Treaty of Prüm


The Treaty of Prüm, concluded on 19 September 855, was the second of the partition treaties of the Carolingian Empire. As Emperor Lothair I was approaching death, he divided his realm of Middle Francia among his three sons.

Background

From 830, Lothair and his brothers Pepin I of Aquitaine and Louis the German had fought several inner dynastic battles with their father Emperor Louis the Pious. The emperor's death in 840 started another fight for the inheritance between his three surviving sons Lothair I, Louis the German, and Charles the Bald. Lothair, eldest son and co-ruling Holy Roman Emperor with his father since 817, claimed supremacy but was denied and defeated by the united forces of his brothers at the 841 Battle of Fontenoy.
Emperor Lothair finally had to yield the superior strength of Louis the German and Charles the Bald, who confirmed their pact by the Oaths of Strasbourg. He concluded his fighting and in August 843 signed the Treaty of Verdun with his younger brothers. As a result of this treaty, the empire of late Louis the Pious was officially divided between his three surviving sons: Louis the German received the lands east of the Rhine and Aare rivers, Charles the Bald the territories west of the Scheldt, Meuse, Saône, and Rhône, while Lothair retained the interjacent lands from Frisia to Italy, including the cities of Aachen and Rome, and the title of Holy Roman Emperor.
Though the Carolingian rulers stressed the idea of a unified empire, the gradual dissolution by partible inheritance continued. Mainly Lothair's Middle Frankish realm combined lengthy and vulnerable borders with poor internal communications. Devastated both by Viking raids in the north and Muslim incursions in the south, it was not a viable entity and soon fragmented.

Provisions

Already seriously ill, Emperor Lothair I staying at his estate in Schüller on 19 September 855 further divided the Lotharii Regnum between his sons:
Louis II, the eldest son, was granted the imperial crown and the Kingdom of Italy
Lothair II was granted Frisia and the parts of Austrasia that remained his father's after the Treaty of Verdun - this kingdom became known as Lotharingia after its ruler and was the shortest lived of the three successor kingdoms, succeeded by the duchies of Upper and Lower Lorraine about one hundred years later.
Charles, the youngest of the three sons, became King of Provence, being granted Provence and the greater part of the former Frankish Kingdom of Burgundy - this kingdom would later evolve into the Second Kingdom of Burgundy
Lothair I himself abdicated and retired to Prüm Abbey in the Eifel range where he died ten days later.

Legacy

Due to the deaths of Charles in 863 and Lothair II in 869, Burgundy and Lotharingia were again divided between East Francia, West Francia and the Kingdom of Italy by the 870 Treaty of Meerssen. The effects of the Treaty of Prüm came to a complete end, when in 951 King Otto I of Germany invaded and conquered Italy during a period of political unrest and married the former queen consort Adelaide. He attained the Iron Crown of Lombardy and was finally crowned King of Italy and Holy Roman Emperor in 962.
The Treaty of Prüm is regarded as one of the last significant effects of partible inheritance before being surpassed by feudalism as the primary cause of European state decentralization.

Literature