1556

The abdication of Charles V puts an end to his dream of unifying Christendom

Throughout the Middle Ages, the Germanic Holy Roman Empire, which saw itself as the heir to the imperial crown of Charlemagne, sought in vain to restore this lost unity. The Empire exhausted itself in a long quarrel with the Papacy (the quarrel over investitures), which sought to assert the primacy of spiritual authority over temporal power. It was during this time that the great European kingdoms, particularly France, established their power. Despite this political fragmentation, Europe acquired a certain economic, cultural and above all religious unity.In 1519, Charles of Hapsburg, who had already inherited the crowns of Spain and Burgundy, was elected Holy Roman Emperor under the name of Charles V. He was convinced that he had been given a divine mission to reunite Christendom under the imperial banner, but his dream of a universal empire collided with the rival ambitions of the Kingdom of France under Francis I, the emergence of the Ottomans and above all the Reformation initiated by Luther, which was to shake the Christian world. Recognising the failure of his plans, Charles finally renounced all his crowns to end his life in the seclusion of a monastery.

evt-labdication-de-charles-quint-met-fin-son-reve-dunification-de-la-chretiente-1556