the powerful new Germanic barbarian ruler Charlemagne as
Imperator
Romanorum, the Emperor of the Romans. By invoking this designation, he
sought to restore the title to the West, wresting it away from the Greeks in
Constantinople who had “usurped” it in this war of names.
In any event, Charlemagne, as the most powerful ruler of the time in the
West, ultimately decided against trying to wrest back the title of Emperor of
Rome for himself, but he did attempt to arrange
a dynastic marriage with the
Empress Irene in Constantinople as one means of recovering the title and uniting
the two empires under his authority. In this he did not succeed. It would not be
long, however, before a federation of German tribes decided to adopt the
grandiloquent title of “Holy Roman Empire” and to deny it to Constantinople
and the Eastern Empire. The arrogation of the additional designation of “Holy”
added real fuel to the fire; it marked the German federation’s claim to the
spiritual power of the empire as well, even though the federation did not even
control the city of Rome. (Hence the legendary essay question for English
schoolboys on European history: “The Holy Roman Empire was neither holy,
Roman, nor an empire. Discuss.”)
Thus this war of names
carries the freight of a deep, ongoing geopolitical
struggle over authority, legitimacy, even spirituality. The pope, isolated in Rome,
clung to the title and belief that he was the head of Christendom, even though he
had originally been only one of five equal bishops of the church in the fourth
century. With each passing century, the political gulf between East and West
grew. In Constantinople, a sense of Greekness
would come to form part of a
“national” identity based on language and culture, especially at the popular level.
Passions hardened into prejudices; over time the barbarian-dominated West
came to think of Constantinople as little more than the locus of an overgrown,
effete, and corrupted Eastern tradition that ultimately was increasingly hard put
to defend itself against the encroaching Muslim infidels in the Holy Lands. This
dismissive attitude was maintained even in the face of the extraordinary political,
military, and cultural accomplishments of Constantinople over a thousand years,
as it spread its power across North Africa, the Eastern Mediterranean, the
Balkans, and the Fertile Crescent. But Constantinople’s power could not last
forever, and by 1453 the last segments of the “Greek Empire”
had fallen
irrevocably to the Muslim Turks.
Still, unlike the short-lived Roman Empire, which had barely made it into the
fifth century, the Eastern Roman Empire had enjoyed a magnificent run of
another thousand years, into the fifteenth. And even though the empire did fall,
the Eastern
Church itself was far from dead, even then. The Eastern Orthodox