Myths of the state in the West European Middle Ages

Authors

  • Lennart Ejerfeldt

Keywords:

Middle Ages, Myth, State and religion, Merovingians, Europe, Germanic tribes, Holy Roman Empire -- History, Church and state, Politics and religion, Politics and Christianity, Feudalism, Civilization, Germanic

Abstract

In the first centuries of the barbarian kingdoms the most striking feature is the gens, the tribe, as the principle of unity, even if the ethnic homogeneity often was missing. The myth of the Germanic State of the early Middle Ages was in the first place a myth of the common origin of the gens.These histories of tribal origins have some times been influenced by powerful Ancient literary patterns, especially the Trojan myth of Virgil. But the concern of presenting the origin of the gens in mythical form is no doubt Germanic. And it seems probable that the tribal origins are more ancient than the genealogies of royal families with alleged divine ancestors. The kingship among the Germanic tribes was secondary in relation to the tribe. The king was rex Francorum; the king of a certain country or geographic territory is a later conception. The power comes from below; the king is an exponent of the tribe. All the Germanic words for "king" are derivations from terms for "kin, people, tribe." The limitation of the power of the king is also indicated by institutions like the right to resistence, the possibility to depose the king, the participation by all free men in the judicial and criminal procedure through self-help and blood feud.
Section
Articles

Published

1972-01-01

How to Cite

Ejerfeldt, L. (1972). Myths of the state in the West European Middle Ages. Scripta Instituti Donneriani Aboensis, 6, 160–169. https://doi.org/10.30674/scripta.67077