Charlemagne: Inherit, Conquer, Scale Up (768–814) · EARLY MIDDLE AGES
When Pepin the Short dies in 768, his two sons become kings: Charles and Carloman. This co‑rule follows Frankish custom, but it creates a structural tension: two courts, two clienteles, two logics.
Before his death, Pepin planned a division of the kingdom. It does not cut space into two simple sets: territories are distributed in a complex way. Charles’s lands form more of a western arc, while Carloman’s concentrate further east; Austrasia, Neustria, and Aquitaine are split.
On 9 October 768, each is proclaimed king by his own followers: Charles at Noyon, Carloman at Soissons. Co‑rule thus begins under the sign of a double legitimacy — but a separated one.
The problem is not only territorial. It is political:
In the first years, Charles is absorbed by Aquitaine, which he handles without Carloman’s help. Then the years 769–771 are marked by alliance calculations, notably around the Lombards and marriage plans, complicating cooperation.
In 771, Carloman dies suddenly at the Carolingian palace of Samoussy, near Laon. Charles seizes his brother’s lands and sets aside his nephews’ rights. Carloman’s widow, Gerberga, takes refuge in Italy with the Lombard king.
This moment is decisive: it makes a coherent, continuous strategy possible, without permanent negotiation between brothers.