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Government and Politics - What Was The Carolingian Empire?

What was the Carolingian Empire?

The Carolingian Empire united most of western Europe under a single ruler from about 751 until 987. It was named for the Carolingians, a family of Frankish kings. The roots of the empire were formed in 476, when the Roman Empire fell to Germanic tribes under Odoacer (c. 435–493). As a result, the Romans lost control of western Europe. At this time Germanic tribes such as the Visigoths, Ostrogoths, Vandals, Franks, and Anglo-Saxons fought to control western Europe and to protect their territory from the Muslims (Moors), who lived in present-day Portugal and Spain. In 719, at the end of a war between the Salian and Ripuerian Franks, Charles Martel (c. 688–741) united the tribes and became ruler of the Franks. (The Salian and Ripuerian Franks were descendants of Germanic tribes who lived along the Rhine River, in present-day northeastern France and southwestern Germany.) Repelling Muslims...

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