ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1962, The Long-Haired Kings is split into two parts. The first is concerned with the history of France in the period of gestation, between the end of Roman imperial room in Gaul, and the emergence of medieval France in the tenth century. It is principally concerned with the Franks, their institutions, laws and writers. The second half acts as an introduction to the hitherto unpublished study of Frankish kingship and surveys Merovingian rule from its beginning in the Rhineland wastes to the metamorphosis as Carolingian rule. This book is a unique contribution to the study of medieval history and was one of the first books of its time to provide a unique study of European languages.

chapter Chapter One|24 pages

Frankish Gaul 1

chapter Chapter Two|24 pages

Gothia and Romania 1

chapter Chapter Four|24 pages

Fredegar and the History of France 1

chapter Chapter Five|26 pages

Archbishop Hincmar and the Authorship of Lex Salica 1

chapter Chapter Six|27 pages

The Bloodfeud of the Franks 1

chapter Chapter Seven|101 pages

The Long-haired Kings