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Otto II, född 955 i Saxony, Tyskland, död 983-12-07
i Rom, Italien. Holy Roman Emperor.
Otto II (955 – December 7, 983), called the Red (Rufus), was Holy Roman Emperor from 973 until his death in 983. A member of
the Ottonian dynasty, Otto II was the youngest and sole surviving son of Otto the Great and Adelaide of Italy.
Otto II was made joint-ruler of Germany in 961, at an early age, and his father named him co-Emperor in 967 to secure his
succession to the throne. His father also arranged for Otto II to marry the Byzantine Princess Theophanu, who would be his wife
until his death. When his father died after a 37-year reign, the eighteen-year old Otto II became absolute ruler of the Holy Roman
Empire in a peaceful succession. Otto II spent his reign continuing his father's policy of strengthening Imperial rule in Germany
and extending the borders of the Empire deeper into southern Italy. Otto II also continued the work of Otto I in subordinating the
Catholic Church to Imperial control.
Early in his reign, Otto II defeated a major revolt against his rule from other members of the Ottonian dynasty who claimed the
throne for themselves. His victory allowed him to exclude the Bavarian line of Ottonians from the line of Imperial succession. This
strengthened his authority as Emperor and secured the succession of his own son to the Imperial throne.
With domestic affairs settled, Otto II would focus his attention from 980 onward to annexing the whole of Italy into the Empire.
His conquests brought him into conflict with the Byzantine Empire and with the Muslims of the Fatimid Caliphate, who both held
territories in southern Italy. After initial successes in unifying the southern Lombard principalities under his authority and in
conquering Byzantine-controlled territory, Otto II's campaigns in southern Italy ended in 982 following a disastrous defeat by the
Muslims. While he was preparing to counterattack Muslim forces, a major uprising by the Slavs broke out in 983, forcing the
Empire to abandon its major territorial holdings east of the Elbe river.
Otto II died suddenly in 983 at the age of 28 after a ten-year reign. He was succeeded as Emperor by his three-year old son Otto III,
plunging the Empire into a political crisis.
Birth and youth
Otto II was born in 955, the third son of the King of Germany Otto I and his second wife Adelaide of Italy. By 957, Otto II's older
brothers Henry (born 952) and Bruno (born 953) had died, as well as Otto I's son from his first wife Eadgyth, the Crown Prince
Liudolf, Duke of Swabia. With his older brothers dead, the two-year old Otto II's became the Kingdom's crown prince and Otto I's
heir apparent. Otto I entrusted his illegitimate son, Archbishop William of Mainz, with Otto II's literary and cultural education.
Margrave Odo, commander of the Eastern March, taught the young crown prince the art of war and the kingdom's legal customs.
Needing to put his affairs in order prior to his descent into Italy, Otto I summoned a Diet at Worms and had Otto II elected, at the
age of six, co-regent in May 961. Otto II was later crowned by his uncle Bruno the Great, Archbishop of Cologne, at Aachen
Cathedral on May 26, 961. While Otto I had secured succession of the throne, he had violated the Kingdom's unwritten law that
succession rights could only be granted to a child who has reached the age of majority. He was likely motivated by the high-risk
associated with his expedition into Italy to claim the Imperial title from the Pope. Otto I crossed the Alps into Italy, while Otto II
remained in Germany, and the two Archbishops, Bruno and William, were appointed as his regents. After three and a half year
absence in Italy, Otto I returned to Germany early in 965 as Holy Roman Emperor. In order to give the hope of dynastic continuity
after his death, Otto I again confirmed Otto II as his heir on February 2, 965, the third anniversary of Otto I's coronation as
Emperor.
Heir apparent
Though Otto I was crowned Emperor in 962 and returned to Germany in 965, the political situation in Italy remained unstable.
After almost two years in Germany, Otto I made a third expedition to Italy in 966. Bruno was again appointed regent over the
eleven-year old Otto II during Otto I's absence.
With his power over northern and central Italy secured, Otto I sought to clarify his relationship with the Byzantine Empire in the
East. The Byzantine Emperor objected to Otto's use of the title "Emperor". The situation between East and West was finally
resolved to share sovereignty over southern Italy. Otto I sought a marriage alliance between his Imperial house and the Eastern
Macedonian dynasty. A prerequisite for the marriage alliance was the coronation of Otto II as Co-Emperor. Otto I then sent word
for Otto II to join him in Italy. In October 967, father and son met in Verona and together marched through Ravenna to Rome. On
December 25, 967, Otto II was crowned Co-Emperor by Pope John XIII, securing Otto II's succession to the Imperial crown
following his father's death.
Otto II's coronation allowed marriage negotiations to begin with the East. Only in 972, six years later, under the new Byzantine
Emperor John I Tzimiskes, was a marriage and peace agreement concluded, however. Though Otto I preferred Byzantine Princess
Anna Porphyrogenita, daughter of former Byzantine Emperor Romanos II, as she was born in the purple, her age (then only five
years old) prevented serious consideration by the East. The choice of Emperor John I Tzimisces was his niece Theophanu, who was
the soldier-emperor's niece by marriage. On April 14, 972, the sixteen-year old Otto II was married to the twelve-year old Eastern
princess, and Theophanu was crowned empress by the Pope.
Even after his coronation, Otto II remained in the shadow of his overbearing father. Though the nominal co-ruler of the Empire, he
was denied any role in its administration. Unlike his earlier son Liudolf, whom Otto I named Duke of Swabia in 950, Otto II was
granted no area of responsibility. Otto II was confined primarily to northern Italy during his father's time south of the Alps. After
five years away, the Imperial family returned to Saxony in August 972.
On May 7, 973, Otto died of fever, and Otto II succeeded his father as sole Emperor without meeting any opposition. Otto II spent
his reign continuing his father's policy of strengthening Imperial rule in Germany and extending it deeper into Italy.
Reign as emperor
Coronation and domestic strife
When Otto the Great died, the smooth succession to the imperial throne of Otto II had long been guaranteed. Otto II had been king
of Germany for twelve years and Emperor for five at the time of Otto the Great's death. Unlike his father, Otto II did not have any
brothers to contest his claims to the throne. On May 8, the nobles of the Empire assembled before Otto II and, according to the
Saxon Chronicler Widukind of Corvey, "elected" Otto II as his father's successor. One of Otto II's first acts was to confirm the
rights and possessions of the Archbishop of Magdeburg. Although Otto II had succeeded peacefully to the throne, internal divisions
of power still remained unaddressed. During his first seven years as Emperor, he was constantly occupied with maintaining
Imperial power against internal rivals and external enemies. The domestic problems Otto the Great faced between 963 and 972 had
not been resolved by his death. The Saxon nobility continued to resist the Archdiocese of Magdeburg located along the Empire's
eastern border. Though established by Otto I, the exact details of the diocese's boundaries were left to Otto II and his aides. Otto II's
marriage to the Byzantine Princess Theophanu proved to be to his disadvantage because the Saxon nobles felt it distanced the
Emperor from their interests. Among Otto II's chief advisors, only the Saxon Bishop Dietrich I of Metz had close connections with
the old Saxon nobility. His other advisers lacked support from the Empire's various Dukes. The Archbishop of Mainz Willigis,
appointed in 975, who had been with Otto II's advisor since Otto the Great's second expedition into Italy in the 960s, had not been
born from a noble family. Hildebald of Worms, who had been appointed as Otto II's Chancellor in 977 and then as Bishop of
Worms in 979, was also not from a noble family. Otto the Great also failed to clarify affairs in Italy prior to his death. Otto died
soon after the appointment of Pope Benedict VI in 973. In 974 Benedict was imprisoned in the Castel Sant'Angelo, the stronghold
of the Crescentii family. When Otto II sent an imperial representative, Count Sicco, to secure his release, Crescentius I and
Cardinal-Deacon Franco Ferrucci, who would subsequently become Boniface VII, an antipope, had Benedict murdered while still
in prison.[4] Following his coronation, a rift developed between Otto II and his mother, the Dowager Empress Adelaide of Italy.
From the death of Otto the Great until Easter 974, Adelaide accompanied the Emperor at all times, traveling throughout the
Empire with him. However, Otto II's mother and his wife Theophano each distrusted the influence the other held over the
Emperor, causing friction within the Imperial household. A final meeting between Otto II and Adelaide was arranged shortly
before Pentecost in 978, but a peaceful outcome was not achieved, forcing Adelaide to retire to Burgundy and to the protection of
her brother King Conrad of Burgundy.
Conflict with Henry II
Otto II sought continued peace between himself and the descendants of his uncle Henry I, Duke of Bavaria. To ensure domestic
tranquillity, Otto II, on June 27, 973, granted his cousin, Henry II, Duke of Bavaria, control over the imperial castles in Bamberg
and Stegaurach. This was not enough for the young Bavarian Duke, who wished to extend his influence in the Duchy of Swabia as
his father had under Otto the Great. The death of Bishop Ulrich of Augsburg on July 4, 973, brought the conflict between the
cousins to a head. Without consulting Otto II, Henry II named his cousin Henry as the new Bishop of Augsburg. Augsburg was
located on the western side of the Swabian-Bavarian boarder, the territory of Henry II's brother-in-law Burchard III, Duke of
Swabia. Henry's actions in naming a bishop in a duchy not his own and without Imperial direction brought him into conflict with
both Otto II and Burchard III. Not desiring civil war, Otto II, on September 22, 973, invested Henry as bishop.
On November 12, 973, Burchard III died with no heir: his union to Hadwing, sister of Henry II, had produced no children. With no
clear successor, Henry II demanded that Otto II name him as the new Duke of Swabia. The Emperor sensed the far-reaching
ambitions of his cousin and denied his request. Instead, Otto II named as Duke his nephew Otto, son of his half-brother Liudolf,
Duke of Swabia. Prior to his appointment, Otto had been a long-time opponent of Henry II's expanding influence in Swabia. By
naming a descendant of his half-brother instead of his cousin, Otto II reinforced his father's policy of appointing close family
members to key posts throughout the Empire. This appointment elevated the descendants of Otto the Great above those of Henry I
in the selection process, further dividing Otto II and Henry II.
The appointment of Otto as Duke of Swabia was taken by Henry II as an assault on his claim to the Imperial throne and a slight to
his honor.[3] He and his advisor, Bishop Abraham of Freising, conspired with the Duke of Poland Mieszko I and the Duke of
Bohemia Boleslaus II against Otto II in 974. While the historical sources do not describe the goals of the conspirators, Henry II
likely intended to restore his honor and to ensure his position as the second most influential man in the Empire. Upon hearing of
the conspiracy, Poppo, the Bishop of Würzburg, demanded Henry II and his followers to submit to Otto II or face
excommunication. Otto the Great's efforts to consolidate the Church under Imperial control had made this type of action normal.
Henry II and his followers complied and submitted to Otto II before armed conflict broke out. Otto II, however, severely punished
this conspirators: Henry II was imprisoned at Ingelheim and Bishop Abraham at Corvey.
By 976, Henry II returned to Bavaria. Whether Otto II released him from prison or if he escape is not known for certain. Upon his
return, Henry came into open rebellion against Otto II, claiming rulership over the Empire for himself. Henry II mobilized the
Saxon nobility against Otto II. In particular, Henry II had strong connections to Margrave Gunther of Merseburg, Count Egbert the
One-Eyed, and Dietrich I of Wettin, who were all displeased with Otto II's lack of adherence to Saxon tradition. In response to the
rebellion, Otto II stripped Henry II of his Duchy and had him excommunicated. Otto II then marched his army south to Bavaria
and laid siege to Regensburg, Henry II's stronghold. Otto II's army eventually broke through the city's defenses, forcing Henry II to
flee to Bohemia.
With Henry II deposed, in July 976 Otto II issued far-reaching edicts on the reorganization of the southern German duchies. Otto II
reduced the Duchy of Bavaria in territorial size by almost a third. From the confiscated Bavarian territory, Otto II established the
Duchy of Carinthia in southern Germany. By depriving Bavaria of the March of Verona, Otto II considerably reduced the influence
of the Bavarian Dukes in northern Italy and in general Imperial policy regarding Italy. Otto II gave the newly diminished Duchy of
Bavaria to his relative Otto, the Duke of Swabia, and appointed Henry III, son of the former Bavarian Duke Berthold, as Duke of
Carinthia. These appointments continued his policy of appointing of individuals who had no political links to Otto the Great,
including those who had even rebelled against him.
With matters in southern Germany settled, Otto II turned his attention to defeating and capturing Henry II. After a failed first
invasion into Bohemia, Otto II marched to Bohemia a second time in August 977. While in Bohemia, a revolt broke out in Bavaria.
Henry I, Bishop of Augsburg, and the newly appointed Carinthian Duke Henry III joined Henry II in rebellion, forcing Otto II to
return from Bohemia. The Emperor, aided by the Duke of Swabia and Bavaria, met the rebels at Passau and, after a long siege,
forced them into submission. Otto II the brought the rebels before the Imperial Diet in Quedlinburg on March 31, 978. Boleslaus II
was treated with honors and swore loyalty to Otto II. Mieszko I of Poland also submitted to Otto II's overlordship.[7] Henry II,
however, was not so fortunate: Otto II imprisoned him under the custody of the Bishop of Utrecht where he would remain until
Otto II's death in 983.
While Otto the Great had pardoned rebellious family members for their crimes, Otto II followed a different policy. Instead, Otto II
hoped to subordinate the Bavarian line of Ottonians to his Imperial authority. Henry II's four-year old son, also named Henry, was
sent to Hildesheim to study for an ecclesiastical career. It appears Otto II intended to end the Bavarian Ottonians' secular control of
Bavaria. Under a new Duke, Bavaria would remain a remote area of the Empire. Otto II would only visit the Duchy three times
during his reign, in all cases accompanied by the military.
War with Denmark
In 950, Otto the Great had subdued the Kingdom of Denmark and forced the Danish King Gorm the Old to accept him as his
overlord. Otto the Great also forced the king and his heir apparent Harald Bluetooth to convert to Christianity. Under the reign of
Otto the Great, Denmark fulfilled all its obligations and regularly paid tribute to the Germans. When Harald became king in 958,
he expanded the control of his kingdom into Norway, becoming king there in 970. With his newly obtained power, the young ruler
was no longer willing to accept German supremacy over his kingdom. In summer 974, Harald rebelled against Otto II.[6] With the
support of Norwegian troops, Harald was able to cross the Danish border into Germany, defeating the German forces stationed in
the north. Otto II attacked Harald's forces, but the joint Danish-Norwegian army repelled the German army. In autumn, however,
when the Norwegian allies sailed north to return to Norway, Otto II was able to counter Harald's advances at the Danevirke. As a
result of this victory, Otto II officially annexed Denmark into the Empire and exiled Harald to Norway.
War against France
Before Henry II's civil war in southern Germany erupted, Otto II was faced with disputes in western Germany. The brothers
Reginar IV, Count of Mons, and Lambert I, Count of Louvain, demanded that the Emperor restore their confiscated inheritance in
the Duchy of Lorraine.[3] Years earlier in 958, Otto the Great banished their father Reginar III, Count of Hainaut, to Bohemia
after he attempted a failed revolt. In 973, Otto II granted their request. With both Otto the Great and Count Reginar III dead, it
appears Otto II desired a fresh start with the two sons. Lambert I and Reginar IV returned to Lorraine in 973 to reclaim their land
by force. After an initial failure, the brother attempted again in 976, this time with the support of King Lothar of France. To help
calm the situation in the west, Otto II appointed Charles, his cousin and brother of Lothar, as Duke of Lower Lorraine. The same
year, Otto II appointed Egbert as his Imperial Chancellor.
Otto II's support of Charles, however, infuriated the French king, who claimed the Duchy as his own territory. Charles and Lothair
were also feuding, with Charles being exiled from France over infidelity allegation concerning Lothair's wife. Charles fled to Otto
II's court and paid homage to Otto II. In return, Otto II appointed Charles as Duke and promised to support him in claiming the
French throne. Soon after Otto II crushed Henry II's revolt in the south, the Emperor and his wife Theophanu returned to the old
capital of Aachen in Lorraine. With the Imperial family near the French border, Lothair invaded Lorraine and marched on
Aachen. With the French army in sight, Otto II and Theophano fled to Cologne and then to the Duchy of Saxony. Upon hearing of
the French invasion, Otto II’s mother Adelaide of Italy, who was Lothair's mother-in-law, sided with Lothair over his own son and
moved to the court of her brother King Conrad at Bourgogne. After occupying Aachen for five days, Lothair returned to France
after symbolically disgracing the city.
Otto II convened the Imperial Diet in mid-July at Dortmund. There, Otto II declared war against France and prepared his army to
march west. In September 978, Otto II retaliated against Lothair by invading France with the aid of Charles.[9] He met with little
resistance on French territory, devastating the land around Rheims, Soissons, and Laon. Otto II then had Charles crowned as King
of France by Theodoric I, Bishop of Metz. Lothair then fled to the French capital of Paris and was there besieged by Otto II and
Charles. Sickness among his troops brought on by winter and a French relief army under Hugh Capet forced Otto II and Charles to
lift the siege on November 30, and to return to Germany. On the journey back to Germany, Otto's rearguard was attacked and
destroyed by French forces, with their supplies being captured.[8] Despite neither side obtaining a clear victory, Otto II felt his
honor was sufficiently restored and opened peace negotiations with the French King. Peace was finally concluded between Otto II
and Lothair in 980: in return for renouncing his claims on Lorraine, Otto II would recognize Lothair's son Louis V as the rightful
heir to the French throne.
With peace concluded, Otto II returned to Aachen to celebrate Pentecost, and then moved towards Nijmegen. During the journey,
in late June or early July 980, the Empress Theophanu gave birth to the Imperial couple's their only son: Otto III.
Reign in Italy
Papal politics
With his rule north of the Alps secured and with the birth of his heir, Otto II shifted his focus to Italy. The situation south of the
Alps was chaotic. Pope Benedict VI, who had been appointed by Otto I, had been imprisoned by the Romans in Castel
Sant'Angelo. When Otto II sent an imperial representative, Count Sicco, to secure his release, Crescentius I and Cardinal Franco
Ferrucci had Benedict VI murdered while still in prison in 974. Cardinal Franco Ferrucci then crowned himself as Benedict VI's
successor, becoming Antipope Boniface VII. A popular revolt, however, forced Boniface VII to flee to Constantinople, taking a
vast treasure with him. In October 974, under the direction of Count Sicco, the bishop of Sutri was elected Pope as Pope Benedict
VII. Boniface VII was then summarily excommunicated for his unsuccessful attempt to take the papacy.
In 979 Benedict VII's position as ruler of Rome was threatened, forcing the Pope to withdraw from and seek the aid of the
Emperor. Accepting the Pope's call for aid, Otto II and Theophano, along with their infant son Otto III, prepared for a march south
across the Alps. Otto II appointed Willigis, the Archbishop of Mainz, to serve as his regent over Germany.
In October 980 the Imperial court arrived in Chiavenna and received its first Italian delegations. Otto II arrives in Italy at Pavia on
December 5, 980. In Pavia, Otto II and his mother, the dowager empress Adelaide of Italy, were reconciled after years of being
apart. Before the imperial family celebrated Christmas together in Ravenna, Otto II received the Iron Crown of Lombardy as the
King of Italy. Following the New Year, Otto II led his Imperial court to Rome, reaching the city on February 9, 981, where the
Emperor restored Pope Benedict VII to his papal throne without difficulty. In Rome, Otto II held a magnificent court ceremony to
mark Easter. The imperial family was joined by Otto II's sister Matilda, Abbess of Quedlinburg, King Conrad of Burgundy and his
wife Matilda of France, Duke Hugh Capet of France, Duke Otto of Swabia and Bavaria, and other high secular and religious
officials from Germany, Italy and France.
Otto II proceeded to hold court in Rome, making the city his Imperial capital, where he received princes and nobles from all parts
of western Europe.
Venetian affairs
The relationship between the Empire and the Republic of Venice was readdressed during Otto II's reign. In 966, The Doge of
Venice Peitro IV married a relative of Otto I. The marriage brought the Empire and Venice into close relationship, with Otto I, in
967, granting a series of commercial agreements to Venice in general and to Pietro IV's family in particular. These agreements
strengthened Venice's tie to the Western Empire, which greatly angered the Byzantine Emperor John I Tzimisces as Venice
controlled all sea trade between Western Europe and the Byzantine Levant in the East.
Otto I's military protection of Pietro IV ensured his hold over power in Venice despite his autocratic tendencies over the republican
city. In 973, however, Otto I died. With Otto II busy suppressing revolts in Germany, the Venetians opposed to Pietro IV found
their opportunity to depose him. Imprisoning the Doge within his palace, the Venetians nobles set fire to the building. However,
the fire soon spread to Saint Mark's Basilica, resulting in the greater part of the city being burnt. The Doge and his son, also named
Pietro, were killed in the blaze, but their bodies were later recovered and respectfully buried. Pietro IV's younger son, Vitale
Candiano, survived however, and fled to Otto II's court in Saxony with plans to depose the new pro-Byzantine Doge, Pietro I
Orseolo.
Pietro I's conciliating policy towards the Empire was ineffective. After having ruled Venice for four years, Pietro I voluntarily
abdicated to become a monk, allowing the pro-Ottonian Vitale to return to Venice as Doge in 977, restoring the city's friendly
relationship with the Empire. However, Vitale's reign was short (less than two years) and he too voluntarily abdicated to become a
monk. With the position vacant, the pro-Byzantine Tribuno Memmo became the new Doge in 979. With the change in leadership,
Otto II was reluctant to renew the city's commercial agreements which his father had previously granted to the city. It was only
after the intervention of Otto II's mother, the dowager empress Adelaide of Italy, did the Emperor renew the agreements.
Violence erupted in Venice during 980 when tensions between pro-Ottonian Coloprini family and the pro-Byzantine Morosini
family. The Coloprini pleaded with the Emperor for support. Seeing an opportunity to fully incorporate Venice into the Empire,
Otto II agreed. Upon arriving in Italy in 981, Otto II immediately imposed a trade embargo against the island republic. While the
initial embargo showed little effect on Venice, Otto II imposed a second embargo in 983 which dealt considerable damage to the
Venetian economy. The effects were disastrous enough to cause the ruling Venetian families to surrender to Otto II, but Otto II's
untimely death that year prevented such action.
Religious policy
Otto II followed the policy of his father in expanding the importance of the Church in his Empire, in particular the importance of
monasticism and monasteries. The Church and its organs served as supporting and stabilizing factor in the Empire's structure. To
fulfill these tasks, Otto II strengthened the legal integrity and economic independence of the bishops from the secular nobility. The
Ottonians had particular religious interest in Memleben as both Otto II's father Otto I and grandfather Henry I had died there. Otto
II and his wife Theophanu enhanced the spiritual importance of the city by establishing a Benedictine Imperial abbey there: the
Memleben Abbey. Within a short time, the Memleben Abbey had become one of the richest and most influential of the Imperial
abbeys. These measures and the unusual size of the abbey perhaps suggest that Memleben may have been intended as an Imperial
Mausoleum for the Ottonians.
Following the suppression of Henry II's rebellion, Otto II used the Empire's monasteries as the location for the treason trials. While
his father had founded only one monastery (Otto I later replaced the abbey with the Cathedral of Magdeburg) during his 37 years
of reign. Otto II, however, established at least four monasteries: Memleben, Tegernsee, Bergen, and Arneburg. Monasticism
became a key part of Otto II's Imperial policy, entrusting the Abbots with key political functions.
Otto II employed monks among his top political advisers, including Ekkehard I and Majolus of Cluny. One of the most important
such monks was John Philagathus (the future Antipope John XVI). Of Greek descent, John was the personal chaplain of Otto II's
wife Theophanu, accompanying her when she traveled from Constantinople to marry Otto II.[15] Otto II appointed him as his
Imperial Chancellor from 980 to 982, as well as the Abbot of the Nonantola Abbey. Following Otto II's death in 983, Theophanu,
as her son Otto III's regent, would name John as Otto III's tutor. She would later appoint John as the bishop of Piacenza, and would
send him to Constantinople to arrange for a marriage between Otto III and a Byzantine princess.
Southern expansion
In regard to his Italian policy, Otto II went beyond the goals of his father. Not satisfied with the territorial gains made under Otto I,
Otto II wanted more. His policy was based not only on securing his power in Rome, or to cooperate with the Papacy, but also to
gain absolute dominion over the whole of Italy. Influenced by his wife, who was hostile to the return of the Macedonian Dynasty in
the shape of Byzantine Emperor Basil II after the assassination of John I Tzimisces, Otto II was persuaded to annex the Byzantine
controlled southern Italy.[16] However, this policy necessarily meant war with not only the Byzantine Empire but the Muslim
Fatimid Caliphate as well, who claimed southern Italy as within their sphere influence.
The Ottonians' chief lieutenant in central and southern Italy had long been the Lombard leader Pandulf Ironhead. Originally
appointed by Otto I as Prince of Benevento and Capua in 961, Pandulf waged war against the Byzantines and expanded Ottonian
control to include the Duchy of Spoleto in 967. Under Otto II, Pandulf added the Principality of Salerno in 978 to the Empire. His
campaigns under Otto I and Otto II incorporated all three of the southern Lombard principalities - Benevento, Capua, and Salerno
- into the Holy Roman Empire. As vassal of Otto II, Pandulf ruled a large bloc of territories that stretched as far north as Tuscany
and as far south as the Gulf of Taranto.
Pandulf's death in 981 deprived Otto II of one of his primary lieutenants. Pandulf's lands were partitioned among his sons, though
further quarrels between the local Lombard princes soon followed. Pandulf's older son Landulf IV received Capua and Benevento
while his younger son Pandulf II received Salerno. Upon hearing of Pandulf's death, Otto II, ruling from Rome, traveled south to
install Thrasimund IV as Duke of Spoleto. Then, Pandulf's nephew Pandulf II was given Benevento when Otto II partitioned
Landulf IV's territory, with Landulf IV keeping Capua. Finally, Duke Manso I of Amalfi deposed Pandulf II of his rule in Salerno
in 982.
By 982 the entire area once ruled by Pandulf had collapsed, weakening Otto II's position against the Byzantines. The Byzantines
still claimed sovereignty over the Lombard principalities and the lack of singular leader to prevent their advances into Lombard
territory allowed the Byzantines to make inroads further north. Otto II attempted on several occasions to reunify the Lombard
principalities politically and ecclesiastically into his Empire after Pandulf's death. Though he unsuccessfully besieged Manso I in
Salerno, Otto II ultimately obtained the recognition of his authority from all the Lombard principalities. With his authority
reestablished over the Lombard princes, Otto II turned his attention towards the threat from Muslim Sicily. Since 960s the island
had been under Muslim rule as the Emirate of Sicily, a state of the Fatimid Caliphate. The ruling Kalbid dynasty had conducted
raids against Imperial territories in southern Italy. The death of Pandulf in 981 allowed the Sicilian Emir Abu al-Qasim to increase
his raids, hitting targets in Apulia and Calabria. As early as 980 Otto II demanded a fleet from the city of Pisa to help him carry
out his war in southern Italy,[18] and in September 981 he marched into southern Italy. Needing allies in his campaign against the
Muslims and the Byzantine Empire, Otto II reconciled with Amalfian Duke Manso I, granting Imperial recognition of his rule over
Salerno.
Otto II's troops marched on Byzantine-controlled Apulia in January 982 with the purpose of annexing the territory into his Empire.
Otto II's march caused the Byzantine Empire to seek an alliance with Muslim Sicily in order to hold onto their southern Italian
possessions.[9] The Emperor's army besieged and captured the Byzantine city of Taranto, the administrative center of Apulia, in
March 982. After celebrating Easter in Taranto, Otto II moved his army westward, defeating a Muslim army in early July. Emir
Abu al-Qasim, who had declared a Holy War (jihad) against the Empire, retreated when he noticed the unexpected strength of Otto
II's troops when the Emperor was not far from Rossano Calabro. Informed of the Muslim retreat, Otto II left his wife Theophanu
and young son Otto III (along with the Imperial treasury) in the city and marched his army to pursue the Muslim force.
Unable to flee back to his stronghold in Sicily due an Imperial naval blockade, al-Qasim faced the Imperial army in a pitched battle
south of Crotone at Cape Colonna on July 14, 982. After a violent clash, a corps of Otto II's heavy cavalry destroyed the Muslim
center and pushed towards al-Qasim's guards, with the Emir killed during the charge. Despite the Emir's death, the Muslim troops
did not flee the battlefield. The Muslims regrouped and managed to surround the Imperial soldiers, slaughtering many of them and
inflicting a severe defeat upon the Emperor. According to the historian Muslim Ibn al-Athir, Imperial casualties numbered around
4,000. The Lombard Princes Landulf IV of Benevento and Pandulf II of Salerno, German Bishop Henry I of Augsburg, German
Margrave Gunther of Merseburg, the Abbot of Fulda, and numerous other Imperial officials were among the battle's casualties.
The Imperial defeat shocked the political makeup of Southern Italy. With two Lombard princes dead, the Principalities of Capua
and the Benevento passed to younger branches of the Landulfid family. Though the Muslim troops were forced to retreat to Sicily
after their victory, the Muslims remained a presence in southern Italy, harassing the Byzantines and Lombards. The Ottonian
defeat, the worst in the history of the Empire at the time, greatly weakened Imperial power in southern Italy. The Byzantines joined
forces with the Muslims and regained possession of Apulia from Ottonian forces.
Succession issues
The defeat at Stilo forced Otto II to flee north to Rome. He then held an Imperial Diet at Verona on Pentecost, 983.[20] He sent his
nephew Otto I, Duke of Swabia and Bavaria, back to Germany with the news of the defeat and to call the German nobles to the
assembly, but he died en route on November 1, 982, in Lucca. News of the battle did cross the Alps, however, reaching as far as
Wessex in Britain, signifying the magnitude of the defeat. Duke Bernard I of Saxony was heading south for the assembly when
Danish Viking raids forced him to return to face the threat.
At the assembly, Otto II appointed Conrad (a distant relative of Otto II) and Henry III as the new Dukes of Swabia and Bavaria
respectively. Henry III had previously been exiled by Otto II following his defeat as part of a two-year revolt against Otto II's rule.
The defeat at Stilo cost the Empire many nobles, forcing Otto II to lift the banishment of Henry III in order to stabilize domestic
affairs in Germany while he campaigned against the Muslim and Byzantines in southern Italy. Also, the appointment of Conrad I
allowed the House of the Conradines to return to power in Swabia for the first time since Emperor Otto I in 948. Otto II and the
assembled nobles agreed on a strategy of naval blockade and economic warfare until reinforcement from Germany could arrive.
Otto II then prepared for a new campaign against the Muslims[16] and obtained a settlement with the Republic of Venice, whose
assistance he needed following the destruction of his army at Stilo. However, the death of Otto II the next year and the resulting
civil war prevented the Empire from appropriately responding to the defeat.
The most important action taken by Otto II at the assembly, however, was to secure the "election" of his son Otto III, who was then
only three years old, as King of Germany and heir apparent to the Imperial throne. Otto III thus became the only German king
elected south of the Alps. The exact reason for this unusual procedure has been lost to history. It is possible that the conditions in
southern Italy following the defeat required Otto II to act quickly in designating an Imperial heir to ensure connivance in the
Empire's future. It is also conceivable, however, that holding the election in Italy was a deliberate choice on the part of Otto II in
order to demonstrate that Italy was an equal part of the Empire on the same level as Germany. His election secured, Otto III and
his mother, the Empress Theophanu, traveled north across the Alps heading for Aachen, the traditional coronation site for the
Ottonians, in order for Otto III to be officially crowned as king. Otto II stayed in Italy to further address his military campaigns.
Great Slav uprising
The Northern March (outlined in red) between the Billung March in the north and the Saxon Eastern March (March of Lusatia) in
the south. Both the Billung March and the North March were lost following the Great Slav Rising.
Around the year 982, Imperial authority in Slavic territory extended as far east as the Lusatian Neisse River and as far south as the
Ore Mountains. Following the defeat of Otto II at Stilo in 983, the Lutici Federation of Polabian Slavs revolted against their
German overlords, sparking a great revolt known as the Great Slav Rising (Slawenaufstand). The Polabian Slavs destroyed the
bishoprics of Havelberg and Brandenburg. According the German chronicler Bishop Thietmar of Merseburg, the decades-long,
forced Germanization and Christianization of the Slavs associated with these two churches was the reason for their destruction.
Thietmar blames the uprising on maltreatment of the Slavs by the Germans: "Warriors, who used to be our servants, now free as a
consequence of our injustices." In the Obotrite territories along the Elbe River, the Luticians initiated a revolt aimed at the
abolition of feudal rule and Christianity, drawing upon considerable support by the Obodrite populace and their leader Mstivoj. In
part, the Obrodite revolt was successful: The princely family, though in part remaining Christian, dissolved Christian institutions.
Soldiers from the Northern March, the March of Meissen, the March of Lusatia, as well as from the Bishop of Halberstadt and the
Archbishop of Magdeburg, joined forces to defeat the Slavs near Stendal. Nevertheless, the Empire was forced to withdraw to the
western banks of the Elbe river. The successes of the Empire's Christianization policy towards the Slavs were nullified, and
political control over the Billung March and the Northern March (territories east of the Elbe) was lost. In the decade since his
death, Otto I's life work of converting the Slavs was undone. The Slavic territories east of the Elbe would remain pagan for over a
century before further missionary work resumed: it would not be until the 12th century that the churches of Havelberg and
Brandenburg would be reestablished.
The Danes took advantage of the Slavic revolt and invaded the March of Schleswig along the Empire's northern border while the
Sorb Slavs invaded and conquered the March of Zeitz from Saxon control.
Sudden death and political turmoil
In July 983, Pope Benedict VII, a longtime Ottonian supporter, died of natural causes after having reigned for almost ten years.
Otto II returned to Rome in September to name a new Pope, selecting the Bishop of Pavia Pietro Canepanova (who reigned as Pope
John XIV) in November or early December. While Otto II was in Rome overseeing the election of a new pope, a malaria outbreak
in central Italy prevented the resumption of military activity in southern Italy. The outbreak ultimately led to the death of the
Emperor himself: he died in his palace in Rome at the age of 28 on December 7, 983, after having reigned for just over a
decade.[16] Otto II's money and possessions were divided among the Catholic Church, the poor of the Empire, his mother Adelaide
and sister Matilda, and those nobles loyal to him. Otto II was then buried in the atrium of St. Peter's Basilica, becoming the only
German ruler to be buried in a foreign country instead of in Germany.
Otto II's three-year-old son Otto III was crowned as King of Germany in Aachen on Christmas Day in 983, three weeks after his
father's death. Otto III was crowned by Willigis, the Archbishop of Mainz, and John, the Archbishop of Ravenna.[28] News of Otto
II's death first reached Germany after Otto III's coronation. The unresolved problems in southern Italy and the Slavic uprising on
the Empire's eastern border made the Empire's political situation extremely unstable. The arrival of a minor on the Imperial throne
threw te Empire into confusion, allowing Otto III's mother, the Byzantine Princess Theophanu, to reign as his regent.
In 976, Otto II had deposed Henry II as Duke of Bavaria and imprisoned him. In early 984, Henry II escaped from his
imprisonment by the Bishop of Utrecht. Free from his confinement, he seized the infant Otto III and, as a member of the ruling
Ottonian dynasty, claimed the regency of the Empire for himself. Henry II eventually went so far as to claim the German throne
outright, obtaining the allegiance of Mieszko I of Poland and Boleslaus II, Duke of Bohemia. Henry II's claims were supported by
Archbishop Egbert of Trier, Archbishop Gisilher of Magdeburg, and Bishop Dietrich I of Metz.[30] Otto III's right to the throne,
however, was supported by Archbishop Willigis of Mainz and the Dukes of Saxony, Bavaria, and Swabia.[29] The threat of war
from Willigis and Conrad I, Duke of Swabia forced Henry II to relinquish Otto III on June 29, 984 and to respect the regency of
Theophanu.
The early death of Otto II and the ensuing events proved to be a serious test for Empire. Despite having a child under the regency
of his mother as a ruler, the structure established by Emperor Otto the Great remained strong as most of the Empire's most
powerful officials stayed loyal to the Imperial system.
Character
Otto was a man of small stature, by nature brave and impulsive, and by training an accomplished knight. He was generous to the
church and aided the spread of Christianity in many ways. According to one of the chroniclers of the time, he was given the epithet
of the "Red" when in 981 he invited the most troublesome of the Roman families to a banquet, and proceeded to butcher them at
dinner.[10] More sympathetic chroniclers said that it was due to his reddish complexion. Family and children[edit]
Ottonian dynasty
Otto II was a member of the Ottonian dynasty of rulers of Germany (and later the Holy Roman Empire) from 919 to 1024. In
relation to the other members of his dynasty, Otto II was the grandson of Henry I, son of Otto I, father of Otto III, and a first-cousin
once removed to Henry II.
Otto II had only one known wife. On April 14, 972, Otto II married Theophanu, a Byzantine princess of the Phokas family who
was the cousin of reigning Byzantine Emperor John I Tzimiskes. The two had at least five children:
Sophie I, Abbess of Gandersheim and Essen, born 975, died 1039.
Adelheid I, Abbess of Quedlinburg and Gandersheim, born November or December 977, died 1040.
Matilda, born 979, died 1025; who married Ezzo, count palatine of Lotharingia
Otto III, Holy Roman Emperor, born June or July 980
A daughter, a twin to Otto, who died before October 8, 980
Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Otto_II,_Holy_Roman_Emperor
Links:
The Peerage
Geneall
Wikipedia
Holy Roman Emperor Reign 25. December 967 – 7. December 983
King of Germany(formally King of the Franks) Reign 26. May 961– 7.December 983
King of Italy(formally King of the Lombards) Reign 980-7. December 983
Predecessor: Otto I Successor: Otto III
Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire.
Leo: The Normans in Sicily , Norwich, John Julius, Reference: Biographical details.
Leo: Europäische Stammtafeln, J.A. Stargardt Verlag, Marburg, Schwennicke, Detlev (Ed.), Reference: 1.1 10.
Leo: Europäische Stammtafeln, Band I, Frank Baron Freytag von Loringhoven, 1975, Isenburg, W. K. Prinz von, Reference: Page
3.
Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire.
Leo: The Normans in Sicily , Norwich, John Julius, Reference: Biographical details.
Leo: Europäische Stammtafeln, Band I, Frank Baron Freytag von Loringhoven, 1975, Isenburg, W. K. Prinz von, Reference: Page
3.
See Wikipedia for furthur info.
Otto II (955 – December 7, 983, Rome), called the Red, was the third ruler of the Saxon or Ottonian dynasty, the son of Otto the
Great and Adelaide of Italy.
Education, first years of reign
He received a good education under the care of his uncle, Bruno, archbishop of Cologne, and his illegitimate half-brother, William,
archbishop of Mainz. At first only co-reigning with his father, he was chosen German king at Worms in 961, crowned at Aachen
Cathedral on May 26, 961, and on December 25, 967 was crowned joint emperor at Rome by Pope John XIII.
He married Theophanu, niece of the Eastern Roman Emperor John I Tzimisces, on April 14, 972. After participating in his father's
campaigns in Italy, he returned to Germany and became sole emperor on the death of his father in May 973, without meeting any
opposition.
Otto spent his reign continuing his father's policy of strengthening imperial rule in Germany and extending it deeper into Italy.
After suppressing a rising in Lorraine, difficulties arose in southern Germany, probably owing to Otto's refusal to grant the duchy
of Swabia to Henry II of Bavaria. In 974 Henry's mother, Judith, set up a conspiracy against the emperor, which included Henry,
Bishop Abraham of Freising, the dukes of Bohemia and Poland, and several members of the clergy and the nobility who were
discontented by the previous emperor's policies. The plan was discovered and easily suppressed, however. In the same year, Otto's
forces successfully opposed an attempt by Harald I of Denmark to throw off the German yoke; however, his expedition against the
Bohemians in 975 was a partial failure owing to the outbreak of further trouble in Bavaria. The following year he restored order for
the second time in Lorraine and forced Henry II to flee from Regensburg to Bohemia, Bavaria being assigned to his relative Otto of
Bavaria. In 977 the king made another expedition into Bohemia, where King Boleslaus II promised to return to his earlier
allegiance. Also Mieszko I of Poland submitted. (See also War of the Three Henries).
Otto II and Theophano: Byzantine ivory plaque (Musée de Cluny)
After Otto had crushed an attempt by Henry to regain Bavaria, King Lothair of France invaded Lorraine with an army of 20,000
and occupied the capital Aachen for five days. Otto retired first to Cologne and then to Saxony. His mother, who was of French
origin, sided with Lothair and moved to Bourgogne. In September 978, having mustered 30,000 men, Otto retaliated by invading
France. He met with little resistance, but sickness among his troops compelled him to raise the siege of Paris, and on the return
journey the rearguard of his army was destroyed and the baggage seized by the French. An expedition against the Poles was
followed by peace with France: Lothair renounced his claim on Lorraine (980), and in exchange Otto recognized the rights of
Lothair's son Louis.
[edit] Italy
Otto therefore felt himself free to travel to Italy. The government of Germany was left to arch-chancellor Willigis and to duke
Bernard I of Saxony. He was accompanied by his wife, his son, Otto of Bavaria, the bishops of Worms, Metz and Merseburg and
numerous other counts and barons. Crossing the Alps in what is today Switzerland, he reconciled with his mother at Pavia and
then celebrated the Christmas of 980 in Ravenna.
Pope Benedict VI, elected by his father, had been imprisoned by the Romans in Castel Sant'Angelo, where he had died in 974. His
successor Boniface VII had fled to Constantinople and Benedict VII, former bishop of Sutri, was now pope. Preceded by Benedict,
Otto ceremoniously entered Rome on Easter day of 981.
Otto held in the city a splendid court, attended by princes and nobles from all parts of western Europe. He was next required to
punish inroads of the Saracens on the Italian mainland and, most of all, the aggressive policy of the Sicilian emir Abu al-Qasim,
whose fleet was harassing Apulia and whose troops had invaded Calabria. In September 981 Otto marched into southern Italy. He
was first entangled in the quarrels between the local Lombard princes who had divided the area after Pandulf Ironhead's death.
Otto unsuccessfully besieged Manso I of Amalfi in Salerno, but in the end obtained the recognition of his authority from all the
Lombard principalities. In January 982 the German troops marched towards the Byzantine Apulia to annex this region as well to
the Western Empire.
When Otto moved from Taranto, he met with a severe defeat near Stilo in July 982 (in which, among the others, al-Qasim was
killed). Without revealing his identity, the emperor escaped on a Greek vessel to Rossano. He returned to Rome on November 12,
982.
At a diet held at Verona in June 983, largely attended by German and Italian princes, he had Otto III confirmed as king of
Germany and prepared a new campaign against the Saracens. He also obtained a settlement with the Republic of Venice, whose
help was much needed after the defeat of Stilo. Proceeding to Rome, Otto secured the election of Peter of Pavia as Pope John XIV.
Just as the news reached him of a general rising of the Slav tribes on the eastern frontier of Germany, he died in his palace in
Rome on December 7, 983. He was survived by the future emperor Otto III and three daughters. He was buried in the atrium of St.
Peter's Basilica, and when the church was rebuilt his remains were removed to the crypt, where his tomb can still be seen.
Otto, who is sometimes called the "Red", was a man of small stature, by nature brave and impulsive, and by training an
accomplished knight. He was generous to the church and aided the spread of Christianity in many ways.
Marriage and issue
On April 14, 972, Otto II married Theophanu. They had the following children:
* Sophie I, Abbess of Gandersheim and Essen, born 975, died 1039.
* Adelheid I, Abbess of Quedlinburg and Gandersheim, born November or December 977, died 1040.
* Matilda, born 979, died 1025; who married Ezzo, count palatine of Lotharingia
* Otto III, Holy Roman Emperor, born June or July 980
* A daughter, a twin to Otto, who died before October 8, 980
BIOGRAPHY: b. 955
d. Dec. 7, 983, Rome
German king from 961 and Holy Roman emperor from 967, sole ruler from 973, son of Otto I and his second wife, Adelaide.
Otto continued his father's policies of promoting a strong monarchy in Germany and of extending the influence of his house in
Italy. In 961 he was crowned co-regent king of Italy and Germany with his father and was made co-regent emperor in 967. On
April 14, 972, he married the Byzantine princess Theophano. At his father's death in 973 he was accepted without opposition as
successor, although revolts in the duchy of Bavaria and in Lorraine occupied the early years of his reign. Bavaria, the most
independent of the duchies, rebelled in 974, under the leadership of its duke, Henry II the Quarrelsome, Otto's cousin. It was not
until 978 that Bavaria was pacified, the same year that Lothair, king of France, invaded Lorraine. In 979 Otto received the
submission of Bohemia and Poland, and in 980 Lothair renounced his claim to Lorraine. Having thus secured his German
dominions, Otto marched into Italy in 980, where German rule had been maintained by an imperial party headed by Hugh,
marquis of Tuscany. Otto invaded southern Italy and was decisively defeated there by the Arabs in 982. In 983 he summoned a diet
at Verona, where his young son, Otto III, was crowned German king. Otto II died in 983 while attempting to bring Venice under
imperial control. His absence from Germany had occasioned revolts along its borders, and after his defeat in Calabria in 982 the
German position east of the Elbe collapsed because of a revolt by the Danes and an invasion by the Slavs. Nonetheless, Otto left a
firmly established realm to his son and successor Otto III.
Copyright © 1994-2001 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
Otto II (955 – December 7, 983, Rome), called the Red, was the third ruler of the Saxon or Ottonian dynasty, the son of Otto the
Great and Adelaide of Italy.
Education, first years of reign
He received a good education under the care of his uncle, Bruno, archbishop of Cologne, and his illegitimate half-brother, William,
archbishop of Mainz. At first only co-reigning with his father, he was chosen German king at Worms in 961, crowned at Aachen
Cathedral on May 26, 961, and on December 25, 967 was crowned joint emperor at Rome by Pope John XIII.
He married Theophanu, niece of the Eastern Roman Emperor John I Tzimisces, on April 14, 972. After participating in his father's
campaigns in Italy, he returned to Germany and became sole emperor on the death of his father in May 973, without meeting any
opposition.
Otto spent his reign continuing his father's policy of strengthening imperial rule in Germany and extending it deeper into Italy.
After suppressing a rising in Lorraine, difficulties arose in southern Germany, probably owing to Otto's refusal to grant the duchy
of Swabia to Henry II of Bavaria. In 974 Henry's mother, Judith, set up a conspiracy against the emperor, which included Henry,
Bishop Abraham of Freising, the dukes of Bohemia and Poland, and several members of the clergy and the nobility who were
discontented by the previous emperor's policies. The plan was discovered and easily suppressed, however. In the same year, Otto's
forces successfully opposed an attempt by Harald I of Denmark to throw off the German yoke; however, his expedition against the
Bohemians in 975 was a partial failure owing to the outbreak of further trouble in Bavaria. The following year he restored order for
the second time in Lorraine and forced Henry II to flee from Regensburg to Bohemia, Bavaria being assigned to his relative Otto of
Bavaria. In 977 the king made another expedition into Bohemia, where King Boleslaus II promised to return to his earlier
allegiance. Also Mieszko I of Poland submitted. (See also War of the Three Henries).
Otto II and Theophano: Byzantine ivory plaque (Musée de Cluny)
After Otto had crushed an attempt by Henry to regain Bavaria, King Lothair of France invaded Lorraine with an army of 20,000
and occupied the capital Aachen for five days. Otto retired first to Cologne and then to Saxony. His mother, who was of French
origin, sided with Lothair and moved to Bourgogne. In September 978, having mustered 30,000 men, Otto retaliated by invading
France. He met with little resistance, but sickness among his troops compelled him to raise the siege of Paris, and on the return
journey the rearguard of his army was destroyed and the baggage seized by the French. An expedition against the Poles was
followed by peace with France: Lothair renounced his claim on Lorraine (980), and in exchange Otto recognized the rights of
Lothair's son Louis.
[edit] Italy
Otto therefore felt himself free to travel to Italy. The government of Germany was left to arch-chancellor Willigis and to duke
Bernard I of Saxony. He was accompanied by his wife, his son, Otto of Bavaria, the bishops of Worms, Metz and Merseburg and
numerous other counts and barons. Crossing the Alps in what is today Switzerland, he reconciled with his mother at Pavia and
then celebrated the Christmas of 980 in Ravenna.
Pope Benedict VI, elected by his father, had been imprisoned by the Romans in Castel Sant'Angelo, where he had died in 974. His
successor Boniface VII had fled to Constantinople and Benedict VII, former bishop of Sutri, was now pope. Preceded by Benedict,
Otto ceremoniously entered Rome on Easter day of 981.
Otto held in the city a splendid court, attended by princes and nobles from all parts of western Europe. He was next required to
punish inroads of the Saracens on the Italian mainland and, most of all, the aggressive policy of the Sicilian emir Abu al-Qasim,
whose fleet was harassing Apulia and whose troops had invaded Calabria. In September 981 Otto marched into southern Italy. He
was first entangled in the quarrels between the local Lombard princes who had divided the area after Pandulf Ironhead's death.
Otto unsuccessfully besieged Manso I of Amalfi in Salerno, but in the end obtained the recognition of his authority from all the
Lombard principalities. In January 982 the German troops marched towards the Byzantine Apulia to annex this region as well to
the Western Empire.
When Otto moved from Taranto, he met with a severe defeat near Stilo in July 982 (in which, among the others, al-Qasim was
killed). Without revealing his identity, the emperor escaped on a Greek vessel to Rossano. He returned to Rome on November 12,
982.
At a diet held at Verona in June 983, largely attended by German and Italian princes, he had Otto III confirmed as king of
Germany and prepared a new campaign against the Saracens. He also obtained a settlement with the Republic of Venice, whose
help was much needed after the defeat of Stilo. Proceeding to Rome, Otto secured the election of Peter of Pavia as Pope John XIV.
Just as the news reached him of a general rising of the Slav tribes on the eastern frontier of Germany, he died in his palace in
Rome on December 7, 983. He was survived by the future emperor Otto III and three daughters. He was buried in the atrium of St.
Peter's Basilica, and when the church was rebuilt his remains were removed to the crypt, where his tomb can still be seen.
Otto, who is sometimes called the "Red", was a man of small stature, by nature brave and impulsive, and by training an
accomplished knight. He was generous to the church and aided the spread of Christianity in many ways.
Marriage and issue
On April 14, 972, Otto II married Theophanu. They had the following children:
* Sophie I, Abbess of Gandersheim and Essen, born 975, died 1039.
* Adelheid I, Abbess of Quedlinburg and Gandersheim, born November or December 977, died 1040.
* Matilda, born 979, died 1025; who married Ezzo, count palatine of Lotharingia
* Otto III, Holy Roman Emperor, born June or July 980
* A daughter, a twin to Otto, who died before October 8, 980
BIOGRAPHY: b. 955
d. Dec. 7, 983, Rome
German king from 961 and Holy Roman emperor from 967, sole ruler from 973, son of Otto I and his second wife, Adelaide.
Otto continued his father's policies of promoting a strong monarchy in Germany and of extending the influence of his house in
Italy. In 961 he was crowned co-regent king of Italy and Germany with his father and was made co-regent emperor in 967. On
April 14, 972, he married the Byzantine princess Theophano. At his father's death in 973 he was accepted without opposition as
successor, although revolts in the duchy of Bavaria and in Lorraine occupied the early years of his reign. Bavaria, the most
independent of the duchies, rebelled in 974, under the leadership of its duke, Henry II the Quarrelsome, Otto's cousin. It was not
until 978 that Bavaria was pacified, the same year that Lothair, king of France, invaded Lorraine. In 979 Otto received the
submission of Bohemia and Poland, and in 980 Lothair renounced his claim to Lorraine. Having thus secured his German
dominions, Otto marched into Italy in 980, where German rule had been maintained by an imperial party headed by Hugh,
marquis of Tuscany. Otto invaded southern Italy and was decisively defeated there by the Arabs in 982. In 983 he summoned a diet
at Verona, where his young son, Otto III, was crowned German king. Otto II died in 983 while attempting to bring Venice under
imperial control. His absence from Germany had occasioned revolts along its borders, and after his defeat in Calabria in 982 the
German position east of the Elbe collapsed because of a revolt by the Danes and an invasion by the Slavs. Nonetheless, Otto left a
firmly established realm to his son and successor Otto III.
Copyright © 1994-2001 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
Gift med
Theophano Sklerina Skleros, född 956
i Konstantinopel, Byzantium, död 991-06-15 i Nijmegen, Nederländerna.
Barn:
Mathilde, född cirka 979, död 1025-11-04
|