Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor
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Henry IV, (1050 – 1106) was King of Germany (Holy Roman Empire) from 1056 and Emperor from 1084, until his abdication in 1105. He was the third emperor of the Salian dynasty.
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[edit] Biography
Henry was the eldest son of the Emperor Henry III, by his second wife Agnes de Poitou, and was probably born at the royal palace at Goslar. His christening was delayed until the following Easter so that Abbot Hugh of Cluny could be one of his godparents. But even before that, at his Christmas court Henry III induced the attending nobles to promise fidelity to his son. Three years later, still anxious to ensure the succession, Henry III had a larger assembly of nobles elect the young Henry as his successor, and then, on July 17, 1054, had him elected as king by Herman II, Archbishop of Cologne at Trebur. The incoronation was held in Aachen in 1054. When Henry III unexpectedly died in 1056, the accession of the six-year-old Henry IV was not opposed by the reign's vassals. The dowager Empress Agnes acted as regent: in the will of the dead emperor, pope Victor II should act as her counsellor, but the latter's death in 1057 soon showed the political ineptitude of Agnes.
She assigned the Duchy of Bavaria, given by his husband to Henry IV, to Otto of Nordheim. This however deprived the young King of a solid base of power. Also her decision to assign the Duchies of Swabia and Carinthia to, Rudolf of Rheinfelden (who married her daughter) and Berthold of Zähringen, would prove mistakes, as both later rebelled against the king. She was also uncapable to influence, differently from Henry III, the election of the new popes, Stephen IX and Nicholas II. Also the Papal alliance with the Normans of southern Italy, born to counter the communal resistance in Rome, resulted in the deterioration of the relationships with the German King, as well as Nicholas' intereferences in the election of German bishops.
Henry's reign was marked by efforts to consolidate Imperial power. In reality, however, it was a careful balancing act between maintaining the loyalty of the nobility and the support of the pope. Henry jeopardized both when, in 1075, his insistence on the right of a secular ruler to invest, i.e., to place in office, members of the clergy, especially bishops, began the conflict known as the Investiture Controversy. In the same year he defeated a rebellion of Saxons in the First Battle of Langensalza. Pope Gregory VII excommunicated Henry on February 22, 1076. Gregory, on his way to a diet at Augsburg, and hearing that Henry was approaching, took refuge in the castle of Canossa (near Reggio Emilia), belonging to Matilda, Countess of Tuscany. Henry's intent, however, was to perform the penance required to lift his excommunication, and ensure his continued rule. He stood for three days, January 25 to January 27, 1077, outside the gate at Canossa in the snow, begging the pope to rescind the sentence (popularly portrayed as without shoes, taking no food or shelter, and wearing a hairshirt). The Pope lifted the excommunication, imposing a vow to comply with certain conditions, which Henry soon violated.
In 1088, Henry of Luxembourg, an antiking, died and Egbert II, Margrave of Meissen, a longtime enemy of the emperor's proclaimed himself the antiking's successor. Henry had him condemned by a Saxon diet and then a national one at Quedlinburg and Regensburg respectively, but was defeated by Egbert when a relief army came to the margrave's rescue during the siege of Gleichen. Egbert was murdered two years later (1090) and his ineffectual insurrection and royal pretensions fell apart.
In his last years Henry faced rebellions from his eldest son and his wife. He died at Liège in 1106, "like one falling asleep", after nine days of illness. He was interred next to his father at Speyer.
[edit] Marriages
In 1055 Henry was betrothed to Bertha of Maurienne, daughter of Count Otto of Savoy. They were married in June 1066. In 1068 he attempted to divorce her, but was unable, and Bertha was restored as Empress a year later. She died on December 27, 1087 and was buried at the Speyer Cathedral. Their children were:
- Agnes of Germany (born 1072), married Frederick I von Staufen, Duke of Swabia.
- Conrad (February 12 1074-July 27 1101)
- Adelaide, died in infancy
- Henry, died in infancy
- Henry V, Holy Roman Emperor
In 1089 Henry married Eupraxia of Kiev, a daughter of Vsevolod I, Prince of Kiev, and sister to his son Vladimir Monomakh (Russian: Владимир Мономах) (1053 -- May 19, 1125), prince of Kievan Rus. She assumed the name "Adelaide" upon her coronation. In 1094 she joined a rebellion against Henry, accusing him of holding her prisoner, forcing her to participate in orgies, and attempting a black mass on her naked body.
[edit] Henry IV in fiction
The titual character in Enrico IV by Luigi Pirandello is a madman who believes himself to be Henry IV.
[edit] Sources
- Robinson, I.S. Henry IV of Germany 1056-1106, 2000
| Preceded by: Henry III | King of Germany 1056–1105 | Succeeded by: Henry V |
| Holy Roman Emperor 1084–1105 | ||
| Preceded by: Conrad I | Duke of Bavaria as Henry VIII 1053–1054 | Succeeded by: Conrad II |
| Preceded by: Conrad II | Duke of Bavaria as Henry VIII 1055–1061 | Succeeded by: Otto II |
| Preceded by: Welf I | Duke of Bavaria as Henry VIII 1077-1096 | Succeeded by: Welf I |
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