2024-12-25
1 小时 3 分钟Thank you for listening to the Rest is History.
For weekly bonus episodes ad free listening, early access to series and membership of our much loved chat community, go to therestishistory.com and join the club that is therestishistory.com on the 25th of December, Charles celebrated the Nativity of the Lord in Rome.
And the count of the years from Christ's nativity changed from 800 to 801.
And that very same day, when the King rose from prayer before the altar that stands above the tomb of St.
Peter, Pope Leo placed a crown upon his head and all the Roman people acclaimed him in this to Charles Augustus, the God crowned great and peace loving, Emperor of the Romans, life and victory.
And after these acclamations of praise, Charles was saluted by the Pope in the same way that back in ancient times the Roman emperors had been.
And from that moment on, he was addressed as Emperor and Augustus.
Happy Christmas everybody.
So what more festive reading could there be than that little reading from the Annals of the Kingdom of the Franks?
And it is describing one of the landmark moments, Tom, in all history.
It is the imperial coronation on Christmas Day 800 of Charlemagne.
So more than three centuries after the fall of the Roman Empire in the west, the emperors have returned.
There was an Augustus in Rome once again.
Happy Christmas everyone.
And as you say, Dominic, what could possibly be more festive than that scene?
An imperial coronation in Rome.
The Empire has struck back.
It has indeed.
So as you prepare your sprouts and do your turkey and all that kind of stuff, I hope that you will enjoy our explanation of what the hell is going on here.
So in the previous episode, we heard about Charles's rise to greatness, how he comes to be Charles the Great, Carolus Magnus Charlemagne, as he's known in English.