Pepin of Herstal: Prince of the Franks (687–714) · EARLY MIDDLE AGES
In Pepin of Herstal’s time, texts and political practice show a clear evolution: the mayor of the palace stops being a simple court officer. He becomes a kind of head of government before the term exists.
Pepin’s power rests on concrete realities:
Merovingian kings keep dynastic and sacred prestige, but they no longer shape policy alone.
Pepin does not take the crown yet because the 7th century is not ready for an open rupture. Keeping a Merovingian king helps:
This compromise is one key to Pippinid success: take power without changing the façade.