Charles the Bald: The Birth of West Francia (840–877) · EARLY MIDDLE AGES
In 842, Charles the Bald and Louis (called “the German”) seal their alliance against their brother Lothair. The Oaths of Strasbourg are a military and political episode, but also a famous moment in the history of languages.
After Louis the Pious’s death (840), war breaks out among heirs. Charles and Louis seek to secure a durable coalition. The oaths are pronounced before their troops to make the commitment public and credible.
In 841, the alliance has already proved decisive on the battlefield: Charles and Louis win at Fontenoy‑en‑Puisaye, weakening Lothair. The crisis is also fed by other claims, especially in Aquitaine, where Pepin II contests Charles’s authority.
The episode is famous because the oaths are formulated so that each army can understand:
This choice does not “invent” French, but it shows that the empire’s linguistic unity is already broken: governing requires taking real spoken languages into account.