Ep. 95: Colonisation of the East(700-1200) -  Callous Kings and Murderous Margraves

Ep. 95: Colonisation of the East(700-1200) - Callous Kings and Murderous Margraves

I have to start with an admission. I promised you a History of the Germans but I am afraid there is no such thing. All I can give you is the histories of the German people. The last 94 episodes you have heard one of the histories of the Germans, the one about the mighty emperors and their political, military and spiritual struggle with the papacy. It is a great story, and it was fun to tell it.

But today we kick off another of the histories, the history of the North of Germany, the part that looked east, rather than south. It is a story of a frontier culture where an estimated 7% of the population of the western part of the empire pack up their belongings and move east, sometimes under the cover of expansionary princes or knightly orders, sometimes invited by local potentates looking to grow their economies. It is a story about the creation and expansion of trade networks, the foundation of cities, some that will remain modest in size, others that turn into important European capitals. It is the story of a periphery that will in time become the centre.

And because it is an almost independent history, we start at the beginning, in the year 772, the year when Charlemagne takes his troops into Saxony hell bent on turning these pagan tribesmen into good Christians and subjects of his emerging empire. If things work out as I hope, we should end this episode with the life of Hermann Billung and Margrave Gero, the first of a wave of chancers and warlords that seek their fortune in the east.

And to all of you who may be new to the History of the Germans Podcast, do not panic. You do not have to catch up on all the previous episodes; you can just start right here, and the narrative should make sense in itself – at least I hope it will. However, some say that the previous three seasons weren’t completely shoddy and may be worth listening to.

The music for the show is Flute Sonata in E-flat major, H.545 by Carl Phillip Emmanuel Bach (or some claim it as BWV 1031 Johann Sebastian Bach) performed and arranged by Michel Rondeau under Common Creative Licence 3.0.

As always:

Homepage with maps, photos, transcripts and blog: www.historyofthegermans.com

If you wish to support the show go to: Support • History of the Germans Podcast

For do it yourself merchandise go to: Merchandise • History of the Germans Podcast

Facebook: @HOTGPod

Threads: @history_of_the_germans_podcast

Bluesky: @hotgpod.bsky.social

Instagram: history_of_the_germans

Twitter: @germanshistory

To make it easier for you to share the podcast, I have created separate playlists for some of the seasons that are set up as individual podcasts. they have the exact same episodes as in the History of the Germans, but they may be a helpful device for those who want to concentrate on only one season.

So far I have:

The Ottonians

Salian Emperors and Investiture Controversy

Fredrick Barbarossa and Early Hohenstaufen

Frederick II Stupor Mundi

Saxony and Eastward Expansion

The Hanseatic League

The Teutonic Knights

The Holy Roman Empire 1250-1356

The Reformation before the Reformation

The Empire in the 15th century

The Fall and Rise of the Habsburgs

Episoder(248)

Ep. 214: Friedrich III (1440-1493) - The Siege that Woke up an Empire

Ep. 214: Friedrich III (1440-1493) - The Siege that Woke up an Empire

The venerable city of Neuss between Cologne and Düsseldorf was founded in 16 BC as a Roman army camp, making it one of the oldest in Germany. Its history is marked by the usual mix of feuds with its a...

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Ep. 213: Friedrich III (1440-1493) – Duping the Duke of Burgundy

Ep. 213: Friedrich III (1440-1493) – Duping the Duke of Burgundy

How long can an emperor not be an emperor. The official record stands at 25 years, that is how long Friedrich III had stayed out of the core areas of the Holy Roman Empire. That meant 25 ears of Imper...

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Ep. 212:  Matthias Corvinus (1443-1490) – The Library of the Raven King

Ep. 212: Matthias Corvinus (1443-1490) – The Library of the Raven King

Today we will talk a lot about Matthias Corvinus, the legendary renaissance king of Hungary whose library outshone that of the Medici in Florence and whose standing army was one of the greatest – and ...

30 Okt 202540min

Ep. 211: Friedrich III (1440-1493) – Hitting Rock Bottom

Ep. 211: Friedrich III (1440-1493) – Hitting Rock Bottom

It is November 1462 and the emperor Friedrich III and his young family are huddling together in the cellars of the Hofburg. The citizens of Vienna are shooting cannonballs into the 13th century castle...

23 Okt 202536min

Ep. 210: Ladislaus Postumus (1440-1457) - Lord of all, Ruler of No One

Ep. 210: Ladislaus Postumus (1440-1457) - Lord of all, Ruler of No One

Our journey today will take us away from the emperor Friedrich III who will spend most of the episode holed up in his castle at Wiener Neustadt, fretting and gardening.Instead we look at the dramatic ...

16 Okt 202536min

Ep. 209 – Friedrich III (1440-1493) - The First Habsburg Emperor

Ep. 209 – Friedrich III (1440-1493) - The First Habsburg Emperor

Today we – and the Habsburgs – stride back on to the grand stage of European politics. Not with a titan of history or monarch whose long and fruitful reign resonates across the centuries, but with Fri...

2 Okt 202541min

Ep. 208: Albrecht II (1438-1439) - Boy Meets Princess, Boy Becomes King

Ep. 208: Albrecht II (1438-1439) - Boy Meets Princess, Boy Becomes King

Last week we saw the family slowly climbing out of the hole that Friedrich IV of the Tyrol had dug them. But despite all these consolidation efforts, the family was still in the second league of Europ...

25 Sep 202538min

Ep.207: Habsburg Dukes (1308-1437) - How the Habsburgs got their Chin

Ep.207: Habsburg Dukes (1308-1437) - How the Habsburgs got their Chin

“The Habsburgs ruled half of Europe with a chin that entered the room five minutes before they did,” is one of those witticisms that made the 19th century so amusing. But by then the Habsburg jaw had ...

18 Sep 202533min

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