The disastrous feast at Werla

Ekkehard of Meißen’s appropriation of the feast prepared for the sisters of the late emperor Otto III was a turning point in the succession contest to determine the next ruler of Germany in 1002. Ekkehard’s arrival at the feast has been construed as an insult to the Ottonian sisters, marking the poi...

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Main Author: Greer, S
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 2018
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author Greer, S
author_facet Greer, S
author_sort Greer, S
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description Ekkehard of Meißen’s appropriation of the feast prepared for the sisters of the late emperor Otto III was a turning point in the succession contest to determine the next ruler of Germany in 1002. Ekkehard’s arrival at the feast has been construed as an insult to the Ottonian sisters, marking the point at which he lost the succession race and paved the way for his own murder. However, there is no convincing explanation in current scholarship for why Ekkehard thought publicly insulting the family of the former emperor and breaking the regulated structure of Ottonian politics was a good move. This article sets Ekkehard’s actions at Werla into the broader context of Saxon politics by tracing the relationships between those present at the feast and the author of our account, Thietmar of Merseburg. In doing so, we can see that Ekkehard was not trying to offer an insult, but rather aggressively claim the support of one of the sisters by emphasizing their connections and mutual friends. By reassessing the disastrous feast at Werla, this article stresses the importance of taking into account the context in which demonstrative acts and disruptions of usual political conduct took place.
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spelling oxford-uuid:5d299b17-8e51-405d-8d58-3246009c7f8a2022-03-26T17:32:36ZThe disastrous feast at WerlaJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:5d299b17-8e51-405d-8d58-3246009c7f8aEnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordOxford University Press2018Greer, SEkkehard of Meißen’s appropriation of the feast prepared for the sisters of the late emperor Otto III was a turning point in the succession contest to determine the next ruler of Germany in 1002. Ekkehard’s arrival at the feast has been construed as an insult to the Ottonian sisters, marking the point at which he lost the succession race and paved the way for his own murder. However, there is no convincing explanation in current scholarship for why Ekkehard thought publicly insulting the family of the former emperor and breaking the regulated structure of Ottonian politics was a good move. This article sets Ekkehard’s actions at Werla into the broader context of Saxon politics by tracing the relationships between those present at the feast and the author of our account, Thietmar of Merseburg. In doing so, we can see that Ekkehard was not trying to offer an insult, but rather aggressively claim the support of one of the sisters by emphasizing their connections and mutual friends. By reassessing the disastrous feast at Werla, this article stresses the importance of taking into account the context in which demonstrative acts and disruptions of usual political conduct took place.
spellingShingle Greer, S
The disastrous feast at Werla
title The disastrous feast at Werla
title_full The disastrous feast at Werla
title_fullStr The disastrous feast at Werla
title_full_unstemmed The disastrous feast at Werla
title_short The disastrous feast at Werla
title_sort disastrous feast at werla
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