Provocative interrogation of how the Ottonian kingdom grew and
flourished, focussing on the resources required.
The Ottonians were the most powerful monarchs in Europe during the tenth
and early eleventh century, exercising hegemony in West Francia,
Burgundy, and much of Italy in addition to ruling the German realm.
Despite their enormous political and military success, however, the
foundations of Ottonian royal power remain highly contested and largely
misunderstood, with previous scholarship tending to have considered it
as depending upon the ability of the king to shape and harness the power
of the nobles.
This study challenges the dominant historiographical paradigm, rebutting
the notion of putative power-sharing between the king and the nobility,
which simply did not exist as a legal class in the Ottonian century.
Rather, it argues that the foundations of royal power under the
Ottonians comprised not only their own enormous wealth, but also their
unique authority and ability, through the royal bannum, the authority
inherent in the office of the king, to make use of the economic
resources and labour of the broad free population of the realm, as well
as from the Church. In so doing, the Ottonians drew upon and further
developed the administrative, institutional, and ideological inheritance
of their Carolingian predecessors, in the process creating the dominant
polity in tenth-century Europe.