Reichskrone)    Western Germany, 2nd half of 10th century
Imperial Cross (Reichskreuz)    Western Germany, around 1024/1025
Holy Lance (Heilige Lanze)    Langobardian, 8th/9th century
Relics of the True Cross (Kreuzpartikel)   
Imperial Sword (Reichsschwert)    Sheath from Germany, 2nd third-part of 11th century
Imperial Orb (Reichsapfel)    Western Germany, around end of 12th century
Coronation Mantle (Krönungsmantel) (Pluviale)    Palermo, 1133/34
Alb    Palermo, 1181
Dalmatic (Dalmatica or Tunicella)    Palermo, around 1140
Stockings    Palermo, around 1170
Shoes    Palermo, around 1130 or around 1220
Gloves    Palermo, 1220
Ceremonial Sword (Zeremonienschwert)    Palermo, 1220
Stole (Stola)    Central Italy, before 1338
Eagle-dalmatic (Adlerdalmatica)    Upper Germany, before 1350
Imperial Sceptre (Zepter)    Germany, 1st half of 14th century
Aspergille    Germany, 1st. half of 14th century
Reliquary with chains    Rome or Prague, around 1368
Reliquary with a piece of vestment of the John the Evangelist    Rome or Prague, around 1368
Reliquary with a shaving of the Crib of Christ    Rome or Prague, around 1368
Reliquary with an arm-bone of St. Anne    probably Prague after 1350
Reliquary with a tooth of John the Baptist    Bohemia, after 1350
Case (Futteral) of the Imperial Crown    Prague, after 1350
Reliquary with a piece of the tablecloth used during the Last Supper   

History edit

Middle Ages edit

 
The Holy Lance

The inventory of the regalia during the late Middle Ages normally consisted only of five to six items. Goffredo da Viterbo counted following items: the Imperial Cross, the Holy Lance, the crown, the sceptre, the orb, and the sword. On other lists, however, the sword is not mentioned.

Whether the medieval chronicles really do refer to the same regalia which are kept in Vienna today depends on a variety of factors. Descriptions of the emperors only spoke of them being "clothed in imperial regalia" without exactly describing which items they were.

The crown can only be dated back to the 13th century, when it is described in a medieval poem. The poem speaks of the Waise (i.e., The Orphan) stone, which was a big and prominent jewel on the front of the crown, probably a white opal with an exceptionally brilliant red fire, since replaced by a triangular blue sapphire. The first definite pictorial image of the crown can only be found later in a mural in the Karlstein Castle close to Prague.

It is also difficult to define for how long the Imperial and Ceremonial Swords have belonged to the regalia.

Whereabouts in medieval times edit

Until the 15th century the Imperial Regalia had no firm depository and sometimes accompanied the ruler on his trips through the empire. Above all with conflicts around the legality of the rule it was important to own the insignia. As depositories during this time some imperial castles or seats of reliable ministerialises are known:

 
Ceremonial guidance from Nuremberg to Frankfurt for the coronation of Emperor Leopold II, September 1790

Committal to Nuremberg edit

 
Heilig-Geist-Spital in Nuremberg, along the Pegnitz river, with the Holy Ghost chapel to the left

Emperor Sigismund transferred the Imperial Regalia "to everlasting preservation" to the Free Imperial City of Nuremberg with a dated document on 29 September 1423. They arrived there on 22 March the following year from Plintenburg, and were kept in the chapel of the Heilig-Geist-Spital. Once a year they were shown to believers in a so-called Heiltumsweisung (worship show), on the fourteenth day after Good Friday. For coronations they were brought to Aachen or Frankfurt Cathedral.

Ceremonial decoration edit

 
The last Emperor Francis II, dressed with the Imperial Insignia of the Holy Roman Empire.

Since the Age of Enlightenment at least, the imperial regalia had no constitutive or confirming character for the imperial function any more. It served merely as an adornment for the coronation of the emperors, who all belonged to the House of Habsburg and since the mid-16th century had ceased to be crowned by the pope.

A young Johann Wolfgang Goethe on 3 April 1764, was an eyewitness in Frankfurt during the coronation of the 18-year-old Joseph, Duke of Lorraine to King in Germany. He later wrote dismissively about the event in his autobiography Dichtung und Wahrheit (English: From my Life: Poetry and Truth):

The young king, on the contrary, in his monstrous articles of dress, with the crown-jewels of Charlemagne, dragged himself along as if he had been in a disguise; so that he himself, looking at his father from time to time, could not refrain from laughing. The crown, which it had been necessary to line a great deal, stood out from his head like an overhanging roof. The dalmatica, the stole, well as they had been fitted and taken in by sewing, presented by no means an advantageous appearance. The sceptre and imperial orb excited some admiration; but one would, for the sake of a more princely effect, rather have seen a strong form, suited to the dress, invested and adorned with it.

— J. W. Goethe, Truth and Fiction, Book V[1]

Refuge in Vienna edit

While French troops were advancing in 1794 in the direction of Aachen during the War of the First Coalition, the pieces located there were brought to the Capuchin's monastery in Paderborn. In July 1796, French troops crossed the Rhine and shortly thereafter reached Franconia. On 23 July the most important parts of the Imperial Regalia (crown, sceptre, orb, eight pieces of the vestments) were hastily evacuated by Nuremberg colonel Johann Georg Haller von Hallerstein from Nuremberg to Regensburg, where they arrived the next day. On 28 September the remaining parts of the jewels were also delivered to Regensburg. Since this elopement parts of the treasure are missing.

Until 1800 the Imperial Regalia remained in the Saint Emmeram's Abbey in Regensburg, from where their transfer began to Vienna on 30 June. The committal there is verified for 29 October. The pieces from Aachen were brought in 1798 to Hildesheim and didn't reach Vienna before 1801.

Nazi and post-war period edit

 
Checking the Imperial Regalia at delivery in 1946 in Austria's central bank Oesterreichische Nationalbank in Vienna, National Archives Washington, DC

After the Anschluss of Austria to the Nazi Reich in 1938 the imperial regalia were returned on instruction by Adolf Hitler to Nuremberg, where they were exhibited in the Katharinenkirche. In the Second World War they were stored for protection from air raids in the Historischer Kunstbunker (English: historical art bunker) beneath Nuremberg Castle.

In 1945 the imperial regalia were recovered by American soldiers, based on an investigation by art historian Lt. Walter Horn,[2] who had joined the US military after becoming a naturalized citizen. In January 1946 the treasures were returned it to the Oesterreichische Nationalbank in allied-occupied Austria. They have been kept permanently in Vienna since that date. The Crown and Regalia were again on display at the Hofburg, the former imperial palace of the Habsburg dynasty, since 1954.[3]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ John Oxenford, ed. (1 May 2004). Autobiography: Truth and Fiction Relating to My Life. J. H. MOORE. Retrieved 22 Feb 2014 – via Project Gutenberg.
  2. ^ "In Memoriam, 1996, Walter Horn, History of Art: Berkeley". University of California. 20 May 2023.
  3. ^ Rihoko Ueno (11 Apr 2014). "Recovering Gold and Regalia: a Monuments Man investigates". Archives of American Art. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 13 Apr 2014.

Bibliography edit

  • Weltliche und Geistliche Schatzkammer. Bildführer. Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna. 1987. ISBN 3-7017-0499-6
  • Fillitz, Hermann. Die Schatzkammer in Wien: Symbole abendländischen Kaisertums. Vienna, 1986. ISBN 3-7017-0443-0
  • Fillitz, Hermann. Die Insignien und Kleinodien des Heiligen Römischen Reiches, 1954.
  • Heigl, Peter. The Imperial Regalia in the Nazi Bunker/ Der Reichsschatz im Nazibunker. Nuremberg 2005. ISBN 3-9810269-1-8
  • Jason Philip Coy; Benjamin Marschke; David Warren Sabean, eds. (2013). The Holy Roman Empire, Reconsidered. Vol. 1 (Spektrum: Publications of the German Studies Association ed.). Berghahn Books. ISBN 978-1-7823-8090-0. OCLC 872619479. Retrieved 13 Apr 2014.

External links edit

  • The Imperial Treasury Museum Vienna (Wiener Schatzkammer)


imperial, regalia, japan, japan, brazil, brazil, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, german, november, 2017, click, show, important, translation, instructions, machine, translation, like, deepl, google, translate,. For Japan s Imperial Regalia see Imperial Regalia of Japan For Brazil s Imperial Regalia see Imperial Regalia of Brazil You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in German November 2017 Click show for important translation instructions Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 9 092 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing German Wikipedia article at de Reichskleinodien see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated de Reichskleinodien to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The Imperial Regalia also called Imperial Insignia citation needed in German Reichskleinodien Reichsinsignien or Reichsschatz are regalia of the Holy Roman Emperor The most important parts are the Crown the Imperial orb the Imperial sceptre the Holy Lance and the Imperial Sword Today they are kept at the Imperial Treasury in the Hofburg palace in Vienna Austria Charlemagne wearing the Imperial Regalia An imaginary portrait by Albrecht DurerImperial Crown Reichskrone Imperial Orb Reichsapfel Coronation Gospel Kronungsevangeliar Glove from Palermo before 1220The Imperial Regalia are the only completely preserved regalia from the Middle Ages During the late Middle Ages the word Imperial Regalia Reichskleinodien had many variations in the Latin language The regalia were named in Latin insignia imperialia regalia insignia insignia imperalis capellae quae regalia dicuntur and other similar words Contents 1 Components 2 History 2 1 Middle Ages 2 2 Whereabouts in medieval times 2 3 Committal to Nuremberg 2 4 Ceremonial decoration 2 5 Refuge in Vienna 2 6 Nazi and post war period 3 See also 4 References 5 Bibliography 6 External linksComponents editThe regalia is composed of two different parts The greater group are the so called Nurnberger Kleinodien roughly translated Nuremberg jewels named after the town of Nuremberg where the regalia were kept from 1424 to 1796 This part comprised the Imperial Crown parts of the coronation vestments the Imperial Orb the Imperial Sceptre the Imperial Sword the Ceremonial Sword the Imperial Cross the Holy Lance and all other reliquaries except St Stephen s Purse St Stephen s Purse the Imperial Bible and the so called Sabre of Charlemagne were kept in Aachen until 1794 which gave them the name Aachener Kleinodien Aachen jewels It is not known how long they have been considered among the Imperial Regalia nor how long they had been in Aachen Present inventory in Vienna Aachen regalia Aachener Kleinodien Probable place of origin and date of productionImperial Bible Reichsevangeliar or Kronungsevangeliar Aachen end of 8th centurySt Stephen s Purse Stephansbursa Carolingian 1st third of 9th centurySabre of Charlemagne Sabel Karl des Grossen Eastern Europe 2nd half of 9th centuryNuremberg regalia Nurnberger Kleinodien Probable place of origin and date of productionImperial Crown Reichskrone Western Germany 2nd half of 10th centuryImperial Cross Reichskreuz Western Germany around 1024 1025Holy Lance Heilige Lanze Langobardian 8th 9th centuryRelics of the True Cross Kreuzpartikel Imperial Sword Reichsschwert Sheath from Germany 2nd third part of 11th centuryImperial Orb Reichsapfel Western Germany around end of 12th centuryCoronation Mantle Kronungsmantel Pluviale Palermo 1133 34Alb Palermo 1181Dalmatic Dalmatica or Tunicella Palermo around 1140Stockings Palermo around 1170Shoes Palermo around 1130 or around 1220Gloves Palermo 1220Ceremonial Sword Zeremonienschwert Palermo 1220Stole Stola Central Italy before 1338Eagle dalmatic Adlerdalmatica Upper Germany before 1350Imperial Sceptre Zepter Germany 1st half of 14th centuryAspergille Germany 1st half of 14th centuryReliquary with chains Rome or Prague around 1368Reliquary with a piece of vestment of the John the Evangelist Rome or Prague around 1368Reliquary with a shaving of the Crib of Christ Rome or Prague around 1368Reliquary with an arm bone of St Anne probably Prague after 1350Reliquary with a tooth of John the Baptist Bohemia after 1350Case Futteral of the Imperial Crown Prague after 1350Reliquary with a piece of the tablecloth used during the Last Supper History editMiddle Ages edit nbsp The Holy LanceThe inventory of the regalia during the late Middle Ages normally consisted only of five to six items Goffredo da Viterbo counted following items the Imperial Cross the Holy Lance the crown the sceptre the orb and the sword On other lists however the sword is not mentioned Whether the medieval chronicles really do refer to the same regalia which are kept in Vienna today depends on a variety of factors Descriptions of the emperors only spoke of them being clothed in imperial regalia without exactly describing which items they were The crown can only be dated back to the 13th century when it is described in a medieval poem The poem speaks of the Waise i e The Orphan stone which was a big and prominent jewel on the front of the crown probably a white opal with an exceptionally brilliant red fire since replaced by a triangular blue sapphire The first definite pictorial image of the crown can only be found later in a mural in the Karlstein Castle close to Prague It is also difficult to define for how long the Imperial and Ceremonial Swords have belonged to the regalia Whereabouts in medieval times edit Until the 15th century the Imperial Regalia had no firm depository and sometimes accompanied the ruler on his trips through the empire Above all with conflicts around the legality of the rule it was important to own the insignia As depositories during this time some imperial castles or seats of reliable ministerialises are known nbsp Ceremonial guidance from Nuremberg to Frankfurt for the coronation of Emperor Leopold II September 1790Limburg Abbey near Durkheim Palatinate 11th century Harzburg 11th century Imperial Palace of Goslar 11th 13th century Castle Hammerstein at Rhine 1125 Trifels Castle near Annweiler 12th 13th century with interruptions Imperial chapel of Haguenau 12th 13th century with interruptions Waldburg Castle near Ravensburg c 1220 1240 Krautheim Castle on the river Jagst probably 1240 1242 Kyburg Palace today Canton of Zurich in Switzerland 1273 1322 with one interruption Castle Stein municipality of Rheinfelden in the canton of Aargau in Switzerland about 1280 under Rudolf of Habsburg Alter Hof Old Court in Munich under Ludwig the Bavarian 1324 1350 St Vitus Cathedral Prague and Karlstein Castle in Bohemia c 1350 52 1421 Plintenburg and Ofen in Hungary 1421 1424 Committal to Nuremberg edit nbsp Heilig Geist Spital in Nuremberg along the Pegnitz river with the Holy Ghost chapel to the leftEmperor Sigismund transferred the Imperial Regalia to everlasting preservation to the Free Imperial City of Nuremberg with a dated document on 29 September 1423 They arrived there on 22 March the following year from Plintenburg and were kept in the chapel of the Heilig Geist Spital Once a year they were shown to believers in a so called Heiltumsweisung worship show on the fourteenth day after Good Friday For coronations they were brought to Aachen or Frankfurt Cathedral Ceremonial decoration edit nbsp The last Emperor Francis II dressed with the Imperial Insignia of the Holy Roman Empire Since the Age of Enlightenment at least the imperial regalia had no constitutive or confirming character for the imperial function any more It served merely as an adornment for the coronation of the emperors who all belonged to the House of Habsburg and since the mid 16th century had ceased to be crowned by the pope A young Johann Wolfgang Goethe on 3 April 1764 was an eyewitness in Frankfurt during the coronation of the 18 year old Joseph Duke of Lorraine to King in Germany He later wrote dismissively about the event in his autobiography Dichtung und Wahrheit English From my Life Poetry and Truth The young king on the contrary in his monstrous articles of dress with the crown jewels of Charlemagne dragged himself along as if he had been in a disguise so that he himself looking at his father from time to time could not refrain from laughing The crown which it had been necessary to line a great deal stood out from his head like an overhanging roof The dalmatica the stole well as they had been fitted and taken in by sewing presented by no means an advantageous appearance The sceptre and imperial orb excited some admiration but one would for the sake of a more princely effect rather have seen a strong form suited to the dress invested and adorned with it J W Goethe Truth and Fiction Book V 1 Refuge in Vienna edit While French troops were advancing in 1794 in the direction of Aachen during the War of the First Coalition the pieces located there were brought to the Capuchin s monastery in Paderborn In July 1796 French troops crossed the Rhine and shortly thereafter reached Franconia On 23 July the most important parts of the Imperial Regalia crown sceptre orb eight pieces of the vestments were hastily evacuated by Nuremberg colonel Johann Georg Haller von Hallerstein from Nuremberg to Regensburg where they arrived the next day On 28 September the remaining parts of the jewels were also delivered to Regensburg Since this elopement parts of the treasure are missing Until 1800 the Imperial Regalia remained in the Saint Emmeram s Abbey in Regensburg from where their transfer began to Vienna on 30 June The committal there is verified for 29 October The pieces from Aachen were brought in 1798 to Hildesheim and didn t reach Vienna before 1801 Nazi and post war period edit nbsp Checking the Imperial Regalia at delivery in 1946 in Austria s central bank Oesterreichische Nationalbank in Vienna National Archives Washington DCAfter the Anschluss of Austria to the Nazi Reich in 1938 the imperial regalia were returned on instruction by Adolf Hitler to Nuremberg where they were exhibited in the Katharinenkirche In the Second World War they were stored for protection from air raids in the Historischer Kunstbunker English historical art bunker beneath Nuremberg Castle In 1945 the imperial regalia were recovered by American soldiers based on an investigation by art historian Lt Walter Horn 2 who had joined the US military after becoming a naturalized citizen In January 1946 the treasures were returned it to the Oesterreichische Nationalbank in allied occupied Austria They have been kept permanently in Vienna since that date The Crown and Regalia were again on display at the Hofburg the former imperial palace of the Habsburg dynasty since 1954 3 See also edit nbsp Holy Roman Empire portalCoronation of the Holy Roman Emperor Imperial Treasury ViennaReferences edit John Oxenford ed 1 May 2004 Autobiography Truth and Fiction Relating to My Life J H MOORE Retrieved 22 Feb 2014 via Project Gutenberg In Memoriam 1996 Walter Horn History of Art Berkeley University of California 20 May 2023 Rihoko Ueno 11 Apr 2014 Recovering Gold and Regalia a Monuments Man investigates Archives of American Art Washington DC Smithsonian Institution Retrieved 13 Apr 2014 Bibliography editWeltliche und Geistliche Schatzkammer Bildfuhrer Kunsthistorisches Museum Vienna 1987 ISBN 3 7017 0499 6 Fillitz Hermann Die Schatzkammer in Wien Symbole abendlandischen Kaisertums Vienna 1986 ISBN 3 7017 0443 0 Fillitz Hermann Die Insignien und Kleinodien des Heiligen Romischen Reiches 1954 Heigl Peter The Imperial Regalia in the Nazi Bunker Der Reichsschatz im Nazibunker Nuremberg 2005 ISBN 3 9810269 1 8 Jason Philip Coy Benjamin Marschke David Warren Sabean eds 2013 The Holy Roman Empire Reconsidered Vol 1 Spektrum Publications of the German Studies Association ed Berghahn Books ISBN 978 1 7823 8090 0 OCLC 872619479 Retrieved 13 Apr 2014 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Imperial Regalia of the Holy Roman Empire The Imperial Treasury Museum Vienna Wiener Schatzkammer Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Imperial Regalia amp oldid 1215321678, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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