Louis the Pious: The Empire Put to the Test (814–840) · EARLY MIDDLE AGES
The “Field of Lies” (Campus Mendacii) is the name given by the sources to a dramatic moment of the Carolingian civil war. In June 833, Louis the Pious is abandoned by many supporters and forced to submit to his sons.
Lothair returns from Italy with an army and joins his brothers against their father. Pope Gregory IV is present, showing how religious authority can weigh on imperial politics.
On the field, Louis’s allies abandon him one after another. The emperor, isolated, cannot fight.
After the surrender, Judith is taken away and Charles is placed in the monastery of Prüm.
In November 833, at Soissons, Louis undergoes a public penance and is forced to abdicate imperial dignity.
The story does not end there: the princes cannot maintain durable unity, coalitions shift again, and Louis is restored as emperor the following year.