FranceHistories

991–996: Melun, Conspiracy, and the War of Coalitions

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Hugh Capet: The Birth of the Capetian Dynasty (987–996) · HIGH MIDDLE AGES

Under Hugh Capet, royal authority does not impose itself through a centralised administration: it is built through alliances. The resistance of the great princes is not an accident; it is the very framework of power, and the king must survive politically if he is to make his dynasty last.


🏹 991: Melun, Coup de Force, and Coalition

In the spring of 991, Odo of Blois seizes Melun by bribing the castellan and the milites of the castle. The matter is serious: Melun controls an axis close to the Capetian core.

The reaction is revealing of the new regime: a coalition forms between the king, the count of Anjou, and the duke of Normandy. Melun is retaken by the summer, and Odo falls back. The struggle continues: Odo then takes Nantes, only for it to be retaken immediately by Fulk Nerra.


🕵️ 993: A Plan to Capture the King

In 993, Odo, disappointed not to receive the title of duke of the Franks, allies with Adalbero of Laon around a plan: capture Hugh and Robert during a projected meeting at Metz with Emperor Otto III, and place a Carolingian prince on the throne. The plot fails: the king and his son, warned in advance, thwart it.


🤝 995–996: Shifting Alliances and the End of a Cycle

Alarmed by Angevin expansion, Richard I of Normandy, Odo of Blois, and Baldwin IV of Flanders ally against Anjou in 995–996. This conflict, typical of the 990s, shows a kingdom governed by balances of power: the king does not abolish princely powers, he negotiates with them.

The sequence closes with two deaths in quick succession: Odo dies in March 996, then Hugh in the autumn of the same year. The conflict does not disappear, but the dynasty itself holds.


🧠 Key Takeaways

  • Melun (991) shows both the vulnerability of the royal domain and the effectiveness of coalitions.
  • The plot (993) reveals that the crown is still open to challenge.
  • 995–996: politics is a game of alliances more than a true “state” power.