Italienzug: Difference between revisions – Wikipedia

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* The 1451-52 ”Italienzug” – [[Frederick III, Holy Roman Emperor|Frederick III]]

* The 1451-52 ”Italienzug” – [[Frederick III, Holy Roman Emperor|Frederick III]]

* The 1508 ”Italienzug” – [[Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor|Maximilian I]], incomplete, blocked by Venetians

* The 1508 ”Italienzug” – [[Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor|Maximilian I]], incomplete, blocked by Venetians

* The 1529 ”[[Coronation of Charles V|Italienzug]]” – [[Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor|Charles V]], expedition to Bologna, final ”Italienzug”

* The [[Coronation of Charles V|Italienzug” – [[Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor|Charles V]], expedition to Bologna, final ”Italienzug”

==References==

==References==


Revision as of 23:21, 9 November 2025

Holy Roman Emperor’s coronation journey to Rome

Henry VII crossing the Alps on his Italienzug (1312). From the Codex Balduini Trevirensis (c.1340).

An Italienzug (also known as Romfahrt or Romzug in German, or as expeditio italica in Latin) was the expedition undertaken by an elected king of the Romans to be crowned by the pope as the Holy Roman emperor in the City of Rome.[1] Prior to the reforms of Frederick Barbarossa, the kings of the Romans struggled to muster an army for the expedition, for they needed the formal approval of the Reichstag. If such approval was granted, the king had permission to recruit knights for their military service in Italy for 410 days.

However, the nobility was generally disinterested and inclined to rather substitute a monetary payment for the service. Therefore, the small force tended to be composed of mercenaries and high ranking clergymen, reinforced by loyal Italian cities.[2] Occasionally, the substitution was not enough – Henry V ended up using his wife Matilda‘s dowry to fund his Italienzug.[3]

Following Barbarossa’s struggles against the Lombard League towards the end of the 12th century, the system was reformed by banning monetary substitution and requiring each prince to contribute a fixed number of troops to the cause.[2] These troops could be substituted by an amount of money, which was eventually known as the Roman Month.

Expeditions

References

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