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| While castle building was a necessary passion of many of Germany's most successful and aggressive leaders they left little behind to mark their earliest efforts. That is because up until the German emperor, Henry IV, everyone was building castles of wood and earth. Like any sand castle they eventually succumbed to time or turmoil. Kings and emperors held castle building rights close to themselves. Virtually all castles had to have their authority or suffer destruction. The authorized castles were generally built in newly conquered lands by the monarch and staffed by trusted royal appointees. Much like the cavalry outposts of later America, these were palisaded forts built to preserve new territories, protect subjects transplanted from the home land, and subjugate the surrounding communities. The important point is that the structures were all properties of the royal house. Just as today no government is going to allow its citizens to build and man a military base on their own, so it was then. |
See History 3 for more about these wood castles. |
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The proliferation of castles differed in each
country. In Germany the spread of castles came somewhat later
than in France and the impetus was a conflict between church
and state, and the exploitation of this conflict by anyone with
the wherewithal to fund such an expensive undertaking. In Charlemagne's
empire his bureaucratic system was successful in maintaining
relative stability. But in virtually all succeeding monarchies
the lack of such organization necessitated implementation of
a patch work of royal supporters to protect citizens and royal
lands. Feudalism, for a while, filled the bill. With feudalism
a trusted knight or noble would be granted land, often including
many villages, in return for services to the upper lord or monarch.
This service included the obligation to provide agricultural
products as well as a certain level of military capacity with
which to accompany the lord or monarch on campaigns or relieve
him when threatened or besieged by an aggressor. A noble or monarch
without such lands to grant had little with which to bargain
and assure loyalty. The Investiture Contest was the struggle between lay nobles and the church over the power to appoint high church positions and grant lands and power to church officials in return for loyalty to the lord, just as with any enfeofed knight. The problem lasted a good four decades and resulted in frequent political and military skirmishes without ever resolving the issue in Henry IV's reign. The pope not only declared Henry's crown null and void, he excommunicated the king and gave license to all nobles with sworn allegiance to Henry to dismiss any and all obligations to the crown. Ambitious nobles leaped on the opportunity to launch a castle building frenzy that would have been illegal earlier. Many did so because it became necessary, under such anarchic conditions, to take the defense of their lands and villages into their own hands. Yet others did so in defiance of the crown and in hopes of using their new freedom and powers to enrich themselves and expand their own land holdings through unrestrained aggression against neighbors that would otherwise have had the protection of the crown. The results of this era and of the next few centuries are a country dotted with thousands of castles, fortified manors, village defenses and castle ruins. |
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