In the 6th century, a Merovingian king had to be a war leader. Lasting peace was rare because power rested on conquest, booty, and the ability to protect.
💥 Why is war permanent?
- Prestige: a king who does not win loses his warriors’ obedience.
- Resources: booty, tribute, land, and cities = the kingdom’s wealth.
- Security: striking neighbours can prevent them from striking first.
- Family rivalries: after 511, brother-kings want to enlarge their share.
🛡️ Thuringia: securing the East
In the East, campaigns aim to control routes and impose the king’s strength on frontier zones.
- Goal: prevent another people or another king from occupying this space.
- Result: Austrasia becomes militarised and turns into a war machine.
🏰 Burgundy: a rich kingdom to conquer
Burgundy is a tempting target: cities, wealth, Roman networks.
- The conflicts are also political: controlling Burgundy means controlling a major part of Gaul.
🧠 Key takeaways
- War is a Merovingian tool of government.
- It serves both to enrich and to legitimise the king.
- It builds durable kingdoms, but makes the Frankish world violent and unstable.