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6 - Capitalhood in the Visigothic Kingdom

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 February 2024

Damián Fernández
Affiliation:
Northern Illinois University
Molly Lester
Affiliation:
United States Naval Academy, Maryland
Jamie Wood
Affiliation:
University of Lincoln
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Summary

Abstract

Visigothic scholarship has traditionally seen in the choice of Toledo as ‘capital’ of the kingdom a feature of imitatio imperii. Such imitation of Rome or Constantinople would have coincided with changing ideas of capitalhood among Visigothic elites, who progressively abandoned the idea of a ‘head city’ as the seat of a king (sedes regia) and embraced the notion of a royal city (urbs regia)—that is, a city with its own intrinsic central status. This chapter challenges this interpretation in two ways. First, the idea of Toledo as urbs regia grew within Toledan church circles to affirm the city's primacy within the ecclesiastical province. Thus, strategic use rather than imitation provides a better framework of understanding. Second, it is very likely that this concept of Toledo was not universally accepted; in royal circles and other important cities, the sedes regia view probably prevailed.

Keywords: Toledo; capitals; metropolitan sees; Julian of Toledo; Constantinople

Introduction

‘The city of Toledo was the first one founded in Hispania and all the Spanish cities were subject to it.’ Thus begins the short story of Octavianus, King of Hispania who ruled from Toledo, and his enemy Septemsiderus, preserved in the tenth-century codex of Roda. Octavianus, the story continues, summoned Septemsiderus who, for an unexplained reason, refused to obey the king's order. Preparations for war ensued. The two characters marshalled their armies to face each other in battle, but, as the clash neared, Septemsiderus halted his troops, raised his prayers to God, and Octavianus's forces were miraculously destroyed. The victor settled in Lugo, and his seven children founded eponymous cities in Galicia, Leon, and northern Portugal, a geographical focus that probably betrays the origin of the anonymous author.

This story, as Ann Christys has pointed out, must be set against the background of the ambiguous status of Toledo among Christian thinkers in the centuries following the Arab conquest. Although later Latin chronicles and histories would emphasize the connection between the Visigothic kingdom of Toledo and the early medieval Christian kingdoms, this association was far from established before the tenth century, when the story of Octavianus and Septemsiderus was probably written.

Type
Chapter
Information
Rome and Byzantium in the Visigothic Kingdom
Beyond Imitatio Imperii
, pp. 151 - 178
Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Print publication year: 2023

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