Philip I: Enduring in Feudal France (1060-1108) · HIGH MIDDLE AGES
On 29 July 1108, Philip I dies. The Capetian dynasty has passed through the crises of minority, the Anglo-Norman shock, and religious conflicts. The crown passes to Louis VI, nicknamed “the Fat.”
The legacy is twofold:
The new king inherits a clear mission: regain the initiative in the domain, confront the unruly castle lords of the Ile-de-France, and restore to the king a more visible capacity for action. Philip’s reign did not “build a state,” but it kept the crown in place long enough to make future growth possible.
A symbolic detail stands out: Philip is buried at the abbey of Saint-Benoit-sur-Loire, rather than at Saint-Denis, which is unusual for a Capetian. The succession itself takes place without major crisis: that is one of the dynasty’s essential achievements.