[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":24},["ShallowReactive",2],{"zoom:p4ch14z6:en":3},{"period":4,"chapter":14,"zoom":17},{"id":5,"title":6,"titleEn":6,"titleEs":7,"range":8,"rangeEn":8,"rangeEs":8,"cover":9},"p4","Early Middle Ages","Alta Edad Media","476 → 987",{"fileName":10,"filePageUrl":11,"imageUrl":12,"sourceLabel":13},"François Louis Dejuinne 08265 baptême de CLovis.JPG","https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Fran%C3%A7ois%20Louis%20Dejuinne%2008265%20bapt%C3%AAme%20de%20CLovis.JPG","/assets/p4-haut-moyen-age-cover.png","Wikimedia Commons",{"id":15,"title":16},"p4ch14","Charles the Bald: The Birth of West Francia (840–877)",{"id":18,"title":19,"chapterId":15,"html":20,"hasEn":21,"isFallback":22,"seoDescription":23},"p4ch14z6","848: Charles’s Anointing at Orléans","\u003Cp>On \u003Cstrong>6 June 848\u003C/strong>, \u003Cstrong>Charles the Bald\u003C/strong> was anointed at \u003Cstrong>Orléans\u003C/strong> in a ceremony that formalized both political support and sacred legitimacy. In ninth-century West Francia, kingship depended not only on inheritance, but also on recognition by elites and clergy.\u003C/p>\n\u003Chr>\n\u003Ch2>Political background\u003C/h2>\n\u003Cp>Following the Carolingian civil conflicts of the 830s and 840s, dynastic legitimacy alone could not guarantee obedience. Royal authority had to be staged and renewed through public rituals in which bishops and magnates played central roles.\u003C/p>\n\u003Ch2>The ritual sequence at Orléans\u003C/h2>\n\u003Cp>At Orléans, three dimensions converged:\u003C/p>\n\u003Cul>\n\u003Cli>\u003Cstrong>election and acclamation\u003C/strong> by political elites,\u003C/li>\n\u003Cli>\u003Cstrong>anointing\u003C/strong> by ecclesiastical authority (notably Archbishop \u003Cstrong>Wenilo\u003C/strong>),\u003C/li>\n\u003Cli>public liturgical framing of royal office.\u003C/li>\n\u003C/ul>\n\u003Cp>The ceremony did not “create” Charles politically from nothing; it strengthened and clarified his status by binding military leadership, aristocratic consent, and sacred sanction.\u003C/p>\n\u003Ch2>Why Orléans mattered\u003C/h2>\n\u003Cp>Orléans was a major urban and ecclesiastical center of West Francia. Choosing this setting amplified the political message:\u003C/p>\n\u003Cul>\n\u003Cli>the king ruled through institutional nodes (cities, bishoprics, assemblies),\u003C/li>\n\u003Cli>legitimacy was territorial and negotiated, not merely abstract.\u003C/li>\n\u003C/ul>\n\u003Ch2>Broader significance\u003C/h2>\n\u003Cp>The 848 anointing illustrates a durable Carolingian pattern: ritual monarchy as a technology of government. It also prefigures later medieval developments in which consecration and elite consensus remained inseparable from effective rule.\u003C/p>\n\u003Ch2>Historiographical note\u003C/h2>\n\u003Cp>Medieval sources often idealize unanimity at royal ceremonies. Historians therefore treat such events both as moments of real legitimation and as crafted political communication.\u003C/p>\n\u003Chr>\n\u003Ch2>Key points\u003C/h2>\n\u003Cul>\n\u003Cli>The 848 anointing reinforced Charles the Bald’s authority after civil-war fragmentation.\u003C/li>\n\u003Cli>Kingship in West Francia relied on both elite consent and ecclesiastical sacralization.\u003C/li>\n\u003Cli>Orléans exemplifies how ritual, politics, and territory interacted in Carolingian rule.\u003C/li>\n\u003C/ul>\n",true,false,"On 6 June 848 , Charles the Bald was anointed at Orléans in a ceremony that formalized both political support and sacred legitimacy. In ninth-century West",1778543120598]