Talk:Charlemagne: Difference between revisions
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|dykentry=... that '''[[Charlemagne]]''' owned [[Abul-Abbas|an elephant]] that he received as a gift from the [[Abbasid Caliphate|Abbasid]] caliph [[Harun al-Rashid]]? |
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== About "Karl" and "Karlus" == |
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== Can the editor add some citations to his claim? == |
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The page had for years on and off listed "Karl", the modern German form of his name, as the form that would've been used by Germanic speakers at the time. I can find evidence of this out on the internet, but not in any scholarly sources. This makes me worried that it's out there as a [[WP:CIRCULAR]] reference back here. The last time it was added [https://xtools.wmcloud.org/blame/en.wikipedia.org/Charlemagne/2023-08-01?q=latinized], it was cited to Fried's biography, but Fried makes no such claim on page 2, or anywhere else in the book. "Karl" is only used in the book in footnotes referencing titles of German-language sources. Even in it's appearances prior to this it didn't seem we had any RSs for it. |
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I replaced Karl with the form "Karlus", citing the following in Nelson's ''King and Emperor'': "I call my subject Charles, or use one or another of the languages spoken by his contemporaries: Latin Carolus, Old High German Karlus or Romance Karlo." (Nelson 2019 p. 2). Nelson's is the most up-to-date comprehensive English-language biography, and she's a giant in Charlemagne scholarship. Frustratingly, though, this is in the introduction, the only part of the book where she doesn't provide footnotes. And except for this passage, she invariably calls him "Charles", never using one of these forms again. |
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Article states, "He also campaigned against the Saxons to his east, Christianizing them (upon penalty of death) which led to events such as the Massacre of Verden." But no sources are cited for this claim. ([[User:AltheaCase|AltheaCase]] ([[User talk:AltheaCase|talk]]) 00:58, 16 January 2023 (UTC)) |
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So while I trust Nelson on this, it's tough because she doesn't have a footnote we can track down, and "Karlus" definitely seems odd as a Germanic form to us. And what you see on the web is that the evolution went something like {{lang|frk|keril}} or {{lang|frk|kerl}} -> {{lang|goh|Karl}} -> {{lang|la|Karolus}}/{{lang|la|Carolus}}. Our article on [[Charles]] mostly seems to claim this, although it doesn't look that well sourced to me. |
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:Added citation and cleared it up. The source was already in the [[Massacre of Verden]] article. [[User:Momgamer09|Momgamer09]] ([[User talk:Momgamer09|talk]]) 03:36, 20 October 2023 (UTC) |
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Johannes Fried, Roger Collins, and Alessandro Barbero are all silent on a contemporary Germanic name. The only other of the major biographies I have access to that addresses the name at all is Becher, on p. 43: |
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==Wiki Education assignment: Christian Ethics== |
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{{dashboard.wikiedu.org assignment | course = Wikipedia:Wiki_Ed/Florida_Southern_College/Christian_Ethics_(Spring_2023) | assignments = [[User:AdiraMavros|AdiraMavros]] | start_date = 2023-01-10 | end_date = 2023-05-04 }} |
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{{Blockquote|But what did this name "Charles," which was uncommon in this period, actually mean? For a while it was thought that the name was taken from the root in "Kerl - fellowman" which meant "a free man without inherited property," or simply "man, married man, or beloved." This interpretation of "Charles" was used to support the now outdated theory that Charles Martel's mother Chalpaida came from a low-status family. Modern research sees the name "Carolus" as the Romanized form of "Hariolus" a pet form of the name "Chario." It also appears to have been an element in the name "Charibert" which was borne by two Merovingian kings. There is also some suggestion that the name may have been derived from "Crallo." This was the name of the father of Bishop Kunibert of Cologne, who had been a close ally of Pippin the Elder. In any case, there were no negative connotations associated with the name "Charles" at the end of the seventh century}} |
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<span class="wikied-assignment" style="font-size:85%;">— Assignment last updated by [[User:Bdhamilton|Brian]] ([[User talk:Bdhamilton|talk]]) 17:38, 3 April 2023 (UTC)</span> |
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So Becher, gesturing at "modern research" seems to represent that {{lang|la|Carolus}} is the original form of the name as an adaptation of the (Germanic?) names {{lang|goh|Chario}} and {{lang|goh|Hariolus}}. And that the {{lang|frk|kerl}} origin is outdated scholarship. |
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== Remove or Edit Sentence? == |
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Doubling the frustration though, Becher is again one of the foremost Charlemagne scholars. But his book was apparently written for a general audience. According to Roger Collins' review in ''The Historian'', it's in a genre of German publishing called a "pocket book" "aimed at a serious but non-specialist readership that wants to be well informed on a wide range of subjects but not in too much detail and without any element of uncertainty".<ref>https://www.jstor.org/stable/24453272</ref> So it also doesn't have any footnotes and doesn't engage in debate over topics, really just presenting a "state of the subject". |
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Under the Aquitane section, there is a passage stating "The French name Gascony derives from Vasconia. The Romans were never able to subjugate the whole of Vasconia. The soldiers they recruited for the Roman legions from those parts they did submit and where they founded the region's first cities were valued for their fighting abilities. The border with Aquitaine was at Toulouse." I don't understand the intent or syntax in "The soldiers they recruited for the Roman legions from those parts they did submit and where they founded the region's first cities were valued for their fighting abilities." There's no citation and it doesn't seem relevant to this article, or even the rest of the passage. I vote to just delete the sentence but maybe someone understands what could be written instead? [[Special:Contributions/144.121.186.250|144.121.186.250]] ([[User talk:144.121.186.250|talk]]) 15:12, 12 April 2023 (UTC) |
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So between Nelson and Becher, my best hunch (though entirely synthesis at this point) is that modern scholarship has arrived that {{lang|la|Carolus}} (a Latin name though with Germanic roots) was actually borrowed ''back'' into German in the form {{lang|goh|Karlus}}, which then derived into {{lang|de|Karl}}, {{lang|nl|Karel}}, etc. |
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:removed it. [[User:Momgamer09|Momgamer09]] ([[User talk:Momgamer09|talk]]) 03:09, 20 October 2023 (UTC) |
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I'd love to track down the actual scholarship on this but haven't been able to. I'm sure it's in some obscure German-language journal. I was able to find through Googling this paper: [https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110210477.3.575/html?lang=en], which has a text his for "Carolus" "Chario" "Hariolus", but it's paid access. But it's probably working from the same scholarship Becher is so I might go to [[WP:RX]] to see if anyone has access and try to get someone to translate the relevant paragraphs. Finding the source for Nelson's "Karlus" hasn't turned up anything. So if anyone cares to research this, hopefully we can eventually track it down. But I highly doubt Matthias Becher and Janet Nelson are just making these things up out of whole cloth. |
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== Legitimacy == |
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'''TLDR/The point''' Not being able to track down Nelson and Becher's own citations, they are still preeminent scholars and the best references we have. So unless we can give an equivalent modern scholarly source that gives Karl as the contemporary Germanic form, giving Karlus as cited to Nelson is our best-sourced option. Karl is either old scholarship perpetuated by Wikipedia, or a WP invention that got picked up elsewhere. [[User:Seltaeb Eht|Seltaeb Eht]] ([[User talk:Seltaeb Eht|talk]]) 17:43, 23 January 2024 (UTC) |
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The article mentions in a few places that Charles was most likely born "out of wedlock," before his parents' 744 marriage, etc., making him illegitimate. However, it notes that they did have some kind of contract to marry prior to his birth. I don't know who the sources were for the debate here. I'm a historian and I studied this time period, and in particular, the differences between standard modern practices and what were considered standard practices in the Middle Ages. It seems to me that the texts, books, and sources I read in graduate school agree that, in at least the Middle Ages, if not beyond the Renaissance, a betrothment could legitimize a child. Travel was not as easy then as it is now, resources were not as available or reliable then as they are now, and often - since marriage, particularly among the upper classes, was a financial contract, not a social or romantic act - the betrothed couple could have had a large age difference, or geographical separation, or other obstacles that even necessitated marriage by proxy or lengthy betrothments. As long as there was a solemn promise to marry (it wasn't like today's engagements, it was much more formal), the couple was considered in a legal & binding status; using a term that I am making up right here and now, it was kind of like a pre-marriage, but practically as binding as marriage (only in the event of death or some major political upheaval that negated the terms of contract, could the contract be broken without similar legal concerns as if a spouse died or a marriage ended). Children conceived and born in this time of betrothment were considered to be legitimate. What I'm saying is that it's anachronistic to say, the parents were betrothed or otherwise had a contract to marry, but weren't married, so he was illegitimate. In that time, if there was a contract to marry, he was legitimate.[[User:Kelelain|Kelelain]] ([[User talk:Kelelain|talk]]) 02:08, 20 September 2023 (UTC) |
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{{reflist-talk}} |
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:"Cool story, bruh." Doesn't matter what you think. Sources. [[Special:Contributions/109.70.84.130|109.70.84.130]] ([[User talk:109.70.84.130|talk]]) 18:02, 18 November 2023 (UTC) |
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== Latin in the Carolingian Renaissance == |
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== Reorganization? == |
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Hi there, a note that Latin was standardised on the basis of Classical Latin texts during the Carolingian Renaissance, a change which began the "fixing" of Latin, and the realisation that modern Romance languages were no longer the same thing as Latin as a formal written and spoken language. This is a very important change that had implications for the development of vernacular languages as well as ensuring that Latin was fit to serve as the pre-eminent language of learning for the coming centuries, so deserves a line or two. [[User:JimKillock|Jim Killock]] [[User_talk:JimKillock|(talk)]] 07:24, 8 April 2024 (UTC) |
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Hi all, taking a look at this article, I personally believe it could do with some reorganization and cleanup to improve readability and facilitate some improvements to the article. For such a key figure, it'd be great if we could bring this article up to GA standards, and I think a reorg might be a good first step to build off of. This is based off organization of some other pre-modern ruler bios, and (admittedly), personal opinion of what might be a better flow. I'd propose something along the lines of the following, based on the article as it stands now (including some renaming of sections and maybe looking where we're duplicating info or maybe providing more than is necessary): |
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*<s>Names and nicknames</s>-> ''Name'' |
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*Early life and rise to power |
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**Ancestry and political background |
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**<s>Early life</s> -> ''Birth'' |
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**<s>Ambiguous high office</s> -> **''Joint reign (with Carloman?)'' - This section is a little odd to me. The first three paragraphs seem to duplicate and expand on information in "Political background" on how Pepin became king. Good info, but maybe better served there. Really, the key info at this point in the article are the last two paragraphs regarding the brothers' accession and how the kingdom was divided administratively. There's also room for expansion on the point (currently unsourced) ''"Charles was 26 years old, but he had been campaigning at his father's right hand for several years, which may help to account for his military skill."'' If we can dig up some sources on his activities in Pepin's reign, would be good information to add either here or a section detailing these activities. |
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***<s>Aquitanian rebellion</s> - Of the eight paragraphs here, only the last actually deals with events during Charles's reign. The preceding are ~100 years of background on Aquitaine's history. While it's definitely good to give readers context for events, I wonder if this background material can be trimmed (and preserved either at [[Aquitaine]] or [[Carolingian Empire]]?) |
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**<s>Marriage to Desiderata</s> - Needs sources, and as the content stands currently in these three sections, I think they can condense to one covering 768-771 for now |
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*''(Sole?) King of the Franks'' |
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**Italian campaings |
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***''current subsections'' |
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**<s>Carolingian expansion to the south</s> -> ''Southern expansion(?)'' |
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***''current subsections'' |
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**Eastern campaigns |
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***''current subsections'' |
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*<s>Imperium</s> -> ''(Reign as?) Emperor'' |
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**Coronation |
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***Debate |
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**Imperial title |
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**Administration |
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***''current subsections'' (for now, some of these probably need to be cleaned up) |
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***Imperial diplomacy |
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***Danish attacks |
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***Death |
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*Appearance - ''some here could maybe fly to other sections - i.e. Language into early life?'' |
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*Wives, concubines, and children (''issue''?) - ''personally would ditch the table here in favor of a list format, but just my thought'' |
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*Cultural impact (''Legacy?'') |
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**''current subsections'' |
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**Beatification |
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:I added a line on the general relevance of the renaissance for the use of Latin; the point on Latin's change is a bit contested and seems less relevant on balance that its contribution to the spread and vitality of early medieval Latin learning and literature etc. [[User:JimKillock|Jim Killock]] [[User_talk:JimKillock|(talk)]] 11:11, 27 May 2024 (UTC) |
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Beyond the early sections, not proposing any major content changes. I'm digging up resources I have as well as acquiring some more so I can put some work into expansion of some of the thinner sections and (especially) adding citations to what we have. [[User:Seltaeb Eht|Seltaeb Eht]] ([[User talk:Seltaeb Eht|talk]]) 04:27, 23 November 2023 (UTC) |
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== add a page == |
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:And wow, doing an rewrite of the sections up to 771, and a source used in "Ambiguous high office" is [https://bootcampmilitaryfitnessinstitute.com/2022/01/20/who-was-charlemagne-2/|"Boot Camp & Military Fitness Institute] - not only did it flag as a low quality source, but clicking through the article there is actually a ''[[WP:CIR|mirror of this article]]''. The article probably needs a top to bottom overhaul. I'm basing the early life section mainly on McKitterick, which I own, and am waiting for Janet Nelson's ''King and Emperor'' in the mail, which I hope should really be able to boost the article up. It looks like Nelson is currently used only a handful of times in the article.[[User:Seltaeb Eht|Seltaeb Eht]] ([[User talk:Seltaeb Eht|talk]]) 03:08, 26 November 2023 (UTC) |
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There are many contempory media portraits of charlemegne. Some are mentioned but there's a lot more, I think it'd be cool to get a page dedicated to that is like the layout of the wives/concubines page(just a list with brief descriptions and hyperlinks to other wikipages where possible). If you'd like I could name a few movies/TV shows/documentaries/songs that mention him or portrays him. I don't really know how to add something(and honestly dont really care to learn) but I could add some references and sources if people like this idea and would be willing to add this page. [[Special:Contributions/2603:6011:2C00:3C5:9759:7B9B:C3EC:AD75|2603:6011:2C00:3C5:9759:7B9B:C3EC:AD75]] ([[User talk:2603:6011:2C00:3C5:9759:7B9B:C3EC:AD75|talk]]) 19:38, 17 June 2024 (UTC) |
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== Sketch image == |
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{{Talk:Charlemagne/GA2}} |
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==Did you know nomination== |
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[[User:SergeWoodzing]], good call on removing the hairstyle info from the caption - was indeed too much and I should have eliminated it when I moved it to the new section. On "thought to be of" - the image is sourced to Fried's biography (p. 262), where it's captioned: |
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{{Template:Did you know nominations/Charlemagne}} |
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== Who the fuck is Roger Collins? == |
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"FIGURE 29 Image from the inside front cover of the Fulda codex of the Aix capitulary, now held at the Herzog August Library in Wolfenbüttel, Germany. This quick sketch is thought to be of Charlemagne." |
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He has a Wikipedia page, but regardless of his prominence he in "Medievology" or whatever, one person saying something sensational like "Charlemagne was an illegitimate child" isn't worthy of an encyclopedia blurb. Case closed. [[User:Octaazacubane|Octaazacubane]] ([[User talk:Octaazacubane|talk]]) 22:56, 11 August 2024 (UTC) |
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:{{Fixed}} Thank you for checking that! --[[User:SergeWoodzing|SergeWoodzing]] ([[User talk:SergeWoodzing|talk]]) 01:16, 3 December 2023 (UTC) |
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:I've also fixed this now on the image page at Commons. Being a bit sensitive, because many so-called "historians" hardly consider any portrait older than the 16th century to be an authentic likeness, I overreacted a bit. --[[User:SergeWoodzing|SergeWoodzing]] ([[User talk:SergeWoodzing|talk]]) 01:24, 3 December 2023 (UTC) |
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:To answer the topline question, Collins is indeed an eminent medievalist and his book was probably the standard English-language biography on Charlemagne until Nelson published hers in 2019. |
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::Very much understood, and share the sentiment! This, coins, and possibly the equestrian statue are probably the closest we have to getting a real view of what he may have looked like. I wanted to make sure I wasn't jumping the gun using Fried in exclusion of better sources in this case. Thanks for improving the caption, and replying to the talk quickly. Best, [[User:Seltaeb Eht|Seltaeb Eht]] ([[User talk:Seltaeb Eht|talk]]) 02:44, 3 December 2023 (UTC) |
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:Collins is certainly reflective of some older trends in scholarship (partially owing to the fact his book is over 25 years old). |
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:It seems it was pretty in vogue to cast Charlemagne as illegitimate, and it's still pretty prevalent in pop culture. But this is usually based off of the 742 birthdate. |
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:Collins' 749 date for the marriage is cited to paper in German by Becher from 1989, "Drogo und die Konigserhebung Pippins". However, Becher in his 2005 biography gives 744 as the date of Pippin's marriage to Bertrada (p. 34) as does Nelson (p. 63). Without digging up Becher's paper, it's hard to know what underlying information the sentence in Collins is reflective of. I'm going to adjust it to reflect the marriage in 744. I feel like it was in there at one point, with the 749 date contrasting, but I don't think the latter needs to be represented at all unless it's present somewhere besides Collins. |
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:While I might have asked it differently (though it definitely made it the topic jump out on my watchlist) :), thanks for bringing it up and putting some attention on the issue. [[User:Seltaeb Eht|Seltaeb Eht]] ([[User talk:Seltaeb Eht|talk]]) 01:02, 12 August 2024 (UTC) |
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:[[User:Seltaeb Eht|Seltaeb Eht]], thank you for your diplomatic reply. [[User:Octaazacubane|Octaazacubane]], MF got his book published with U of Toronto, which runs one of the best medieval programs in the world. Also, bro got a resume that's quite impressive. [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 01:09, 12 August 2024 (UTC) |
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::Roger Collins is definitely a real one. His books are both readable and reliable. Though not infallible, in this case. I do wonder if he would support renaming medieval studies to Medievology. [[User:Seltaeb Eht|Seltaeb Eht]] ([[User talk:Seltaeb Eht|talk]]) 01:24, 12 August 2024 (UTC) |
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:::Also, FWIW, "Drogo und die Konigserhebung Pippins" is available from the WP library. I don't speak German, so take my reading with the assist of machine translation with many grains of salt, but it does appear to indicate a 744 marriage between Charlemagne's parents. The citation on that sentence in Collins may instead be for his use of Becher's work placing Charlemagne's year of birth (the entire sentence being "Charles was illegitimate, being born either in 747 or, more probably, in the Spring of 748; not till the next year did Pippin actually marry the boy's mother, Bertrada."). The reasoning for calling Charlemagne illegitimate in this case remains obscure to me. [[User:Seltaeb Eht|Seltaeb Eht]] ([[User talk:Seltaeb Eht|talk]]) 01:40, 12 August 2024 (UTC) |
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About "Karl" and "Karlus"
[edit]The page had for years on and off listed "Karl", the modern German form of his name, as the form that would've been used by Germanic speakers at the time. I can find evidence of this out on the internet, but not in any scholarly sources. This makes me worried that it's out there as a WP:CIRCULAR reference back here. The last time it was added [1], it was cited to Fried's biography, but Fried makes no such claim on page 2, or anywhere else in the book. "Karl" is only used in the book in footnotes referencing titles of German-language sources. Even in it's appearances prior to this it didn't seem we had any RSs for it.
I replaced Karl with the form "Karlus", citing the following in Nelson's King and Emperor: "I call my subject Charles, or use one or another of the languages spoken by his contemporaries: Latin Carolus, Old High German Karlus or Romance Karlo." (Nelson 2019 p. 2). Nelson's is the most up-to-date comprehensive English-language biography, and she's a giant in Charlemagne scholarship. Frustratingly, though, this is in the introduction, the only part of the book where she doesn't provide footnotes. And except for this passage, she invariably calls him "Charles", never using one of these forms again.
So while I trust Nelson on this, it's tough because she doesn't have a footnote we can track down, and "Karlus" definitely seems odd as a Germanic form to us. And what you see on the web is that the evolution went something like keril or kerl -> Karl -> Karolus/Carolus. Our article on Charles mostly seems to claim this, although it doesn't look that well sourced to me.
Johannes Fried, Roger Collins, and Alessandro Barbero are all silent on a contemporary Germanic name. The only other of the major biographies I have access to that addresses the name at all is Becher, on p. 43:
But what did this name "Charles," which was uncommon in this period, actually mean? For a while it was thought that the name was taken from the root in "Kerl - fellowman" which meant "a free man without inherited property," or simply "man, married man, or beloved." This interpretation of "Charles" was used to support the now outdated theory that Charles Martel's mother Chalpaida came from a low-status family. Modern research sees the name "Carolus" as the Romanized form of "Hariolus" a pet form of the name "Chario." It also appears to have been an element in the name "Charibert" which was borne by two Merovingian kings. There is also some suggestion that the name may have been derived from "Crallo." This was the name of the father of Bishop Kunibert of Cologne, who had been a close ally of Pippin the Elder. In any case, there were no negative connotations associated with the name "Charles" at the end of the seventh century
So Becher, gesturing at "modern research" seems to represent that Carolus is the original form of the name as an adaptation of the (Germanic?) names Chario and Hariolus. And that the kerl origin is outdated scholarship.
Doubling the frustration though, Becher is again one of the foremost Charlemagne scholars. But his book was apparently written for a general audience. According to Roger Collins' review in The Historian, it's in a genre of German publishing called a "pocket book" "aimed at a serious but non-specialist readership that wants to be well informed on a wide range of subjects but not in too much detail and without any element of uncertainty".[1] So it also doesn't have any footnotes and doesn't engage in debate over topics, really just presenting a "state of the subject".
So between Nelson and Becher, my best hunch (though entirely synthesis at this point) is that modern scholarship has arrived that Carolus (a Latin name though with Germanic roots) was actually borrowed back into German in the form Karlus, which then derived into Karl, Karel, etc.
I'd love to track down the actual scholarship on this but haven't been able to. I'm sure it's in some obscure German-language journal. I was able to find through Googling this paper: [2], which has a text his for "Carolus" "Chario" "Hariolus", but it's paid access. But it's probably working from the same scholarship Becher is so I might go to WP:RX to see if anyone has access and try to get someone to translate the relevant paragraphs. Finding the source for Nelson's "Karlus" hasn't turned up anything. So if anyone cares to research this, hopefully we can eventually track it down. But I highly doubt Matthias Becher and Janet Nelson are just making these things up out of whole cloth.
TLDR/The point Not being able to track down Nelson and Becher's own citations, they are still preeminent scholars and the best references we have. So unless we can give an equivalent modern scholarly source that gives Karl as the contemporary Germanic form, giving Karlus as cited to Nelson is our best-sourced option. Karl is either old scholarship perpetuated by Wikipedia, or a WP invention that got picked up elsewhere. Seltaeb Eht (talk) 17:43, 23 January 2024 (UTC)
References
Latin in the Carolingian Renaissance
[edit]Hi there, a note that Latin was standardised on the basis of Classical Latin texts during the Carolingian Renaissance, a change which began the "fixing" of Latin, and the realisation that modern Romance languages were no longer the same thing as Latin as a formal written and spoken language. This is a very important change that had implications for the development of vernacular languages as well as ensuring that Latin was fit to serve as the pre-eminent language of learning for the coming centuries, so deserves a line or two. Jim Killock (talk) 07:24, 8 April 2024 (UTC)
- I added a line on the general relevance of the renaissance for the use of Latin; the point on Latin's change is a bit contested and seems less relevant on balance that its contribution to the spread and vitality of early medieval Latin learning and literature etc. Jim Killock (talk) 11:11, 27 May 2024 (UTC)
add a page
[edit]There are many contempory media portraits of charlemegne. Some are mentioned but there's a lot more, I think it'd be cool to get a page dedicated to that is like the layout of the wives/concubines page(just a list with brief descriptions and hyperlinks to other wikipages where possible). If you'd like I could name a few movies/TV shows/documentaries/songs that mention him or portrays him. I don't really know how to add something(and honestly dont really care to learn) but I could add some references and sources if people like this idea and would be willing to add this page. 2603:6011:2C00:3C5:9759:7B9B:C3EC:AD75 (talk) 19:38, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
GA Review
[edit]GA toolbox |
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Reviewing |
- This review is transcluded from Talk:Charlemagne/GA2. The edit link for this section can be used to add comments to the review.
Nominator: Seltaeb Eht (talk · contribs) 00:16, 9 June 2024 (UTC)
Reviewer: Tim riley (talk · contribs) 10:41, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
Starting the review. More a.s.a.p. Tim riley talk 10:41, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
From a first canter-through looking for typos etc my first comment is that although the article is generally in BrE – centre, colour, favour, honour, metres, neighbouring, Sepulchre, spectre – the odd AmE spelling has crept in: neighbors, traveled. Most noticeable of all is the inconsistency of –ise and –ize forms. We have emphasised and we have emphasizes, recognised and recognized, standardised and standardized. Other –ise endings in the text are canonised, characterisations, Christianised, criticising, finalised, harmonise and idealised; other –ize forms are baptized, characterized, legitimized, organization, popularized and realizing.
I'll begin a proper study of the text next. Meanwhile pray ponder the above points. Tim riley talk 10:59, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
- Thanks for reviewing! It was a long labor to rewrite this article, and it received an excellent and thorough first GA review (which RL prevented me from completing), and has had a copyedit since. Thank you for helping get it over the finish line.
On English usage - yes, the article should be in BrE - it was tagged as such when I arrived, and the more prominent English-language scholars are from the UK. But as an American, I and my spellchecker often slip, so any catches on those are welcome. Seltaeb Eht (talk) 15:11, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
Detailed comments
[edit]I must make it clear at the outset that the following are merely my suggestions, to be acted on or rejected as you see fit. I have found nothing in the text that I think must be changed to meet the GA criteria.
- Names
- "A number of languages were spoken in Charlemagne's world" – if you say "a number of…" the reader is likely to ask what the number was. Safer to say "many" or "several" if you don't know the number.
- Good suggestion, changed
- Early life and rise to power
- "practiced by the Franks" – practised, if we're in BrE
- changed
- Birth
- "German scholar Karl Werner" – clunky tabloidese false title, easily remedied by a definite article before the phrase. Ditto later in the text for German historian Johannes Fried, Historian Janet Nelson, Historian Rosamond McKitterick, Historian Henry Mayr-Harting, contemporary Byzantine chronicler Thophanes and historian Jennifer Davis.
- Clunky implementation of a good suggestion at the previous GAN, all revised.
- "but it cannot be proven – in English (though not in Scottish) usage "proved" rather than "proven" is usual.
- changed
- Language and education
- "German historian Johannes Fried" – is his nationality relevant?
- No, and removed from him and others
- Accession and reign with Carloman
- "but modern historians dispute this" – all modern historians or just some of them?
- It is the consensus - open to better suggested wording because I agree it's not great as is. The intended contrast is between what Carolingian propoganda represented (and some general audience works repeat today) vs. what today's historians actually say.
- "does not say whether Charles and Himiltrude ever married, were joined in a non-canonical marriage (friedelehe), or if married after Pepin was born" – do we want the "if" here?
- Omitting it reads much better, thanks!
- King of the Franks and the Lombards
- "the pagan irminsul – we capitalise the noun throughout our Wikipedia article on the topic. I merely mention it and don't presume to express an opinion.
- Reviewing my books, it does seem to be capitalized more often than not. Great catch
- Building the dynasty
- "under the care of regents and advisors" – according to the current (2015) edition of Modern English Usage the form "adviser" as opposed to "advisor" is "nearly three times as common across all varieties of English, and so the traditional spelling still predominates"
- Thanks, great catch. I was letting some of my professional usage leak in
- Saxon resistance and reprisal
- "convinced him to end his resistance" – a touch of WP:ENGVAR here. In BrE one convinces someone that and persuades him to.
- Didn't know that - good to know! changed
- Continued wars with the Saxons and Avars
- "lasted through 799" – does this mean "throughout" or "until"?
- Until, but inclusive of, 799
- Coronation
- "French scholar Henri Pirenne" – as with Herren Werner and Fried earlier, I'm not certain his nationality is all that relevant here. Or am I wrong?
- Not relevant, removed
- Governing the empire
- "more-sedentary rule" – I don't think I'd hyphenate this
- Agreed, I think one of the CE may have done so
- "focused on internal governance … increasingly focused" – rather too highly focused: perhaps a variant the second time?
- Revised this as I realized that it wasn't quite still making the same point as it was meant to. Let me know what you think.
- "requiring that all free men take an oath of loyalty to him" – to the emperor presumably but this doesn't say so.
- Indeed, specified Charlemagne
- Religious impact and veneration
- "Frederick Barbarossa convinced Antipope Paschal III to elevate Charlemagne – see comment above on "convince"
- Changed to persuaded
- Bibliography
- I avoid the heading "Bibliography" as it can equally mean "Publications about…" or "Publications by…" As there aren't any publications by Charlemagne it doesn't matter here, but even so I think "Sources" is clearer.
- I take your point, and see that's the usage on recent FAs. Changed
That's all from me for now. This article seems to me to have the potential for FAC, and if you take it on to that stage I shall have some pickier comments on some of the prose, but it will unquestionably suffice for GA. Over to you. Tim riley talk 12:34, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
Thanks for all your suggestions, User:Tim riley - a couple left open above for your further comment ("but modern historians", "through 799", and "focused" comments).
Don't know about FAC, we'll see - a lot of work just to get it here, and related articles are still in need of a lot of attention. Seltaeb Eht (talk) 15:11, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
- All fine now. And so:
Overall summary
[edit]GA review – see WP:WIAGA for criteria
- Is it reasonably well written?
- Is it factually accurate and verifiable?
- A. References to sources:
- Well referenced.
- B. Citation of reliable sources where necessary:
- Well referenced.
- C. No original research:
- A. References to sources:
- Is it broad in its coverage?
- A. Major aspects:
- B. Focused:
- A. Major aspects:
- Is it neutral?
- Fair representation without bias:
- Fair representation without bias:
- Is it stable?
- No edit wars, etc:
- No edit wars, etc:
- Does it contain images to illustrate the topic?
- A. Images are copyright tagged, and non-free images have fair use rationales:
- Well illustrated.
- B. Images are provided where possible and appropriate, with suitable captions:
- Well illustrated.
- A. Images are copyright tagged, and non-free images have fair use rationales:
- Overall:
- Pass or Fail:
- Pass or Fail:
Did you know nomination
[edit]- The following is an archived discussion of the DYK nomination of the article below. Please do not modify this page. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as this nomination's talk page, the article's talk page or Wikipedia talk:Did you know), unless there is consensus to re-open the discussion at this page. No further edits should be made to this page.
The result was: promoted by Jumpy542 talk 22:50, 9 July 2024 (UTC)
- ... that Charlemagne owned an elephant which he received as a gift from the Abbasid caliph Harun al-Rashid?
- Source: Paul E. Dutton, Charlemagne's Mustache: And Other Cultural Clusters of a Dark Age, pp. 59-61
- Reviewed:
Seltaeb Eht (talk) 23:43, 22 June 2024 (UTC).
General: Article is new enough and long enough |
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Policy: Article is sourced, neutral, and free of copyright problems |
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Hook: Hook has been verified by provided inline citation |
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QPQ: None required. |
Overall: The hook and the article have no problems; this is my second review, so take my opinion with a grain of salt. TheNuggeteer (talk) 03:20, 25 June 2024 (UTC)
To Prep 1
Who the fuck is Roger Collins?
[edit]He has a Wikipedia page, but regardless of his prominence he in "Medievology" or whatever, one person saying something sensational like "Charlemagne was an illegitimate child" isn't worthy of an encyclopedia blurb. Case closed. Octaazacubane (talk) 22:56, 11 August 2024 (UTC)
- To answer the topline question, Collins is indeed an eminent medievalist and his book was probably the standard English-language biography on Charlemagne until Nelson published hers in 2019.
- Collins is certainly reflective of some older trends in scholarship (partially owing to the fact his book is over 25 years old).
- It seems it was pretty in vogue to cast Charlemagne as illegitimate, and it's still pretty prevalent in pop culture. But this is usually based off of the 742 birthdate.
- Collins' 749 date for the marriage is cited to paper in German by Becher from 1989, "Drogo und die Konigserhebung Pippins". However, Becher in his 2005 biography gives 744 as the date of Pippin's marriage to Bertrada (p. 34) as does Nelson (p. 63). Without digging up Becher's paper, it's hard to know what underlying information the sentence in Collins is reflective of. I'm going to adjust it to reflect the marriage in 744. I feel like it was in there at one point, with the 749 date contrasting, but I don't think the latter needs to be represented at all unless it's present somewhere besides Collins.
- While I might have asked it differently (though it definitely made it the topic jump out on my watchlist) :), thanks for bringing it up and putting some attention on the issue. Seltaeb Eht (talk) 01:02, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
- Seltaeb Eht, thank you for your diplomatic reply. Octaazacubane, MF got his book published with U of Toronto, which runs one of the best medieval programs in the world. Also, bro got a resume that's quite impressive. Drmies (talk) 01:09, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
- Roger Collins is definitely a real one. His books are both readable and reliable. Though not infallible, in this case. I do wonder if he would support renaming medieval studies to Medievology. Seltaeb Eht (talk) 01:24, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
- Also, FWIW, "Drogo und die Konigserhebung Pippins" is available from the WP library. I don't speak German, so take my reading with the assist of machine translation with many grains of salt, but it does appear to indicate a 744 marriage between Charlemagne's parents. The citation on that sentence in Collins may instead be for his use of Becher's work placing Charlemagne's year of birth (the entire sentence being "Charles was illegitimate, being born either in 747 or, more probably, in the Spring of 748; not till the next year did Pippin actually marry the boy's mother, Bertrada."). The reasoning for calling Charlemagne illegitimate in this case remains obscure to me. Seltaeb Eht (talk) 01:40, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
- Roger Collins is definitely a real one. His books are both readable and reliable. Though not infallible, in this case. I do wonder if he would support renaming medieval studies to Medievology. Seltaeb Eht (talk) 01:24, 12 August 2024 (UTC)
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